Posts Tagged “Global State of War”

05w39:1 Everybody must get stoned

by timothy. 0 Comments

Good Reads Mailing List | 2005 week 39 number 1 (everybody must get stoned)


——————————————————————— The ’60s Trap | David Greenberg
http://www.slate.com/default.aspx?id=2125915&nav/tap1
No Direction Home, Martin Scorsese’s documentary about Bob Dylan’s early years, is but the latest item in a flood tide of Dylanalia that, in trying to pay due homage to America’s most important rock artist, constricts his four-decade career to its first six years. […] Though delightful to watch … the documentary wallows in baby boomer nostalgia. […] Despite subsequent droughts and misfires, Dylan has since turned out some brilliant albums – from Desire in the 1970s to Infidels and Oh Mercy at either end of the 1980s to Time Out of Mind a few years ago – that approach his greatest work and surpass much of the folkie stuff that still draws so much giddy attention. So, why have we been so quick to ignore the bulk of his career? One part of the answer is that Dylan shares a problem with the 1960s as a whole: Scholarship and popular commentary alike are shaped by the baby boomers who lived through the period and have never quite transcended their own youthful enthusiasms. As Rick Perlstein noted in Lingua Franca several years ago, the preponderance of boomers in the historical profession – and, he might have added, in the culture overall – has made it hard for younger voices to gain a hearing for ideas that argue with the prevailing, familiar tale of the decade.”

A Less Fashionable War | Charles Shaw
http://tinyurl.com/bran7
“Thirty years ago Gore Vidal noted that ‘roughly 80% of police work in the United States has to do with the regulation of our private morals – controlling what we drink, eat, smoke, put into our veins – with whom and how we have sex or gamble.’ Then there were roughly 250,000 prisoners in the nation. Today there is more than 2 million, with another million in county jails awaiting trial or sentencing, and another roughly 3 million under ‘correctional supervision’ on probation or parole. The total national cost of incarceration then was $4 billion annually; today it’s $64 billion, with another $20 billion in federal money and $22-24 billion in money from state governments earmarked for waging the so-called ‘War on Drugs.’ Nationally, around 60% or more of these prisoners are drug criminals. Yet, throughout all this time and expense there has not been the slightest decrease in either drug use or supply.”

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emailed by Timothy on Saturday 01 October 2005 @ 6:13 PM

04w51:3 Patriotic Propaganda

by timothy. 0 Comments

Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 51 number 3 (patriotic propaganda)

Thank you Hollywood for teaching the world how to make patriotic propaganda videos. The war is more fun with internet. I found out about this via Metafilter where these comments to this link were posted:

Not to sound like I hate freedom(tm), but I love how much more well-reasoned this sounds than American propaganda.
posted by borkingchikapa at 10:16 AM PST on December 15

A new era of Adobe Premiere Propaganda?

This is pretty fascinating. Instead of having leaflets dropped on my head and watching state TV, I am choosing to watch propaganda to satisfy my curiosity, and it’s so easy to do. I imagine there’s probably around four Kevin-Bacon links between the author, the journalist and me. Yay internet. That being said, the video’s pretty standard stuff. It makes a good contrast with the scared-rat untranslated blurry badly lit masked man type videos the individual groups have been putting out so far.

About time they hired a ‘marketing board’.
posted by anthill at 10:29 AM PST on December 15

I agree, with you both. It’s reasoned, rational and contrasts strongly to some of the recent comments I have heard from US army commanders: Fallujah being a “Nest of Vipers” etc. It is a bit surreal hearing a Midlands accent in those circumstances… and it would be very easy to string together using stock footage without every having been near Iraq… …must watch what I say before Homeland Security starts following people home from the Mosque in Wolverhampton.
posted by fingerbang at 10:30 AM PST on December 15

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A Message From The Iraq Resistance | The Iraqi Resistance
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article7468.htm
“And to George W. Bush, we say, ‘You have asked us to ‘Bring it on’’, and so have we. Like never expected. Have you another challenge?'”
Windows Media File

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 17 December 2004 @ 12:45 PM

04w50:2 Erasing de Kooning

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 50 number 2 (erasing de Kooning)


