Society, Science, ReligionDecember 21, 2005 12:10 am GMT

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United States District Court judge John E. Jones delivered a ruling against the teaching of the theory of intelligent design in American schools today, stating that the inclusion of these teachings in public schools violates the constitutional principle of the separation of church and state. What is your position on this issue? This is a weblog search feed for bloggers who are discussing evolution and intelligent design. [FEED]

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Pharyngula
“The Discovery Institute has responded to the Kitzmiller decision, hurling out a thunderbolt of a press release. What else would they do?

“The Dover decision is an attempt by an activist federal judge to stop the spread of a scientific idea and even to prevent criticism of Darwinian evolution through government-imposed censorship rather than open debate, and it won’t work,” said Dr. John West, Associate Director of the Center for Science and Culture at Discovery Institute, the nation’s leading think tank researching the scientific theory known as intelligent design.

Their criticism has two predictable prongs: it was an activist judge, and this is censorship. Both objections have already been preempted by Judge Jones.

He was not an “activist judge”, but was responding to reckless activism by “ill-informed” creationist activists. Judge Jones, by the way, was appointed by GW Bush.

Those who disagree with our holding will likely mark it as the product of an activist judge. If so, they will have erred as this is manifestly not an activist Court. Rather, this case came to us as the result of the activism of an ill-informed faction on a school board, aided by a national public interest law firm eager to find a constitutional test case on ID, who in combination drove the Board to adopt an imprudent and ultimately unconstitutional policy. The breathtaking inanity of the Board’s decision is evident when considered against the factual backdrop which has now been fully revealed through this trial. The students, parents, and teachers of the Dover Area School District deserved better than to be dragged into this legal maelstrom, with its resulting utter waste of monetary and personal resources.

It was also not censorship. The judge goes out of his way to say that the creationists should be free to continue to study their ideas…they are just so poorly formed and without foundation that they do not meet the standards required to justify teaching it in a public school.

With that said, we do not question that many of the leading advocates of ID have bona fide and deeply held beliefs which drive their scholarly endeavors. Nor do we controvert that ID should continue to be studied, debated, and discussed. As stated, our conclusion today is that it is unconstitutional to teach ID as an alternative to evolution in a public school science classroom.

The DI is going to have to go shopping for a new schtick. “Intelligent Design” has just been rubbished in the courts. Can we expect “Sudden Appearance Theory” to suddenly become fashionable?”

Pandagon: Creationists get spanked
“In midst of everything, a small victory for the forces of reason and law against a tide of fundamentalism–a Dover, PA judge has ruled that teaching religion in the science classroom and thinking you can get away with it by calling it something else, in this case “Intelligent Design”, is unconstitutional. As you can imagine, PZ Myers is stoked. The judge is a hero today for those of us aligned against the avalanche of bullshit the religious right heaps out on a daily basis–he refuses to play along with the notion that teaching religion and calling it science makes it science.

What really makes my heart do the pitter-patter dance it does when someone gets into a righteous fury while defending the truth against horseshit is this part of the decision where Judge Jones calls out the supposedly moral troops for their non-stop lying.

The citizens of the Dover area were poorly served by the members of the Board who voted for the ID Policy. It is ironic that several of these individuals, who so staunchly and proudly touted their religious convictions in public, would time and again lie to cover their tracks and disguise the real purpose behind the ID Policy.

With that said, we do not question that many of the leading advocates of ID have bona fide and deeply held beliefs which drive their scholarly endeavors. Nor do we controvert that ID should continue to be studied, debated, and discussed. As stated, our conclusion today is that it is unconstitutional to teach ID as an alternative to evolution in a public school science classroom.

Cue your favorite team’s fight song. Reading this decision, I’m struck again by what I’ve stated before about how the actual religious beliefs of the religious right are so easily tossed aside if it furthers their cause of trying to further their theocratic goals. In this case, we have a series of board members who lied about their intentions in official capacities as board members and of course when they pushed their case in court. That, I do believe, is a sin that is specifically forbidden by the 10 Commandments. Unless of course someone snuck in and replaced the commandment against bearing false witness with one saying, “Thou shalt try to sneak your religion into the classroom, even if it’s a violation of the law.”"

Evolution - Intelligent Design Deja Vu
‘Intelligent Design’ Deja Vu: “School boards across the country are facing pressure to teach ‘intelligent design’ in science classes, but what would such courses look like? Thankfully, we need not tax our imaginations. All we have to do is look inside some 19th-century textbooks.”

