Category Archives: protest

Sucking the marrow from the bones of Greece

The Greek economic crisis showcases how quickly a nation’s assets can be broken down and sold.  The New  York Times gives scary insight into the plans to make Greece the retirement community of continental Europe among other big changes under foot.  Russell Shorto’s essay gives some time to those with and without money to describe the impact the economic changes have on their life.

Not only are the national assets being traded off for debt reduction (or deferment) deals, but the citizens are being squeezed for more tolls and tariffs. What I appreciate is the circumvention of even rich citizens, who can view the whole scheme for what it is.  Ripping off impoverished citizens to pay the interest on old national debt.

“Watch it! Watch out!” Paul Evmorfidis was driving up to a toll plaza on the main road from Athens to Thebes. He slowed down as he came to the toll arm blocking the road, but he was not paying the toll and, to my alarm, was not stopping. “I’m showing you something,” he said. He reached out his window, shoved the toll arm up out of the way and drove off as an alarm shrieked behind us. “This is what we do here — everybody who lives around here.” As the Greek government adds new taxes and surcharges onto its citizens, they respond with protest or evasion. After the government announced that there would be an additional 2010 income tax — in effect, retaxing that year’s income — people refused to pay, whereupon the government tacked a new property tax onto electricity bills, which you could elude only at the cost of having the power cut. Likewise, the toll plaza was installed to raise money. The toll was about $3. “The problem is if you live around here, you have to go down this road maybe five times a day,” Evmorfidis said. “Crazy! What kind of planning is that? So we protest.”

via The Way Greeks Live Now – NYTimes.com.

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Women behind the wheel: Saudi drivers and M.I.A.

When we amplify cultural appropriation with glossy mediated representations trimmed from context we often get something spectacular. Witness M.I.A.’s new video.   Is it a sensationalist exploitation of vague Arab identity?  Is it a mediocre song with a snazzy video? Is it an anthem for Arab women’s power and emancipation at a particular moment when Saudi Arabian women are fighting for the right to drive?

Saudi Arabia is the only country that bars women from driving. But the topic remains a highly emotional issue in the kingdom, where women are also not allowed to vote, or even work without their husbands’, or fathers’, permission. For religious puritans, the ban on women driving is a sign that the government remains steadfast in the face of a Western onslaught on Saudi traditions. A political cartoon here once depicted car keys attached to a hand grenade.

via Saudis Arrest Woman Leading Right-to-Drive Campaign – NYTimes.com.

Maybe these sultry hooded women are representations of the terrifying hand grenade of women’s emancipation? M.I.A. is certainly in charge — note that she and the other women are suggested as the stunt drivers in her video.  Not quite the dis-empowered sultry video vixen.

Let’s also note the Saudi stunt driving tradition which has provided some of the visual antecedents for M.I.A.’s video.

I think it is a smart way to make the argument.  It’s a savvy juxtaposition — to connect the stunt driving (socially acceptable youth rebellion) with women driving (absolute moral panic).  But the construction of the argument relies on some of the most blunt images of Arab and Muslim cultures.

Cultural appropriation has a couple of dimensions.  One is  the absorption of specific cultural traditions into a generic western culture (German sausages become hot dogs which then become America’s national food).  A second dimension is the insistence that citizens hide their specific culture: language, food, sexuality in order to gain the benefits of citizenship.

In this case, I think the risk is the other-izing jump to rescue Arab women from their oppressive men.  In the buildup to the US-Afghanistan war, the Taliban’s treatment of women was a central theme used to drum up support for military intervention.  I think this is an insincere secondary objectification of women’s struggles, a hijack of liberation and autonomy.    The American invasion of Afghanistan has not helped the women of Afghanistan and the emotional concern that made ‘Afghan women‘ a news cycle trope seems to have dissipated.

We tend to represent the Arab-other in murky abstractions of difference and this video is a slight variation of an Orientalist theme.

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Turning Randall Terry gay

Progressives might be losing in this country, but they do seem to be having more fun.

Anyone who has been disappointed by the horrifically bad aim of most glitter bombings can see that this is by far the most successful glitterbombing ever; so good job, crazy dude.

via Man With Boot On His Head Glitterbombs Anti-Gay Racist Randall Terry / Queerty.

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Primate Freedom 2012

An imprisoned chimp in Louisiana where they do Hepetitis C research. Photo by Tim Meuller in the NYT

Nice to hear that the United States has decided to stopped funding research on Chimpanzees. I’m not feeling the excemptions:

The committee identified two areas where it said the use of chimpanzees could be necessary. One is research on a preventive vaccine for hepatitis C. The committee could not agree on whether this research fit the criteria and so left that decision open.

In the second area, research on immunology involving monoclonal antibodies, the committee concluded that experimenting on chimps was not necessary because of new technology, but because the new technology was not widespread, projects now under way should be allowed to reach completion.

via U.S. Suspends Use of Chimps in New Research – NYTimes.com.

It does seem like a victory for some of the cultural arguments about animal rights.  The statement by the director of the National Institute of Health begins with these explanations:

Chimpanzees are our closest relatives in the animal kingdom, providing exceptional insights into human biology and the need for special consideration and respect. While used very selectively and in limited numbers for medical research, chimpanzees have served an important role in advancing human health in the past. However, new methods and technologies developed by the biomedical community have provided alternatives to the use of chimpanzees in several areas of research.

via Statement by NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins on the Institute of Medicine report addressing the scientific need for the use of chimpanzees in research, December 15, 2011 News Release – National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Lets note that the development of scientific alternatives is a key theme that Collins uses to justify his decision.  This suggests there are tangible rewards for those activists who focus on the alternatives to animals in scientific research.

