Date: Mon, 1 Feb 93 19:16:58 PST
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From: [email protected] (tebcvat sbe gur urer naq abj)
To: [email protected] (SURFPUNK Technical Journal)
Subject: [surfpunk-0043] [ahawks@nyx] What *IS* FutureCulture
Keywords: surfpunk, future culture, virtual culture, postmodern, fringe science

+              +  Topic 176:  Cyberpunk on the cover of TIME Magazine
              +  # 22: the colander brain (jrc)
              +   Fuck 'em if they think they get the joke.
              +                                                 [the well]
              ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

I really enjoy Andy Hawks' writing on the FutureCulture mailing list.
You can probably tell -- I keep nandoing it here.

The following takes a bold stab at hitting some moving targets,
and does far better job (for me) than most who have tried (tired).
I had to FF through the first third, but eventually you get to discussions of
       Virtual Culture       Psychedelic Culture
       Rave Culture          Cyberculture
       Industrial Culture    PostModernism
       Street Culture        Fringe Science
and more problematic terms futureculture, technoculture, and new edge.
When he attempted the word "hacker", I thought, Oh No, Not Again, but
his comments are actually refreshing, and pretty close to my own ideas.
Recent discussion suggests replacing "Fringe Science" with "new science."

                                                              --strick
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________


From: ahawks (pink floyd)
Subject: What *IS* FutureCulture
Date: Fri, 29 Jan 93 22:20:53 MST

WHAT *IS* FUTURECULTURE?
A Manifesto on the Here-and-Now Technocultural [R]evolution

by Andy Hawks
[email protected]
[email protected]

FutureCulture E-List Requests & Info
[email protected] <'send info'>

    You are five years old.  You are lieing on a grassy hill,
blowing bubbles up into a clear field of blue sky.  Bubbles.  Right
now, as a five year old child, you look at the bubbles, and words pop
into your head:  "pretty", "oooooo", "float".  To you, the bubbles
are almost like people -- at least somewhat analogous to Bugs Bunny
or a Smurf.  Your wide eyes follow the bubbles as they traipse along
the gentle prevailing curves of soft winds, turning, rotating,
revolving endlessly in the air.  A sunray beams its light through one
particular bubble you have been admiring, and within its midst your
eyes become privy to a new world -- a heretofor unknown domain of
chaotic rainbows swirling about along the bubble.  The colors, like a
sentient anthill, work at once individually and synergetically to
give the bubble it's unique flavor, an individual identity among the
community of bubbles.

    As you lay your eyes on the continually morphing rainbows in
the bubble, admiring how this internal shapeshifting never ceases as
long as the bubble is "alive", the wind brings forth from nearby
another bubble.  Now you are focused on two bubbles circling each
other ever closer, probably communicating in some fashion on some
sort of subatomic level.  Now that your eyes know to look for the
chaotic rainbows, you enthusiastically discover them in this second
bubble as well.  The rainbows exist in both bubbles, with only a
thinly veiled invisible wall of air seperating the two.  The rainbows
do not stop in admiration or wonder to ponder the existence of
another bubble, they continue on with their duties in the wake of the
orbic maelstrom that is the individual bubble.  And suddenly, in the
mesh of an event that seems at once both predetermined and free, the
bubles combine and join forces as one.  If the sun catches the
bubble-morph at the right angle you can still see a wall, where
airspace once existed, within the bubble.  All the while, the chaotic
rainbows have continued of course, and now willingly flow back and
forth between what was once two seperate entities.  The shape of the
bubble-morph is still oddly circular as a whole, with the original
shape of the individual bubble-orbs stil clearly visible.

    The bubble-morph is stil at home among the individual bubbles
and still haphazardly surfs the winds as if nothing had happened.
Low and behold, a third bubble approaches its vicinity.  Same chaotic
rainbows, seemingly no different from any other bubble in the group.

