Monthly Archive for December, 2006

Lies

Glen Hansard | download MP3

I think it’s time, we give it up
And figure out what’s stopping us
From breathing easy, and talking straight
The way is clear if you’re ready now
The volunteer is slowing down
And taking time to save himself

The little cracks they escalated
And before you know it is too late
For making circles and telling lies

You’re moving too fast for me
And I can’t keep up with you
Maybe if you slowed down for me
I could see you’re only telling
Lies, lies, lies
Breaking us down with your
Lies, lies, lies
When will you learn

The little cracks they escalated
And before you know it is too late
For making circles and telling lies

You’re moving too fast for me
And I can’t keep up with you
Maybe if you’d slowed down for me
I could see you’re only telling
Lies, lies, lies
Breaking us down with your
Lies, lies, lies
When will you learn

So plant the thought and watch it grow
Wind it up and let it go

The execution of Saddam to be televised?

Jumping the shark:

Jump-the-shark moments are typically scenes that finally convince viewers that the show has fundamentally and permanently strayed from its original premise. In these cases, they are viewed as a desperate and futile attempt to keep a series fresh in the face of a decline in ratings. In other cases, the departure or replacement of a main cast member or character or a significant change in setting changes a critical dynamic of the show.

The phrase specifically arises from a scene in the hit TV comedy series Happy Days. During the show’s run, the writers were challenged to come up with new, fresh stories; they developed a story where Arthur “Fonzie” Fonzarelli is on water skis, wearing his trademark leather jacket despite the well-known negative effects of salt water on leather, and literally jumps over a shark.

Part II of the episode: “Fonzie” reveals his ‘new‘ plan for Iraq.

Murder for Profit

“The armed conflicts that so often roil Africa rarely engage U.S. interests except in a humanitarian sense.”

- The Somali Stakes, Wall Street Journal, 28 December 2006

I can nearly imagine the WSJ editor who wrote it chuckling openly whilst typing that sentence. The U.S. has been jockeying for military and economic preeminence in Africa since the Cold War era, including arming Somalians against a Soviet-backed, Marxist regime in Ethiopia during the Carter years. Alliances are redefined but strategies, propaganda, and the resultant devastation of people and land remain the same.

“It is the height of a nations tragedy when those who pillaged and therefore destroyed a citys way of life are allowed to turn murder into profit. Militarised capitalism is on the ascendancy, and the idea of cosmopolitanism is dead and buried.”

- – Nuruddin Farah


Ethiopians in Europe protest against tyrant Meles Zenawi | (hat tip)

Meles Zenawi: A Terrorist Fighting War on Terror???
Anuak Justice Council, 27 December 2006, [.pdf]

Who is Prime Minister Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia? Is he the free worlds partner in the War on Terror or is he a terrorist? The answer might depend upon whom you ask. To his own people of Ethiopia, you might hear stories of human rights abuses, political prisoners, Internet censorship and suppression of freedom, but he is representing himself quite differently to outsiders, especially now that he has diverted the attention of the international community from his own serious political problems to his new war with Somalia, assisted by the United States.

As he publicly is presented as being pro-Christian, pro-democracy and a legitimate anti-terrorist partner, his record in his own country defies these descriptions and instead places him on the opposite side of each. [More -.pdf]

13 DEC 2006: PRESS RELEASE ON ANUAK SITUATION

This Press Release Accompanies the Release of the United Nations Report
On the third anniversary of the state-orchestrated massacres in Gambella Ethiopia, indigenous Anuak people are again under threat of massive violence.
(Please Read the Press Release. )
download pdf | read the html page

LIVELIHOODS AND VULNERABILITIES STUDY, GAMBELLA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
UNITED NATIONS REPORT

POSTED 13 DEC 2006, in recognition of the third anniversary of the state-sponsored terorism of 13-15 December 2003 in Gambella Ethiopia. (On 13 December 2006 the Government of Ethiopia initiated a fresh campaign to terrorize innocent and unarmed Anuak people. Read the press release (above) and report. )
download pdf | read the html page

Ethiopian women leading the struggle against tyranny
Radical Journeys | (hat tip)

In a country where politics is regarded as man’s domain, Ethiopian women are leading the struggle against tyranny, writes KE’s Women’s Affairs correspondent Rachel Lewis

A woman in her twenties walks on a muddy path sporadically speckled with red sand and reaches her destination. The way she respires betrays excitement. She wears black gown and carries a cake, giftwrapped with greaseproof paper and ribbons. A group of people follows her, their faces knotted with utter exhilaration.