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Internet Technology, BooksDecember 20, 2005 12:00 am GMT

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Now you can ‘read’ while you work, drive, exercise, whatever! You’re never too busy to have a good book by your side when it’s loaded into your favorite mp3 player. iTunes produces a feed of its Top 10 featured audiobooks. Just in time for the holidays. [FEED]

Recent Releases

The Google Story: Inside the Hottest Business, Media, and Technology Success of Our Time (Unabridged) - David A. Vise and Mark Malseed

The Camel Club (Unabridged) - David Baldacci

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln (Abridged Nonfiction) - Doris Kearns Goodwin

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MoviesDecember 16, 2005 4:10 pm GMT

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Peter Jackson’s remake of King Kong was released in theatres this week to rave reviews. Here is a weblog search feed to hear what bloggers have to say about the movie.

Recent Comments in the Blogosphere

Matt Paprocki on Breaking Windows 2.0

Impossibly beating all odds, destroying every bad memory about the 1976 remake, and setting a new standard for creature features, King Kong is a remarkable film. It’s intense, brutal, and draining on every emotion. You’re actually tired after leaving the cinema. Peter Jackson’s remake is a $207 million gift for every Kong fan in the world, and except for a few ugly spots, it’s hard to imagine a better way to resurrect one of cinema’s all time greats.

Things move fast for a movie clocking in at over 180 minutes. There are numerous extended sequences on the boat as Carl Denham (Jack Black) takes a crew to Skull Island for his final shot at fame. The benefit to this is character development, establishing real relationships that play a huge role when the title character finally runs onto the screen. Time goes by quickly, and the countless little nods to the original (including an early RKO/Merian C. Cooper reference) will bring a smile to anyone who appreciates the 1933 version.

Jackson’s direction follows a straight path that doesn’t stray far in pacing. Once the initial set up is taken care of, there’s hardly a scene in the movie that doesn’t feature Kong or one of his island co-inhabitants, just like the ‘33 Kong. If you felt the opening exposition was dull, you’ll forget that those dialogue scenes were even included once the sure-to-be-nominated special effects from WETA take over.

Whiggles.com

I wonder if the fact that Peter Jackson released extended editions of The Lord of the Rings trilogy has worked against King Kong at the box office. After all, why would people want to go to the cinema to see what is essentially a work in progress that will probably be superceded by the eventual extended DVD release? Personally I think that The Lord of the Rings has set a really bad precedent where the version released in cinema is essentially nothing more than an over-long trailer for a superior version.

Insanedeano on Dreaming the Nightmares Fade

Kong. Kong good. Kong too long. Kong well acted. Kong well scripted. Kong too long. Kong well CGed. Kong too long.

It about sums the film up, in a really damned cheesy manner. The film, while well captured felt like it was dragging. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t mind long films, unless they start to drag their feet as though “no, I don’t want to finish yet”. While I enjoy the idea of King Kong, the plot is not exactly complicated. Ape falls in love with human female. Ape chases human female. Ape has fights with various things, each getting more and more difficult and closer to killing him.

Why the hell did that take 3 hours to tell? While scenes were generally brilliant, it took far too long to reach them. Everything seemed far too drawn out for its own good. At least to me. It felt painful to sit and watch. I did not get this with Lord of the Rings. I get the impression that it was a case of “it’s Peter Jackson, we want him to make a long film again”.

Other Resources

Rotten Tomatoes - collection of critics’ reviews of the movie

The UnMuseum - The Making of the Original King Kong

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Health, SocietyDecember 1, 2005 8:03 am GMT

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Keywords: “face transplant”
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French surgeons successfully completed the first transplantation of human facial tissue from a deceased patient to a 38-year old woman who had previously sustained facial injuries as a result of a dog attack. What are the ethical implications of the use of such a procedure? Is this the beginning of a slippery slope to a new kind of cosmetic surgery? The blogosphere is heating up on the topic. This is a weblog search feed to follow the conversation. [FEED]

Recent Comments in the Blogosphere

Horatio on Dodecahedron: An Online Magazine

“I’m not making the claim that French medicine is any better than ours (nor would I refute such a claim), but seeing as French doctors, in France, just performed the world’s first face transplant (!), what’s clear to me is that innovation is still part of the gameplan. Anti-GHCFAA* advocates are constantly rolling out that old “innovation will suffer” canard, insisting that socialized medicine will result in a catastrophic slowdown in the pace of research and invention. Well, if that’s true, why didn’t we perform the first ever face transplant? Why weren’t we, Land Of Innovation, surfing down the front end of that learning curve?”

