Rules of the road

Kasama

On the Shelf

August 22, 2007

Finkelstein case: Urgent need to right wrongs at DePaul University

The following is an open letter from Prof. Bill Martin, a tenured professor of philosophy at DePaul University, site of the recent fight over Norman Finkelstein's tenure  and the very ability of intellectuals to engage in work that runs counter to the dominant politic.

"Two things that are very simple to understand need to be said up front. First, you cannot deny tenure to a professor because she or he takes a political stand that you do not like, agree with, or that is going to incur the disapprobation and wrath of some group. Yes, frankly, I think a professor who is an outright racist or misogynist or anti-gay bigot ought to be removed from the university (though even here there have to be procedures, and judgments cannot be based on whims, innuendo, or the self-promoting agendas of powerful persons or groups), but that is not what is going on here. Second, you cannot deny tenure to a professor simply for a rhetorical style that you do not like. A person cannot be denied tenure simply because you find his or her rhetoric 'inflammatory.'”

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August 21, 2007

Support needed for SF mural on popular struggles against borders & fences

Peoples_artists_murals

By Martin Travers
artist living in Holland, and creator of the original image

I am a firm believer in the right to self determination of all peoples all over this wonderful world we all inhabit. To stand by the right to that self determination by Palestinian people or any other people is by no means supporting terrorism or senseless violence or racism, to say that is in itself an injustice. My painting which was recreated on the mural in question is about that right, breaking through the wall that separates the Israelis from Palestinians and the Palestinians from each other is symbolic of the breaking of the walls that fence in the marginalised and the “unwanted” people everywhere because to see them is to be reminded of where and how Europe, north America and Israel got its wealth.

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August 20, 2007

Akil Bomani's Authoring a Culture

Okay, so I confess that as a New Yorker, the fact that "Burningman" was an over-priced participatory arts orgy in the Nevada desert didn't quite register with my hard head. Every year, around this time, I get a surge of traffic from folks looking for information or reports on the Burningman festival. Haha! Bet you didn't see this one coming! I was just a man on fire... Adopting the Burningman pen name was only a play on the translation of my family name. In any case, I thought I'd post a link for ya'll burners to a scientific essay about the art of revolution. What does that mean?

Read it!

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August 18, 2007

IntifadaNYC: Racist campaign claims Khalil Gibran principal

Intifada_khalil_gibran

The resignation of Debbie Almontaser as principal of the proposed Arab language school in Brooklyn has caused a great deal of controversy. The DOE replaced her with Danielle Salzberg. There's so much stuff flying it is hard to keep track of it all. An interesting interview by Amy Goodman posted on Democracy Now can be found here. Also this piece written by Almontaser, not long after 9/11.

By Steve Quester
UFT chapter leader
P.S. 372/418K The Children’s School
from
Education Notes Online

Imagine...

A veteran Latina educator, with a years-long record of service supporting Latino/a youth and building bridges between Latino/a and non-Latino/a communities, is slated to be principal of a new middle school with a focus on Hispano-Caribbean studies and Spanish language. She endures months of vitriolic attacks from right-wing hate websites and blogs, and from the Murdoch news organizations. Finally, the Murdoch media uncover that she’s on the board of an organization that shares an office with a Latina girls’ empowerment organization. The organization has produced a T-shirt with the image of Che Guevara and the words “Hasta la victoria siempre.” The Murdoch media point out (rightly) that the “victoria” to which Che referred was the violent overthrow of all capitalist governments, including the U.S. The media demand that the educator condemn the T-shirt, but instead she says that the girls’ intention was to point to the victory of tolerance and coexistence over anti-Latino/a bias in New York. The media howl. The educator quickly apologizes, admitting that she did not take into account the effect that the image of Che has on Cuban-American refugees of Castro’s oppression.

After the apology, the United Federation of Teachers president [hypothetically Randi Weingarten —JB], who had been supportive of the new middle school and its principal, is quoted condemning the educator’s initial defense of the T-shirt...

Continue reading "IntifadaNYC: Racist campaign claims Khalil Gibran principal" »

July 19, 2007

"I do not recognize myself anymore"

Found poem.

"Actually, everything is quite clear if one thinks it over and reaches the conclusion that indirect democracy is a hoax.  Ostensibly, the elected Assembly is the one which reflects public opinion most faithfully.  But there is only one sort of public opinion, and it is serial. 

"The imbecility of the mass media, the government pronouncements, the biased or incomplete reporting in the newspapers -- all this comes to seek us out in our serial solitude and load us down with wooden ideas, formed out of what we think others will think.  Deep within us there are undoubtedly demands and protests, but because they are not echoed by others, they wither away and leave us with a 'bruised spirit' and a feeling of frustration.  So when we are called to vote, I, the Other, have my head stuffed with petrified ideas which the press or television has piled up there.  They are serial ideas which are expressed through my vote, but they are not my ideas. 