It is Lidya’s graduation day and family members have gathered to celebrate the achievements of their beloved daughter, niece and sister. There is food, and smiles and laughter all around. As her mother looks on, beaming tearfully with pride, the new graduate excitedly discusses her plans for the future amidst the well-meaning interjections of her gathered relatives and friends. This scene should ring familiar to anyone who has ever attended a graduation celebration. What makes this a rather unique and remarkable celebration is that it is being held in Kaliti Federal Prison in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, during the strict one-hour visitation period allotted the nation’s political prisoners.

Kaliti prison is a collection of wide hovels made of corrugated iron and concrete. The celebration is taking place at the stand where prisoners meet their relatives during the visitation hours. It is unbearably hot by the sweltering midday sun, which followed the morning drizzle. There are no decorations and music is prohibited, though a few defiant relatives absently hum quiet refrains, while wild mice scurry underfoot in fierce competition for the leftover crumbs of the modest graduation feast.

In a few moments time, the `10-minute warning’ will be announced by the head guard over a crackling loud-speaker and the celebrations will immediately come to a closedishes and leftovers are hurriedly stuffed back into bags, goodbyes exchanged, and palms pressed. Mother and daughter stand face to face, in a final private momentthe mother bravely smiles, her repeated congratulations punctuated by the sobs that rack her small frame, while the daughter nods and whispers words of comfort as she turns to leave, masking the pain of goodbye with a maturity far beyond her years.

The unexpected festivities came as a wonderful surprise to federal prisoner Nigist Gebrehiwot, 48, who was unable to attend the graduation ceremony of her only daughter in July 2006. This high school arts teacher and mother of three remains one of the political prisoners who languish here, arrested in November 2005 during the sweeping government crackdown following last year’s contested elections. For thirteen months she has been confined to a cell occupied by 70 other women, accused of treason and `attempts to incite genocide’charges which, if upheld, carry sentences of life-imprisonment and even the death penalty. The human-rights organization Amnesty International calls Nigist and fellow treason defendants “prisoners of conscience…imprisoned solely on account of their non-violent opinions and activities”. Yet they continue to await sentencing in a political trial widely condemned for its `failure to observe internationally recognized standards of fair trial before impartial and independent judges.’ [More]

Soviet school
From The Economist print edition
, 26 October 2006

The government promised a speedy trial but has reneged, dragging out the process while keeping it far from view. Most of those arrested are still languishing in Kaliti prison in Addis Ababa. The cells there are baking hot by day, freezing by night, infested with roaches and mice, and thick with mud in the rainy season. The government has so far used a mix of spin and harassment of journalists (local more than foreign) to avoid international condemnation. But that may be changing.

An independent commission into the June and November killings has become an embarrassment. The government had stacked the commission with its supporters but eight out of ten of them still decided that the government had used excessive force. The commission members claim Mr Zenawi tried to get them to reverse their decision earlier this year; when that failed the government sought to bury the findings. The head of the commission and his deputy fled to Europe, fearing for their safety. Their investigation says at least 193 people were killed, nearly all by the security forces, including 40 teenagers, some shot at close range, others strangled. Some 20,000 young Ethiopians were said to be imprisoned in labour camps, though a government spokesman calls this absolute rubbish.

The government is spending more on its secret police as well as on state media. Well-placed sources claim an Israeli-trained unit now monitors e-mail and blocks opposition websites. Yet there is also disloyalty in the security apparatus. Berhanu Nega, the imprisoned mayor-elect of Addis Ababa, managed to write a book in Kaliti entitled Dawn of Freedom that is now being widely distributed in samizdat. Some people say 200,000 of the opposition calendars have been sold, often for several times their cover price.

