Kamis, 20 Oktober 2011
Cara Memasang Meta Tag Keyword Dan Deskripsi
Melanjutkan postingan artikel belajar Blogspot Pemula kami akan lanjutkan pada tahap Memasang Meta Tag pada Blogspot.
Sebenarnya kami belum begitu mengerti tentang SEO namun kami akan mencoba memberikan tips dan trik sedikit tentang SEO friendly yaitu cara memasang Meta Tags pada blogspot.
Mungkin tips ini sudah banyak Blogger yang menulisnya sebagai optimasi search engine atau SEO
Rabu, 19 Oktober 2011
The New 7 Wonders of Nature Mari Kita Vote Pulau Komodo
Mari kita dukung Pulau yang berada di Provinsi Nusa Tenggara Timur ini yang akan menjadi wakil Negara Indonesia di 7 keajaiban Dunia. Karena Persaingan yang sangat ketat dengan dengan Para nominator dari negara lain yang tak kalah hebat nya kita sebagai Warga negara Indonesia Mari Turut Memberi Dukungan.
Pulau Komodo yang menjadi akan menjadi wakil kita di 7 keajaiban Dunia. Pulau yang
Minggu, 16 Oktober 2011
Occupy: Imagine Power to the People
Politics for Joe
October 17, 2011
By: Hubert O’Hearn
For: Lake Superior News
Occupy Part 4: Imagine Power to the People
When I was directing live theatre, which I did for the better part of a decade after swearing off politics (and believe me, there was a fair bit of swearing involved), what I would wait for is the ‘Aha! Moment’. You could see it physically happen to an actor. It was in their eyes, their body, and their voice. Suddenly the play and the character stopped being objective things that were being learnt by rote and embodied by a series of repeated moves and vocal inflections. Instead, the experience burst into the subjective. A life was being explored on-stage. If you could bottle that electric charge, that moment, you’d make billions.
I had my Aha! Moment regarding the Occupy Movement in the wee small hours last night. A friend of mine, Tammy Lee Marche, a professional communications consultant based out of London Ontario, attended the Occupy Toronto event on October 15. Tammy’s an all-around good egg who has dedicated her business, BullMarket Consulting Limited, to building community consensus that will advance the cause of the disadvantaged: unemployed youth, Aboriginals, and Women’s Health in particular. Anyway, Tammy wrote a short blog entry on her website (http://tammyleemarche.com/) explaining why she marched in the Occupy Toronto protest. I invite you to read it. Trust me, it won’t take long. I quote the second paragraph:
I believe that over the last 15 years, a consciousness evolution has taken place very rapidly on earth, and as a result, we are in the midst of a consciousness revolution, a revolution that no longer depends on the mind or logic for answers to our global, national, local and individual problems. It is a movement that relies on the heart of the people and the collective heart for answers.
That and the rest of her posting changed the way I view Occupy. As should be shriekingly obvious to anyone who has been reading either this series or much of my recent newspaper work, I not only support Occupy, I want to hug it and give it a tender kiss. I now know what the Movement is, what it can be, and these remaining columns can now take on amuch more specific (and I hope helpful) focus. Curious? Read on.
What are the principal criticisms of Occupy as blathered and burped by pundits and politicians on Big Media? A list:
- Occupy has no agenda.
- Occupy is unfocused
- Occupy is leaderless
- Occupy mistrusts politics
- Occupy has no ‘go forward’ strategy
A short response to all of the above:
- Good
- Better
- Thank God
- Wouldn’t you?
- Wait for it
I had been trying to put my finger on what the Occupy Movement actually Is. Analysis by myself and others, in both Big Media and limited reach commentators has been - for want of a better word - Vulcan in nature. What are the specific demands and what are the specific policies demanded and what is the inner logic driving these events?
But these are not Vulcan events. They are human - emotional and instinctive. There is a sense that Things are Not Going Well; an impending sense of doom similar to villagers seeing the long-dormant volcano start to smoulder, or the big grey line of a Tsunamai appear on the ocean’s horizon. And what do people do when those sorts of natural disasters announce themselves? They do two things: they run like hell in the same direction, then huddle together for comfort and mutual support.
Maybe these ARE Vulcan events... |
That is the Occupy Movement. That is why it seems so spontaneous. That is why it has spread so quickly across cities, nations and continents.
The world is either broken or is breaking. Its peoples have seen the reports and have felt the personal effects of climate change, a financial system kept together with chewing gum and bailing wire, famine in a time of great wealth, the depletion of easily available carbon energy, health care systems that cover the wealthy but not the poor, unemployment, under-employment, the trampling of organized labour, outsourcing of jobs, and the dominance of money in democratic politics. That’s just a start.