    *POP!*  Quickly this third bubble seemingly self-destructs
without any reason, sending a fury of bubble residue out into the
wind.  Some of it lands on a tree, some on the grass, and yet more
lands on the bubble-morph.  As the bubble morph continues to rotate,
revolve, spin endlessly, the residue makes it's way to the
translucent crease marking the marriage of two individual bubbles.
And, then, it is gone.  Absorbed into the structure of he bubble
morph, evolving into yet more particles of chaos rainbows.

    More bubbles float by the bubbly-morph.  Some stumble in it's
wake and escape it's grasp, some pop, some are attracted to it and
become yet another aspect of the holistic bubble-creature, still
other bubbles diverge into a completely different spacial area.  If
you watch long enough, you might even see one portion of the
bubble-morph leave, mutating back into it's original state as an
individual bubble.

    All the while, bubbles are combining into new bubbles, bubbles
are popping, bubbles are floating, rotating, revolving, spinning,
shapeshifting.  Affecting and being affected by each other and other
entities such as the wind, a sharp blade of grass, a flower pedal.
The chaos rainbows never cease, the bubbles will always exist as long
as you, as the bubble-maker, decide to keep blowing bubbles.

    You are now, let's say, 40 years old.  You are sitting on the
same hill with your five year old child, urging him to discover the
wonders of the bubble world.  Your eyes are not as wide anymore, at
least not as wide as your child's.  But do you still find delight and
joy in the wonders of bubbles?  There is beauty in the bubble world,
even though you may approach it now from the perspective of an
accomplished chemist, or physicst, or artist, or engineer, or
cyberneticist, or 7-11 night manager.  Hopefully, you have not closed
your eyes to the magic your child sees, the magic you once saw.

    It should be obvious, by now, that bubbles are a metaphor.
What do you think the metaphor is?  I would be interested o hear what
peole have to say in this regards.  But, since this text is to be
confined to the context of futureculture, the bubbles are meant to
represent subcultures.  The caotic rainbows represent the people, the
material articles, the ideas, the *memes* that define those
subcultures.

    Thus, you can see, subcultures combine into cultures or bigger
subcultures (it's all relative), subcultures may self-destruct, they
may evolve or morph, they may diverge in a seperate direction.  But
watever the case, there's still bubbles because we, as a global
village, are like the five year old -- entrenched in the world of
bubbles, looking on with wide-eyes.

    Probably the most important ideas I have related so far are
that:  1) the process is continuous with an infinite amount of ebb
and flow among and between and through subcultures with an infinite
amount of possible outcomes, and 2) when subcultures combine they do
not lose their original individual identity, and may in fact leave,
though a synergetic effect exists which is *unrelated* to the amount
of individual bubbles combined to produce the bubble-morph.  The
bubble-morph being, obviously, the combination in some fashion or
another of seperately defined subcultures.  It is also interesting to
note that, ultimately, bubbles are "of the same stuff" which can be
paralled to individuals in groups on a vast variety of levels.

    Let us now turn to subcultures, let us see what bubbles we have
blown that provide the basic constructs of what we might deem, for a
lack of a better word, FutureCulture.  When I use the word
"FutureCulture" I am referring to the FutureCulture E-List.  When I
use "futureculture" I am referring to the culture of the future.  But
it's not really the future, it's here-and-now, and it's in this
writing.  There are some other words with similar connotations, but
yet the distinctions need to be mentioned, and then applied to
everyday life.  The first word is "technoculture".  Like a
technocracy is a government run by scientists or those who create
technology, a technoculture is a culture that is fueled by
technology.  America is a technoculture.  We would be lost without
our televisions, our cars, our computers, our telephones.
Futureculture, then, is a way of deciphering what tomorrow will look
like in a technoculture.  Another label to mention is "new edge".
This is a trendy, shortsighted term that has little relevance to the
perpetual realities of technoculture and futureculture.  New Edge is
a here-and-now-gone-tomorrow ideal.  Fairly soon, it won't be "new"
and increasingly so it is definitely not "edge".  The other misnomre
to mention is "cyberculture".  Cyberculture is probably most closely
associated with the idea of futureculture, yet cyberculture is often
mis- and over-used.  If you look at the meaning of the word "cyber",
basically "information" in an oversimplified context, it has little
to do with frequently-used notions of cyberculture, specifically a
Gibson-esque cyberpunk world as it exists today or in the
near-future.