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Antonio Negri: The Nostalgic Revolutionary | Adrian Hamilton
http://www.globalpolicy.org/empire/analysis/2004/0817negri.htm
“I try to think of a polite way to remind him of the fact that every communist revolution of the 20th century lead to tyranny and mass murder. And a nice way to say that communism was a betrayal of the democratic values of the left. […] Negri recently described the Soviet Union as ‘a society criss-crossed with extremely strong instances of creativity and freedom’, which is more than he has ever said for any democracy. He even says that the Soviet Union fell because it was too successful. I point this out, and he replies: ‘Now you are talking about memory. Who controls memory? Faced with the weight of memory, one must be unreasonable! Reason amounts to eternal Cartesianism. The most beautiful thing is to think ‘against’, to think ‘new’. Memory prevents revolt, rejection, invention, revolution.’ He leans back as though he has brilliantly rebutted any critique of communism. So, is he seriously saying that we should never look at history, that the left should carry on as though communism was a great success, that we should not reconsider our values at all? […] None of the world’s real problems – from poverty to tyranny to climate change – are discussed in Negri’s work, except to claim that the poor are ‘more alive’, and the citizens of liberal democracies are living under the ‘real tyranny’, and… oh, I give up. It’s not just that this preacher of Empire has no clothes; he is living in an intellectual nudist colony. There are some important anti-globalisation writers, such as Monbiot and Joseph Stiglitz. But Negri is trying to keep alive a patient – Marxism – whose heart stopped beating long ago. So, this is where revolutionary Marxism comes to die. It has been reduced to an obscure parlour game for ageing bourgeois nostalgics, played out a few feet from Buckingham Palace by an old terrorist who needs us to forget.”

The philosopher as dangerous liar | Patrick West
http://tinyurl.com/3jsvt
“In his 1977 pamphlet Forget Foucault, the eminent French social historian Jean Baudrillard argued that Foucault’s writings are themselves discourses in power that impose their own narrative, projecting their own will to truth. Those who lionise this ‘author’ today, devoted as they are to this source of power-knowledge, continue to contradict themselves. Perhaps it is time to take heed of Baudrillard’s exhortation. Perhaps it is time to forget Foucault.”

Feeling sorry for Rosalind Krauss | Roger Kimball
http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/11/may93/krauss.htm
“It is easy to be exasperated with Rosalind Krauss. She is pretentious, obscurantist, and mean-spirited. Enjoying a position of great academic respect, she has, through her writings, teaching, and editorship of October, exercised a large and baneful influence on contemporary writing and thinking about culture. In the end, however, one’s exasperation is likely to be mixed with pity. Here is a woman who has devoted her professional life to art and ideas but who clearly has no feeling for art and for whom ideas are ghostly playthings utterly cut off from reality.” Article date May 1993

The Derrida Industry | Brian Leiter
http://leiterreports.typepad.com/blog/2004/10/the_derrida_ind.html
“Of course, even Wittgenstein and Heidegger are controversial choices, though in terms of sheer impact, they are plainly in a wholly different league from Derrida, so much so that anyone knowledgeable about 20th-century European and Anglophone philosophy and intellectual culture must laugh out loud at Professor Taylor’s dishonest hyperbole. (Why do those in literary studies think the intellectual world revolves around their once proud discipline, now enfeebled by three decades of bad philosophy, bad history, and bad social science?) […]If he had become a football player as he had apparently hoped, or taken up honest work of some other kind, then we might simply remember him as a ‘good man.’ But he devoted his professional life to obfuscation and increasing the amount of ignorance in the world: by ‘teaching’ legions of earnest individuals how to read badly and think carelessly. He may have been a morally decent man, but he led a bad life, and his legacy is one of shame for the humanities.” NOTE: a blog posting taking Mark Taylor’s opinion piece (orignally in the New York Times and readable here) to task for his ‘dishonest hyperbole’ with a breakdown and argument with his points.

