Friday, June 21, 2013

Ventura Reporter Nails It!

I frankly don't spend a lot of time reading my local free paper, the Ventura County Reporter.  Most of their writing is amateurish, and they give way too much space to right-wing bigots. (A bigot being someone who refuses to listen to reasoned argument, not necessarily a racist.)  I think they find it amusing to annoy progressives.

However, this week they have scored a bull's-eye! This dead-on hit takes the form of an article by Raymond Freeman, who apparently has a training in economics, "the dismal science".

This excellent examination of our proud American social system is called "Downton Abbey, part one", and it begins thus:

"Leo Gerard, president of the United Steelworkers, says America has become like Downton Abbey.  This is a British soap opera set in a large country estate. (I’ve actually stayed in one.) It’s about the lives of an aristocratic family around WWI. They live in luxury and don’t work. The servants are trapped in poverty and work like slaves. Couldn’t happen here?

Don’t be too sure. It’s the right-wing’s vision for America. They’ll be the aristocracy. You’ll be a servant or a serf in the feudal system. An aristocrat ran for president here. Romney made his fortune by taking over companies, firing the servants and outsourcing their jobs to China. He was met with cheering crowds. He got 47 percent of the vote, not the aristocrats’ 4.7 percent. Go figure.

This lunacy goes back to Ronald Reagan...."


"A living wage?  Ridiculous!"

You can read the rest at the Reporter's website here.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Can You Believe This G8 Sh*t?



Isn't this a quaint scene?  Reassuring, huh?  An old-fashioned butcher's shop, with a very expansive window-display of good-quality food for sale. A town anyone (except maybe a vegetarian) would be happy to live in.

Only this town is a fraud. The "display" is paper, stuck to the windows of an abandoned store. So the official attending the G8 summit in Ireland won't have to stare at the reality of their austerity program in action.  Or maybe more to the point, so that the Media will not look too closely.

Let Roots Action tell the story: "As Fermanagh, Ireland, prepares to host officials from the wealthy G8 nations, run-down and abandoned stores have been painted over with images of "free-market" prosperity.  The happy, thriving butcher's shop pictured here consists of stickers plastered to windows.  It wouldn't do for the architects of austerity to see its actual effects.

Fraud and a butcher's shop, in fact, are perfect images for austerity "science," which turns out to be on a par with climate-change denial and creationism.  An influential study claiming to prove that government deficits halt economic growth has recently been debunked.  Claims in the United States that our Social Security system is in trouble have just been disproven for the umpteenth time.


The United States is rolling in wealth, but the wealth is piled up in the hands of a tiny oligarchy.  That is the real project of austerity.  Public funds are flowing like water, but they're flowing into the Pentagon and prisons and tax breaks for the wealthy, while we cut education, environmental protection, and infrastructure."

You can sign RootsAction's Petition here, to say "The G8 must change course. It's time to invest in people and public resources rather than profit and plunder."

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Spanking Jesus and Free Will

This week, Rob Brezsny, in his Free Will Astrology, introduces us to a new image - well, new to me anyway:



Max Ernst: 
The Blessed Virgin Chastises the Infant Jesus, 1926

It's beautiful to look at, and it does what art is supposed to do - shakes our minds out of their comfortable preconceptions and makes us look at things afresh. It's - the Shock of the New....

"The Shock of the New" was the title of a brilliant documentary series on the art of the 20th Century, written and presented by the Australian critic, Robert Hughes.  You can watch the entire glorious feast here:


Then you can go to "The New Shock of The New", Hughes' updating essay from 2004, which has a link on the same page.




Friday, June 14, 2013

Sauce For The Goose... Senators Don't Like To Be Spied On!

This is really Funny!



BoldProgressives. org went to Sen. Lindsey Graham's office (The one Jon Stewart always refers to as a "middle-aged lesbian") with video cameras, to present him with 100,000 signatures protesting Government spying.