The government could claw back some credibility by releasing the political prisoners, but this is unlikely. And that credibility took another knock last week when Mr Zenawi was forced to admit, after months of denial, that Ethiopian troops had indeed been sent to intervene in the growing civil war in neighbouring Somalia. Donor countries are disgusted by the treason trial, but equally terrified that the country could once again fall miserably apart if they dare to stop their aid. [More]

‘Corrie’ canceled in Canada

Play has potential to offend Jewish community
Richard Ouzounian, Variety, 22 December 2006

It’s curtains for “My Name Is Rachel Corrie” in Canada.

CanStage, the country’s largest not-for-profit theater, has changed its opinion and decided not to present the show as part of its 2007-2008 season.

[...]

Jack Rose, from the CanStage board — while admitting he has neither read nor seen the script — said that “my view was it would provoke a negative reaction in the Jewish community.”

And philanthropist Bluma Appel, after whom CanStage’s flagship theater is named, concurred. “I told them I would react very badly to a play that was offensive to Jews.”

Language and the crimes we permit in Gaza
Scott Kennedy, Live from Palestine, 20 December 2006

When looking at the ruins of al Nasr Mosque, several Palestinians whose homes had been bulldozed beseeched me to tell others “in America” what had happened to them. They demonstrated the widespread and seemingly irrepressible faith among Palestinians that if Americans only knew what was going on in Gaza, then surely we would stop sending the weapons that Israel uses to control and attack the civilian Palestinian population.

I didn’t have the heart — or the courage — to explain that most Americans simply don’t care to know what is done with our money or what is made possible by our nation’s diplomatic and economic support. Or, if they do know, they don’t care enough to do anything about what is going on in places like Gaza. Many otherwise thoughtful people in the United States, people with a demonstrated commitment to human rights and social justice, defend whatever actions Israel may take, regardless of international law and despite devastating consequences for a defenseless civilian population such as the Palestinians in Gaza. Glib slogans are offered in defense of actions that they would not support or want to pay for anywhere else. This degree of indifference is constructed through a concerted effort to prevent the U.S. public from really knowing what is going on.

Whatever the case, the United States sends $10 million a day to Israel. Our support and tolerance of what goes on there flows essentially unchallenged through Congress and unnoticed by the public.

Kurt Tucholsky says a country “should be judged … by what it tolerates.” If that be true, in light of what I saw happening in Gaza, the United States and all of us who live, vote or pay taxes here, have a lot to answer for.

James Brown 1933-2006

Die on your feet, don’t live on your knees.” *

- – James Brown


Catfish Scar – Scarred

A Bethlehem Christmas photo essay

Steve Sabella and the IMEU, Dec 23, 2006


A Palestinian boy and his father light a candle at the Altar of the Nativity in the Church of the Nativity, where the Virgin Mary is said to have given birth to Jesus Christ. (Steve Sabella)


Bethlehem is surrounded by a 25-foot high concrete wall built by Israel. It chokes the local economy and impedes movement. Palestinian Christians from Jerusalem and other towns need a permit to travel to Bethlehem. (Steve Sabella)

View the photo essay… | (hat tip)

Christmas in the Holy Land

Americans back Bethlehem – but not sure where it is

Two Nation survey: America vs Bethlehem.

Most Americans believe Bethlehem is an Israeli town inhabited by a mixture of Jews and Muslims, a pre-Christmas survey of US perceptions of the town has shown.

Only 15 per cent of Americans realise that it is a Palestinian city with a mixed Christian-Muslim community, lying in the occupied West Bank. Read more

Christmas Message 2006

Dear Sisters and Brothers:

Salaam from the little town of Bethlehem. Our Christmas message this year will not focus on the Separation Wall or the struggle for political control between Fateh and Hamas. Rather, we would like to invite you to visit the people living behind the Wall as they prepare for Christmas. We invite you to watch a short clip produced by the students of Dar al-Kalima College; to listen to a short Arabic Christmas hymn performed by our Bethlehem Star choir; to enjoy a few snapshots featuring our program for the elderly “Ajyal”; to get introduced to some of our artisans as they produce a Christmas banner; to enjoy the work of one of our art teachers exhibiting his oil paintings for Christmas.

