We are a Society of Friends. We are not completely on our own. As Quakers say, we are 'bound unto God and unto each other'. We are all together in our experience of the Inner Light. We are all friends.
George Peck in Friends Journal, 1969

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We are a Society of Friends. We are not completely on our own. As Quakers say, we are 'bound unto God and unto each other'. We are all together in our experience of the Inner Light. We are all friends.
George Peck in Friends Journal, 1969
Affiche OK Vancouver OK début Octobre 2015
It's a special day today. I get to introduce to you something that I, and the people that make up some of my all-time favorite blogs, have been working on. And that is PORTALS.
PORTALS is the ultimate collaborative effort between sixteen blogs. Our hope is not to pander to the expectations of what we should be, but to stand as a safe-house for the music and art that represent the age we live and breath in. Click through to start getting to know PORTALS, and download or stream our first mixtape full of so much good, you'll want to do something about it.
PORTALS on: facebook / twitter / 8tracks
Family involved:
AWD Castles
Cactus Mouth
Cool Things I Find
Dead As Digital
Decoder
East to West
Flashlight Tag
Friends With Both Arms
Life Aquatic
Magic Teepee
Pasta Primavera
Smoke Don't Smoke
Speaker Snacks
Unholy Rhythms
Verb/Re/Verb
Zen Tapes
Making Things in America
by Paul Krugman
Some years ago, one of my neighbors, an émigré Russian engineer, offered an observation about his adopted country. “America seems very rich,” he said, “but I never see anyone actually making anything.”
That was a bit unfair, but not completely — and as time went by it became increasingly accurate. By the middle years of the last decade, I used to joke that Americans made a living by selling each other houses, which they paid for with money borrowed from China. Manufacturing, once America’s greatest strength, seemed to be in terminal decline.
But that may be changing. Manufacturing is one of the bright spots of a generally disappointing recovery, and there are signs — preliminary, but hopeful, nonetheless — that a sustained comeback may be under way.
And there’s something else you should know: If right-wing critics of efforts to rescue the economy had gotten their way, this comeback wouldn’t be happening.
The story so far: In the 1990s, U.S. manufacturing employment was more or less steady. After 2000, however, it entered a steep decline. The 2001 recession hit industry hard, while the bubble-fueled expansion of the decade’s middle years — an expansion marked by a huge rise in the trade deficit — left manufacturing behind. By December 2007, there were 3.5 million fewer U.S. manufacturing workers than there had been in 2000; millions more jobs disappeared in the slump that followed.
Only a handful of these lost jobs have come back, so far. But, as I said, there are indications of a turnaround.
... Read the full article here.