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Monthly Archives: January 2026

Thought for Today: Have we all become “cloud serfs”?

25 Sunday Jan 2026

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Economy and Finance, Recommended Reading

≈ 6 Comments

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Cloud Serfs, Cloudalists, Greek Author and Economist Yanis Varoufakis, Technofeudalism

Front Cover Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism by Yanis Varoufakis (UK/USA, 2024)
Photo Credit: Melville House Publishing

The digital revolution may be turning waged workers into cloud proles, who live increasingly precarious, stressful lives under the invisible thumb of algorithmic bosses…. But that’s not the most significant fact about cloud capital…. The true revolution cloud capital has inflicted on humanity is the conversion of billions of us into willing cloud serfs volunteering to labour for nothing to reproduce cloud capital for the benefit of its owners.

[…]

Technofeudalism made things infinitely worse when it demolished the fence that used to provide the liberal individual with a refuge from the market. Cloud capital has shattered the individual into fragments of data, an identity comprised of choices as expressed by clicks, which its algorithms are able to manipulate. It has produced individuals who are not so much possessive as possessed, or rather persons incapable of being self-possessed.  

Excerpts from Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism by Yanis Varoufakis, published by Melville House Publishing, UK & USA, 2024, pp. 88 & 182.

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“Jaguar Song” – Poem by Asian American Poet Laureate Arthur Sze

18 Sunday Jan 2026

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Poetry, United States

≈ 32 Comments

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Asian American poet, Into the Hush by Arthur Sze, Poem “Jaguar Song” by Arthur Sze, Santa Fe/New Mexico/USA, United States Poet Laureate Arthur Sze (2025-2026)

Asian American Poet Laureate Arthur Sze 2025-2026
Photo Credit: U.S. Library of Congress (Photo by Shawn Miller)

My Poetry Corner January 2026 features the poem “Jaguar Song” from the twelfth poetry collection Into the Hush by Arthur Sze, Poet Laureate of the United States 2025-2026. He is the first Asian American to serve in this position. The following excerpts of poems are all sourced from this collection which explores humanity’s impact on Mother Nature together with glimpses of her untouched beauty.

Listen—in an Anchorage night, / a crunching resembling cars colliding, / and, as the incoming tide slaps, / you will never forget inlet ice breakup; black spruce branches are etched / against the sky; far from a city lined / with fast-food spots, bars, and pawnshops, […] you marvel at the green translucency / of leaves, the mystery of photosynthesis; / as grief and joy well up, you step / into the vernal sharpening of the day— / apricot trees are the first to bloom. (Poem “Spring View” p. 5).

Born in 1950 in New York City to Chinese immigrants, Sze is an award-winning poet with twelve books of poetry published, a translator of classical Chinese poetry, and editor. His journey to becoming a poet began in 1968 during his first semester at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where he was pursuing a career in the sciences. As he tells it during an interview in 2025 with Jim Natal for Marsh Hawk Press:

“I sat in a large calculus class and felt increasingly bored by the lecture. I remember flipping to the back of a spiral notebook, and I started writing phrases to a poem. I was excited at what came to me, and, before the end of class, I had a rough draft…”

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The Writer’s Life: New Monthly Series on the Changing Earth

11 Sunday Jan 2026

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Nature and the Environment, Recommended Reading, The Writer's Life

≈ 50 Comments

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Documentary Film From the Heart of the World: The Elder Brothers’ Warning (BBC 1990), Environmental Crisis, Hopi Elder Thomas Banyacya (1909-1999), Mohawk Chief Jake Swamp-Tekaronianeken (1940-2010), Mother Earth, Muskogee-Creek Elder Phillip Deere (1929-1985), North American Indigenous Voices

Front Cover: We Are the Middle of Forever: Indigenous Voices from Turtle Island on the Changing Earth – Edited by Dahr Jamail and Stan Rushworth
Published by The New Press, New York, USA, 2022

During the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown, Dahr Jamail – an American award-winning journalist and environmental advocate – and Stan Rushworth – an elder and retired teacher of Cherokee descent living in Northern California – interviewed several people from different North American Indigenous cultures and communities, generations, and geographic. Their featured collection of interviews offers us a wide variety of perspectives on a much more integrated relationship to Earth and all human and non-human beings.

Turtle Island is a term used by some Indigenous peoples, primarily those in North America, to refer to the continent. This name stems from various Indigenous creation stories which describe the landmass as being formed on the back of a giant turtle. The concept of Turtle Island is deeply significant in many Native American cultures as it reflects their spiritual beliefs and relationship with Mother earth.

As inhabitants of these lands for thousands of generations before the arrival of European conquistadores and colonizers, Native Americans carry in their ancestral memories the rise and fall of great civilizations before ours. They have much to teach us about surviving collapse and healing our broken relationship with Mother Earth.

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Year 2025: Reflections

04 Sunday Jan 2026

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in The Writer's Life, United States

≈ 44 Comments

Tags

AI Revolution, Censorship, Earthrise, Mother Earth, New Global Order, Overcoming adversity, Storyteller Rosaliene Bacchus, Year 2025

Earthrise – NASA Apollo 8 – December 24, 1968 – Photo by Astronaut William Anders
Source Credit – Wikipedia

I’m still trying to process everything that has happened since the Earthrise on January 20, 2025. The punches were fast, violent, and relentless. They upended the global order established at the end of World War II. European allies have been left out in the cold to face what was once our mutual Cold War adversary. North American allies are treated with contempt. Venezuela’s coveted vast oil reserves have transformed the Caribbean Sea into a danger zone. How did we get here?

Sorry Greenland. The sovereignty of nations be damned. Your rare-earth metals are essential to our technological advancement. Our Big Tech giants are in a race to colonize Mars and the vast expanse of space beyond. They need these metals to build and power their AI machines. They also need lots of energy (and water) to operate their vast AI data centers.

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