Law in the Internet Society

View   r19  >  r18  >  r17  >  r16  >  r15  >  r14  ...
ShayBanerjeeFirstEssay 19 - 13 Oct 2015 - Main.ShayBanerjee
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"

ShayBanerjeeFirstEssay 18 - 08 Oct 2015 - Main.LizzieOShea
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
Line: 94 to 94
 To be blunt, I simply do not believe that starving children half a world away are engaging in the same sort of intellectual endeavors that we are under the shadow of the ivory tower. Being only one generation removed from those children, I believe they are hungry and want us to help get them food. Until I see evidence of the former, I would rather structure our learning environment on the latter. I'm sorry if that demand comes off as impatient or cynical. But, as a racial minority, I have been lectured enough by those in power about what my freedom looks like to approach this whole thing with a certain degree of skepticism.

-- ShayBanerjee - 07 Oct 2015

Added:
>
>

Okay, perhaps so I understand this better - how would you design the curriculum? Genuine question.

-- LizzieOShea - 08 Oct 2015

 
 
<--/commentPlugin-->
\ No newline at end of file

ShayBanerjeeFirstEssay 17 - 07 Oct 2015 - Main.ShayBanerjee
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
Line: 91 to 91
 If there are impoverished children in India expressing their ingenuity and curiosity through computers and in ultimate pursuit of socioeconomic change, perhaps those stories should be told instead of discussed in the abstract. That would actually convince me about the merits of the free software movement. Until then, all I am hearing about in these readings and lectures are a group of society's most privileged individuals who so love their privilege they decided to give it a name: "Revolution."
Changed:
<
<
To be blunt, I simply do not believe that starving children half a world away are engaging in the same sort of intellectual endeavors that we are under the shadow of the ivory tower. I believe those children are hungry and want us to help get them food. Until I see evidence of the former, I would rather structure our learning environment on the latter. I'm sorry if that demand comes off as impatient or cynical. But, as a racial minority, I have been lectured enough by those in power about what my freedom looks like to approach this whole thing with a certain degree of skepticism.
>
>
To be blunt, I simply do not believe that starving children half a world away are engaging in the same sort of intellectual endeavors that we are under the shadow of the ivory tower. Being only one generation removed from those children, I believe they are hungry and want us to help get them food. Until I see evidence of the former, I would rather structure our learning environment on the latter. I'm sorry if that demand comes off as impatient or cynical. But, as a racial minority, I have been lectured enough by those in power about what my freedom looks like to approach this whole thing with a certain degree of skepticism.
 -- ShayBanerjee - 07 Oct 2015
 
<--/commentPlugin-->

ShayBanerjeeFirstEssay 16 - 07 Oct 2015 - Main.ShayBanerjee
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
Line: 85 to 85
 None of this is to disagree with your perspective as such. Just a thought.

-- GreggBadichek - 07 Oct 2015

Added:
>
>

Gregg, thank you for your perspective, but I think you also might be de-politicizing. Your comment reads as if we have not been told that our freedom is linked to the free software movement, as if we have not been fed an insular body of literature, as if we have not been told that tending to human brains achieves more than tending to human bodies, as if it has not been implied that Mark Zuckerberg is a greater threat than, say, Agribusiness or Big Oil. In other words, you write as if there are no power relations governing the makeup of this curriculum.

If there are impoverished children in India expressing their ingenuity and curiosity through computers and in ultimate pursuit of socioeconomic change, perhaps those stories should be told instead of discussed in the abstract. That would actually convince me about the merits of the free software movement. Until then, all I am hearing about in these readings and lectures are a group of society's most privileged individuals who so love their privilege they decided to give it a name: "Revolution."

To be blunt, I simply do not believe that starving children half a world away are engaging in the same sort of intellectual endeavors that we are under the shadow of the ivory tower. I believe those children are hungry and want us to help get them food. Until I see evidence of the former, I would rather structure our learning environment on the latter. I'm sorry if that demand comes off as impatient or cynical. But, as a racial minority, I have been lectured enough by those in power about what my freedom looks like to approach this whole thing with a certain degree of skepticism.

-- ShayBanerjee - 07 Oct 2015

 
 
<--/commentPlugin-->
\ No newline at end of file

ShayBanerjeeFirstEssay 15 - 07 Oct 2015 - Main.ShayBanerjee
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"

Revision 19r19 - 13 Oct 2015 - 15:35:27 - ShayBanerjee
Revision 18r18 - 08 Oct 2015 - 03:00:42 - LizzieOShea
Revision 17r17 - 07 Oct 2015 - 17:35:56 - ShayBanerjee
Revision 16r16 - 07 Oct 2015 - 16:25:02 - ShayBanerjee
Revision 15r15 - 07 Oct 2015 - 14:44:18 - ShayBanerjee
Revision 14r14 - 07 Oct 2015 - 04:33:53 - GreggBadichek
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM