Wednesday, March 31, 2004

Walmart: Paragon of Freedom and Justice

While browsing Jakeneck after the previous posting I couldn't resist importing this brilliant post of a letter to Wal Mart executives:
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Walmart: Paragon of Freedom and Justice

From Jesus' General. Do your patriotic duty. Fight tryanny and hypocrisy.

Dear Wal-Mart Executive Team,

I imagine that the traitors among us are giving you a hard time for refusing to carry Robert Greenwald's Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the Iraq War. They just can't comprehend how you could consider such a film to be unpatriotic. You see, they don't understand the value of having unquestioning loyalty for a great leader even when he's wrong.

That's why they'll probably condemn you for rejecting Uncovered while carrying Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will. I imagine they'll take great pains to paint you as a corporation which values authoritarian order over free speech. They'll never understand Triumph of the Will's patriotic message about the importance of blind obedience to leadership.

I say to hell with the traitors. Wal-Mart should be proud to be a symbol of authoritarianism. Indeed, I urge you to sponsor a Triumph of the Will like tribute to fascism at your headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas. I'm sure the local Chamber of Commerce would love the idea. Think about it. Bentonville could become the new Nuremberg.

Heterosexually yours,

Gen. JC Christian, Patriot

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(courtesy Atrios and SNAFU)

Downloading Music--Serious Crime? Welcome to Bizarro World?

Does the downloading of music from the Internet harm recording industry sales? A recent study published in the New Scientist disputes any correlation between downloading and declining record sales:

Net music piracy 'does not harm record sales'

While the folks at Wired magazine state what I have been thinking all along, that maybe the music's just lousy and the recording industry would like us to buy the crap anyways so that they can have nice houses and drive expensive cars?

Nonetheless our continuously distracted congress took the time to pass the pirate act on March 25th, which could carry up to ten years in prison for simple file sharing. Once again the folks at Wired supply us with the full lowdown on the act and other events:

Congress Moves to Criminalize P2P

(Thanks to Paul Jones, SNAFU, Mobius, and the posting sites Mediasquatters and Jakeneck for sources/discussion)

Various Thoughts At the End of a Work Day

Tragic news hitting the airwaves this afternoon of American bodies being mutilated and dragged through the streets of a town west of Baghdad. There seems to be the sense that this is a continuation of the populace resisting the intrusion of American military and business (the bodies are businessmen) forces, but still the Bush administration wants to paint it as the desperate acts of a few terrorists?

Yahoo report

Of course our failed democracy plan has nothing to with it:

Shutting Down Newspapers in Iraq

But then what do I know I'm obviously no expert, just a concerned citizen wondering... why?

Still, Bush painting his administration as the saviors of the world from evil terrorists leaves such a bitter taste in my mouth. Have you seen the newest Move On ad that confronts this claim:

MoveOn's disputed ad

Republican Attack on Non-Profit Groups

Move On alert

Are you involved in a local or national non-profit or public interest organization? As a leader or board director or member? Please read this message carefully, because your organization could be facing a serious threat.

The Republican National Committee is pressing the Federal Election Commission ("FEC") to issue new rules that would cripple groups that dare to communicate with the public in any way critical of President Bush or members of Congress. Incredibly, the FEC has just issued -- for public comment -- proposed rules that would do just that. Any kind of non-profit -- conservative, progressive, labor, religious, secular, social service, charitable, educational, civic participation, issue-oriented, large, and small -- could be affected by these rules.

By the way, one thing FEC's proposed rules do not affect is the donations you may have made in the past or may make now to MoveOn.org or to the MoveOn.org Voter Fund. They are aimed at activist non-profit groups, not donors.

Operatives in Washington are displaying a terrifying disregard for the values of free speech and openness which underlie our democracy. Essentially, they are willing to pay any price to stop criticism of Bush administration policy.

We've attached materials below to help you make a public comment to the FEC before the comment period ends on APRIL 9th. Your comment could be very important, because normally the FEC doesn't get much public feedback.

Public comments to the FEC are encouraged by email at

politicalcommitteestatus@fec.gov

Comments should be addressed to Ms. Mai T. Dinh, Acting Assistant General Counsel, and must include the full name, electronic mail address, and postal service address of the commenter.

More details can be found at:

Rulemaking

We'd love to see a copy of your public comment. Please email us a copy at FECcomment@moveon.org.

Whether or not you're with a non-profit, we also suggest you ask your representatives to write a letter to the FEC opposing the rule change.

Some key points:

- Campaign finance reform was not meant to gag public interest organizations.
- Political operatives are trying to silence opposition to Bush policy.
- The Federal Election Commission has no legal right to treat non-profit interest groups as political committees. Congress and the courts have specifically considered and rejected such regulation.

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If you need help finding the phone numbers and addresses of representatives visit the Move On site.

Socialist Position One Year After the Invasion of Iraq

Important simply because they seem to be the only party concerned with worker rights and are effective critics of the two-party hegemony which supplies only one option with two choices. No wonder they are completely ignored and silenced by the mainstream media.

"One year since the US invasion of Iraq: Statement of the World Socialist Web Site and Socialist Equality Party"
World Socialist Web Site

One year after the US invasion of Iraq, the lies upon which the war was based have been completely exposed.

There were no Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. There were no ties between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda—although Islamic fundamentalist terrorists may now be active in US-occupied Iraq. The Iraqi people did not welcome the American military as their liberators. Many resisted with arms in hand, and the vast majority looked upon the occupation authority as a colonial regime to be expelled as quickly as possible.

The lie that the war was waged to bring democracy to Iraq and the Middle East has been thoroughly exposed by US actions in Iraq and elsewhere. In Iraq, the US occupation authority has ruled out elections and instead plans to declare its stooge governing council the “sovereign” government—one that will sanction the indefinite continuation of the US military presence and the exploitation of the country’s oil wealth by US and British companies.

In Haiti, Washington engineered an armed coup against an elected government in order to install a regime of murderers and political thugs directly beholden to the Haitian elite—one that will be more subservient to US dictates.

The first anniversary of the war has been marked by a major turning point in the world political situation—the popular upsurge in Spain that brought down the right-wing government headed by Bush’s accomplice, José Maria Aznar. The intensely felt and widespread opposition to the war internationally—which took the form of mass demonstrations mobilizing more than 20 million people worldwide in February 2003—found renewed expression in the election results of March 14. Aznar’s Popular Party was thrown out of office and replaced by the social-democratic PSOE, which had pledged to withdraw Spanish troops from Iraq.

The Spanish election sent shudders through every imperialist government—not only the direct participants in the assault on Iraq, Bush and Blair, and those who joined the occupation, like Italy’s Berlusconi and Australia’s Howard, but also the leaders of the powers that opposed the invasion, such as Chirac in France and Schröder in Germany. All of them are aghast at the prospect of the direct intervention of masses of working people to effect a change in imperialist foreign policy.

The defeat of Aznar has provoked an especially frenzied reaction in the American political and media establishment. Bush administration spokesmen, congressional Democrats as well as Republicans, and countless media pundits have denounced the Spanish people for “capitulating to terrorism” in the wake of the Madrid train station bombings that occurred three days before the election.

There is a deeply anti-democratic component to these slanders against the Spanish people. The underlying premise—stated or unstated—is that major questions of government policy such as war cannot be left to the people to decide. The implication is that elections themselves are a luxury that should be discarded if they interfere with the pursuit of the global economic and geo-political interests of the American ruling elite.

It has been widely reported in the Spanish media and on the Internet that the Popular Party, feeling the ground shifting beneath its feet the day before the election, approached King Juan Carlos with a proposal for a royal decree postponing the election. The king declined, saying this would amount to a coup d’etat.

The US reaction to the Spanish vote poses very directly the question of what the response of the Bush administration would be to a terrorist attack in the run-up to the US election. As the World Socialist Web Site has warned, there is every possibility that such an attack would become the pretext either for canceling the presidential election outright, or holding it under such conditions of police-military mobilization that it would amount to an exercise in mass intimidation.

The electoral upset in Spain has shattered any pretense that the Democratic Party opposes the war in Iraq. Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry responded to the threats of the Spanish prime minister-elect to withdraw his country’s troops from Iraq by declaring: “In my judgment, the new prime minister should not have decided that he was going to pull out of Iraq. He should have said this increases our determination to get the job done.”

Kerry repudiated the comments of Howard Dean, who suggested that Bush’s decision to go to war in Iraq “apparently had been a factor in the death of 200 Spaniards over the weekend.”

In the weeks since he clinched the nomination, Kerry has been at pains to reassure the ruling elite that he will not challenge the rationale for the conquest of Iraq, but will confine his criticisms of the Bush administration to tactical prescriptions on how to wage war more effectively by enlisting international support. He is telling the corporate and political establishment that his election is necessary to change the international climate and provide a political cover for the European powers, acting under the umbrella of the United Nations, to buttress the US occupation by sending their own military forces into Iraq.

Kerry’s position was summed up by “liberal” New York Times foreign policy columnist Thomas Friedman, who published a March 18 attack on the Spanish electorate under the headline “Axis of Appeasement,” in which he called for sending more US troops into Iraq.

These developments underscore the significance of the orchestrated drive to scuttle Dean’s bid for the Democratic nomination. Despite the former Vermont governor’s assurances that he too supported the so-called “war on terror” and was opposed to the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, he was considered too closely associated with the mass anti-war sentiment to be permitted to run as the Democratic candidate.

The ruling elite, utilizing the media, intervened to take the issue of the war out of the presidential campaign and ensure that any potential replacement for Bush could be relied on to continue the basic thrust of the current administration’s policies. At the same time, the political and media establishment provided a platform for left-talking candidates Al Sharpton and Dennis Kucinich, who performed the critical service of fostering the illusion that the Democratic Party can serve as a vehicle for seriously improving the conditions of working people.

The overwhelming consensus of the American political and corporate elite—Democratic as well as Republican—is that the war in Iraq must be continued and the repression of the Iraqi people intensified. It is a misnomer to call this illegal and predatory enterprise “Bush’s war.” Both parties are committed to a policy of using military force to establish the global hegemony of US imperialism.

For all the mud-slinging between Kerry and Bush, the Democrats represent no genuine alternative for working people, and this applies to jobs, health care, education, housing and the defense of democratic rights, no less than militarism and war. The Iraq war is a bipartisan undertaking of the two-party system—the long-standing instrument of the American ruling elite to insure its political monopoly and deprive the working class of any means for effecting fundamental change.

Basic lessons have to be drawn from such fundamental political experiences as the war in Iraq, the Spanish election, and Democratic Party’s embrace of the continued US occupation. There can be no viable anti-war movement so long as it remains tied to the Democratic Party. The struggle against war requires something more than a protest movement that seeks to pressure the parties and institutions of the ruling elite. It requires a complete break with the Democrats and the implementation of a new strategy—based on the independent political mobilization of working people, in the United States and internationally, against imperialism.

The Socialist Equality Party is intervening in the 2004 elections to present before the widest possible audience the socialist alternative to war, social reaction and the assault on democratic rights. Our presidential and vice presidential candidates, Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence, as well as SEP congressional candidates, will utilize the elections to fight for the development of an independent political movement of working people on the basis of a socialist and internationalist program.

We reject the position of those who oppose a socialist alternative on the grounds that the only issue is the defeat of Bush. Such a position ignores the real roots of militarism, war and social reaction—the crisis of American and world capitalism. It is an illusion and a trap, which only reinforces the political monopoly of the financial oligarchy exercised through the two-party system. A vote for Kerry is not a vote against the Iraq war. It is a vote for a trusted representative of American imperialism pledged to continue the occupation of Iraq and the overall colonialist policy of the US ruling elite.

The central issue in the 2004 election is the need to establish the political independence of the working class from all of the political representatives of American imperialism.

The Socialist Equality Party election campaign aims to create a genuine anti-war movement that will link the fight against militarism with all of the social issues facing working people—jobs, living standards, health care, education and the defense of democratic rights.

We are placing at the center of our campaign the demand for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of American military forces from Iraq, Afghanistan and the entire Middle East and Central Asia.

We call on all those who oppose imperialist war and the colonialist occupation of Iraq to support the SEP election campaign. Read our election statement, which is posted on the World Socialist Web Site. Contact the WSWS editorial board and the SEP and join in the campaign to place our candidates on the ballot. Join the Socialist Equality Party and help make it the mass socialist party of the working class.

Statement Link

Tuesday, March 30, 2004

International Women's Month: Vandana Shiva

Vandana Shiva
by Brooke Shelby Biggs
Anita Roddick

With a master's degree in particle physics, a Ph.D. in the philosophy of science, and eleven books to her credit, Vandana Shiva is nothing if not erudite. But she's no ivory-tower intellectual. In 1982, several years after getting her Ph.D., she cut short her research at the Indian Institute of Management in Bangalore to establish the Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology in her home town in the Himalayan foothills. As the foundation's director, she helps communities counter threats to forests and agricultural land, leads a movement called Navdanya ("nine seeds") for the conservation of indigenous seeds, and is an active and articulate defender of diversity -- be it biological, cultural, or intellectual.

Hers is also a key voice in the international debate over globalization and development. Shiva has been an important figure in the movement to put pressure on the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organization. "Our policy work simultaneously addresses biodiversity, intellectual property rights, and globalization," she explains. Indeed, in 1993, Shiva won the prestigious Right Livelihood Award (widely referred to as the "alternative Nobel Prize") "for placing women and ecology at the heart of modern development discourse."

Shiva's ecological activism began in the 1970s with the Chipko ("embrace") movement, a broad-based grassroots protest -- organized principally by women -- against the commercial exploitation of Himalayan forests by outside contractors. The women chained themselves to tree trunks or threw their arms around native trees to save them from the ax.

Shiva has taken pains ever since to draw out the connections between the environmental, the ethical, and the political. Just as Gandhi and Bhave fused the spiritual and the social in the practice of satyagraha ("fight for truth"), Shiva sees ecology and equity as intimately linked. Gandhi led a satyagraha against the British policy of forcing Indian farmers to produce indigo; Shiva sees her movement as a satyagraha in the same tradition.

Shiva's primary focus is on resisting the forces of globalization in India, especially agribusiness. She sees an industry that forces farmers to abandon traditional and sustainable farming practices for genetically engineered monoculture, with its accompanying pesticides, irrigation requirements, and intellectual property demands. Farmers are plunged into debt and beholden to multinational companies while the land is quickly exhausted and misery mounts.

"The real issue, for both people and nature," says Shiva, "is the extent to which control over seeds and other genetic materials is becoming increasingly concentrated in the hands of those whose only interest is profits." Shiva helps farmers roll back this process in practical ways -- establishing living seed banks, training farmers in chemical-free methods of sustainable agriculture, and engaging in policy advocacy to oppose implementation of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in Indian law.

This question of control is also the linchpin that links the fight for biodiversity with the defense of cultural diversity and diversity of knowledge. And it is a fight, albeit a nonviolent one. "The primary threat to nature and to people today comes from centralizing and monopolizing power and control," she said as she accepted the Right Livelihood award. "Not until diversity is made the logic of production will there be a chance for sustainability, justice, and peace. Cultivating and conserving diversity is no luxury in our times: It is a survival imperative."

When change comes, Shiva says it will be driven by a spiritual outrage at the brutality of corporate rule. "To be outraged by violation and violence is a necessary complement to being spiritual," she told an organic farming convention. "To me this means that one has boundaries that say, 'This is sacred, it cannot be violated.' If the rage is directed to protecting the sacred, it can become a creative rage, it can be a compassionate rage." Here, as elsewhere in Vandana Shiva's thinking, the legacy of satyagraha is legible: "From Gandhi we have learned that you cannot respond to violent systems with violence. But you have a duty to not cooperate with violence through nonviolent means."

Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology
Founded in 1982 by Vandana Shiva, the Foundation is commited to conservation and the resistance of global exploitation of local ecological assets.
60, Hauz Khas
New Delhi India 110016
Tel.: +91-11-6968077
Email: vshiva@giasdl01.vsnl.net.in
RESEARCH FOUNDATION FOR SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ECOLOGY website


From Brave Hearts, Rebel Spirits

15 Year Anniversary of the Exxon Valdez Disaster

Alternet

Read why drilling in the Artic National Wildlife Refuge is a terrible idea:

Exxon Valdez Disaster 101

To commemorate the 15-year anniversary of the Exxon Valdez disaster, Free Range has teamed up with the Alaska Wilderness League to create a lively Flash movie that will get you thinking about Bush's plans to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge:

Animated Movie

New Medicare Bill's Hidden Profits

"Medicare's Hidden Bonanza: After millions in campaign contributions, an insurance magnate's 10-year lobbying campaign finally pays off"
by Michael Scherer
Mother Jones

For conservative leaders, the best part of the Medicare bill President Bush signed in December had absolutely nothing to do with Medicare. Rather, the provision that House Speaker Dennis Hastert calls "the most important piece in the bill" and former Speaker Newt Gingrich considers "the single most important change in health care policy in 60 years" is a little-noticed tax rebate set to cost the Treasury $6.4 billion over the next decade. The measure allows Americans to open tax-free "health savings accounts," which can be used to pay medical bills—in effect removing their owners from the shared risk that has been the core of the health-insurance system since World War II.

Conservatives claim health savings accounts will encourage people to more closely monitor their health care spending and bring down medical costs. Critics call the accounts a tax shelter that will benefit the wealthy and draw young, healthy workers out of health care plans, potentially doubling the cost of insurance for everyone else. But no matter who is right about the long-term impact, there is little doubt about the biggest short-term winner. He is J. Patrick Rooney, a major Republican campaign donor from Indiana who has done more than anyone else to make health savings accounts a reality. Rooney is the chairman emeritus of the Indianapolis-based Golden Rule Insurance Co., which has been selling health savings accounts through a now-expired pilot program that Rooney helped convince Congress to approve in 1996. Just days before the new Medicare bill passed, UnitedHealth Group, the largest insurer in America, paid $500 million in cash for Rooney's family-owned company—a move that analysts said was directly tied to the Medicare bill's provisions broadening the market for health savings accounts.

Rarely has a basic federal program been so tied to one man or one company. In their 10-year campaign to promote health savings accounts, Rooney's family, companies, and employees have given $3.6 million to political candidates and committees, with 90 percent going to Republicans. Rooney and his companies gave another $2.2 million to Republican organizations, including $121,000 to help pay for President Bush's Florida recount battle, and nearly $1.9 million for a group called the Republican Leadership Coalition, which ran attack ads against Al Gore during the 2000 campaign. Rooney also registered himself as a lobbyist and spent close to $2.2 million working the halls of Congress and the White House.

For conservatives, a key selling point of health savings accounts is the potential effect on the future of health care: In making their case to lawmakers, Rooney's allies cited polls showing that two-thirds of Americans support government-run, universal health care. By giving a large segment of the population the option to withdraw from the health-insurance system, they argued, health savings accounts could serve as a poison pill preventing another "Hillarycare" debate. "It's going to be real hard to socialize the system if everybody has their own account," explains John Goodman, head of the conservative National Center for Policy Analysis.

In the meantime, the Golden Rule division of UnitedHealth has gotten a jump start on the competition, having rolled out new health savings accounts within weeks of the bill's passage. By then, UnitedHealth's stock had already jumped 9 percent. "We know this market exceptionally well," Golden Rule's top lobbyist, Brian McManus, boasted. "We pioneered it."

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Mapping Media Ownership

Why stop with Clear Channel?... learn who is telling you about the world and what their interest are!

Columbia Journalism Review's Media Ownership page:

I Want My Media Ownership page

Why stop with knowing who is telling you about the world and what their interests are, why not become the media and start restor(y)ing your world?:

Become the Media!

Clear Channel Hegemony

It surprises me (perhaps it shouldn't) when I talk to people about Clear Channel and they have never heard of the radio giant. So I found a good series of articles posted at Salon outlining the concerns about Clear Channel:

Salon Magazine's Series on Clear Channel's Tactics

Also check out Harper's recent cover story:

Big World: How Clear Channel Programs America

Harper's is one of the best print magazines that is inexpensive and easily available, so I would prefer that Americans buy it (thus I won't post the article), but if you are reading this outside the U.S. where you have difficulty finding it let me know if you would like to read the article and I'll see what I can do.

More reports on Clear Channel:

Clear Channel Politics

CorpWatch's Article on Clear Channel

Wired News on Clear Channel

Clear Channel Stumbles

Of course I would be remiss if I didn't supply Clear Channel in their own words:

Clear Channel's Website

Clear Channel's Radio Stations

Clear Channel's Education and Museum Exhibits

Clear Channel Outdoors

Clear Channel Entertainment

Clear Channel United Kingdom

Clear Channel Italy

Clear Channel SE

Of course this is just the tip of the iceberg...

City of God (A Hypertextual Review)

My newest column at In the Fray I'm not really sure what my editor was thinking when she titled it "In God's Country" (although I appreciated her taking care of posting it while I was at the CCCCs conference in San Antonio, TX) ... but it is better than her suggestion of "New Age Ethnography" (a title so revolting to me that I demanded it be changed back immediately) for my previous column Ethnography for the 21st Century She believes that my titles are not sexy enough--ha, oh well.

So here is "City of God: A Hypertextual Review" now known as:

In God's Country

Top 25 Censored Media Stories of 2003: #1) The Neoconservative Plan for Global Dominan

Censored 2004: The Top 25 Censored Media Stories of 2002-2003

#1: The Neoconservative Plan for Global Dominance

Sources:
The Sunday Herald
September 15, 2002
Title: "Bush Planned Iraq 'regime change' before becoming President"
Author: Neil Mackay

Harper's Magazine
October 2002
Title: "Dick Cheney's Song of America"
Author: David Armstrong

Mother Jones
March 2003
Title: "The 30 Year Itch"
Author: Robert Dreyfuss

Pilger.com
December 12, 2002
Title: "Hidden Agendas"
Author: John Pilger

Random Lengths News
October 4, 2002
Title: "Iraq Attack-The Aims and Origins of Bush's Plans"
Author: Paul Rosenberg

Project Censored wishes to acknowledge that Jim Lobe, the Washington, D.C. correspondent for Inter Press Service (IPS), has been covering the ways in which neo-conservatives, using the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) among other mechanisms, used the 9/11 attacks to pursue their own agenda of global dominance and reshaping the Middle East virtually from the outset of the Bush administration’s “war on terrorism.” For more information, please vist the following website link

Faculty Evaluators: Phil Beard Ph.D. and Tom Lough Ph.D.
Student Researcher: Dylan Citrin Cummins

Corporate Media Partial Coverage:
Atlantic Journal Constitution, 9/29/02, The President's Real goal in Iraq, By Jay Bookman

Over the last year corporate media have made much of Saddam Hussein and his stockpile of weapons of mass destruction. Rarely did the press or, especially, television address the possibility that larger strategies might also have driven the decision to invade Iraq. Broad political strategies regarding foreign policy do indeed exist and are part of the public record. The following is a summary of the current strategies that have formed over the last 30 years; strategies that eclipse the pursuit of oil and that preceded Hussein's rise to power:

In the 1970s, the United States and the Middle East were embroiled in a tug-of-war over oil. At the time, American military presence in the Gulf was fairly insignificant and the prospect of seizing control of Arab oil fields by force was pretty unattainable. Still, the idea of this level of dominance was very attractive to a group of hard-line, pro-military Washington insiders that included both Democrats and Republicans. Eventually labeled "neoconservatives," this circle of influential strategists played important roles in the Defense Departments of Ford, Reagan and Bush Sr., at conservative think tanks throughout the '80s and '90s, and today occupies several key posts in the White House, Pentagon, and State Department. Most principal among them are:

·Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, our current Vice-President and Defense Secretary respectively, who have been closely aligned since they served with the Ford administration in the 1970s;
·Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, the key architect of the post-war reconstruction of Iraq;
·Richard Perle, past-chairman and still-member of the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board that has great influence over foreign military policies;
·William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard and founder of the powerful, neo-conservative think-tank, Project for a New American Century.

In the 1970s, however, neither high-level politicos, nor the American people, shared the priorities of this small group of military strategists. In 1979 the Shah of Iran fell and U.S. political sway in the region was greatly jeopardized. In 1980, the Carter Doctrine declared the Gulf "a zone of U.S. influence." It warned (especially the Soviets) that any attempt to gain control of the Persian Gulf region would be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the U.S. and repelled by any means necessary, including military force. This was followed by the creation of the Rapid Deployment Force — a military program specifically designed to rush several thousand U.S. troops to the Gulf on short notice.

Under President Reagan, the Rapid Deployment Force was transformed into the U.S. Central Command that oversaw the area from eastern Africa to Afghanistan. Bases and support facilities were established throughout the Gulf region, and alliances were expanded with countries such as Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq.

Since the first Gulf War, the U.S. has built a network of military bases that now almost completely encircle the oil fields of the Persian Gulf.

In 1989, following the end of the Cold War and just prior to the Gulf War, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, and Paul Wolfowitz produced the 'Defense Planning Guidance' report advocating U.S. military dominance around the globe. The Plan called for the United States to maintain and grow in military superiority and prevent new rivals from rising up to challenge us on the world stage. Using words like 'preemptive' and military 'forward presence,’ the plan called for the U.S. to be dominant over friends and foes alike. It concluded with the assertion that the U.S. can best attain this position by making itself 'absolutely powerful.'

The 1989 plan was spawned after the fall of the Soviet Union. Without the traditional threat to national security, Cheney, Powell and Wolfowitz knew that the military budget would dwindle without new enemies and threats. In an attempt to salvage defense funding, Cheney and company constructed a plan to fill the 'threat blank'. On August 2, 1990 President Bush called a press conference. He explained that the threat of global war had significantly receded, but in its wake a new danger arose. This unforeseen threat to national security could come from any angle and from any power.

Iraq, by a remarkable coincidence, invaded Northern Kuwait later the same day.

Cheney et al. were out of political power for the eight years of Clinton’s presidency. During this time the neo-conservatives founded the Project for the New American Century (PNAC). The most influential product of the PNAC was a report entitled Rebuilding America's Defense, which called for U.S. military dominance and control of global economic markets.

With the election of George W. Bush, the authors of the plan were returned to power: Cheney as vice president, Powell as Secretary of State, and Wolfowitz in the number two spot at the Pentagon. With the old Defense Planning Guidance as the skeleton, the three went back to the drawing board. When their new plan was complete, it included contributions from Wolfowitz's boss Donald Rumsfeld. The old 'preemptive' attacks have now become 'unwarned attacks.' The Powell-Cheney doctrine of military 'forward presence' has been replaced by 'forward deterrence.' The U.S. stands ready to invade any country deemed a possible threat to our economic interests.

Update by David Armstrong

Just days after this story appeared, the Bush administration unveiled its “new” National Security Strategy, which effectively validated the article’s main thesis. The NSS makes clear that the administration will pursue a policy of pre-emption and overwhelming military superiority aimed at ensuring US dominance. Since that time, the major media have generally come around to the point of view presented in the article. The New York Times, which originally rejected the article’s premise, now makes a virtual mantra of the notion that the current security strategy is little more than a warmed-over version of the policy drafted during the first Bush administration of preventing new rivals from rising up to challenge the US in the wake of the Soviet Union’s collapse. The article circulated widely, particularly in the run up to the war in Iraq, and was entered into the Congressional Record. It also became a topic of discussion on such outlets as the BBC, NPR, MSNBC, various talk radio shows, and European newspapers. In the process, it has substantially helped shape the debate about the Bush administration’s foreign policy.

Update by Bob Dreyfuss

For months leading up to the war against Iraq, it was widely assumed among critics of the war that a hidden motive for military action was Iraq's oil, not terrorism or weapons of mass destruction. In fact, "No Blood for Oil" became perhaps the leading slogan and bumper sticker of the peace movement. Yet, there was very little examination in the media of the role of oil in American policy toward Iraq and the Persian Gulf, and what coverage did exist tended to pooh-pooh or debunk the idea that the war had anything to do with oil. So, I set out to place the war with Iraq in the context of a decades-long U.S. strategy of building up a military presence in the region, arguing that even before the war, the U.S. had turned the Gulf into a U.S. protectorate. Perhaps most importantly, I showed that a motive behind the war was oil as a national security issue, as a strategic commodity, not as a commercial one — and that, in fact, most of the oil industry itself was either opposed to or ambivalent about the idea of war against Saddam Hussein. Yet the neoconservatives in the Bush administration, whose forebears had proposed occupying the oil fields of the Gulf in the mid-1970s, sought control of the oil in the region as the cornerstone of American empire.

Since the end of this war, it has become clear that the United States (and the U.K.) have aggressively sought to maintain direct control over Iraq's oil industry. When looters devastated Baghdad, only the Ministry of Oil was unscathed, since U.S. marines protected it. Since then, handpicked Iraqi officials have been installed in the ministry, under the supervision of U.S. military and civilian officials, and there is movement toward privatization of Iraq's oil industry, a point that I emphasized in my writing on the topic before the war. Not only that, but it is increasingly clear that France, Russia, and China are likely to be excluded from either rebuilding the industry and securing contracts for future Iraqi oil delivery.

I can't say that the media followed up on my exposure of this issue, except that I appeared on a number of radio and television talk show programs as a result of my writing on Iraq, in both Mother Jones and The American Prospect, as well as C-Span, CNBC, and CBC-TV in Canada. I was also invited to make a presentation on "The Thirty-Year Itch" at the Transnational Institute in Amsterdam. According to Mother Jones, the article drew more traffic to its web site than any other article.

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Monday, March 29, 2004

Privatization of Our Lives

Concerned about corporate redesign of public spaces:

Nikeground

Luckily it was all a prank:

The Pranksters

But of course corporations rarely have a humorous side and Nike attempted to punish these fun-loving artists. Here is the latest report on Nike International attempts to silence this art project:

January 25th, 2004

Nike throws in the towel

...and withdraws case against European art project

In December there was still uncertainty about the final outcome of the lawsuit filed by Nike International against Public Netbase for producing 0100101110101101.ORG's art project "Nike Ground - Rethinking space". For several weeks, the fate of the renowned Vienna-based net culture platform hung in the balance, its continuing existence threatened by the court action. But we can now confirm that the sportswear company has yielded under the pressure of international public and media attention generated by the action.

"We won! - declares satisfied 0100101110101101.ORG spokesman Franco Birkut, - and our victory is proof of at least one thing: the famous "Swoosh" logo belongs to the people who actually wear it every day. These commercial giants think they can beat anyone who annoys them, and they're unable to distinguish an artistic or critical project from unfair competition or commercial fraud. Nike was not the target of our performance, they are just one amongst the many tools we use to make our point. We were not against them, but they reacted in such a hasty and unseemly way, with no style at all. In the end it was a pleasure to play with Nike: the bigger they are, the harder they fall!"

"It was worth the risk in order to insist on the right to free artistic expression in urban spaces - Public Netbase director Konrad Becker declares - The intimidation attempts of this company known for its sneaky marketing strategies have turned back against them". The worldwide interest generated by the project can also be explained by the fact that it emphasized the importance of a cutting-edge artistic practice that employs the real means of production of a society increasingly determined by the media and technology. Becker: "The project drew attention to important issues such as the globalized dominance of economic interests over cultural symbols and gave rise to controversial perspectives and contentious interpretations".

In mid September 2003, 0100101110101101.ORG started a surreal art project called Nike Ground ( http://www.nikeground.com ), a "hyper-real theatrical performance" built around a fake guerrilla marketing campaign: Nike was supposedly buying streets and squares in major world capitals, in order to rename them and insert giant monuments of their famous logo. A 13 tons hi-tech container was installed in Vienna, the first city to host a "Nike Square", as part of the action.

Nike wasted no time: "These actions have gone beyond a joke. This is not just a prank, it's a breach of our copyright and therefore Nike will take legal action against the instigators of this phoney campaign". On October 14th, Nike released a 20 page injunction requesting the immediate removal of any reference to copyrighted material, and that any activity related to Nike cease immediately. Failure to comply with this request would mean that Nike would claim 78,000 Euros for damages.