Here's what happened:

"On Wednesday, we delivered 100,000 petition signatures against government spying on Americans to Senate offices.
Senator Lindsey Graham's (R-SC) staff responded by repeatedly yelling, "We don't allow filming in the front office!" We responded, "We don't like having our phone records spied on."
Sen. Graham has made some of the most outrageous comments in favor of government surveillance. We made sure that he heard from the people.
Thanks for being a bold progressive.
-- Zaid Jilani, PCCC Investigative Blogger"



"Those Damn Liberals"

Jon Wiener, KPFK broadcaster and John Lennon expert, is also a History Prof at UC Irvine. He has an amusing piece in the Nation, on the whining by the poor downtrodden "Conservatives"  (in quotes because they really don't understand traditional values of tolerance and neighborliness). Apparently the poor, overpaid, hard-done-by ranters at Fox News are complaining that "Commencement Speakers are All Liberals".  Read on, brothers and sisters:

Today is graduation day on my campus.  At the University of California and thousands of other schools over the last few weeks, millions of students and their families have been celebrating – and listening (or not listening) to commencement speakers.  Fox News has a complaint about those speakers: too many of them are liberals.
“When it comes to selecting a commencement speaker, the nation’s top 100 universities lean decidedly left,” Fox News declared.  “Of the top 100 universities listed by U.S. News and World Report, 62 have selected liberal commencement speakers and only 17 selected conservatives.”
“Conservative speakers aren't welcome on college and university campuses,” says Kevin Hassett of the American Enterprise Institute.  In an op-ed for the L.A. Times, he reported  that no current or former Republican elected official was scheduled to speak at any of the top 50 liberal arts colleges, and only four spoke anywhere in the top 100 universities.  Meanwhile Cory Booker, the Democrat from Newark who is running for governor of New Jersey, gave as many commencement speeches as all current elected Republicans combined.


Jon Wiener


The evidence seems overwhelming—until you look at what all those liberals are telling the class of 2013 and their families.
Bill Clinton spoke at Howard University.   He said “what we have in common is more important than our differences."
Arianna Huffington spoke at Smith.  She said it was time to move “beyond money and power” and focus instead on “wisdom, our ability to wonder, and to give back.”
Michelle Obama spoke at Bowie State.  She urged students and their families to “Take a stand against the culture that glorifies instant gratification instead of hard work and lasting success.”
The commencement speaker who got the most media attention this season was Oprah Winfrey—at Harvard.  I wondered whether her message would be “believe in yourself” – which you don't really need to tell those students.  In fact what she said was “There is no such thing as failure. Failure is just life trying to move us in another direction.”
And what about Cory Booker, the Democrat from Newark who gave more commencement speeches than all current elected Republicans combined?  What matters in life, he told graduates at Washington University in St. Louis, is  “the content of your character, the quality of your ideas, the kindness that you have in your heart.”
There's a related problem, says Kevin Hassett of AEI.  What motivated him to take up this issue was that at his own school, Swarthmore College, a conservative, Robert Zolleck, was invited—but “pulled out after being attacked by students who said he'd helped instigate the Iraq war.”  Hassett says that was “a preposterous claim considering he was the U.S. trade representative at the time the conflict began.”
But Zolleck didn’t have to pull out – that was his own decision.  He should have gone to Swarthmore, and explained what he really thought about the Iraq war.  He should have had the courage of his convictions.
Others have complained that the few conservatives who did give commencement speeches sometimes faced protests.   When Condoleezza Rice spoke at Boston College, some students and faculty stood and held up signs that said “your war brings dishonor” and “not in my name.”  Kevin Hassett told the NPR radio station in Los Angeles, where the two of us debated the issue, that once a speaker is invited, they should be treated with respect.
My view is that debate and criticism are part of the mission of the university – and that, for the rest of her life, Condoleezza Rice should be confronted about her role in taking us into a decade of war in Iraq.  But unlike Zolleck she didn’t pull out because people criticized her.  In her speech she acknowledged the protesters and said "There is nothing wrong with holding an opinion and holding it passionately."  The audience responded with applause.
Her main message to students, however, was a different one: “be optimistic.”  But what about the optimistic view that invading Iraq would be “a cake-walk”?
One more thing: it’s true that most commencement speakers at the top 100 liberal arts colleges and universities are liberals.  But at the top conservative and Christian colleges, ALL the commencement speakers are conservatives.  When has a liberal ever been invited to be the commencement speaker at Jerry Falwell’s Liberty University, or at Colorado Christian, which recently sued to block Obamacare?
One more question: what is it that commencement audiences at all those liberal arts colleges are missing when they don’t get to hear conservatives?  Paul Ryan was the commencement speaker this season at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas.  He didn’t tell the Class of 2013 that freedom in America means tax cuts for the rich.  Instead he said “We are  all in this together, so we must be good to one another.”
As a liberal, I say “Amen.”


