Are any of our grasping, dissembling politicians even thinking about it?
[image, otherwise unattributed, via salvationinc]
Category: Politics
Guantanamo and the other stuff
And waiting.
[image, otherwise unattributed, via salvationinc]
Guantanamo, etc.
Still waiting.
[image, otherwise unattributed, via salvationinc]
whither Guantanamo?
Where is the outrage over Guantanamo, seven months after the election? Why hasn’t our political “detainment” camp in Cuba, our festering national disgrace, been shut down yet?
And while I’m on the subject, where is my right to habeas corpus? Where is my right to protection from coercion or torture? Where is my right to privacy? Where is my right to assemble and speak? Where is my country?
Why don’t these absolutely fundamental issues even appear to be on the agenda of a newly-ascendant Democratic Congressional caucus?
I’m afraid I may already know the answers to these questions: Its leaders are actually quite content, even happy, with the way things have been arranged by the current regime, since they can now look forward to enjoying the spoils themselves when the Presidency passes to their team twenty months from now.
In 2009 it will become their oil, their war, their empire, their lobby money, their regime, and we may well find that we have only traded one king for another.
If this is a democracy, we’re all tyrants – and beasts.
I will probably be repeating this post regularly, since I don’t expect things to change soon, if ever.
[image, otherwise unattributed, via salvationinc]
we’re back, but it still looks pretty dreadful around here

like a bad penny
I cannot hide it any longer: We arrived back from Spain Wednesday afternoon. Our luggage, having decided to extend the holiday for another day, arrived at our door 24 hours later, sadder but a little wiser. Next time there will be no dawn check-ins at a remote airport for a connection to a Transatlantic flight.
I have tons of images from our trip to Spain which I’d like to put up on this site. I’m going to keep putting more up until I get distracted by the next new thing.
Unfortunately I really am very easily diverted. Witness my delight in one of today’s biggest news stories and my failure to resist looking back almost four years to three of the entries on this site which dealt with Paul Wolfowitz – in one of his earlier incarnations. Too bad he’s never gotten fired for his real failures and crimes: total personal incompetence and state murder on an international scale.
If you can still stand to read about the man, see this, my September 21, 2003 post and both this and this post each filed two days later, concerning Wolfowitz’s appearance at The New School.
[yucky image, but perhaps also an homage to Deborah Kass, from trueblueliberal]
Gore Vidal in New York

Don Bachardy Gore Vidal 1963 pencil and ink wash
“From George Washington to George Bush makes a monkey out of Darwin. [pause] I’m now a creationist.”
And so, punctuating himself with a mischievous smile and a composed chuckle, did Gore Vidal introduce himself before speaking to a group of enthusiastic admirers (many of whom had brought stacks of the great man’s books for his signing). The scene was the Borders store on Columbus Circle yesterday afternoon. The iconic, and iconoclastic, Leftist author, historian and “homosexualist” was in town because he was being honored with the first PEN/Borders Literary Service Award during last night’s PEN Literary Gala.
Vidal reminisced about the era in America past when, if you had scoundrels in office, “you’d hold and election and you’d get them out.” He spoke lovingly of his close relationship, as a boy who loved reading, to his blind Grandfather, the Oklahoma Senator Thomas Pryor Gore, who played an extremely significant role in our federal system as a player in a very different political age. But not completely different, as he indicated when he told us that although the populist, anti-foreign war Senator was an atheist, he had the good sense not to share that fact with his constituents.
Knowing the audience would be interested in his opinion on the subject of the next election, he encouraged us to “Vote for Al Gore,” insisting that Gore did win the 2000 election and was only prevented from assuming the office by the Supreme Court. He also dropped a good word for Pelosi and Kucinich.
He told us he never reads at a book signing, since it’s enough work just to write them, and he would prefer leaving the reading to others. So he asked for the mind or sense of the audience; what did we want to talk about about? There was a brief hesitation, so I shouted out, “revolution!”, which seemed to take him by surprise for a moment. He answered, Revolutions don’t usually end well”, and went on to look for another subject before I thought to retort with a list of those that did, restructurings all provoked by the impossibility of any moderate alternative.
For someone who dismisses the idea of rebellion so lightly, he fails to offer the rest of us any hope, any alternative. “We have rogues in high office and no one wants to do anything about them”, he bellowed. We were very fortunate in our founders, but today “We have no republic”.
Answering a question about 9/11, he admitted, “I’m not a conspiracy theorist; I’m a conspiracy analyst.” He said that this gang in the White House would never have been able to pull it off; everything they do is screwed up completely. On the other hand, he suggested, it would be possible for them to have just stood aside when they learned it was happening. “I’d like to blame them”, Vidal concluded, but he wouldn’t go any further.
[Don Bachardy drawing from americanartists]
citizens demand impeachment, occupy Senate offices
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A.R.T. (Activist Response Team) lowers banners inside the Hart Senate Office Building April 26
I was delighted, one day after my French Revolution post, to come across this story. It needs to be circulated to a much wider audience.
In Washington today it may actually be the spring of 1789.
For more, see the citizens at A28 and for a live, recorded sound record of the action, hear guerilla radio via indymedia.
[image, via bloggy, from an email originally sent to newsgrist]
no one will take Bush’s head (although he’d never miss it)
raw NYPD brutality, spawned by Kelly, Bloomberg and Quinn