    These are my own personal reflections on the world of bubbles,
and these labels and subcultural labels I am using are better thought
of as what I see as the most outstanding reference points to use in
the context of getting The Basic Idea (tm) across.  Relative labels
and reference points, no dictatorial lines being drawn here.

    Each mention of a subculture will be followed by a basic
reasoning by a defense in applying the group to the idea of
futureculture.  The idea of futureculture evolves *from* the
relationship between different bubbles and buble-morphs.  These core
bubbles and bubble-morphs produce noticeable ideas, trends, and
material objects for example, which are deemed by some relatively
large bubble-blower (ie society) to reflect the evolution of society
and world culture.  Simply put, FutureCulture represents an internal
and external effort, both passive and interactive, observational and
participatory, to:  discover these trends/ideas/objects or at least
bring acknowledgement of their existence to a larger segment of the
global populous, provide an interactive forum for the global populous
to discuss such matters and to reflect and refract varying cultures
and subcultures, to then apply this discussion to existing cultures
and subculture to plant the seeds spawning further
trends/ideas/objects.  Thus one can begin to see the infinitely
cyclic nature of the process.  It is a process which you are at
varying levels of consciousness engaged in every moment you are
alive, by everything you say or do, and every sensory input.  By
providing the on-line interactive forum of the FutureCulture e-list,
we as individuals and members of varying subcultures and cultures can
merge the unconscious acts of participation in culture with a
conscious understanding, to create/construct/deconstruct/destroy and
evolve reality and people's lives on an individual and group basis.
Basically, we are analyzing existing culture, we are creating
tomorrow's reality, and we are doing it on a here-and-now, globally
interactive, seemingly real-time forum.

Thus I submit the reference points, the subcultures, the basic
bubbles that are essential to futureculture:

Virtual Culture - This is probably the easiest to "define".  We can
---------------  all say with assurance, that to some degree, in any
                basic sense of the word, we are all
                participants and members of Virutal Culture.
                The essence of Virtual Culture lies in the
                notion of cyberspace.  In this context I might
                define cyberspace as that frontier defined by
                electronic communications towhich georaphy has
                little or no relevance to being a member of the
                group.  If you regularly use a phone, modem,
                fax, or networked computer terminal,
                videophone, or interactive video, consider
                yourself part of virtual culture.

    Technology is a key aspect of tomorrow's reality.  Technology
    seemingly provides the basis of all constructs we produce.
    Virtual culture, then, is a giant leap forward for humankind in
    terms of the way we approach ourselves as individuals, and the
    nature of how we approach individuals in groups.  Basic
    sociological structures will eventually be realigned to conform
    to this key evolutionary step as technology continues to
    increase exponentially, thus forever expanding the limits of
    virtual culture and therefore potential of all cultures.
    Non-communicative technological forces will be mentioned
    briefly throughout this writing, but the most interesting
    applications of technology increasingly revolve around aspects
    of communication.

Psychedelic Culture - Arguably begun in the 60's, this subculture
-------------------   revolves around the use and effects of
                    psycho-active drugs, particularly
                    psychedelics like LSD, to mainfest new
                    ideas, new ways of thinking, new ways
                    of approaching reality and
                    consciousness.

    One of the mysteries of modern day society is the nature of the
    mind and consciousness.  Psychedelic culture is vital in
    exploring these areas.  These areas in turn are vital to our
    understanding of who and what we are as humans and the basic
    philosophical questions homan have asked for centuries.
    Recently, psychedelic culture has bubble-morphed with virtual
    culture as seen in the potential exploration of the
    technoligcal advancements of virtual reality as a means of
    "opening the doors of perception".  Here-and-now extrapolations
    are evident in the use of "mind machines" as well as the
    resurgance of 60's guru Timothy Leary as a spokesperson for
    virtual reality.  And need we mention the unbelievable
    explosive return of LSD acros the US and other parts of the
    world.