Samuel Johnson said of the guillotine, ‘It concentrates the mind wonderfully.’ One can think of little else when the moment comes than the guillotine, volcano or tidal wave. The only exceptional quality of the guillotine is that executions happen one at a time (although give Texas half a chance...) whereas natural disasters or the world disaster just described happen to lots and lots of people at once.
And thank heavens for it. This has created the run like hell/huddle together response in all these parks, streets and civic squares.
Now here’s the nut, the Aha! Moment.
It’s not about reform.
It’s not about tweaking, modifying or legislating. Incremental change has been tried, abandoned, and tried again; yet the world remains broken. It becomes that classic definition if insanity: doing the same thing over and over while expecting a different result.
Instead, Occupy is about form, not reform.
It is about instinct, not logic.
It is about - yes- Imagine.
The collective memory of John Lennon’s solo work is dominated by Imagine. Rightly so, I guess. It is a beautiful song that calms the soul and releases the mind into dreams of what could be. I suggest to you that the ‘B side’ for October 2011 should be another of Lennon’s solo songs - his rabble rousing ‘Power to the People’. See
This is why Occupy sometimes seems amoeba-like and formless. It is the world’s biggest focus group that has come together (another good Lennon song) to imagine the world it would like to see.
What should an ideal banking system look like?
Where should energy in the future come from?
What do we want our lives to feel like?
I said to a friend the other day, half in jest, that the 1% or as I prefer to term it, The Power should just offer all the Occupiers a huge tract of land like Madagascar and let us just go about our business of creating a nation that would be sustainable and address needs before wants. A new and secular Israel, is you will. Now that still wouldn’t work, because climate change in particular knows no national boundaries. Instead, the job of the Occupiers is to create a new world. From scratch. From heart. From love. From feelings and all those messy human emotions.
Just imagine power to the people. Power to the people? Right on.
Be seeing you.
Sabtu, 15 Oktober 2011
Cara Daftar Situs Ke Bing Webmaster Centre
Melanjutkan Postingan Artikel terdahulu kali ini kita melanjutkan Cara Mendaftar Situs Ke Bing Webmaster Centre. Bing Webmaster Centre merupakan salah satu layanan layaknya seperti Google Webmaster Tools ataupun Yahoo! Site EXplorer.
Fasilitas ini dapat digunakan oleh para pemilik
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terkait website yang telah
Occupy: Hot Chicks and The Empire Strikes Back
Politics for Joe
October 15, 2011
By: Hubert O’Hearn
For: Lake Superior News
Equally to my delight and relief, the Occupy Movement is no longer operating within a Cone of Silence. A quick Google search of ‘Occupy Together’, the catch-all name for the activities associated with the activism emerging from the original Occupy Wall Street, sprang out a pretty impressive 209,000,000 results. Indeed, it is now worldwide. A quick list of countries and/or cities with Occupations either on-going or planned:
United States of America (50+ cities)
Canada (Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Thunder Bay)
New Zealand (Wellington, Christchurch)
Germany (Frankfurt)
Italy (Rome, Milan)
Spain (Madrid, Barcelona)
South Korea (Seoul)
Australia (Sydney, Melbourne)
… and on and on
And yes, a news result on Google peaked my curiousity. Searching ‘hot chicks of Occupy Wall Street’ displays (good grief!) 29,800,000 results!
However, just to put life in perspective: ‘hot chicks of the Tea Party’ also yields 21,600,000 results; although ‘hot chicks of the Republican Party’ only coughs up a relatively paltry 1,810,000. And just to finish this off - the Democrats have even less - 1,660,000. So the obvious lesson for males with lecherous intent is avoid your precinct caucus and grab a tent instead.
You're supposed to be looking at THE SIGN! |
The point of all this (besides undoubtedly popping this column to the top of SEO searches) is that Occupy is now creating its own weather. It has momentum, growth and the single most important factor for a social movement: coolness. It’s new, it’s hot, and now it’s sexy.
Now that can be both a strength and a weakness. People who wander out to an Occupy event just to ‘see what all the shouting’s about’ yield numbers, which is good; and a lack of true believer commitment, which can be very bad. For the first time I worry about violent acts. Random thugs who sneak into an Occupation hoping to do a smash-and-grab under cover of a large crowd are now a real possibility. They are the same thugs who do the same thing when a big city team wins a major sports championship. So, I worry.