stills captured from video on NYCindymedia site
On Thursday I wrote about a demonstration in which I had participated (put together by The Radical Homosexual Agenda [RHA], Assemble for Rights NYC, and other groups and individuals), which was directed against Council Speaker Quinn’s support of newly-adopted NYPD regulations restricting the right of assembly. I included in that entry a dozen or so still pictures I had taken.
They weren’t enough to tell me about the full measure and shape of the violence I witnessed that afternoon. Last night I saw this footage of the Glass Bead Collective and Time’s Up! Video Collective documenting the most violent images of Police aggression I’ve witnessed in almost twenty years of street activism.
Go to this NYC indymedia page and click onto the link under the heading, “Video Footage showing aggressive arrests by NYPD during the peacefull parade”. Note that the video is composed of segments from several cameras, so there is more than a single presentation of some scenes.
It was already clear to anyone who hasn’t tried to avoid thinking about the quality of civic life in New York that this city’s police ranks and leadership are both out of control and a physical and Constitutional threat to its citizens, and not just those seen by “the finest” as “the other”, so this footage should not come as a revelation to any of us. But the problem neither begins nor ends with the failures of the uniforms on the street. Our appointed and elected representatives and municipal executives, far from fulfilling their responsibility to police the police, continue to aid and abet their crimes and outrages. Officials are content with a ritual mourning of the dead and arranging photo opportunities with the survivors, visiting the homes and attending the funerals of their prey – while paying tens of millions of dollars of our public treasury in court awards to the growing number of victims of police and government brutality.
Chief of Police Kelly is dead wrong about his so-called “parade rules”, the Mayor Bloomberg knows it and the best I can say about the Speaker of the City Council on this issue (she is also my local representative) is that Chris Quinn appears to have a tin ear on First Amendment issues. Our rights and freedoms to speak and assemble are not subject to political negotiation, the convenience of our law enforcement officials (or their macho “control” neuroses), the swift traffic (and free street storage) of private automobiles, or our politicians’ ambitions for higher office.
For a long time I lulled myself into thinking I could continue to distinguish between what has been happening in the country at large and what is going down here in the land I call home, but today I realize I can only be thankful that New York doesn’t have a foreign policy and weapons of mass destruction.
[images from Glass Bead Collective and Time’s Up! Video Collective via NYCindymedia]
police “control” un-permitted parade protesting Quinn

I survived this afternoon’s “Parade Without a Permit” more or less unscathed, although I was pushed to the ground while photographing the police exercising their “control” of our right to free speech.
At the start of the parade in City Hall Park there were, by Norm Siegel‘s semi-official count, 54 demonstrators (plus a large contingent of members of the alternative media, and various support people and legal observers), making the assemblage an official “un-permitted parade” according to new NYPD rules, which allow only up to 49 people if no police permit has been granted.
At no time was there a crime in progress; we presented no threat to anyone. There was not even a hint of a misdemeanor, yet the Department, our servants, not content with a melodramatic presence made up of officers and inspectors, many in plainclothes, a scooter contingent and several police vans, decided to do some pushing around.
The pushing began with repeated orders, rude shouts in fact, to keep our feet on the sidewalk at all times, even when it was narrowed or blocked by subway entrances and construction sheds. In the end it appeared to be problems with the obstruction and tunnel darkness of a large shed on the west side of Church Street, complicated by the many bags of debris stacked underneath, which elevated the pushing to the physical level. The police seemed to be unhappy with the speed with which we were clearing the street for the important people who use cars.
I assume that any attempt to point out to the officers that their own combined body mass and the bulk of their own vehicles added up to a much bigger traffic obstruction than did the presence of our little band would have fallen on deaf ears.
One verbal exchange led to another, and then the pushing began (from them on us) without any further warning. Before I could get away from the center of the melee I found myself on the pavement. I snapped a few (not very interesting) pictures from that dramatic vantage point and when I scrambled back to my feet I saw that at least two people had been taken into the middle of the street where they were on the ground. Surrounded by their banners, flags and leaflets, they were handcuffed and carried away.
The struggle for New York City’s recognition of the First Amendment will certainly continue, but for tonight we have these beautiful battle ribbons:
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related sites:
The Radical Homosexual Agenda
Assemble for Rights NYC
NYC indymedia
Transportation Alternatives
TIME’S UP!
Association of the Bar of the City of New York
Critical Mass
Five Borough Bicycle Club