Thursday, June 13, 2013

"Masters of War”

Dedicated to the true Heroes - Veterans Against the War....

"You that never done nothin'
But build to destroy
You play with my world
Like it's your little toy"

                Bob Dylan, “Masters of War”

It makes me sad to see Gay people struggling for the right to go to War.

It makes me sick to see Women lining up to be recruited, to be raped by the "Men of Honor" they call brothers and comrades.

How many times do we have to say it?

War is Evil.

If you take part in a war, or in building weapons, or in equipping or financing military forces - you are contributing to Evil.

Is that who you are?

Now look at this: 

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

37,000 "Thank You's" for Snowden -- and Counting


The Institute for Public Accuracy reports on the Petition which we posted here yesterday:  "A petition thanking NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden continues to gather support after gaining more than 25,000 signers in its first day. Launched by the group RootsAction.org, the petition says: “We thank Edward Snowden for his principled and courageous actions as a whistleblower, informing the public about vast surveillance by the National Security Agency that undermines our civil liberties.” (The petition, posted at SupportEdwardSnowden.org, includes thousands of individual comments.)" 

Renowned Media Critic Norman Solomon says,

“With much-touted ‘congressional oversight’ almost meaningless and secret surveillance courts mere rubber stamps for the Obama administration, many Americans across the political spectrum are asking deeper questions -- and they’re getting official doubletalk in response.”
The Freedom of the Press Foundation comments, “Leaks and whistleblowers are vital to democracy and Edward Snowden’s NSA revelations prove they have never been more important. The American people deserve to know what is being done in secret under their name, and if the government won’t bring transparency to its programs officially, often investigative journalism is the only way for Americans to do so. In an era where government secrecy has reached an all-time high, Snowden’s revelations are welcome, and we hope Congress will act to bring further transparency to these programs immediately.”

Student Loans Rip-Off: The Struggle Goes On


Senator Elizabeth Warren says "We're still in the middle of the fight."

To prevent College students being charged nine times what we charge Wall Street banks, "It's going to take people all across the country saying 'This matters to me. We can't do this to our kids.'"

July 1st is the date of the big vote in the Senate, and Democracy for America say, "A majority of senators already support stopping the rate hike. We just need a few more to break the Republican filibuster"

You can donate to them at https://secure.actblue.com/contribute/page/studentloanaction?refcode=CSL13jhdt


Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Get Your Sticker Here!

Bold Progressives say: 

"Elizabeth Warren and Alan Grayson are standing up to those in Congress who want to call whistleblowers "traitors" and end public debate.

Yesterday, Warren said,"Now it's going to be a public conversation. It's a conversation we've needed to have for 12 years now."
And Alan Grayson put forward legislation that would stop the government from collecting information on Americans without probable cause.

Together with our allies, we've collected over 90,000 signatures. We're delivering the petition to Congress tomorrow -- add your name and help us reach 100,000 signatures by delivery time.
Thanks for being a bold progressive."

And the clincher - or sticker:

"We’re sending a sticker to everyone who donates $3 or more to our work supporting the fight against widespread government surveillance. Click here to get yours."

"Bradley Manning Has Done More for U.S. Security than SEAL Team 6"

Tom Dispatch.com proudly announces that it has won an award for “best political coverage” of the year.

