Monthly Archive for February, 2005

Stay Tuned

I experienced skinned-knees, double-dutch, and Captain Kangaroo’s parenting in the sixties. The Beatles were mod ‘roos, the White Album let-me-down, and hippies were reality-challenged kids who wondered if Paul was dead. They dropped acid and called it a movement; I learned that from Woodstock, the movie. Hollywood confiscated hippie-ness and neutralised white dissent from a studio in Beautiful Downtown Burbank; Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In was America’s rubber soul.

Above the ancient mosh pits poets flew. Dr. Hunter S. Thompson was one of those, a stake in Burroughs’ camp, a pulse in Ken Kesey‘s; a thoroughbred in unicorn drag. He bartered equisitely unique talent for iconoclastic glory and called it bread and butter; his gonzo journalism tasted like humble pie masqued in a glaze of depraved indifference. It was a stepping stone he administered like a last stand. Thompson’s suicide was no surprise. Fear and Loathing, Campaign 2004 was a death rattle. He pulled the plug on the eve of the 40th anniversary of Malcolm X‘s assassination.

Intentionally or not, their legacies will now be revisited in the same news cycles. I’m the same cynical 13-year-old who jostled the perimeter of a staggering crowd spilling out of downtown central at a Free Bobby Seale rally in New Haven, Connecticut to hear Angela Davis and others speak; I was elevated by echoing, electrified waves of acclamation and luminous, breatheable, spiritual expansiveness. The Black Panther Party‘s newspaper and handouts were the first public records that came close to representing my instincts. Who could tune in to that and drop acid? Advocate it? The only ism that served was racism.

Thompson stoked the control fire. Timothy Leary was a fire-starter who died in his sleep in his Beverly Hills home. In 1977 when NBC attempted to revive Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In, Robin Williams appeared as one of the supporting performers. Last week he appeared as a liberal on Real Time. When Maher resurrected last season’s punchline that giving Muslims a “lap dance” isn’t torture, Williams affected an African American dialect and mannerisms to describe how prisoners in the United States would react to being smeared with menstrual blood. He then went on to say that Iraqis and Afghanis who experience it are up-for-grabs in a comedic sense since their first sexual experiences are with their cousins or goats.

A short interview with David Gilbert is included in The Weather Underground DVD. In it, he explains how sometimes opposition is really just the flip side of the coin. Malcolm X was killed because he possessed the rare ability to underscore the futility of such pursuits with the inspiration to rise above them. Thompson was afforded the privilege of choosing his place and time to die; I’d like to think he did it because he couldn’t stand being on the same coin with Williams & Associates.

In any event, I’d have preferred a sober investigation.

“u can oppress us, but u can’t make me love you”

View the “neo-con luv” music video

via Iron Sheik

via Doc Jazz

This project could use some financial support:

SlingShot Hip Hop: The Palestinian Lyrical Front

‘Hariri assassins not Australian suspects’

By Nayla Assaf
Daily Star staff
Saturday, February 19, 2005

BEIRUT: Australian Federal Police said the men the Lebanese government has identified as suspects in the murder of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri are not linked to the assassination.

The denial by Australian police comes after Lebanese Justice Minister Adnan Addoum said Beirut police were on the trail of 14 suspects who left Lebanon for Australia within hours of Hariri’s assassination.

Addoum said: “They left for Australia from Beirut airport a few hours after the attack. Traces of TNT powder were found on the seats some of them had occupied.”

Addoum added the suspects are understood to have links with fundamentalist circles, but he did not specify if they were linked to the little-known group that claimed responsibility for Monday’s assassination.

He said: “I can’t say more because the investigations are taking their course.”

But Jane O’Brien of the Australian Federal Police said federal officers interviewed the men but did not believe any were linked to the attack.

Sources close to the Public Prosecutor’s Office told The Daily Star that 14 bearded men had initially left Beirut International Airport, but that two of them left the group after the plane stopped in the United Arab Emirates.

The men, all of whom are Australian nationals, had reportedly spent 25 days in Lebanon.

Prior to that, they had allegedly spent a few days in Saudi Arabia to perform the Hajj pilgrimage.

