
Author: jameswagner
Edward Said
Edward Said died today.
“Every empire… tells itself and the world that it is unlike all other empires, that its mission is not to plunder and control but to educate and liberate. These ideas are by no means shared by the people who inhabit that empire, but that hasn’t prevented the U.S. propaganda and policy apparatus from imposing its imperial perspective on Americans, whose sources of information about Arabs and Islam are woefully inadequate.”
Said worked most of his life trying to remove the burden of our ignorance.
[Said was speaking this past July, and the quote was taken from a tribute on The Nation site today]
greenmarket (black radishes)

post-gothic tower

Grace Church, lower Broadway, this week
Wait, could it . . . uh, is it, uh, the French flag?
a most incurious man
Especially welcome on this laptop after my experience Tuesday near the UN, today’s strong lead NYTimes editorial talks about free speech zones – and much more.
The Presidential Bubble
Four progressive political groups sued the Bush administration this week, charging that the Secret Service is systematically keeping protesters away from the president’s public appearances. They make a serious point about free speech rights, but they also point out a disturbing aspect of the Bush White House: the country has a chief executive who seems to embrace the presidential bubble.
Security concerns make it inevitable that a modern American president will be somewhat cut off from the country he leads. He cannot insert himself into any part of normal life without a phalanx of security guards.
Protesters cannot be permitted to get close enough to pose a threat, but they ought to be able to get close enough so the president can see that they are there. Sometimes seeing a glimpse of placard-wielding demonstrators is as close as the commander in chief can get to seeing the face of national discontent.
At Mr. Bush’s public appearances, his critics are routinely shunted into “protest zones” as much as a half-mile away. At the Columbia, S.C., airport last year, a protester with a “No War for Oil” sign was ordered to move a half-mile from the area where Mr. Bush’s supporters were allowed to stand. When the protester refused, he was arrested.
Mr. Bush and his aides also seem to go to great lengths to underline the degree to which the president closes himself off from the news media. In an interview with Fox News this week, the president said he learned most of what he needs to know from morning briefings by his national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, and his chief of staff, Andrew Card.
As for newspapers, Mr. Bush said, “I glance at the headlines” but “rarely read the stories.” The people who brief him on current events encounter many of the newsmakers personally, he said, and in any case “probably read the news themselves.”
Some of this may be a pose that is designed to tweak the media by making the news appear to be below the president’s notice. During the Iraqi invasion, when the rest of the nation was glued to TV, Mr. Bush’s spokesman claimed that his boss had barely glanced at the pictures of what was going on.
But it is worrisome when one of the most incurious men ever to occupy the White House takes pains to insist that he gets his information on what the world is saying only in predigested bits from his appointees.
Mr. Bush thinks of himself as a man of the people, but carefully staged contacts with groups of supporters or small children does not constitute getting in touch with the people. It is in Mr. Bush’s interest, as well as the nation’s, for him to burst the bubble he has been inhabiting, and take a hard look at the real world.
greenmarket (heirloom tomatoes)

greenmarket (parsnips)

greenmarket (celery root)

[three greenmarket images in a row, to catch up]
designated free speech area
View of the UN from 47th Street and 1st Avenue on Tuesday
Only about two dozen people found their way to the designated free speech zone a block from the United Nations yesterday. From where we stood we had a view of the tops of the buildings and a number of media vans and mammoth, rock-filled dump trucks some distance away. Exciting.
I’d like to think that everyone who wasn’t there knows that Bush’s days are now numbered, but it may also be that the administration’s strategy has succeeded: Dissent is wrong, but if you insist on pursuing your little perversions you may do it where you will only be shouting at the cops and other security types.
The few (10?) anti-regime boobies gathered in the rain in Dag Hammarskjold Park were even slightly outnumbered and clearly out-shouted – ok, rather shamed – by the organization and enthusiasm of a group of Indonesians demonstrating for justice, human rights and a free Aceh.
Maybe America will survive if even with our own civil rights so threatened and compromised it can still inspire such courage and hope in her youngest sons and daughters, or her newest visitors. Many of these people may have much to lose with their activism – one modelled on our own best traditions. I hope we will remain worthy of such tributes.
The media yesterday? I only saw a Telemundo crew in almost two hours, but they lingered in front of us for quite a while, especially in front of the young Indonesians. There was some interest in my own waterproofed sign, which read, intending to direct an indictable Bush, “THE HAGUE, NOT THE UN.” The few diplomat-types which walked by kept straight faces, unless they made eye contact, which broke the facade and the response was then a warm smile.
“heckler” confronts Wolfowitz, Goldberg

Following up: This is the photo and caption which appeared in the NYTimes print edition on Monday. Fortunately I appear only in silhouette. We should all have been so fortunate with Wolfowitz and Goldberg as well.
[image scanned by Barry from newsprint]