And they celebrate with a righteously angry tirade against the fascists who run our foreign policy:

"Okay, give them this much: their bloodlust stops just short of the execution chamber door. The military prosecutors of the case against Bradley Manning, assumedly with the support of the Obama administration, have brought the virulent charge of “aiding the enemy” against the Army private who leaked state secrets. Yet they claim to have magnanimously taken the death penalty off the table. All they want to do is lock Manning up and throw away the key because, so they claim, he did nothing short of personally lend a hand to archfiend Osama bin Laden. This echoes the charge repeatedly made by top U.S. officials that he and WikiLeaks have “blood on their hands” for releasing a trove of military and State Department documents.

We’re talking about the very officials who planned and oversaw Washington’s wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and 
elsewhere in the backlands of the planet and who have searched their own hands in vain for any signs of blood.  (None at all, they don’t hesitate to assure us.)  Among them are those, military and civilian, who set up our torture prisons at Guantanamo and in Afghanistan, are ultimately responsible for the perversions of Abu Ghraib, and oversaw kidnappings off the streets of global cities."

"... Given what we now know about the U.S. military’s unwillingness to pursue prosecutions of rape in its own ranks, its eagerness to pursue Manning to the edge of the grave should be considered striking."

This by way of an introduction to an exxccellent, highly persuasive essay by Chase Madar, entitled "How Dystopian Secrecy Contributes to Clueless Wars: Bradley Manning Has Done More for U.S. Security than SEAL Team 6"

Read it here

Surveillance: Hear Christopher Pyle

Christopher Pyle, whom we mentioned in yesterday's Post - was on air this morning, on Mitch Jeserich's "Letters and Politics" program on KPFK/Pacifica Radio.

Christopher H. Pyle teaches constitutional law and civil liberties at Mount Holyoke College. He is the author of Military Surveillance of Civilian Politics and Getting Away with Torture

In 1970, he disclosed the U.S. military’s surveillance of the civil rights and anti-war movements and worked as a consultant to three Congressional committees, including the Church Committee. 

You can hear the program here:  http://archive.kpfk.org/ - scroll down to "Letters and Politics" and click play.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Pithy Comments on Secrecy and Obama

From the very excellent Institute for Public Accuracy:
"Glenn Greenwald of the Guardian has revealed the identity of Edward Snowden, the source for a string of pieces on the NSA, and posted a video interview with him. Recent revelations include: "NSA collecting phone records of millions of Verizon customers daily," "NSA Prism program taps in to user data of Apple, Google and others" and "Boundless Informant: the NSA's secret tool to track global surveillance data."
Greenwald has noted in recent interviews that `these lessons should have been learned from the Church Committee.'"
(Remember the Church Committee?  They investigated the FBI and their stinking, illegal COINTELPRO. See my earlier post on COINTELPRO for more.)
AND: 
"Christopher H. Pyle teaches constitutional law and civil liberties at Mount Holyoke College. He is the author of Military Surveillance of Civilian Politics and Getting Away with Torture

    In 1970, he disclosed the U.S. military’s surveillance of the civil rights and anti-war movements and worked as a consultant to three Congressional committees, including the Church Committee. 

    Pyle just wrote the piece "Edward Snowden: Profile in Courage," which states: "Edward Snowden may go down in history as one of this nation’s most important whistleblowers. He is certainly one of the bravest. ...

    "Like Daniel Ellsberg, who disclosed the Pentagon Papers [and who is supporting Snowden], Snowden is a man of principle. 'The government has granted itself power it is not entitled to,' he told interviewers. 'There is no public oversight.  The result is that [NSA employees] have the latitude to go further than they are allowed to.' For example, he said, he could have accessed anyone’s e-mail, including the president’s.

    "This is not the first time that the American people have learned that their intelligence agencies are out of control. I revealed the military’s surveillance of the civil rights and anti-war movements in 1970. Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein of the Washington Post disclosed the Watergate burglary by White House operatives, which led Congress to create two select committees to investigate the entire intelligence community.