[MORE]

Letter Home

One might argue that individuals define felicity, but gracelessness is universal. To those who attempted to hold a candlelight vigil in rain-soaked Land Park, Sacramento last night, the effigy of an American soldier bearing the sign “Bush Lied. I Died.” displayed on their home by Steve and Virginia Pearcy (and vandalised twice within a week), was a treasonous statement, disgusting, and in the name of democracy had to be removed. Many likely drove to that home in vehicles plastered with “God Bless the USA” decals, as if God would notice a car decal and look upon it favourably, or bless this nation due to it, or blinkered egotism will be accepted universally as a holy mission since a cheap, garish magnet says it is so.

Paul Johnson believes that George Bush is freeing millions of Arabs from the tyranny of slavery and he’s confident that “countless millions throughout the world” are whispering “God Bless America.” He lambasts democratic nations of the world who have “turned their back” on America’s efforts to liberate the Arab world. Germany is a failing socialist experiment that impoverishes its people and the democratic freedom imposed upon them twice by victorious Allies is in peril. France has never afforded its people the feeling that they are in charge of their own affairs. Johnson says this explains why they “take to the streets and block the roads and ports, knowing from bitter experience that force is more likely to get results than arguments or votes.”

Paul dredges the banks of sophism and ends his ode to historical revisionism on this note:

“Just as the appalling 20th century was the age of the totalitarian state, the Gulag and Auschwitz, so the 21st may come to be seen as the age of government “of the people, by the people, for the people.” If so, the U.S., by its courage and persistence, will be able to take primary credit. It has certainly led from the front, and it has shown that it knows how to use its position as the world’s sole superpower with judgment, honor and unselfishness.

I think Abraham Lincoln would be proud of what George W. Bush and the U.S. forces have done. After the freeing of the slaves, what more logical and benevolent step could there be than to free millions of Arabs from the slavery of terror? So I say, God Bless America. And I’m confident that countless millions throughout the world say so, too, even if they do not dare–yet–to say so aloud.”

It isn’t remarkable that so many Americans buy into exceptionalism, or are slavishly devoted along partisan lines to those who sell this nonsense to them. The same God-fearing worshippers who are pacified by such belly-rubs don’t connect overindulgence to the aching since the most of everything is all they’ve ever known. Greed is their right. But isn’t God supposed to be all-knowing? Why would the God of freedom and democracy shrug-off the toppling of democratically-elected governments for failing to serve the interests of the USA, the extermination of anyone in its path, armed-threat or not, the decimation of economies that do not serve America’s powerfull, and the enslavement of millions by the disease, hunger, and ecological devastation caused by the ever-needfull, hardly generous, and always self-serving American empire?

A compassionate nation would have engaged in deep reflection and mourned the loss of innocent lives in its indiscriminate bombing of Afghanistan. A courageous people would not have allowed emotions of revenge to transcend their moral obligation to protect thousands in their quest to kill one. Instead, it got busy silencing critics like 15-year-old Katie Sierra, who was suspended from her high-school for wearing a t-shirt with the handwritten message: “When I saw the dead and dying Afghani children on TV, I felt a newly recovered sense of national security. God Bless America.”

An honest nation would admit it doesn’t give a damn about freeing Afghanis. It certainly didn’t when Australia was sending them to detention camps and using the military to escort them from asylum. How does this God of freedom explain that indifference?

Who represents alternatives to this madness in mainstream media today? Not the racist Bill Maher, whose ascension to a podium of protest was more accidental than intentional, a consequence of an off-handed remark that angered his corporate sponsors. The chairs of popular news programmes are being filled with liberty-hating liberals, a sickly charade that feigns opposition, sending the message there is no other path than one of permanent war.

Real debate has no soldier protecting its forum in America. Iraqis are defended by soldiers like Spec. Matt Hertlein who in his letter home displays his racism like a badge of courage and its overt grotesqueness is received with laughter by his family, not with surprise or concern.

Is democracy’s God amused?

In her keynote speech “God Bless the World“, delivered at MOFGA‘s Common Ground Country Fair on September 23, 2001, Dr. Vandana Shiva was hopefull Americans would redefine the object in this blessing:

“In India when we pray, we say, “Let all beings be happy. Let all beings be at peace. Let all beings be free of disease.” And when we say beings, we mean the grass in this field. We mean the pollinators. We mean all the species in those forests. I do hope that this country too will be able to go beyond the contemporary slogan of “God Bless America” to “God Bless the Earth.”

