Take two thick slices of Noonie's day old bread, smear Honey Cup honey mustard
liberally over both. Cover both slices with green leaf lettuce. Then on one slice only lay smoked turkey on the lettuce,
a tomato slice on the turkey and sprinkle it with shredded carrot. Then on the lay a slice of provolone cheese over the
carrot then a green pepper ring on top of the cheese. Sprikle with sprouts. Cover with the other slice, lettuce side down.
The letuce should be stuck to the bread with honey mustard so it doesn't fall off when you turn it upside down to cover the
sandwich. Slice sandwich in half with a knife. Wrap in tightly in plastic wrap. Use too much wrap. Tape on label. Tadaaa!
Weighs one pound. Costs Four Bucks.
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yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your
teeming shore, Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed,
to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door."
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"During the 1992 campaign, Bill Clinton
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implying that Hillary would play an important role in his
administration."
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Whatever things
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Alexis de Tocqueville
Monday, March 09, 2009
My friend Jonas sent this. It's probably smart or something. I don't have time to explore it, but maybe you do.
"Bowling Alone" is a super famous article/book. Some disputes about terms and measurement of "social capital" but has been a very influential work. Perhaps most notably, Putnam is focusing on the very phenomenon highlighted by de Tocqueville (the guy I sent you earlier): American civil society/association membership. In 1830, Tocqueville finds such association widespread, novel (he's French), and crucial to the American democratic system. In the 1990's Putman claims that such association has been on the decline since the 50's and as a result, democracy is suffering.
A few things... Social capital--not unlike other forms of capital used by academics (cultural capital, specifically)--is a bit of a slippery animal. The concept is quite laudable, but defining and measuring it is a sticky wicket, as it were. The World Bank has a few surveys getting at social capital. The Canadians actually have what I think is the only national survey dedicated to measuring social capital.
For those interested in a more international take on civil society, political associations, etc, Antonio Gramsci's work ("Prison Notebooks") deals with much of this in the Italian context of the 1880-1920s.
Nonetheless, Tocqueville remains highly influential in the social sciences. Of course, the big question we're left with is: are we, can we, or should we be like that anymore?
Those who are interested by question of civil society, civic engagement, political activism, class issues, etc...Tocqueville is a very powerful read.
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"Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses
yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your
teeming shore, Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed,
to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door."
-Emma Lazarus, 1883
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consequat eget, tristique nec, auctor quis, purus. Vivamus ut sem. Fusce aliquam nunc vitae purus.
Whatever things
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Duis ligula lorem,
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Hi Haik. Putnam spoke at UVM last year. His work on declining social capital informed Front Porch Forum's beginnings...
http://frontporchforum.com/blog/2008/02/27/robert-putnam-to-speak-at-uvm