"When they started legal action against us - says Franco Birkut - they knew perfectly well that we were not a competitor and that they were dealing with an art project, but they continued legal proceedings in order to crush us and erase any trace of the work. We didn't allow them to intimidate us, we ignored their ultimatum and went on with the performance till the end of October, because this was our initial idea".

The international press reacted badly to Nike's legal action: "Regardless of the outcome of the trial - wrote Cathy Macherel in Le Courrier - their action will have been success: hasn't operation Nike Ground shown the public the other side of the "Swoosh" corporation advertisement? Far from being a free symbol integrated in the public sphere, here Nike reveals itself as a humorless multinational that has lost all sense of play as soon as someone touches its interests".

The Commercial Court has rejected Nike's plea for a provisional injunction on formal grounds. After this refusal Nike didn't take further legal action. The match is over: Nike threw in the towel.
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We can now all breath easily that the corporate giants have been chastised, but wait here in the US they still dominate easily and re-write our public spaces and restrict (think of the tightening of blood vessels to such a point that it destroys the overall health of the body/corpus) the public sphere with impunity. What parts of your city have been re-named, restricted, and refashioned by corporate desires! What public discourses or public knowledge or public art in your region has been limited, restricted, or, even, threatened by corporate policies.

Its not that we should be anti-corporate or anti-business, instead the danger is the complete domination of corporate ethos/policies in our public sphere and public institutions. Where do we draw the line? Think of how many phrases are now copyrighted and restricted? In our nations schools/universities the privatization of our educational process is a direct result of a corporate ethos that views the bottom line and numbers as the 'only' answer.

Yet, we are suprised by the destruction and debasement of many communities due to a bottom-line policy... but who cares as long as it isn't in my backyard--right!!!! But as the student-filmakers Laura Dunn and Kyle Henry brilliantly realized it is the subtext of our education that is the problem. What do we teach our children and young adults, as long as we can grab our piece of the pie, everyone else can fuck off!

Why do we bury our heads in the sand and foolishly believe the complete privatization of our social institutions will benefit us (as in the 'people') the most? Have we completely forsaken the ideal of strong social institutions that will benefit our communities and educate our future citizens?

Ask questions!
Make connections!
Make your presence felt!
Resist the impulse to withdraw from society!
Being political is not a bad thing!

"The White House Has Disinvited the Poets" by Julia Alvarez

The always fascinating Melissa Purdue showed me this poem tonight (I had seen it about a year ago). It was written after the Bush's canceled a poetry reading at the white house because the poets were 'too' political... with Laura mumbling something about poetry and art not being political. Immediately when I heard Laura Bush's dismissal of these poets two artistic statements popped into my head:

"Art is not a mirror held up to reality, but a hammer with which to shape it."
---Bertolt Brecht

"I'm just looking for one divine hammer … I'll bang it all day long."
---Breeders "Divine Hammer" (1993).

Then still reflecting on about Laura Bush's own willfull ignorance I returned to two major statements by women authors, the first reminding us about the the politics of writing and the second of reading:

"Writing is [or can be] a transgression of boundaries, an exploration of new territory. It involves making public the events of our lives, wriggling free of the constraints of purely private and individual experiences. From a state of modest insignificance we enter a space in which we can take ourselves seriously. As an alternative to accepting everyday events mindlessly, we recall them in writing."
--Frigga Haug "Memory Work as Social Science Writing" 1987

"The disobedient reader as writer is no longer a shadow on the text, but rather makes the text a shadow of her own"
--Nancy Walker "The Disobedient Writer" 1995

Then I came across this poem ... I can't remember where, but I saw it in multiple places and it became a resounding questioning of the Bush's politics in ignoring these poets and their poetry dismissing them and their work as simply political, forgetting that all poetry is political:

"The White House Has Disinvited the Poets" by Julia Alvarez

The White House has disinvited the poets
to a cultural tea in honor of poetry
after the Secret Service got wind of a plot
to fill Mrs. Bush’s ears with anti-war verse.
Were they afraid the poets might persuade
a sensitive girl who always loved to read,
a librarian who stocked the shelves with Poe
and Dickinson? Or was she herself afraid
to be swayed by the cooing doves, and live at odds
with the screaming hawks in her family?

The Latina maids are putting away the cups
and the silver spoons, sad to be missing out
on música they seldom get to hear
in the hallowed halls. . . The valet sighs
as he rolls the carpets up and dusts the blinds.
Damn but a little Langston would be good
in this dreary mausoleum of a place!
Why does the White House have to be so white?
The chef from Baton Rouge is starved for verse
uncensored by Homeland Security.

NO POETRY UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE!
Instead the rooms are vacuumed and set up
for closed-door meetings planning an attack
against the ones who always bear the brunt
of silencing: the poor, the powerless,
the ones who serve, those bearing poems, not arms.
So why be afraid of us, Mrs. Bush?
you’re married to a scarier fellow.
We bring you tidings of great joy—
--------------------------------------------------------------

For more poetry by Julia Alvarez

Thanks to Culture Cat for making the poem available...

Turning the Tide--Noam Chomsky

I've been in San Antonio the last four days attending the Conference on Collecge Communication and Composition. I gave a presentation on the University of Kentucky's new place-based writing program. Good to be back, but it was also fun exploring a new city!

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(courtesy of SNAFU)

Turning the Tide

The official weblog of Noam Chomsky, including exclusive, original observations drawn from personal correspondence, ZNet

Turning the Tide

Tuesday, March 23, 2004

Super Heros, Straussians, and Ideological Crossings

I posted Shadia Drury's negative review of the neo-conservative appropriation of Leo Strauss and then later associated him with Alan Watt's Trickster Guru figure... lo-and-behold it was linked at the Straussian site and Straussians started popping in at this site. So, I decided I would return the favor and visit them on their own turf at the Straussian News Blog to see if I could learn anything from them (hey learning from others, means everyone--right!)... and while I still disagree with the premises of Straussian thought (which I intend to learn more about) I must say that they are at least "thinking" and "discussing"... a little one-sided for my tastes, but then they probably think the same thing when they see my site. Anyways, I left some comments, seeking to disrupt the general monological tone of the site and I am very happy to say that the webmaster Jeff toook all in stride and we even got into a good discussion about the current need for literary super heros/heroines.

Here is the essay Jeff first pointed out: Superhero's Stories

and I in return included some of my favorite creators who I thought pushed the boundaries of two-dimensional fascist notion of super-herodom:

Alan Moore

From Hell

Watchmen

Neil Gaiman

Grant Morrison

Frank Miller interview

Anyways... I'm a firm believer that there must be dialogue between those with differing opinions and beliefs and experiences--thanks Jeff! Peace!

"The Maze" by Seamus Sweeney

"The Maze"
by Seamus Sweeney
Nth Position Book Reviews

Review of:
The Maze
Donovan Wylie
Granta, 2004

Prisons often have strangely poetic names. Think of Strangeways in Manchester or Parchman in Mississippi, think of Sing Sing or Spandau. Even Wormwood Scrubs has an evocative ring - the juxtaposition of the Book of Revelations book Wormwood and an image of the mundane labour of scrubbing. Some prisons display reverse nominative determination - Mountjoy in Dublin is anything but joyful. But no prison that I know of has as apt a name as The Maze near Belfast.

I had always assumed "The Maze" was so called because it was literally a maze, a medieval sounding fortress-prison. In fact, the townland on which the prison was built was known as "An Má" - the plain - as Gaeilge, which became "The Maze" over time. Yet the Maze is exactly that. Like something out of a Borges story, the building is deliberately designed to baffle and confuse. Entering the world of Donovan Wylie's photographs is to enter a world of "steriles" and "inertias" - open spaces, the former a stone surfaced space designed to immobilise the prisoners, the latter a void running immediately along the wall of the prison designed to detect any movements near the seventeen-foot high perimeter wall. It's a world of roads that are almost all cul-de-sacs, where any one point in the prison looks exactly the same as sundry other points.

The Maze, from the evidence of Wylie's photographs, was and is a prime example of a distinctive architecture those familiar with the Northern Ireland landscape will instantly recognise. The watchtowers, many now dismantled but many still present across the landscape, the courthouses and police stations surrounded by high walls and enmeshed in barbed wire - British Army Gothic, it could be called. For many who didn't have to actually live there (and, I suspect, not a few of those who did) the apparatus of militarisation gave driving through the North a certain frisson of excitement. It was part of what made Northern Ireland distinct, and for this Free Stater, part of the sense of the place not being the same as Galway or Cork. There was a certain heaviness in the air, palpable at the sight of one of these inscrutable structures. Margaret Thatcher's aphorism that Northern Ireland was as British as her constituency Finchley was widely ridiculed, but to call it as Irish as Spiddal or Mullingar betrays an even tinnier ear to the unique atmosphere of the Six Counties/Ulster/Northern Ireland.

As that last splurge of strokes indicates, it's almost impossible to write about the wider topic of Northern Ireland for any length without betraying yourself - I use the word "betraying" judiciously. One's allegiances are revealed in the very terms used to describe the Troubles/conflict/armed struggle/security situation. Even the attempt to be linguistically neutral will probably alienate both sides more than anything else.

Dr Louise Purbrick, Senior Lecturer in the History of Art and Design at the University of Brighton, provides a clear-sighted essay on the photographs that manages, on the whole, to avoid the partisan traps language sets for the unwary (although - here's the inevitable "although") her account of the start of the "Troubles" is a bit simplistic. Like a lot of penological literature, there's a strange void in Purbrick's essay - no mention of what the prisoners had actually done to end up in jail. One almost feels a deus ex machina has deposited them there.

Purbrick is strong on the history of the Maze, and the thinking in prison construction and design that underlay its conception. The Maze was built in 1976, beside the existing internment camp of Long Kesh. The paradox was that to enforce the end of special category status for paramilitary prisoners, a special prison had to be used. The Maze was unique in British prisons in that it was a complete maximum security institution - elsewhere in the UK, the policy of 'dispersal', incarcerating high security prisoners in Special Security Units scattered throughout the prison system, had been in place since the Sixties and continues to be. Housing prisoners in separate cells, as opposed to the dormitories of Long Kesh, was expected to break up group loyalties.

The H-blocks which became part of the iconography of the Troubles were prefabricated concrete units whose shape was dictated by economy rather than any aspiration to symbolise anything. The advent of prefabrication in prison architecture could even be seen as part of the International Modernist glorification of functionality over traditional ideals of form. If Le Corbusier felt a house was a machine for living in, prefabricated prisons were machines for incarcerating people in. Built by the Royal Engineers, the Maze is British Army Gothic Triumphant - Wylie describes how the walls initially appear entirely grey, such is the volume of barbed wire around them.

The Hunger Strikes of the early Eighties (there were two major ones, the second during which Bobby Sands and ten others died, and a less well known strike in 1980) and the dirty protests, as well as creating a potent Republican martyrology and searing the H-block into Irish consciousness, ultimately ended the debate on special status. Purbrick cites the Chief Inspector of Prisons during this later phase in the conflict that "there is no point in pretending that it is a normal prison."

Wylie's photographs both gain and lose something for being taken when the Maze was unoccupied. There's an eerie, JG Ballardian atmosphere to the photos of vast institutional structures now disused. There is little difference between the inertias and steriles, and indeed navigating the photographs becomes disorientating - have I been here before, one asks, even while turning the pages. This is a hint of the derealisation that the Maze itself must have provoked.

The pictures of now-empty cells, their flowery curtains the one hint of lively colour in the book, again strike one largely with their sameness. But how much of this is the sameness of institutional buildings - from hospitals to schools to barracks back to prisons - anywhere? How much of our reaction to these photos is their presumed context - was this cell wall covered in excrement, did a hunger striker lie on this bed? In these images, life is drained out- but is it because the prison is empty or because of the nature of the building itself?

The images are reminiscent of David Farrell's , Innocent Landcapes (published in book form in 2001). In 1999, after the Northern Ireland (Location of Victims' Remains) Bill was passed in the Commons declaring an amnesty to help the identification and location of the remains of those "disappeared" during the Troubles, six locations were identified where eight people had been buried after being murdered by the IRA. Their fate and the location of their bodies had been unknown to their families since the Seventies. Farrell's photographs were pastoral landscapes, with the unmistakable signs of a forensic search for a body discreetly in the middle distance, like a shepherd in a Poussin painting. Hannah Arendt's thinking on the banality of evil are often discussed, but Wylie and Farrell portray the banality of much else that we think of with fear and trembling - the banal reality of maximum security and of murder and hidden burial respectively. Wylie and Farrell complement each other in other ways - Wylie portrays the architectural embodiment of the state's forceful authority, while Farrell shows us the smiling hills where the IRA forcefully asserted its authority.

The Maze now lies empty, closed since October 2003. A public process of consultation is ongoing as to its fate - the interested can visit the site at New Future for the Maze. Predictably, there is a sectarian edge to the various proposals - museum, suburban centre, stadium - for its future. Wylie's photographs may be closest we will get to simply leaving the Maze intact, neither the burden of interpretative centres with a no doubt contentious interpretation nor the simple erasure of history, but simply leaving it as it is.

Review Link

The Rebirth of Edan, Kansas

"Sowing Art on the Kansas Prairie"
By STEPHEN KINZER
New York Times

EDAN, Kan. — Not long ago this isolated town nestled in the Flint Hills seemed about to blow off the map. The bank failed, farmers lost or sold their land, stores shut down, and people drifted away.

Now, however, life here is changing. Driven in part by the dream of Bill Kurtis, a Kansan and longtime television newscaster, Sedan is reinventing itself as a prairie art colony.

As word spreads, artists have begun arriving. Some are refugees from what they say are overcommercialized art scenes in places like Santa Fe, N.M. One, Stan Herd, a pioneer of environmental art, has built a monumental stone work called "Prairiehenge" on a hilltop outside town.

Mr. Herd lives in Lawrence, 180 miles north of Sedan, but spent much of 2003 here working on his installation. During last year he saw Sedan begin to flower. "This is a very unique spot for the evolving of an art that is about land and place," he said. Mr. Herd and several other artists are considering buying homes and relocating part time to Sedan. "As the place builds, we'll have weekend houses and then see where we go from there," he said.

Tourists are also finding their way to Sedan. Local merchants estimate that about 80,000 visited in 2003, and they expect substantially more this year. The visitors not only buy art but flit among new shops to scoop up antiques, quilts and homemade candy. To accommodate them, developers plan to renovate the town's only hotel, which has been closed since the 1970's.

Many troubled Midwestern towns are grasping for ways to fend off decline and, in some cases, extinction. People in Sedan, which has 1,200 residents and is in one of the poorest parts of Kansas, believe they have found what hundreds of communities are seeking: a formula that will lead them back toward prosperity.

"It's just mind-boggling to see what can happen," said Judy Tolbert, who grew up nearby, now owns a bed-and-breakfast here and is a former president of the town's chamber of commerce. "When I got back to Sedan four and a half years ago, there were 14 empty buildings on Main Street. Now there are two. The cultural aspect is the key. When people come to see renowned artists and galleries, that's a different clientele you're attracting." The town's first and so far only gallery, called Art of the Prairie, is the centerpiece of Mr. Kurtis's effort to make prairie art a signature Sedan product. "Western art has become very popular and expensive," he said. "Indian art is on the same track. This prairie art strikes those same chords of land and heritage."

The gallery is hung with paintings of the prairie, a landscape that generations of artists have shunned as featureless and uninteresting. "The prairie is so subtle that it's hard to get the atmosphere," said Judith Mackey, who since July has been an artist in residence at Art of the Prairie. "It doesn't have the grandeur of the mountains or canyons, but the beauty is there."

A prominent American Indian artist, the ceramic sculptor Barry Coffin, who lived in New Mexico for more than 20 years, recently moved back to his hometown, Lawrence, partly because he wanted to be close to Sedan. He said he planned to open a studio here this spring, and to teach workshops in ceramic art.

"I really like what's going on there, and I decided I'd like to be a part of it," Mr. Coffin said.

Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas visited Sedan in October and said afterward that she considered this "very much a model" for other struggling communities.

"It's not only art and culture, but the land itself," Ms. Sebelius said. "Ninety-five percent of the tallgrass prairie that remains in the world is here in Kansas. It's a terrain that needs to be seen and appreciated the same way people go down the Amazon River or into a rain forest."

Prairie grassland once covered much of North America's midsection. European settlers turned nearly all of it into farms and ranches, and today the prairie landscape survives mainly in isolated reserves. The area around Sedan, however, looks much as it did when Indians first roamed here. Its appeal is central to the town's revitalization.

"The idea is not just to introduce people to art from the prairie," Mr. Kurtis said. "We also want to help them experience this environment so they feel a closer connection to the art and to the landscape it represents."

Dick Jones, a real estate agent, said that in the 1950's Sedan was "a robust rural community." He recalled watching it decline into "a ghost town" by 1980. But he said that 33 homes have been built in the area during the last three years, compared with 11 during the previous three years. Real estate prices have risen by a total of 24 percent since 1998, he said.

Residents have initiated a handful of civic efforts since the late 1980's, including a successful campaign to save the local movie house. The big break came in 1999 when Mr. Kurtis, who had already bought land nearby, decided to make rescuing Sedan his personal project.

Mr. Kurtis, who is 63, grew up in Independence, Kan., 40 miles east of here. He built a reputation as a correspondent and news anchor for CBS (he was a co-anchor on the "Morning" program in the early 1980's) and now runs a company in Chicago that produces documentaries for cable television, including the History Channel and A&E.

During the last four years he has bought 14 buildings in Sedan, many along Main Street, and paid to renovate most of them. He has also assembled 10,000 acres west of town, on which he grazes about 1,000 head of cattle and 50 buffalo. By his own account he has invested about $1 million here. He said he hoped to turn a profit, although that is not his main goal.

"For me it was getting back in touch with the land, especially after 9/11," he said while driving over a frozen hillside on his ranch. "When towers fall, you reach out for some permanent anchor."

By renovating buildings on Main Street and renting them to shopkeepers for $1 a year, Mr. Kurtis fueled Sedan's rebirth. This has made him something of a local hero, but some people here fear that Sedan is losing its rural identity.

"We've seen a lot of hype, but not much for the average Joe," said Jeanette Myers, who works with disabled children at the nearby elementary school. "Bill did straighten up his buildings, which made other stores clean up and paint. If you talk to business people, they'll tell you business has really picked up. Yeah, he's helped, but everything he does also helps himself."

Larry Powell, a city council member, said he has heard that some older residents resent Mr. Kurtis and fear that his project will drive up property taxes. "But when you ask people directly, no one says anything really negative," Mr. Powell said. "How can they? This is the first time in many years that we've had something to look forward to."

The latest building Mr. Kurtis has bought here is an old lumber mill that he plans to turn into a residence and studio space for three artists.

Some people want to renovate the old 300-seat playhouse, where the last production was staged more than half a century ago. Others dream of mounting a clown festival or performance series, tied to Emmett Kelly, one of the most famous clowns of the 20th century and a Sedan native. Mr. Kurtis said he planned to open his ranch to tourists who want to relive the Old West experience.

"If there's a lesson here, it's that towns can regenerate themselves by doing something different," Mr. Kurtis said. "Imagination is the key."

Article link

"The Siege of the Sierra Club" by Rebecca Solnit

The Siege of the Sierra Club
Anti-immigration ideologues must not be allowed to hijack John Muir's vision.
by Rebecca Solnit
Mother Jones

Long, long ago, in a decade that now seems far away, terrorists were a non-issue and immigrants were the brown peril of choice, particularly in Pete Wilson's California. In 1994, Californians voted into law Proposition 187, a measure to deny basic healthcare and educational access to undocumented immigrants, and a whole host of demagogues ran around blaming various social and economic woes on immigrants, which degenerated into animosity to Latinos, whether they were immigrants or citizens whose ancestors beat the US to the area.

In 1998, anti-immigrant activists forced the Sierra Club to put a referendum on immigration on the annual membership ballot. Having been blamed for every other sin under the sun, immigrants were now to be scapegoated for our environmental problems as well. By the time the Club's membership had voted the measure down, a lot of participants were embittered, and the environmental movement was tarnished in the eyes of many onlookers. The 1990s saw the rise of the environmental justice movement, which did address environmental racism -- just who gets poisoned by dumps and incinerators, among other things -- but the mainstream environmental movement is not always so good at the racial politics that lurk within its own priorities and assumptions.

Still, this is a long way from the politics of the anti-immigration activists attempting an openly hostile takeover of the Club, with three candidates for the March board elections looking to form a majority with some of the more dubious current board members, and various outside organizations -- some clearly racist and white-supremacist -- encouraging their members to join the Club and sway the vote. "Without a doubt, the Sierra Club is the subject of a hostile takeover attempt by forces allied with ... a variety of right-wing extremists," said the Southern Poverty Law Center in a warning letter. "They hope to use the credibility of the Club as a cover to advance their own extremist views."

The three are Frank Morris, David Pimentel and Richard Lamm, all with links to the anti-immigration organization Diversity Alliance for a Sustainable America. Former Colorado Governor Lamm is also a longtime board member of the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), which receives funding from the pro-eugenics and "race betterment" Pioneer Fund. Lamm, who has talked about the elderly's "duty to die," has made statements such as, "[T]he rash of firebombings throughout the Southwest, and the three-month siege of downtown San Diego in 1998 were all led by second-generation Hispanics, the children of immigrants." (One wonders if he or any other anti-immigration activist remembers that the reason the Sierra Club's name is half-Spanish is because California used to be Mexican territory.)

The vision of a relatively homogenous place overrun by disruptive, destructive outsiders is a better picture of the Sierra Club under siege than the United States in relation to immigration. Outside groups such as the National Immigration Alert List encouraged their members to join the Club to force it to endorse an issue rejected six years before and so perhaps permanently warp its identity and image; further, most candidates for a seat on the Club's board are active longtime members, but these three outsiders seem to have become members specifically to stage the nonprofit equivalent of a hostile corporate takeover. That hostility is underscored by the fact that they filed, then petulantly dropped, a lawsuit against the Club and its current president, which sought an injunction that would prevent the club, the board, and other board candidates from commenting on their agenda. Current board president Larry Fahn writes that "the lawyer for Lamm, Morris and Pimentel had hired a high-powered corporate public relations firm (which also represents the American Chemical Council) to try their case in the media." Thirteen past presidents of the Club have come out in opposition to the coup; eleven of them issued a statement that included these remarks: "These outsiders' desire is to capture the majority of seats so as to move their personal agenda, without regard to the wishes or knowledge of the members and supporters of the Sierra Club, and to use the funds and other resources of the Club to those ends…. We believe that the crisis facing the Club is real and can well be fatal, destroying the vision of John Muir, and the work and contributions of hundreds of thousands of volunteer activists who have built this organization." (Of course Scottish immigrant Muir was a racist too -- he said some pretty astounding things about Native Americans-- but that's another story, and era.)

A lot of leftists have already written off the 112-year-old Sierra Club, and though I've occasionally thought its slogan should be Earth First's "No compromise in the defense of Mother Earth" without the No, it remains what it has been for so many decades: the flagship of the environmental movement dealing with everything from clear-cutting and global warming to endangered species and water pollution. If it is discredited and disempowered, so will be much of the movement. And it seems that the goal of these anti-immigration activists has little or nothing to do with the protection of the environment. After all the links between immigration and environmental trouble are sketchy at best.

During the 1990s, the border was always talked about as though it was a tangible landform, a divinely ordained difference. I grew up with a clear picture of the Iron Curtain too, since it was spoken of as though it were as coherent an artifact as the Berlin Wall. But the Berlin Wall was made out of concrete, while the Iron Curtain was not made out of metal, despite the vision of a continental cyclone fence I'd had. Like the US-Mexican border, it was a political idea enforced by a variety of structures, technologies, and people with guns. In 1998, I spent a couple of weeks on the border in Texas. There, the border is a river, the Rio Grande, and there I realized that in most senses it is also a fiction. As our raft floated downstream, Mexico was the stark expanse to the right, the United States the bleak expanse to the left, and crossing songbirds and cattle seemed indifferent to the idea that the Chihuahuan desert was really two countries. The toxins from American agriculture and Juarez maquilladoras mixed indiscriminately in the slow, brown river, even as plant and animal life clustered and bloomed on its banks. It was not a boundary but an oasis. Not quite a Berlin Wall, even if you're not a swallow or a cactus wren.

Borders don't exist in nature. I learned that a second time in northern Canada, up where British Columbia meets up with the Northwest Territories. I was traveling by raft again, and the ornithologist with us would get up at dawn to identify, band, and free the songbirds that she caught in her mist nets. She liked to point out that a lot of them wintered in the tropics of Central America and so conservation efforts needed to be transnational. Canada's remotest wilderness was not a place apart; it was intimately tied to the tropics.

Borders don't exist in nature, but they can be made. In San Diego and Tijuana shortly after last year's devastating October fires, friends pointed out to me how a single bioregion had sharply diverged because of distinct human practices. On the Baja side, the resources to put out fires never really existed; the fire cycle had never been seriously interrupted; and so the colossal fuel loads that would incinerate so much around San Diego had never accumulated. Besides Mexicans are less interested in moving into locations remote from their fellows. The upshot is not only that they didn't have such devastating fires but that they didn't have mansions in canyons and on mountaintops for which firefighters would have to risk their lives and the state squander its dwindling funds.

This is not the only place where the ecology is better preserved south of the border than north of it. Consider the case of the nearly extinct Sonoran pronghorn. About ten times as many survive on the Sonora side, while on the Arizona side, they're pretty much confined to the Barry Goldwater Bombing Range -- not the healthiest habitat for the last couple dozen of their kind in the U.S. I traveled there too, amid signs warning of live ordnance and the sound of distant bombing operations.

The takeover of the Sierra Club will only succeed if the invaders convince people to believe again that the border marks a coherent environmental divide and that the US is, or can be, a place apart. The official idea is, of course, that immigrants are bad for the environment, but you can reframe that a couple of dozen ways. One is to point out that we don't need help being bad for the environment. The US consumes the world's resources in huge disproportion to its percentage of the global population, and most of us work overtime to do our bit for global warming. (My mother got caught up in the same arguments the last time the immigration issue roiled the Sierra Club's waters and exclaimed to me, "But what if they come here and live like us?" to which the only possible reply was, "What if we stay here and live like us?") If you care about the environment, there are more relevant issues you might choose to take up before immigration. If you care about stopping immigration, on the other hand, the environment is a touchstone of conventional goodness, or at least of liberalism, you can hide behind.

The poor nonwhite immigrants who are the real targets of this campaign are generally building and cleaning those big houses in remote places and mowing the lawns and fueling up the snowmobiles, but they tend not to own them, or to make the decisions to de-list an endangered species, or defund the Superfund cleanup program, or lower emissions standards. (We elect people to do that, actually.) In fact, if sprawl and resource consumption are the immediate threat population growth poses, then the new immigrants who live frugally, densely, and rely on public transport are a rebuke to the suburbanite majority in the US.

The fantasy that the US can be sealed off from the world like a walled garden in a slum overlooks dozens of other inconvenient facts, like the role of our country, with tools such as agricultural dumping and the World Bank, in making those other nations slummier, or the fact that they too have their gardens and we too have our slums. Sometimes it's the destruction of their gardens that set them on the immigrants' path in the first place -- certainly that's the case with Mexican farmers bankrupted by NAFTA. But it's also dismaying because setting gardens apart is how the conservation movement began back at the turn of the twentieth century when it was far more closely affiliated with racist, nativist, and eugenicist movements. Behind the early national parks and wilderness areas was the idea of scenery segregation -- that it was enough to save the most beautiful and biotically lush places, a few dozen or hundred square miles at a time.

Setting one piece apart always implied that the rest of the environment was up for grabs, and into the 1960s the Sierra Club's basic strategy was doing exactly that. They fought a nuclear power plant in California's Nipomo Dunes but agreed it was okay to put one in Diablo Canyon instead; Club activists like David Brower came to bitterly regret that they had secured protection of Utah's Dinosaur National Monument from damming by letting Glen Canyon Dam go forward. Now most environmentalists are against big dams and nuclear power, so that the debates are about policy, not just geography.

Back then, Rachel Carson had only recently brought us the bad news about pesticides -- that they didn't stay put but moved through the environment into both wild places and into our own bodies, and with that it began to become clear that you couldn't just defend places. You had to address practices; you had to recognize systems; you had to understand that, in John Muir's famous aphorism, "When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the universe." When he said that, of course, he wasn't imagining plastic detritus being ingested by seabirds in the center of the Pacific Ocean or polar bears far beyond the industrialized world becoming hermaphroditic from chemical contamination, but we can.

More and more things come under the purview of environmentalism these days, from what we eat to where our chemicals end up. Immigration, unless it's part of a larger conversation about consumption, birthrates, reproductive rights, agriculture, international economic policy and trade, sprawl, and dozens of other issues, isn't really one of them. It seems instead that environmentalism is a cloak of virtue in which anti-immigration activists are attempting to wrap themselves. But they're better looked at naked.

This commentary first appeared on TomDispatch, a web-log of The Nation Institute. A second-generation American, Rebecca Solnit is the author of several books, including the National Book Critics Circle award-winning River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West and Savage Dreams: A Journey into the Landscape Wars of the American West, which deals with the environmental movement's erasure of Native Americans from the American vision of nature.

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Monday, March 22, 2004

Fun Round Up!

Andie asked MediaSquatters this question... and I thought it was an important one:

"So in that spirit, how about a 'fun round-up'? What's the most fun youse all
have ever had?"
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So I thought about it for a bit and here are the first ten things that came to my mind:

Getting launched out of a wave while body-surfing and quite literally flying for a few, brief, but fantastic seconds...
Staring at the stars out in the desert and realizing that we are but a tiny speck in the universe...
Traveling with Melissa...
Loving--spiritually and physically...
Camping with my family when I was a kid/teen ...
Those heady philosophical conversations with good friends right about the second beer when you really start to feel the ideas flow and everything clicks ...
Getting lost in a good book...
Parties with Melissa, Tim and Liz...
Walking/hiking in a stimulating environment...
Interacting with animals...

Votewatch

Votewatch is a citizen-based non-profit non-partisan organization that works to ensure that the voices of ordinary people are heard and can be acted upon within America's democratic process. Our democratic process requires constant vigilance on the part of our citizens, and we must employ the most effective and efficient technology available to ensure free, fair and unfettered elections nationwide. Through this combination of technology and the need for vigilance, Votewatch is creating the tools that will give all citizens the opportunity to participate in the oversight of our election process. Votewatch will strengthen each American's ability to uncover, document, analyze and report on electoral anomalies.

Votewatch

Bush's Leadership

Lazarus over at Ungodly Politics had this to say about the Bush campaign's focus on "leadership" as the defining quality of his current term. Lazarus does a great job of situating what this term means in a military sense.
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Bush's reelection campaign is focused on his "leadership". His "leadership" in the War on Terror, his "leadership" on 9/11 and the days immediately after. Leadership, leadership, leadership.

I don't know how many of you have been in the military, but I was. Granted, I only did one enlistment, but that was enough to learn some lessons. My wife is a retired Navy Chief, plenty to learn a LOT of lessons; she and I had the same epiphany last night, watching Stephen Hadley talk about Bush's leadership on the War on Terror:

In the military, when you can't manage to come up with anything specific to say about someone, any actual accomplishments that someone has made, but you still want to give them a good write-up, you talk a lot about their "leadership". "This sailor demonstrated a great deal of leadership during the period in question." That's standard write-up talk for, "This sailor didn't do a damned thing, but I don't want to say it."

Leadership is an easy thing to talk about, because you don't have to talk about specifics. You don't have to mention jobs, just leadership on the economy; you don't have to mention actual terrorist acts prevented (or not, see: Madrid), just leadership on terrorism.

You don't have to show what you did. You don't have to have a record. You can just say you showed leadership. That's as fuzzy as it gets.

