I'll be looking forward to it...nice change of pace from the cocktails
they force on me here. You know in the US it's all anxiety and
depression...we have to take a step sideways from time to time.

On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 9:46 PM, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I've always been practically more successful abroad Gabbers,
> particularly Copenhagen and North.  There and in Germany there is much
> quicker focus on practical resourcing and how we might change systems
> to match what we intend to try.  Flask of the tea on its way Chris.
>
> On 24 Feb, 23:11, gabbydott <[email protected]> wrote:
>> The Danish disease, yeah. Nothing you can do about this twisted vanity
>> thing.
>>
>> On 24 Feb., 14:27, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> > The classic argument from child is in the Emperor's New Clothes -
>> > though we sit as adults nodding like donkeys when he is declared naked
>> > without recognising 'we' are the idiot adults of the story.  South
>> > Park does a lot of sociology as 'out of the mouths of babes'.
>>
>> > My child was impressed by the opening of a B movie vampire saga.  The
>> > opening is a memoir of an old vampire fighter, writing-up as they are
>> > about to do for him.  Another child was impressed by the guy hanging
>> > on to life in a pulp Western, one bullet left, Indians swarming.  He
>> > hangs on long enough to discharge his last bullet in order to warn the
>> > oncoming stagecoach.  Existential heroes a-go-go.  I don't approve of
>> > Indian-slaying or the myths that hide its reality, but do believe the
>> > Undead are amongst us (as metaphor).
>>
>> > Over the years it has regularly seemed to me that one emerges from
>> > organisational interventions only with a memoir about the Undead to
>> > write - something that might just help in a more rational future, or
>> > with the one-bullet warning.  The old joke is about it being no use
>> > draining the swamp when one is up to one's arse in alligators, yet the
>> > reality is that the alligators would have been no problem in the first
>> > place if we had taken account of them in their own terms.  The classic
>> > statement in systems analysis is that you are doing it for the first
>> > time when you first see the world through the eyes of another.  The
>> > ghastly truth is that this view will not be very nice, likely a flying
>> > mess of projections.
> >
>

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