Rave Culture - If you don't know what raves are, I will attempt to
------------   explain it, though with a parallel that will disturb
             many ravers (myself included in the group of ravers
             disturbed by the anology).  Aforementioned
             psychedelic culture reached a "peak" with the
             community of Woodstock.  Think of rave culture as
             woodstock in the 90's, though wih obvious notable
             advancements and progressions:  smaller and more
             specific communities allow for more woodstock-esque
             events to occur more often and produce a higher
             deree of community, the music reflects technology --
             techno music is the mainstay - music that may often
             range between 0 and 160bpm that is almost entirely
             created on computers and modern audio technology and
             is an evolutionary mutation of disco music
             generally, and finally, raves are often times
             associated with psychedelic culture in a general
             desire to create one's own reality or be part of
             some sort of *gestalt-consciencous* event.  And,
             most importantly, the idea of raves is to have
             fun!!!  We most not overlook outlets of communal
             entertainment in futureculture.  At raves, the vibe
             is generally happy and easy to catch, the people
             generally fun, the music is cutting edge, and, if
             you want, you can further entertain yourself with
             nootropic or other psycho-active substances.

    Basically, raves are the entertainment aspect of the evolving
    futureculture as it stands now.  Undoubtedly raves will
    eventually morph into something else, as this particular side
    of culture rises and falls quickly in proportion with people's
    day to day lives.  Raves, as mentioned before, are deeply
    intertwined with technology as well as some aspects of
    psychedelic culture, thus their inclusion in futureculture.

Cyberculture - This is a difficult culture to explain as it is still
------------   in its infancy, thus it is still comprised of
             aspects of the varying other subcultures.  I will
             do my best to set it apart from other subcultures.

             Cyberculture is a here-and-now reality that grew
             out of the science fiction movement of "cyberpunk".
             Look at the word "cyberpunk" -- broken down you
             have "cyber" and "punk" which roughly translates to
             people using technology and information in ways
             that deviate from the expected norms and mores and
             laws of society.

             Hackers are part of cyberculture.  I will draw more
             criticism by defining a hacker as a "cyberpunk" --
             as previously stated, one who uses information and
             technology in ways that go against the grain of
             norm society.

             Let me put to rest an ageold debate that persists
             among aspiring futureculturists, he said while
             slowly walking backwards to the bomb shelter.
             Hackers originated in the 60s, and basically did
             they same things hackers do now, unly possibly with
             less of a violent nature attached.  Somewhere along
             the line, those hackers gave up their
             antiauthoritarian ideals and merged into mainstream
             society, though they still wanted to be called
             "hackers" because they can program a computer in
             nifty ways.  Modern-day hackers came along, the
             WarGames generation, and the connection between
             illegality (antiauthoritarianism rather) and
             hackers resurfaced.  Old hackers got pissed, and
             have done their best to dissociate themselves from
             the genreally-accepted term of modern day hacking.
             This is most clearly seen in their attempt to
             seperate "hackers" from "crackers" which I won't go
             into because old hackers don't realise that
             cracking is still hacking in the original true
             sense -- it does take skill and requires privied
             information.

             Hackers nowadays, post-Wargames hackers at least,
             have as their motto "information wants to be free"
             and thus that is their goal in hacking or, more
             appropriately, being a cyberpunk.

             Cyberculture, at its roots, appropriates (samples)
             heavily from other subcultures.  This could be
             easily guessed because of the inclusion of the
             prefix "cyber", referring to information.  In this
             context I would like to see usage of the term
             cyberculture return back to its roots -- the idea
             of an information culture.  That is, a culture
             where information is an important commodity, if not
             the most vital commodity.  Information is an
             important commodity in modern global culture, as
             witnessed by the power and popularity and
             prominence of CNN and Mtv in our society.  When
             people talk about an information society, they are
             actually talking about cyberculture, and they are
             actually talking about a soon-to-be historical
             shift in society that is currently in it's infancy.
             Contributions to this shift will be seen in the
             wake of the ISDN (Integrated Services Digital
             Network) and other such technologies as they become
             more readily available and approachable to the
             mainstream.

