I’m playing a live version tonight, even though the quality may not be as good as the remastered studio version, because the studio recording just didn’t do anything for me. The thing about the Beatles is that half the fun is watching them perform!
Depending on how you reckon it, the “American century” has already ended, is now drawing to its close, or has some life left in it yet. But whatever its boundaries, that ambiguous period has been culturally defined by one medium above all: film, or more broadly speaking, motion pictures. These very words might start a series of clips rolling in your mind, a highlight reel of industrial developments, political speeches, protest marches, sports victories, NASA missions, and foreign wars. But that represents just a tiny fraction of America on film, much more of which you can easily discover with a visit to the Prelinger Archives.
Rick Prelinger founded the Prelinger Archives in 1982 with the mission of preserving “ephemeral films.” According to the program of a 2002 series he introduced at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive a couple of decades later, these are “typically educational, industrial, or amateur films,” often made to serve a “pragmatic and narrow purpose. It is only by chance that many of them survive.”
Do we build bridges or walls? I suppose it depends on your planned end result. Human connection works as a bridge, bringing together people built on pillars of education, compassion, understanding, and strength. Disconnection is like demolishing a bridge that can destroy such unity or make people retreat.
When I heard about the huge cargo ship that struck Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge last week, I, along with so many people watched in horror as that bridge which became an artery that this city relied on for nearly 50 years, folded into the Patapsco River like popsicle sticks. An unthinkable tragedy occurred within a few seconds, that took 5 years to build.
The wise build bridges, not walls. There is a cascade of disconnection when we turn our heads and backs to people who may look different from us, but are souls who can unify, uplift, support, and empower. Where there is intentional disconnection and rejection it can be terrifying, toxic, tragic, destructive, and quite polarizing.
BRIDGE BUILDERS
Unsung heroes who diligently build bridges visions of growth, cultural development, and spiritual excellence connections that guide us on an exodus from chains of separation and bondage knowing such structures built by warriors strengthen our understanding of ourselves introducing us to a new land of emancipation where others we never met, join us on future expeditions, exploring the unknown as new conversations of understanding are exchanged about where we come from who others are and the direction where we are headed those bridge builders erecting structures support mechanisms to take us further as we embark on the new, the learned, the untapped and pass the torch of wise lessons to light the pathway before us, and lead those who follow.
Simon & Garfunkel in 1970, released the song, Bridge Over Troubled Water. There was something quite solemn yet so painfully spiritual when I first heard this song. It made me think about how we reach out to people in their time of need, and to be of service when people are suffering. We see such evidence when bridges have been compromised in times of disaster, especially when people are displaced and feel afraid of the unknown.
So even though the Francis Scott Key Bridge came down when it was compromised by the collision that the cargo ship created, people are coming together to build this bridge back. The hole gaping over the Patapsco River is a void that leaves us bewildered but also mobilizes the human spirit. It is mindboggling how one bridge affects the lives of thousands of people and their livelihoods. Yet, such a disaster makes us focus on the immediate future, to devise a plan to build back better and build back in unity. There is no measuring in what we think, but in what we do, together. Be the pathway to build bridges that unite, and not walls that lead to devastating polarization.
River’s in the US don’t function like they used to, resulting in degraded wetlands and increased wildfire risk. This short video explains what’s happened and how to reverse the damage.
Bem Vindos a este espaço onde compartilhamos um pouco da realidade do Japão à todos aqueles que desejam visitar ou morar no Japão. Aqui neste espaço, mostramos a realidade do Japão e dos imigrantes. O nosso compromisso é com a realidade. Fique por dentro do noticiário dos principais jornais japoneses, tutoriais de Faça você mesmo no Japão e acompanhe a Série Histórias de Imigrantes no Japão. Esperamos que goste de nossos conteúdos, deixe seu like, seu comentário, compartilhe e nos ajudar você e à outras pessoas. Grande abraço, gratidão e volte sempre!
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