Allan Bellows on Damn Interesting

This operation was the first of its kind in the world, and if the patient’s body doesn’t reject the skin, she will not look like she used to look, nor will she look like her donor, but somewhere in between. Hopefully she will also regain her ability to speak and eat properly, which she has been unable to do since the attack. But because skin is so prone to rejection, she will have to take high levels of immunosupressants for long periods of time, perhaps for the rest of her life. These drugs increase the risk of disease and cancer.

Mr. Wales on A Long Way from Anywhere

Weird…I guess she got mauled by a dog and is getting a person who is brain deads face. I can understand the ethical dilemma involved in that. But, like any other transplant, there is the chance that her body will reject it. Hmmm what do you do when your body doesn’t like your face…Do they take if off and leave with ???.

Other Resources

Wikipedia article on Face Transplantation

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Society, ReligionNovember 30, 2005 3:47 am GMT

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Keywords: “homosexuality”
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There are a wide range of views on homosexuality among modern religions, spanning the spectrum of acceptance and permission of same-sex unions to those that forbid homosexuality as a sin punishable by death. The Vatican released an 8-page document today that outlines the Catholic Church’s current belief that homosexuals, or those with “deep-seated homosexual tendencies” should be barred from the priesthood. In response to the news, a great deal of debate over homosexuality and religion has emerged in the blogosphere. This is a weblog search feed to follow the conversation. [FEED]

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Andrew Sullivan on The Daily Dish

Well, it’s great that Will sees the radicalism of Benedict’s new rule with respect to homosexuality. In the past, the gay individual who remained chaste could attain Christian perfection, his orientation was not in itself sinful, gay men and women were worthy of respect and made in the image of God. Under Benedict, homosexuality itself is morally disordered; even chaste homosexuals are a threat to “priestly life”; homosexuals, whatever they do, are threats to society and the Church; the great gay priests of the past, including Mychal Judge or Henri Nouwen, have “no social value.” This is not about hating sin and loving the sinner any more; it’s about hating a segment of humankind, segregating them out for moral censure, and banishing them from moral discourse. It’s about taking the fundamental message of the Gospels and inverting it.

DL Foster on Perspectives in Motion

I too applaud the Pope for securing and defining the position of the church on homosexuality. When it comes to people who are fraudulently representing the church and by extension Christ, they should be given clear directives on how to correct that. The Vatican has taken this a redemptive step forward by recommending that homosexual identified priests overcome their homosexuality before entering the priesthood.
According to the AP report, “The Instruction said men “who practice homosexuality, present deep-seated homosexual tendencies or support the so-called `gay culture’” cannot be admitted to seminaries. The only exception would be for those with a “transitory problem” that had been overcome for at least three years.”

Homosexual clergy, hidden or otherwise, in any denomination which eschews homosexuality, are a threat to that church’s spiritual well being. Those who “come out” in protest are doing the church a favor. I pray that they come out and resign.

Reverend Robert Buchanan on Gay Christian Comments

Theologians and critics appear to be in an uproar about the Vatican’s recent ban on gay priests. The concerns range from the difficulty of defining some of the conclave’s verbiage, to calling it a “witch hunt” blaming gays for the pedophilia problem in the Roman Catholic Church.

I don’t find it surprising that the Vatican is prejudiced against gays. Neither do I find it surprising that they refuse to admit that homosexuality and pedophilia are two different issues. The position of this Pope is no different from those of the recent past. The Roman Church has been anti-gay since Saint Thomas Aquinas first defined homosexuality as sin.

I am not offended by the Vatican’s document or their desire to “cleanse” the church of gay priests. It is their right to believe what they want and to support that belief, as ignorant as it is, within their own church. That is why there are multiple religions and many branches of Christianity. There is enough room in Christ for a great diversity of views. There always has been and, whether others like it or not, there always will be.

I find something else far more disturbing and offensive than the Roman Church’s position. I am repulsed and offended that anyone would support such an ignorant and archaic organization as to want to be a priest when one is gay. The Roman Catholic Church persecutes and spreads hatred of sexual minorities. How can someone who is a part of the minority group support those who persecute their own minority group? It is absurd.

Other Resources

Religion and sexual orientation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Internet Technology, Technology, SoftwareNovember 29, 2005 2:35 pm GMT

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TipMonkies

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TipMonkies is a great resource for computing tips, tricks, and hacks for Linux, Mac, and Windows platforms. The site offers a host of categories:

  • Ask a Monkey
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Have a computing question? Ask a Monkey and they’ll post a reply. The site is relatively new (started in April 2005) and has maintained an extensive and regular publishing schedule over the last several months. You can follow the TipMonkies using this [FEED].

