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Recipe for Green Fairy Pie. from a torn note found inside an earthen pot discovered by Mr. and Mrs. F. Nolen when they moved into 732 North Cherry Drive, Idaho in 1983.

My Grandmother told me about this recipe, which has been made for at least 4000 years on the Irish West coast.
"Careful Be when Calling the Fairy Pie. The Stars and the Moon shall Rise and Sink Twelve Times Before this Pie Plays the Piper."
Ingredients:
Fresh green peas.
Flour
Egg
Raisins
Dried Fig
Water
Butter
Nutmeg
Seeds of the XXXXX (words have been erased in the original document).
Take the green peas and boil them in salted water.
Make pie dough as it was done before.
Put the peas in a large baking tray.
Mix in the raisins and figs. sprinkle with nutmeg.
Place the flattened pie dough over the mixture.
Make twelve holes in the pie dough with the middle finger.
Inside each hole insert seventy seeds and a knob of butter.
Seal the holes with remaining dough.
Bake in a hot oven until dough rises and becomes brown.

(the following addendum was added to the recipe and written by hand along its left margin)

Charlotte. Make this for your dear brothers when they return from the war. It will heal them and bless them with the constant constancy of the Fairies without whom we all wander aimlessly on the waves. With Constance. Mother.

Negri Matters

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I attended the explanation meeting for Negri's sudden Japan visit cancellation last night at The International House. In short, it seems that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Immigration Office hastily and without any prior notice demanded that Negri apply for a visa, even though the organisers had confirmed numerous times with them that he did not require a visa to enter Japan. The visa issue emerged two days prior to Negri's planned arrival, on the 17th. Details of the case can be read at Japan Today , The Tocqueville Connection and breitbart.com.
Japanese law states that people with a criminal record and over one year in prison cannot enter Japan. There is a clause to this though which states that political prisoners are exempt. The Japanese authorities insisted that he submit all relevant documents which would prove that he was a political prisoner - something which, according to statements made at the meeting, would involve tracking down thousands of pages of court documents in Italian and take many months. This was simply impossible to achieve. I was surprised to hear that Negri's French partner, Judith Revel, was also  requested to apply for a visa, even though as a French citizen this is not needed.  The organisers last night could not hide their immense sense of disappointment, and commented that this effective denial of entry amounted to an infringement of Negri's human rights as well as to the curtailment of intellectual, research and cultural freedom of university institutions. Some commented that it amounted to a sense of paranoia and political intervention by the government, especially in the run up to this summer's Tohyakou G8 Summit, which Japan hosts.
The various events which were planned will nonetheless go ahead.
Tokyo University intends to use real-time media technology to try to realise a symposium with Negri in remote attendance. Kyoto University will hold a symposium with the oranisers reading aloud Negri's prepared paper. Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music will hold a two day event of symposiums and art actions. They also plan a 'mochi-tsuki' (sticky rice pounding) event, where participants can vent frustration by taking turns pounding rice. More information Here.
I wrote some months back about Japan entering its second period of 'sakoku' (isolation). The trigger then was the introduction of finger-printing technologies for all non Japanese entering Japan, thinly veiled under the rhetoric of its anti-terrorism laws. Only the United States and Japan asks all visitors to submit bio-data. Now, with Negri's case, Japan is once again in partnership with the United States, as the only other country which effectively denied him entry. Negri's letter mentioned that he has travelled to 22 countries without restriction - the United States was the only exception, as it demanded piles of documents which were simply not reasonable to gather. Japan seems to have followed suit.
It is indeed a sad day when the apparatus of the state cannot accommodate one thinker to enter its borders.




Sublime and Ridiculous

Concurrent to denying philosophers entry to the country, the Foreign Minister was appointing a large animation cat - Doraemon - to the post of official 'anime Ambassador' of Japan.

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See THIS  AP news story for more.

Japan effectively denies entry for Antonio Negri

Antonio Negri ('Empire', 'Multitude' etc) was to arrive in Japan this week for a series of lectures and discussions. I was to hear him speak at the International House of Japan this coming Saturday. I received a phone call from I-House about one hour ago informing me that his trip has been abruptly cancelled. The organising committee is holding a meeting to explain the circumstances of this decision tommorrow evening, which I intend to attend.
For immediate news please see THIS webpage on the I-House website, which has the letters from Negri explaining the course of events in Japanese and French.
More details as I get them.

LDP MP's ask to see 'Yasukuni' film

There was an interesting item on News 23 (channel 6) tonight about conservative LDP lawmakers asking to see the documentary film 'Yasukuni', to make sure that it was not 'anti-Japan' and that grant money was not 'mis-used'. You can read a report HERE. It seems to be the first time that politicians have intervened in this way before public screening. One of the lawmakers being interviewed stressed that she wanted to make sure that the film portrayed history objectively and was not ideological. This means that all sports commentary, evening news programs with their incredible 'commentators', and pretty much everything else in the cultural industries need politicians to nursemaid prior to general public release.

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