    "Among other things, the committees discovered that the National Security Agency had a huge watchlist of civil rights and anti-war protesters whose phone calls it was intercepting.  The FBI had bugged the hotel rooms of Martin Luther King and tried to blackmail him into committing suicide rather than accept the Nobel Peace Prize. The CIA had tried to hire the Mafia to kill Fidel Castro. President Richard M. Nixon used the Internal Revenue Service to audit the taxes of his political enemies. His aides tried to destroy Daniel Ellsberg for leaking a history of the Vietnam War, both by prosecuting him and by burglarizing his psychiatrist’s office for embarrassing information. The FBI opened enormous amounts of first-class mail of law-abiding citizens in direct violation of the criminal law.

    "Since then the technology has changed. The old Hoover vacuum cleaner has been redesigned for the digital age. It is now attached to the Internet, where it secretly collects the contents of everyone’s 'audio, video, photographs, e-mails, documents, and connection logs' from Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube, and Apple. It also siphons billions of telephone communications and Internet messages off the fiber optic cables that enter and pass through the United States. None of us has a reasonable expectation of privacy any more.

    "The Fourth Amendment used to require specific judicial authorization before the government could undertake a seizure. No longer, according to the secret FISA court. Secret seizures of 'metadata' now precede individualized searches. Starting this fall, this information will be stored in a huge warehouse at Camp William, Utah, where it can be searched by computers whenever the military decides to re-label one of us a 'person of interest,' like a reporter, a suspected leaker, or a Congressman it doesn’t like.

    "Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), claims not to be worried, but he should be. Before Watergate, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had 24 file cabinet drawers full of dirt on politicians just like Graham. Hoover let each politician know that the Bureau had found the compromising information while on some other search, but promised not to reveal it. Not surprising, Hoover’s abuses of power were not challenged until he died. New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, who used to prosecute Wall Street swindlers, was driven from office when data miners at the U.S. Treasury Department leaked news that he had been laundering money to pay call girls. ...

     "Now that the story is out, President Barack Obama “welcomes” a 'conversation' about them. Baloney. The function of secrecy is to prevent conversation, not welcome it. The Obama administration is a great supporter of privacy, but only for itself. ...

    "The president insists that no one is listening to our phone calls, but Snowden said he could. Of course, we now know that President George W. Bush lied us into the Iraq War, and falsely denied authorized a massive program of warrantless wiretapping, then a felony under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The NSA and FBI both denied their illegal wiretapping and mail opening programs in the 1950s and 1960s. In 2004, the Justice Department assured the Supreme Court that our government did not torture people, just a few hours before the torture photos from Abu Ghraib were broadcast on national television. Why should we believe such people now?

    "Secret government was curbed in the 1970s. President Nixon was driven from office. The NSA’s watchlist was shut down; the FBI was returned to law enforcement. Wiretapping was brought under the supervision of a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Assassinations were forbidden by executive order, and the campaign to punish leakers ended when White House aides were caught trying to suborn Ellsberg’s judge. Both Houses of Congress created intelligence committees to oversee our secret agencies.

    "Unfortunately, these efforts at oversight have largely failed. Judge Vinson’s order to Verizon proves beyond cavil that the secret FISA court is a rubber stamp for the indiscriminate seizure of all sorts of personal records. ...

    "Seventy percent of the federal government’s intelligence budget now goes to private contractors. Far from overseeing the agencies, members of Congress court them, hoping to obtain business for companies that contribute generously to their campaigns. ...

    "Americans can no longer trust the President, Congress, or the courts to protect them, or the reporters, whistleblowers, and politicians on whom our democracy relies. Our government has been massively compromised by campaign contributions and executive secrecy."

The online activist group Rootsaction.org has begun a petition supporting Snowden's actions."
 

1967 - A Snapshot

In the 60s, the vast new consumerism produced some good stuff, including the Weekly Color Magazine.  All the major newspapers had them, and they actually included some fine journalism - as well as fascinating portraits of the times.

I remember one example - pretty sure it was from "The Daily Telegraph" - which graced our quasi-hippie shared 6th-Form study at school for quite a while. (Don't worry if you don't talk BritSchoolSpeak - it doesn't matter.)