             We might say then, that cyberpunks (hackers, not
             just computer hackers either) provide the deviant
             portion of an existing cyberculture.  Cyberculture
             should *NOT* be confused with technoculture, new edge,
             or futureculture, all of which will be put in the
             proper context later.

    As I have said, cyberculture is in its infancy.  We really
    *don't* live in an information society, because economics, not
    infomics or infonomics if you will, is the underlying thread
    that holds our society together.  However, this may be
    beginning to change, as witness in our reliance on economic
    credit systems (your credit is just information, which can be
    hacked) as well as on a political scale the intertwining of
    political, media, and international-conglomerate businesses as
    the definite powerhouses.  At the turn of the century, it was
    basically just political forces.  Post-WW-II, as postindustrial
    society developed, it became politics + business which
    continues to this day, but now media (information power) is a
    substantial force in the global power game.

    Rudy Rucker, prominent writer and scientist, is credited with
    the outstanding motto of cyberculture as a whole -- "How fast
    are you?  How dense?"  The phrase should be examined in the
    context of information processing, individuals dealing wth a
    world that is transforming and morphing from economics-based to
    infonomics-based.

Industrial Culture - This is a misnomre, actually, since we
------------------   realistically live in a postindustrial
                   society.  At any rate, industrial culture is
                   most noted for a musical movement.
                   Industrial music is highly technological,
                   though it has a definite rebellious spirit
                   that can easily be likened o the punk
                   movement of the late 70's.  Thus, industrial
                   musicians could easily be considered
                   cyberpunks, and sometimes are.

                   Industrial culture also consists of other
                   types of performance art other than music.
                   One notable inclusion is Survival Research
                   Laboratories, which builds robots, and
                   usually does strange things with them like
                   putting it inside a rabbit carcus and having
                   the rabbit carcuss walk around and fall into
                   an acid bath.  Again, very cyberpunk.

                   These postmodern industrialists are easily
                   seen as a byproduct of postindustrial
                   ziabatsus arising out of the sleek, slick,
                   greed-filled 80s and their never-ceasing
                   propagation, as seen in the motivations of an
                   indivudal like Michael Milken or a zaibatsu
                   like Sony.

    Again, technology is prominent in this subculture and by now
    you are probably beginning to see the extent of the overlap
    that occurs among these subcultures.  The further you go, the
    more indescribable as individual entities they become, thus the
    need for a meta-subculture or meta-culture that encompasses the
    important attributes.  From here on out, then, the focus will
    shift to smaller or more humanities-oriented topics.

PostModernism - Postmodern art and philosophy arises out of the
-------------   here-and-now state of our world as it has evolved
              and changed, using WW-II as a reference point to
              seperate modernism and postmodernism.  In the
              postmodern world, technology is prominent (tv,
              radio, computer).  Information is important (se
              cybcerculture).  Ideas are easily constructed and
              deconstructed.  Communication is more readily
              accessible and is an artform in itself, witness
              the popularity of appropriation (sampling) as seen
              in industrial and hip-hop culture as well as the
              works of writer Kathy Acker.  Politically,
              postmodernism acceps the reality of a
              postindustrial world moving towards an
              information-based world.

    Postmodernism is a tricky subject, and a parallel between
    mentioning postmodernism can be drawn to the use of the word
    "shaman" in psychedelic culture - overused, often misinformed,
    often appropriated without true understanding.  Postmodernism
    has been around for some time now and stands on its own, thus
    it is difficult to incorporate it in this context. We must at
    least, however, acknowledge the fact that the threads of
    postmodernism reality provide the basis for the evolving
    futureculture, technoculture, and cyberculture.