One of my favorite, favorite Indian rituals is the peace prayer, which we have every time we shift house, someone is born, someone dies, we have a peace prayer. And I love it because it’s not just about a country, a family, it’s about peace of the earth, may the peace of the skies, may the peace of the plants, may the peace of the atmosphere, may the peace of all beings of creation, of the creator, may that tremendously deep peace be with you.”

What does your red-white-and-blue God say to that?

Oh God, it’s the Christian Left

I have two words for Democrats hoping to capture moral ground by lading soulfull helpings of religious rhetoric into their speeches.

Why bother?

Marie Cocco is correct that in her speech given on the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Hillary Clinton didn’t really stray from a position that abortions should be “safe, legal and rare,” and Cocco did a fine job reviewing the assault on programmes that prevent unwanted pregnancies and have proven successfull in reducing incidents of abortions.

But as they adopt and defend this obvious, contrived attempt to deliver fence-sitting conservative votes for Democrats, they are running from the concessions they would have to make if they expect this strategy to be a campaign winner.

Unless Democrats are willing to make a pivotal sacrifice, such as opposing abortions done for the convenience of the mother, they will only be ridiculed as crass exploiters of Biblical reference by those who have much more experience doing the same.

And whose brilliant idea was it to reference the poor? Suburbanites placed the blame for their plight on Democrats long ago and there are yards of material in the queue readied to reinforce the belief.

targetting the messenger(s)

“There was an online petition on CNN to find a transcript, and fire Jordan if he said the military had intentionally killed journalists.”

[LINK]

I’m wondering how many, if any, of the articles reporting on Jordan’s demise are reminding readers of these incidents?

Eliminating journalists

The images from last month’s siege on Falluja came almost exclusively from reporters embedded with US troops. This is because Arab journalists who had covered April’s siege from the civilian perspective had effectively been eliminated. Al Jazeera had no cameras on the ground because it has been banned from reporting in Iraq indefinitely. Al-Arabiya did have an unembedded reporter, Abdel Kader Al-Saadi, in Falluja, but on November 11 US forces arrested him and held him for the length of the siege. Al-Saadi’s detention has been condemned by Reporters Without Borders and the International Federation of Journalists. “We cannot ignore the possibility that he is being intimidated for just trying to do his job,” the IFJ stated.

It’s not the first time journalists in Iraq have faced this kind of intimidation. When US forces invaded Baghdad in April 2003, US Central Command urged all unembedded journalists to leave the city. Some insisted on staying and at least three paid with their lives. On April 8, a US aircraft bombed al Jazeera’s Baghdad offices, killing reporter Tareq Ayyoub. Al Jazeera has documentation proving it gave the coordinates of its location to US forces.

On the same day, a US tank fired on the Palestine hotel, killing Jos Couso, of the Spanish network Telecinco, and Taras Protsiuk, of Reuters. Three US soldiers are facing a criminal lawsuit from Couso’s family, which alleges that US forces were well aware that journalists were in the Palestine hotel and that they committed a war crime.

CNN should post a questionairre listing them and asking which were likely intentional or accidental. At least a few “patriots” would openly call the al Jazeera incident intentional and well-deserved. The rest would cut-and-run like Jordan, believing it, but not honest or courageous enough to discuss it publically.

Go Ahead, Jeff

White House Rolls Out Big Guns to Refute Clarke
By Jeff Gannon
Talon News
March 23, 2004

When asked if the president had any regrets about his policy of “setting a new tone in Washington” which included retaining members of a previous administration, McClellan told Talon News, “The president has always been someone who’s worked to elevate the discourse and worked to focus on where we can advance on common ground issues of great importance.”

Press Briefing Scott McClellan

“Go Ahead, Jeff”

Q Does the President have any regrets about his new tone policy, now that one more Clinton holdover has betrayed his administration?

MR. McCLELLAN: I’m sorry? Does the President have —

Q Well, does he have any regrets about the new tone that he wanted to set in Washington, now that these people from the previous administration, from another political party, have taken the actions that they’ve done?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, let me just, without getting into specific areas there, just broadly, the President has always been someone who’s worked to elevate the discourse and worked to focus on where we can advance on common ground issues of great importance. There are many common challenges that we have, and the President believes it’s important to reach out and work together to address those priorities. Certainly, it’s difficult to change the tone in this town. But the President —

Q Don’t you see it as a little one-sided here?

