Showing posts with label Nation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nation. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Russell Brand, Political Commentator (Right On!), Magazine Editor

Apparently the Huffington Post has a UK edition. Not that I'm prejudiced, of course, but it does seem to have a more urbane (world-weary?) tone than its parent creation of the megalomaniacal once-Republican Arianna Huffington, who famously began her career by shacking up with aged intellectual Bernard Levin, then publishing a book on Picasso that was thoroughly slagged by the critics.

Just goes to show we can all start afresh, if we have unlimited chutzpah.

HuffPostUk, as I now call it, has a nice little piece about the BBC's late-night, at-length Current Affairs show Newsnight, which you can watch on PBS here in the States. They ask, "When did Newsnight, that ageing, late night, sleep-inducer suddenly become the most watchable programme on British TV?"

The main talking head on Newsnight is an irascible but highly intelligent veteran journalist called Jeremy Paxman, famous for snarling at politicians who he believes are guilty of dodging his questions - popularly known as "Paxo".

Yes, Virginia, we need a few dozen like him here.

HuffPostUk continues, "Wednesday’s offering continued the show’s good form, with producer Ian Katz pitting Paxo against the garrulous, unpredictable yet always-brilliant Russell Brand. And the pair played their roles to perfection."



Brand has been invited to be guest editor of the New Statesman, a venerable leftie publication in Britain, sort of an equivalent to the Nation. So of course, Paxman's first question has to be, "Who are you to edit a political magazine?"

Brand's political comments are, in my opinion, right on the money. Indeed, the Tea Party would probably approve of them, if they could just get over their hatred of "liberals".

A sample:
    “What will your revolution look like?” growled Paxo from behind said beard.
    “I’ll tell you what it won’t be like,” said Brand in a moment of clarity, “a huge disparity between rich and poor, where 300 Americans have the same amount of wealth as the 85 million poorest Americans, where there is an exploited and underserved underclass that are being continually ignored and where welfare is slashed while Cameron and Osborne go to court to defend the rights of bankers to continue to receive their bonuses. This has to be addressed.”   
The interview is pretty funny, but also moving in a way, as truth-telling usually is.  Don't miss it - 


The "Boris" being referred to is Boris Johnson, the hilarious Mayor of London, educated at Eton and Oxford, who once edited the "Spectator" magazine and was involved in massive sexual scandals.  Sample scandal from Wikipedia:  

"In 2004, British newspapers reported that Johnson had had a four-year affair with Petronella Wyatt.[117] The affair, which had been well hinted at in UK newspaper gossip columns, included passionate London taxi cab rides around St John's Wood during which they would ask the cab driver to insert cassette tapes of Wyatt singing Puccini.[118]")


Friday, June 14, 2013

"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.”