The Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Pre­sent­ed cre­ative­ly …


Noam Chomsky vs. William F. Buckley, 1969

Is there such a thing as the benign use of inter­na­tion­al force? It’s a ques­tion that Noam Chom­sky and William F. Buck­ley, lead­ing thinkers from the left and right, took up in 1969. And, of course, the whole ques­tion of Viet­nam loomed in the back­ground. As you’ll see below (and in Part 2 here) the debate is remark­ably civ­il. And when Buck­ley threat­ens to punch Chom­sky in the face, it’s said much more lov­ing­ly than when he offered to do the same to Gore Vidal in 1968.

As an inter­est­ing aside, when Buck­ley died ear­li­er this year, Chom­sky revis­it­ed the 1969 debate and Buck­ley’s lega­cy and essen­tial­ly saw him look­ing a lot bet­ter than his con­ser­v­a­tive heirs — although I’m not sure that Chom­sky was real­ly pass­ing along a deeply felt com­pli­ment here.

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Paul Krugman’s Nobel Prize in Economics

Paul Krug­man is main­ly known in the States as an econ­o­mist who writes fre­quent­ly for The New York Times. Mean­while, few real­ly know much about his seri­ous aca­d­e­m­ic work. Now that’s he’s been award­ed the Nobel Prize, it’s worth giv­ing you a quick feel for it. Here’s Krug­man giv­ing you the gist in his own words (iTunes — Rss Feed — Stream).

A Brief History of the 1929 Crash

With the gyra­tions of the world mar­kets, 1929 was sud­den­ly very present last week. All too present. What real­ly went down in ’29? Below we present “The Crash of 1929,” a doc­u­men­tary that aired as part of PBS’ The Amer­i­can Expe­ri­ence Series. Part 1 appears below. You can get the remain­ing parts here: Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5.

Relat­ed Con­tent

Free Pres­i­den­tial Biogra­phies on iTunes: FDR and Beyond

 

 

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Virtual Tour of the Forbidden City

Thanks to $3 mil­lion dol­lars from IBM and three years of effort, you can now down­load a vir­tu­al tour of Chi­na’s For­bid­den City. Based on gam­ing soft­ware, the project lets you take a three dimen­sion­al tour of the impe­r­i­al palace built dur­ing the mid-Ming Dynasty, start­ing in 1406 (get more info here).

Update: This was orig­i­nal­ly post­ed in 2008. It looks like the vir­tu­al tour has been tak­en offline.

via Metafil­ter

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Morphing Van Gogh Portraits

You’ll get the con­cept of this pret­ty quick­ly. And if you’re a fan, see these oth­er clips (Women in Art & Women in Film). These cre­ative videos by Philip Scott John­son all reside in this larg­er YouTube col­lec­tion, which has now made it on to our our grow­ing list: Intel­li­gent Life at YouTube: 80 Edu­ca­tion­al Video Col­lec­tions.

 

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President Tours U.S To Survey Damage Caused By His Presidency

Yeah, okay, I am get­ting off track here with this com­ic bit from The Onion, veer­ing from cul­ture to pol­i­tics. Sor­ry for the detour. I will get back on track tomor­row. Real­ly, I will…

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Saturday Night Live on AIG’s Bottomless Chutzpah

It did­n’t take long for cor­po­rate Amer­i­ca to start brazen­ly shaft­ing the Amer­i­can tax­pay­er again. Just days after the gov­ern­ment spent $85 bil­lion bail­ing out AIG, the com­pa­ny shelled out $440,000 to send its execs to a South­ern Cal­i­for­nia resort. There a good $23,000 was spent on well-deserved spa treat­ments.

The cor­rup­tion has reached points where you just have to laugh (did you know that AIG’s CEO also gets a $5 mil­lion per­for­mance bonus?), and that’s what Sat­ur­day Night Live helps you do. Watch the video below and fast for­ward to the last two and a half min­utes.

PS In the com­ments, one of our read­ers has offered a defense of AIG. Your thoughts? 

 

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Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.