And it's a sign of incredible weakness. The Bush people are admitting they have no record to run on, in the War on Terror, foreign policy, or any other area they use "leadership" as a primary focus of the campaign. It's up to us to exploit it, by pointing out the lack of a record, by asking exactly what Bush has done that qualifies as "leadership."

Clarke started last night by sneeringly referring to Bush's "nice speech" a week after 9/11. Let's keep it up.

Posting Link

Call for Photos/Art: In the Fray

If you have any art or photos that you've taken related to segregation
(however loosely or narrowly you'd like to define that) and think that we
might to be able to put them together for a visual essay for IMAGE, please
e-mail us at recruiting@inthefray.com ASAP with your ideas and some samples
of your work (sent as jpegs). You can take a look at some previous IMAGE
pieces at Image Pieces.

Thanks!
Laura

--
Laura Nathan
Managing Editor
INTHEFRAY Magazine
In the Fray

In Woomera, detainees weren't addressed by name, but by number.

“Every story-telling medium in the history of mankind has included violent themes, because we depend on stories to help us sort through our conflicting values and our mixed feelings about aggression…What is bad about a lot of games isn’t that they are violent but that they trivialize violence.”
– Henry Jenkins, director of comparative media studies, MIT

A videogame collective with an avowed mission to interject progressive/activist sensibilities into their designs/stories. This is their first project:

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ABOUT THE GAME:

If you thought escaping from Castle Wolfenstein was hard, try Woomera Immigration Reception and Processing Centre...

With a first person, 3D adventure game we invite gamers to assume the character of, and 'live' through the experiences of a modern day refugee. The effective media lock-out from immigration detention centres has meant that the whole truth about what goes on behind the razor-wire at Woomera, Baxter, Port Hedland, Maribyrnong and Villawood remains largely a mystery to the Australian public. We want to challenge this by offering the world a glimpse - more than that even: an interactive, immersive experience - of life within the most secretive and controversial places on the Australian political and geographical landscape. In this way, Escape From Woomera will be an engine for mobilising experiences and situations otherwise inaccessible to an nation of disempowered onlookers. It will provide both a portal and a toolkit for reworking and engaging with what is otherwise an entirely mediated current affair.

Why Escape From Woomera?

The videogame is the most rapidly evolving, exciting, subversive and feared cultural medium in the world today. It's akin to graffiti on the cultural landscape. As such it is ripe for an injection of interesting and progressive ideas that can effect social change. We are a team of game developers, digital artists and media professionals, committed to the videogame medium - not merely as a vehicle for conceptual new media art or profit-driven entertainment - but as a free, independent art form in its own right. The creation of Escape From Woomera is part of a larger goal: the rise of a counter-culture of developers and gamers who create and engage with game art outside the mainstream corporate industry.

Copyleft

Mapping the Media Giants

Mapping the Media Giants (click on the names):

Media Giants

Sunday, March 21, 2004

Another Ex-Bush Official Condemns the Bush Administration Handling of the Aftermath of 9/11

Former top anti-terrorism official, Richard Clarke, accuses the Bush administration of ignoring warnings of 9/11. The White House responds. CBS News' Joie Chen reports.

"I find it outrageous that the President is running for re-election on the grounds that he's done such great things about terrorism. He ignored it."
Richard Clarke

Read More and Watch Video Clips

Plastic Debit Cards as Paychecks

"From Paycheck to Plastic"
Caroline E. Mayer
Washington Post

This article reports on the growing use of payroll cards by employers, as an alternative to paychecks. The article notes that the switch saves money for employers, and can be more convenient for workers; however in some cases the cards impose significant fees on workers, which are deducted from their pay.

Read Article

Booknotes--On American Character: CSPAN Celebrates 25 Years!

One of my favorite stations C-SPAN is celebrating its 25th anniversary! NPR recently joined the celebration with an indepth interview of Brian Lamb, founder of CSPAN and host of Booknotes (15 years running, this is also one of my favorite shows on TV), on the origins of C-SPAN and its role in American culture.

Listen to the Audio Interveiws and read more

Bottled Water Wars

"Bottled Water Blues"
By Kari Lydersen
AlterNet

The residents of Mecosta County and the surrounding areas in central Michigan regard water as central to their identity. They fish for trout and watch ospreys and eagles feeding in the streams. They spend warm days by the ponds and small lakes that dot the woodlands. And of course the Great Lakes, which hold a fifth of the world's fresh water, are a constant presence. So when a huge multinational bottled water company decided to move in and start pumping over half a million gallons of water a day out of the springs that feed their lakes and streams, the residents took it personally.

To meet the exponentially growing demand for bottled water, in the late '90s Perrier subsidiary Great Spring Waters of America sought to open a major pumping and bottling operation in the Midwest. First the company tried to set up shop in Adams County, Wisconsin, but they were driven away by intense opposition from residents and local government.

So in 2001 Perrier, which has since been bought by Nestle Waters North America, was welcomed with open arms by then-Michigan Gov. John Engler, who allowed the company to open up a plant for a licensing fee of less than $100 per year and offered millions in tax breaks to boot.

Construction started on the plant even before all the necessary permits had been obtained. For the past year and a half, the plant has been pumping 100 to 300 gallons per minute out of an aquifer on a hunting preserve in Mecosta County and piping the water 11 miles away to a bottling plant in Stanwood, where it is prepared for shipping and sale around the Midwest as Nestle's Ice Mountain brand.

Shortly after the pumping plan was announced, a grassroots movement of local residents and activists coalesced to oppose the plan, on the grounds that not only would the pumping have harmful effects on the environment and quality of life for residents, but it would also set a chilling precedent in selling off the area's natural resources to a multinational company.

This coalition has used both legal and direct action approaches to raise awareness of the issue and try to stop the pumping plan. Among other things, the group Sweetwater Alliance, which has coordinated much of the grassroots opposition, staged a "canoe-in" along one of the streams fed by the spring.

In the fall of 2001 the group Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation (MCWC) along with four individual local residents filed a lawsuit in Mecosta County Circuit Court seeking to prevent the pumping, arguing that it was not a legally defined "reasonable use" of water and violated state and federal regulations regarding water rights. The case is currently being heard by Judge Lawrence Root, with an outcome expected by mid-June. The result will determine whether Nestle can keep pumping there or even increase its withdrawals from about 150 gallons a minute to as much as 800 gallons a minute. And even more than that, the case will set a precedent for Michigan and possibly other states in deciding whether and how companies are allowed to extract water for profit.

"This is a precedent-setting case about how our common law water rights will be defined and what folks can do with those rights," said Scott Howard, an attorney working on the case. "Can folks take that water, bottle it and sell it for profit?"

In Michigan there are few regulations relating to the use of groundwater; it is essentially seen as part of the property it is on. "Ice Mountain paid $75 to $85 to the state for a permit application fee and with that it can essentially gain billions by selling [the water]," Howard said. "There's no other industry that gets to do that – timber and mining industries don't get to do that."

Howard notes that under Michigan law, one can make "reasonable use" of water on the property they own, but the water can't be diverted. The suit argues that the pumping of water to sell all over the Midwest is clearly a diversion.

There is also a federal law, the Water Resources Development Act, prohibiting the diversion of water headed to the Great Lakes. Under this measure opposition from a governor of any of the other Great Lakes states could theoretically put a halt to the pumping. In court lead attorney Jim Olson argued that at the very least the pumping should be limited to 100 gallons per minute instead of 400 or more.

The lawsuit cites studies finding that pumping 400 gallons a minute will reduce the flow of water in lakes and streams fed by the spring; in Deadstream by a half inch during the summer and in Thompson Lake by two and a quarter inches. "That might not sound like a lot, but in reality that could be irreparable harm," said Rhonda Huff, vice president of MCWC. "Then you have to talk about erosion, invasive species that could come in if the water level drops, it sounds like you're throwing the whole ecosystem off."

"These streams support the wild iris that only grows in Michigan; the possum, raccoon, deer, owls and other birds that drink from them; the dragonflies and butterflies; the turtles, who are having a hard time already; and of course the fish," added Lois Hartzler, who notes that she lives in Coldwater Township about 25 miles from the plant, in a town called Lake. "All of these things depend on the wetlands."

Nestle Goes Trout Fishing

In its response to the suit Nestle argued that residents will "suffer no harm whatsoever from Nestle's groundwater pumping" and that the water reduction in Deadstream would actually be good for trout by lowering the overall water temperature.

But opponents of the pumping argue that even more than the actual effect of the pumping on the local environment is the larger issue of why Nestle should be allowed to extract billions of gallons of water a year from the area for profit without any remuneration to local citizens or even the state, beyond its permit fees and its lease with the private owner of the hunting preserve.

"At the gut level people believe water is for everybody," said Holly Wren Spaulding, a member of the Sweetwater Alliance, noting that the grassroots movement against the plant has included a wide coalition ranging from Native American tribes to Navy SEALS. "People think it's wrong for a transnational company to be allowed to come in and take water and profit from it." Huff, who is a resident of neighboring Osceola County, noted that Nestle also has two experimental wells operating in Osceola and hopes to open a plant there, though it is currently prohibited from doing so by a local ordinance that is in effect through August 2004.

"I equate the plant to an octopus with tentacles going out to various springs," she said.

"This will just open the floodgates," added Blaine Stevenson, a professor of sociology at Central Michigan University and a water rights activist. "There are these bottled water wars going on now, with Coke and Pepsi and the others battling it out. They're all going to want to come in here."

Opponents say they see this situation as even more unjust given that not far away in Detroit, about 8,000 low-income families are without running water at all because they are unable to pay their water bills or live in buildings with outstanding back bills.

"It's really frightening that our state would grant tax abatements to this plant while there are people in our cities who don't have drinking water," said Eartha Melzer, a journalist who has been documenting the whole struggle. "We're moving toward a third world model in this country."

A World-Wide Battle

Spaulding, who has traveled to Brazil, South Africa and other parts of the world for her work in the water rights movement, sees the issue as part of a world-wide battle against privatization of water and natural resources. The mass extraction of water is endangering environments around the world while at the same time a huge portion of the world's population – including people in the U.S. – have trouble accessing clean fresh water.

"This isn't just about the environment, this is about social justice," she said. "That's the part that has really riled people up." She notes that there is also a movement opposing a Nestle/Perrier bottling plant in Sao Lourenco in Brazil, where people blame the plant for drying up one of the country's historic sources of mineral water. The Serra da Mantiqueira region of Brazil is famous for its Circuito das Aguas, or "water circuits," with high mineral content and medicinal properties. Four small towns, including Sao Lourenco, were built up around these water circuits in the 19th century. Now people say the mineral content of the water is being reduced by over-pumping by Nestle/Perrier for its Pure Life brand. Non-governmental organizations were formed to oppose the pumping, and in 2001 the federal government launched an investigation into the company on the grounds it was violating constitutional prohibitions on demineralizing water.

"If it is pumped in quantities greater than nature can replace it, its mineral content will gradually decrease, bringing the change in taste that we were noticing," said Franklin Frederick, a member of the International Free Water Academy, in a recent interview with the journal Mountain Research and Development.

There is clearly a water crisis around the world, exacerbated by deforestation, drought, and lack of infrastructure in poor countries, that prevents even available water from reaching much of the population. But for the most part the U.S. remains blissfully unaware of the crisis, consuming an average 92 gallons of fresh water daily, compared to 44 gallons for Europeans and five gallons for Africans. The mushrooming popularity of bottled water in a country where tap water is safe to drink is symbolic of the drive to consume without thinking about the bigger picture. In the year 2000, according to the book "Blue Gold" by Maude Barlow, over eight billion gallons of water were bottled and traded globally, over 90 percent in non-renewable plastic.

Activists in Michigan see the battle against Ice Mountain as a way not only to protect their own streams and lakes but to bring the larger issues of water conservation and rights to the attention of the American public. "I think in the last year people in the state have become much more aware that privatization is a threat to our water," said Melzer. "It's only recently that people have realized water isn't a limitless resource, and that it is vulnerable to exploitation by corporations."

Kari Lydersen is a regular contributor to AlterNet. She writes for the Washington Post and is an instructor for the Urban Youth International Journalism Program in Chicago.

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Guy Debord on the Spectacle

Debord, Guy. The Society of the Spectacle. Trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith. NY: Zone Books, 1994.

The spectacle corresponds to the historical moment at which the commodity completes its colonization of social life. It is not just that the relationship to commodities is now plain to see—commodities are now all that there is to see; the world we see is the world of the commodity. (29)

Read More About the Spectacle

Saturday, March 20, 2004

50 Book Challenge: #9 Blue Eyes by Jerome Charyn

The challenge, read 50 books in one year. I am a notoriously distracted reader, jumping from one to another and not always returning to those I start. So this is my attempt to make sure I finish some of them.

9) Blue Eyes--Jerome Charyn (1974; reprinted in the Four Walls, Eight Windows 2002 collection The Isaac Quartet)
Blue Eyes is one of the best hard-boiled detective novels I have ever read. Charyn doesn't just tell this story, he grabs you by the scruff of the neck and sticks your nose into the brutal environment of low-level detectives and gangsters on the make. Detective Manfred Coen, the mysterious shadow figure Isaac, the deformed snitch Spanish Arnold, Chino the pint-sized macho-criminal, the bizarre Peruvian Guzman crime family, baby Jeronimo and crazy Sheb, the lustrous Odile and the dyke bouncers of the nightclub The Dwarf, are just some of the crazy, colorful and most importantly, carefully created, believable characters. Charyn even manages to make Ping-Pong cool and exciting as pool in the movie The Hustler. This book is a must for all fans of powerful literature--do not let the genre trappings fool you, this is a masterful writer at the top of his form. Whatever you do, avoid most reviews until you have read the novel because there is a major plot secret that most reviewers give away--in fact do not read the intro to the Isaac Quartet until you have read the first volume as Charyn himself gives it away. I heard that the next three novels in the Quartet venture into even more experimental forms... luckily they are all in this handy volume. I'm going to be on the hunt for more books by Jerome Charyn (I think he has 36 books published).
8) A Case of Conscience--James Blish (1958; Del Rey reprint 2000)
A book of ideas set in the future. Deals with human fears/misunderstandings of the Other/difference, the struggles of religious conscience, the limitations of technocratic knowledge, and the rebellion of the young. It was written in 1958 and has the pulpish trappings of late 50s science fiction, but it still speaks to the concerns of 2004. The book certainly will appeal more to those that have dealt with internal struggles of faith and knowledge (the main character struggles with the contradictions of being both a scientist and a priest). I liked it so much that I hunted down a collectible hardback copy of his novel Dr. Mirabilis (1964).
7) The Social Mind—James Paul Gee (1992)
I reread this book for the second time so that I could discuss a smaller reading from the book with my students. It is also on my PhD comprehensive exam lists.
6) The Deep—John Crowley (1975)
I kept seeing raves about Crowley's books so I read his first book The Deep. On the surface it is about a mysterious stranger that has amnesia while wandering around a feudalistic environment. The society which is divided into two constantly shifting, warring factions thrives upon pageantry and intrigue. The book touches upon the mysteries of beginnings and endings, game theory, and our deeper dark passions (of course all in an otherworldly fantasy).
5) Critical Thinking and Everyday Life—Ira Shor (South End Press, 1980)
I read this book because it is on my PhD Comprehensive exams list. It is somewhat outdated, but still is worth the read because of Shor’s historical analysis of the development of an open college system in the U.S. and his pedagogical experiments.
4) Curriculum Development in the Postmodern Era—Patrick Slattery (Garland Publishing, 1995)
3) Times Square Red, Times Square Blue—Samuel R. Delany (New York University Press, 1999)
2) Time Maps: Collective Memory and the Social Shape of the Past—Eviatar Zerubavel (University of Chicago Press, 2003)
1) A Friend of the Earth—T.C. Boyle (Penguin, 2001)

Thivai Mix 1

1. Nasca Lines--Brian Hughes
2. Friend of the Devil--Grateful Dead
3. Red House--Jimi Hendrix
4. Why Can't I Be You--The Cure
5. Aaj Mera Jee Kardana--Mychael Danna
6. Lust For Life--Iggy Pop
7. What Difference Does It Make--The Smiths
8. Personal Holloway--Bush
9. Omelete Man--Carlinhos Brown
10. Trailer Trash--Modest Mouse
11. Drugs, God and the New Republic--Warrior Soul
12. 32 Flavors--Alana Davis
13. When It All Goes Wrong, Again--Everclear
14. I Can't Explain--The Who
15. I Feel Fine--Beatles
16. My Iron Lung--Radiohead
17. Homeboy Blues--Russell Malone
18. Sugar Magnolia--Grateful Dead

March 20th, One Year Anniversary of Iraq War II (or Iraq War, Pt. 2)

"How Very Foreign"
By Brian Morton, Political Animal column
Baltimore City Paper
First noticed at Radio Free Albemuth

Bit by bit, the Bush administration's combination of xenophobia and high-handedness is coming back to bite it. A year ago, it spent untold amounts of time and effort browbeating the United States' regular political allies into supporting a pre-emptive strike into Iraq on the basis of intelligence information that many of the allies felt was shoddy at best, and treating the United Nations like it was a bunch of preschoolers who didn't know enough to make "adult" decisions.

The administration pushed for a U.N. resolution, only to withdraw the effort when it saw it wouldn't get the needed votes. There was spying on various allies using the British as a cover, and one of the Bush administration's strongest foreign policy relationships to date, with Mexico, was jeopardized when the Mexicans were threatened with retaliation via jobs and trade if they didn't straighten up and fly right. For the better part of six months, you could make a pretty decent case that the probable author of U.S. foreign policy was Vito Corleone: "Nice little country you have there--it would be a shame if something happened to your aid budget."

Irony, something this administration has seen no shortage of in its three and a half years, could be scooped out in shovelfuls. While now the Bushies talk about establishing a working democracy in Iraq, they didn't have much respect for the working democracies that were our allies in NATO. Turkey's leaders were put between a United States that wanted not only acquiescence to an Iraq invasion but also use of Turkish bases and airspace to do it, and the Turkish population, which was overwhelmingly against an invasion, fearing another flashpoint on its southern border with the troubles arising from the Kurdish population. When Turkey's leaders wisely came down in favor of the wishes of their own citizenry, U.S. officials all but demanded that they contradict the wishes of their own people in order to do our bidding.

Now the chickens are coming home to roost. More than 90 percent of the Spanish people were against going to war in Iraq, and in the wake of last week's terrorist bombing of four commuter trains in Madrid and the deaths of 200 people, Spaniards concluded that were it not for the center-right leadership of Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, their troops wouldn't be in harm's way in Iraq and their nation never would have drawn the attention of what now seems to have been an al-Qaida attack. And this came about because Aznar was one of the few European leaders who stood next to George W. Bush in the Azores a year ago and declared that his country would support an invasion.

What a difference a year makes. Despite the fact that there have been no weapons of mass destruction found and no visible ties between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida demonstrated, Bush is campaigning as if he is a "war president" skilled at foreign policy in a dangerous world. He is correct in that the world out there is a dangerous one--but it is becoming more and more apparent that much of that danger has been brought about because of the foreign policy ineptness of his administration, not in spite of it. What's worse is that since the president has declared war on yet another abstract noun (we still haven't defeated poverty, cancer, or drugs), there is no way to determine when we can declare victory. Like the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, the whims of this war are to be decided solely at the discretion of this president, who argues that nobody has oversight over his actions in its regard--not the Supreme Court, not the Geneva Convention, not the United Nations, and not the U.S. Congress. It's a war because he says so, and it ends when he says it does. This is the example of democracy we wish to set for Iraq?

For too long the Bush administration has peddled its Manichean viewpoint of the world--black and white, good and evil, with us or against us. Whereas the president's father, George H.W. Bush, spent years in public service, serving as ambassador to China during some of our country's touchiest years in dealing with the world's most populous nation, this president wields foreign policy like a blunt instrument with as much subtlety as Pope Alexander VI cutting Latin America in two in 1493.

Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney are already attacking Sen. John Kerry's foreign policy views from their typical simplistic vantage point, that "there are evil people in the world, capable of any atrocity," as the vice president told an audience in Kentucky recently. While there have always been evil people in the world, in the past we didn't inflame them into taking their aggressions out on our allies due to childish demands that those allies do what we want or else. Nearly every other president we've had has known better.

The policy of the last three years hasn't been foreign. It's been downright alien.

Policy wank: politicalanimal@citypaper.com.

© 2003 Baltimore City Paper. All Rights Reserved.

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Warez Textz

He Warez it Well
Rhizome

The net vernacular term ‘warez’ is defined by the online resource Webopedia as follows: ‘commercial software that has been pirated and made available to the public via a BBS or the internet. Typically, the pirate has figured out a way to de-activate the copy-protection or registration scheme used by the software. Note that the use and distribution of warez software is illegal. In contrast, shareware and freeware may be freely copied and distributed…’ A riff on this paradigm is textz.com, an open archive of sometimes closed works of authorship. Curated by German artist and activist Sebastian Luetgert, the texts in the database include works by Baudelaire, Bataille, Adorno, and more technology oriented authors like Geert Lovink, McKenzie Wark and the Critical Art Ensemble. The warez on this site invoke a broad and progressive intellectual history, positioning them as analogues to software tools. Luetgert writes in an introduction to the site ‘…there was a time when content was king, but we have seen his head rolling. Our week beats their year. Ever since we have been moving from content to discontent, collecting scripts and viruses, writing programs and bots, dealing with textz as warez, as executables--something that is able to change your life.’ If texts like ‘Les fleurs du mal’ or ‘Empire’ can take on the character of artifacts or inert objects sitting on bookshelves, here they are reinscribed with some of their radical potential by being positioned as critical software. In tune with other cases of anti-piracy bullying, Luetgert is currently under legal and punitive siege (for sharing Adorno, of all things!). Browse the site for textual warez and stand on the side of fair use and free culture by putting up 'Free Adorno' banners or contributing to his legal battle. -- Rachel Greene

Textz

Why Did Respected News Organizations Fall Prey To Young Fabricators?

( courtesy of Andie, reposted at Media Squatters )

"Chuck Lane, The New Republic editor who finally caught Glass, says when you
go back and read Glass' stories with the knowledge that they're fake, it's
interesting to see why they were believed.

'One of the parts of the answer that I've settled on is that so many of his
stories revolve around stereotypes,' says Lane, now a reporter with The
Washington Post.

'They fit into the pre-existing grooves that are already etched into
everybody's heads, things we think or are predisposed to believe are true.
So he's got stories about young conservatives who turn out to be total
hypocrites about morality; he's got stories about department store Santa
Clauses who turn out to be pedophiles; and he's got a big story about a
pseudo-scientific exploration about why African-Americans are too lazy to
drive taxicabs but immigrants will.'

Peter Sarsgaard, who plays Lane, also blames gullibility as much or more
than the fabricator's mendacity.

'I think what made all of this possible for him has more to do with the
public than it does him. It's more interesting to think about why people
believe people like that than why they lie. Why is our culture only
interested in the hyperbolic, the entertaining, in journalism?' he wonders,
noting that Fox News Channel gets more buzz than PBS' NewsHour With Jim
Lehrer.'I put the moral judgment more on us, the consumers, rather than ...
the perpetrators.'"

Read Entire Report

The Unbearable Lightness of Being (Oso's review)

I don't know if anyone popped over to Oso's blog when I posted a rave earlier in the week? I just wandered over there again and happened upon this amazing experiential book/movie review (using a review of a book as bookends to enter and exit larger philosophical/experiential discussions). Thanks Oso!


The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Filed under: Book Review Reviews Movie Reviews— oso @ 11:50 am
I’ve been reluctant writing this because I wanted to re-read passages of the novel and re-watch scenes of the movie first, but what the hell, here it goes. I was first attracted to Laura because she was beautiful and because she was reading a book; that’s all it took. Not to say that I fell in love with her because she is beautiful and was reading a book, but those were the first two things to catch my attention. Those are always the first two things to catch my attention. In fact, I think Kundera himself writes about this somewhere - a character in one of his novels feels like he/she (I don’t remember) belongs to some sort of secret society with everyone else that he/she sees reading in public. I’m the same way. Everytime I go to a coffeeshop and see someone reading by themselves - instantly I want to sit down, offer them a cigarette, and talk about the book. About the characters. About how the author presented someone or something, about bias, about what was not brought up. But I rarely do. And when I do, the conversations almost always disappoint. Because truth is, novels (I would say all artwork) are meant to be experienced more than talked about. Which is why I’ve always had strange issues with museums, museum curators, literature departments and professors, art commentaries - just about anyone telling me what I should think or even politely suggesting what I might want to consider about some piece of art.

I came across this Lawrence Ferlinghetti poem the other day:

“Truth is not the secret of a few”
yet
you would maybe think so
the way some
librarians
and cultural ambassadors and
especially museum directors
act

you’d think they had a corner
on it
the way they
walk around shaking
their high heads and
looking as if they never
went to the bath
room or anything

But I wouldn’t blame them
if I were you
They say the Spiritual is best conseived
in abstract terms
and then too
walking around in museums always makes me
want to
“sit down”
I always feel so
constipated
in those
high altitudes

It’s weird. Lit classes were often my favorites in college, but I always had this almost seething anger at the professors and especially TA’s and their methods of teaching us “how to read,” and “what the author is trying to communicate.” My experiences with novels are always so intense, so personal. It’s hard for me to recommend a novel to someone because I would take it personal if they weren’t impressed, or didn’t come away with a new perspective on life, or god forbid, didn’t even finish it. I’ve learned to lie, learned to say “oh that one was alright” with passing non-chalance.

I digress. So there was Laura - she was reading a book (it was an anthology of Oscar Wilde), I fell for her, and now we’re living together. We started talking about The Portrait of Dorian Gray and she asked me what my favorite book was. That’s a tough question, but usually I answer, “Immortality” by Milan Kundera. She said she’s never heard of the guy.

It always amazes me how few people have Milan Kundera, that he has not won the Pullitzer or Nobel prize, hardly any literary prizes at all really.

“But I’d really like to read something of his,” she said with this flirtatious smile of hers where one eye is a little more open than the other. That smile kills me … today just like it did that day. And ever since I had been looking for a Spanish language version of Immortality. I would stop by every bookstore in every town as we traveled through Mexico, but never any luck. Finally, in Mexico City - in a small indie bookstore right off of Coyoacan’s main plaza - was a cheap copy of La Insorportable Levedad de Ser - “The Unbearable Lightness of Being.” In the next two weeks she became enthralled and we switched places: now it was her always asking if we could go to a cafe or park to read. We had beautiful conversations about the book while walking arm in arm around plazas in Cuernavaca, Oaxaca, and San Cristobal de las Casas.

I could also see the book affecting her mood. She would become attached to a character, relate to him or her, and then later become disgusted with the character’s decisions. She would finish reading a short passage about Tomas cheating on Teresa and then ask me with angst what I thought about fidelity, if I have ever cheated on her, if I ever would cheat on her, if there was a difference between sex and making love. In short, the novel did everything to her that it did for me: it made her question.

The Unbearable Selection of Blockbuster

There are two video stores that I go to in San Diego. One is Kensington Video where they have every dvd and video you could imagine, where their staff has seen almost everything, where it is only $2.50 for four days. I walk into Kensington Video and within five minutes I have more than 20 dvd’s bundled in my arms and I have my argument already prepared for why we should watch one of these rather than whatever 20 dvd’s Laura has bundled in her arms Unfortunately it is also a twenty minute drive from our house. The other video store is the La Jolla Blockbuster, which is only five minutes from our house. It is filled with bored UCSD students in pajamas about to go back to their 7 story concrete dorms where they will watch Ferris Bueller’s Day Off for the tenth time, feigning interest, wanting to heavily pet the nearest person of the opposite sex. Rather than spending the extra 15 minutes driving to Kensington Video, sometimes we go to Blockbuster and spend an extra 45 minutes in a desperate search for one single movie that we could tolerate.

This is what we were doing a few nights ago when finally … like finally after 40 minutes … I came across Philip Kaufman’s The Unbearable Lightness of Being. I had always heard the same thing about the movie: that it at the time of release (1988), it was the sexiest movie since Last Tango in Paris. And there are definitely some sexy scenes, but by today’s standards, it’s “graphic representation of sex” is mild.

Anyone who has read The Unbearable Lightness of Being would affirm that making a filmed version to capture the essence of the novel is a daunting if not impossible task. Though I would still recommend reading the novel first to really understand the symbolism, Kaufman does a good job of translating Kundera’s philisophical meditations into visual representations and character dialogues. For example, Kundera begins his novel talking about Nietzche’s Eternal Return. Which in my opinion is really what the entire novel is trying to demonstrate. Kaufman tries to represent this idea with a simple two minute discussion between Tomas and Sabina.

Tomas has always been a bachelor. He is a successful surgeon, sleeping around with a different woman every night. He also has a sexual agreement with Sabina who is much more than another of his women. She could be considered his “soul-mate” or “kindred-spirit.” Someone who shares the same values as he does, who also sees life as light, and who also has always avoided getting involved in heavy relationships. Tomas has broken that unsaid agreement however. He has allowed himself to fall in love with Teresa who he decides to marry. When Sabina asks him why he would do such a thing, something that goes against the way he has always led his life, he says (something along the lines of:) “Well, how could I know? That’s the thing about life isn’t it Sabina, that there’s no way for us to know what decision is best. In the perfect world I could live my life with Teresa and live my life without her and then compare the two to see which is better. But that’s not how it works. There is no way for me to know.” And this I think sums up Kundera’s take on Nietzche’s Eternal Return - that in life, we can’t hold ourselved accountable for our decisions, because we have no way of knowing which choice would have turned out better.

On last December 8th I passed up a flight to Istanbul where I was going to live and teach English. I couldn’t get a refund, the empty seat went unused. There were a number of reasons I didn’t go. To stay with Laura, to take care of Crystal, to continue my research with Mexico, and probably others that aren’t even consciouss. I have often thought about whether I made the right decision or not. But there is absolutely no way for me to know.

For Tomas this makes life light and carefree, for Teresa, heavy and filled with anxiety.Here is an excerpt from a great review on The Jujube Spotlight:

Based on a novel by Milan Kundera, the movie takes place in Prague, 1968, and centers around a young Czech doctor named Tomas. As played to simmering perfection by Daniel Day-Lewis, Tomas is gorgeous, intelligent, successful, and sexy, the epitome of sophistication and detachment. He has, in fact, made detachment his personal religion. Despite a steady diet of lovers and an ongoing affair with the equally sexy and freedom-loving Sabina (Lena Olin), Tomas masters his admitted fear of women and the uncertainty of life by eschewing any sort of commitment. He approaches his paramours with the same clinical and unemotional goodwill with which he is shown to perform brain surgery, humming contentedly to himself. His connection to the world is “light:” adamantly unattached to anything, he can come and go as he pleases, take or leave what he will, and feel only the trifling amount of guilt or regret his airy relationships demand.

This begins to change, however, when Tomas espies the lovely Tereza (Juliette Binoche) during a business trip to the country. Pursuing her as he does all attractive women, he is put off a bit when he discovers that her willingness to meet his advances stems from a naif’s wish for experience and interaction with someone interesting, rather than a reciprocal desire for casual sex. Leaving her behind untasted, however, does not rid him of the temptation, for she shows up at his apartment in Prague a few days later, desperate for his attention and the new life she thinks he can offer. Thus, Tomas suddenly finds himself with a live-in lover and, before long, a wife — undoubtedly an attachment, although he continues to sleep with Sabina and everyone else he can get his hands on.

Whereas Tomas’ approach to life is light, Tereza’s is “heavy,” as she herself admits. She is very sensitive and unable to resist becoming emotionally attached to other people (and animals). Unlike Tomas’ profession, which allows him to interact with human beings in a detached fashion, Tereza’s occupation as a photographer reflects her willingness to be personally acquainted with the pains and struggles of other people. (During the Russian invasion of Prague, wonderfully rendered in gritty, newsreel-like footage, she risks her life to capture images of her countrymen being threatened and injured by the invading military.) She knows about and suffers from Tomas’ philandering and philosophy of remoteness, alternately trying to understand it, fight against it, and flee from it. Tereza’s affection and devotion are visceral and all-encompassing, and bind her and those caught up in them to the responsibility, moral commitment, and potential pain of the human world.

