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|| 10/31/2005 || 1:17 am || Comments Off || ||
My Eulogy to Rosa Parks

I just returned from the grounds of the Capitol. I brought a megaphone and a sheet of paper with the eulogy written on it. I rode my bike down to the grounds and made my way to the front of the line. Moving toward the end of the line, I soapboxed my eulogy to the captive audience of mourners about 10 times to well over 2,000 people.

this is what I said:

Fellow mourners, as you pass by Rosa Parks laying in state, remember that the struggle for civil rights is not over. You the residents of Washington, DC are still second-class citizens who are denied the representational equality given to every other American.

As you walk into the Capitol, a seat of government in which you are still forced to sit in the back of, remember her struggle and think of ways you can carry the torch she lit for us long ago.

The feedback I received was 95% supportive with people staying “That’s right,” “Power to the people,” “Statehood for DC,” “Keep up the fight,” and “Thank You.” About mid-way through the queue, I received a complaint from a woman wearing a hajab saying that this was time for remembrance not a political agenda. I respectfully disagreed, but thanked her for sharing her thoughts with me. Aside from her, no else voiced annoyances and I believe my eulogy was well received. This act was very moving for me, by speaking out before those mourning her, her actions lived through me. As I rode back home I cried as I thought about the civil rights struggle and the institutional complacency that exists today.

The quote from Martin Luther King came to my mind…

“Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. And so we must straighten our backs and work for our freedom. A man can’t ride you unless your back is bent.”

I glided home and wrote this. And this.



|| || 8:06 pm || 1 Comment Rendered || ||
Abstract George W. Bush

: rendered at 10,000 X 7500 :

On Valentines Day I made this for good ‘o GW, and for Halloween I made him something a bit more abstract.

#UPDATE## 2/16/08 — added background

This was the last map I made using the 2002 USGS aerial photography of the area around the White House. By combining a United States Air Force high-resolution publicity photograph of George W. Bush, I created a unique tessellation that I overlaid on to the surface of a complex 3-D object. In the background I used the same tessellation but placed the design into in a kaleidoscopic pattern similar to the More Quilt Projection style. The result is both eerie and visually engaging. Made on Halloween, it could be taken as an abstract Halloween mask, but when viewed as a human interest map, it becomes slightly more twisted. At the center, below the obligatory American flag lapel pins, is a mirrored image of a visually redacted White House. This is the same legacy aerial photography that was used in the wildly popular Inaugural Map I published in January of 2005. This was also the first imagery of Washington, DC used by Google Maps when it was released a couple months later. It was soon updated after people complained that the White House (and the Old Executive Office Building & Treasury Department) should not be censored.

Last year when the USGS released the 2005 Washington, DC aerial photography, the entire area around the White House was completely redacted. Shortly thereafter, I created “The White House Is Off-Limits To The Public,” an interactive geovisual environment, to showcase the egregious amount of censorship that was exercised by the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency. Google still has not updated their servers with newest public domain imagery of downtown Washington, DC….

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Photo by Charlie McCormick
Nikolas Schiller is a 29-year-old cartographer, consultant, digital artist, researcher, photographer, civil rights activist, and blogger living in America's last continental colony, Washington, DC. If you have any questions or comments, please contact:

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