"The institutions of bourgeois democracy have split me apart:  there is me and there are all the Others they tell me I am (a Frenchman, a soldier, a worker, a taxpayer, a citizen, and so on).  This splitting-up forces us to live with what psychiatrists call a perpetual identity crisis.  Who am I, in the end?  An Other identical with all the others, inhabited by these impotent thoughts which come into being everywhere and are not actually thought anywhere?  Or am I myself?  And who is voting?  I do not recognize myself any more."

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June 29, 2007

Nazim Hikmet: On Living

Red_flowers

Living is no laughing matter :
you must live with great seriousness
                           like a squirrel, for example -
I mean without looking for something beyond and above living,
                           I mean living must be your whole occupation.

Living is no laughing matter :
you must take it seriously,
so much so and to such a degree
that, for example, your hands tied behind your back,
                     your back to the wall,
or else in a laboratory,
    in your white coat and safety glasses,
    you can die for people -
     even for people whose faces you have never seen,
     even though you know living
     is the most real, the most beautiful thing.

I mean, you must take living so seriously
that even at seventy, for example, you'll plant olive trees -
and not for your children, either
but because although you fear death you don't believe it,
                     because living, I mean, weighs heavier.

More poetry from Nazim Hikmet

March 05, 2007

Denmark riots: Youth House Vs. Father House

Ungdomshuset_1Ungdomshuset3

Riots and repression have rocked Copenhagen for three days and nights. In what's been billed as the "final conflict" of the Scandanavian autonomous scene, the Danish state has moved to sell off and shut down Youth House, the last remaining political squat outside of Cristiana, Copenhagen's famed semi-autonomous zone in the center of the city. Over 600 people have been brutally arrested attempting to block the transfer of Youth House to a Christian sect that has slated this vibrant social center for demolition. Supporters from around Scandanavia and Germany traveled to assist the Danes, with the government responding by raiding anti-authoritarian offices and movement centers in round-ups. UK Indymedia has an update page with timelines, pictures and tons of information.

David Rovics wrote a short report on some of the back story:

The 1980’s was the heyday of the autonomous movement in Denmark, Germany and elsewhere in Europe. Thousands of mostly young people squatted hundreds of abandoned buildings in dozens of urban centers, creating alternative societies that embraced community, art, music, and a culture of resistance that rejected consumerism and empire. A community was formed that rejected the domination of the world by multinational corporations and the governments that supported them, whether they be outright militarist states like the US or more watered-down NATO members like Denmark. They defended their squats in pitched battles with police, and at the same time debated sexism within their movement and organized protests in support of refugees and against nuclear power. The movement existed in a near-constant state of siege. Many squats were ultimately taken by force by the police, and others were legalized.

With that in mind: Either we fight for the world, or fight for our own turf. They are not the same thing. There is no as autonomy in this world and there never will be. The retreat into socio-political ghettos in Europe was a surrender to the permanence of the capitalist (welfare) state while playing at war against it. It is people in their millions who will take down European capitalism. In the difference between the suburban riots in France last year and the subcultural resistance of the long-waned autonomous scene – we can see the outlines of new European left that no longer sees itself flowering in the cracks and margins – but which pushes to the very centers of power through the rebellion of working people and their allies, both native born and immigrant.

These social centers are exciting places, particularly for Americans with little experience in strong, radical institutions (as Rovics ably reports). Understood in context, the squats and social centers were a retreat by movements past, not simply something to defend. When radicals gave up on a better world, they settled for a better apartment.

What sees itself as autonomy could be seen through another lens as containment.

That said, they take their autonomy seriously – and they fight for it. You have to respect people who refuse to be governed. In Texas, the fetish of private property means you legally get shot for walking on somebody's lawn. In Copenhagen for these days, what people were willing to wage a violent defense of is their right to a social existence outside of capitalism, with mutual aid and solidarity outside of the exploitative hierarchies of capitalism.

In the ferocity of their battle is the measure of their hope.

Continue reading "Denmark riots: Youth House Vs. Father House" »

March 02, 2007

Iranian Women Call for International Women’s Day Actions

Received from A World to Win News Service: The Women’s Campaign for the Abolition of all Misogynist, Gender-Based Legislation and Islamic Punitive Laws in Iran is preparing for actions on March 3 and March 8, on the occasion of International Women’s Day.