Interestingly, although Tereza seems to have an accurate view of their disparate personalities, she believes that she is weak in her emotional attachment to the world and Tomas is strong in his distance from it. But is she right in this? After the invasion of their homeland, Sabina, Tomas, and Tereza all embark on journeys both geographic and personal, beginning in Geneva. Sabina acquires a new lover who appears perfect until he leaves his wife for her; she then literally runs away in fear and escapes to continue her rambling life in America. Tomas and Tereza, however, return to Czechoslovakia, first to Prague and then to the countryside, where, away from the cultured aloofness and myriad sexual temptations of the city, Tomas at last declares himself happy. Has he finally and bravely anchored himself to the world and found fulfillment there? As the unforgetably bittersweet ending reminds us, no one’s attachments to life are that strong.

Both the novel and the movie ask us, given the fact that we cannot know if the decisions we make are for the better or the worse, is it better to live an attached or detached life? Though others have disagreed with me, I think the answer is left in the air.

There were plenty of awkward moments over the two nights that it took Laura and I to finish the movie. Tereza and Tomas’ relationship at times parallels our own. In fact, I would say the only real difference I can find between myself and Tomas (besides the cheesy way he asks for a cognac and how women fall for him after two seconds) is that he is not affected by guilt and I am. Which is why I do not cheat on Laura - I cannot find any moral justification for it - but I would be much more affected by the guilt than the pleasure of sex. That is one thing that I always wish Kundera explained in the book - how it is that Tomas goes on unaffected after causing Teresa so much pain.

Otherwise there are many similarities. I am detached, Laura is attached. For me life is light and playful, for Laura, she is overcome by a wave of strong emotions in reaction to just about everything. I easily flee from what I consider useless tribulation, Laura drowns herself in it. My world is light and hers is heavy.

Which one is better I still know not.

An Oso Production

Friday, March 19, 2004

Hearing the Blues

"Hearing the Blues"
Mother Jones
The only way to understand the blues is to listen. So we asked six insiders to point the musical way.

What is the blues?

Blues afficianadoes and blues musicians often answer the question in poetic fashion. Bruce Iglauer, the founder and owner of Alligator Records, one of the country's most important independent blues labels, says it's "secular music that speaks of the here and now, not of heaven to come." "Emotionally, blues is healing music. It was designed to make oppressed people feel better. But the magic of the blues is that it isn't just about African-Americans, but about people everywhere. Its tension-and-release form is designed to wring out the emotions, cleanse the soul, and make the audience feel whole -- like gospel music, but without the religon," Iglauer says. "As we say in Chicago, you listen to the blues to get rid of the blues." And, at an essential level, you need to listen to the blues to really understand the blues. No description, however poetic, can suffice.

So, with that in mind, we asked Iglauer and other blues historians, record industry insiders, musicians, and music journalists for a little guidance -- we asked them for a list of ten (or so) definitive recordings which can provide listeners with a window into the heart of the blues.

David Hajdu, author of two award-winning books, Lush Life: A Biography of Billy Strayhorn and Positively 4th Street: The Lives and Times of Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez Farina and Richard Farina.
Louis Armstrong -- West End Blues
Sleepy John Estes -- Some Day, Baby (a.k.a., Worried Life Blues)
Mississippi John Hurt -- Candy Man
Blind Lemon Jefferson -- The Black Snake Moan
Robert Johnson -- Crossroads
B.B. King -- Sweet Little Angel
Ma Rainey -- Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
Jimmie Rodgers -- TB Blues
Bessie Smith -- St. Louis Blues
Muddy Waters -- Mannish Boy

Bruce Iglauer, founder and owner of Alligator Records.
Tommy Johnson -- Cool Drink Of Water Blues
Skip James -- Devil Got My Woman
Elmore James -- Something Inside Me
Sonny Boy Williamson -- Cross Your Heart
Otis Spann -- The Hard Way
Big Walter Horton -- Trouble In Mind
Albert Collins -- Blue Monday Hangover
Irma Thomas -- It's Raining
Otis Rush -- Three Times A Fool
Magic Sam -- That's Why I'm Crying

Chris Thomas King, innovative Grammy Award-winning blues musician and actor who played the role of blues legend Tommy Johnson in "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
Chris Thomas King -- 21st Century Blues and Hard Time Killing Floor
Jimi Hendrix -- Red House
Robert Johnson -- Crossroads
Muddy Waters -- Mannish Boy
BB King -- Thrill is Gone
Robert Cray -- Strong Persuader (Right Next Door)
Freddy King -- Hide Away
Johnny Guitar Watson -- Ain't That A Bitch
Billy Holiday -- Strange Fruit

Bob Koester, owner of Delmark records and the Jazz Record Mart.
Bessie Smith -- Long Old Road
Ma Rainey -- See See Rider
Chippie Hill -- Trouble in Mind
Leroy Carr -- How Long Blues
Sleepy John Estes -- Rats in My Kitchen
Walter Davis -- No Place to Go
Roosevelt Sykes -- Dog in a Man
Big Bill Broonzy -- Just a Dream
Jazz Gillum -- Key to the Highway
Sonny Boy Williamson -- Your Funeral and My Trial

Brett Bonner, staff writer, Living Blues Magazine.
Robert Petway -- Catfish Blues
Ted Taylor -- I'm Just A Crumb In Your Bread Box Of Love
Son House -- Death Letter
Otha Turner & The Rising Star Fife & Drum Band -- Granny Does Your Dog Bite
Floyd & Moody Jones with Snooky Pryor -- Stockyard Blues
ZZ Hill -- Shade Tree Mechanic
Johnny Shines -- Glad Rags
Mississippi Fred McDowell -- Write Me a Few Lines
Frankie Lee Sims -- Lucy Mae Blues
Skip James -- Cyprus Grove Blues
Junior Kimbrough -- All Night Long

Honeyboy Edwards, blues musician. (Michael Frank, Edwards' manager, says the 88-year-old musician "does not listen to records, but in his youth he encountered all these musicians, played with them, knew all of them and does some of their songs.")
Big Joe Williams -- various Delmark recordings
Tommy Johnson -- Complete Recorded Works
Tommy McLennan -- 1997 Bluebird Recordings
Robert Petway -- Guitar King
Willie Brown -- Library of Congress Recordings
Howlin' Wolf -- Moanin' in the Moonlight
Sonny Boy Williamson -- Down and Out Blues
Big Walter Horton -- Fine Cuts
Magic Sam -- With a Feeling
Roosevelt Sykes -- Hard Drivin' Blues
Sunnyland Slim -- House Rent Party and Be Careful How You Vote
Robert Nighthawk -- Bricks In My Pillow

@2003 The Foundation for National Progress

Visit the Article Site to hear Audio Samples or leave your own suggestions.

Remembering Neil Postman

Remembering Neil Postman

Postman understood better than anyone that television has inextricably changed the nature of debate, and that in politics now, entertainment reigns supreme.

Kill Bill, Vol. 1 and Mystic River

The recent Tarantino flick Kill Bill, Vol.1 is contemptible and negative ... yes, I made the mistake of hoping that there might be something to it, instead I was assaulted by a non-stop series of images of extreme violence and rape--set to comic book format with no thought or reflection. Even worse were the twisted attempts at humor (particular disturbing was the intended comedy of dry humping a comatose woman?) ... while some listening/watching males in the audience laughed at the most disgusting or graphically violent images... the solo male viewer next to me twitched and giggled throughout the movie, his leg jerking as heads flew and blood spurted. Melissa afterwards said that my face during the movie reflected my distaste and disgust, it was more my reaction towards the viewer's laughter than the movie.

On the other hand, although flawed in other ways, Clint Eastwood's newest movie Mystic River approaches how what we repress or ignore can erupt in traumatic/tragic ways. I don't want to give anything away for those who haven't seen it yet, but it does deal with some masculine fears in an understated and powerful manner and the violence is real and painful (not comedic and comic book). I had some problems with its conclusions, but I connected with the story and action in a way that made me think about the repercussions of repression, violence and vengence... whereas Kill Bill just comes off as a bloody porno set for laughs and pop! (remember the wrestlers in Merchants of Cool)

Thursday, March 18, 2004

Myanmar Sets Aside Land for the Restoration of Tiger Populations!

NPR Radio Expeditions Audio Report/Interview with Alan Rabinowitz.

World's Biggest Tiger Reserve
Myanmar Creates Sanctuary the Size of Vermont
by Renee Montagne

Officials for the government of Myanmar, once known as Burma, will soon announce the creation of the largest tiger reserve in the world -- an entire valley nearly the size of Vermont.

Even though relations between Myanmar and the Western world are strained, the driving force behind this is an American.

Alan Rabinowitz, director of science and exploration for the Wildlife Conservation Society, has dedicated the past 10 years to field work and conservation projects in the northern forests of Myanmar.

Most recently, he has been working with the Myanmar Forest Department to triple the size of the 2,500-square-mile Hukawang Valley Wildlife Sanctuary, where probably fewer than 100 tigers remain..

The size of the reserve is crucial -- Rabinowitz says the key to maintaining a viable, flourishing tiger population isn't the heavily guarded wildlife sanctuaries typical of other tiger reserves. Rather, he advocates a porous environment, where tigers can roam naturally over long distances to hunt and mate.

"Animals like tigers and elephants -- the largest carnivores and mammals on Earth -- are not going to survive if their future is just in isolated pockets of very hard-core protected areas," Rabinowitz tells NPR's Renee Montagne.

"We've got to find a way where we can create landscapes of both core-protected areas and places where people live -- and both elements of that equation can be balanced. This tiger reserve will be a model for that."

The Hukawng Valley is mostly inhospitable to humans, with its rugged mountains, thick forests, floods and malaria. But tigers thrive here -- as do elephants, clouded leopards and a host of other wild species quickly becoming endangered in the rest of Asia.

When Rabinowitz first surveyed the tigers in the Hukawng Valley back in 1999, all he could hear were sounds of wild creatures. But when the government cleared an old, overgrown highway, it set off a gold rush. Tens of thousands of miners seeking gold poured into the valley. In places where Rabinowitz once saw only tiger tracks, he now saw trucks and mining camps.

Rabinowitz entered into talks with a rebel group that controls the valley, Kachin Independent Army, or KIA. He tells Montagne that both the KIA and the Myanmar government -- most often described in the press as a repressive military junta -- were exceptionally receptive to the idea of creating the tiger reserve. Rabinowitz credits the nation's pride in its wildlife and heritage.

Rabinowitz will soon travel back to Myanmar to begin what he calls "the really hard work" -- sitting down with government officials to talk about funding, wildlife management strategies and how the Wildlife Conservation Society will work together with Myanmar's forestry department to make what will be the world's largest tiger reserve a reality.

Listen to the Interview and Access Other Sources

New WHO Report States That Legal Drugs Pose Greatest Health Threat

"Legal Drugs Pose Greatest Health Threat, WHO Says"
by Axel Bugge
Yahoo

BRASILIA, Brazil (Reuters) - The health threat from legal drugs like alcohol and tobacco is much greater than that from illegal narcotics, the World Health Organization said on Thursday.

The first report of its kind by the global body found that dependence on alcohol and cigarettes has a much greater cost for societies than illegal drugs like cocaine and crack. The Neuroscience of Psychoactive Substance Use and Dependence report said that drug addiction is a growing problem, especially in poor countries which have rising rates of alcohol consumption and smoking.

There are about 200 million illegal drugs users worldwide, or 3.4 percent of the world population, it said. Illegal drugs contributed 0.8 percent to global ill health in 2000, while alcohol accounted for 4.1 percent and cigarettes 4 percent. The percentages are based on a measurement used by WHO which gauges the burden that premature deaths and years lived with disability impose on society.

The "main global health burden is due to licit rather than illicit substances," the report said. Men in rich countries are especially vulnerable to suffer from alcohol- and cigarette-related bad health.

"Health and social problems associated with use and dependence on tobacco, alcohol and illicit substances require greater attention by the public health community," WHO Director-General Dr. Lee Jong-Wook said in a statement. The report also found that it may not be possible to fully cure drug dependence because of long-term changes to the way the brain works.

Health experts need to consider a range of factors in treating drug dependence because it is a disorder caused by genetic disposition, as well as psychological and cultural factors, it said. "Like major psychiatric disorders, substance dependence may not be curable but improved effectiveness of available treatment has contributed significantly to recovery," said Dr. Catherine Le Gales-Camus, assistant-director general of noncommunicable diseases and mental health at WHO.

The global launch of the report took place in Brazil, a country with spiraling drug-related violence, which has in the past led to rough treatment of drug users.

Any person can become a drug addict and that dependence is a disorder, making it crucial to eradicate the stigma suffered by drug users that can make treatment more difficult, the report said.

Article Link

Fuck You FCC!

The FCC is rolling back our freedom of expression. This puritanical bullshit is a cover for deeper concerns about growing resistance to bureaucratic control of the population. We are pissed and we are not going to fucking take it anymore! Who would think that I would find myself defending Howard Stern who I have in the past found to be very reactionary and conservative... funny how this all started two days after he encouraged his listeners to vote Bush out of office? Particularly disturbing is the FCC's new policy of accepting complaints without recorded evidence of obscenity!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

"FCC Cites Stern, Bono for Indecency"
By JONATHAN D. SALANT, Associated Press Writer
Yahoo

WASHINGTON - Federal regulators opened a new front in their crackdown on offensive broadcasts Thursday, saying that almost any use of the F-word on over-the-air radio and television would be considered indecent. The Federal Communications Commission overruled its staff and said an expletive uttered by rock singer Bono on NBC was both indecent and profane. It marked the first time that the FCC (news - web sites) cited a four-letter word as profane; the commission previously equated profanity with language challenging God's divinity.

The FCC on Thursday also proposed maximum fines for the broadcast of the Howard Stern radio show and for a program on two Florida radio stations owned by a Clear Channel Communications subsidiary.
Commissioners said they did not propose a fine for Bono's expletive during the 2003 Golden Globe Awards (news - web sites) because they had never before said that virtually any use of the F-word violated its rules. The FCC specifically rejected earlier findings that occasional use of the F-word was acceptable.

"Given that today's decision clearly departs from past precedent in important ways, I could not support a fine retroactively against the parties," said FCC Chairman Michael Powell, who had asked his fellow commissioners to overturn the agency's enforcement bureau's finding. "Prospectively, parties are on notice that they could now face significant penalties for similar violations," Powell said.

NBC issued a statement that said: "We believe the commission made the right decision in not fining us over the regrettable Bono incident. As we've previously said, Bono's utterance was unacceptable and we regret it happened." A publicist for U2 said Bono was in the studio in Ireland and was not immediately available for comment.

But the decision was criticized by the Parents Television Council, a conservative advocacy group whose complaints led to the FCC's review. "Bono may have used the F-word as an adjective, but today's FCC ruling turned it into a verb directed at American families," council president L. Brent Bozell III said. He said the decision "does nothing to hold NBC accountable for this obvious breach of commonsense decency standards."

The FCC received hundreds of complaints about the Golden Globes broadcast after Bono, the lead singer of the Irish rock group U2, said, "This is really, really, f------ brilliant." The enforcement bureau said last October that Bono's comment was not indecent or obscene because he did not use the word to describe a sexual act. To avoid a repeat incident, NBC aired this year's Golden Globes broadcast on a 10-second delay. ABC did the same with its telecast of the Academy Awards (news - web sites) show.

In another decision Thursday, the FCC proposed fining Infinity Broadcasting the maximum $27,500 for a Stern show broadcast July 26, 2001, on WKRK-FM in Detroit. The FCC received a complaint from a Detroit listener about a show that featured discussions about sexual practices and techniques. Infinity Broadcasting failed to immediately return a call seeking comment. The Center for Responsive Politics, a watchdog group, said fines against Stern accounted for almost half of the $4 million in penalties proposed by the FCC since 1990.

The commission also affirmed a $7,000 fine for indecency first leveled in 2000 against Infinity station WLLD in Holmes Beach, Fla., for a live hip-hop concert featuring references to oral sex. The FCC also proposed fining a subsidiary of Clear Channel, the nation's largest radio station chain, the maximum $55,000 for a broadcast on two Florida radio stations, WAVW in Stuart and WCZR in Vero Beach, where the host conducted an interview with a couple allegedly having sex.

Commissioners noted that they acted against Clear Channel on the complaint of a listener who did not have a transcript or tape, a departure from past practice. "Complaints should no longer be denied because of a lack of tape, transcript or significant excerpt," Commissioner Kevin Martin said. Commissioner Michael Copps dissented from the decision, saying the commission should have moved to revoke the stations' licenses. "The time has come for the commission to send a strong message that it is serious about enforcing the indecency laws of our country," he said.

Clear Channel executive vice president Andrew Levin said, "We're as determined as ever to make sure that we don't have any violations in the future." Federal law bars radio stations and over-the-air television channels from airing references to sexual and excretory functions between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m., when children may be tuning in. The rules do not apply to cable and satellite channels or satellite radio.

The House earlier this month voted to increase the maximum fine for indecency to $500,000. Similar legislation is pending in the Senate.

Article Link

"U.S. Videos, for TV News, Come Under Scrutiny"

"U.S. Videos, for TV News, Come Under Scrutiny"
By Robert Pear
Originally published in the The New York Times and republished at Truth Out ... and posted at MediaSquatters
Monday 15 March 2004

WASHINGTON, March 14 — Federal investigators are scrutinizing television segments in which the Bush administration paid people to pose as journalists praising the benefits of the new Medicare law, which would be offered to help elderly Americans with the costs of their prescription medicines.

The videos are intended for use in local television news programs. Several include pictures of President Bush receiving a standing ovation from a crowd cheering as he signed the Medicare law on Dec. 8.
The materials were produced by the Department of Health and Human Services, which called them video news releases, but the source is not identified. Two videos end with the voice of a woman who says, "In Washington, I'm Karen Ryan reporting."

But the production company, Home Front Communications, said it had hired her to read a script prepared by the government. Another video, intended for Hispanic audiences, shows a Bush administration official being interviewed in Spanish by a man who identifies himself as a reporter named Alberto Garcia.

Another segment shows a pharmacist talking to an elderly customer. The pharmacist says the new law "helps you better afford your medications," and the customer says, "It sounds like a good idea." Indeed, the pharmacist says, "A very good idea."

The government also prepared scripts that can be used by news anchors introducing what the administration describes as a made-for-television "story package." In one script, the administration suggests that anchors use this language: "In December, President Bush signed into law the first-ever prescription drug benefit for people with Medicare. Since then, there have been a lot of questions about how the law will help older Americans and people with disabilities. Reporter Karen Ryan helps sort through the details." The "reporter" then explains the benefits of the new law.

Lawyers from the General Accounting Office, an investigative arm of Congress, discovered the materials last month when they were looking into the use of federal money to pay for certain fliers and advertisements that publicize the Medicare law. In a report to Congress last week, the lawyers said those fliers and advertisements were legal, despite "notable omissions and other weaknesses." Administration officials said the television news segments were also a legal, effective way to educate beneficiaries.

Gary L. Kepplinger, deputy general counsel of the accounting office, said, "We are actively considering some follow-up work related to the materials we received from the Department of Health and Human Services." One question is whether the government might mislead viewers by concealing the source of the Medicare videos, which have been broadcast by stations in Oklahoma, Louisiana and other states.

Federal law prohibits the use of federal money for "publicity or propaganda purposes" not authorized by Congress. In the past, the General Accounting Office has found that federal agencies violated this restriction when they disseminated editorials and newspaper articles written by the government or its contractors without identifying the source.

Kevin W. Keane, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services, said there was nothing nefarious about the television materials, which he said had been distributed to stations nationwide. Under federal law, he said, the government is required to inform beneficiaries about changes in Medicare.

"The use of video news releases is a common, routine practice in government and the private sector," Mr. Keane said. "Anyone who has questions about this practice needs to do some research on modern public information tools."

But Democrats disagreed. "These materials are even more disturbing than the Medicare flier and advertisements," said Senator Frank R. Lautenberg, Democrat of New Jersey. "The distribution of these videos is a covert attempt to manipulate the press."

Mr. Lautenberg, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, and seven other members of Congress requested the original review by the accounting office. In the videos and advertisements, the government urges beneficiaries to call a toll-free telephone number, 1-800-MEDICARE. People who call that number can obtain recorded information about prescription drug benefits if they recite the words "Medicare improvement."

Documents from the Medicare agency show why the administration is eager to advertise the benefits of the new law, on radio and television, in newspapers and on the Internet. "Our consumer research has shown that beneficiaries are confused about the Medicare Modernization Act and uncertain about what it means for them," says one document from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Other documents suggest the scope of the publicity campaign: $12.6 million for advertising this winter, $18.5 million to publicize drug discount cards this spring, about $18.5 million this summer, $30 million for a year of beneficiary education starting this fall and $44 million starting in the fall of 2005.
"Video news releases" have been used for more than a decade. Pharmaceutical companies have done particularly well with them, producing news-style health features about the afflictions their drugs are meant to cure.

The videos became more prominent in the late 1980's, as more and more television stations cut news-gathering budgets and were glad to have packaged news bits to call their own, even if they were prepared by corporations seeking to sell products. As such, the videos have drawn criticism from some news media ethicists, who consider them to be at odds with journalism's mission to verify independently the claims of corporations and governments.

Government agencies have also produced such videos for years, often on subjects like teenage smoking and the dangers of using steroids. But the Medicare materials wander into more controversial territory. Bill Kovach, chairman of the Committee of Concerned Journalists, expressed disbelief that any television stations would present the Medicare videos as real news segments, considering the current debate about the merits of the new law. "Those to me are just the next thing to fraud," Mr. Kovach said. "It's running a paid advertisement in the heart of a news program."

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Jim Rutenberg contributed reporting for this article.

Article Link

"Using Story as Strategy" an Interview with David Barry

For two years I worked as an editorial assistant for Dale Fitzgibbons and the Journal of Management Education (Sage). During that time I learned that there are some radicals operating in the midst of the very conservative and traditional business departments. They operate under the loose disciplinary title of "Organizational Theory" and generally favor the qualitative (without forgoing important quantitative facts) method. They were very important in opening up my understanding of the functions of organizations in the re-production of social structures. I'll be posting their works and journals from time-to-time.
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"Using Story as Strategy"
Interview with David Barry, Ph.D. by Helen McKay
Australian Storytelling

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Helen: How did you get interested in story as a communication tool?
David: I am attracted to their transformative power. I believe we live our lives by the stories we tell ourselves and tell others. Change the story and life changes. This is a view I picked up several years ago from David Epston, co-founder with Michael White (in Adelaide) of narrative therapy. As an organisational change consultant and change management lecturer, I find the approach immensely appealing. Organisations often seem to run on a few core narratives. Epston & White's narrative change methods offer profound ways for organizations to restory themselves.

Helen: In which areas of business life do you see story as an effective strategy? (apart from the advertising industry). Do you see a company benefitting from hearing the stories staff may tell of their role in and perception of, the company? And how?

David: Stories are a double-edged sword. Because they are so fundamentally a part of what it means to be human, they have a great deal of power (especially when fashioned by an expert teller). In organisations, this power is often used to seduce, to lull dreamy employees into thinking they're part of some great cause. I think of many global companies which spin a tale of the corporate family:
'Come join our team. Work hard and we will give you the kind of family life you couldn't find elsewhere.' It is a hypnotic and convincing narrative 'we work hard right up to when we're given our severence notice (which is always such a shock. 'You wouldn't fire your brother or mother. Why are you firing me?').

On the other hand, stories have the power to release and change; if new story elements can be introduced into a problem-saturated narrative, remarkable things can happen. Where do these new story elements come from? I find the best ones come from that which was previously silenced - the forgotten story remnants left on the company cutting board.

If these elements - these points of difference - can be given life and turned into what literary theorist, Charles Baxter, calls a counterpoint narrative, there's a good chance that existing, but dysfunctional company stories can be changed. So in this way, getting staff to engage in storywork can be very beneficial.

I suppose what I'm saying here is that storytelling rights should be given to everyone in an organisation, and not just the PR group or the top executives. I think this makes for less insular and more adaptive organizational functioning.

Helen: Can you see the stories told by people chosen at random in the electorate, about the political party governing a country, effectively assisting in the planning of future policy strategies? And how?

David: I would guess that they could help, especially if they were listened to in an open way (much easier said than done however). Perhaps what Bakhtin called - dialogue' could happen. Instead of me telling you my - mono-logic' and you telling me yours, a dia-logic - one informed by our careful listening and taking in of each other's story - could be created. An interesting possibility.

Helen: We use some traditional stories as ways to introduce discussion points for our seminars, have you any stories of instances where you have had success in this way?

David: If, by traditional stories, you mean ancestral or culturally historic ones, then no. However, I often use stories in the classroom to illustrate themes I can't get at any other way. One I like to tell concerns ways of learning. A well known marine biologist had just started working with an eager graduate student. The student, anxiously awaiting all those pearls of wisdom, was stunned when the biologist said 'Here's a fish and there's a tablet. Write down whatever you see and I'll be back in a few hours.'

'See?' said the student. 'What's there to see? That's one dead fish.'

With time however, the student noted how the scales lay and made some guesses about their functions. He did the same with the rest of the fish. Later, the biologist came back and congratulated the student. He then left again, saying he'd be back in a few days. The fish turned ripe (what's that saying about guests and fish after three days?) and the student had filled the tablet with notes. As it turned out, many of his conclusions accorded with what other expert biologists had written. The course of his studies for the next few years was set. The story works well. Most students after hearing it stop looking to me for all the answers and begin studying their own organizational - fish,' notebooks in hand.

Helen: You are interested in story as it can be used in therapy. Care to comment?

David: I think my answers to your first two questions capture my views on this. I would add that from where I stand in the organizational research community, we are just beginning to take the narrative turn - moving away from the logico-scientific view towards a storied one. This is both exciting and threatening.

A number of very heated debates are now springing up between leading theorists and speakers. Some are saying that all we've learned about management over the last hundred years is simply artful rhetoric. And of course others are denouncing such views as poppycock. The field is more interesting than it has been in years.

David Barry, Ph.D.
Management & Employment Relations Dept., University of Auckland; Private Bag 92019 Auckland, New Zealand d.barry@auckland.ac.nz

Interview Source


"Generation Debt: The Economics of Being Young" by Brendan I. Koerner

"Generation Debt: The Economics of Being Young"
by Brendan I. Koerner
Village Voice
The Ambition Tax
Why America's young are being crushed by debt—and why no one seems to care
March 17 - 23, 2004

From this side of the Pacific, we've always shuddered at the prospects for young people in a place like Japan. The routine of archetypal sarariman, or corporate drone, sure sounds dreadful: a drab college education followed by a youth of low-paid toil, long commutes into Tokyo, and little chance for advancement beyond middle management. The very best a sarariman can hope for, we're led to believe, is to someday go into hock for a suburban condo and to scrape together enough money so the kids can attend after-school cram sessions.

It all seems so tedious, so pointless, so restrictive—in short, so un-American. In our country, the story goes, a youngster's economic options are limitless as long as he or she's got gumption and smarts. At 21 or 22, the age at which a sarariman supposedly begins his trudge toward a corporate pension, his American peer should be wrapping up college and preparing to enter a workforce that justly rewards ambition. By 33 or 34, an American with a bachelor's degree should be sitting pretty, with a worthwhile job, a house with a backyard, and enough scratch in the bank to send Junior to preschool. Anyone who falls short of that middle-class dream is obviously a no-count layabout.

But is the sarariman treadmill really so alien to the American experience today? The average collegian in the U.S. isn't graduating into a world of boundless opportunity, but rather is $20,000-plus in the hole thanks to student loans and credit cards. So begins the snowball effect: The most desirable entry-level jobs often pay wages too low for the indebted, who must fork over a large percentage of their salaries to Sallie Mae or Citibank. Other posts are reserved for those who can afford to work unpaid internships, or whose parents can support them through an extra year or two of graduate studies.

Employers are increasingly reluctant to defray the cost of health care, so tack on an extra several hundred bucks a year, even $2,000 or more for the technically self-employed—"permanent temps," as the saying goes. Though housing is supposedly cheaper than ever, due to record-low interest rates, the ambitious young aren't necessarily enjoying the trend. Rents in many metro areas, where a good portion of knowledge-based jobs are located, remain sky-high; cheaper digs exist in the suburbs, though that means enduring sarariman-like commutes.

High levels of debt preclude the young from getting the sweetest mortgage deals, and they often end up in the clutches of sub-prime lenders. On average, people who had to borrow their way to a graduate degree are already behind $45,900; median debt for grad students has increased 72 percent since 1997. (Aspiring doctors have it the worst, with average loans of $103,855.) Add to those obligations an investment in a humble bungalow, and you're on the hook for a quarter million or more—not counting interest.

The cumulative effect is that merely keeping one's head above water, rather than getting ahead, has become the top priority for Americans between the ages of 18 and 34. Pursuing the relatively modest dream of doing better than the generation before requires serious capital—up front in the form of tuition and loans, and hidden in the form of lost opportunities. Call it the ambition tax—the money you've got to pony up if you want a college degree and a shot at middle-class bliss. But it's really more of a gamble, as there's no guarantee those tens of thousands of dollars will get you where you want to go.

"The next generation is starting their economic race 50 yards behind the starting line," says Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard Law School professor and author of The Two-Income Trap. "They've got to pay off the equivalent of one full mortgage before they make it to flat broke, in order to pay for their education. They can never get ahead of the game, because they're constantly trying to play catch-up.

"And once you've got accumulated debt, the debt takes on a life of its own. It demands to be fed, and it takes that first bite out of the paycheck. And it means the opportunity to accumulate a little, to get a little ahead, to maybe put together a down payment—it's just never there. It's just staggering to me that this is not a part of our national debate right now."

If the early rhetoric in the presidential race is any indicator, neither candidate cares a whit about the struggles of America's young. George Bush and John Kerry are happy to trade barbs about draft dodging and flip-flopping. But they've yet to utter more than a few peeps about alleviating the unique economic burdens of the next generation, and the one after, and the one after. It's almost as if Americans under the age of 35 don't exist.

Read the Rest of the Essay

Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles

Neil Swaab's cartoon Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles is one of the most explosively funny (and painful) comics I have read in a long time. Be careful, not for the timid, this pushes the limits and transgresses every taboo:

Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles

Wednesday, March 17, 2004

Get Your War On!

Who would have ever thought that the most subversive artists would be working in the cartoon field. Here is another classic (you may have seen the book):

Get Your War On

Red Meat

As I've cut out red meat (mostly) from my diet I have turned to Max Cannon's comic "Red Meat" to satisfy my primal thirsts...

Red Meat

Tuesday, March 16, 2004

Correcting the Record on the Economy

An Economic Policy Institute Report posted at Moving Ideas

Recent speeches and statements by key Bush administration officials contain assertions about the economy that are either inaccurate or incomplete.

Correcting the Record

Lexington Progressive Activism, Democrat Rallies and Film Series

Global Day of Protest: The World STILL Says No to War

Anti-war Rally marking one year of war & occupation in Iraq United for Peace

WHEN: Noon, Saturday, March 20

WHERE: Phoenix Park (in front of Downtown Library), Lexington, KY

HELP SPREAD THE WORD:

Download & print a flyer

Download & print handbills

DETAILS:

One year after the beginning of the Iraq invasion, 100s of demonstrations are being held around the world. In the United States the demonstrations are being coordinated by United for Peace & Justice

In Central KY, we will gather to hear EKU history Professor Robert Topmiller, poet George Ella Lyon, and the Rev. Dr. Albert M. Pennybacker, CEO and Chair of the National Committee of the Clergy Leadership Network. We?ll hear music from John Reels, Levi Gordon, The Swells, and more. And to get in the mood, there will be some chants and songs. We will remind ourselves why this war was both wrong and a bad idea. We will recommit ourselves to ending the occupation, bringing U.S. troops home, and working to ensure that preemptive war never happens again.
SPONSOR: The Central KY Council for Peace & Justice
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Geoff at 859.278.4966

March 19 IRAQ ADVOCACY DAY Take it to Congress - Then take it to the Streets!
For info: United For Peace
Time of meeting to be determined.