It was around this time that the Divine opened a window for humanity to see and know Him through the child of Bethlehem. This is why we open this window to invite you to see the people of Bethlehem, our beneficiaries, as they celebrate the coming of Christ to their town. www.annadwa.org

We wish you all a Merry Christmas, and a blessed 2007.

Rev. Dr. Mitri Raheb

The Staff of the International Center of Bethlehem, Dar al-Kalima College and the Health & Wellness Center

Merry Christmas from Salt Films

Christians like these are the living Church in the Holy Land. As you celebrate Christmas this year, know that they are also celebrating our Lord’s birth and yearning for “Peace on Earth.” Please pray for them and their continued witness during these difficult days.


View the Christmas message

One Country: A tonic for life and well-being

Ron Kampeas, Washington bureau chief of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, interviewed Ali Abunimah, cofounder of The Electronic Intifada, about his new book, One Country, for C-Span‘s After Words. Kampeas attempted to retire the promise of the book under a fuzzy blanket of half-truths and conventional wisdom but Abunimah repeatedly dashed his efforts with logic, reason, resurrected facts and morality lessons sharpened by Abunimah’s personal struggle to bring resolution to the century-long conflict. Abunimah is a Palestinian whose mother was made a refugee in 1948. His father is from a village in the occupied West Bank that is near the open-air prison of Bethlehem. He hopes that his book will encourage Palestinians to think about Israelis in a different way and will encourage Israelis and their supporters in the United States “to think about Palestinians in a different way.”

When asked by Kampeas why he now endorses a one-state solution, Abunimah replied that as he grappled with the moral, political, and practical issues on the ground he came to realise that the two-state solution is an illusion and concluded that, “Justice for Palestinians, security, recognition, legitimacy for Israelis cannot come through dividing this country it can only come through putting it back together and giving equal rights and protection to all the people living in it.”

Kampeas spoke of Zionist attachment for the land and wondered if Palestinians would ever accept it. He didn’t explain why Palestinians should be forced to accept the alternative – that Zionist claims on their land and resources may be redefined whenever Israel decides to do so and that these claims must always pre-empt their attachment, needs, security and desires.

After the break [29:00] Kampeas put forth the argument that Israel must maintain separation for security reasons. This bottomless well from which all Zionist apologists draw from to justify the inhumane oppression and endless annexation of Palestinian lives and lands was siphoned most recently and deeply by Avigdor Lieberman to enlist supporters for his racist agenda of ethnically cleansing Israel proper of its Israeli Arab population.

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Strategic Affairs since November 2006, Lieberman is now “the second-most popular politician in Israel,” according to unnamed polls cited by Ira Stoll in his article for the New York Sun, Israel’s Lieberman Calls for Tougher Stance on Israeli Arabs. According to those same polls, Benjamin Netanyahu is the most popular, a man who like Lieberman has been touring the U.S. promoting military intervention in Iran by equating Ahmadinejad with Hitler and the nuclear impasse with World War II.

Israeli Arabs are not the lone target of Lieberman’s pogrom. If he has his way, “he would also deny Israeli citizenship to extreme anti-Zionist Orthodox Jewish groups, such as the Neturei Karta.” Lieberman’s party, Yisrael Beiteinu (“Israel, Our Home”), draws most of its support from Israels 900,000 Russian immigrants. Lieberman himself is a Russian immigrant with alleged ties to the Russian Mafia. An Israeli citizen since 1978, he is now “pushing a plan to overhaul the Israeli government and give the prime minister much expanded executive power,” that if enacted, would further his personal power immensely.

