Ryan Fritsch • Utopos.net is ready for the rest

Archive of January 2008


transportation.jpg
-- Do the math --

January 30th, 2008 / 0 Comments / Tags: transportation, livable cities, locality

tetrisbuilding.jpg

These apartments, designed by architecture firm Ofis Arhitekti, were built last year in the Slovenian city of Ljubljana. Their goal? Design some stylish-yet-affordable public housing. Their obstacle? The building had to be only four stories tall, and they were given less than 54,000 square feet to build on. So they did what any right-minded person would do, and slotted the apartments together like they were playing a game of Tetris. Simple, effective, stylish.

(Reposted from Kotaku.com).

January 9th, 2008 / 0 Comments / Tags: architecture, games, public housing, aesthetics, sustainability, Slovenia

Opinio Rex

It is almost inevitably the hallmark of a stupid argument where it begins with a comparison of its subject to Hitler or Stalin. And indeed, cartoon squawk-box Rex Murphy, for once, completely failed to redeem his bombastic rant with a point predicated on substance.



Last night Rex got four minutes on The National to present "real human rights." This, according to Rex, is the stuff of Hitler. It isn't the stuff of MacLean's Magazine, a national newsmagazine in Canada, who last year just so happened to publish a conspiratorial piece about global Muslim domination. It's apparently A Muslim proclivity to "reproduce like mosquitos", and apparently, according to Rex, saying so is what "free speech" looks like. And so the four Muslim law students who filed a human rights complaint in BC, Ontario and federally in late November exemplify "fake" human rights, and are a discredit to the concept and show how useless these Human Rights Commissions are.

I encourage you to watch Rex's piece. Because it's crazy. And because Rex missed a few points which I think are rather wonderful.

The truth of the matter is that none of the human rights commissions in BC, Ontario or Federally have yet heard the matter, much less decided it in favor of the complainants. The Commissions may very well determine that the very same complaints levied by Rex amount to the "frivolous and vexatious" grounds on which a commission can freely dismiss an entire claim. For Rex to induce sweeping conclusions from a premature claim is entirely, and purely, inflammatory.

Furthermore, the Commissions could also decide that the matter is more appropriately heard more appropriately under other jurisdictions, such as the provision in the Criminal Code against hate speech, or as a Constitutional case through the regular court system. The later of course amounts to a horrendously expensive and nearly impossible task for the average citizen to contemplate and would more likely than not kill their claim in utero. This is what Rex should really be concerned about if he wants to protect freedom of expression. In my opinion, the mere presence of the Charter of Rights does little to protect any Canadian when it is practically inaccessible to them.

Finally, Rex implies through a drive-by argument that the "floodgates are open" to foolish complaints; that Commissions are nothing more than boondoggles; and that Respondents are unfairly disadvantaged with the burden of bearing legal costs.

The truth is that only Ontario provides complainants with Commission counsel, though even here often only late in the process, and even then most claimants hire independent counsel. Furthermore, filing a human rights complaint takes a great deal of courage, sacrifice, time, social risk, determination and effort for people suffering very serious and often intersecting disadvantage. A complaint is not something anyone lightly undertakes just because there are no fees. The cases are as heart wrenching as the decisions are vital. The decisions of the Commissions are reported and freely available on their websites; I would urge everyone who criticizes from afar to read a few before coming to a sweeping conclusion about what these institutions stand for. And the Commissions are not stupid; they do (at least in Ontario) have the power to award legal costs to a Respondent under a broad variety of circumstances. An affordable human rights process is a good thing. I would have thought that a smart guy like Rex would understand that a corner stone of a free society is access to justice, and that without it, justice is a sham concept.

What Rex has achieved, in other words, is precisely what he purportedly railed against. By abusing his privileged position as a national reporter to make a point that doesn't exist, he showed precisely how "free speech" so quickly turns to senseless, empty, hurtful and inflammatory rhetoric that is a disservice to the term.

January 5th, 2008 / 0 Comments / Tags: rex murphy, CBC, human rights, freedom of expression, stupid

dali.jpg
You could do this easily in Photoshop today, but Philippe Halsman did not - this was shot live. It took 26 tries to get it over five hours - Halsman counted to four, Dali leapt, 3 assistants threw the cats, one threw the water from a bucket. But most importantly, I think, is that Halsman's wife held the chair aloft for those five hours of retakes, almost like an artistic Moses against the Amelikites!

I wonder if the reference to the biblical "Water and War" in Exodus ch. 17(5-6; 10-13) isn't more explicit. Halsman's photo surrealistically shows a world off balance, as if the floor has only just fallen away from beneath the feet of the painter, the animals, and the furniture. With nothing to stand on, rivers miraculously start flowing through the sky from a source as unexpected as a solid rock. Dali becomes a Moses of the artistic faith: as long as he keeps his feet off the ground the artistic war will be won, miraculous interventions into reality will be made possible, and we will have or guide through exodus to the promised land of the aesthetic ethical.

January 5th, 2008 / 0 Comments / Tags: aesthetics, artists, surreal, faith, Dali, lolcats

Chyrping a Symphony


WordPress = (Spam Chernobyl)+(Rube Goldberg engineering). Why, just this evening it ate 50+ of my draft posts (a whole Moleskine notebook of ideas) after malware exploited security gaps to turn my blog into a zombie spybot that was eventually blackballed by smarter websites fleeing in terror. Shove it you say? Don't mind if I do.

So happily then hath the spring chicken hatched a little early this year. Chyrp is this spry 1MB martlet that walks all over the other blogging pterodactyls without ever touching the ground. For software that is all of 8 days old, it took a ridiculously elegant total of 10 minutes to install on this webserver, not just configure but master the user and administrative settings, add a few bonus modules, and finally compose this first post.

It is clean, efficient, and so thoughtfully designed that to use it is thoughtless. Rather like OS 8.5.1 before Apple went all rococo crazy.

I'm so pleased I'll probably create a new aesthetic theme as a thank-you to the author.

January 4th, 2008 / 0 Comments / Tags: WordPress, Chyrp, Hello World