Central KY Council for Peace and Justice is having a direct Meeting with our local Congressman.
United for Peace and Justice has called on us to deliver the message and power of the "World Still Says No to War" global actions to our members of Congress the day before we march and rally around the country. The message you deliver to congress should mirror the message the world is delivering the following day at the demonstrations. For more information or to join, please contact Amy at arckitectonics@yahoo.com

March 19th Demonstrate Against Bush at a Location Near You!
A demonstration will be held in Lexington on March 19th between 4:30 and 7:00 to commemorate the beginning of the Iraq war.

We're planning a different kind of demonstration to recognize the beginning of the Iraq war - a year ago on March 19th - and as a memorial to those who have died on all sides of the conflict. We're fanning out all over town, covering all the major arterials and shopping centers, all carrying the same sign.

Bush knew the war was based on lies. He didn't care. Do you?

If you'd like more information on what we're doing, to share your ideas, or better yet, to sign up, please call or email Tom Herrick at: 859-873-2334 or therrick@qx.net.

March 24 Bluegrass Democrats Meeting

DNC/Meetup.com-sponsored gathering. Democrats Meetup

Unity Day, March 24th, 7:00pm at the Springs Inn on Harrodsburg Rd. (in Lexington).
Sen. Ernesto Scorsone (D-Lexington) may be joining us.

Web site should be running soon: Bluegrass Democrats

Film Series:

Las Madres: The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo
Thursday, April 8, 7pm, Gaines Center House, 218 E. Maxwell St
Sponsored by: UK Women's Studies, Women and War, History and Memory Series

Independent Media in a Time of War
Tues. April 13, at 7pm, WTYoung Library
Movie Site

For more info contact: Adel at afara0@uky.edu

Sponsored by: UK Media Research Group

Kabul Kabul, Tuesday April 20, 7pm, Kentucky Theater, 214 E. Main
Filmmaker Sedika Mojadidi will introduce film
Sponsored by: UK Women's Studies, Women and War, History and Memory Series

Tentative Film series:

Knowing Through Showing
Sponsored by: You (from donations), The Leftist Student Union, and GroundScore

Monday, April 19th, 5:30-7:30pm
Center Theater, University of Kentucky Student Center
Razing Appalachia
Save Our Lands, Save Our Towns

Friday, April 23rd, 5:30-7:30pm
Classroom Building, University of Kentucky
Noam Chomsky - Distorted Morality: America's War on Terror?
Movie Site

Monday, April 26th, 5:30-7:30pm
Center Theater, University of Kentucky Student Center
In Whose Interest
Myth of the Liberal Media: The Propaganda Model of News

Friday, April 30th, 5:30-7:30
Classroom Building, University of Kentucky
Unprecedented: The 2000 Election

For more information, please contact Amy at arckitectonics@yahoo.com

Oso, The Bear!

Oso, a fellow San Diegan, has set up a very sophisticated and informative weblog. Part travelogue, part photoblog, part political rant, part confessional, part review of the arts and part documentation of the San Diego scene == a well rounded and fascinating reading/viewing experience. Thanks Oso!

Oso

Monday, March 15, 2004

No Budget is Better Than the Proposed Senate Budget

No Budget is Better Than a Senate Budget
by OMB Watch
A Moving Ideas alert

The budget resolution approved last week by the Senate Budget Committee has nothing good to recommend it. It will hand more tax breaks to the extremely wealthy while slashing assistance to low-income working families and children. Funds for education, housing, the environment and a host of other services that benefit ordinary Americans will also be cut. Ironically, in spite of all these cuts, the committee?s resolution will increase -- not reduce -- the deficit.

This budget resolution, which will be up for debate on the Senate floor this week, will:

Slash domestic appropriations for almost everything government does outside of entitlements, homeland security and military funding. Only funds for space exploration and Homeland Security will be significantly increased. These cuts will really balloon in 2006, but appear to be less severe during the 2005 election year.
Cut billions from "entitlement" spending targeting Medicaid and Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) programs that primarily benefits low-income children and families.
Accelerate the repeal of the estate tax for one year, a windfall for those who have estates valued at over $3.5 million, and extend for five years the temporary tax cuts for capital gains and dividend rates.
While the budget for fiscal year 2005 is bad, the next five years covered by the budget resolution will get much worse. If this five year budget is adopted, funding for domestic appropriations programs outside of homeland security would be cut a total of $113 billion over five years according to an estimate by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Some of the main provisions from the Senate Budget Committee?s proposed budget resolution are:

Budget caps for fiscal years 2005 and 2006. The $814 billion cap for 2005 is $9 billion lower than the president's request, and will cut or freeze most domestic appropriations at FY 2004 levels of spending. Since the caps will cover both domestic and military spending, increases in military spending will crunch domestic spending even more. Budget caps cannot be exceeded without 60 votes in the Senate.
Required reductions in "mandatory" or "entitlement" spending. Proposed cuts include a $3 billion reduction in the EITC for low-income working families. Possibilities include eliminating the EITC for working families without children; raising taxes for 3.1 million low-income taxpayers; or delaying refunds to eligible families for up to a year. Other cuts that are on the table include an $11 billion reduction in Medicaid, paying no regard to the forty-three million Americans who are already without health insurance. These cuts will increase the number of the uninsured, and swell state fiscal crises because it will cause a decrease in the federal share of Medicaid costs.
Tax cuts in the amount of $80.6 billion that are exempt from Senate filibuster or 60-vote requirements. These cuts are intended to extend for five years past their 2005 expiration date, and include: the marriage "penalty," the child credit, and the 10 percent tax bracket. Lest multimillionaires with over $3.5 million in assets feel left out of these "middle-income" tax cuts, the 2010 repeal of the estate tax will be accelerated to 2009. In actuality, the $80.6 billion worth of tax cuts only specifies the total amount of cuts that are protected from dissent, leaving the possibility of even more tax cuts for the wealthy.
Tax cuts that are subject to Senate filibuster and a 60-vote requirement include another temporary one-year fix to the Alternative Minimum Tax, and a five-year extension of the cuts in capital gains and dividend rates. The total amount, including the protected $80.6 billion, set aside for taxes in the budget is $164 billion over 5 years, minus the$20 billion in offsets that the Senate must find.
Continuation of the Senate pay-go rules that require an offset for entitlement spending increases or tax cuts. The catch is that these rules only apply to spending or tax cuts not included in this year?s resolution. For example, the estate tax repeal acceleration does not have to be paid for by an offset.

The effort to balance the budget by cutting spending for the kind of priorities ordinary Americans value -- education for their kids, clean water and air, and the opportunities for every American to succeed -- while simultaneously insuring that the Bush tax cuts are made permanent (at a cost of $2 trillion over the next ten years) means that the deficit will continue to rise. The cuts that will negatively affect millions of middle-income and low-income Americans will only partially offset the cost of the tax cuts, not reduce the deficit. In anticipation of continued deficits, the budget also includes an increase in the national debt ceiling from $7.4 trillion to $8 trillion. Coincidently, this ensures a level debt limit for the year, with no significant raise, as we get closer to Election Day.

The budget is being debated on the Senate floor during the week of March 8. According to reports on March 9, a bipartisan amendment may be offered to remove the reconciliation instructions for the $80.6 billion in tax cuts (which would be exempt from filibuster or the 60-vote requirements). This would make it more difficult to accomplish the proposed acceleration of the estate tax (or other tax cuts benefitting wealthier taxpayers that might be attempted).

The House Budget Committee is expected to markup its budget on March 10, with floor debate during the week of March 15. The House budget is widely expected to have even more draconian cuts than the Senate budget. In order to have a binding budget, the Senate and House versions must be reconciled and the final version approved by both chambers.

Report Link

David Was On the New Music Programming Device--Garageband

Garageband: Changing the Way Music Is Made
Musician David Was Test-Drives the Latest Software Craze
An NPR Day To Day audio report

Using a $49 computer program called Garageband and a Macintosh computer, novice musicians are now able to create sounds that only a few years ago would have required the services of an expensive studio, loads of instruments and lots of money.

Garageband is rapidly becoming the latest high-tech living room craze -- mostly because it makes it easy for even the most musically challenged among us to make tunes that sound like real music.

Day to Day senior producer Stephen Proffitt wanted to find a professional musician and composer who would try out Garageband -- and found a world-class volunteer: musician, producer and composer David Was, one of the Was-es from the group Was (Not Was).

His verdict? Garageband could very well change the way we think about music and the way music is created. It's easy to use, powerful and very flexible.

Audio Report

Exhibit of the Works of Photojournalist Harriet Logan

Mar 26 -- Lexington -- 4:00 pm. The Nell Stuart Donovan Exhibit Series. UK Art Museum and the Ann Tower Gallery. Featuring British photojournalist Harriet Logan. Photographs of Afghanistan. 4:00pm Robert C May Lecture. UK Worsham Theatre. 5:30-7:30pm Reception with Artist at the Ann Tower Gallery in downtown Lexington. Sponsored by the Kentucky Women Writers Conference.

The Five Point Plan To Save America

(courtesy of Andie Miller--posted at Mediasquatters)

This is a call to arms to you -- as an American and a custodian of your nation's future. Please act as if your life depends on it -- it well might.

We have been led down a dark, perilous road.

The Plan

Monsoon Wedding and Indian Feast!

Mar 25 -- Lexington -- 6:00pm Dinner and a Movie. Full screening of Monsoon Wedding at the historic Kentucky Theatre in downtown Lexington with screenwriter Sabrina Dhawan. Indian Feast to follow at the Lexington Public Library. Tickets are $12 and are available at the Vishal Grocery, Saagar Grocery, the Kentucky Theatre, or through the KYWWC at 859-257-8734. Sponsored by the Kentucky Women Writers Conference.

What is "Culture"?

WHAT IS CULTURE?

Culture

"The Case For Bush Hatred: Mad About You" by Jonathan Chait

(courtesy of Melissa Purdue--who hates Bush)

"The Case For Bush Hatred: Mad About You"
by Jonathan Chait
(The New Republic)

I hate President George W. Bush. There, I said it. I think his policies rank him among the worst presidents in U.S. history. And, while I'm tempted to leave it at that, the truth is that I hate him for less substantive reasons, too. I hate the inequitable way he has come to his economic and political achievements and his utter lack of humility (disguised behind transparently false modesty) at having done so. His favorite answer to the question of nepotism--"I inherited half my father's friends and all his enemies"--conveys the laughable implication that his birth bestowed more disadvantage than advantage. He reminds me of a certain type I knew in high school--the kid who was given a fancy sports car for his sixteenth birthday and believed that he had somehow earned it. I hate the way he walks--shoulders flexed, elbows splayed out from his sides like a teenage boy feigning machismo. I hate the way he talks--blustery self-assurance masked by a pseudo-populist twang. I even hate the things that everybody seems to like about him. I hate his lame nickname-bestowing-- a way to establish one's social superiority beneath a veneer of chumminess (does anybody give their boss a nickname without his consent?). And, while most people who meet Bush claim to like him, I suspect that, if I got to know him personally, I would hate him even more.

There seem to be quite a few of us Bush haters. I have friends who have a viscerally hostile reaction to the sound of his voice or describe his existence as a constant oppressive force in their daily psyche. Nor is this phenomenon limited to my personal experience: Pollster Geoff Garin, speaking to The New York Times, called Bush hatred "as strong as anything I've experienced in 25 years now of polling." Columnist Robert Novak described it as a "hatred ... that I have never seen in 44 years of campaign watching."

Yet, for all its pervasiveness, Bush hatred is described almost exclusively as a sort of incomprehensible mental affliction. James Traub, writing last June in The New York Times Magazine, dismissed the "hysteria" of Bush haters. Conservatives have taken a special interest in the subject. "Democrats are seized with a loathing for President Bush--a contempt and disdain giving way to a hatred that is near pathological--unlike any since they had Richard Nixon to kick around," writes Charles Krauthammer in Time magazine. "The puzzle is where this depth of feeling comes from." Even writers like David Brooks and Christopher Caldwell of The Weekly Standard--the sorts of conservatives who have plenty of liberal friends--seem to regard it from the standpoint of total incomprehension. "Democrats have been driven into a frenzy of illogic by their dislike of George W. Bush," explains Caldwell. "It's mystifying," writes Brooks, noting that Democrats have grown "so caught up in their own victimization that they behave in ways that are patently not in their self-interest, and that are almost guaranteed to perpetuate their suffering."

Have Bush haters lost their minds? Certainly some have. Antipathy to Bush has, for example, led many liberals not only to believe the costs of the Iraq war outweigh the benefits but to refuse to acknowledge any benefits at all, even freeing the Iraqis from Saddam Hussein's reign of terror. And it has caused them to look for the presidential nominee who can best stoke their own anger, not the one who can win over a majority of voters--who, they forget, still like Bush. But, although Bush hatred can result in irrationality, it's not the product of irrationality. Indeed, for those not ideologically or personally committed to Bush's success, hatred for Bush is a logical response to the events of the last few years. It is not the slightest bit mystifying that liberals despise Bush. It would be mystifying if we did not.

One reason Bush hatred is seen as inherently irrational is that its immediate precursor, hatred of Bill Clinton, really did have a paranoid tinge. Conservatives, in retrospect, now concede that some of the Clinton haters were a little bit nutty. But they usually do so only in the context of declaring that Bush hatred is as bad or worse. "Back then, [there were] disapproving articles--not to mention armchair psychoanalysis--about Clinton-hating," complains Byron York in a National Review story this month. "Today, there appears to be less concern." Adds Brooks, "Now it is true that you can find conservatives and Republicans who went berserk during the Clinton years, accusing the Clintons of multiple murders and obsessing how Vince Foster's body may or may not have been moved. ... But the Democratic mood is more pervasive, and potentially more self-destructive."

It's certainly true that there is a left-wing fringe of Bush haters whose lurid conspiracy-mongering neatly parallels that of the Clinton haters. York cites various left-wing websites that compare Bush to Hitler and accuse him of murder. The trouble with this parallel is, first, that this sort of Bush-hating is entirely confined to the political fringe. The most mainstream anti-Bush conspiracy theorist cited in York's piece is Alexander Cockburn, the ultra-left, rabidly anti-Clinton newsletter editor. Mainstream Democrats have avoided delving into Bush's economic ties with the bin Laden family or suggesting that Bush invaded Iraq primarily to benefit Halliburton. The Clinton haters, on the other hand, drew from the highest ranks of the Republican Party and the conservative intelligentsia. Bush's solicitor general, Theodore Olson, was involved with The American Spectator's "Arkansas Project," which used every conceivable method--including paying sources--to dig up dirt from Clinton's past. Mainstream conservative pundits, such as William Safire and Rush Limbaugh, asserted that Vince Foster had been murdered, and GOP Government Reform Committee Chairman Dan Burton attempted to demonstrate this theory forensically by firing a shot into a dummy head in his backyard.

A second, more crucial difference is that Bush is a far more radical president than Clinton was. From a purely ideological standpoint, then, liberal hatred of Bush makes more sense than conservatives' Clinton fixation. Clinton offended liberals time and again, embracing welfare reform, tax cuts, and free trade, and nominating judicial moderates. When budget surpluses first appeared, he stunned the left by reducing the national debt rather than pushing for more spending. Bush, on the other hand, has developed into a truly radical president. Like Ronald Reagan, Bush crusaded for an enormous supply-side tax cut that was anathema to liberals. But, where Reagan followed his cuts with subsequent measures to reduce revenue loss and restore some progressivity to the tax code, Bush proceeded to execute two additional regressive tax cuts. Combined with his stated desire to eliminate virtually all taxes on capital income and to privatize Medicare and Social Security, it's not much of an exaggeration to say that Bush would like to roll back the federal government to something resembling its pre-New Deal state.

And, while there has been no shortage of liberal hysteria over Bush's foreign policy, it's not hard to see why it scares so many people. I was (and remain) a supporter of the war in Iraq. But the way Bush sold it--by playing upon the public's erroneous belief that Saddam had some role in the September 11 attacks--harkened back to the deceit that preceded the Spanish-American War. Bush's doctrine of preemption, which reserved the right to invade just about any nation we desired, was far broader than anything he needed to validate invading a country that had flouted its truce agreements for more than a decade. While liberals may be overreacting to Bush's foreign policy decisions-- remember their fear of an imminent invasion of Syria?--the president's shifting and dishonest rationales and tendency to paint anyone who disagrees with him as unpatriotic offer plenty of grounds for suspicion.

It was not always this way. During the 2000 election, liberals evinced far less disdain for Bush than conservatives did for Al Gore. As The New York Times reported on the eve of the election, "The gap in intensity between Democrats and Republicans has been apparent all year." This "passion gap" manifested itself in the willingness of many liberals and leftists to vote for Ralph Nader, even in swing states. It became even more obvious during the Florida recount, when a December 2000 ABC News/Washington Post poll showed Gore voters more willing to accept a Bush victory than vice-versa, by a 47 to 28 percent margin. "There is no great ideological chasm dividing the candidates," retiring Democratic Senator Pat Moynihan told the Times. "Each one has his prescription-drugs plan, each one has his tax-cut program, and the country obviously thinks one would do about as well as the other."

Most Democrats took Bush's victory with a measure of equanimity because he had spent his campaign presenting himself as a "compassionate conservative"--a phrase intended to contrast him with the GOP ideologues in Congress--who would reduce partisan strife in Washington. His loss of the popular vote, and the disputed Florida recount, followed by his soothing promises to be "president of all Americans," all fed the widespread assumption that Bush would hew a centrist course. "Given the circumstances, there is only one possible governing strategy: a quiet, patient, and persistent bipartisanship," intoned a New Yorker editorial written by Joe Klein.

Instead, Bush has governed as the most partisan president in modern U.S. history. The pillars of his compassionate-conservative agenda--the faith-based initiative, charitable tax credits, additional spending on education--have been abandoned or absurdly underfunded. Instead, Bush's legislative strategy has revolved around wringing out narrow, party-line votes for conservative priorities by applying relentless pressure to GOP moderates--in one case, to the point of driving Vermont's James Jeffords out of the party. Indeed, when bipartisanship shows even the slightest sign of life, Bush usually responds by ruthlessly tamping it down. In 2001, he convinced GOP Representative Charlie Norwood to abandon his long-cherished patients' bill of rights, which enjoyed widespread Democratic support. According to a Washington Post account, Bush and other White House officials "met with Norwood for hours and issued endless appeals to party loyalty." Such behavior is now so routine that it barely rates notice. Earlier this year, a column by Novak noted almost in passing that "senior lawmakers are admonished by junior White House aides to refrain from being too chummy with Democrats."

When the September 11 attacks gave Bush an opportunity to unite the country, he simply took it as another chance for partisan gain. He opposed a plan to bolster airport security for fear that it would lead to a few more union jobs. When Democrats proposed creating a Department of Homeland Security, he resisted it as well. But later, facing controversy over disclosures of pre-September 11 intelligence failures, he adopted the idea as his own and immediately began using it as a cudgel with which to bludgeon Democrats. The episode was telling: Having spent the better part of a year denying the need for any Homeland Security Department at all, Bush aides secretly wrote up a plan with civil service provisions they knew Democrats would oppose and then used it to impugn the patriotism of any Democrats who did--most notably Georgia Senator Max Cleland, a triple-amputee veteran running for reelection who, despite his support for the war with Iraq and general hawkishness, lost his Senate race thanks to an ugly GOP ad linking him to Osama bin Laden.

All this helps answer the oft-posed question of why liberals detest Bush more than Reagan. It's not just that Bush has been more ideologically radical; it's that Bush's success represents a breakdown of the political process. Reagan didn't pretend to be anything other than what he was; his election came at the crest of a twelve-year-long popular rebellion against liberalism. Bush, on the other hand, assumed office at a time when most Americans approved of Clinton's policies. He triumphed largely because a number of democratic safeguards failed. The media overwhelmingly bought into Bush's compassionate-conservative facade and downplayed his radical economic conservatism. On top of that, it took the monomania of a third-party spoiler candidate, plus an electoral college that gives disproportionate weight to GOP voters--the voting population of Gore's blue-state voters exceeded that of Bush's red-state voters--even to bring Bush close enough that faulty ballots in Florida could put him in office.

But Bush is never called to task for the radical disconnect between how he got into office and what he has done since arriving. Reporters don't ask if he has succeeded in "changing the tone." Even the fact that Bush lost the popular vote is hardly ever mentioned. Liberals hate Bush not because he has succeeded but because his success is deeply unfair and could even be described as cheating.

It doesn't help that this also happens to be a pretty compelling explanation of how Bush achieved his station in life. He got into college as a legacy; his parents' friends and political cronies propped him up through a series of failed business ventures (the founder of Harken Energy summed up his economic appeal thusly: "His name was George Bush"); he obtained the primary source of his wealth by selling all his Harken stock before it plunged on bad news, triggering an inconclusive Securities Exchange Commission insider-trading investigation; the GOP establishment cleared a path for him through the primaries by showering him with a political war chest of previously unthinkable size; and conservative justices (one appointed by his father) flouted their own legal principles--adopting an absurdly expansive federal role to enforce voting rights they had never even conceived of before--to halt a recount that threatened to put his more popular opponent in the White House.

Conservatives believe liberals resent Bush in part because he is a rough-hewn Texan. In fact, they hate him because they believe he is not a rough-hewn Texan but rather a pampered frat boy masquerading as one, with his pickup truck and blue jeans serving as the perfect props to disguise his plutocratic nature. The liberal view of Bush was captured by Washington Post (and former tnr) cartoonist Tom Toles, who once depicted Bush being informed by an adviser that he "didn't hit a triple. You were born on third base." A puzzled Bush replies, "I thought I was born at my beloved hardscrabble Crawford ranch," at which point his subordinate reminds him, "You bought that place a couple years ago for your presidential campaign."

During the 1990s, it was occasionally noted that conservatives despised Clinton because he flouted their basic values. From the beginning, they saw him as a product of the 1960s, a moral relativist who gave his wife too much power. But what really set them off was that he cheated on his wife, lied, and got away with it. "We must teach our children that crime does not pay," insisted former California Representative and uber-Clinton hater Bob Dornan. "What kind of example does this set to teach kids that lying like this is OK?" complained Andrea Sheldon Lafferty, executive director of the Traditional Values Coalition.

In a way, Bush's personal life is just as deep an affront to the values of the liberal meritocracy. How can they teach their children that they must get straight A's if the president slid through with C's--and brags about it!--and then, rather than truly earning his living, amasses a fortune through crony capitalism? The beliefs of the striving, educated elite were expressed, fittingly enough, by Clinton at a meeting of the Aspen Institute last month. Clinton, according to New York magazine reporter Michael Wolff, said of the Harken deal that Bush had "sold the stock to buy the baseball team which got him the governorship which got him the presidency." Every aspect of Bush's personal history points to the ways in which American life continues to fall short of the meritocratic ideal.

But perhaps most infuriating of all is the fact that liberals do not see their view of Bush given public expression. It's not that Bush has been spared from any criticism--far from it. It's that certain kinds of criticism have been largely banished from mainstream discourse. After Bush assumed office, the political media pretty much decided that the health of U.S. democracy, having edged uncomfortably close to chaos in December 2000, required a cooling of overheated passions. Criticism of Bush's policies--after a requisite honeymoon--was fine. But the media defined any attempt to question Bush's legitimacy as out-of-bounds. When, in early February, Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe invoked the Florida debacle, The Washington Post reported it thusly: "Although some Democratic leaders have concluded that the public wants to move past the ill will over the post-election maneuvering that settled the close Florida contest, McAuliffe plainly believes that with some audiences--namely, the Democratic base of activists he was addressing yesterday--a backward-looking appeal to resentment is for now the best way to motivate and unite an often-fractious party." (This was in a news story!) "It sounds like you're still fighting the election," growled NBC's Tim Russert on "Meet the Press." "So much for bipartisanship!" huffed ABC's Sam Donaldson on "This Week."

Just as mainstream Democrats and liberals ceased to question Bush's right to hold office, so too did they cease to question his intelligence. If you search a journalistic database for articles discussing Bush's brainpower, you will find something curious. The idea of Bush as a dullard comes up frequently--but nearly always in the context of knocking it down. While it's described as a widely held view, one can find very few people who will admit to holding it. Conservatives use the theme as a taunt--if Bush is so dumb, how come he keeps winning? Liberals, spooked, have concluded that calling Bush dumb is a strategic mistake. "You're not going to get votes by assuming that, as a party, you're a lot smarter than the voters," argued Democratic Leadership Council President Bruce Reed last November. "Casting Bush as a dummy also plays into his strategy of casting himself as a Texas common man," wrote Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne in March 2001.

Maybe Bush's limited brainpower hasn't hampered his political success. And maybe pointing out that he's not the brightest bulb is politically counterproductive. Nonetheless, however immaterial or inconvenient the fact may be, it remains true that Bush is just not a terribly bright man. (Or, more precisely, his intellectual incuriosity is such that the effect is the same.) On the rare occasions Bush takes an extemporaneous question for which he hasn't prepared, he usually stumbles embarrassingly. When asked in July whether, given that Israel was releasing Palestinian prisoners, he would consider releasing famed Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard, Bush's answer showed he didn't even know who Pollard is. "Well, I said very clearly at the press conference with Prime Minister [Mahmoud] Abbas, I don't expect anybody to release somebody from prison who'll go kill somebody," he rambled. Bush's unscripted replies have caused him to accidentally change U.S. policy on Taiwan. And, while Bush's inner circle remains committed to the pretense of a president in total command of his staff, his advisers occasionally blurt out the truth. In the July issue of Vanity Fair, Richard Perle admitted that, when he first met Bush, "he didn't know very much."

While liberals have pretty much quit questioning Bush's competence, conservatives have given free rein to their most sycophantic impulses. Some of this is Bush's own doing--most notably, his staged aircraft-carrier landing, a naked attempt to transfer the public's admiration for the military onto himself (a man, it must be noted, who took a coveted slot in the National Guard during Vietnam and who then apparently declined to show up for a year of duty). Bush's supporters have spawned an entire industry of hagiographic kitsch. You can buy a twelve-inch doll of Bush clad in his "Mission Accomplished" flight suit or, if you have a couple thousand dollars to spend, a bronze bust depicting a steely-eyed "Commander-in-Chief" Bush. National Review is enticing its readers to fork over $24.95 for a book-length collection of Bush's post-September 11, 2001, speeches--any and all of which could be downloaded from the White House website for free. The collection recasts Bush as Winston Churchill, with even his most mundane pronouncements ("Excerpted Remarks by the President from Speech at the Lighting of the National Christmas Tree," "Excerpted Remarks by the President from Speech to the Missouri Farmers Association") deemed worthy of cherishing in bound form. Meanwhile, the recent Showtime pseudo-documentary "DC 9/11" renders the president as a Clint Eastwood figure, lording over a cringing Dick Cheney and barking out such implausible lines as "If some tinhorn terrorist wants me, tell him to come on over and get me. I'll be here!"

Certainly Clinton had his defenders and admirers, but no similar cult of personality. Liberal Hollywood fantasies--"The West Wing," The American President--all depict imaginary presidents who pointedly lack Clinton's personal flaws or penchant for compromise. The political point was more to highlight Clinton's deficiencies than to defend them.

The persistence of an absurdly heroic view of Bush is what makes his dullness so maddening. To be a liberal today is to feel as though you've been transported into some alternative universe in which a transparently mediocre man is revered as a moral and strategic giant. You ask yourself why Bush is considered a great, or even a likeable, man. You wonder what it is you have been missing. Being a liberal, you probably subject yourself to frequent periods of self-doubt. But then you conclude that you're actually not missing anything at all. You decide Bush is a dullard lacking any moral constraints in his pursuit of partisan gain, loyal to no principle save the comfort of the very rich, unburdened by any thoughtful consideration of the national interest, and a man who, on those occasions when he actually does make a correct decision, does so almost by accident.

There. That feels better.

Article Link

The Deep South Comic

No this isn't a comic that mocks the South, instead Paul G. engages in the grand ol' tradition of detourning famous paintings/images in order to comment on the issues of today.

The Deep South

This Modern World

Just in case you have been living in a cave (that just feels weird when I say "living in a cave"... it use to be that I would think of some solipsistic individual escaping the modern world and actually, willingly, living in a cave ... then I began to associate it with Plato's cave screening us from reality ... now I can't but think of Osama hiding out ...) for the last few years here is the always relevant, insightful, and subversive Tom Tomorrow to help you understand politics as usual:

This Modern World

Whitehouse For Sale $$$

Just in case you are wondering who is buying!

White House For Sale

A Public Citizen report

Ashcroft's Battle With NY Doctors

Ashcroft Terrorizes New York Doctors
by Sharon Lerner
(Village Voice)

Attorney General John Ashcroft has entered into a bitter battle with doctors who perform abortions in New York. In an unprecedented foray into an area usually protected by medical privacy laws, the federal government's top lawyer—who also happens to be a fervent opponent of abortion—is demanding women's confidential medical records from doctors at two local hospital centers. So far, hospitals and doctors have not turned over the documents.

The Justice Department has subpoenaed voluminous material, including particularly sensitive patient information, according to documents obtained by the Voice. In one case, Ashcroft demanded that a doctor supply the records of patients who have had a certain abortion procedure-even when their fetuses suffered from chromosomal abnormalities and diseases that would have killed them. The attorney general also asked the doctor to provide the names of any companies that funded research related to the method, as well as the names of all colleagues who performed the abortion technique in the past five years.

The requests stem from lawsuits challenging the so-called "Partial Birth Abortion Act," which abortion rights groups filed in early November and which are scheduled to go to trial on March 29. Proponents of the law, which has not been enforced because of the suits, say it is aimed only at "D and X," an abortion method performed in the second or third trimester of pregnancy. But, in the pending suits, lawyers for individual doctors, the National Abortion Federation, and the American Civil Liberties Union argue that the law is broad enough to outlaw several abortion methods used after the 14th week of pregnancy to protect women's lives and health. In a mid-February press conference, Sheila Gowan, a Justice Department lawyer, said the requested information was required to determine whether the abortions are ever medically necessary.

And so began the war of medical records, with federal marshals dispatched with subpoenas to at least five hospitals nationwide, including Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center and New York Weill Cornell Medical Center, which are both part of the New York Presbyterian health care system, and St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York. On February 24, the marshals descended on Planned Parenthood in New York City and five other locations, demanding patient records there.

"It was like in the movies," said one employee of Planned Parenthood of New York City.

For doctors, patients, and medical privacy advocates, the skirmishing over records may seem like a horror film. And, though the outcome of the lawsuits will affect the entire nation, New York City is proving center stage for the dispute. While three federal courts are hearing similar challenges in different parts of the country, only one judge—Richard Conway Casey in Manhattan, who is presiding over a challenge brought by the National Abortion Federation—has so far allowed the Justice Department to proceed with its information hunt. In Chicago, federal judge Charles Kocoras refused the government's request for patient records from Northwestern Memorial Hospital, calling it "a significant intrusion" on patient privacy. And, on Tuesday, a federal judge in San Francisco ruled that records from Planned Parenthood could not be introduced in trial, forcing the Justice Department to drop its effort to get them.

New York's Judge Casey has not only allowed the Justice Department's demand for records, but has also threatened to lift the injunction on the abortion law and forbid the physicians from testifying in the trial unless they comply with the attorney general's requests. Doctors will likely have a hard time satisfying Casey, though, not least because of the extraordinary amount and delicate nature of the information requested.

