The Founders Speak in New York

If you’re anywhere near Columbia University on November 19th, you might want to go and check this event out, brought to us for free by the Burning Man Project:

firetromboneThe Founders Speak: Burning Man, Technology, Religion, and The Future

Burning Man Project

Tuesday, November 19, 2013 from 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM (EST)

The Burning Man Project is proud to join Columbia University’s Department of Religion and Institute for Religion, Culture and Public Life to present a forum on Burning Man, technology, religion and the future, featuring panelists Larry Harvey (founder of Burning Man), John Perry Barlow (founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation) and Peter Hirshberg (disruptive cultures and technology expert). 

Dr. David Kittay of Columbia’s Department of Religion will moderate a lively conversation about Burning Man as a philosophical movement, its history, and its predicted global applications.

barlow and friendThis event is free and open to the public.

Tuesday, November 19th, 2013
7-9pm 
IAB, Room 417 – Altschul Auditorium 
Columbia University, New York, NY

Directions: http://www.cs.columbia.edu/theory/directions2.html

Have questions about The Founders Speak: Burning Man, Technology, Religion, and The Future? Contact Burning Man Project
larry bunnies

Burning Man HQ Up For Grabs

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Photos by George Post copyright 2011

Burning Man arrived in the central Mid-Market district a few years ago with great fanfare. They announced their move a day after the city provided a new payroll tax break, trying to lure employers to the area – suggesting that getting BMHQ was considered a coup by the city. Larry Harvey gave a speech at the United Nations Plaza, as did Mayor Ed Lee and President of the Board of Supervisors David Chiu. They talked about how Burning Man’s art and vibrant culture was going to transform the rather seedy part of Market Street, near the Tenderloin. And Larry spoke of the exciting change to make Burning Man into a non-profit. Harvey described the neighborhood, with its oh-so-urban mixture of hipster tech workers and street hustler crackheads, as “very like Black Rock city” in its diversity. He humbly offered to make the neighborhood a better place with their presence: “as humble immigrants into this neighborhood, we mean to contribute to a neighborhood that is already vital

From the SF Examiner:

The Burning Man Project plans to build an “urban cultural center” in San Francisco that will provide, among other things, collaborative gathering and gallery spaces, classrooms, and sites for ritual and ceremony, according to the group.

“It’s one thing to put up a sculpture somewhere, which is good, but we’ve never had the opportunity to look at a whole group of neighborhoods like this as a potential for our endeavors,” Burning Man founder Larry Harvey said.

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Painting by Todd Berman

Sadly, none of this seems to have happened. Except for a single rusty flower on arrival, there was no Burning Man art put on Market Street, no collaborative cultural center, no real community engagement with the Tenderloin. The area still looks pretty much like it always has. Burning Man is making bigger profits than ever for Black Rock City, LLC, the private corporation who remain the owners. The Burning Man Project is now well into it’s third year, and we’re still waiting for it to announce some of the charitable things that it’s done.

And Burning Man are now moving out of their fancy corporate tower.

If you’re looking for nearly 20,000 square feet of A grade commercial office space, 5 entire floors of their $17 million building at 995 Market Street are available. You’d be in good hi-tech company with Twitter, Spotify, Benchmark Capital and Zoosk all nearby.

Burning Man’s total rent bill in 2012 was $615,944, if all that was for this building then that works out to about $2.50/square foot per month – which seems like a pretty good deal to me, especially since they got a payroll tax break on their $7 million salary bill to offset the rent costs.

From craigslist:

Burning Man Sublease (downtown / civic / van ness)

 
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Market Street at 6th Street (google map) (yahoo map)
[Update 6:05pm] George Post has commented that there was art on Market Street. I have found only this one flower, which seems to have appeared around the time the BMOrg arrived. If anyone else has any photos of Burning Man art or events in Market Street, please share.
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There were high hopes when Burning Man arrived…

Burning Man organizers eye move to redeveloped mid-Market Street arts district

SF Public Press
 — Jan 28 2011 – 9:03am

In much the same way as they annually transform a desolate stretch of the Nevada desert into a week-long countercultural art festival, the organizers of Burning Man are now hoping to transform a desolate stretch of San Francisco’s Market Street.