MR. McCLELLAN: — the President has certainly set an example by elevating the discourse and talking about what he’s for and trying to find common ground to where we can get results.

Bush Administration’s First Memo on al-Qaeda Declassified

January 25, 2001 Richard Clarke Memo:

“We urgently need . . . a Principals level review on the al Qida network.”

A Voice of the New Media

In White House: Washington Post Article ‘Flat Wrong’ for Talon News, former correspondent Jeff Gannon cited this entry, posted to PoynterOnline.com, by Jonathan Weisman.

This is the letter in which Weisman admitted to playing along with the White House press office’s demand that quotes be approved and edited if necessary before publication. Gannon, aka “The Conservative Guy” and “James Dale Guckert“, referred to Weisman’s March 2003 confession as “recent” and pulled this quote, ” I think it is time for all of us to reconsider the way we cover the White House.”

That Weisman’s letter is still fresh in his mind, and he frames it as proof that Weisman is just another disgruntled, Bush-bashing liberal, says a lot about Gannon’s mindset. How Gannon’s story is handled will tell us a lot about the media.

Go Ahead, Jeff“, “still sexy after all these years“, claims to be leaving public life in fear of his personal and his family’s safety. NY Daily News says it’s due his links to gay prostitution.

Democrats.com has a petition calling for a Special Prosecutor since Gannon seems to be the lone “journalist” who was leaked the internal CIA memo naming Valerie Plame as a covert agent.

He also managed to pass a background check and gain access to the WH press room using an alias? where he quickly became a favourite of Scott McClellan’s. The timeline of a White House plant/foil.

So how will the Democrats handle it? My guess is they’ll sit back as the Bush squad spins their way out of it and all of the bloggers working to uncover it will find, once again, they toiled for naught.

Gannon’s clone will report their conspiratorial demise.

“them that’s got shall get”

Excerpt:

A new report from United for a Fair Economy shows that since 2000, more than a third of the progress made in the 1990s in reducing poverty among African-American families has been erased, as 300,000 of these families fell below the poverty line from 2000 to 2003.

Responsible Wealth member and business leader Arnold Hiatt commented, “Even with the major cuts in basic human services this budget is anticipated to propose, Mr. Bush is leaving our children a crushing legacy of debt. In effect, the tax cuts for the rich are creating a new birth tax on every baby born in our country. This soaring deficit continues to undermine the soundness of our economy.”

Dr. Elizabeth A. Letzler presented the group’s Responsible Tax Pledge and signed it, along with other affluent Americans. “We calculate that 257,000 American millionaires are scheduled to receive an average of $123,592 each in federal tax breaks this year, based on data from the Tax Policy Center,” said Letzler. “That alone totals $32 billion. Today we’re launching a drive to have these millionaires pledge to refuse the tax breaks and donate the proceeds to charity.”

Responsible Wealth is a national network of over 800 business people, investors and affluent Americans who are concerned about the deepening wealth divide in America and who advocate widespread prosperity. The Responsible Tax Pledge, along with a tax break calculator, can be found at http://www.responsiblewealth.org.

via IPA

Max Sawicky on children’s savings accounts.

Shaping Communities in Times of Crises

Israel to receive $50-80m of PA aid
By Aluf Benn

“Israel will get $50-80 million of the special aid package U.S. President George Bush promised the Palestinian Authority. The money will go to build innovative border crossings between the territories and Israel, containing advanced technology for checking cargo and people.” [MORE]
Continue reading ‘Shaping Communities in Times of Crises’

george has limits

According to the NYT‘s, “Mr. Bush would set a firm overall limit of $250,000 on subsidies that can now exceed $1 million in some cases.”

It also reports that the decision is a “vindication of sorts” for Mr. Grassley, Iowa Senator who says he’s the “only family farmer in the Senate.”

Actually, it’s his son who does “the lion’s share of the work,” and between the years 1995-2003 received $482,706.00.

Sen. Lugar‘s family received $100,854.55.

How does Grassley define “family farmer?”