Indeed, a subpoena filed on December 22 demanded that a doctor at New York Presbyterian Hospital identify "all persons to whom you have taught" the D and X method as well as "all persons who have started using and teaching" it in the last five years. The subpoena also called for the medical record numbers of the "at least 50" women who had undergone such abortions after 19 weeks of pregnancy, as well as the records of women who had had such abortions because their fetuses had trisomy 18, a severe genetic disorder from which the vast majority of affected infants die in their first year of life, or anencephaly, a brain defect that results in death before or very soon after birth.

Though the Justice Department has offered repeated assurances it would strike names, addresses, Social Security numbers, and other identifying markers from the record, no hospital has yet released the information. In a February 13 memo, James Frank, an attorney for New York Presbyterian Hospital, objected to the request, arguing that the files are protected by federal and state privacy laws. Hospitals in Pennsylvania and Michigan have also balked at the subpoenas, insisting that disclosing records violates patients' privacy. Lawyers for New York Presbyterian have also said doctors should only have access to records in order to provide patient care.

Others say the records being forcibly collected may have little bearing on the question of whether a particular abortion is medically necessary. "When you dictate [a file of an abortion patient], you rarely dictate why you choose to do one type of procedure over another-you just say what you did," explains Rachel Masch, medical director of the reproductive choice service at New York University Hospital. "So I don't know why they think there would be anything of relevance in that dictation." Challenges of similar state bans on abortions were decided without subpoenaing or probing individuals' medical files.
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Insisting there is no scientific purpose for subpoenaing these medical records, some women's health advocates say the attorney general's request amounts to harassment. "One strongly suspects that the purpose is to make life extremely unpleasant for these physicians and these institutions," says Wendy Chavkin, chair of the national doctors' organization Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health. "The overzealous handling of this case communicates to physicians at large that life is going to be really difficult if you go forth with providing this service."

Of particular concern to Chavkin is the demand that doctors provide the names of their colleagues—including those not cited in the original suit. "That is straight from Joe McCarthy's handbook," says Chavkin, referring to the scare tactics the U.S. senator used in his 1950s witch hunt for Communists. "Ashcroft is clearly bent not only on chilling the provision of abortion but also on creating a climate of fear among doctors."

On that front, at least, the attorney general seems to be having some success. "I'm afraid that by limiting physicians' alternatives, patient care will suffer," says Masch, who works at both Bellevue and NYU hospitals. Doctors also have reason to fear for themselves, since the law would allow convicted doctors to be jailed as well as sued by the "father" and "maternal grandparents" of the fetus.

To be protected by the temporary injunction on the abortion ban, doctors need to be either individual plaintiffs in one of the suits or members of a plaintiff organization—so Masch joined the National Abortion Federation. The Health and Hospitals Corporation, the agency that represents the city's 10 public hospitals, including Bellevue, also joined the federation as an institutional member, according to a corporation spokesperson. As a result, the handful of doctors who perform contested abortions at city hospitals will, at least for now, be protected from prosecution. And, with city hospitals having joined the fray, the stakes in New York's mounting standoff over abortion are that much higher.

Sharon Lerner is a senior fellow at the Center for New York City Affairs at New School University.

Article Link

Socialists Claim Victory in Spain Elections

Socialists Oust Spain's Ruling Party
By ED McCULLOUGH, Associated Press Writer
(Yahoo)

MADRID, Spain - Spain's Socialists scored a dramatic upset in elections Sunday, unseating conservatives stung by charges they provoked the Madrid terror bombings by supporting the U.S.-led war in Iraq (news - web sites) and making Spain a target for al-Qaida. It was the first time a government that backed the Iraq war has been voted out of office. Incoming prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has pledged to bring home the 1,300 troops Spain has stationed in Iraq when their tour of duty ends in July.

The defeat of Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar's Popular Party and his hand-picked successor capped four tumultuous days starting with the attacks that killed 200 people and wounded 1,500. The attacks were followed by massive street rallies against the bombings and smaller ones against the government.

The arrest of five suspects, including three Moroccans, and a reported al-Qaida claim of responsibility, raised the disturbing prospect that terrorists aligned with Osama bin Laden (news - web sites) had changed the course of a national election. The Spain government has insisted its prime suspect in Thursday's rail bombings was the armed Basque separatist group ETA.

Before the attacks, polls had given the governing party a lead of 3-5 percentage points. With 99 percent of the votes counted, Zapatero's Spanish Socialist Workers Party soared from 125 seats to 164 in the outgoing 350-seat legislature. The ruling Popular Party fell from 183 to 148. The Popular Party cannot try to form a governing coalition because it has no virtually no allies in the legislature, where it had enjoyed a majority and was often accused of riding roughshod over opponents.

Zapatero began his victory speech with a minute of silence for those killed in the terror attacks. "At this moment I think of the lives that were broken by terror on Thursday," he said. "My most immediate priority will be to fight terrorism."

The numbers will leave Zapatero short of a majority — or 176 seats — and he will have to seek help to form a government. The Socialists ruled Spain from 1982-1996 but ran afoul of corruption scandals and were voted out of power.

Savoring victory again outside the Socialist party headquarters, several hundred supporters cheered the results. But they, too, remembered the 200 people killed in Thursday's railway blasts. "Not all of us are here. Two hundred are missing," the crowd shouted. "I think the party won because of people's frustration people about the Popular Party getting us into the war in Iraq," said one of them, housewife Loli Carrasco Gomez, 36. Of the troops in Iraq, she said: "I hope they all come home and never go back."

The government had insisted that its prime suspect in the bombings was ETA, even as evidence mounted of an Islamic link. The government was accused of withholding information on the investigation to save the election.

Throughout Sunday, voters said they lost faith in the ruling party, in power since 1996. "I wasn't planning to vote, but I am here today because the Popular Party is responsible for murders here and in Iraq," said Ernesto Sanchez-Gey, 48, who voted in Barcelona.

Some voters, however, expressed support for the ruling party precisely because it endorsed the Iraq war, and for its crackdown on ETA. Mari Carmen Pinadero Martinez, 58, a housewife, said she "voted to help the government end terrorism" as she cast her ballot near the downtown Atocha railway station where trains were bombed.

In El Pozo northeast of Madrid, site of one of the four blasts, a ruined train car was in clear view of the polling station as were flowers for the victims, signs stating "Paz" (Peace) and dozens of lit candles. Some of the voters, teary-eyed, held onto relatives and friends for support.

On Sunday, a Basque-language daily published a statement by ETA in which the group for a second time denied involvement in the attacks. A videotape purportedly from al-Qaida claimed Thursday that the Islamic terror network was behind Thursday's attacks, and Spanish authorities have arrested three Moroccans and two Indian suspects.

Jamal Zougam, one of the Moroccans, was a follower of suspected al-Qaida leader Imad Yarkas, jailed in Spain for allegedly helping plan the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States, according to court documents reviewed by The Associated Press. Zougam and thousands of other Moroccans were put under police surveillance after May terrorist bombings in the coastal city of Casablanca that killed 33 people and 12 bombers, a Moroccan official told AP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Article Link

Sunday, March 14, 2004

Student/Community Mappings of Experience/Knowledge/Meaning

Turning From the Millennium: An Excavation of the Past, Present and Future (Los Angeles):

The Project

Narrative Therapy Notes

(Its Spring Break--classes are out and students are gone so it looks like I might get some work done. I'm looking into the "narrative therapy" movement for their recognition of how stories help us to shape, and make meaning of, our world.)

Erickson, M.H. “The Use of Systems as an Integral Part of Hypnotherapy.” (1965) The Collected Papers of Milton H. Erickson on Hypnosis. V. 4 NY: Irvington, 1980: 212-223.

The therapist’s task should not be a proselytizing of the patient with his own beliefs and understandings. ... What is needed is the development of a therapeutic situation permitting the patient to use his own thinking, his own understandings, his own emotions in the way that best fits him in his scheme of life. (223)

Erickson, M.H. and E.L. Rossi. Hypnotherapy: An Exploratory Casebook. NY: Irvington, 1979

Each psychotherapeutic encounter is unique and requires fresh creative effort on the part of both the therapist and the patient to discover the principles and means of achieving a therapeutic outcome. (234)

Freedman, Jill and Gene Combs. Narrative Therapy: The Social Construction of Preferred Realities. NY: W.W. Norton and Co., 1996.

We liked the way Erickson attended to and respected the experience of the people he worked with. He cultivated a kind of therapeutic relationship that de-emphathized the therapist’s professional, theoretical ideas and put a benevolent spotlight on people’s particular situations. (Freedman/Combs: 10) {MB—They are talking about the therapist Milton H. Erickson—see your notes on him)

It invites our attention to rather small, rather tight, recursive feedback loops when, instead, we want to be paying more attention to ideas and practices at play in the larger cultural context. The “systems” metaphor tempts us to look within families for complementary circuits and for collaborative causation of problems, rather than to work with family members to identify the negative influence of certain values, institutions, and practices in the larger culture on their lives and relationships, and to invite them to pull together in opposing those values, institutions, and practices. It encourages a position of neutrality or curiosity rather than one of advocacy or passion for particular values and against others. (Freedman/Combs: 13) {MB—they state that feminist critiques in therapy led them to reassess their reliance on the systems metaphor (similar to humanist thought, rather than neo-marxist system theory) and their later move past Erickson hypnotherapy methods}

In Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends (White & Epston, 1990), White reminds us how Bateson used the metaphor of “maps,” saying that all our knowledge of the world is carried in the form of various mental maps of “external” or “objective” reality, and that different maps lead to different interpretations of “reality.” No map includes every detail of the territory that it represents, and events that don’t make it onto a map don’t exist in that map’s world of meaning. (Freedman/Combs: 15) {MB—see citation for the referenced book, page 2)

… {MB—social constructionism’s} main premise is that the beliefs, values, institutions, customs, labels, laws, divisions of labor, and the like that make up our social realities are constructed by the members of a culture as they interact with one another from generation to generation and day to day. That is, societies construct the “lenses” through which their members interpret the world. The realities that each of us take for granted are the realities that our societies have surround us with since birth. These realities provide the beliefs, practices, words, and experiences from which we make up our lives, or, as we would say in postmodernist jargon, “constitute our selves.”
When we use both narrative and social constructionism as guiding metaphors for our work, we see how the stories that circulate in society constitute our lives and those of the people we work with. We also notice how the stories of individual lives can influence the constitution of whole cultures—not just the stories of people like Gandhi or Martin Luther King, but also those of people like Pocahontas, Annie Oakley, Helen Keller, and Tina Turner, as well as the stories of ordinary people whose name we have never heard. As we work with the people who come to see us, we think about the interaction between the stories that they are living out in their personal lives and the stories that are circulating in their cultures—both their local culture and the larger culture. We think about how cultural stories are influencing the way they interpret their daily experience and how their daily actions are influencing the stories that circulate in society. (Freedman/Combs: 16-17) {MB—see Weingarten: 289}

This conception of self is at odds with the skin-bound container with fixed contents (resources) that we had previously conceptualized. As we pondered the implications of this new “constitutionalist” metaphor of self, my (JF) taken-for-granted reality was so shaken up that I became motion-sick. I literally became nauseated. … If we were really to adapt these new ways of thinking and perceiving—which we wanted to do because of the kinds of therapy they support—we would become responsible for continually constituting ourselves as the people we wanted to be. We would have to examine taken-for-granted stories in our local culture, the contexts we moved in, the relationships we cultivated, and the like, so as to continually re-author and update our own stories. Morality and ethics would not be fixed things, but ongoing activities, requiring continuing maintenance and attention. (Freedman/Combs: 17)

Instead of seeing ourselves as mechanics who are working fix a broken machine or ecologists who are trying to understand and influence complex ecosystems, we experience ourselves as interested people—perhaps with an anthropological or biographical or journalistic bent—who are skilled at asking questions to bring forth the knowledge and experience that is carried in the stories of the people we work with. We think of ourselves as members of a subculture in collaborative interaction with other people to construct new realities. We now work to help people notice the influence of restrictive cultural stories in their lives and to expand and enrich their own life narratives. We strive to find ways to spread the news of individual triumphs—to circulate individual success stories so that they can keep our culture growing and flowing satisfying ways. (Freedman/Combs: 18)

What is important here … is that change, whether it be change of belief, relationship, feeling, or self-concept, involves a change in language. … Meanings are always somewhat indeterminate, and therefore mutable. … Meaning is not carried in a word by itself, but by the word in relation to its context, and no two contexts will be exactly the same. Thus the precise meaning of any word is always somewhat indeterminate, and potentially different; it is always something to be negotiated between two or more speakers or between a text and a reader. (Freedman/Combs: 29)

Rosenblatt, Paul. Metaphors of Family Systems. NY: Guilford Press, 1993.

{MB--Start a file of books that dissemble metaphoric constructions—exs. Lakoff, Morgan, Boje, Rigney…}

Weingarten, Kathy. “The Discourse of Intimacy: Adding a Social Constructionist and Feminist View.” Family Process 30 (1991): 285-305.

In the social constructionist view, the experience of self exists in the ongoing interchange with others … the self continually creates itself through narratives that include other people {MB—and other people’s narratives?} who are reciprocally woven into these narratives. (Weingarten: 289)

White, Michael. Re-Authoring Lives. Adelaide, Australia: Dulwich Centre Publications, 1995.

Is this work better defined as a world-view? Perhaps, but even that is not enough. Perhaps it’s an epistemology, a philosophy, a personal commitment, a politics, an ethics, a practice, a life, and so on. (White: 37)

White, Michael and David Epston. Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends. NY: Norton, 1990.

In arguing that all information is necessarily “news of difference,” and that it is the perception of difference that triggers all new responses in living systems, he demonstrated how the mapping of events through time is essential for the perception of difference, for the detection of change. (White & Epston: 2) {MB—Freedman and Combs, following this quote, state that: “An advantage that Michael White saw in the narrative metaphor was that a story is a map that extends through time” (2).}

Saturday, March 13, 2004

The Coming Elections and the Future of American Global Power--Gabriel Kolko

The US Must be Isolated and Constrained:
The Coming Elections and the Future of American Global Power
By GABRIEL KOLKO
Counterpunch

We are now experiencing fundamental changes in the international system whose implications and consequences may ultimately be as far-reaching as the dissolution of the Soviet bloc.

The United States' strength, to a crucial extent, has rested on its ability to convince other nations that it is to their vital interests to see America prevail in its global role. But the scope and ultimate consequences of its world mission, including its extraordinarily vague doctrine of "preemptive wars," is today far more dangerous and open-ended than when Communism existed. Enemies have disappeared and new ones--many once former allies and even congenial friends--have taken their places. The United States, to a degree to which it is itself uncertain, needs alliances, but these allies will be bound into uncritical "coalitions of the willing."

So long as the future is to a large degree--to paraphrase Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld--"unknowable," it is not to the national interest of its traditional allies to perpetuate the relationships created from 1945 to 1990. The Bush Administration, through ineptness and a vague ideology of American power that acknowledges no limits on its global ambitions, and a preference for unilateralist initiatives which discounts consultations with its friends much less the United Nations, has seriously eroded the alliance system upon which U. S. foreign policy from 1947 onwards was based. With the proliferation of all sorts of destructive weaponry, the world will become increasingly dangerous.

If Bush is reelected then the international order may be very different in 2008 than it is today, much less in 1999, but there is no reason to believe that objective assessments of the costs and consequences of its actions will significantly alter his foreign policy priorities over the next four years.

If the Democrats win they will attempt in the name of internationalism to reconstruct the alliance system as it existed before the Yugoslav war of 1999, when even the Clinton Administration turned against the veto powers built into the NATO system. America's power to act on the world scene would therefore be greater. John Kerry's foreign policy adviser, Rand Beers, worked for Bush's National Security Council until a year ago. More important, Kerry himself voted for many of Bush's key foreign and domestic measures and he is, at best, an indifferent candidate. His statements and interviews over the past weeks dealing with foreign affairs have been both vague and incoherent. Kerry is neither articulate nor impressive as a candidate or as someone who is likely to formulate an alternative to Bush's foreign and defense policies, which have much more in common with Clinton's than they have differences. To be critical of Bush is scarcely justification for wishful thinking about Kerry. Since 1947, the foreign policies of the Democrats and Republicans have been essentially consensual on crucial issues--"bipartisan" as both parties phrase it--but they often utilize quite different rhetoric.

Critics of the existing foreign or domestic order will not take over Washington this November. As dangerous as it is, Bush's reelection may be a lesser evil because he is much more likely to continue the destruction of the alliance system that is so crucial to American power. One does not have to believe that the worse the better but we have to consider candidly the foreign policy consequences of a renewal of Bush's mandate.

Bush's policies have managed to alienate, in varying degrees, innumerable nations, and even its firmest allies--such as Britain, Australia, and Canada--are being compelled to ask if giving Washington a blank check is to their national interest or if it undermines the tenure of parties in power. The way the war in Iraq was justified compelled France and Germany to become far more independent, much earlier, than they had intended, and NATO's future role is now questioned in a way that was inconceivable two years ago. Europe's future defense arrangements are today an open question but there will be some sort of European military force independent of NATO and American control. Germany, with French support, strongly opposes the Bush doctrine of preemption. Tony Blair, however much he intends acting as a proxy for the U.S. on military questions, must return Britain to the European project, and his willingness since late 2003 to emphasize his nation's role in Europe reflects political necessities. To do otherwise is to alienate his increasingly powerful neighbors and risk losing elections. His domestic credibility is already at its nadir due to his slavish support for the war in Iraq.

In a word, politicians who place America's imperious demands over national interest have less future than those who are responsive to domestic opinion and needs.

This process of alienating traditional close friends is best seen in Australia, but in different ways and for quite distinctive reasons it is also true elsewhere--especially Canada and Mexico, the U.S.' two neighbors. In the case of Australia, Washington is willing to allow it to do the onerous chores of policing the vast South Pacific and even take greater initiatives, at least to a point, on Indonesia. But the Bush Administration passed along to it false intelligence on Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction, which many of Australia's own experts disputed, and Bush even telephoned Prime Minister John Howard to convince him to support America's efforts in innumerable ways. As Alexander Downer, the foreign minister, admitted earlier this month, "it wasn't a time in our history to have a great and historic breach with the United States," and the desire to preserve the alliance became paramount. (1) But true alliances are based on consultation and an element of reciprocity is possible, and the Bush Administration prefers "coalitions of the willing" that raise no substantive questions about American actions--in effect, a blank check. Giving it produced strong criticism of the Howard government's reliance on Washington's false information on WMD and it has been compelled to endorse a joint parliamentary committee to investigate the intelligence system--sure to play into opposition hands this election year.

Even more dangerous, the Bush Administration has managed to turn what was in the mid-1990s a budding cordial friendship with the former Soviet Union into an increasingly tense relationship. Despite a 1997 non-binding American pledge not to station substantial numbers of combat troops in the territories of new members, Washington plans to extend NATO to Russia's very borders--Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania especially concern Moscow--and it is in the process of establishing a vague number of bases in the Caucasus and Central Asia. Russia has stated that the U.S. encircling it warrants its retaining and modernizing its nuclear arsenal--to remain a military superpower--that will be more than a match for the increasingly expensive and ambitious missile defense system the Pentagon is now building. It has over 4,600 strategic nuclear warheads and over 1,000 ballistic missiles to deliver them. Last month Russia threatened to pull out of the crucial Conventional Forces in Europe treaty, which has yet to enter into force, because it regards America's ambitions in the former Soviet bloc as provocation. "I would like to remind the representatives of [NATO]," Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov told a security conference in Munich last February, "that with its expansion they are beginning to operate in the zone of vitally important interests of our country." (2) The question Washington's allies will ask themselves is whether their traditional alliances have far more risks than benefits--and if they are necessary.

In the case of China, Bush's key advisers were publicly committed to constraining its burgeoning military and geopolitical power the moment they took office. But China's military budget is growing rapidly--12 percent this coming year--and the European Union wants to lift its 15-year old arms embargo and get a share of the enticingly large market. The Bush Administration, of course, is strongly resisting any relaxation of the export ban. Establishing bases on China's western borders is the logic of its ambitions.

The United States is not so much engaged in "power projection" against an amorphously defined terrorism by installing bases in small or weak Eastern European and Central Asian nations as again confronting Russia and China in an open-ended context which may have profound and protracted consequences neither America's allies nor its own people have any interest or inclination to support. Even some Pentagon analysts have warned against this strategy because any American attempt to save failed states in the Caucasus or Central Asia, implicit in its new obligations, will risk exhausting what are ultimately its finite military resources. (3)

There is no way to predict what emergencies will arise or what these commitments entail, either for the U. S. or its allies, not the least because--as Iraq proved last year and Vietnam long before it--its intelligence on the capabilities and intentions of possible enemies against which it is ready to preempt is so completely faulty. Without accurate information a nation can believe and do anything, and this is the predicament the Bush Administration's allies are in. It is simply not to their national interest to pursue foreign policies based on a blind, uncritical faith in fictions or flamboyant adventurism premised on false premises and information. It is far too open-ended both in terms of time and costs. If Bush is reelected, America's allies and friends will have to confront such stark choices, a painful process that will redefine and perhaps shatter existing alliances.

But America will be more prudent and the world will be far safer only if the Bush Administration is constrained by a lack of allies and isolated.

Gabriel Kolko is the leading historian of modern warfare. He is the author of the classic Century of War: Politics, Conflicts and Society Since 1914 and Another Century of War?.

Notes

1. Australian Broadcasting Company Online interview with Downer, March 2, 2004.

2. Wade Boese, "Russia, NATO at Loggerheads Over Military Bases," Arms Control Today, March 2004.

3. Dr. Stephen J. Blank, "Toward a New U.S. Strategy in Asia," U.S. Army Strategic Studies Institute, February 24, 2004.

Counterpunch

Gabriel Kolko's "Another Century of War"

"Clear Channel vs. The First Amendment" by Katrina vanden Heuvel

CULTURE WARS HEATING UP AGAIN – ON RADIO
Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editor's Cut
The Nation

Censorship and the First Amendment are on the table again following Clear Channel's suspension of shock-jock Howard Stern from the airwaves for violating its new "zero tolerance" obscenity policy. Katrina Vanden Heuvel in the Nation (3/4/04) says it's politically motivated "hogwash." Clear Channel and Viacom, says Vanden Heuvel, control approximately 42 percent of America's radio audience. Clear Channel has stifled diversity and opposed low-power FM, and its officers and PAC are big-time Bush/Republican Party donors. "Is it a coincidence that Stern came out against Bush shortly before his suspension?" asks Vanden Heuvel. "If Clear Channel can yank the commercially successful Howard Stern, then it has the power to silence any DJ or radio kingpin who refuses to … mouth Clear Channel's political line." (Thanks, Allen Welty-Green.)

Read the Entire Report

"The Architect's Brother" by Robert Parke Harrison

An amazing new art book:

Praise for Robert Parke Harrison's "The Architect's Brother":

He (Robert ParkeHarrison) comes down on the side of lamentation but expresses it with an unusual combination of poetic license, laboriously constructed props and a wry and melancholy, vaguely allusive sense of myth. He appears in every picture, in a black suit and white shirt with no tie, a kind of Everyman or a minor employee of the universe, patiently, dutifully doing a job that's too big for him. That job is essentially to take care of the devastated Earth with inadequate equipment. He works or performs obscure rituals in large and empty landscapes beneath gray skies. Perhaps this is one man's private way of saying that neither pollution, global warming nor digitalization can entirely extinguish the hands-on experience and the human desire to create.
Vicki Goldberg, The New York Times

See Images from the Book

(courtesy of Orion)

PBS Frontline Videos Online

(courtesy of Mason)

For the past 20 years, Frontline has been the flagship public affairs series on America's public television network. Frontline presents long-form public affairs documentaries that "fully explore and illuminate the critical issues of our times." In fact, FRONTLINE remains the only regularly scheduled long-form public-affairs documentary series on American television, producing more hours of documentary programming than all the commercial networks combined.

Frontline

Now for the cool part. If you head over to the Frontline web site at

View

you can watch nearly three dozen Frontline episodes in their entirety, online, free of charge.

Frontline's web site offers 26 episodes from the past three years on topics ranging from an inside view of what it will take to stabilize Iraq to how Wall Street betrayed the public's trust during the dot com
bubble. You can also watch classic Frontline episodes on topics ranging from the 1993 ambush of American soldiers in Mogadishu [an episode that inspired the movie "Black Hawk Down"] to what really
happened in the Branch Davidian compound in Waco.

A few of Frontline's episodes also have links to analyses, interviews, chronologies, discussions, and even teachers guides. Look for the links somewhere on the episodes' homepages.

"Time to Act" by Paul Rogat Loeb


  • The ad in the airline magazine shows a young boy on a swing, the backdrop for an interactive pager being held by a man's hands. "Maybe you don't have to send an e-mail right now," says BellSouth's ad for their interactive paging service. "But isn't it cool that you can?" The ad, with its headline of work@lifespeed, celebrates a world where our jobs engulf our every waking moment.

    It's not just our workplaces. Our lives in general seem faster, more complicated, more at the mercy of distant powers and principalities. We have less time for our families, and less room to ask where we want to go as a society and as a planet. The very pace of environmental crises, global economic shifts and the threats of war and terrorism make it harder to address them. If we're to act effectively as engaged citizens, we're going to have to slow down our lives, our culture, and a world that seems to be
    careening out of control.

    People talk of these pressures wherever I go. "I'd like to be more involved in my community," they say, "to take a stand on important issues. "But I just don't have the time." I hear this from low-wage workers holding two jobs to make ends meet, from professionals working late nights and
    weekends, for students beleaguered by outside jobs and debt. It's true for all of us stretched between escalating workplace demands and a sense that we'll never catch up on everything else we have to do, much less change a culture that keeps us scrambling, as if in Alice in Wonderland world, simply to keep
    from falling further behind.

    The pace and length of the working week was once the central issue in the labor movement. In 1791, carpenters struck for the ten-hour day, challenging employers who paid flat daily wages during the long summer shifts and then switched to piecework during the shorter winter days. A movement to make
    this a universal standard grew throughout the nineteenth century, in response to the 70-hour weeks of America's new industrial enterprises.

    By the 1860s, the labor movement made the eight-hour day its central focus, with marches, rallies, and related political campaigns. A hundred thousand New York City workers, mostly in the building trades, struck and won this right in 1872, followed by other workers, industry by industry, like the
    printers in 1906 and the steelworkers in 1923. Finally, in 1940, Roosevelt instituted the universal 40-hour week, with mandatory overtime when employers exceeded it. The workers who won these changes fought for time with their families, but also for time to educate themselves and act as
    citizens. And then the debate over the pace and speed of life quietly stopped.

    As Harvard economist Juliet Schor has examined, Americans' working hours have been steadily increasing for the past 30 years. Between 1969 and 1987 alone, paid employment by the average American worker jumped by over 160 hours per year, or the equivalent of an entire extra month on the job. We now work the equivalent of nearly nine weeks more a year than our European
    counterparts.
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    ... we are also seeing the beginnings of a citizen activism that combines new approaches, like online organizing, with traditional grassroots outreach. Emails easily overload, as our inboxes pile up with disturbing news and urgent action calls. We feel lucky just to keep up with the flow. Yet the strength of the new worldwide peace movement or the movements against corporate globalization would be inconceivable without electronic networks to pass on talking points, articles, fliers, posters, summaries of key documents, and information on ways to protest. In the process these movements have also raised critical issues about how ordinary citizens can slow the pace of critical global decisions enough to ensure that they're wise.

    The very speed of our electronic communications also makes more intimate kinds of connections more necessary. We need the visible human presence of public vigils and protests, and the step-by-step outreach that happens when we discuss major public issues in churches, temples, PTAs, city council
    meetings, Rotary Clubs, college and high school campuses, and with coworkers, neighbors, and friends. While electronic discussions can foster surprisingly productive dialogue, they work best as an adjunct to face-to-face conversation and community, and not a replacement for it. People still need to gather together, eat, joke, flirt, tell their stories, attach names to faces, and remind themselves why they joined their causes to begin with. "It's almost reassuring that we still have to do all the traditional things if we want people to respond," says a software editor who chairs her local Amnesty International chapter, "not just rely on the new technologies."

    America's dominant culture makes speed an ultimate virtue, as if simply by moving faster we can overcome all obstacles, including our own mortality. Yet as Milan Kundera writes, "there is a secret bond between slowness and memory, between speed and forgetting." Challenging the increased pace of
    work and of change may require slowing down our own lives. Even in our activism we might remind ourselves that we're in it for the long haul, however difficult the times. We need time to play with our children, read a book, go to a movie, dance to good music, or soak in the bathtub and do nothing. If our causes call for more, and they always will, we can find other people to participate, or take on fewer projects. One way or another we need to stop before we're so spent and bitter, that we feel no choice
    but to withdraw permanently from the fray. "You can't solve all the world's problems," longtime labor and environmental activist Hazel Wolf reminded me on the eve of her 100th birthday. "You have to guard against taking on more than you can do and burning out with frustration. But you can take on one project at a time, and then another. You can do that your entire life."

    It's tempting to respond to the speed of all that we face with a short-term politics of our own, reacting on issue after issue, as we try to prevent further incursions on human dignity by a culture that would place every value on a global auction block. We can keep our eyes on the prize by drawing strength from what we fight to preserve, and thinking about the world we'd like to see. We can tell the stories at the core of complex issues, so lives and communities can't simply be dismissed as expendable barriers to progress. We can raise enough root questions so we do more than challenge particular abuses of power, but offer a broader alternative.

    For most of us, our community activism will inevitably be squeezed into whatever hours we have remaining after we earn what we need to get by. For over half a century, these hours have been diminishing, as our work takes over more and more of our lives. If we can begin reversing this, we'll have more time to heal the real wounds of our communities, of our nation, and of the world. We fight for bread and roses, in the words of old union song--not only for survival, but for the beauty and richness that makes life worthwhile. We fight as well for the right to be citizens, for the chance
    to create a democracy where all can participate.

    -----------------------
    This is an excerpt from a longer article, "Time to Act", by Paul Loeb, author of Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time . A version of the Full Article, will appear in Experience Life magazine and in the forthcoming book Take Back Your Time (Publishers). The article is intended as a complement to the events of the Oct 24 Take Back Your Time Day. You can find more information on this project at .To receive Loeb's articles directly, send a blank message to paulloeb-articles-subscribe@onenw.org

  • Friday, March 12, 2004

    Dalkey Archive Press

    This is one of my favorite presses (independent of course). They publish cutting-edge fiction from around the world and rescue classics of the last 100 years of world literature. John O'Brien and co. should be honored for the service that they continue to do for literary connoisseurs.

    (from their webpage)

    Since 1984, Dalkey Archive Press has made available to readers the finest works of world literature from the past 100 years. The intention of the Press is to serve as a permanent home for these works, so that they will continue to be read by present and future generations.

    Dalkey Archive Press

    Bush's Newest Ad's: The Dark Face of Terrorism!

    New Republic reporting on the image tactics of these TV ads:

    Ryan Lizza's Campaign Journal

    Ads Backward

    Ever wonder what they are thinking when they make these ads? Here The Poor Man gives us an imaginative glimpse into what Bush's campaign ad designers might be hoping we see when we watch the ads on TV. Now be a good citizen and fill in those discursive gaps:

    Storyboards For Bush's New Ad


    The Trojan Horse in the Medicare Act

    ( Mother Jones )

    A little-noted provision tucked into the Medicare Act of 2003 has raised serious concerns among health care advocates. The amendment, added by Republican lawmakers, offers tax breaks to citizens who opt out of traditional insurance schemes to invest in high deductible Health Savings Accounts. It may sound
    benign, but critics charge that the plans will lure away the wealthiest and healthiest, driving up the cost of insurance and transferring the burden of payment to the less well-off. J. Patrick Rooney, a major GOP campaign donor who led a ten-year campaign on behalf of HSAs, is the big winner. Days before the Medicare bill passed, United Health Group paid $500 million in cash for Rooney's Golden Rule Insurance Co., which rolled out new health savings accounts within weeks of the bill's passage.

    Medicare's Hidden Bonanza
    By Michael Scherer (March/April 2004)

    Mother Jones first reported on HSAs -- then known as Medical Savings Accounts -- in 1996 with a four-
    article feature detailing Rooney's early efforts on behalf of his pet project.