The greater worry though is what the Power, the 1% will do in response. Clearly the suffocation response has not worked. Big Media has been hauled out to cover the events. Any remaining credibility would be lost if the Occupation was ignored. Furthermore, the sniffy dismissals of, ‘they have no agenda’ have been dealt with and have turned into a boomerang. People are now bringing more agenda items: student debt, renewable energy, labour rights, etc. etc. I don’t think I’m exaggerating one bit when I say that the entire field of public policy has been put into play - it’s not just bringing back Glass-Steagall (the American banking regulations Act that has been dismantled over the past 30 years) any more.
So what has been offered up in response is...Herman Cain? It’s not that Cain has a snowball’s chance of being either President or even the Republican Presidential nominee. I’m on the record as saying if Cain is the Republican nominee, I will jump out of a cake, slowly strip to the sounds of Peggy Lee’s ‘Fever’ and stick a burning sparkler between my butt cheeks - all of this at your worst enemy’s next birthday party. Trust me, you wouldn’t wish that on your friends.
But Cain is a distraction. ‘Hey! Look over here! Black guy with EZ tax plans!’ And Big Media have turned their heads in his direction.
His 9-9-9 plan is an idiot’s dream. A 9% flat tax on individual income, 9% on corporate income and a 9% sales tax. Oh please spare me. Lowering corporate taxes to 9% while raising the price of toilet paper 9% is an Idiot’s Guide to Economic Idiots.
The second response in the U.S. has been the 53% movement. Supposedly 47% of the people in the U.S. pay no income tax. This is supposed to enrage the middle class. It well should, but not for the reasons the 53% founders want. There are over 46 million people in the U.S. living in poverty. That makes a pretty good chunk of that 47%. Once again, a possible boomerang effect.
Two more parts to come in this series. Next time out, we start to look at the next step - how to build on this momentum and create real change.
Be seeing you.
Kamis, 13 Oktober 2011
Cara Memasang Google Translate di Blogspot
Cara memasang google translate pada blogspot, sedikit tentang google translate : Fungsi dari gadget ini adalah untuk menterjemahkan bahasa blog kita dengan berbagai bahasa yang ada di dunia.
Karena pengunjung blog/website tidak hanya dari lokal saja tapi juga berasal dari berbagai negara, jika kita memasang gadget translate di blog kita maka akan memudahkan para pengunjung yang kita harapkan
Rabu, 12 Oktober 2011
The Occupy Movement Part Two: The Armies of the Day
Politics for Joe:
The Occupy Movement, Part Two
The Armies of the Day
12 October 2011
By: Hubert O’Hearn
For: Lake Superior News
I looked something up before writing this, the second of a five part series on the Occupy Movement that was the genius idea of a group of Canadians at AdBusters, came to birth on Wall Street and now is busily reproducing in parks, city squares and financial centres in the great cities of the world. Is it a revolution? Of course it is. Now before one starts imagining scenes of guerrilla warfare and screaming widows bearing slaughtered children, I remind you that Darwin’s Theory of Evolution was also a revolution and Darwin never fired a shot. So far, so peaceful, so good.
It all brings back childhood memories, of the last time thousands took to the streets and occupied buildings, city squares and the like. Not the Big Media one-time million man marches or vast prayer meetings or outdoor town halls - those are as instantaneous and instantaneously forgettable as any year’s Super Bowl. (Go ahead, name me any five plays from any individual Super Bowl. You can name one or two, but five? Exactly.) No, we’re talking about the sustained effort here - the long campaign that stretches across vast terrains of time and space, emergent from mist and ending in sunlight.
The last one of those was, dear God how time flies when we’d prefer it to walk, between 40 and 50 years ago. That long campaign was the one against the Vietnam War, which began with the distribution of the Port Huron Statement, written mostly by Tom Hayden, in New York’s Gramercy Park. (What is it with movements and New York parks anyway?) It ended with U.S. diplomats scrambling onto helicopters that landed on the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, now called Ho Chi Minh City.
That movement began as a student protest. Students had the most to lose in Vietnam, as they were right in the demographic sweet spot for drafting into the Army. All successful movements have to expand from their base and into other classes, ages and the professions. Which brings me to the piece of writing I looked up before starting this column.
