do we owe it all to Bush?

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“Certainly the prestige of the office of president must be seriously compromised if a woman has a serious shot at it.”

I would add “or a black man” to that conditional clause, but the subject of the article from which this quote was pulled is specifically that of the place of women in American society. The sentence is inserted as a parenthetical reality check inside the penultimate paragraph of Leslie Camhi’s Village Voice review of “Wack! Art and the Feminist Revolution” at PS 1. She alludes to the current state of our national political life with this reminder of both how far we have come and how close we still remain to the more benighted environment of the 60’s and 70’s which inspired the feminist revolution:

Just how far we’ve traveled since those times might be measured by the fact that the female contender for the Democratic presidential nomination is perceived as the establishment candidate. (Certainly the prestige of the office of president must be seriously compromised if a woman has a serious shot at it.) But some things almost never change: It’s nearly impossible, for example, to imagine this show being staged across the river, at P.S. 1’s Manhattan affiliate, the Museum of Modern Art.
Instead, the artists of “Wack!” remain in the schoolhouse. But their contemporaries might well take a lesson from them.

[Presidential chart image by Automatic Preference whitosphere blog via Francis L. Holland]

“They hate our freedoms”

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the enemy is us

“They hate our freedoms” [from Bush’s 2002 State of the Union address]

But just yesterday:

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Senate overwhelmingly passed a bill on Tuesday granting retroactive immunity from lawsuits to telecommunications companies that took part in President George W. Bush’s warrantless eavesdropping program.
[The bill would replace a 15-day extension of a surveillance law which expires this week, a law whose provisions for the protection of privacy and personal freedoms the Bush administration and the companies have repeatedly, and avowedly, violated.]
The 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) requires that the government receive the approval of a secret FISA court to conduct surveillance in the United States of suspected foreign enemy targets.
But after September 11, Bush authorized warrantless surveillance of communications between people in the United States and others overseas if one had suspected terrorist ties [although in fact we do not know the full extent of the warrantless wiretapping program, or the extent to which FISA has been violated].

[image from ABC news]

Guantanamo: is there no limit to the obscenities?

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a view of the camp we’ve known about for six years, not the secret one

Really?!!!
We learn tonight that the regime in Washington has been maintaining a separate concentrated concentration camp totally hidden inside the Guantanamo camp we already knew about, a concentration camp which had already been created and maintained, with the explicit or tacit support and approval of members of both parties, outside of any legal system existing anywhere on the planet.
Even now, a year and a half after the last Congressional election, the Democratic majority hasn’t been able to bring itself to talk about even the original camp. Please tell me once gain about the genius of the vaunted two-party system which is supposed to promote liberty and justice for all.

[image by Carlotta Gall and Andy Worthington from the NYTimes]

“American Primary System Fails to Impress Europeans”

Duh.
Deutsche Welle, the English language on-line news site, reports that intelligent Europeans who study our political system essentially think the way we select candidates for office is, well, nuts.

National elections in Europe often last only six weeks and campaigns are publicly financed. That makes the details of the United States’ prolonged primary season, the winner-takes-all Electoral College and campaign financing groups particularly murky waters for Europeans.
“Quite frankly the American democratic system is atavistic,” said Frank Unger, an expert on US politics and a professor at the John F. Kennedy Institute, which is part of the Freie University in Berlin. “It’s outdated. It doesn’t really reflect democracy in a modern sense.”

I think he’s being kind.

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[image from blog.kir]

the last of the old year’s (glorious, expiring) lillies

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Flowers, like other objects of our affection – or lust – are usually sought out for their freshness and youth, and not for their spots and wrinkles. Anyone familiar with this site knows I love flowers, but I confess that more and more in recent years I myself seem to have so shared this attitude. It must be one of the reasons I have generally avoided purchasing cut flowers either for myself or for others.
Of course, since I have watched so many bouquets purchased from New York corner deli’s die within hours of their arrival, my preference for potted plants might be explained by something other than any special aversion to witnessing the natural sequence of maturation and death. There’s also that messy, complicating thought that a flower actually dies the moment it is cut.
Like their animal cousins flowers do not seem to lose beauty as they age as long as they are left in their natural environment. I’ve always loved looking at a landscape or garden, including those I’ve nurtured myself, late in the season when its flashier beauties start to fade and begin to shrivel and bend. Indoors I’ve thought I could only approach this phenomenon with a living, flowering plant in a pot.
Until this past week.
Thirteen days before I took the images at the top and bottom of this post I received as a birthday gift the magnificent vase of florist-arranged mixed white blossoms into which were tucked the buds of these now-fading lillies.
It lasted over a week as a bouquet (although, surprisingly, the roses left shortly before that, having never quite opened). These remaining stems, together with the Eucalyptus leaves which accompany them, have now been sitting by the window on our ancient table in this heavy old green glass “can” for many more days. They have Barry and I both great, silent pleasure while we read, write, talk, and listen to music, eat and drink.
Some time today, before midnight, I will respectfully dispose of them, but I’m going to remember the beautiful, graceful dignity of their aging.