The group that builds a temporary city of more than 40,000 creative vagabonds at the end of each summer is in talks to move into the nine-story early 20th century Warfield Building, at Market Street where Taylor and Sixth streets converge. The building is in the heart of a depressed and crime-ridden three-block zone that San Francisco has been trying to redevelop for years, and is now offering incentives to turn it into cluster of arts organizations.

Marian Goodell, director of business and communications and one of the founders of Burning Man LLC, said the organization has been looking at a number of office spaces on Market Street. She said the Warfield Building in particular has “many characteristics that we like.”

Goodell said the group has also been talking with other arts groups that are looking into the mid-Market area and that an arts renaissance there is imminent.

“We’re willing to go into a neighborhood that no one else really wants and liven it up,” Goodell said. “We’re pretty engaged. I can imagine that whatever a neighborhood might need we would be open to help.”

The group, which has 30 employees and thousands of volunteers who work on a variety of artistic, performance and media projects, would provide foot traffic and a financial boost to retail business in the area.

…San Francisco officials have provided Burning Man with logistical help. Amy Cohen, director of neighborhood Business Development for the city, said the city has actively encouraged Burning Man to move into the area.

“We are interested in anyone who can bring people into the area,” Cohen said. “There is a movement to have Market be an extension of downtown. We see a niche that is developing as a civics-oriented arts district. There’s a lot of entrepreneurial energy moving into this area and Burning Man represents this energy.”

The city’s efforts to revive the forlorn stretch between Fifth and Eighth streets have been slow to gain momentum. Last year Mayor Gavin Newsom announced an $11 million loan fund to encourage arts groups to settle in the zone. But as of last month, only one business — a hamburger restaurant — had taken the city up on the offer. Part of the problem has been that due to restrictions on federal funds, the money must be used to generate new jobs, not just relocate existing ones.

Cohen’s office has conducted walking tours of office spaces in the mid-Market area. She said she will help the group navigate complex city approvals. One way her office could help Burning Man is by speeding up the temporary arts licensing process.

Tomas McCabe, executive director of the Black Rock Arts Foundation, the nonprofit arm of Burning Man, said his group’s main focus is finding places for temporary public art on the street outside the office complex.

“I’m talking large-scale projects,” McCabe said. “One problem that cities have in putting in public art is there’s lots of bureaucracy. And sometimes after years and years of work, nothing happens.”

Temporary public art is meant to be installed for a short time and then either removed or replaced with a different installation.

McCabe used the group’s installation of Hayes Green Temple, a intricately carved wooden structure, at Patricia’s Green in Hayes Valley as a showcase of its public art installation work.

“We worked with the local community and they have started their own arts commission,” he said. “They basically curate that one spot in their park. We were the first ones to place public art there.”

He said the residents became instant art critics and have shown a strong civic interest in what is placed there.

“Its fascinating,” McCabe said. “People might not like a piece but they know it’s going to be in a few months and they can’t wait to see the next one.”

McCabe said Burning Man is now looking at ways to bring additional temporary public art into the mid-Market area. Last year the city installed several displays in the Warfield and other buildings as part of its Art in Storefronts project to spruce up the street, where dozens of storefronts have sat vacant for years and even warehouse space for rent.

“We’re looking at doing some window display art and refurbishing a vacant lot and turning it into a bit of an art park,” McCabe said.

The group was recently named in a National Endowment for the Arts grant to pursue this type urban art initiative.

The Burning Man offices are currently located on the edge of the Bayview district in an anonymous office park near a sewage treatment plant.

“The city would love to see us in the mid-Market area, and we love the idea of moving in there,” McCabe said. “I don’t know if it is going to happen, though it looks like it might happen. We’re already talking about the possibilities of engaging the community and getting art out.”

He said moving out of their current offices and into the heart of the city is essential for public participation. “That’s not really happening in an office park in an industrial neighborhood,” he said.

The group is considering using a storefront in the Warfield Building for a museum and cafe.

“I am not sure what it’s going to look like,” he said. “I know it will add a lot of color to have Burning Man there. People know we are here, but it is going to be really exciting for people to actually see us and know where we are.”