    MediKill
    (January/February 1996 Issue)

    50 Book Challenge: #8) A Case of Conscience--James Blish

    The challenge, read 50 books in one year. I am a notoriously distracted reader, jumping from one to another and not always returning to those I start. So this is my attempt to make sure I finish some of them.

    8) A Case of Conscience--James Blish (1958; Del Rey reprint 2000)
    A book of ideas set in the future. Deals with human fears/misunderstandings of the Other/difference, the struggles of religious conscience, the limitations of technocratic knowledge, and the rebellion of the young. It was written in 1958 and has the pulpish trappings of late 50s science fiction, but it still speaks to the concerns of 2004. The book certainly will appeal more to those that have dealt with internal struggles of faith and knowledge (the main character struggles with the contradictions of being both a scientist and a priest). I liked it so much that I hunted down a collectible hardback copy of his novel Dr. Mirabilis (1964).
    7) The Social Mind—James Paul Gee (1992)
    I reread this book for the second time so that I could discuss a smaller reading from the book with my students. It is also on my PhD comprehensive exam lists.
    6) The Deep—John Crowley (1975)
    I kept seeing raves about Crowley's books so I read his first book The Deep. On the surface it is about a mysterious stranger that has amnesia while wandering around a feudalistic environment. The society which is divided into two constantly shifting, warring factions thrives upon pageantry and intrigue. The book touches upon the mysteries of beginnings and endings, game theory, and our deeper dark passions (of course all in an otherworldly fantasy).
    5) Critical Thinking and Everyday Life—Ira Shor (South End Press, 1980)
    I read this book because it is on my PhD Comprehensive exams list. It is somewhat outdated, but still is worth the read because of Shor’s historical analysis of the development of an open college system in the U.S. and his pedagogical experiments.
    4) Curriculum Development in the Postmodern Era—Patrick Slattery (Garland Publishing, 1995)
    3) Times Square Red, Times Square Blue—Samuel R. Delany (New York University Press, 1999)
    2) Time Maps: Collective Memory and the Social Shape of the Past—Eviatar Zerubavel (University of Chicago Press, 2003)
    1) A Friend of the Earth—T.C. Boyle (Penguin, 2001)

    The Human Ecology of Memory

    The Human Ecology of Memory: A "Common-Place Book"
    Complied and Collated by John F. Kihlstrom

    Kihlstrom's Site

    Indy Media is Alive and Well!

    Look up a participating group near you and become the media!

    Indy Media

    The Combahee River Collective Statement

    This website is a landmark manifesto from a 1970s Black Feminist organization that declares how they are different in their struggles from White Feminists and Black Men. An important move in the development of "identity politics" because although the Black Feminists recognized both groups as allies in many circumstances, they still were recognizing how their "situations" differed and how they were sometimes "silenced" by these supposed allies. This was an important step in the move away from essentializing statements and classifications:

    The Combahee River Collective Statement (excerpts)

    "Fed Up Catholic Designs Own God" by Josh Richter

    (courtesy of Kenneth Applebaum who posted it at MediaSquatters)

    "Fed Up Catholic Designs Own God" by Josh Richter
    Enduring Vision

    Frustrated by the "too god damn many" rules and stipulations of the Catholic faith, and disheartened by their depiction of a God that is "wussy and boring", 24 year-old former-Catholic Ron Guller of Runeburg, Nebraska announced yesterday that he has concocted his own God, and further explained in a press conference.

    "I was just so sick of crap like lent and confession and all that shit," Guller revealed. "I mean, I know Heaven is supposed to be a nice place and all, but getting in there is just ridiculous! On top of that, church was boring, my priest hated me, and the way they described God sounded plain old dumb. So one day I thought, 'Hey! Ron! Why the hell are you believing in some guy who makes you do all this crap, and doesn't even sound cool anyway?' That's when I got the idea for Super God Xtreme, or SGX as I sometimes like to call Him."

    SGX reportedly possesses far more abilities than that of the Catholic God, including night-vision, "mega-sharp" claws, super speed, and even eyes capable of shooting laser blasts at unfortunate non-believers.

    "I just whipped up this little sketch in Microsoft Paint here," Guller explained, gesturing to a diagram behind him, "and the ideas came like water. Probably because SGX filled my head with them with his hyper-telepathic capabilities. Anyway, I think it's pretty clear that he could easily kill anything, including all the different versions of God, not just the Catholic one."

    Furthermore, Guller's God is far more lax about what His followers must to in order to reach the desired state of afterlife.

    "I don't know about the Catholics," Guller smirked, "but my God likes to party. In fact, that's one of his Five Commandments, the other four being 'Don't Kill People', 'Only Drink Sometimes And Not Too Much When You Do Unless It's A Cool Party Or You Had A Rough Day', 'Hang Out With Hot Girls And/Or Guys', and, the most important one, 'Don't Believe In The Catholic God Or Any Other Religion's Version Of God Or Gods Or Whatever'. If you follow those, dude, you're set. And even if you don't follow them, SGX is cool with that. He's not a dick or anything. Just don't be, like, a nerd, and you'll be okay."

    In addition, SGX will apparently assist believers with their everyday daily lives, as long as they follow His Commandments, and are generally "cool with Him".

    "I've already quit my lame-ass [auto mechanic] job," Guller said with a dismissive wave of his hand. "I don't need that shit anymore, and SGX doesn't want me to have that shit anymore. He'll send me a good job really soon, and then probably a hot girlfriend."

    Added Guller with a grin, "Would the Catholic God do that?"

    Though the currently-unnamed religion of believing in SGX has no firm guidelines for recruiting new members, such as Christianity does, Guller believes that a minor amount of boasting is perfectly acceptable.

    "There's nothing more satisfying that hanging out by a Catholic church, telling people that SGX could kick their God's ass if He wanted to, which he could. And if that makes people interested, well, they can always talk to me."

    So what's next for SGX's most devoted follower? Building a place of worship, of course.

    "It'll have this huge party room," Guller said excitedly, eyes gleaming. "With a number of sub-rooms for other stuff, if you know what I mean. SGX is cool with that stuff, too."

    Article Link

    Thursday, March 11, 2004

    Tropical America

    Tropical America
    OnRamp Arts

    América Tropical fusiona el nuevo mundo de los video-juegos con el pasado latinoamericano, para crear una experiencia interactiva y renovadora de la geografía política y cultural de las Américas. El video-juego se desarrolló en colaboración con artistas, profesores, escritores y estudiantes de secundaria de Los Angeles, y cuenta con una interfase bilingüe y temática, acompañada con una base de datos de materiales educativos.

    Tropical America fuses the new world of video games to a compelling past through a journey to unravel the mysteries of the Americas. Developed in collaboration with Los Angeles artists, teachers, writers and high school students, the game features a bilingual, thematic gameplay, accompanied by an online database of educational resource materials, source texts and imagery.

    The Game

    Usted es el único sobreviviente de una terrible masacre - debe encontrar cuatro evidencias que hagan justicia a la memoria de su pueblo.

    Your journey begins as the sole survivor of a terrible massacre - you must find four pieces of evidence to bring justice to the memory of your small village.

    About the Game

    Inspired by the similarly titled mural by David Alfaro Siqueiros- subsequently whitewashed in Los Angeles in 1932- Tropical America explores the causes and effects of the erasure of history. From the battles of Bolivar, to the single-crop economy of Cuba, the myth of El Dorado and the poems of Sor Juana de la Cruz, Tropical America reveals a forgotten terrain, the birthplace of contemporary cross-cultural life.

    The story of Rufina Amaya, sole survivor of the 1981 massacre of El Mozote in El Salvador, becomes the contextual anchor for Tropical America, and the impetus from which the game begins. El Mozote symbolizes the silencing of one people’s histories and the perseverance of its survivors to bring the events into the open.

    Tropical America

    Review by Digital Divide Network

    "The Bubble of American Supremacy" by George Soros

    The Atlantic

    A prominent financier argues that the heedless assertion of American power in the world resembles a financial bubble—and the moment of truth may be here.

    "The Bubble of American Supremacy" by George Soros

    It is generally agreed that September 11, 2001, changed the course of history. But we must ask ourselves why that should be so. How could a single event, even one involving 3,000 civilian casualties, have such a far-reaching effect? The answer lies not so much in the event itself as in the way the United States, under the leadership of President George W. Bush, responded to it.

    Admittedly, the terrorist attack was historic in its own right. Hijacking fully fueled airliners and using them as suicide bombs was an audacious idea, and its execution could not have been more spectacular. The destruction of the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center made a symbolic statement that reverberated around the world, and the fact that people could watch the event on their television sets endowed it with an emotional impact that no terrorist act had ever achieved before. The aim of terrorism is to terrorize, and the attack of September 11 fully accomplished this objective.

    Even so, September 11 could not have changed the course of history to the extent that it has if President Bush had not responded to it the way he did. He declared war on terrorism, and under that guise implemented a radical foreign-policy agenda whose underlying principles predated the tragedy. Those principles can be summed up as follows: International relations are relations of power, not law; power prevails and law legitimizes what prevails. The United States is unquestionably the dominant power in the post-Cold War world; it is therefore in a position to impose its views, interests, and values. The world would benefit from adopting those values, because the American model has demonstrated its superiority. The Clinton and first Bush Administrations failed to use the full potential of American power. This must be corrected; the United States must find a way to assert its supremacy in the world.

    This foreign policy is part of a comprehensive ideology customarily referred to as neoconservatism, though I prefer to describe it as a crude form of social Darwinism. I call it crude because it ignores the role of cooperation in the survival of the fittest, and puts all the emphasis on competition. In economic matters the competition is between firms; in international relations it is between states. In economic matters social Darwinism takes the form of market fundamentalism; in international relations it is now leading to the pursuit of American supremacy.

    Not all the members of the Bush Administration subscribe to this ideology, but neoconservatives form an influential group within it. They publicly called for the invasion of Iraq as early as 1998. Their ideas originated in the Cold War and were further elaborated in the post-Cold War era. Before September 11 the ideologues were hindered in implementing their strategy by two considerations: George W. Bush did not have a clear mandate (he became President by virtue of a single vote in the Supreme Court), and America did not have a clearly defined enemy that would have justified a dramatic increase in military spending.

    September 11 removed both obstacles. President Bush declared war on terrorism, and the nation lined up behind its President. Then the Bush Administration proceeded to exploit the terrorist attack for its own purposes. It fostered the fear that has gripped the country in order to keep the nation united behind the President, and it used the war on terrorism to execute an agenda of American supremacy. That is how September 11 changed the course of history.

    Exploiting an event to further an agenda is not in itself reprehensible. It is the task of the President to provide leadership, and it is only natural for politicians to exploit or manipulate events so as to promote their policies. The cause for concern lies in the policies that Bush is promoting, and in the way he is going about imposing them on the United States and the world. He is leading us in a very dangerous direction.

    Read the Entire Essay

    Uma Faveleira Resistente (A Hardy Plant)

    UMA FAVELEIRA RESISTENTE (A HARDY PLANT)
    Community Arts Network

    "Uma Faveleira Resistente" is a new story from Bill Grow about a community performance project by the Peoples’ Central Institute, a Methodist center for social action located on the Providence Hill favela (slum) in Rio de Janeiro. A collaboration among "Swamp Gravy" creator Richard Owen Geer, Brazilian artists and children, teenagers, adults and elders from Providence Hill, the piece explores life in Rio's oldest favela. Vignettes created by the cast portray their own stories of violence and resolution, desperation and leadership. The project got support from local businessmen and a bishop, and performances are scheduled throughout Rio at businesses and churches. PCI has been a player in Brazilian life for the last century, in youth work, education, training, employment and public health.

    Read the Full Report

    Remembering the Courage of Edward R. Murrow

    "McCarthy on 'See It Now'" by Walter Cronkite
    NPR

    Fifty years ago, one of the most influential news programs in television history aired. It was on CBS-TV, and produced by Fred Friendly and Edward R. Murrow. Part of the series See It Now, hosted by Murrow, it was a report on Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy and his campaign to root out "unpatriotic" Americans. Former CBS-TV anchor and commentator Walter Cronkite remembers the occasion as the night network television shook off its timidity and called the bluff of a bully.

    Listen to this Audio Essay

    Interview with John Shelton Lawrence about the American Monomyth

    Interview with John Shelton Lawrence, co-author of The Myth of the American Superhero and Captain America and the Crusade against Evil
    Eerdman's

    1. Why would two scholars from serious academic disciplines write a book about superheroes in comic books, video games, TV shows, and popular films? Isn't that just kids' stuff?

    John Shelton Lawrence: The short answer is that our college students forced us to start looking at these materials. It happened because we were both committed to teaching students to think critically about their ethical and religious beliefs. We discovered early in our teaching career that many students spent a lot of time with popular culture and became emotionally involved with some of the stories and heroes. Yet quite a few of them were very reluctant to examine those attachments. Like so many of the academic apologists for American popular culture, they thought that life was one thing and entertainment was simply a diversion with no impact on their attitudes or behavior. So, in their view, there was nothing to talk about. The religious subtext in pop culture became even more apparent in the late 70s, when we discovered that students and their parents sometimes attributed great spiritual significance to the Star Wars epic. But in their view, discussing "The Force" as faith in violence was unwelcome, even a rude interference with their private lives. They wanted privacy for that part of their experience. But I shouldn't leave the impression that all students resisted the discussion of their favored pieces of pop culture. Many of them were pleased to begin exploring it seriously and they became great helpers and teachers for us.

    2. So where does the superhero come into this? Can you tell me why you and Robert Jewett believe that there's an American superhero? Don't all countries have their heroes?

    John Shelton Lawrence: You are correct that heroes and heroic myths appear in all nations. Our book puts heroism in the frame of what we call the American monomyth, and thus acknowledges Joseph Campbell's famous description of the classical monomyth that pervades world culture. The classical hero typically has human or exaggerated human powers, as in the case of Hercules who is exceptionally strong. And most of his heroic deeds in service of the community are penance for his moral failings. The superhero, with more than human powers, and the immortality required by serialized episodes, emerges in American pop culture during the 20s and 30s. The odd and the special character of the American monomyth's hero is a peculiar kind of mythic discord. Whereas most of the world's heroic myths celebrate the social ethos of their societies, the American monomyth seems exceptional to us because it consistently dramatizes the need for its heroes to reject principles of American democracy.

    3. How does this myth reject American social values? And as a popular story, how does it get away with turning against our official democratic ethos?

    John Shelton Lawrence: Here we need to talk about the myth and its appeals. The American superhero story portrays someone blessed with gifts of moral and physical perfection. He (and occasionally she) rescues communities whose institutions, laws, and leaders have failed in confronting a clearly defined threat. The hero must rise above those failures and rescue the community — typically violating the law in some way. These heroes are not full members of their community. They have a disguise of some sort because the failed societies around them would persecute them if they could identify them. So the myth shows us democracy fails and demands rescue by someone who stands on the outside. In addition to giving us the thrill of singular heroism, this fantasy offers an escape for citizens of democracy in rejecting their responsibility for the success and safety of his community — yet offers a vision of rescue anyway. We call this experience "mythic redemption" and see it as the secularized counterpart of the much older religious idea of redemption.

    4. Can you give me some examples of a redemptive American superhero?

    John Shelton Lawrence: If we take the longer historical view, we have to go back to tales of rescue for colonial captives held by Native Americans and the stories of their rescue. Then we have the tales of vigilante justice, with The Virginian of a hundred years ago as the leading example. He is the clear predecessor for the unknown cowboy gunman who roams into the distressed village. Somewhat later in history, you have the masked and caped superheroes that alternately hide and then emerge from the phone booth or the Bat Cave to save the city. Jumping to the present, let's take the summer's hit film, Spider-Man. It's especially significant because it came out almost a year after 9/11 and offers a portrayal of the New York Police and Fire Departments, who were clearly last year's real life democratic heroes. The newspaper (an important democratic institution) has been depicting Spider-Man as a criminal and has managed to convince the police that they should arrest him. At a crucial moment in the film the police and fire personnel confront Spider-Man at a burning building with a threatened child inside. With craven fear in their faces, the fire personnel are too afraid to enter and the police stupidly want to arrest the only person who can carry off the rescue. Spider-Man rescues the child and then defiantly eludes the police. Think about it. After all the national celebration of New York public employees in the 9/11 catastrophe, a popular superhero film comes along and casually trashes their reputation. Even more remarkable is that it doesn't even register with critics or audiences because the story pattern is locked into our popular myths. Many of the great American superstars and superhero characters have built their franchises on roles that, like Spider-Man's, show them circumventing laws and the leaders so that they can be saviors. Our book discusses Clint Eastwood, Mel Gibson, Sylvester Stallone, Charles Bronson, John Wayne, and many others. We find it striking that our most honored stories and heroes are outsiders so unlike the heroes of the classical monomyth — persons who become fully integrated members of the community, accepting permanent responsibility for its welfare.

    5. Are you taking these stories too seriously? What if I take the viewpoint of your students here and say that they are just entertainments?

    John Shelton Lawrence: We would like to think that the widespread popularity of the American monomyth doesn't translate into behavior. Unfortunately, we find a correlation between the myth and increasing passivity of our citizens. Voting participation is steadily declining, especially among our younger citizens who spend the most time absorbing the mythic products that come to them as computer games, movies, comic books, and television programs. We also find that with popular, decades-old franchises like Star Trek and Star Wars, forms of religious adulation are beginning to emerge. Some ministers have given sermons inspired by The Matrix. Our book describes groups and individuals who say that these materials help them find life meaning, some even claiming that they illustrate the truths of the Christian faith. We also discuss the more overtly religious program Touched by Angel, which highlights psychological manipulation rather than violence. We don't find Touched healthy either, because it is just one more way of dramatizing failed institutions and calling for intervention by disguised superheroes who will leave after they exercise their special powers.

    6. Why not take your religious inspiration wherever you can get it?

    John Shelton Lawrence: When spiritual sensibilities are nurtured by and focused on media products, individuals are likely to reduce their commitment to institutions where they accept responsibility for the welfare of others. Working within churches and other care-focused groups can be a form of civic training in its own right. We believe that there's a significant connection between such work and the ethos of democracy. Another hesitation to accept this form of mythic inspiration is that the American monomyth's heroes typically redeem by violence. The great religions of the world attempt to break down stereotypes and celebrate the possibilities for coexistence. That kind of message never appears in the American monomyth, which stereotypes the world according to moral stereotypes and achieves redemption by the destruction of evil.

    7. What's wrong with attempting to destroy evil? Isn't that what America is attempting to do in fighting against terrorists?

    John Shelton Lawrence: Terrorism certainly produces evil. America would be suicidal to ignore destructive acts against citizens and allies. However, we have a constitutional system of national government and international treaties designed to guide our response to criminal attacks.
    The myth tells us that laws merely restrain our commitment to destroy our enemies. The American superhero is the person who understands and circumvents those laws in order to save the community or even the entire world. In our current world situation, we can see the tension between what we might call "constitutional realism" and the call of the superhero myth. President Bush himself has often spoken the language of the myth in describing the way "we will rid the world" by fighting "the evil ones" and has threatened to "go it alone" in the American battle. The truth is that the will cannot be mapped according to the myth. Evil is real, to be sure, but it is real in us because we are not the paragons of virtue in the myth. And we need allies to press forward against the great dangers we face. I think that President Bush knows this. But he wavers between responding to the myth and committing the nation fully to the constitutional constraints on the way we exercise power.

    8. Haven't some other countries seen Bush as a mythic "cowboy" figure? And have they shown any interest in The Myth of the American Superhero?

    John Shelton Lawrence: President Bush is an interesting figure because he wavers between the stance of the courageous cowboy who threatens to act alone in fighting against evil and the president who is reigned in by constitutional considerations and U.S. treaties with other countries. He has openly announced a preemptive war doctrine that violates our United Nations treaty obligations, but has backed off after seeing how much alarm has been inspired by these stances. We have a chapter on the president as superhero that fits him in some respects. Some publications in other countries have expressed interest in our ideas about pop culture inspirations as an element in foreign policy. We have done articles and interviews about the book's ideas that have appeared in Germany, Finland, and Japan. We are hoping that we can come through the current crisis in Iraq without another surge of monomythic talk and posturing.

    9. You seem very critical of the American myth system you discuss. Do you think that it's better to live without any myths at all?

    John Shelton Lawrence: Actually, we don't think it's desirable or even possible to live without myths. The democratic standard that we appeal to rests upon a faith in the capabilities of ordinary people and their judgment. The system of letting citizens choose their leaders who are in turn restrained by the rule of law grows out of a mythology that can never be "rationally proven" as the best way for societies to organize their affairs.

    10. Can we talk a little about how you and Jewett collaborate? You live in Berkeley, California and he lives in Heidelberg, Germany. That sounds hard.

    John Shelton Lawrence: The short answer here is that we rely absolutely on email. And then we have worked together on popular culture issues for several decades. It's basically a matter of one person drafting and the other person revising, with an occasional intervention from our wise and wily editor at Eerdmans, Reinder Van Til. Because I live in America, I did most of the work in looking at the latest films, television shows, and video games. But Jewett was always indispensable in developing our interpretation and fitting it into the mosaic of American culture.

    Article Link

    "Bush Exploiting 9/11" by Bill Berkowitz

    "Bush Exploiting 9/11" By Bill Berkowitz,
    AlterNet

    Like many issues surrounding the Bush presidency the past six months – no stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction found in Iraq, questions about his service record in the Texas Air National Guard and a skyrocketing deficit – his new advertising campaign has caused a flurry of controversy, with criticism coming from a number of family members of those who died in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.

    As Team Bush's strategists were shaping up his re-election strategy, it was clear from the outset that the president's war on terrorism would take center stage. Despite early warnings that the president would use actual footage from Ground Zero to market his re-election, in early March when the first advertisements rolled out on television screen across the country, some family members of the victims of 9/11 were outraged by what they saw.

    The ads, aimed at boosting the president's flagging poll ratings, began airing on national cable networks in 80 media markets in 18 states that Team Bush feels are "electoral battlegrounds." The New York Daily News reported that "Two ads, including a Spanish version, show fleeting images of the World Trade Center devastation. The 30-second spots include a poignant image of an American flag fluttering defiantly amid the WTC wreckage."

    The use of the footage seemed insensitive to some family members, coming only a few weeks after the president finally gave in to pressure and agreed to extend by two months the time for the independent commission investigating 9/11 to complete its work. The fact that the president reluctantly agreed to testify before the commission, albeit in a closed door session with a few members that will be limited to one hour, also rankled some 9/11 families.

    In addition, according to the Times of London, "the White House has also been accused by the commission of blocking its progress by being slow to produce Bush's intelligence briefings from before the September 11 attacks."

    While the president hasn't appeared all that curious about getting to the bottom of how and why 9/11 occurred, he evidently has no compunctions about using 9/11 to enhance his re-election possibilities.

    "It's a slap in the face of the murders of 3,000 people," Monica Gabrielle, whose husband died in the twin tower attacks, told the newspaper. "It is unconscionable."

    "I would be less offended if he showed a picture of himself in front of the Statue of Liberty," said Tom Roger, whose daughter was a flight attendant on doomed American Airlines Flight 11. "But to show the horror of 9/11 in the background, that's just some advertising agency's attempt to grab people by the throat."

    Firefighter Tommy Fee in Rescue Squad 270 in Queens was appalled. "It's as sick as people who stole things out of the place. The image of firefighters at Ground Zero should not be used for this stuff, for politics," Fee told the Daily News.

    Mindy Kleinberg, another relative, said the image of remains being removed from the rubble was particularly offensive. "How heinous is that? That's somebody's loved one," she said.

    According to the Daily News, the two thirty second "ads reinforce...Ground Zero imagery with frontal shots of two firefighters. Unlike the paid actors and actresses in most of the footage, they are not ringers, but their red headgear gives them away as non-New Yorkers. The Bush campaign declined to reveal where the burly smoke-eaters actually work."

    As with the MoveOn.org anti-Bush advertisement rejected by CBS for airing on Super Bowl Sunday, the Bush ads received a great deal of attention from the cable news networks before they aired. However, unlike MoveOn's rejection, which generated a great deal of support for the organization, the Bush's ads were getting an immediate thumbs down from 9/11 families. The negative reactions of 9/11 family members put administration officials on the defensive and they were forced to take to the airwaves to defend the administration's strategy.

    Bush campaign manager Ken Mehlman told reporters that using images of Ground Zero was fair game because "9/11 was the defining moment of these times. Because of that day, America is at war and still is."

    "With all due respect, I just completely disagree [with the families], and I believe the vast majority of the American people will as well," Karen Hughes, a Bush campaign adviser said on CBS' "The Early Show."

    "September 11th was not just a distant tragedy. It's a defining event for the future of our country....Obviously, all of us mourn and grieve for the victims of that terrible day, but September 11 fundamentally changed our public policy in many important ways, and I think it's vital that the next president recognize that."

    Exploiting 9/11 is the centerpiece of the president's re-election campaign. That was made abundantly clear when the Republican Party decided upon New York City for the site of its national convention and scheduled it for the week before the tragedy's third anniversary.

    In January 2003, President Bush was quoted by Associated Press saying that he had "no ambition whatsoever to use this [9/11] as a political issue." Just a few weeks ago, Newsday reported that Bush-Cheney spokesman Kevin Madden responded to charges that the White House has overtly politicized 9/11 by saying "I can't believe [they] said that. They are playing politics with national security."

    MoveOn.org claims that Bush is doing precisely that. In an e-mail letter to its members MoveOn is suggesting that supporters write letters to the editor of their local newspapers expressing disappointment in the president's decision to exploit 9/11 for "partisan political gain."

    The first series of Bush re-election advertisements doesn't mention Sen. John Kerry by name. However, according to ABC News, "The next round will not be so polite."

    September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows

    Article Link

    Mistress Matisse Reviews "The Passion"

    The Passion of the Christ dir. Mel Gibson
    Reviewed by Mistress Matisse
    The Stranger

    Here's a riddle: Why did Jesus die on the cross? He forgot his safeword! That's an old joke in the BDSM community, but I left the theater after watching Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ feeling like I'd forgotten mine, too. At least half the reviews I've read about this movie used words like "sadomasochistic," "S&M," and "fetishistic violence." It's nice that my community has given movie reviewers some new vocabulary, but, as a bona fide sadomasochist, my verdict is that this movie is not kink-friendly.

    Why doesn't the film work as an SM scene? For one thing, there's no warm-up. We meet Jesus, there's a tiny bit of mind-fuck action with the Devil, and boom, the High Priest's goons jump right into heavy bondage and suspension. So that's all wrong. Jesus then gets dragged around to different tops, but neither Pilate nor Herod want to play with him, and I don't blame them, because Jesus is already smeared with blood and pretty unresponsive. Sloppy seconds, you know? But then we get to Mel's real blood-fetish come-shot, the flogging scene.

    Now, calling it the flogging scene is somewhat misleading, because I saw various bad guys snapping whips throughout the entire film. However, Mel indulges himself in more than 10 long minutes of nothing but Jesus having the crap kicked out of him by some Roman soldiers. (I'm really afraid to even think of how long it's going to be in the director's cut.) The use of canes in this scene surprised me; I went to Catholic school for 12 years, and they never told us Jesus got caned. I don't know how they missed it, since the nuns took such delight in detailing all the other terrible things that Jesus endured, just for the sake of our unworthy little souls. However, I do know that the rattan-like canes they used in the movie are anachronistic; the Romans caned people with something called lignae, which is apparently the knobby root of a bush. Mel also got carried away with the sound effects here--thin rattan canes do not make such a loud thud when they land on flesh. But the body makeup used in this scene is excellent, because the marks did look very much like what you get with caning.

    Then comes the flogging--or to be more Biblically accurate, the scourging. Jim Caviezel, the actor who plays Jesus, has been quoted as saying, "I experienced the whip." I believe he may have taken a few whacks in honor of Lee Strasberg, but I'm quite sure the Screen Actors Guild has some kind of rule about not exsanguinating its actors, and this scene is all about bloodletting. Jesus' shredded flesh and blood, rather than Jesus himself, is the star; dripping in slow motion, puddling on the ground, spattering the faces of the leering Roman soldiers--Gibson can't get enough of it. This isn't like watching a BDSM scene, it's like watching Jerusalem Chainsaw Massacre. I like blood, and even I sat there thinking, Eeuuww, gross.

    Then there is how Mel has his Roman soldiers acting. They're jumping around and giggling like preschoolers at a birthday party as they beat up Jesus, acting like this is the biggest treat they've ever had. Now, I can accept that the soldiers who volunteered for flogging duty might have done so because they were inherently sadistic. It was a brutal age, and violent punishments were common; there was plenty of scope for nonconsensual sadism. But I'd have been more inclined to believe in a casual "Yeah, yeah, time to make the doughnuts" attitude from the soldiers instead of how Mel portrays them, simply because flogging a poor soul, even if that poor soul was Jesus, would be nothing unusual for them.

    In the end, The Passion of the Christ doesn't work as a BDSM scene because it's not about connection. I didn't feel connected with Mel's Jesus, mainly because he spends most of the movie looking less like a man and more like a bloody rag doll with rolled-up eyes. Like many novice kinksters, Mel hasn't yet learned that the success or failure of a scene doesn't rest on how many strokes of the whip you give someone, but how everybody feels when it's finished. MISTRESS MATISSE

    Article Link

    "Why Require Only Poor To Do Community Service?" by Peter Dreier

    Why require only poor to do community service?
    By Peter Dreier
    USA Today

    Starting Oct. 31, the Bush administration will require unemployed adults living in public housing to contribute eight hours a month of community-service work or face eviction. Public housing agencies across the USA have sent letters to tenants informing them of the new federal mandate.
    In theory, this is a good idea. But if President Bush is serious about encouraging the spirit of volunteerism, he shouldn't limit his plan to the poor people who live in public housing. They represent only a tiny proportion of people who get housing assistance from Washington. Most beneficiaries of federal housing subsidies are wealthy, or at least in the upper middle class. And they get their subsidies not from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) but from the Internal Revenue Service, in the form of tax breaks.

    The HUD budget for low-income housing is about $31 billion. Subsidized housing for the poor is essentially a lottery, not an entitlement; only about a third of the families eligible for federal housing assistance receive any subsidies. This adds up to about 5 million households, 1.1 million of whom live in public housing.

    In contrast, tax breaks for homeowners — the deduction of mortgage interest and property taxes — cost the federal government more than $88 billion last year. About 33 million homeowners took advantage of these tax breaks. That would be OK if most of it helped the middle class. But those with the highest incomes and the most expensive homes (including second homes) get the largest subsidy.

    Rich returns
    The average annual mortgage-interest tax deduction:
    Income: Value of deduction
    Below $10,000: $83
    $10,000-$20,000: $386
    $20,000-$30,000: $421
    $30,000-$40,000: $596
    $40,000-$50,000: $906
    $50,000-$75,000: $1,205
    $75,000-$100,000: $2,111
    $100,000-$200,000: $3,145
    Above $200,000: $6,905

    Source: Joint Committee on Taxation

    More than half of the $66 billion mortgage-interest subsidy goes to the richest 11% of taxpayers with incomes above $100,000. This alone is bigger than the entire HUD budget. More than one-fifth of the mortgage tax break goes to the richest 2.25% of taxpayers, those with incomes above $200,000.

    Overall, 22.5% of taxpayers take the mortgage interest deduction, but the percentage varies significantly with income. For example, 62.5% of taxpayers with incomes above $200,000 took the deduction, with an average tax benefit of $6,905. In contrast, only 26.7% of those in the $40,000-$50,000 bracket took the deduction; they saved an average of $906 on their taxes. Among those in the $20,000-$30,000 income category, only 9.4% took it, receiving an average benefit of only $421.

    The Bush administration isn't requiring homeowners who receive tax breaks — whether employed or not — to do community service. But it is forcing jobless low-income adults fortunate enough to live in government-subsidized housing to do volunteer work or face eviction.