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 10 December 2004 @ 6:30 PM

04w40:4 I loath America

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 40 number 4 (i loathe america)

My website tracking is showing me that Margaret Drabble’s “I Loath America” is currently a hot search, so I figure I might as well bring this one off the archive’s shelf. Written in May 2003, it comes to us from the salad days of the Gulf War II: The Son’s Revenge. Perhaps the search has something to do with the fact that Margaret Drabble will be interviewed onstage October 30th during the Harbourfront Centre’s International Festival of Authors.
By the way, I did catch the bug in the posting I sent out earlier this week; the link broke due to a bug in the program I’m using to send out these postings, one that I can’t do anything about except to be vigilant. So apologies for that, but what I’d like to say that all of these postings go up on the goodreads website, which I do have control over, and since I usually find the problems very quickly, there you can find spelling mistakes caught, problems fixed, and an eye pleasing design, all available for the low low cost of clicking on the link below. – Timothy
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I loathe America, and what it has done to the rest of the world | Margaret Drabble
http://tinyurl.com/b8y9
“I can hardly bear to see the faces of Bush and Rumsfeld, or to watch their posturing body language, or to hear their self-satisfied and incoherent platitudes. The liberal press here has done its best to make them appear ridiculous, but these two men are not funny. […] America is one of the few countries in the world that executes minors. Well, it doesn’t really execute them – it just keeps them in jail for years and years until they are old enough to execute, and then it executes them. It administers drugs to mentally disturbed prisoners on Death Row until they are back in their right mind, and then it executes them, too. They call this justice and the rule of law. America is holding more than 600 people in detention in Guantanamo Bay, indefinitely, and it may well hold them there for ever. Guantanamo Bay has become the Bastille of America. They call this serving the cause of democracy and freedom. ”

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 01 October 2004 @ 1:20 PM

04w38:2 Creative Bush Craziness x2

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 38 number 2 (creative bush craziness x2)

The thing about running a mailing list is that people hate spam. So ISP’s and servers go through all this effort to help reduce the efforts of American and African businesspeople. Which means that sometimes your messages to friends and family and people who want on your list just don’t get through. Running a list means that you also sometimes have “problems with the server” as technical people working with the machines between you and the recipient try to deal with issues surrounding spam. Not that I’m saying this is spam nor that the problems were my fault! (Goodreads does not what to be considered synonymous with faux-meat products so please take advantage of the link to unsubscribe in each message if you would rather not get these anymore). So yesterday, I had “problems with the server” and I’ve been told it’s been fixed, and which means that some of you (I think) are getting this for the first time while others are getting it twice, only this note is new. But the one below isn’t:
Both these posts come via Mark Federman’s What is the Message? weblog at the U of T McLuhan Centre. – Timothy
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Bush vs. Jesus | Mad Magazine
http://atrios.blogspot.com/2004/09/bush-vs-jesus.html
What if W was runnin’ against his homeboy in the sky?

George Bush sings ‘Sunday Bloody Sunday’ | rx
http://www.audiostreet.net/artists/006/407/song_sunday_bloody_sunday.html
the ironic joys of sampling

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emailed by Timothy on Wednesday 15 September 2004 @ 11:35 PM

04w34:1 All Your Base Are Belong to U.S.

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 34 number 1 (all your base are belong to U.S.)

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Inside Al-Qaeda’s Hard Drive | Alan Cullison
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/print/200409/cullison
“Like the early Russian anarchists who wrote some of the most persuasive tracts on the uses of terror, al-Qaeda understood that its attacks would not lead to a quick collapse of the great powers. Rather, its aim was to tempt the powers to strike back in a way that would create sympathy for the terrorists. Al-Qaeda has so far gained little from the ground war in Afghanistan; the conflict in Iraq, closer to the center of the Arab world, is potentially more fruitful. As Arab resentment against the United States spreads, al-Qaeda may look less like a tightly knit terror group and more like a mass movement. And as the group develops synergy in working with other groups branded by the United States as enemies (in Iraq, the Israeli-occupied territories, Kashmir, the Mindanao Peninsula, and Chechnya, to name a few places), one wonders if the United States is indeed playing the role written for it on the computer.”

War of the worlds | Giles Foden
http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,12084,779530,00.html
“In October last year [2001], an item appeared on an authoritative Russian studies website that soon had the science-fiction community buzzing with speculative excitement. It asserted that Isaac Asimov’s 1951 classic Foundation was translated into Arabic under the title ‘al-Qaida’. […] The Arabic word qaida – ordinarily meaning ‘base’ or ‘foundation’ – is also used for ‘groundwork’ and ‘basis’.” Article date: 24 August 2002

All you base are belong to us | various – compilation
http://www.allyourbasearebelongtous.com/flash/
Flash presentation. Check out history of the phrase under the site’s ‘History’ section.