About TipMonkies

TipMonkies covers various aspects of technology, from software, hardware, services, hacks, etc. and attempts to bring these topics to the reader in a way that anyone can understand covering tools which you may not know even existed! Part blog, part education database, part tech, all life…TipMonkies aims to make computer use easier and more productive. -About TipMonkies

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Movies, MusicNovember 22, 2005 8:34 pm GMT

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“Walk The Line”, a new film about the life and times of Johnny Cash (starring Joaquin Phoenix) has hit the theatres. The number of blog posts about the film have steadily increased over the last week with the topic currently representing approximately 0.11% of all messages in the blogosphere. This feed is a weblog search feed for blogs that are discussing the film right now.

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fisticuffs on Toadsoup

I also went and saw Walk the Line, also a movie over two hours long. It followed in the footsteps of Ray!, showing Johnny Cash’s childhood, his brother die, and his ascent into music. Apparently the reason he wears black is because he couldn’t find anything else to wear, and the reason he sings like that is because his band can’t play any faster. Anyway, it shows Johnny on the road with June Carter, Elvis, and Jerry Lee Lewis, that takes up most of the movie. Of course there is a point where he is addicted to pills, but he kicks that, with the help of June. This was a fantastic movie. I would say that if Philip Seymour Hoffman wasn’t going to get best actor this year then it would have to be given to Joaquin Phoenix. It really is a tough break for him. Reese Witherspoon did a great job as well, I think she will at least get nominated. Whatever, go see the movie. A lot of it was made here in Memphis, TN. If you like music and/or Johnny Cash, excellent movie.

Nik on Spatula Forum

Johnny Cash’s epic American life was made for a movie, and “Walk The Line” delivers, thanks to remarkable performances from Joaquin Phoenix as Johnny Cash and Reese Witherspoon as his future wife, June Carter.

It’s mostly a rousing joy, although director James Mangold bogs down a little too much in the drug abuse and darkness of Cash’s life. The potent romantic chemistry and soaring music performances give “Walk The Line” its real kick.

The musical numbers crackle with an electric tension, particularly when Phoenix and Witherspoon duet. Believe it or not, these two actually sang every note themselves. Phoenix really manages to evoke the spirit of Cash’s deep drawling majesty, echoing Cash without just imitating him. It’s a smart move — merely lip-synching Cash’s tunes would not have had the same weight onscreen.

Eric on Fire Ant Gazette

When Joaquin Phoenix first introduces himself on stage in Walk the Line, he’s not convincing. But before the movie’s over — well before the end — you’ve hopelessly sold out to the illusion that he is, indeed, Johnny Cash. And there’s never any doubt, from the first shot, that Reese Witherspoon is June Carter.

Remember how Jamie Foxx became Ray Charles last year in Ray? Walk the Line raises the bar considerably in terms of actors and actresses stepping into the skin and souls of real people (I understand that Philip Seymour Hoffman does the same thing in Capote). It’s one thing to adopt the speech patterns and physical mannerisms of another person, but it’s quite something else when you are able to perform like them, especially when you’re not a trained musician. Much has been hyped about how Phoenix and Witherspoon did their own singing and playing in the movie; I’m here to tell you that it ain’t hype if it’s true.

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NewsNovember 21, 2005 3:01 am GMT

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Keywords: “Al-Zarqawi”
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Rumors have circulated once again that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi may have been killed in an attack by United States military forces. In related news, the Islamic militant’s family denounced the recent bombings in Jordan that were claimed by al-Zarqawi’s group Al Qaeda in Iraq and effectively disowned him.

“We announce, and all the people are our witnesses, that we - the sons of the al-Khalayleh tribe - are innocent of him and all that emanates from him, whether action, assertion or decision.”

The statement effectively declared open season on Zarqawi, saying that anyone who carried out acts of terrorism in the kingdom would not be protected. -The Guardian 11/21/2005

This feed is a weblog search feed for the current discussion on al-Zarqawi.

Al-Zarqawi [FEED]

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Dwight Meredith on Wampum

Wiping out the Zarqawi terrorist threat before the war was Not Useful to the goal of starting the war. As a result, the administration passed on several chances to eliminate the threat and hundreds and hundreds of people have since died at the hands of Zarqawi and his minions. Let’s hope that the current rumors are true and that the threat is finally eliminated. After all, Mr. Bush got his war and he no longer has reason to think that wiping out a terrorist threat is Not Useful.