Besides being one of the greatest American novelists of the 20th Century, Norman Mailer was an interesting character within his own life. He was a vain and violent soft-hearted liberal. Many of those adjectives don’t work easily together, and that’s exactly what made Mailer interesting. In 1967 and 1968, he wrote a series of pieces for Esquire magazine that were collected into The Armies of the Night. Mailer covered the protests, the demonstrations, the politics at the height of that movement. Brilliant stuff, as it would be when a great novelist turns his eyes and imagination to reporting.
Anyway, one evening Mailer was called upon to address a group preparing for a march on the Pentagon. Here is a portion of what he said and wrote. It ends with a naughty word. I apologize if either Mailer or I offend.
“We are gathered here” - shades of Lincoln in hippieland - “to make a move on Saturday to invest the Pentagon and halt and slow down its workings, and this will be at once a symbolic act and a real act” - he was roaring - “for real heads may possibly get hurt, and soldiers will be there to hold us back, and some of us may be arrested” - how, wondered the wise voice at the rear of this roaring voice, could one ever leave Washington now without going to jail? - “some blood conceivably will be shed. If I were the man in the government responsible for controlling this March, I would not know what to do.” Sonorously - “I would not wish to arrest too many or hurt anyone for fear the repercussions in the world would be too large for my bureaucrat’s heart to bear - it’s so full of shit.”
If the parallel lines aren’t obvious, the reader has no perspective. Perhaps the key phrase is, “I would not know what to do.” That seems to apply to both sides of the Occupy Movement. Big Media - by which I mean the New York Times, CNN’s ephemeral to the point of translucence Erin Burnett, and the major American and Canadian TV networks - spent the first two weeks since Occupy Wall Street began on September 17th telling readers and viewers that the Occupiers had “no agenda.” Then on October 5th, Keith Olbermann on Current TV’s Countdown read the first collective statement (http://current.com/shows/countdown/videos/special-comment-keith-reads-first-collective-statement-of-occupy-wall-street) of the Occupiers and there went that argument out the window.
I invite you to either listen to the statement or read the transcript on the Countdown site, but for those whose time is limited, here are the highlights:
1) corporations have taken self-interest over justice
2) the workplace has become corrupted through discrimination and outsourcing
3) the farming system has been undermined through monopolization
4) money has corrupted politics
5) economic policies have led to catastrophe
6) environmental cover-ups
7) the judiciary has been unduly influenced in granting corporations the same rights
as individuals
There is much more to it than that. Ultimately, if one were to breathe deep and pick one word to describe the entire statement, or indeed the movement as a whole, it would be Equality. Perhaps Balance might be better, but Equality has a nice legal ring to it. As pictures do speak a thousand words (and as I wrote that I realized I was close to a thousand words already), here is a map of the world showing economic balances country by country. Full credit to The Atlantic for putting this together:
What the map shows is what is known as the GINI coefficient. Put in layman’s terms, a country with a coefficient of .00 would have a perfect economic distribution: 80% of the people would control 80% of the economy, 10% would control 10% and so forth. The highest imbalance is .50. As you can see there are some countries whose imbalance is even greater that .50. Much like quarterback ratings it is possible to be more perfect (or imperfect in this case) than perfection. And so it is that certain African republics, including South Africa, have people with absolute no economic power whatsoever which takes them right off the charts, so to speak.
The U.S. is at a coefficient of .45, perilously close to that ultimate imbalance of .50. China, with absolutely no democracy and workers turning 12 hour shifts for tiny wages so that you, dear consumer, can get a nice deal on home furnishings, is at .415. Yes, Communist China is in better balance than the United States of America. As is Russia. As is Canada.
As is Canada? So what are we so upset about? Why are we planning to Occupy Toronto and other cities on October 15th? Our pale green splotch of a .30-.35 coefficient puts us in line with most of Western Europe, although not quite as green as Scandinavia. Two credible reasons:
1) We know a trend when we see one. Although Canadian banking regulations have defended us from the widespread debt crisis that set off the Wall Street bailouts, there is a strong perception that economically things are not going as well as they should. The Canadian Occupy movement is more to prepare for the future rather than repair the present.
2) The non-financial issues of the environment, justice and privacy are more likely to come to the forefront here. One hastens to mention that all of these do have economic impact and a huge impact at that, but the coefficient of issues is likely to parallel the GINI coefficient.
In any event, I have asked friends who will be at Occupy Toronto to report back to me on what is said and what is distributed. Because God knows I don’t trust our networks and newspapers to do it for me.
Part Three will be out in two days time. At that time I want to look at the “I do not know what to do” issue from the side of the 1%. What is the specific threat to power, and how is the 1% responding? Please send me any comments you have or questions you want answered.
Be seeing you.
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