The "Torygraph", as we called it, had sent a reporter and photographer out on the Hippie Trail to Kathmandu, or at least India. (Yes, Virginia, in those days people could travel on a shoestring, with a pretty good chance of being attacked by nothing worse than gippy tummy.)

They had dozens of photographs of individual travellers, with amazing tales of how they travelled, smoked dope, lived rough, communicated with the locals - in a word, lived!

(One couple, when they ran short of money, would rent out the wife's services for a night - it fed them, and they both seemed quite happy with the arrangement - don't do this at home, kids.)

Now the fabulous Sweet Jane has come up with an article from 1967 about something the "Observer" called "the Scene", looking at the London movers and shakers of that year.



(Sweet Jane, you haven't e-mailed me, and I haven't found a way to communicate with you - it would be great to start a dialogue.)

The article has a patronising introduction by a journalist who's afraid the middle-agers might think he was actually in favor of the Underground Hippie shenanigans - "the pop scene with it's (sic) mixture of Beatles and Beardsley seems to be a show of decadence" - but then it gives a fascinating listing of some of the most interesting (brillinat, even) characters on the said "Scene".  (Small print, but well worth a look.)

Richard Neville, whose "International Times" was prosecuted for obscenity - Yayyyyyyy! - and John Peel*, who introduced many of us to Chicago Blues, were heroes of my teens. (I remember walking my dog round the neighborhood streets at midnight, barefoot and in bellbottoms (Pants, that is), carrying a radio on my shoulder, to treat the neighbors to the joys of Peel's eclectic musical choices).

Sweet Jane's Blog also has excellent links, for those looking to dig deep into the 60s!

*Take another look at the trailer for "Pirate Radio":

Sunday, June 9, 2013

More Glamour From Lise II

Our talented friend Lise Solvang says, "Hello Halter Tops!"


Lise and her Tops (or should that be Halters?) have "made it into YM Fashion Magazine!".

You can find out all about them at Lise's website, a Hand Knit Life - even how to create them for yourself, and "Knit in your own Slogan!"

Those Beautiful, Beautiful 60s People

Now here's a quotable quote:  "I can cope with my wife leaving me, but I HATE losing my hair."


Terence Stamp with girlfriend Jean Shrimpton in 1965

In the Swinging London era of the mid-60s, Terence Stamp, then a fashionable young actor around London, a Cockney like Michael Caine and trendy photographer David Bailey, was a major heart-throb and Lothario - I won't call him "hunk" because he was slim and ethereal-looking, like his lady.

(Jean Shrimpton was Twiggy's main rival as a symbol of the 60s London scene - what would now be called a Super-Model.)

IMDB says, "Terence Henry Stamp was born and lived in Canal Road, Bow, until German bombers forced his family to move to Plaistow. An icon of the 1960s, he dated the likes of Julie Christie, Brigitte Bardot, and Jean Shrimpton. After an extremely successful early career, starring in Modesty Blaise (1966), Poor Cow (1967), and Far from the Madding Crowd (1967), Stamp withdrew from mainstream films after his girlfriend, supermodel Jean Shrimpton, left him, and he and went on a 10-year sabbatical in India. He returned home in the late 1970s to star as the evil General Zod in Superman II (1980) and in 1984, delivered what many consider his finest performance as the supergrass in Stephen Frears' The Hit (1984). A few minor but colourful roles, topped by his performance as the transsexual, Bernadette, in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994), have put Stamp back in the British conscious. His role of a vengeful gangster in The Limey (1999) was created especially for him by its director."

Terence is now a better actor than he was in youth - you may have seen him camping it up in the hilarious "Priscilla, Queen of the Desert", among his heavier roles

His website links to a interesting, passionate video voiced by Stamp, about the 2010 World Soccer Cup in South Africa.  Its logic might not stand up to philosophical rigor, but it's great to look at - http://www.terencestamp.co.uk/the-truth-the-cup-contains.

