Michael Tobis, editor-in-chief of Planet3.0 and site cofounder, has always been interested in the interface between science and public policy. He holds a doctorate from the University of Wisconsin - Madison in Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences where he developed a 3-D ocean model on a custom computing platform. He has been involved in sustainability conversations on the internet since 1992, has been a web software developer since 2000, and has been posting sustainability articles on the web since 2007.
Lennon was a highly flawed individual. But his ideas and how he expressed them opened many eyes and changed the world. Why do people insist on focusing on the individual? It's like focusing on Al Gore. Imagine a world in which ideas stood on their merit rather than popularity contests and judgements of individuals associated with those ideas.
Vinny I don't suppose you could find it in yourself to wait a day while those of us who miss him, for all his flaws, remember him fondly on the 30th anniversary of his murder?
See? The piano was doubtless made of mahogany, the extraction of which not only but also bla bla.Stepping away from a literal take on the film's imagery: in real life, Lennon was a hypocrite. An angry, wealthy, woo-merchant who banged on about peace and the desirability of being poor.
More troll-bait! Shame on you!('Imagine no possessions', says the millionaire as he saunters into his enormous mansion – his draughty single-glazed enormous mansion, to boot.)
Lennon was a highly flawed individual. But his ideas and how he expressed them opened many eyes and changed the world. Why do people insist on focusing on the individual? It's like focusing on Al Gore. Imagine a world in which ideas stood on their merit rather than popularity contests and judgements of individuals associated with those ideas.
Yes, I can. Sorry.I didn't know this was all about an anniversary. I thought it was just…Later.
Vinny I don't suppose you could find it in yourself to wait a day while those of us who miss him, for all his flaws, remember him fondly on the 30th anniversary of his murder?
See? The piano was doubtless made of mahogany, the extraction of which not only but also bla bla.Stepping away from a literal take on the film's imagery: in real life, Lennon was a hypocrite. An angry, wealthy, woo-merchant who banged on about peace and the desirability of being poor.
Well, the mansion in the video was in fact empty of possessions, except for the piano…
Er, the one in the film?
Actually, a Manhattan coop is about the least damaging lifestyle a famous person can reasonably manage.What mansion are you talking about?
More troll-bait! Shame on you!('Imagine no possessions', says the millionaire as he saunters into his enormous mansion – his draughty single-glazed enormous mansion, to boot.)