HAPPY NEW YEAR TO US ALL, WITH LILLIES FOR EVERYONE – OF EVERY AGE!


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GUANTANAMO DELENDA EST!

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Out of sight and out of mind. Our concentration camp in Guantanamo is still off the chart (literally); missing from the Democratic Congressional agenda; “not present” in presidential campaign rhetoric; and, most frighteningly and damningly of all, it still appears to have completely escaped our national conscience.

[fabric color swatch, otherwise unrelated to Guantanamo, from froggtoggs]

comments glitch discovered, repaired

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(this one’s an aesthetic glitch)

I learned yesterday that my “comments” function had not been operating since we switched servers, but the glitch has now been repaired.
If you’ve tried to comment on something recently and felt shut out, please try again, or hang on and see if something else moves you down the road.

[image from Benjamin Fischer’s “portfolio neuordnung“]

Reverend Billy free this time, but the assaults never stop

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cover of a 1909 pamphlet created to protect the right of free speech at a time Emma Goldman was being prevented from speaking

How often does the NYPD have to be reminded about the First Amendment?
Two days ago all charges which the police had brought against the Reverend Billy for reciting the First Amendment to officers harassing Critical Mass cyclists in Union Square on June 29th were dropped.
New York’s guardians of [certain kinds of] law and order have once again failed to have their behavior upheld by the courts. Fortunately this time it was not the soft tissue of a citizen victim that bore the injury, but the tissue of the civil liberties each one of us shares. The escalating, accumulative record of police misconduct like this, regularly authorized and protected by Departmental and civilian municipal authorities, assaults our Constitutional protections and it may some day effect a mortal wound.
The NYTimes article by Anemona Hartocollis barely hints at what should have been a huge embarassment for the arresting officers and those who had handed them their assignment:

The Manhattan district attorney�s office quietly dropped its prosecution today of Reverend Billy, a street performer accused of harassing police officers by reciting the First Amendment at a rally in Union Square Park.
Prosecutors said today that they deliberately allowed the case to be dismissed by failing to meet a court-ordered deadline to file papers explaining why the arrest of Reverend Billy, whose real name is William Talen, was justified.
�Sometimes not making a decision is a good decision,� one prosecutor said.

Norman Siegel, Billy’s lawyer, let the Times know that the incident wouldn’t end there.

He said he would file a federal lawsuit against the city and the Police Department charging false arrest, malicious prosecution and violation of Mr. Talen�s free-speech rights.
�We call this trial by inconvenience,� Mr. Talen said, adding that between the two cases he had been required to appear in court six times and spend three nights in jail.
�There are a number of questions,� Mr. Siegel said. �Who ordered the arrest? Why put him through the system when he should get a desk appearance ticket? Who made the decision to take five months before getting the case dismissed?�
He called the case �a classic example of government abuse of power.�

The hundreds of plaintiffs suing the city and the Hudson River Park Trust over the dangerous condition of the holding pens in which they were dumped following their arrests during the 2004 Republican Convention are experiencing their own continuing abuse and hardship. A article written by Chris Lombardi, “Pier 57 cops also exposed to toxins during 2004 RNC“, which appeared in a recent issue of Chelsea Now, is interesting for many of its revelations. In it Lombard reports:

Right now, the suits are still at the deposition stage, with the 500-plus plaintiffs spending days at the federal courthouse downtown.
�They�re keeping them for eight hours at a time, sometimes,� said [Environmental Justice Law Project] co-founder Martin Stolar.

Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom, but do we have to pay for despotism too?

[image from the Emma Goldman papers, sunsite.berkeley.edu]

GUANTANAMO DELENDA EST!

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This post is part of a series begun on May 21, 2007, which will continue until the U.S. concentration camps at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere around the world have been razed.

Two things this time around: First, we haven’t been screaming about Guantanamo for five years only to watch painfully as this miserable concentration camp is broken up and its internee victims removed and dispersed among any number of new facilities established inside the U.S. border, fresh black holes even less open to our own conscience and the world’s scrutiny than their notorious progenitor. Second, today is the eighty-ninth anniversary of the armistice which ended the Great War; it would be nice if we could believe our never-ending supply of old men in suits and brass had learned anything at all in the interim.

[fabric color swatch, otherwise unrelated to Guantanamo, from froggtoggs]