At a youthful 74, he's just been divorced by this lady:



The British "Daily Mail" reports he married for the first time at 64: "His wife, Elizabeth O’Rourke, was 35 years younger than him. He was working in Sydney and walked in to the pharmacy where she was training as a pharmacist in 1998. They married in a low-key ceremony in 2003,  and they remained very private. But they divorced in 2008 on the grounds of his unreasonable behaviour.
‘One of the things I’ve learned in life is that it’s very easy to make a lover from a friend but it’s very hard to make a friend from a lover.’ He laughs again, but this time it carries a little pain with it."

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Decline and Fall

An interesting Photo of the decline of grandeur, of a sort:-



It comes from an arty and freethinking blog, http://thethoughtexperiment.wordpress.com/, and it put me in mind of a poem by the English Romantic, Percy Bysshe Shelley, which should be taped to the bathroom mirror of every politician and despot.


Percy Bysshe Shelley

The Poem is "Ozymandias" - which also happens to be the title of an experimental Screenplay I wrote - and it goes like this:

 "I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal these words appear:
`My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:
Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!'
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away".

Food for thought as we watch the nightly news....

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Sign Here to Break Up the Big Banks

As we all know, one of the main reasons for the Financial Fuck-Up of 2008 - along with the criminality of Wall Street and the irresponsibility of Washington - was that the main institutions of our financial system had grown "too big to fail".  That's (allegedly) why they had to be bailed out by us plebs.

Guess what? In the last 5 years, those institutions have grown by ANOTHER 30%!

This just came in from BoldProgressives.org:

"Today, the NY Attorney General filed a lawsuit against big bank HSBC for ignoring the law and hurting families in foreclosure. Big banks like HSBC think the rules don't apply to them -- not acceptable!
Over 40,000 people have already joined Elizabeth Warren in saying that we need to protect the public and break up the big banks.
Thanks! -- Karissa Gerhke"

Please sign the Petition, people!

And here's an entertaining video of our lovely Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren questioning Treasury Secretary Jack Lew about why Too Big To Fail keeps getting bigger:  http://act.boldprogressives.org/survey/brown_vitter/?akid=13573.348172.98-ATm&rd=1&source=e3-warren-don-tst&t=2

(After you watch the video there are links to a number of other interesting videos about reforming Financial Institutions.)

It's Time We Had Some Fun....

... and very soon I'll be bringing you  "Topless and Literary in NYC".

In the meantime, though - just cos it's on my mind - let's talk about  COINTELPRO.

This is from my Book Proposal, "The War On The 60s":

"On a night in March 1971 when much of the country was watching the Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier boxing-match, a group of activists broke into the two-man FBI office in Media, Pennsylvania, with a crowbar, and emptied the file cabinets of more than a thousand documents.

They called themselves The Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI, and the papers revealed years of systematic wiretapping, infiltration and media manipulation designed to suppress any challenge to the status quo.

16 days later, over the Government's objections, the “Washington Post” revealed that it had received an envelope with 14 FBI documents, detailing how the bureau had enlisted a local police chief, mail carriers and a switchboard operator at nearby Swarthmore College to spy on campus and black activist groups in the Philadelphia area.

The “burglars” were never identified; and the American public heard for the first time a sinister new word,: "COINTELPRO". Short for the FBI's "secret counterintelligence program," this was created to investigate and disrupt dissident political groups in the U.S. Under these programs, beginning in 1956, the bureau worked to "enhance the paranoia endemic in these circles," as one COINTELPRO memo put it, "to get the point across there is an FBI agent behind every mailbox."

It wasn't until 1975-76 that the Senate mounted a full-scale investigation, known as the Church Committee after its chair, Sen. Church of Idaho. They found that the FBI, working with local Police forces, ignored the law and the Constitution....

Many of the techniques used would be intolerable in a democratic society even if all of the targets had been involved in violent activity, but COINTELPRO went far beyond that...the Bureau conducted a sophisticated vigilante operation aimed squarely at preventing the exercise of First Amendment rights of speech and association, on the theory that preventing the growth of dangerous groups and the propagation of dangerous ideas would protect the national security and deter violence.