Street Culture - Primarily Afro-Centric because of the racism and
--------------   general inequality that exists in America
               (specifically), the motto of street culture is
               given to us by William Gibson:  "the street
               finds uses for itself".  Thus, Street Culture can
               often be considered D.I.Y. (Do It Yourself) culture.
               Hip-Hop (Rap) music is a prime example of this.
               Kids create singles in their basement (which is
               also the case with rave music and industrial
               music) and then market it themselves, or, better
               yet, market *themselves*.  Street fashion is
               equally D.I.Y. -- small, sometimes local labels
               that use postmodernism elements like
               appropriation, also a key elemnt in street music.
               For example, as I write this I am wearing a shirt
               by a group called 26 Red.  On the back, the shirt
               has a picture of Charlie Tuna with the words
               "Human Safe".  This is copywright infringement,
               but it is also appropriation and a realization of
               the realities of pop culture and not being afraid
               to apply them.  Graffiti is street culture art,
               as well.

    Street Culture is a product of a key shift in our postmodern
    world, which could best be stated as a movement towards
    individualization and specialization, hence the importance of
    D.I.Y. aspects in futureculture.  You can't wait for someone to
    produce something to appease you, appease yourself instead.
    Create your own art, your own clothes, your own music, your own
    reality, your own manifesto, whatever.....Action is a *vital*
    element in all of this.

Fringe Science - The idea of hyperreality is very important in this
--------------   conglomeration of cultures.  Hyperreality might
               best be explained by looking at the realities of
               the world that brought Rudy Rucker to make the
               aforementioned statement "how fast are you?  how
               dense?"  Our world is now moving very fast, and
               is very dense.  There is so much out there, that
               people have come up with new ways of looking at
               Why Things Are (tm) -- new explanations for new
               realities.  Cellular automata, chaos theory,
               singularity, maybe even quantum theory.  Time,
               space, dimensions, reality, consciousness, life,
               cybernetics, intellignece, artificial life,
               subatomic realities, genetic mutations -- these
               are a few of the fringe scientist's avorite
               things.

    A lot of Fringe Science is an outgrowth of people involved to
    some degree with psychedelic culture.  That aspect, combined
    with the fact that fringe science is "fringe" makes it less
    valid to some minds.  However, these scientists are the
    post-Einstiens and should be loked at in that perspective.

    Technology is readily being accepted as a foundation of
humankind, and that belief continues to gain prominence in a world
technology increases exponentially.  Witness the idea of an
information society -- that could not occur in a world where
technology and the desire to Make Something New (tm) plays second
fiddle.  Technology in our world is rapidly surging us upward, to a
point where we are not even knowing What's Going On (tm).  Witness
the out-and-out FEAR of people accepting the TRUTH that is outlined
in this writing, witness the fear of computers, the fear of hackers,
the fear of evolution, the fear of genetic engineering...  Those of
us who are out there now LIVING this reality that's supposed to be
for the *future* have one thing in common - a DESIRE to explore the
unknown, to alter our realities, to alter ourselves and our lives,
and to alter our real lives ourselves.  Simply said, we are morphing.
Constantly.  On an individual, cultural, and global societal level.
Constantly.  On a multitude of levels.  Constantly.

    We live in a world full of infinite potential.  Reality is what
we make it.  This may sound like I'm speaking a small fringe special
interest grop, but that is not the case.  I am speaking to every
living individual human being, especially those privelaged enough to
live in a postmodern postindustrial world filled with art and
technology, money and information, pop culture and subcultures.

    The future is now.  That phrase is overused a lot, but in this
context I mean that our visions of the future, what we have written
about, fantasized about, our hopes and dreams of what will be -- the
seed of those realities exists NOW.

    In the linear flow of history, we found ourselves at an
important nexus in which linear seems much too confining when we live
in a technoculture that seems poised to greet an exponential model of
time with open arms.  Here-and-now and tomorrow we are creating New
forums of communication, New philosophical schools, New art, New
politics, New technologies, New realities.

