The Outsider – Colin Wilson (1956)

1960s: Days of Rage's avatar1960s: Days of Rage

Strange life: “Like Aldous Huxley and C S Lewis with John F Kennedy, the English writer Colin Wilson had the misfortune of dying on the same day as a vastly (and justly) more famous man: Nelson Mandela. When Wilson’s first book, The Outsider, came out in 1956 — coinciding with the arrival of a noisy cohort of anti-establishment writers labelled the ‘Angry Young Men’ — he became an overnight sensation: a self-taught, ‘staggeringly erudite’, working-class, provincial 24-year-old hailed by highbrow reviewers as Britain’s answer to Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus. Almost as quickly, he was dropped, and his subsequent prolific literary career, which moved from philosophy and religion through psychology and parapsychology to the wilder shores of Atlantis and science fiction, is usually taken to vindicate those second thoughts. A handful of obituaries have appeared in the quality press since 5 December. Most have a tincture of condescension…

View original post 193 more words

7/19/2023 – An old man on a curbside

Slava Ukraine!

Dal Stanton's avatarVoice of Ukraine

Today’s picture is an illustration by Irenaeus Yurchuk, “Anticipation.” Our hearts can see something our eyes don’t.

From Ira Kapitonova in Kyiv (Day 510):

Oh, grant us help against the foe,
for vain is the salvation of man!
With God we shall do valiantly;
it is he who will tread down our foes.
Psalm 60:11‭-‬12

A couple of days ago, we were meeting someone at a train station. We got there early, so we had time to walk up and down the platform. We noticed an older man sitting on a curbside. It looked like he was waiting for someone. Our son was getting restless, so this man invited him to sit on the curbside with him. Being a friendly, talkative boy, our son started telling him who we were waiting for. The man apparently knew the train schedule well because he asked if we were waiting for the specific…

View original post 185 more words

Jennifer Rubin: Florida Is the State Where Kindness and Decency Go to Die

dianeravitch's avatarDiane Ravitch's blog

Jennifer Rubin is a super-smart journalist-lawyer who became a regular columnist for The Washington Post, where she was supposed to express conservative views. However, the election of Trump changed her political outlook. Here, she writes about how Ron DeSantis’ hate policies are hurting the state of Florida.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) and his obedient Republican legislature have made bullying and attacking the vulnerable the hallmarks of their governance. Whether it is “don’t say gay” legislation (and retribution against Disney for supporting inclusion), denying medical care to transgender youths, muzzling teachers and professors who address systemic racism in the United States, firing a county prosecutor who dared object to DeSantis’s refusal to protect women’s bodily autonomy, or shipping unwary immigrants to other states, Florida has become not where “woke” died but rather where empathy, decency and kindness go to die.


DeSantis’s stunts frequently fail in court and cost taxpayers…

View original post 414 more words

Lowell Fulson

1960s: Days of Rage's avatar1960s: Days of Rage


“Lowell Fulson was one of the most important figures in post-war West Coast blues, a guitarist, singer, and songwriter who was active from the late 1940s to the mid-’90s. While Fulson seemed willing to do a little bit of everything over the course of his career, his best-known work was informed by jump blues and the polished, impassioned, big-city sound typified by his fellow California bluesman T-Bone Walker. However, Fulson also cut spare, rural blues-styled material, strong soul-styled sides in the mid- to late ’60s (1967’s Tramp, including the hit title track), a smattering of funky, rock-infused blues (1970’s In a Heavy Bag), and barroom-style guitar workouts (1995’s late-era Them Update Blues). Lowell Fulson was born on March 31, 1921 in Atoka, Oklahoma on a Native American reservation; his father was of Cherokee heritage. He was just six years old when his father died, and his…

View original post 229 more words

7/18/2023 – A Pastor’s Wife Remains On Mission in Ukraine (Video)

Dal Stanton's avatarVoice of Ukraine

By Tom Mills, Jul 18, 2023 (Mission the the World)

Lena and her husband, Mykhailo, a Ukrainian pastor, began preparing for war even before the initial attacks in February 2022 and considered their options for their family. They considered heading east to stay with Lena’s mother. They also considered Lena and the children fleeing to a safe location. But as they prayed, God made it clear they should both stay in Odesa. It was important to them that Mykhailo continue to serve the church in Odesa and Lena wanted to support him in that. They considered sending their teenage children away, but the kids wanted to stay with the family. In the end, staying was the right decision for the family, and for the church.

As a child, Lena lived in the east and had been taught by her grandmother that she had a great Russian heritage. As…

View original post 60 more words

7/18/2023 – Oksana, the sole operating room nurse in the area…

Dal Stanton's avatarVoice of Ukraine

Photo: 128th Zakarpattia Separate Mountain Assault Brigade

From Euromaiden Press: Good morning World! Good morning Ukraine!