The main feature of the law is that under no circumstances can early elections take place for the prime minister unless the serving prime minister wants the elections to take place. If he dies or is removed from office he is replaced by his deputy who serves the rest of the term. Under previous direct election law this would lead to new elections. Those familiar with American political history might term the provision that removing the prime minister leaves the control of the government in the hands of the deputy a “Spiro T. Agnew” provision. During the Nixon administration’s first term posters featuring a photo of vice president Agnew were popular with the line “Keep Nixon Alive”. Agnew resigned in 1973 following evidence of tax evasion.

Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh must be shaking his head over that one. Israel and the U.S. have waged a merciless campaign of brutal sanctions and collective punishment to coerce the Palestinians into holding such elections in the hopes of ejecting Hamas from power. President Abbas, who has always prioritised the needs of his western benefactors above those of the Palestinians, may be shaking his head for a different reason. Lieberman has no use for him and advocates installing U.S. educated, Chalabi-types to oversee Palestinian affairs. Apparently the democratic process will not be transferred with Israeli Arabs when Lieberman sends them to their ethnically cleansed Bantustans, neither will autonomy be granted.

It is clear why Avigdor Lieberman prefers loyalty oaths to religious affiliation in his requirements for Israeli citizenship in his homogenised utopian state.

In a study by journalist Yair Sheleg, published in 2004 by the Israeli Institute for Democracy, Jews Not Considered Jewish by Law: The Case of Non-Jewish Immigrants to Israel , it was reported that “240,000-300,000 people who have immigrated to Israel from the former Soviet Union since 1989 describe themselves as non-Jewish, although one third of them have a Jewish father. About 11% of immigrants openly describe themselves as Christian (about 3% of all immigrants). Additionally, in 2002, 51% of immigrant soldiers were non-Jews; in the past few years hundreds of new soldiers have sworn their oath of loyalty on the New Testament rather than the Old Testament.”

And it is clear why he has “toned down” the rhetoric whilst his plans to transfer thousands of Israeli Arabs remain the same. The overt racism of Lieberman’s proposal, so foul even Olmert won’t openly endorse it, could prove difficult for his U.S. hosts to sell to their constituents if they were finally made to explain their past and present affiliations to the voters.

Exactly what are U.S. taxpayers supporting?

Lawrence of Cyberia provided a translation of a poem that was written in support of Lieberman’s vision and published “pseudonymously in Israels leading Russian language newspaper, Вести (Vesti), on 25 Aug 2005.” No truer analogy to WWII exists in the current landscape than Lieberman’s rise in popularity due his genocidal agenda.

Johann Hari writes, “Anybody who studies the history with open eyes can now see that ethnic cleansing of Palestine’s indigenous population was Israel’s original sin, a prerequisite for the state to come into existence. Today the Israeli people feel their existence is threatened once more, so they are returning in their minds – via Lieberman – to those birth crimes in the search for solutions.”

Abunimah noted these solutions have only succeeded in making Israelis more vulnerable than ever.

Kampeas wanted to know how to protect Jewish citizens from Ahmadinejad, a Holocaust denier who would not be “assuaged” by a one-state solution. According to Morris Mottaned, at the time of this interview serving his second term as the Jewish representative to the Iranian parliament, “Iran has the second oldest Jewish community after Israel, with Jews having lived in Iran for 2,700 years. There is a mausoleum for Esther and Mordechai in Hamadan, and for Daniel in Susa.” Kampeas voiced no concern for Iranian Jews should Israel engineer an attack against their country.

I agree with Max Sawicky, “that Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad couldn’t care less about the Holocaust.”

Dror Etkes of Peace Now believes that [via], “The primitive instrumentalism with which Iranian politics treats the holocaust is merely a mirror image of the way in which the memory of the holocaust is exploited in political life in Israel.”

Israel’s true attitude to the holocaust, Etkes writes, is reflected in its treatment of aging survivors, a large number of whom live in shameful conditions and in poverty. Etkes cites the recent decision of Israel’s government to continue nationalizing the reparation monies owed to tens of thousands of survivors and its concurrent “criminal neglect of many of them” as factors which belie the “memory worship that provides a podium for every politician who is seeking a way into the heart of public consensus.”