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emailed by Timothy on Sunday 15 August 2004 @ 1:38 PM

04w24:2 Og Caligula

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 24 number 2 (Oh Caligula)
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Bush’s Erratic Behavior Worries White House Aides | Doug Thompson
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/printer_4636.shtml
“President George W. Bush’s increasingly erratic behavior and wide mood swings has the halls of the West Wing buzzing lately as aides privately express growing concern over their leader’s state of mind. […] ‘It reminds me of the Nixon days,’ says a longtime GOP political consultant with contacts in the White House. ‘Everybody is an enemy; everybody is out to get him. That’s the mood over there.’ […] Aides say the President gets ‘hung up on minor details,’ micromanaging to the extreme while ignoring the bigger picture. He will spend hours personally reviewing and approving every attack ad against his Democratic opponent and then kiss off a meeting on economic issues. […] Among top officials, Bush’s inner circle is shrinking. Secretary of State Colin Powell has fallen out of favor because of his growing doubts about the administration’s war against Iraq. The President’s abrupt dismissal of CIA Directory George Tenet Wednesday night is, aides say, an example of how he works. “

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emailed by Timothy on Tuesday 08 June 2004 @ 3:52 PM

04w21:1

by timothy. 1 Comment

 

Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 21 number 1


Never mind goodreads, these articles are so hot that if they were women I’d flirt with them. – Timothy
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Game Theories | Clive Thompson
http://www.walrusmagazine.com/article.pl?sid=04/05/06/1929205&tid=1
“As Castronova stared at the auction listings, he recognized with a shock what he was looking at. It was a form of currency trading. Each item had a value in virtual ‘platinum pieces’; when it was sold on eBay, someone was paying cold hard American cash for it. That meant the platinum piece was worth something in real currency. EverQuest’s economy actually had real-world value. […] When he averaged the results, he was stunned to discover that the EverQuest platinum piece was worth about one cent U.S. – higher than the Japanese yen or the Italian lira. With that information, he could figure out how fast the EverQuest economy was growing. […] The Gross National Product of EverQuest, measured by how much wealth all the players together created in a single year inside the game. It turned out to be $2,266 U.S. per capita. By World Bank rankings, that made EverQuest richer than India, Bulgaria, or China, and nearly as wealthy as Russia. It was the seventy-seventh richest country in the world. And it didn’t even exist.”

Lessons from Homer | Ian Brown
http://tinyurl.com/2tcb7
“I was reading Homer’s Iliad when the pictures from Abu Ghraib began to appear. […] One moment I was swimming through 15,693 lines of hexametric verse — long stretches of which-god-did-what-infantile-thing-to-whom, interrupted by splurts of eye-poking gore and knockout stanzas of shattering beauty about rage and revenge. The next I was trying to decipher a digital snapshot of — well, what was that square of interlocking human flesh supposed to be? […] As war atrocities — next to, say, King David’s habit of collecting the foreskins of his victims, or the 500 innocents slaughtered at My Lai in 1968, or even compared with the Chechen trick of sniping at Russians from behind a wounded Russian prisoner strung up in a window — the abuses at Abu Ghraib seemed relatively mild.[…] All over the United States, intellectuals of once-firm conviction, from Michael Ignatieff on the left to Andrew Sullivan on the right, were having meltdowns. […]I read the passage one last time, and put the The Iliad down. Already the moral valence of the Abu Ghraib affair was reversing itself, as the al-Qaeda beheading of an American named Nicholas Berg darkened the Internet. The Abu Ghraib jailers were creepy, but America’s enemies were judged creepier. “

A Troy boy’s epic pecs | Rick Groen
http://tinyurl.com/2uvwu
Troy takes all the wind out of Homer’s sails. This is an epic made by a modernist who doesn’t believe in epics. Doesn’t believe in the honour of battle, or the status of a tragic hero, or the ideal of romantic love, or the dictates of an omnipotent god. What’s left? Not mythology, to be sure, but a rather bland sociology lecturing us on the realpolitik of power and the human waste of war. Now, such a contemporary sermon is well and good…”

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emailed by Timothy on Tuesday 18 May 2004 @ 1:24 PM