Oksana, an operating room nurse with the 128th Brigade, shares her experiences in the war zone.

Despite heavy casualties, wounded soldiers continue fighting and liberating their land. Oksana, aka “Ksiukha”, has been with the brigade since the war began in 2015. Ksiukha is an army jargon term referring to a shortened version of the Kalashnikov assault rifle, specifically the AKSU. It features a folding stock and a shortened barrel.

Initially, there was no stabilization medical center, so Oksana worked tirelessly evacuating the wounded. She became skilled at administering medical aid while on the move. She recalls two shell-shocked soldiers who were disoriented and experiencing severe trauma. With no sedatives available, she calmed them by singing a lullaby and managed to safely transport them to the hospital.

Oksana emphasizes the contrast between medical work…

View original post 217 more words

7/18/2023 – This war is far more than just “a conflict between Russia and Ukraine…”

Dal Stanton's avatarVoice of Ukraine

Today’s picture is an illustration by Maksym Palenko. We remember the victims of the MH17 tragedy and hope for justice.

From Ira Kapitonova in Kyiv (Day 509):

Deliver me from my enemies, O my God; protect me from those who rise up against me; deliver me from those who work evil, and save me from bloodthirsty men.
Psalm 59:1‭-‬2

On this day 9 years ago (July 17, 2014), Russia shot down Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur over the East of Ukraine. All 298 people on board, including 80 children, were killed. Last year, the District Court of The Hague established that an aircraft was hit by a Russian-made Buk anti-aircraft missile system, transported from Russia to the temporarily occupied parts of the Donetsk region, where the Russia-backed criminals launched the missile. While the trial found three men guilty and sentenced them to life imprisonment in absentia…

View original post 189 more words

7/17/2023 – I know we are never able to forget about this war, but we surely cannot let it destroy us…

Dal Stanton's avatarVoice of Ukraine

From Ira Kapitonova in Kyiv (Day 508):

Let them vanish like water that runs away;
when he aims his arrows, let them be blunted.
Psalm 58:7

As a kid, I heard WWII stories and wondered how people lived during those days. Were they always mourning? Did they wear only gray clothes because they had no joy in life? Did they eat only bread and water? I had lots of stereotypical images in my mind and couldn’t believe people could laugh, get married, or have children during the war.

The war in Ukraine started over nine years ago, and the past 500+ days were bound to happen sooner or later. How does one cope with something like this? How do you keep on living when someone is dying for you?

I’ve seen this question addressed by several people over the last couple of days. One said it took her a few…

View original post 377 more words

7/16/2023 – I feel like we live in the never-ending Groundhog Day…

Slava Ukraine!!

Dal Stanton's avatarVoice of Ukraine

Today’s picture – a boy plays on the ruins of his grandma’s house. Kupiansk, fall of 2022. Photo by Anastasia Vlasova (Reuters)

From Ira Kapitonova in Kyiv (Day 507):

Be merciful to me, O God, be merciful to me,
for in you my soul takes refuge;
in the shadow of your wings I will take refuge,
till the storms of destruction pass by.
Psalm 57:1

Some days, I feel like we live in the never-ending Groundhog Day. Missiles and kamikaze drones come again and again, and I get lost in the names of the cities that are attacked. Some of them are attacked daily, so I am often confused if it’s something new or something I already know about.

Today, I read that the Ukrainian government has opened an evacuation train route from Sumy. People will be able to get to Kyiv and get settled in a temporary refugee camp…

View original post 133 more words

The Theatre of Images: The Early Years

1960s: Days of Rage's avatar1960s: Days of Rage

“byrdwoMAN” at Robert Wilson’s Loft in 1968.

“‘The Theatre of Images’—a term coined in the early 1970s by Michel Guy, director of the Avignon Festival in France, and popularized by Bonnie Marranca in Performing Arts Journal—was, along with performance art, the major development in the live arts of the ’70s. The surge of theatricality in the postwar avant-garde had opened tremendous reservoirs of collective feeling across the performing arts of Lower Manhattan, climaxing in the visionary theatre collectives of SoHo, the capstone of one of the great eras in 20th-century American theatre history. It was an era of formal precision, ritual enchantment, therapeutic play, and public participation, reflecting powerful communal urges in a world that seemed to many to be on the verge of some cataclysmic upheaval. … Equal parts countercultural fantasist, wild child, and visionary saint, [Meredith] Monk at age 25 was an American original. Her theatrical vision…

View original post 192 more words