A primitive instrumentalism imbued the publication of highly-offensive Muslim-bashing cartoons and seeped into the reams of commentary they generated but the same cadre of enlightened reviewers barely sneezed at the publication of the following cartoon.


Cartoon by Abdellah Derkaoui – First place in the International Holocaust Cartoon Competition

Still Jews only by Jonathan Cook:

Israel has been leading attempts to characterise the Iranian regime as profoundly anti-Semitic, and its presumed nuclear ambitions as directed by the sole goal of wanting to “wipe Israel off the map” — a calculatedly mischievous mistranslation of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s speech.

Most observers have assumed that Israel is genuinely concerned for its safety from nuclear attack, however implausible the idea that even the most fanatical Muslim regime would, unprovoked, launch nuclear missiles against a small area of land that contains some of Islam’s holiest sites, in Jerusalem.

But in truth there is another reason why Israel is concerned about a nuclear-armed Iran that has nothing to do with conventional ideas about safety.

Last month, Ephraim Sneh, one of Israel’s most distinguished generals, a senior member of the Labour party and now Olmert’s deputy defence minister, revealed that the government’s primary concern was not the threat posed by Ahmadinejad firing nuclear missiles at Israel but the effect of Iran’s possession of such weapons on Jews who expect Israel to have a monopoly on the nuclear threat.

If Iran got such weapons, “Most Israelis would prefer not to live here; most Jews would prefer not to come here with families, and Israelis who can live abroad will … I am afraid Ahmadinejad will be able to kill the Zionist dream without pushing a button. That’s why we must prevent this regime from obtaining nuclear capability at all costs.”

In other words, the Israeli government is considering either its own pre-emptive strike on Iran or encouraging the United States to undertake such an attack — despite the terrible consequences for global security — simply because a nuclear- armed Iran might make Israel a less attractive place for Jews to live, lead to increased emigration and tip the demographic balance in the Palestinians’ favour.

Regional and possibly global war may be triggered simply to ensure that Israel’s “existence” as a state that offers exclusive privileges to Jews continues.

Sens. Joe Lieberman and John McCain led a congressional delegation – Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.; Susan Collins, R-Me.; John Thune, R-S.D.; and Rep. Mark Kirk, R-Ill – to Israel this week to urge the country “not to be tempted by Syria’s recent overtures regarding negotiations.” They reassured Olmert that the Baker-Hamilton recommendations to engage Syria and Iran in dialogue were not likely to be adopted by the Bush administration.

Jim Lobe reports that “Neo-conservative hawks in and outside the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush” are claiming to have influenced the Bush administration to hold “off demands by U.N. Security Council members to halt Israel’s attacks on Hezbollah and other targets in Lebanon during the summer war,” and they encouraged Israel to strike Syria.

Not only are these people vehemently opposed to dialogue with Syria and Iran, they do not want critics of their policy recommendations to engage in dialogue with the American people.

A New America Foundation/American Strategy Program featuring Flynt Leverett on the subject, “Dealing with Tehran,” was carried live by C-Span on 18.12.06. An op-ed that Leverett was preparing for publication in the New York Times was heavily censored recently by the CIA Publications Review Board when urged to do so by the White House National Security Council staff, specifically, Michael Duran, Elliot Abrams, and Meghan O’Sullivan. The Washington Note blogger Steve Clemons, who is a colleague of Leverett’s at the New America Foundation, reported that this WH intervention and subsequent CIA censoring of Leverett’s work was unprecedented. White House and CIA spokesmen have “adamantly disputed” the charges.

Excerpt from Leverett’s official statement published by Clemons on 16.12.06 :

Until last week, the Publication Review Board had never sought to remove or change a single word in any of my drafts, including in all of my publications about the Bush administration’s handling of Iran policy. However, last week, the White House inserted itself into the prepublication review process for an op-ed on the administration’s bungling of the Iran portfolio that I had prepared for the New York Times, blocking publication of the piece on the grounds that it would reveal classified information.

