Welcome to my Online Home!

Welcome to the personal web home of Mike Dolan Fliss of the triangle area in North Carolina, US, where I share stories about the practices of social justice change making, aikido, Zen Buddhism, and Getting Things Done.

It's also the online professional home of Aiki-Doing Consulting... providing social justice friendly tech consulting and web design (for nonprofits, small business and groups), individual PC and organizing support, and young adult time/to-do coaching.


Saturday, April 26, 2008

Line rider - to create in an invisible world....

It's a funny thing how people like to produce art/meaning/excel at....well, almost anything. It's kinda beautiful, actually...though I'd add to that it'd be great to get everyone with what they need to have the leisure time to produce art as they wish. Ending explotation and oppression, let alone providing life basics, are always connected with art I see. Art is obviously produced in that space, but I dunno if I'd say I'm glad suffering exists so all this cool art is produced.

But on the subject of fun, and of fun art, and of seemingly "meaningless but beautiful" things...watch some line rider. :-)


http://www.youtube.com/v/SASjlj5R4U4&hl=en

http://www.youtube.com/v/UYoX47qpoAc&hl=en

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amazing, amazing independent games

Oh my gosh, how beautiful is this? May the most beautifully simple art take over the world.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QsTqspnvAaI

(if you wanna play some, go here for a non-deluxe version. just lines, squares and rectangles and circles, but still wonderful)
http://www.pixelrage.org/downloads/Crayon-Physics-Deluxe-3246.html

Check it out, this guy releases a new game a week. A WEEK.

here's another funny one:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4X4foelQJk
http://www.kloonigames.com/blog/games/tafb

also check out world of goo for similarly beautiful stuff.
http://www.2dboy.com/games.php

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Friday, April 25, 2008

I'm happy with my (just-finished) last paper of this semester: wanna see?

Yeah, ok, I'm done. My last paper of the semester, and I'm pleased with it. A touch rambly, but that's a-ok with me. It's an analysis of a project I'm a part of to potentially create some kind of local community-based school for liberation/anti-oppression training and practice in Durham using tools from macro social work which is kinda like community organizing.

I'm particularly happy to have incorporated at least a minor discussion of how measuring program cost-benefit analysis against dollars has big dangers and advocated some crazy stuff, like translating all costs (financial, emotional, etc.) into environmental acreage needed to sustain it and personal life energy expenditures. And then there's the talk about abundance vs. scarcity models. Got some of my favorite new references in there two, including a few movies. Cool.

Anyway, for those interested, feel free to check it out.

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

Brokennesses of our system. Did clerical errors enable Eve Carson's death?

insane.

We live in a truly broken world. There's so much in this posting that are unspeakable. I'll name just two things from this story posted on a UNC Masters in Social Work discussion group for a Macro / systems class. You may want to scroll down and read the story first.

First, it shows the impossibleness of creating a system to track our broken system. That is, some way to keep track of the injustice represented by huge numbers of people, particularly black men, in prison - without changing the underlying structures, the way those fucked-up structures manifest finally in tracking people's parole cannot be adequately captured. This is good, actually - although a contributing cause to another person's death. But if it were possible, in a complete and perfect police state, to adequately process paperwork so that people can be captured and disappeared almost 100% effectively (see movie: Brazil), we wouldn't feel the pains of that system. It would be totally anethetized.

But also, on the flipside, how heartwrenching of a sentence is this:
"When Atwater appeared in court March 3 ? two days before Carson was shot to death near the UNC campus ? the date was rescheduled to March 31 because of clerical errors."

The potential meaning of this sentence is that clerical errors enabled the death of a human being. That happens, I'm sure, both when clerical errors enable someone who has/will kill to kill...but also the death of those more "obviously" in need of human services. Seniors, those with mental health struggles, ... many, many people I'm sure (and have heard, and have experienced) are impacted by underkept systems and the consequence ranges, but includes death. Just because of out of date computer systems. Why are fun technology tools available for many meaningless things, but human services which protect people sometimes from death have out of date, ineffective systems? What about our culture allows this?