Collins’ argument about the closeness of Chimps to humans is a non-starter for me — I sympathize with all beings that can suffer regardless of cuteness or similarity to me.  I also think  it is a temporary persuader for most people.

But in this case, twenty years of making arguments into the public sphere about primates has saturated the knowledge frame of a few decision-makers.

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Juxtaposition: camping

Artifact one: Camping before the Twilight premier

Photo by Mario Anzuoni/Reuters/Landov

Artifact 2: Camping at #occupy oakland

Thanks to #occupy contra costa for the photo

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Chris Hedges and Cornel West prosecute Goldman Sachs

Thanks to Glen E. Friedman, we have a little write up and video from Chris Hedges and Cornel West prosecuting a corporation in the #occupy wallstreet park.

This is the kind of street theater we need to see in cities all across America. In addition to marching and occupying public places, we need to explore creative and provocative ways to capture the attention of the media. In our ADD culture, we’ve got to keep things interesting. West and Hedges are taking a page from the Abbie Hoffman play book.

via WHAT THE FUCK HAVE YOU DONE?: THE PEOPLE VS.GOLDMAN SACHS: CORNEL WEST AND CHRIS HEDGES PRESIDING.

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Oakland cops have a few bad apples

Thank  you colorlines.  You kick ass.

In August, I completed a two-year long joint investigation for Colorlines.com and the Investigative Fund of the Nation Institute that identified 16 officers still on duty who were responsible for more than half of the department’s officer-involved shooting incidents in the past decade. These repeat shooters operate behind a wall of secrecy, built over decades and sealed with a 2006 California Supreme Court decision blocking public access to personnel records.

Among the worst of them is Sgt. Patrick Gonzales. Over the course of his career, Gonzales has shot four people, three fatally, and been accused of repeated beatings and public strip searches of suspects. In the predominantly black neighborhoods he has policed for 13 years, Gonzales has long been widely known as a loose cannon. Despite Gonzales’ history of questionable uses of force and the $3.6 million paid out by Oakland to settle lawsuits involving him, he is also deployed repeatedly for crowd control. He was videotaped firing projectiles at anti-war protesters in 2003, he was at the November 2010 protest of Mehserle’s verdict and a photograph of him at the Oct. 25 Occupy Oakland raid (above) shows him wearing a gas mask and riot gear, with a tear-gas canister clutched in his hand.

via The Police Raid on Occupy Oakland Was Nothing New for This City – COLORLINES.

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Iran lectures the United States on human rights

Zing.  There it is.  Iranian Member of Parliament Zohre Elahian suggests that the United States be criticized for human rights violations stemming from police repression of protesters.

Elahian, who is the chairperson of the Majlis Human Rights Committee, also said that the UN Human Rights Council should address the issue of the violation of U.S. protesters’ rights.

“The scenes of the suppression of US protesters are upsetting and necessitate pursuing human rights (violations),” she said.

She went on to say that the era of U.S. claims about human rights has come to an end and the U.S. government has lost face due to the suppression of the people.

In addition, she called on the international community to condemn the use of excessive violence by the U.S. police against protesters.

via Occupy Oakland – police under scrutiny live updates | World news | guardian.co.uk.

[Although I got it from the Guardian, the original report is from the Associated Press. ]

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Welcome to Oakland #occupy wallstreet

Photo ran in the Guardian, taken by Kimihiro Hoshino/AFP/Getty Images

 

Photo credit Daryl Bush, AP, ran in the Guardian

 

photo byStephen Lam, Reuters, ran in the Guardian

 

This collection of images is pretty disturbing.  No good photos of the police/protester scraps from yesterday in US media, but the British journal has the images.  I found the same thing when I went to look for images of the crackdown on Chicago #operation wallstreet.  Lets note protesters helping each other and excessive police violence intended to communicate threats to the supportive public.  Lets also note courage, generosity and the elements of a new world being articulated.  The kind of world which disturbs corporate heads and their cop subordinates.

 

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Arundhati Roy on Indian Maoists

I like this article (and the original article) because of Roy’s awareness of how talking about ideas changes them.  This is at the core of the modern power of change — language and ideas.  Important stuff here.

“The country that I live in is becoming more and more repressive, more and more of a police state…. India is hardening as a state. It has to continue to give the impression of being a messy, cuddly democracy but actually what’s going on outside the arc lights is really desperate.”

But at the same time it remains an open society, and the arguments are there to be won. In 2009 the government announced Operation Greenhunt, a new, even tougher attempt to kill off the Maoist insurgency, but it sparked fierce resistance, both inside the forest and beyond. “Among the Indian elite it was okay just to call them Maoist terrorists: they had been de-humanised. So when I, who am not a Maoist, went in and wrote about who they were, it made them human beings, fighting for something very, very serious. And that makes a big difference.

“This is a very interesting time where I think the debates are being cracked open. Real intervention at a real moment can change the paradigm of the debate, even if it doesn’t instantly cause a revolution.”

via Arundhati Roy: ‘The next novel will just have to wait…’ – Features, Books – The Independent.

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