The hardest concept for my mind to digest in this essay was the concept of a Trace. An effacement? Like effacer, in French, to erase?
In my mind, trying to visualize Trace I thought of the bear tracks that we spoke about in class, of course with understanding that Trace is not an object, but a doing. So Trace is that time when I see the tracks and I think of the bear. Although the bear is not present, I make him present and therefore the tracks are not really there anymore, but have been erased by the presence of the bear (in my mind). I have brought the bear to the present by erasing what is in reality the presence in the present (the tracks), and have brought the future to the present.... I think...
La Verdad: it's Freedom!
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Two Lectures by Foucault
This kind of ties in with my last post of reason and discourse. Here he pretty much says that as we try to narrow down knowlege, many things get left out. He says that sooner or later those things left without revolt against those things left within.
Then again he doesn't really blame anyone. He says it is mostly, if not all, done unintentionally over time and space. It is not pruned purposefully, but rather it just gets, so to speak, "filtered" out. I wonder though, is it really all unintentional?
Then again he doesn't really blame anyone. He says it is mostly, if not all, done unintentionally over time and space. It is not pruned purposefully, but rather it just gets, so to speak, "filtered" out. I wonder though, is it really all unintentional?
What is Enlightenment?
If I understood it correctly, I fell in love with the way Foucault attacked what we think of as "Enlightenment." If I understand it as he does, "enlightenment" is merely the rejection or the ignoring of, not necessarily what is UNreasonable (or maybe it is), but what is beyond reason. Without saying it directly, he points out the arrogance of humanity of wanting to squeeze everything within the limits of "reason."
When people thought (or think) of themselves (ourselves?) as enlightened by reason alone, was it not by reason alone that people once assumed the earth was flat? At that time, that only sounded reasonable.
When people thought (or think) of themselves (ourselves?) as enlightened by reason alone, was it not by reason alone that people once assumed the earth was flat? At that time, that only sounded reasonable.
Discourse on Language
This confused me because for a while I had my fixed visual of discourse: a box. It is a box for what today is "truth and knowledge." Then suddenly my visual of discourse began to transform into something that looks more like a cell, from which organisms leave and to which others enter, without force and some with the use of force. Just like in diffusion and osmosis, truth and knowledge have entered our minds forcibly and other times unintentionally....
What is Philosophy?
I want to focus on two things Deleuze talked about: truth and discourse. He attacks the fact that people search for the truth from a preconceived notion, from a certain disposition. As if truth was somehow a balloon and it was tied to a ribbon, which was tied to say, a chair, on the other end. "Truth" can only go certain ways, and can only reach out so far when it is trapped within that discourse. This makes sense to me, but I wondered, how can we escape that?
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Celebrating love for the African American family
Gabriela Fierro
By tradition, the Catholic Church dedicates each month of the year to a certain devotion. In February, it is the Holy Family; Mary, her beloved Joseph and Baby Jesus. February is also the celebration of Black History Month and of love, and it is ironic that the greatest attack on the family, especially the Black family is abortion. Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood (which was originally called the American Birth Control League), first referred to it as her “Negro Project” which aimed to control and maybe even exterminate, some claim, the African American population. Sanger wrote articles and letters about her goals to “purify” the Human race from “unfit” persons, as she called them.
Sanger held meetings with other members of Board of Directors of Planned Parenthood at the headquarters of the Eugenics Society to discuss ways in which the Black population could be more easily controlled. The quickest way, they realized, was through sterilization, birth control, and abortion. Today, there is a lot of evidence that would seem to validate this. For example, 78% of the company’s clinics are situated in neighborhoods that are predominantly inhabited by minorities. Cries of outrage from charity organizations were made against Planned Parenthood after Haiti was struck by Hurricane Tomas in 2010, when after killing thousands and leaving many wounded, Planned Parenthood asked America for donations so as to provide Haitians with new abortion clinics and more contraceptives as soon as possible. When a natural disaster destroys the homes and the lives of people’s beloved, it is expected to find that someone would give that person in suffering a hand, but not that they would be given a condom (Blackgenocide.org).
Planned Parenthood also distributes many forms of birth control pills, one of them being the RU-486. The initials RU stand for Roussel Uclaf, a division of a company called Hoechst AG. After WWII, a company known as I.G. Farben was closed and re-born in the form of small, separate companies. I.G. Farben was a German company that had committed serious crimes during the war, one of them being the production of Zyklon B, used in gas chambers in the Concentration Camps in Germany and Occupied territories. The company then split into several smaller ones, one of them being Hoechst A.G, from which Roussel Uclaf derived. In short, the RU-486 is a pill that still carries the name of a company that served the Nazi Party and for many years supported the eugenicist market(Hli.org).
"Several years ago, when 17,000 aborted babies were found in a dumpster outside a pathology laboratory in Los, Angeles, California, some 12-15,000 were observed to be black." (Erma Clardy Craven, Social Worker and Civil Rights Leader). Every day, nearly 3,500 women in America get an abortion, and almost 2,000 of those aborted are African American babies. Shockingly, abortion is the number one cause of death in the African American community ever since Roe v. Wade. As a matter of fact, more African American babies are being aborted yearly than are being born, outnumbered by nearly 130,000, and although they make up less than 13% of the American population, they make up for about 37% of abortions of all Americans. (Bound4life.com). Ever since Roe v. Wade, 30% of the Black population has been wiped out through abortion. In order for a population to maintain itself, that is, to have enough number to “replace” those that have passed away, an average of 2.11 babies per woman must be born. The African American community has a rate that is less than 2.00 (Humanlife.org). The decrease is fatally steep, and what is now called abortion could be plan B of Margaret Sanger’s “Negro Project.”
The question now is, in this month that celebrates Black America, the Holy Family and love, how is society to celebrate?
Picture 1- The table above shows statistics based on race and percentage of abortions each race makes up for. (curtesy of jillstanek.com)
Picture 2- The picture above is a photograph of Margaret Sanger, a eugenicist and founder of Planned Parenthood. (curtesy of 1.bp.blogspot.com)
Picture 3- Above is a photograph of an African American father and his baby, both targets of Margaret Sanger’s conspiracy. (curtesy of cdn.elev8.com)
Monday, April 18, 2011
Children are not alone in the Battle against Oppression
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