The Campaign, known by its Farsi name Karzar, in 2006 organised a successful series of marches over five days from Frankfurt, Germany to The Hague in the Netherlands. Approximately 1,000 people took part on the last day, mostly Iranian women but also women and men from Europe and around the world, some travelling long distances to give their solemn support to women in Iran whose oppression is legitimised by the legal system set up by that country’s rulers.

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February 14, 2007

Rage Against the Machine Re-Unites!

Rage_against_the_machine

"Is it coincidence that in the seven years that Rage Against the Machine has been away that the country has slid into right-wing purgatory? I think not," [says Tom Morello]. "It occurred to all of us that the times were right to see if we can knock the Bush administration out in one fell swoop, and we hope to do that job well. This administration has done enough damage that it may take generations to undo. This is an administration that believes it's beyond the laws of the land, which is fine for emperors, but not so great for presidents. One thing this president isn't above is the laws of physics, and there is no action without reaction. And we're part of that reaction."

Read MTV News coverage

January 23, 2007

Ward Churchill: Canary in the mine of academic freedom

Ward Churchill isn't just some controversy that flashed over the newswires last year. He's a real human being, a teacher, a soldier against holocaust denial in America and one of the few writers who took the time to explain "why they hate us." He's also a tenured professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado. Backed by powerful right-wing forces nationally, the campus administration is seeking to revoke his post for the tumerity to document empire.

Ward_churchill Churchill is a showman as anyone who's ever seen him speak can testify. Sometimes he lets his own arguments get the best of him. But on this one, there's no mistake. Churchill isn't being purged for ettiquette. It's about a little matter of what America is. Churchill is ferocious in his exposure of America's hidden holocaust and imperial genesis. He has little patience for collegiality in the face of white supremacy.

Do academics have the right to question empire? To document its abuses? To challenge the youth on the ethics of Eichmann? Are professors bound to tow the party line in supposed "times of national crisis"?

For his courage to not shut up, we should all support Ward Churchill's right to teach, share his analysis and refuse a right-wing witchhunt through college campuses. If Churchill is fired, the chill will set in on campus. Turmoil would not be inappropriate, public solidarity is in order.

On the link, there's an Open Letter from Concerned Academics. If you're on campus, get involved or at least lend your name.

Continue reading "Ward Churchill: Canary in the mine of academic freedom" »

January 18, 2007

For Bill O'Reilly

Delacroix_liberty1_1

Wild mobs and lunatics are the mother of democracy.

History is a funny thing.

January 07, 2007

Heads up: Revolutionary Blogs on a Roll

Neomaoism

When Red Flags started out, it was a lonely blog. A year or two later, and there's been an explosion of communist activity online taking advantage of the Web 2.0 technologies that allow for an entirely new degree of interactivity and discussion. What's challenging is that many of the disputes that previously took place in isolated rooms now flow online 24 hours a day. What's exciting is that intellectual ferment currently shaking the communist movement is finding expression in public forums in a way previously rare.

My old comrade Left Spot wrote up a preliminary summation of the Red blogosphere and Modern Pitung's  All Our For the Fight has been thinking outloud about how we can use these technologies without getting used by them.

I just wanted to hype up a few of my favorites...

Continue reading "Heads up: Revolutionary Blogs on a Roll" »

December 14, 2006

Gaddar: The Fela of South Asia

Gaddar

NPR ran a profile of Gaddar, who I can only call the Fela of South Asia, an "Indian man who can barely finish a sentence without breaking into song."  He was once a soldier in the Naxalite movement, but has brought art to the science of revolution. Listen.

Additional list of songs

December 06, 2006

Leslie Feinberg's Lavender & Red, a history of communists and LGBT liberation

Lavenderred166 Serving as long-time editor of Workers World newspaper, Leslie Feinberg is perhaps best known for writings on transgender liberation, including the novel Stone Butch Blues about a working class transgendered lesbian in Buffalo, NY. Workers World has been running a lengthy history of the LGBT movement's intersections with, and conflicts within, the communist movement. With around 80 installments  so fa you can learn something new every day.

Click here for the complete archive of Leslie Feinberg's Lavender & Red

Or start with the same chapter I did: Sexual Freedom vs. Fascism in Germany

December 05, 2006

And now for something completely different...

I'll just post this one without introductory commentary, except by way of historical introduction.

Here's  an American professor of Marxism (at NYU no less!), giving a lecture in Havana in 1991 as Cuba went into a complete economic collapse with the end of Soviet subsidies resulting from their own disintegration as a contending world power.

The topic of this lecture? "A Pedagological Battle Plan to Check the Spread of Skepticism in Cuba." A daunting task if ever there was one... Prof. Ollman is not detered, and begins by way of what he learned in Russia from a fundamentalist American preacher himself just returned from Siberia... Read on...

