New York Times Magazine manages the somewhat astounding feat of conducting a thoroughly boring interview with Bill McDonough, one of the most interesting people on the planet.
File under: dubious accomplishments 9
David Roberts is staff writer for Grist. You can follow his Twitter feed at twitter.com/drgrist.
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caniscandida Posted 4:00 am
20 May 2007
But at least for those of us who are ill-educated and had never heard of Bill McDonough, the interview brought out a few bits of not at all boring information.
Chickens are our cousins!
So are other sensitive animals!
Enough is enough!
No more factory farms!
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Delay And Deny Posted 4:10 am
20 May 2007
The lingerie ads were pretty good...that and the crossword puzzle.
The rest is a lot of gas.
John Bailo, The "Denier Guy"
You Read It Here First
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Steven T Posted 1:44 pm
20 May 2007
I'd agree with David that Bill is one of the more interesting people on the planet, but he does have similar limitations in his thinking as Amory Lovins, e.g., that sustainability is a "design" problem.
Yes and no. It is also a fundamentally political problem.
Consultants seem to be much more successful in the corporate world when they can present a schemata that clearly separates politics from design, but pushed too far this can be devil's bargain.
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GreenEngineer Posted 5:35 am
21 May 2007
GreenEngineer Posted 5:35 am
21 May 2007
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GreenEngineer Posted 5:37 am
21 May 2007
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David Roberts Posted 5:46 am
21 May 2007
grist.org
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caniscandida Posted 6:47 am
21 May 2007
One thing I learned is that the greatest male Celt who ever lived is neither James Joyce nor Tom Jones.
How this guy became "dean," or whatever, of the University of Virginia, while planning sedition and revolution, is not easy to understand ...
And by the way, on the subject of the Founding Fathers, did Benjamin Franklin really "speak Mohawk"?!
Anyway, clearly BMcD is brilliant, and remarkably entertaining. And I understand now DR's judgment of the NYTimes Mag's interview as "thoroughly boring." Seeing BMcD doing his act just confirms my feeling about Deborah Solomon's nauseating narcissism.
BMcD sure knows his way around PowerPoint, doesn't he. And I love the cute graph with "stuff" on the horizontal axis and "intelligence" on the vertical, and the arrow looping back as it rises.
But I am not sure I understand what he means by "spirit," and what he means by "relationships between spirit and matter." Obviously, he has a great respect for Native American wisdom. And his statement, early on, regarding our responsibility to "children of all species" is about as ethically enlightened as you can get. I wish he had talked more about those things.
Chickens are our cousins!
So are other sensitive animals!
Enough is enough!
No more factory farms!
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GreenEngineer Posted 8:46 am
21 May 2007
Spiritual matters are hard for designers to grapple with, and in our techno-reductionist perspective, we are often tempted to dismiss those things we we know on some level are important but cannot easily fit into our preferred framework for knowledge. McDonough is saying, basically: Don't do that.
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