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Since this was so prevalent in the news a while ago after Eve Carson's murder, I know many of you have read about this, but I wanted to post it here because of the many macro issues identified in this unfortunate story. I have copied the entire story below, which tells of oversights in the probation systems of Durham and Wake counties where the two suspects lived. I wonder about all sorts of things in the two suspects lives and the unfortunate truth that there are so many more black men in the correctional system.

-Paula, UNC MSW Discussion group


UNC Murder Suspect Was Overlooked by State
Posted: Today at 3:35 p.m.
Updated: Today at 8:26 p.m.
Raleigh, N.C. ? A suspect charged in Eve Carson's homicide was overlooked by the state's probation system and was allowed to remain out of jail for months until his arrest this week in the University of North Carolina student leader's shooting death.

"We did not provide adequate supervision. We did not do things timely," Robert L. Guy, director of the Department of Correction's Division of Community Corrections, said Friday.

Guy has launched an internal investigation to determine what policies were broken and how the oversights could have been detected. It's possible, he said, that some staff members could be fired, based upon what the investigation finds.

In February 2005, Demario James Atwater was convicted in Wake County of felony breaking and entering and larceny. A judge sentenced him to three years' probation. That included nine months of "intensive" probation, which required Atwater to be in contact with a probation officer five times a week ? at least once in person.

It wasn't until last month, on Feb. 20, that he was arrested on a probation violation from June 2007, in which he pleaded guilty in Granville County to possession of a firearm. Paperwork for that violation had been filed in November.

"Why did it take until November to issue the paperwork from June, and why did it take until February to have him actually arrested?" Guy asked.

According to court records, there was no address listed on the arrest warrant issued in November, and authorities didn't know where to find Atwater. His probation officer contacted him in February and arrested him.

Another mistake uncovered by WRAL Friday: Contrary to state probation policy, the oversight of Atwater's parole was never transferred to Durham County, where Atwater lived.

When Atwater appeared in court March 3 ? two days before Carson was shot to death near the UNC campus ? the date was rescheduled to March 31 because of clerical errors.

Atwater and his probation officer appeared in a District Court courtroom, but his file was sent to a Superior Court courtroom where the case was to be heard. When a clerk of court checked his case status in a statewide computer system, it showed the 2005 case had been disposed.

"I don't think you can point to one person and say that they were at fault," Wake County District Attorney Colon Willoughby said. "Much of this is symptomatic of the fact these were non-violent offenses."

The clerk didn't have the information she needed to understand the facts of the case, Willoughby said.

"Our system is very fragile. We don?t have a good information system, and this is a byproduct of it," he said.

Guy said probation officers must periodically search court records on their clients to see if they have violated parole

"I think everybody in the public thinks that we have these automatic red flags in the criminal justice system that when a new crime occurs ? we're automatically notified," Guy said. "Our system's not that good."

Records show about 117,000 convicts are on probation in North Carolina, meaning each of the 2,000 or so probation officers must handle 58 cases.

In 98 percent of cases where someone on probation commits a violent crime, all policies are followed, Guy said.

"In most cases, we've done our best effort, despite the tragedy, but these things do happen. I'm not trying to make light of things," Guy said. "This is a horrible tragedy."
In the case of Atwater, Guy admitted the case should never have gotten to the March 3 court appearance and that his department should have intervened sooner.

"In fairness to Mr. Willoughby and (Wake County Clerk of Superior Court Lorrin) Freeman, he should not have been in Wake County court," Guy said.

But Willoughby and Guy said it's impossible to say whether any of Atwater's criminal acts and alleged criminal acts, including Carson's death, could have been prevented with earlier intervention.

"There are a lot of opportunities along the way for something to have happened, but to be able to look back and say that any one of them would have changed the course of events, it's probably not fair for anyone involved," Willoughby said.

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