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December 03, 2006

Clamor Magazine folds up, citing financial reasons

One of the most successful publishing projects to develop in the aftermath of Seattle, Clamor Magazine, has announced that they can no longer afford to publish. Produced in Ohio (!), Clamor served as the politico-cultural magazine for the (predominantly white, DIY) anti-capitalist movement over the last few years.

Josh Breitbart, a core volunteer with Clamor and the Indypendent, wrote an assessment that generated some discussion among radical publishers on NYC Indymedia. The Closure of Clamor

If you don't DONATE money to independent, radical and socialist media: We won't have it.

To give: LeftTurn | Revolution | Indypendent (and feel free to add donation links to other radical, anti-capitalist publications in the comments!)

December 01, 2006

Mexico Is Erupting

Mexicancongress
"It is not, contrary to what it might appear to be, a photograph from a scene from a Marx Brothers film. It is, rather, the true history of yesterday’s session of the Mexican National Congress, the distinguished hall in Mexico City where, on Friday, according to the Constitution of the Republic, Felipe Calderón must take the oath of office and put on the presidential sash in order to legalize his status as the nation’s top executive. Not all the members of that esteemed lawmaking body are in agreement that Calderón was elected to the presidency last July 2" [photo: DR2006, La Jornada]

The following digest is from NYC Indymedia :

The Coup d'Etat in Mexico:
As a new regime prepares to seize control Dec. 1, proming a new wave of repression, the antidote is being born from below... A report by Al Giordano of Narco News

PFP expanding operations to towns surrounding Oaxaca City: The Federal Preventative Police is expanding its operations, deaths and dissapearances mount.

Mexico: A Powder Keg: On the walls of La Realidad, the base-village of the Zapatista movement deep in the Lacandona jungle, the paintings of Emilio Zapata, Che Guevara and Subcommandante Marcos have faded over the last three years.

Appo_banner Mexican government squash the popular movement in Oaxaca [es]: Human rights repression in Oaxaca

Killing in Oaxaca, a dispatch from a friend's daughter: This day will go down in local history as the most intense fighting of the movement so far. Perhaps it will go down in national history as a battle of the revolution.

July 06, 2006

You may be a communist!

May 12, 2006

Battle Cry For Theocracy! Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Right

Sunsara Taylor is sounding the cavalry bugle, and you better listen! In today's CounterPunch, the New York-based initiator of World Can't Wait lays out what is happening with BattleCry, the Christian Fascist youth movement led by the Pharisees from on high... She already debated Battle Cry leader Ron Luce on Fox, but this isn't a debate. It's war.

If you've been waiting until the Christian fascist movement started filling stadiums with young people and hyping them up to do battle in "God's army" to get alarmed, wait no longer.

In recent weeks, Battle Cry, a Christian fundamentalist youth movement, has attracted more than 25,000 to mega-rally rock concerts in San Francisco and Detroit and this weekend they plan to fill Wachovia Stadium in Philadelphia.

They claim their religion and values are under attack but, amidst spectacular lightshows, hummers, Navy Seals, and military imagery on stage, it is Battle Cry that has declared war on everyone else! Their leader, Ron Luce, insists: "This is war. And Jesus invites us to get into the action, telling us that the violent--the 'forceful' ones--will lay hold of the kingdom."

No joke, people. Read the full piece on the link.

      

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May 11, 2006

Not Your Soldier: "Sir, No Sir!"

Sirnosir

First watch this amazing Flash preview of Sir, No Sir!
The amazing story of GI resistance to the Vietnam War that you can send by link to friends and family getting preyed on by military recruiters.

Now indulge a personal tangent:
By 16 I'd dropped out of school and was casting around 1980s Chicago. Marginally employed, surly, a little macho, prone to vice and mad at the world in a loving way, I was like so many kids looking for a way to get my act together.

Even though the florescent-light distopia of secondary education wasn't for me [my school building looked exactly like the local juvie hall in a Borg-cube kind of way], I loved to read and hungered to understand the ways of the world. I wanted to go to college, but every school of interest cost more money in tuition than my father made a year. I didn't want to go to a "13th Grade" college. I wanted to learn, not just to earn.

The Cold War was wrapping up in the late 80s. For the first time in my life, war didn't seem imminent. Even though I had no love for the government and made the most of my young rebel years, I actively considered joining the Marine Corps. The week after participating in a militant break-away march to disrupt the main recruiting depot in downtown Chicago because of interventions in Central America, where a bad-ass nun handed the youth red paint in styrofoam cups to douse the station with, I discretely snuck back to meet with a friendly recruiter on my own time.

Continue reading "Not Your Soldier: "Sir, No Sir!"" »

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