Along with the Anti-War Movement, and even occasionally the Ku Klux Klan, the prime target of Cointelpro was the Black Panthers."

More about the Black Panthers another time....

Monday, June 3, 2013

Is Europe More Civilized Than US?

Gotta love this quote from Monsanto: “We’re going to sell the GM seeds only where they enjoy broad farmer support, broad political support and a functioning regulatory system,” corporate spokesman Thomas Helscher told Reuters. “As far as we’re convinced this only applies to a few countries in Europe today, primarily Spain and Portugal.”
If we had a "functioning regulatory system" here in the USA, Monsanto would not be allowed to secretly insert their poisons into our food chain. They couldn't patent seeds given to us by Nature.  Hundreds of poor farmers in Third World countries would not have committed suicide after Monsanto's non-reproducing seeds had bankrupted them and made them lose their farms. American farmers would not have been persecuted for having the misfortune of being downwind of a Monsanto crop, having been colonized by them, and then being accused of stealing the Frankenfood, and taken to court for their own produce having been corrupted.
In Europe, it seems that Monsanto has given up their war to take over the food supply.  Great news - I hope! (Fingers crossed that they're not plotting some other fiendish method of poisoning us the EU's pleasant valleys.)
I have a wonderful memory of seeing on the BBC news in the UK in 1998, a group of Green protesters uprooting a field of Monsanto Frankenplants, while the British Bobbies looked on.
According to the CARE petition site,
"Just as in the United States, millions of European citizens have spoken out against Monsanto’s unchecked control of agriculture through the use of patented, genetically-modified seeds and plants.

A recent poll in Europe found that 60% of respondents considered “Frankencrops” a threat to public health. In 2007, the United States launched a planned retaliation against European countries for refusing to take GMOs into their food chains. In 2009 Monsanto sued Germany because it banned these products, reported FarmtoConsumer.org in late 2012.



Unlike U.S. leaders, those in Germany and elsewhere were not impressed by Monsanto’s well-known intimidation tactics. By January 2013, eight European nations had publicly banned the cultivation of genetically modified crops. Earlier this month, these and other European countries joined the massive March Against Monsanto, a global event that saw millions take to the streets in protest."
Back in the USA, two weeks ago, the New York Daily News reported, "Senate Republicans denied an attempt on Thursday to overturn the so-called “Monsanto Protection Act,” a measure recently signed into law that circumvents judicial authority concerning the planting and development of genetically modified seeds deemed to be unhealthy for human consumption.
An amendment to overturn the provision was put forth by Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), but thanks to GOP opposition, it did not receive the unanimous consent required to be considered."
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/senate-dems-fail-overturn-monsanto-protection-act-article-1.1353287#ixzz2VAzMTA9H"

And Greenpeace has a Petition for you  - they say,

"Monsanto’s unapproved genetically engineered (GE) “Roundup Ready” wheat was found growing in a random Oregon field last week.
The farmer doesn’t know how it got there. Neither does anyone else since Monsanto ended field testing this type of wheat eight years ago. The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) is currently investigating the extent of the contamination. But this story isn’t surprising.

GE crops can’t be controlled. The fact is that contamination happens all the time while companies like Monsanto experiment with nature and our food supply. Putting an end to field testing is the only way to stop it.

Tell the USDA that the only way to prevent contamination is to put an immediate ban on field testing GE crops." [Petition here]

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Are we all "Pot"ty? The Joy of Anecdote

Heard a delightful story recently from a charming lady in her mid-80s, from when she was a girl-about-town in early-1950s Los Angeles, dating nice young men and dreaming of wedding-bells in between Jazz parties and going to Church wearing high heels, hats and gloves. My friend had a female room-mate, a sweet girl whom she had met at work at the Telephone Company.  They were good friends, and had many happy times together with their pals.

The engineers at the Phone Company had a little hobby - listening-in to people's phone calls, just out nosiness and "because they could".

One of these, obviously a real nice, ethical character, took it upon himself to warn my friend against hanging out with her roomie, because "you know she's into the Marijuana scene..."

Needless to say, she paid no attention.

Rock on, 1953!