The Warfield Theatre, on the first floor of the Warfield Building, opened in 1922 and has been host to vaudeville shows, jazz artists and bands including the Grateful Dead and U2. Early in the last decade the building was briefly home to the San Francisco Examiner.

– See more at: http://sfpublicpress.org/news/2011-01/burning-man-organizers-eye-move-to-redeveloped-mid-market-street-arts-district#sthash.8VXv4NOO.dpuf

 

Happy Halloween: Burning Man is America’s Largest Pagan Ritual

Which idol are you worshipping, kiddies? Whose rituals are you really performing on All Hallow’s Eve?

Now The End Begins is a web site dedicated to welcoming in the End of Days. First we had Y2K, then we had 12/21/2012 and the Mayan Calendar, now it seems Burning Man itself is becoming the symbol of Armageddon…

“Then said I unto them, Cast ye away every man the abominations of his eyes, and defile not yourselves with the idols of Egypt: I am the LORD your God.” Ezekiel 20:7

The adherents to this religion are appropriately called “burners”, and the Burning Man Pagan Festival began like this:

“Burning Man stems from a small group of free-spirited artists in the San Francisco area who got together to burn a wooden effigy on the beach in 1986; and the little beach event has grown to an annual gathering of nearly 70,000 attendees and has moved to the Black Rock Desert of Nevada, where hippies, yuppies and wannabe bohemians of every type meet up and enjoy a week of crazy self-expression, self-reliance and communal craziness.” source – Explorer News

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But the reality of the Burning Man is much closer to worship of the gods of the underworld than it is to Woodstock. Every manner of perversion and occultic practice is on open display during the annual Labor Day Weekend extravaganza. This is Old Testament Baal worship on overdrive. Here is a report on this year’s Burning Man theme:

“By morning on Wednesday, there were 15 streets circling the temporary city created by attendees and the forecast remains free of dust storms. Many have been impressed by the size and look of this year’s Man Base, a structure that houses the iconic ‘Man’ figure burned each year near the event’s close. Inside a flying saucer under the Man is a multi-level structure with zoetropes, a giant chandelier and views of Black Rock City. Slides serve as exits. 

burning-man-pagan-festival-occult-temple-worship-all-seeing-eye-horus

Now Is The End seem confused by “Cargo Cult”, and for some reason seem to associate aliens with the devil. So, angels aren’t aliens, but demons are? Or, both are aliens? Jesus was an alien? I get confused, but then there are half a dozen or so series’ worth of Ancient Aliens episodes, as well as years’ worth of YouTube stories, all with their own differing theories on the matter.

The art theme this year is ‘Cult Cargo’ and focuses on a strange being called John Frum. ’He is known to us by many names, this Visitor from Elsewhere, dispenser of endless abundance and wielder of mysterious technologies: John Frum, Quetzalcoatl, Osiris, “Bob,”‘ reads the website. ‘His cargo is splendid, his generosity boundless, his motives beyond our understanding. But across the ages and around the world, the stories all agree: one day he will return, bearing great gifts. ’Our theme this year asks three related questions; who is John Frum, where is he really from, and where, on spaceship Earth, are we all going?’”source – Daily Mail UK

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burning-man-festival-2013-fires-of-hell

“And he doeth great wonders, so that he maketh fire come down from heaven on the earth in the sight of men, And deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had power to do in the sight of the beast; saying to them that dwell on the earth, that they should make an image to the beast, which had the wound by a sword, and did live.” Revelation 13:13,14

Burning Man must be devil worship, because Hell is filled with fire. Hmmm…seems like somewhat of a non sequitur to me. That’s like saying the Sahara Desert must be Burning Man because there’s a lot of sand.

The Devil and all His followers are fascinated with fire and things burning. This is easy to understand as Hell is filled with fire and those there will burn forever and ever. The ironic twist to it all is that the Devil Himself will burn in the fires of His own Hell.

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It is no coincidence that as we get closer to the end times events described in the Bible, that the dark underworld of Satan will dramatically rise and assume a larger and larger role in our everyday society. Everything that the Burning Man festivals stand for is described in the Bible as things that God hates. False gods, idol worship, the groves…all these things incurred God’s wrath on the practicers.

God hates Burning Man? So, God’s a hater? Oh dear, where’s the love?