    The reality is that most poor people do work. The ones who don't are taking care of their children or can't find a job. In the three years of the Bush administration, the unemployment rate has increased, making it more difficult for public housing residents and others to find work. Rather than force them into community-service efforts, Bush should focus on improving the economy so that able-bodied people who want to work can do so. Moreover, many public housing residents already volunteer for their churches, help family members and friends take care of children, and participate in other forms of community service.

    The Bush administration claims its mandate will encourage people in subsidized housing to give back to their communities. If Bush really believes this, why not require all Americans to perform community service based on the size of their federal housing subsidy? Then, when America's super-rich mail in their income tax forms with those huge deductions for their year-round mansions and getaway vacation homes, they also can look forward to volunteering their free time to make America a better place, just like those unemployed folks in public housing.

    Peter Dreier is a professor of politics and director of the Urban and Environmental Policy program at Occidental College in Los Angeles.

    Article Link

    Scott Tucker on Identity Politics

    The following passage from The Queer Question: Essays on Desire and Democracy, by Scott Tucker (South End Press, 1997, p. 72), gives a useful account of the early history of the term identity politics:

    "An early and influential statement of identity politics (as this tendency quickly became known) was "A Black Feminist Statement," published in 1977 and written by the Combahee River Collective: "We believe that the most profound and potentially the most radical politics come directly out of our own identity, as opposed to working to end somebody else's oppression... We reject pedestals, queenhood, and walking ten paces behind. To be recognized as human, levelly human, is enough." They proposed an integrated perspective on sex, race, and class, and criticized both lesbian separatism and "any type of biological determinism." This is important to remember, because identity politics became increasingly identified-- often unfairly, and by both members of the right and left-- as the very ideology of separatism and immutable difference. Identity politics, if we listen to the original voices, was a general call to become "levelly human," but to do so as particular persons with particular histories.'

    Wednesday, March 10, 2004

    "Passion: Regular or Decaf?" by Slavoj Žižek

    (Courtesy of Mason)

    "Passion: Regular or Decaf?" by Slavoj Žižek
    In These Times

    Those who virulently criticized Mel Gibson’s The Passion even before its release seem unassailable: Are they not justified to worry that the film, made by a fanatic Catholic known for occasional anti-Semitic outbursts, may ignite anti-Semitic sentiments?

    More generally, is The Passion not a manifesto of our own (Western, Christian) fundamentalists? Is it then not the duty of every Western secularist to reject it, to make it clear that we are not covert racists attacking only the fundamentalism of other (Muslim) cultures?

    The Pope’s ambiguous reaction to the film is well known: Upon seeing it, deeply moved, he muttered “It is as it was”—a statement quickly withdrawn by the official Vatican speakers. The Pope’s spontaneous reaction was thus replaced by an “official” neutrality, corrected so as not to hurt anyone. This shift, with its politically correct fear that anyone’s specific religious sensibility may be hurt, exemplifies what is wrong with liberal tolerance: Even if the Bible says that the Jewish mob demanded the death of Christ, one should not stage this scene directly but play it down and contextualize it to make it clear that Jews are collectively not to be blamed for the Crucifixion. The problem of such a stance is that it merely represses aggressive religious passion, which remains smoldering beneath the surface and, finding no release, gets stronger and stronger.

    This prohibition against embracing a belief with full passion may explain why, today, religion is only permitted as a particular “culture,” or lifestyle phenomenon, not as a substantial way of life. We no longer “really believe,” we just follow (some of) the religious rituals and mores out of respect for the “lifestyle” of the community to which we belong. Indeed, what is a “cultural lifestyle” if not that every December in every house there is a Christmas tree—although none of us believes in Santa Claus? Perhaps, then, “culture” is the name for all those things we practice without really believing in them, without “taking them seriously.” Isn’t this why we dismiss fundamentalist believers as “barbarians,” as a threat to culture—they dare to take seriously their beliefs? Today, ultimately, we perceive as a threat to culture those who immediately live their culture, those who lack a distance toward it.

    Jacques Lacan’s definition of love is “giving something one doesn’t have.” What one often forgets is to add the other half: “… to someone who doesn’t want it.” This is confirmed by our most elementary experience when somebody unexpectedly declares passionate love to us: Isn’t the reaction, preceding the possible affirmative reply, that something obscene and intrusive is being forced upon us? This is why, ultimately, passion is politically incorrect; although everything seems permitted in our culture, one kind of prohibition is merely displaced by another.

    Consider the deadlock that is sexuality or art today. Is there anything more dull and sterile than the incessant invention of new artistic transgressions—the performance artist masturbating on stage, the sculptor displaying human excrement? Some radical circles in the United States recently proposed that we rethink the rights of necrophiliacs. In the same way that people sign permission for their organs to be used for medical purposes, shouldn’t they also be allowed to permit their bodies to be enjoyed by necrophiliacs? This proposal is the perfect example of how the PC stance realizes Kierkegaard’s insight that the only good neighbor is a dead neighbor. A corpse is the ideal sexual partner of a tolerant subject trying to avoid any passionate interaction.

    On today’s market, we find a series of products deprived of their malignant property: coffee without caffeine, cream without fat, beer without alcohol. The list goes on: virtual sex as sex without sex, the Colin Powell doctrine of war with no casualties (on our side, of course) as war without war, the redefinition of politics as expert administration as politics without politics. Today’s tolerant liberal multiculturalism wishes to experience the Other deprived of its Otherness (the idealized Other who dances fascinating dances and has an ecologically holistic approach to reality, while features like wife beating remain out of sight). Along the same lines, what this tolerance gives us is a decaffeinated belief, a belief that does not hurt anyone and never requires us to commit ourselves.

    Today’s hedonism combines pleasure with constraint. It is no longer “Drink coffee, but in moderation!” but rather “Drink all the coffee you want because it is already decaffeinated.” The ultimate example is chocolate laxative, with its paradoxical injunction “Do you have constipation? Eat more of this chocolate!”—the very thing that causes constipation.

    The structure of the “chocolate laxative,” of a product containing the agent of its own containment, can be discerned throughout today’s ideological landscape. Consider how we relate to capitalist profiteering: It is fine IF it is counteracted with charitable activities—first you amass billions, then you return (part of) them to the needy. The same goes for war, for the emerging logic of humanitarian militarism: War is OK insofar as it brings about peace and democracy, or creates the conditions to distribute humanitarian aid. And does the same not hold true for democracy and human rights? It is OK to “rethink” human rights to include torture and a permanent emergency state, if democracy is cleansed of its populist “excesses.”

    Does this mean that, against the false tolerance of liberal multiculturalism, we should return to religious fundamentalism? The very absurdity of Gibson’s vision makes clear the impossibility of such a solution. Gibson first wanted to shoot the film in Latin and Aramaic and show it without subtitles. Under pressure, he allowed subtitles, but this compromise was not just a concession to commercial demands. Sticking to the original plan would have displayed the self-refuting nature of Gibson’s project: That is to say, the film without subtitles shown in large suburban malls would turn its intended fidelity into the opposite, an incomprehensible exotic spectacle.

    But there is a third position, beyond religious fundamentalism and liberal tolerance. One should not put forth the distinction between Islamic fundamentalism and Islam, a la Bush and Blair, who never forget to praise Islam as a great religion of love and tolerance that has nothing to do with disgusting terrorist acts. Instead, one should gather the courage to recognize the obvious fact that there is a deep strain of violence and intolerance in Islam—that, to put it bluntly, something in Islam resists the liberal-capitalist world order. By transposing this tension into the core of Islam, one can conceive such resistance as an opportunity: It need not necessarily lead to “Islamo-Fascism,” but rather could be articulated into a Socialist project. The traditional European Fascism was a misdirected act of resistance against the deadlocks of capitalist modernization. What was wrong with Fascism was NOT (as liberals keep telling us) its dream of a people’s community that overcomes capitalist competition through a spirit of collective discipline and sacrifice, but how these motives were deformed by a specific political twist. Fascism, in a way, took the best and turned it into the worst.

    Instead of trying to extract the pure ethical core of a religion from its political manipulations, one should ruthlessly criticize that very core—in ALL religions. Today, when religions themselves (from New Age spirituality to the cheap spiritualist hedonism of the Dalai Lama) are more than ready to serve postmodern pleasure-seeking, it is consequently, and paradoxically, only a thorough materialism that is able to sustain a truly ascetic, militant and ethical stance.

    Slavoj Žižek, a philosopher and psychoanalyst, is a senior researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities, in Essen, Germany. Among other books, he is the author of The Fragile Absolute and Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism?

    Article Link

    Tuesday, March 09, 2004

    Outcast (with a "c")

    OK, this is all starting to make sense (we are writing about subcultures in my writing classes and I'm looking for interesting examples--all I keep finding are stupid quizzes that tell me I am maladjusted). Its funny if you answer on a quiz that you like to read, think, or enjoy the outdoors, then those answers outweigh all the answers of wanting to club with your friends... You ever notice on the Law and Order TV shows that if you have a character of above-average intelligence, that is interested in history, likes to read, or is into art, then they are sure to be a freak or some kind of manipulative murderous crazy?

    Outcast
    You are an.. OUTCAST! Nobody hates you, you just
    hate them. Or vice versa. You really don't like
    being around people, being by yourself is much
    better company. You are not accepted by the
    norm and are deemed "weird" or
    "freaky". You appreciate things that
    others don't, and you dwell in your
    indifference.


    The Subculture Label Quiz
    brought to you by Quizilla

    Which 1990s Subculture Do you Belong To?

    They said I belong to Grunge--the description certainly sounds like me?





    Which 1990's Subculture Do You Belong To?


    [Another Quiz by Kris
    @ couplandesque.net]

    Duke Ellington's Sacred, Spiritual Concerts

    "Duke Ellington's Sacred, Spiritual Concerts: Re-Creating a Reverent Opus of Song, Jazz and Dance"
    The Tavis Smiley Show

    Listen to this Audio Feature

    "Disappearing the Dead: Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Idea of a 'New Warfare'" by Carl Conetta

    Disappearing the Dead: Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Idea of a 'New Warfare'
    Carl Conetta

    Project on Defense Alternatives
    Moving Ideas

    Iraqi weapons of mass destruction is not the only war-related subject clouded by misinformation. According to this new study, the Pentagon conducted "perception management" campaigns during the Afghan and Iraq wars that also obstructed the public's awareness of civilian casualties. These activities included Pentagon efforts to "spin" casualty stories in ways that minimized their significance or cast unreasonable doubt on their reliability. Efforts also may have included the placement of misleading news stories. The report concludes that masking the casualty problem leaves America unprepared for the consequences of war and it proposes treating casualties on all sides as a cost of war that must be examined, estimated, and disclosed.

    Full Report

    Linked at Democracy in Action

    The South Project

    The South Project (2004-2008) is a five-year program of exhibitions, forums, performances, residencies and publications designed to explore the possibilities of south-south dialogue across the southern hemisphere. It draws together new cultural energies coming from Africa, the Pacific and South America. The focus of the project is on the visual expression of culture, including visual arts, crafts, design and architecture. "Craft has an integral role to play as a language of technique and materials that provides a convertible currency for exchange between traditional and modern worlds," say the Australian sponsors. It kicks off with "South 1 – The Gathering," a convergence of artists and community representatives from countries of the southern hemisphere, July 1-4, 2004, at the Sidney Myer Asia Centre, University of Melbourne.

    South Project

    FAIR Media Advisory: GOP Rhetoric on Kerry's Voting Record Goes Unchallenged

    MEDIA ADVISORY:
    GOP Rhetoric on Kerry's Voting Record Goes Unchallenged
    Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (reposted at Alternet: Media Culture)
    March 8, 2004

    After John Kerry emerged as the likely Democratic nominee for president, the Republican National Committee (RNC) began criticizing his record on military spending. The campaign against Kerry's record escalated on February 22 when the RNC released a list of weapons systems that Kerry allegedly "voted against."

    Republican spokespeople used this list to make sweeping claims about Kerry in the media: "I think the more that the president and the Republicans describe accurately-- they don't have to exaggerate at all; they just have to describe accurately and calmly-- what it means...to have voted against every major weapon system," Newt Gingrich declared on Fox's Hannity and Colmes (2/26/04), "I think if they stick to that and stick to the facts, Senator Kerry will react by saying that he's being smeared by his own record."

    Partisan TV pundits like Sean Hannity quickly echoed these charges: "He's voting against every major weapons system we now use in our military," Hannity told his Fox News audience (3/1/04). Hannity's participation in the RNC's attack was perhaps to be expected, but he was not the only media figure to simply pass on the Republican allegations without examination. CNN anchor Judy Woodruff (2/25/04) framed the issue this way in an interview with Rep. Norm Dicks (D.-Wash.): "The Republicans list something like 13 different weapons systems that they say the record shows Senator Kerry voted against. The Patriot missile, the B-1 bomber, the Trident missile and on and on and on."

    Embarrassingly, Dicks had to explain to Woodruff that most of the weapons "votes" weren't individual votes at all, but a single vote on the Pentagon's 1991 appropriations bill. Woodruff responded with surprise to this information: "Are you saying that all these weapons systems were part of one defense appropriations bill in 1991?"

    But Woodruff wasn't alone. Appearing on CNN (2/3/04), Bush-Cheney campaign strategist Ralph Reed explained to anchor Wolf Blitzer that Kerry's record was one of "voting to dismantle 27 weapons systems, including the MX missile, the Pershing missile, the B-1, the B-2 stealth bomber, the F-16 fighter jet, the F-15 fighter jet, cutting another 18 programs, slashing intelligence spend by $2.85 billion, and voting to freeze defense spending for seven years." Blitzer responded by pointing out to guest Ann Lewis of the Democratic National Committee, "I think it's fair to say, Ann, that there's been some opposition research done."

    For many reporters, the charges against Kerry's record were recorded as just part of the back-and-forth of a campaign: Fox News Channel's Carl Cameron (2/27/04) explained: "With the GOP attacking John Kerry's votes to cut defense over the years, the Democratic front-runner, once again, counter-attacked what he calls the president's 'mishandling' of the war on terror."

    Associated Press reporter Nedra Pickler (2/27/04) noted that "the Bush campaign has criticized Kerry in recent days for voting against some increases in defense spending and military weapons programs during his 19-year congressional career. Bush campaign chairman Marc Racicot said Kerry's policies would weaken the country's ability to win the war on terror."

    NBC anchor Tom Brokaw (3/2/04, MSNBC) also seemed to accept the charges at face value, noticing that "the vice president just today was talking about his votes against the CIA budget, for example, intelligence budgets and also weapons systems. Isn't he [Kerry] going to be very vulnerable come the fall when national security is such a big issue in this country?

    One of the few reporters to take a serious look at the RNC's list-- on which 10 of the 13 items refer to the single 1991 vote-- was Slate's Fred Kaplan (2/25/04). Kaplan noted that 16 senators, including five Republicans, voted against the bill. Kaplan concluded that the claim against Kerry "reeks of rank dishonesty."

    Kaplan also pointed out that at the time of the 1991 vote, deeper cuts in military spending were being advocated by some prominent Republicans-- including then-President George H.W Bush and Dick Cheney, who was secretary of defense at the time. As Kaplan noted, Cheney appealed for more cuts from Congress: "You've squabbled and sometimes bickered and horse-traded and ended up forcing me to spend money on weapons that don't fill a vital need in these times of tight budgets and new requirements."

    Cheney went to name the M-1 tank and the F-14 and F-16 fighters-- all of which appear on the RNC's list-- as "great systems" that "we have enough of."

    Ironically, Cheney made the rounds on the cable channels on March 2, criticizing Kerry's record in terms parallel to the RNC's release. During an interview with Fox News Channel's Brit Hume, Cheney said: "What we're concerned about, what I'm concerned about, is his record in the United States Senate, where he clearly has over the years adopted a series of positions that indicate a desire to cut the defense budget, to cut the intelligence budget, to eliminate many major weapons programs."

    Unfortunately, Hume failed to raise an important follow-up: Why was Cheney now criticizing Kerry for having essentially the same position Cheney advocated back in 1991?

    The Bush/Cheney campaign plans to spend $133 million over the next several months in an effort to "redefine" Kerry (Sydney Morning Herald, 3/4/04). If this charge is an indication of the Republicans' approach, then the media would perform a valuable service if they took a keen interest in evaluating the accuracy of such campaign rhetoric.

    Advisory Link

    US Jobs and Wages Declined in February

    Employment Flat in February
    By Dean Baker
    March 5, 2004

    WAGE GROWTH IS 0.5 PERCENTAGE POINTS BELOW INFLATION.


    The February employment report was surprisingly weak, showing a gain of just 21,000 jobs. Since the jobs numbers for January were revised down by 23,000, the jobs figure for February is just under the level previously reported for January. The household survey showed a similarly bleak picture, with hundreds of thousands of workers leaving the labor force. The employment to population ratio (EPOP)
    fell 0.2 percentage points to 62.2 percent, just above the 62.1 percent low-point hit in September. With so many workers leaving the labor force, the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 5.6 percent.

    The picture on the household side is consistent with past patterns. The largest falloff in EPOPs was among white teens (0.7 percentage points), black teens (1.1 percentage points) and black men (1.3
    percentage points). Since the peaks in 2000, the EPOPS for both black and white teens have fallen by 10 percentage points, while the EPOP for black men has fallen by 5 percentage points. Overall, the EPOP is down 2.2 percentage points from its peak.

    The EPOP for people with college degrees has fallen by 1.1 percentage points in the last two months. However, this data is erratic, and may be reversed in coming months.

    Consistent with past patterns, older people are aggressively seeking employment, the number of employed people over age 55 rose by 117,000 in February. This age group has accounted for 98.6 percent of the employment gains shown in the household survey over the last year.

    Virtually all other data in the household survey indicates continued weakness in the labor market. The percentage of unemployment due to people voluntarily leaving jobs remains near its low for the cycle,
    the percentage of long-term unemployed remains near its high, and the number of discouraged workers is above the level in February 2003.

    The picture in the establishment survey is no brighter. There was zero growth in private sector employment in February. In fact, with the downward revisions, the private sector jobs figure for February is 35,000 below the level previously reported for January. Over the last three months, private sector job growth averaged just 37,000 per month.

    There is no sector showing any substantial strength at this point. Construction, which had added 54,000 jobs between October and January, lost 24,000 jobs in February. Retail trade added a modest 12,700 jobs, but this follows a downward revision of 20,200 (17,400 in department stores) to the number previously reported for January. The number of jobs in this sector is virtually unchanged
    since October.

    The temporary help sector added 32,000 jobs, although this follows a drop of 13,000 in January. Over the last four months, the growth in temp jobs has averaged 21,000. However, this does not necessarily presage more rapid growth in standard employment. Job growth in the temp sector averaged 26,000 a month from April to September of last year.

    There was little change in hours, either overall or by industry, although the average over-time in manufacturing is down 0.1 hour from the level previously reported for January. The only bright spot on
    the employment side is that declines in manufacturing employment may have finally leveled off, with the number of jobs declining by just 3,000 in January.

    Wage growth continues to slow. The average hourly wage grew at an annual rate of just 1.4 percent over the last quarter, down from an already meager 1.6 percent rate over the last year. Low wage workers seem to be faring even worse, as retail wages are up just 1.1 percent from year ago levels. With inflation – driven by energy prices – at 2.0 percent, workers are seeing declining real wages.

    The continuing weakness of job and wage growth in this report provides serious grounds for concern about the sustainability of the recovery. With workers' buying power stagnating, consumption growth
    cannot be sustained, except by ever greater levels of debt. Many analysts had mistakenly assumed that large tax refunds would boost consumption – ignoring the capital gains tax owed on last year's
    stock earnings. Without such a boost, it is hard to see what can sustain the recovery through the summer.

    A Baker Economic Data Commentary

    Spalding Gray 1941-2004

    A great performer and writer! Like most great performative philosophers, Spalding Gray's passions and insights were born of the pain of his life. His performance art was one of a kind!

    Obituary

    NPR Interviews and Profiles

    Alt-X Interview

    America's Talking Man

    Harvard Gazette Interview

    Some of his films

    Fed-Up Catholic Designs Own God

    -Kenneth Applebaum over at the MediaSquatters forwarded this tale of a disgruntled Catholic who has decided to invent his own God. I found the rationale to be very convincing... I wonder if this would be a good writing project for my classes?

    Fed-Up Catholic Designs Own God by Josh Righter (published by Enduring Vision)

    Frustrated by the "too god damn many" rules and stipulations of the Catholic faith, and disheartened by their depiction of a God that is "wussy and boring", 24 year-old former-Catholic Ron Guller of Runeburg, Nebraska announced yesterday that he has concocted his own God, and further explained in a press conference.

    "I was just so sick of crap like lent and confession and all that shit," Guller revealed. "I mean, I know Heaven is supposed to be a nice place and all, but getting in there is just ridiculous! On top of that, church was boring, my priest hated me, and the way they described God sounded plain old dumb. So one day I thought, 'Hey! Ron! Why the hell are you believing in some guy who makes you do all this crap, and doesn't even sound cool anyway?' That's when I got the idea for Super God Xtreme, or SGX as I sometimes like to call Him."

    SGX reportedly possesses far more abilities than that of the Catholic God, including night-vision, "mega-sharp" claws, super speed, and even eyes capable of shooting laser blasts at unfortunate non-believers.

    "I just whipped up this little sketch in Microsoft Paint here," Guller explained, gesturing to a diagram behind him, "and the ideas came like water. Probably because SGX filled my head with them with his hyper-telepathic capabilities. Anyway, I think it's pretty clear that he could easily kill anything, including all the different versions of God, not just the Catholic one."

    Furthermore, Guller's God is far more lax about what His followers must to in order to reach the desired state of afterlife.

    "I don't know about the Catholics," Guller smirked, "but my God likes to party. In fact, that's one of his Five Commandments, the other four being 'Don't Kill People', 'Only Drink Sometimes And Not Too Much When You Do Unless It's A Cool Party Or You Had A Rough Day', 'Hang Out With Hot Girls And/Or Guys', and, the most important one, 'Don't Believe In The Catholic God Or Any Other Religion's Version Of God Or Gods Or Whatever'. If you follow those, dude, you're set. And even if you don't follow them, SGX is cool with that. He's not a dick or anything. Just don't be, like, a nerd, and you'll be okay."

    In addition, SGX will apparently assist believers with their everyday daily lives, as long as they follow His Commandments, and are generally "cool with Him".

    "I've already quit my lame-ass [auto mechanic] job," Guller said with a dismissive wave of his hand. "I don't need that shit anymore, and SGX doesn't want me to have that shit anymore. He'll send me a good job really soon, and then probably a hot girlfriend."

    Added Guller with a grin, "Would the Catholic God do that?"

    Though the currently-unnamed religion of believing in SGX has no firm guidelines for recruiting new members, such as Christianity does, Guller believes that a minor amount of boasting is perfectly acceptable.

    "There's nothing more satisfying that hanging out by a Catholic church, telling people that SGX could kick their God's ass if He wanted to, which he could. And if that makes people interested, well, they can always talk to me."

    So what's next for SGX's most devoted follower? Building a place of worship, of course.

    "It'll have this huge party room," Guller said excitedly, eyes gleaming. "With a number of sub-rooms for other stuff, if you know what I mean. SGX is cool with that stuff, too."

    Article Link

    "The American Candidate"

    When I first read this pitch it made me a little sick, but then I started to wonder if it is really that much different from the current primary system. In fact it just seems a little more honest...

    "In this election year many people are looking for the best way to communicate the ideas and information which they believe are imperative to the future of this nation. AMERICAN CANDIDATE offers a constructive and intriguing means to create a national conversation around these and other vital issues.

    We are looking for people engaged in advocating for their passions and beliefs; who welcome a chance to be part of this fascinating exercise in the process of democracy.

    The winner of AMERICAN CANDIDATE will receive $200,000 and a nationwide media appearance to occur after the conclusion of the series so that the "American Candidate" can make his or her address to the nation.

    In America, we believe that anyone can grow up to be President of the United States. The reality is that most people don't have the means to try. American Candidate is a groundbreaking television series in which the American people will identify a People's Candidate that they would like to see run for President
    of the United States.

    American Candidate will provide a forum for new and diverse ideas and a path to national prominence for people with the passion and talent to make a difference. Contestants will create their own platforms, organize their own campaigns, recruit key staff members, and garner the support of potential voters. By introducing a diverse group of potential leaders, each championing a different
    set of core issues and policy proposals, the show will provoke discussion and debate about what our nation is really looking for in a president. And by providing a forum for grassroots campaigns throughout the country, American Candidate will involve more people in the political process.

    On American Candidate, an innovative new political television series by Showtime, 12 Americans from all walks of life will be selected to participate in an unscripted, nationally televised political forum. Through competitions, challenges, debates, and engagement with the 2004 presidential election, those 12 people will have a once in a lifetime opportunity to offer their perspective on the state of the nation and their vision for our future.

    Viewers will follow a group of contestants as they campaign across the United States. On each show, the contestants will perform live under pressure, as they participate in competitions, debates, press conferences, crisis simulations, and other tests of presidential mettle. Viewers will also be able to participate in the campaigns via the internet. The final episode will be the American Candidate Convention, during which viewers will select the show's winner: the People's Candidate.

    Viacom is calling!

    American Candidate

    (originally spotted at Media Channel

    Wallpaper that is on my computer...

    I've been on an animal theme lately for the wallpaper on my computer, first this spectacular image of a mother tiger and her young roaming the forest (can't find the picture so here are some penguins and some monkeys) and then a fox looking knowingly into the camera... but this latest one is magnificent and fits my current impulses...

    The world is out there waiting to be discovered!

    Thanks to National Geographic's Photo of the Day for sending me photos that remind me that I know so little about the world (appreciated because it reminds that I should be traveling and interacting)

    Monday, March 08, 2004

    Collective Memory

    Collective Memory (The Media History Project)

    Collective memory is the set of ideas -- derived from literature in literacy, psychology, history, and cultural studies -- that our own memories are not entirely personal.

    Experimental and ethnographic evidence indicates that recall improves when two or more people are asked to recall together a particular memory. That is, a single person attempting to recall an event will be able to retrieve less information less accurately than two or more persons working on the same retrieval task. Thus, there's some indication that actual memory storage is, at least in part, a social, not purely psychological, phenomenon.

    We also know from history that certain "traditions" of cultural heritage or shared cultural events have been invented and then naturalized as "historical". For example, George Lipsitz (1990) argues that 1950s television helped to invent a fictional past in which the nuclear family and its emphasis on consumerism was indicative of family health, wealth, and virtue; thus the new collective memory engineered on television played a key role in the promotion of consumption, in the disruption of longer-standing non-nuclear familial structures, and in the naturalization of a women's sphere.

    Finally, there is the argument that the role of the media in stabilizing or fabricating partial (even entirely fictional) "memories" of a shared past (particularly evident in mainstream media) is paradoxical.

    On the one hand, such shared notions often form the fabric of our beliefs about ourselves as a collective society -- about our past, our goals, our ideals, and our future. In this sense, collective memory can be seen as fundamental to national identity and unity.

    On the other hand, however, such shared notions are inherently selective and, consequently, inherently exclusionary of actual events, ideas, and memories of sets of persons who do not easily fit the alleged mainstream narrative of "who we were." Women, minorities, gays and lesbians, the disabled, the elderly, and the poor have, historically, been rendered invisible by many familiar narratives of the past. In this sense, collective memory also forms the basis for what Gramsci calls "hegemony" -- in which certain ideas that are beneficial to a particular group of people are naturalized as the ways things ought to be (and have always been).

    One of the more recent efforts at stabilizing a collective memory has been aimed at defining generational identities -- particular the identities of both Baby Boomers and the generation following them, which has been labelled "Generation X," "the MTV Generation," "the Twentysomething" generation, among others. A brief essay on the topic of GenX is available here.

    For further reading:
    Howard P. Chudacoff, How Old Are You? Princeton University Press, 1989.
    Paul Connerton, How Societies Remember. Cambridge University Press, 1989.
    Stephanie Coontz, The Way We Never Were. Basic Books, 1992.
    George Lipsitz, Time Passages: Collective Memory and American Popular Culture. University of Minnesota Press, 1990.

    Essay Link

    Deconstruction Slam

    as I regale you with cliché and tales of ancestors ive never known/i end this oral tome/drenched in sweat/wiping away the crocodile tears/of happy endings/in a make believe world/where people speed listen and skim//the poet goes round/making ends meet/by beating muthafuckas over the head with sound/banging tuning forks on minds/looking for vibrations that don’t stop with time

    Beatty, Paul. “Verbal Mugging.” Nuyorican Symphony: Poets Live at the Knitting Factory. Recording of “The One Hundred Greatest Poets of All Time” live at the Knitting Factory, June 8, 1992. Knitting Factory Records.

    People who do not tell stories well, listen to stories effectively and learn to deconstruct those stories with a skeptical ear will be more apt to be victims of … exploitation and power games. Stories have many interpretations. If one interpretation gets pasted over all the rest and becomes a dominant or the only political acceptable way to interpret events, we have ideology, domination, and disempowerment. Part of exploitation is to deny an interpretation, point of view, or experience, that differs from the dominant view. Rhetoric about healthy, happy, and terrific harmony and unity can mask just the opposite reality. A simple sounding moral or prescription about consensus or teamwork can mask deeper costs in terms of power and domination. (339)

    Story Deconstruction Method

    1. Duality Search. Make a list of any bipolar terms, any dichotomies that are used in the story. Include the term even if only one side is mentioned.
    2. Reinterpret. A story is one interpretation of an event from one point of view. Write out an alternative interpretation using the same story particulars.
    3. Rebel Voices. Deny the authority of the one voice. What voices are being expressed in this story? Which voices are subordinate or hierarchical to other voices?
    4. Other Side of the Story. Stories always have two sides. What is the [other] side of the story (usually a marginalized, under-represented, or even silent) …?
    5. Deny the Plot. Stories have plots, scripts, scenarios, recipes, and morals. Turn these around.
    6. Find the Exception. What is the exception that breaks the rule, that does not fit the recipe, that escapes the scrictures of the principle? State the rule in a way that makes it seem extreme or absurd.
    7. State What is Between the Lines. What is not said? What is the writing on the wall? Fill in the blanks. … What are you filling in? With what alternate way[s] could you fill it in? (340)

    Boje, David M. and Robert F. Dennehy. Managing in the Postmodern World: America’s Revolution Against Exploitation. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing, 1993.

    Sunday, March 07, 2004

    Dialogic

    Monologism at its extreme denies the existence outside itself of another consciousness with equal rights and equal responsibilities, another I with equal rights (thou). With a monologic approach…another person remains wholly and merely an object of consciousness, and not another consciousness. No response is expected from it that could change everything in the world of my consciousness. Monologue is finalized and deaf to the other's response, does not expect it and does not acknowledge in it any decisive force. Monologue manages without the other, and therefore to some degree materializes all reality. Monologue pretends to be the ultimate word. It closes down the represented world and represented persons. (Bakhtin: 292-93)

    The dialogic nature of consciousness. The dialogic nature of human life itself. The single adequate form for verbally expressing authentic human life is the open- ended dialogue. Life by its very nature is dialogic. To live means to participate in dialogue: to ask questions, to heed, to respond, to agree, and so forth. In this dialogue a person participates wholly and throughout his whole life: with his eyes, lips, hands, soul, spirit, with his whole body and deeds. He invests his entire self in discourse, and this discourse enters into the dialogic fabric of human life, into the world symposium. (Bakhtin: 293)

    Bakhtin, Mikhail M. Problems of Dostoyesky’s Poetics. ed. and trans. Caryl Emerson. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota P, 1984.
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    This quote by the great Russian writer/critic Mikhail Bakhtin inspires me to listen to 'other' discourses in order to re-view my understanding of the world. I started this blog as an attempt to map out what I am hearing/reading/seeing in an open-ended re-imagining of the world.