Evan Kohlmann on Counterterrorism Blog

Other, highly dubious reports have also surfaced in the media today suggesting that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi may have been himself killed in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul during a U.S. military raid on a suspected Al-Qaida hideout. Needless to say, such “tips” are often posted on fringe Arabic-language message forums on the Internet and are subsequently picked up by overeager news agencies — but ultimately, most prove to be nothing more than unfounded rumor. Certainly, Al-Qaida doesn’t seem to have been at all fazed by the reported Mosul raid. Not only has Al-Qaida issued nearly twenty new communiques in the last twenty four hours, but it also claimed credit for additional insurgent attacks on U.S. forces in Mosul. Apparently, the raid that “might have killed” Zarqawi did not even succeed in decapitating Al-Qaida’s military command structure in the Mosul area. This Zarqawi report ultimately will be proven or disproven by the only sure way possible: forensic evidence collected on scene. But, at least for the moment–given what we do know–it seems fair to classify Zarqawi’s would-be passing as extremely unlikely.

Andy Aplikowski on Residual Forces

…Keep in mind we’ve heard this kind of thing before.
Back in March 2004 he was allegedly dead then too.

One can only hope he now realizes there are not really 72 virgins greeting him right now, BUT we cannot be sure.

Ron Beasley on Middle Earth Journal

The subject of the Corn post is if Zarqawi is dead (again) will it help Bush or make any difference in Iraq? He quotes an email from Larry Johnson who says that al-Queda is a minor part of the problem in Iraq now and that the real problem is the strife between the Shias and the Sunnis. (Go read the entire thing for the details.) The most Bush might get is a temporary uptick in the polls but that would dissolve when things didn’t improve. In addition he would no longer have Zarqaqwi to blame everything on.

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GadgetsNovember 20, 2005 2:25 am GMT

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Keywords: “XBox 360″
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Tuesday marks the release of Microsoft’s widely anticipated XBox 360 in the U.S. Will the system be able to attract gamers away from the Sony Playstation? Hear what bloggers have to say about the XBox 360 with this weblog search feed.

XBox 360 Search [FEED]

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Wikipedia feed of all available XBox 360 games [FEED]

Justin Nolan on 360Insider

We have heard praises about Halo 2 backwards compatibility on Xbox 360, but what about the rest of the supported titles in the long list? The Mortal Kombat fanatics over at the TRMK forums tried out Mortal Kombat: Deceptions, one of the supported games, and the results are not good.

Patrick McCarron reports, “the fight scenes are emulated fairly poor. The game camera keeps getting blocked by polygons that pop over the action constantly. The character I was playing with would get some polygons stretching out past the camera view. It would only get worse the next round, because as I find some stages are worse than others. The game started to slows down and redrawns polygons across the camera surface. Totally making the game unplayable. A positive note is while the screen was clear the details on the characters and surrounding stage really stand out, their rendering quality looks really great in High Definition 1080i. It was a welcome surprise, that should look amazing once the bugs are all fixed.”

Mazrim on Gamer Andy: Zero Hour

Caesar, one of the Microsoft staffers, took us around the front lines, and into the building. The camera battery practically ran dry during the filming of the epic duel between Caesar and Andy on the spectacular battleground of Dead or Alive 4. Seriously - the game is beautiful! Andy’s button mashing skills eventually prevailed, and he emerged victorious - much to the surprise of the Geek Speak Radio crew, who had been recording snide comments in preparation for his crushing defeat…

Henning on PS3Blog

I went by my local Best Buy today to pick up an RF splitter and check out the Xbox 360. I’ve never seen an Xbox 360 in real life, I don’t know what I was waiting for. I was in for a treat.

I played Call of Duty 2 and it was great. The detail was amazing. The textures were great, the HD was wonderful. I literally saw the allure of next-gen systems…

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Weblogs, Photos and Images, ArtNovember 19, 2005 4:09 pm GMT

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Ephemera

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San Fransisco photographer Derek Powazek has a fantastic portfolio of photos on his weblog, Ephemera.

Biosketch: Derek Powazek graduated from the University of Santa Cruz with a BA in PhotoJournalism in 1995. He’s the recipient of a Silver Award from the Society of News Design and has been shooting since his dad gave him a 126 camera for his birthday when he was a kid.

Here are a some of the shots from his collection:

Photo by Derek Powazek, ephemera.orgPhoto by Derek Powazek, ephemera.orgPhoto by Derek Powazek, ephemera.org

Photo by Derek Powazek, ephemera.orgPhoto by Derek Powazek, ephemera.orgPhoto by Derek Powazek, ephemera.org

Ephemera [FEED]

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