This claim is false and, I have come to believe, fabricated by White House officials to silence an established critic of the administration’s foreign policy incompetence at a moment when the White House is working hard to fend off political pressure to take a different approach to Iran and the Middle East more generally.

The op-ed is based on the longer paper I just published with The Century Foundation — which was cleared by the CIA without modifying a single word of the draft. Officials with the CIA’s Publication Review Board have told me that, in their judgment, the draft op-ed does not contain classified material, but that they must bow to the preferences of the White House.

Clemons links to the longer paper (.pdf), which thoroughly reviews Bush administration policies on Iran, in a post that inspired this comment – a stinker amongst others more coherent – from Juan Cole:

Ironically, the White House attempt to stop high-level discussion of talking to Iran comes just as the Iranian public dealt a slap in the face to extremist President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, who stole the presidential elections in summer of 2005. Former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani appears to have trounced Ahmadinejad’s own favorite cleric, Mohammad Taqi Misbah Yazdi, an authoritarian anti-democrat.

Ahmadinejad “stole” the presidential elections but allowed the trouncing of his favourite cleric?

Leverett provides a more nuanced view of Ahmadinejad’s real influence and political skills during the question and answer portion of the New America Foundation presentation. Leverett’s “grand bargain” allows its enemies to stockpile nuclear weapons but denies Iran that technology, “maintaining U.S. leadership both regionally and internationally and ensuring Israels long-term security and standing,” by promising that Israel and the U.S. would respect the sovereignty of Iran’s borders. Leverett liberally seasons his substantial paper with terrorism rhetoric that is demeaning to every victim of western terrorism in the region. The clearly brilliant Leverett has either been dulled by the demands of his positions or he suffers some other impediment that renders him blind to the view from the other side.

But he suffers from no illusions when he says that an attack on Iran would be a disaster.

His colleague at The Century Foundation, Barry Posen, has also published a paper: A Nuclear-Armed Iran A Difficult But Not Impossible Policy Problem. I haven’t read it yet. But if it mirrors Leverett’s grand bargain and insists upon isolating Hamas, Hizballah, and denying the Holocaust taking place in Israel, it is an outdated prescription that kills rather than cures.

Ali Abunimah’s remedy is a tonic for life and well-being.

Uncle Sam

By Lewis H. Lapham
Harper’s Magazine / January 2007

[A free people has] an indisputable, unalienable, indefeasible, divine right to that most dreaded and envied kind of knowledge, I mean, of the characters and conduct of their rulers.

- John Adams

Adams had in mind the ministers of the British crown in the reign of King George III, and presumably he knew that the knowledge in question was interactive, moving mostly in the direction of the man afraid of being discovered as a thief but also toward the man afraid of finding out that he’s been robbed. When the newly elected Congress assembles on January 4 in Washington, the Republican gentlemen in column A can be counted upon to say nothing apt to reveal a flaw of character, a proof of misconduct, or the earmark for a prison sentence. Yes, it’s true, the invasion of Iraq proceeded under the flag of an expedient lie, but the intention was noble, the objective honorable and just – all allegations to the contrary, Mr. Chairman, are false, vindictive, and shamelessly partisan.

The chance for a more illuminating form of public education (Adams’s topic in 1765) rests with a Democratic majority recruited from column B into a coherent body politic willing to acknowledge our current loss of a democratic republic and unafraid to find in the Bush Administration’s specious war on terror a textbook lesson on the ways in which a predatory government goes about the work of stealing from a free but inattentive people their lives, liberties, fortunes, good name, and sacred honor. If the Congress can muster enough courage to exercise the power entrusted to it by the Constitution, the record won’t have much trouble speaking for itself:

1. A foreign war conceived as a means of advancing the Bush Administration’s imposition on the American people of a not-so-benevolent despotism, the army sent to fight and die not for the defense of country but for a corporate dream of commercial empire.

2. A government that tortures people classified as enemy combatants, denies their right to hear all the evidence bearing on their confinement and arrest, forbids their resort to petitions of habeas corpus.

3. The administration’s systematic plundering of the Federal Treasury on behalf of its accomplices in the arms and construction trades.

