Contact
Want to ask a question, email, join the mailing list, or compain about my attitude –> contact form
Readers who viewed this page, also viewed:
- Powered by Where did they go from here?
Profile cancel
Translate
Tumblfree

Paul Belford - http://grainedit.com/2013/05/20/paul-belford/

TV Sculptures by Zhang Xiangxi - http://designyoutrust.com/2013/05/tv-sculptures-by-zhang-xiangxi
The three types of specialists needed to make great change
From a passage of Kurt Vonnegut’s Bluebeard, the three types of specialists needed for the success of any revolution.
Slazinger claims to have learned from history that most people cannot open their minds to new ideas unless a mind-opening teams with a peculiar membership goes to work on them. Otherwise, life will go on exactly as before, no matter how painful, unrealistic, unjust, ludicrous, or downright dumb that life may be.
The team must consist of three sorts of specialists, he says. Otherwise the revolution, whether in politics or the arts or the sciences or whatever, is sure to fail.
The rarest of these specialists, he says, is an authentic genius — a person capable of having seemingly good ideas not in in general circulation. “A genius working alone,” he says, “is invariably ignored as a lunatic.”
The second sort of specialist is a lot easier to find: a highly intelligent citizen in good standing in his or her community, who understands and admires the fresh ideas of the genius, and who testifies that the genius is far from mad. “A person like this working alone,” says Slazinger, “can only yearn loud for changes, but fail to say what their shapes should be.”
The third sort of specialist is a person who can explain everything, no matter how complicated, to the satisfaction of most people, no matter how stupid or pigheaded they may be. “He will say almost anything in order to be interesting and exciting,” says Slazinger. “Working alone, depending solely on his own shallow ideas, he would be regarded as being as full of shit as a Christmas turkey.”
Slazinger, high as a kite, says that every successful revolution, including Abstract Expressionism, the one I took part in, had that cast of characters at the top — Pollock being the genius in our case, Lenin being the one in Russia’s, Christ being the one in Christianity’s.
He says that if you can’t get a cast like that together, you can forget changing anything in a great big way.
Flickr Photos

More PhotosCategories
- animation (2)
- architecture (2)
- art (96)
- basketball (26)
- California Transition (1)
- computers (54)
- design (38)
- dogs (11)
- flash (15)
- fonts (1)
- for sale (22)
- games (22)
- goodandevil (9)
- icons (29)
- milkcrates (8)
- Mixtape (6)
- movies & video (18)
- music (10)
- personal (85)
- photo (2)
- skateboarding (24)
- SPACE1026 (8)
- teaching (2)
- student work (1)
- travel (6)
- wallpaper (1)
- work (3)
- zines (13)
Archives
- September 2012 (2)
- January 2012 (1)
- August 2011 (4)
- February 2011 (1)
- December 2010 (1)
- September 2010 (1)
- July 2010 (2)
- June 2010 (1)
- May 2010 (3)
- April 2010 (4)
- March 2010 (3)
- February 2010 (6)
- January 2010 (3)
- December 2009 (1)
- November 2009 (1)
- October 2009 (3)
- September 2009 (1)
- August 2009 (5)
- July 2009 (4)
- May 2009 (6)
- March 2009 (2)
- February 2009 (3)
- January 2009 (3)
- December 2008 (5)
- October 2008 (2)
- September 2008 (2)
- July 2008 (1)
- June 2008 (1)
- May 2008 (1)
- March 2008 (1)
- February 2008 (2)
- January 2008 (3)
- December 2007 (1)
- November 2007 (2)
- October 2007 (2)
- September 2007 (5)
- August 2007 (3)
- July 2007 (5)
- June 2007 (6)
- May 2007 (9)
- April 2007 (6)
- March 2007 (2)
- January 2007 (3)
- December 2006 (3)
- November 2006 (4)
- October 2006 (5)
- September 2006 (3)
- August 2006 (11)
- July 2006 (3)
- June 2006 (1)
- May 2006 (5)
- April 2006 (7)
- March 2006 (4)
- February 2006 (1)
- January 2006 (2)
- December 2005 (1)
- November 2005 (1)
- June 2005 (1)
- April 2005 (1)
- March 2005 (1)
- December 2004 (2)
- October 2004 (1)
- August 2004 (1)
- July 2004 (1)
- May 2004 (1)
- April 2004 (2)
- February 2004 (1)
- December 2003 (3)
- October 2003 (1)
- September 2003 (2)
- July 2003 (2)
- June 2003 (1)
- May 2003 (3)
- February 2003 (2)
- December 2002 (1)
- November 2002 (1)
- October 2001 (1)
- September 2001 (1)
- August 2000 (2)






Hey… so I saw this really cool thing and thought of you… it was an ottoman made from a milkcrate! The milkcrate was flipped over so the open side faced down, and on each corner, there was a reall fance wood, well, foot, I don’t know what they are called, but you know what I mean… and on the top of the milkcrate was a velvet pillow. I wish I had a picture for you, but it was really awesome. Pretty swanky for a milk crate footstool!
OK… i gots a big meeting soon. Later. Jess