Posts tonen met het label Taco. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Taco. Alle posts tonen

woensdag 29 september 2010

SOCIAL MEDIA TABLETS RULE


Completely wireless free wifi without a wire.

zondag 16 mei 2010

BLUE LIPS


I admire my friend the artist Wim van Willegen. His sculptures of fragile leaves seem to float in space and sex you up in a casual way. Here you have a series of three lip-like leaf sculptures. 'Blue Lips'? The leaves could be very well derived from the genus Nymphaea, Lotus or Waterlily.
One of the three sculptures (wood, carved, and paint brushed to perfection) is slightly higher and provides the extra counterpoint in the composition.

donderdag 4 maart 2010

WOOD LORE

The potent healing powers of a Gingko leaf in rust speckled steel - by Wim van Willegen

The fall of a leaf is a whisper to the living
I harbor this silent but ongoing admiration for my friend the artist Wim van Willegen. His steel sculptures incorporate the cut-out silhouettes of fragile leaves captured as negatives of nature with such potent positive energy. I blogged earlier on this small but significant collection of sculptures and I do so again. His last name suggests that he is of 'the willow-family', but his work just as readily sports leaves and branches and trunks taken from the broader family of deciduous trees. Always with such a delicate attention to detail, yet with a trained eye for what makes sculpture stand out.

An elegant popular leaf like a knife standing in solid steel - by Wim van Willegen

woensdag 25 februari 2009

GONE WITH THE WIND

PUT YOUR MONEY ON THE BANK, BUT DON’T BANK ON IT!The fall of 2008: brittle bills in autumnal colours present zero value

People lost vast sums of money in what will be known as the American banking crisis of 2008, now a full blown monetary depression in the whole of the Western economy, including China. Example: a friend of mine lost 90.000,00 Euros (126.130,45 USDollars) in stocks over a period of five months. This was no wealthy juppy trader for who such a bleeding presented just a minor scratch. This friend now has no pension left whatsoever. His stocks will not go up again in tread with the ups and downs of the illusive trading market, as we are led to believe. No, his stocks are no more, they are ex-stocks, his stocks have gone to meet their maker. Vanished, gone with the wind.

Many (Dutch) pensionfunds, once considered the pillars of finance and wealthy beyond belief, are now in serious debt, not able to match the pensions of those who contributed to their expansion with a sense of trust and comfort about their future finances. Those contributors were robbed out of a secure old age. And those who did the robbing are not being held accountable. In the world of flawed accountancy the real culprits remain at large, flying business class.

European IceSave adventurers will, in the majority of the cases (the fortunate cases), only see up to 100.000,00 Euros of their lost savings refunded. A Dutch saver will receive 20.000,00 Euros from the Iceland government and 80.000,00 Euros from the Dutch government. If you were unlucky enough to have trusted this frigid bank with more than 100.000,00 Euros, it’s adios, adios my little darlings. Gone with the northern winds.

All over the Netherlands large banks are battling each other to the death over the meagre savings of the Dutch. As current interest rates are poor, many choose to cash in stocks, deplete bank accounts and go back to that traditional nest-egg in the form of a knitted sock or two filled to the rim, stacked away in impossible places.
‘Come save with me’, that merry banking tune has lost much of its appeal. The large financial institutes have major repairs to do before any sucker will do a deposit worth mentioning again.

Have a safe year. With lots of interest.

zaterdag 21 februari 2009

POT SUMMIT UNIFIES DUTCH MAYORS

The lack of a comprehensible 'back door policy' in Holland's controversial stand on the purchase of soft drugs no longer divides the majority of Dutch mayors.

Rob van Gijzel, the Mayor of Eindhoven, launched his plan to legalize cannabis supply to so called coffee shops in the Netherlands. He did so at a recent mayor’s summit in the city of Almere in the Netherlands. The ‘Weed Summit’ in Almere was organized by the local authorities association and the city of Maastricht to discuss the Netherlands’ current policy of turning a blind eye to the sale of small quantities of marijuana in licenced cafes known as coffee shops.

The 'Weed Summit' was called after borderline cities such as Roosendaal, Maastricht and Bergen op Zoom announced plans to shut all their coffee shops in the next two years to combat drugs tourism and criminal activity. They complain that the legions of French and Belgians who come every year for a puff of weed or dash of hash are often badly behaved. Worse still, they are targeted by ‘drugs runners’ who lure them away from legal outlets to back-door suppliers that offer harder, illegal drugs.

Health minister Ab Klink has stated that an experiment with licenced cannabis growers in Eindhoven would conflict with the Dutch coalition agreement but that he is prepared to look more closely at the plan and discuss it with the rest of the cabinet.
Closing down Dutch coffee shops is not a solution to drugs tourism and will not change the fact that most marijuana is supplied by criminal gangs, the mayors in their summit concluded. ‘It will only lead to more crime,’ says Maastricht mayor Gerd Leers. ‘And I do not believe that it will mean that people smoke less (pot).’

Amsterdam's mayor, Job Cohen, remains in favour of permitting the sale of soft drugs. ‘There should be a controlled system in which it is clear where soft drugs come from’, he said. Many Dutch also want the tolerant approach to remain in place, with a newspaper poll this week showing 80 per cent of Dutch opposing coffee shop closures. Experts agree that a ban is not the answer. ‘A ban is even more dangerous than the grass itself because consumers will turn to illegal circuits and criminality will explode’, said Tim Boekhout, a criminologist.

[source: NRC Handelsblad/DutchNews.nl]