    In comprehending and dealing with these New realities, it is
important that we reshape our mindstyles NOW to adjust to constant an
consistent fast and dense change.  It is no longer enough to say
"change is the only constant".

    We must try and keep as open a mind as possible:  keep all
doors of perception open, prejudices of *any* sort will not meld (and
I don't mean prejudices only in the physical sense, of course -- I
mean in the mindstyle sense, the "faith" sense, the action sense,
etc.).  An open mind, open to all ideas, all experiences, all people,
all communications, allows for a completely new transreal way of
looking at ourselves, our world, our realities.  In that transreal
mindstyle we should constantly look and redefine ourselves and our
world if it is necessary.  For example, we, as a technoculture, need
to transcribe *everything* we can via some means, whether it be via
computer netowkr, video or audio tape, pencil, etc.  Everything from
the most individual moments to the most important global occurances.
It's not enough that we have I-Witness videos and America's Funniest
People and then CNN.  Everything that's important and meaningful to
you and your life, record it in some fashion or another.  This
recording allows you not only to better future generations by way of
sharing the past, but it allows you the potential of looking at
yourself in different lights, different angles (both literally and
figuratively depending on the means of recording).

    We should continue to develop the means and resources to
further the specialization and individualization of interactive
technologies and interactive communication forums.  Basically, this
is just the idea that the more say each individual has in their
reality, the better.  It ultimately promotes democracy and stronger
communities.  For example, presidential candidate Ross Perot
mentioned "Electronic Town Halls", the Internet is a prime example of
specialization and individualization and interactivity, and more
specialized newspapers and magazines, etc., are also a good idea.

    Relative to a previously mentioned idea, we need to be more
open to change on every level, not only within our own personal
lives, but in small groups, subcultures, and societies.  We need to
be able to deal with the exponential growth of communications in the
world, and to do that we are being forced to change a lot of
deeply-set ideals about the nature of communities, organizations,
etc.  For example, dealing with this change might include saying
"Hey, we live in a system of representative government created 300
years ago when travel was difficult and communication very slow.
Fairly soon we'll live in a world where everyone has some means of
interactive electronic communication in their home, whether it be
telephone or interactive-television or computer-network.  On the
basis of travel and communication, therefor, is representative
government still a necessity?".  On a more realisitc level, we must
own up to the fact that in a constantly changing envionment,
tradition for the sake of tradiition is futile and luaghable.  If the
tradition does not serve well the current environment and has no
purpose, it should quickly be thrown out and changed.  This idea
operates on every level, from dealing wih the national deficit, to
how you arrange your desk at work, to the nature of power structures
that govern the masses.

    These are not radical ideas, they are just an acknowledgment of
necessary changes in how we live our day to day lives, how we operate
on every level, from the individual all the way to the individual
planet.

--

   [email protected]                FutureCulture:  In/f0rmation
   [email protected]                [email protected]

________________________________________________________________________
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The SURFPUNK Technical Journal is a dangerous multinational hacker zine
originating near BARRNET in the fashionable western arm of the northern
California matrix.  Quantum Californians appear in one of two states,
spin surf or spin punk.  Undetected, we are both, or might be neither.
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                    ----- Transcript of session follows -----
                 451 net hang reading from ti.com: Connection timed
                                    out during greeting wait with ti.com
                 421 lig.net: Host NIC.CERF.NET is down, will keep trying
                                    for 3 days
                 421 Host tsoft.net not found for mailer ddn.
                 421 cunixa.cc.columbia.edu: Host cunixa.cc.columbia.edu
                                    is down, will keep trying for 3 days
                 421 tune.cs.columbia.edu: Host cs.columbia.edu is down,
                                    will keep trying for 2 days, 23 hours
                 421 mathcs.sewanee.edu: Host mathcs.sewanee.edu is down,
                                    will keep trying for 2 days, 23 hours
                 421 raven.ukc.ac.uk: Connection refused by raven.ukc.ac.uk,
                                    will keep trying for 2 days, 23 hours