Ques­tions I never answered when I was doing the inter­view meme, from demiurgically_m:

1. Every­one turns to someone(s) for help. Who (or what) do you turn to?

I turn to dai­syn­erd because she’s incred­ibly smart and straight­for­ward and I know I can abso­lutely, 100% trust her to tell me the truth about whatever’s going on. I turn to sleazemon­key because he’s wise and here in Mel­bourne, so I can get hugs when I need them, I turn to thorfinn about spe­cific things, because he has exper­i­ence in those things and has a very logical mind and I think his moral code maps almost dir­ectly to mine and more recently, I’ve been turn­ing to e_dan because he is lovely and sweet, he’s out­side the circle and can see things with a fresh mind and even better, he’s two hours behind, so if I’m dis­tressed at 2 in the morn­ing, it’s still a reas­on­able hour where he is. *grin*

2. You pride your­self on being an indi­vidual. How­ever, I’m sure some­times you have been Sheeple. When did you last accept some­thing without thought?

Inter­est­ing ques­tion. I’m sure I do it all the time. Iron­ic­ally, I’m troubled by the word ‘accept’ here. Does it mean ‘accept some­thing I was given”? Or does it mean “accept some­thing as valid”?

I’ll assume the latter. I trust just about everything marius_cale tells me about astro­phys­ics without ques­tion, because he knows waaaay more about it than I ever will, but that’s not without *thought* because I try hard to com­pre­hend what he’s telling me. Hmmm. “Without thought”. Pre­sum­ably some­thing sig­ni­fic­ant, as opposed to “that’s the right change from $5”. Maybe the couple of recent dis­cus­sions about money with pub­lish­ers where I’ve just accep­ted that what’s being dis­cussed is going to happen?

3. This site talks about the future and our ideas about it ”The future wasn’t tomor­row, next week, next year, or next cen­tury. It was a place with a form, a struc­ture, a style. True, we didn’t know exactly what the future would be like, but we knew that it had to be one of a few altern­at­ives; some good, some very bad. The future was a world with a dis­tinct archi­tec­ture. It had its own way of speak­ing. It had its own tech­no­logy. ” We’ve been let down by per­sonal jet packs, blasters and the Space Age. Where do we go next?

Ah yes. This is why I always loved Gib­son’s short story “The Gerns­back Con­tinuüm”, where the ima­gined future of the 1950s that never happened breaks through to this plane and 6‑lane high­ways keep unfold­ing into 18-lane free­ways filled with finned silver cars.

Where next? Why, to a world where our chil­dren will be let down by stem cell research, bio-engin­eer­ing and embed­ded tech­no­logy of course. And one in which the tech­no­logy that does exist looks noth­ing much like we’ve ima­gined at all but is still mind-blow­ing and soci­ety-chan­ging in its own spe­cial ways. “The street finds its own uses for things.”

4. As an anarch­ist, how would you jus­tify the use of propaganda?

Not sure what the two things have to do with each other. It implies that without organ­ised rulers, we can’t use per­sua­sion. Pro­pa­ganda is one form of sua­sion, and logical argu­ment is another. Advert­ising is a form of sua­sion. And if you’re talk­ing about organ­ised forms of pro­pa­ganda as fre­quently used by gov­ern­ments, why would I as an anarch­ist want to jus­tify that? I see state pro­pa­ganda as one of the manip­u­lat­ive tools states use to achieve their aims. When I was in Latvia, I was at a café and I over­heard someone say that when there was an indus­trial acci­dent in the old days, they’d listen to Soviet radio which would say 2 people had been injured and they’d listen to the Amer­ican pro­pa­ganda radio, Radio Free Europe, which would say that 200 people had been injured and they’d know the truth was that 20 people were injured.

5. Why do these ques­tions appear in this format?

Um… lemon fish gelato?

Oh yeah, that’s right, I’m sup­posed to do some for you now:

1. What does it mean to you to be living in Can­berra again?
2. Your part­ner once argued fairly con­vin­cingly to me that he was polit­ic­ally and eco­nom­ic­ally a fas­cist. What does that mean to you?
3. What is the most import­ant lesson you’ve learned from your kids?
4. Explain how renov­at­ing and writ­ing are similar.
5. (you don’t have to answer this one pub­licly, but I am intrigued) Given that I’m your son’s oddmother (not that I’ve been a very good one lately, but that’s another dis­cus­sion), would you ever tell him about the rela­tion­ships between you, me, hawk_eye and that whole crazy crowd? What would you say?