Archive for the ‘site news’ Category

New blog: Maine Owl

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

I managed to keep away from blogging these past six months. But now Deep Blade Journal has a successor site, Maine Owl. The new blog will differ from Deep Blade Journal in that I intend to keep the content driven more from a local & personal viewpoint. Maine Owl will cover many of the same issues as Deep Blade Journal–Iraq and the Terror War, for example. But more often that coverage will be inspired by local events and media. I will be less likely to post there on national electoral politics or national-level politicians unless there is a local event or media appearance to discuss. And, I intend to amp up the photography there as time goes on.

Now, it is time for you, dear reader, to mosey on over to

http://maineowl.net/blog.

Friday nature blogging

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

Lovers and dreamers and me

Lovers and dreamers and me
What’s at the end?

With this post, Deep Blade Journal ceases publication. I’ve been mulling this decision for a long time now. I can’t keep this thing going by myself any more. People I have tried to engage in writing for this blog in order to help me build it just have not been inspired. In the last several weeks, I’ve had a ton of posts in mind. Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan–all of the places where events are streaming like they’re coming out of a flame thrower–could use a great deal of anti-imperial analysis that just isn’t happening within the empire’s media systems (including in many so-called liberal blogs). But there just doesn’t seem to be enough traffic here to warrant me continuing to try to provide that analysis.

I may post HERE at times. However, one of my greatest disappointments blogging is the public reaction to THIS (also posted HERE). That reaction was a big fat nothing. I asked the hundreds of people involved in the March actions to “think this through…, and arrive at some positions and then focus and maximize our organizing power.”

Guess what? Nobody came to my posts and indicated that they had thought it through much. Then not entirely unexpectedly, the Democrats folded before the highly unpopular Bush. War funding continues, and will continue apace. This empty thud really illustrated for me how much time I have been wasting trying to hammer things out in this medium. Realize that I am not blaming others here for not responding as I had envisioned. I’m just realizing that I am not using my own time most effectively if I really want to help organize the next steps needed to end this war.

This brings us to the Horse Race that will obsess bloggers for the next 18 months running up to election 2008. I’m not going to waste my time on that either. Obviously, various factions of the ruling class dearly want to acquire the US presidency after Bush. But we must realize that working for a Democrat means accepting ruling class prerogatives. I can’t make that compromise and live with myself any more.

We can elect all of the Democrats we want. They’ll tell us, as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi did on March 23, that they are acting to end the war. But that is an obvious charade. The politicians are in a full-gallop retreat away from public opinion, and the common discourse is about making sure the public does not understand what is really going on. The only real choices in the field all must incant the canonical texts of those ruling class prerogatives in order to receive funding. Hence, “all options” must be “on the table” with respect to relations with Iran, for example. Certainly valid arguments exist that a Democrat winning would be “better” than a Republican. But the fundamental nature of US empire and ruling-class domination will not change.

So what are the prospects for Iraq? First, general US public opinion will remain totally irrelevant to the warmakers. The US has acquired Iraq and it will stay there until an essential component of the imperial project, the US military for example, breaks down completely. That day may be many years away. Meanwhile, the recently-escalated program of bombing the Iraqis into submission will go on, and on, and on. Well into the next administration for sure. They’re gonna keep Iraq come hell or high water because it’s an ultra-strategic imperial asset. If Democrats and Republicans have to talk Terror War to keep the public scared enough to retreat into the happier places inside their televisions and their Wal Marts then that’s what they’ll do. It seems to have worked so far.

I will try to keep adding to peacecast.us, the podcasting site that accompanies this one. I have a ton of material collected over the last few months that I have intended to post there. But apart from a few very good friends who are very, very generous people, peacecast.us is not generating enough interest that would seem to justify its existence either. But a decision on that will wait for another day.

With that, this blog is over.

Internet Explorer difficulties

Friday, May 18th, 2007

I just never use Internet Explorer so I didn’t notice that my CSS mods on the Wordpress default theme do not render my header correctly in IE. Sorry. Please use Firefox, everything is perfect there. But I will look into fixing this….

Test post

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

The site was down for some period of time for unknown reasons. It’s back now.

Update: Still problems. All plugins deactivated…

Update: Not sure what this was all about, but everything seems to be back in working order now. I really didn’t do anything myself to fix it.

Report on spam comments and Akismet

Friday, March 2nd, 2007

So far, Akismet has been 100% effective at detecting and sequestering spam comments. It has caught all spam, and there are zero false positives. This is good news! I can leave the comment forms open for posting, even by non-registered users. There are these restrictions in place, however: the first comment by a user will be held for approval, after which that user’s posting will appear immediately; the comment form closes after 45 days or 10 days since the last posting, whichever is later; and, postings are limited to no more than two urls each. Please read the comment policy page for more information.

New site design

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

The new WordPress 2.1 version of Deep Blade Journal finally is coming together. It’s been installed for a couple of weeks, but just now it is settling into its permanent look & feel. I’d sure appeciate any comments readers would like to post concerning how you like this new site design.

Domain outage likely

Tuesday, October 12th, 2004

I will be making some behind-the-curtain changes to the way deepblade.net redirects into Deep Blade Journal…. There could be a period of up to 48 hours where http://deepblade.net is funky. The address http://journal.deepblade.net (which is equivalent to http://deepblade.net) may not function at all for 48 hours or even longer. After the change has settled down, everything should work as before. Thank you for your patience.