Author: Robin Elton

  • Moral Evolution (We’re Not There Yet)

    Moral Evolution (We’re Not There Yet)

    -Some one ought to do it, but why should

     

    The full text:

    Plenty of people wish well to any good cause, but very few care to exert themselves to help it, and still fewer will risk anything in its support.

    “Some one ought to do it, but why should I?” is the ever reëchoed phrase of weak-kneed amiability.

    “Some one ought to do it, so why not I?” is the cry of some earnest servant of man, eagerly forward springing to face some perilous duty.

    Between these two sentences lie whole centuries of moral evolution.

     

    Written by social reformer, women’s rights advocate and Badass Woman of History Annie Besant, who died in 1933. The quote has been sticking in my head all week.

    It’s depressing that we’re not there yet, not even close. What’s it going to take?

     

     

  • Non Required Reading + Must See (Internet) TV

    Non Required Reading + Must See (Internet) TV

     

    Everyone in your timeline too busy living life on the weekend to keep you updated with interesting fodder to read or comment on?

    We gotchu. Here are our favorite links from the week, and the videos we couldn’t keep to ourselves.

    Non Required Reading

     

    Important breaking news: Watching cat videos is good for your health. Science, bitch.

    Here, quick, get your healthy on.

    13 Things White People Do When You Point Out Racism. I saw them all this week.

    This video gets shared every time there’s a tragedy that doesn’t make any damn sense. And it’s worth watching, every time.

    Donald Trump’s use of Neil Young song blasted by singer’s manager. You’d think that such a shrewd businessman would have checked that out and gotten written authorization prior to using the song.

    We love us some Gaga… and 90s nostalgia. “What’s Up?”

    I found this fascinating. And for the first time, I realize that I miss devouring music catalogs. Four Columbia House insiders explain the shady math behind “8 CDs for a penny.”

    There’s a #MySwimsuitStyle blog hop happening encouraging folks to post pics in bathing suits and share their links in the comments. It’s great to scroll through and see everyone looking so lovely and happy. Suit up and join in.

    Heaven is having your face chewed on by a gaggle of puppies.

    How one woman turned less than $1,000 of savings into a business that earns over $200,000 a year. Someone who has actually done what I’ve always wanted to do: take an idea and a little money and turn it into a successful business. What I always lacked was guts. Good for her!

    What would Jesus do? Watch to the end.

    For fellow word nerds: The Rabbit Hole Rabbit Hole. How Carroll literally dropping Alice down a rabbit hole morphed into its current meaning.

    Monkey see, monkey do. Jump up, jump up and get down.

    7 bizarre pairs of people you never knew were alive at the same time. Because really, who ever thought about this? I am excited to know that Charlie Chaplin and I were alive at the same time.

    The “dreams” of Google’s AI are equal parts amazing and disturbing.
     I lean a bit more towards disturbing, but the methodology is really interesting.

     

    Drop your must-share links in the comments, it gets lonely on Saturday nights.

     

     

  • Let’s Start a Revolution

    Let’s Start a Revolution

    modern day salon

    Well-behaved women seldom make history.
    -Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

     

    Hey Internet! We’re pretty sure you’re doing it wrong.

    Let’s start with a history lesson, shall we?

    Back in the day— originating in 16th century Italy and flourishing in 17th and 18th century France, if you’re interested— there used to be these things called salons. From Wikipedia:

    A salon is a gathering of people under the roof of an inspiring host, held partly to amuse one another and partly to refine the taste and increase the knowledge of the participants through conversation.

    Sometimes these salons were held in a lady’s bedroom, her close friends gathered all around as she reclined in bed. Sometimes they were held publicly in coffeehouses. History holds that women dominated salons, acting as organizers, regulators and mediators; enabling interaction and inviting debate between males and females, nobles and bourgeois, intellectuals of all minds and kinds.

    This was the age of conversation, the Age of Enlightenment. It was the era of philosophers. People used their goddamn brains, and they spoke out, and they were ready to defend and refine their beliefs and theories, and new things came out of those discussions, and lo, it was good.

    With the world wide web, we have the opportunity for another age of enlightenment and we are f*cking wasting it. We can read, discuss, engage on a global scale, in real time. Celebrities, geniuses, butt selfie enthusiasts: we’re all on equal footing on the internet. We could and should be doing great things, exchanging incredible ideas, making history every day.

    Instead, people are sharing but not reading. Commenting but not listening. Talking but not thinking. Rather than using the virtual web that connects us all to further our knowledge and expand our worldview, we’re choosing to live in echo chambers of our own making.

    The most courageous act is still to think for yourself. Aloud.
    ― Coco Chanel

    If you want to change the world, pick up your pen and write.
    – Martin Luther King, Jr.

    It’s funny to think that speaking your mind, inviting intelligent debate and quite simply being who you are with all your being has become a revolutionary way of living.

    It’s funny for a hot second until you actually think about it, and then it becomes enraging.

    No real social change has ever been brought about without a revolution… revolution is but thought carried into action.
    -Emma Goldman

    Personal transformation can and does have global effects. As we go, so goes the world, for the world is us. The revolution that will save the world is ultimately a personal one.
    -Marianne Williamson

    Welcome to our modern day salon. We haz opinions— on everything, trust us— and we’re not afraid to publish them.

    Join the conversation.

    Let’s start a revolution.

     

  • The Revolution is Coming

    Brace yourself, bitches.