4. The National Security Agency directed to monitor, without first obtaining a court order, any and all telephone and email traffic suspected of carrying the germs of terrorism.

5. The president’s use of 136 signing statements since he took office to exempt himself from the rule of more than 1,000 federal laws.

The sum of the evidence warrants the impeachment of President George W. Bush on charges comparable to those brought by the Declaration of Independence against the “long train of abuses and usurpations” attendant upon the monarchy of George III. The odds don’t favor the undertaking. Representative Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.), the incoming speaker of the House, was quick to declare so intemperate an initiative “off the table,” wholly lacking in the spirit of bipartisan outreach needed to move the country forward on its patriotic search for common ground. Consistent with the Democratic Party’s fear of being thought unduly liberal, still lost in the Day-Glo discontent of the 1960s with the flower children and Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Pelosi’s press statements during the week following the November elections stressed the importance of avoiding condemnations and recriminations. The money was gone, and what’s to be gained by crying over spilt blood. The time had come for the Democratic Party to behave in the manner of geopolitical adults, to face up to the hard choices that confront the country, to quit striking poses trembling with virtuous indignation. “We have made history,” Pelosi said, “now let us make progress.”
Continue reading ‘Uncle Sam’

Chavez wins “Person of the Year” poll … Time magazine ignores result

By Hands Off Venezuela
Monday, 18 December 2006

A few days ago, Time Magazine announced the winner of its annual “Person of the Year” award. Many supporters of the Bolivarian Revolution will be disappointed to hear that Hugo Chavez did not make it despite the fact that he won Time’s online poll by a wide margin and got 35% of the votes. This is significant, as Chavez had been the number 1 in the poll for several weeks and was clearly set to win the award.

Instead, it seems we all have won the award! Indeed, the 2006 Person of the Year is “you” and much is made of the Web 2.0 and one of its foremost brainchildren, the online video service YouTube. For that matter Hands Off Venezuela is also a happy user of YouTube, but still we find it quite amazing that not a word is said about why the winner of Time’s own readers poll is simply ignored and not even mentioned.

The link to their online poll is simply not there any more, although after some Google searching we traced it back to www.time.com/time/personoftheyear/2006/walkup/, where you can see the results for yourself. You don’t have to be a believer in conspiracy theories to assume that clearly the Time Magazine editorial board was not happy with the choice of its readers! Surely the so-called “liberal” magazine did not like the result of its own poll and decided to push its own candidate, “the YouTube guys”.

[Update: Paul -V- also provides the screenshot.]
Continue reading ‘Chavez wins “Person of the Year” poll … Time magazine ignores result’

Dear Santa, or Someone

By Deb Reich

Dear Santa,

I live in Israel/Palestine and I think I am probably addicted to the big bad conflict we have here. We all seem to be addicted to the conflict we have here. We are so used to it, sometimes I wonder if, given half a chance, we could really learn to live without it. Meanwhile, the academics study it. The politicians cook it and bake it and spin it. The pollsters monitor it. Nonprofit organizations and NGOs mop up the messes, frequently lethal, that it makes. Dissident poets bemoan it, and the journalists (with the exception of a courageous handful, who tell the truth) pretend to report on it. The prisoners find their education, for better or worse, in its shadow, while the wardens find some kinky pleasure there, or anyhow their paycheck.

The mothers, raped by the conflict, carry it with them like some spawn of Satan. That is how it feels, these days. We are continually and forcibly violated by the politicians spinmeisters, who keep trying to impregnate us with their dysfunctional fantasies so we can deliver more soldiers for the conflict. The children are afraid of the conflict, theyre afraid that its lurking under the bed (if they have a bed, if they have a house), or that its about to fall on them from the sky and explode in a hail of blood and gore, to kill and maim, like it did last night or last week or in the last war. Or, brainwashed, they crow about the enemys getting what he deserves, never thinking that the enemy is mainly a bunch of kids like them. And then they get a bit older and go out to do battle.

Santa, tell me: What in Gods name have we done to the children?
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