“Mahomet débordé par les intégristes”

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This cartoon appeared today in Charlie Hebdo, a French satirical weekly associated with the radical Left. The in-house drawing portrays the prophet of Islam next to a headline, “Mahomet overwhelmed by the fundamentalists.” The distraught man cries, “It’s hard to be loved by fools.”
Anyone who comes to my blog regularly knows that I have great affection for the planet’s diversity, and that I am extremely sympathetic to the people and cultures of the middle east, but I expect I’ve also made it pretty clear that I consider myself an adversary not just of fundamentalism, but of all organized religions, equally, and regardless of where they are found. Okay, I admit that sometimes there’s a worthy aesthetic element, but as in any other institution, that’s not the part that destroys and kills.

BETTER THAN A CARTOON
Barry has uncovered the best words to appear on the subject of the cartoon war yet.

The fact that fundamentalists of all persuasions are completely incapable of self-reflection, self-criticism, and self-irony would not warrant a mention, were it not for their practice of imposing their issues on me and my world. They assume that we will kowtow to them as soon as we recognise who they are: “Look out! Religious feelings! We’re leaving the private sphere.”

See his site for the context of this piece and a link to Sonia Mikich’s entire text.

[image from nouvelobs, via a news item from Reuters]

wacky Christians green with envy?

The U.S. and British governments criticized publication of the caricatures as offensive to Muslims, raising questions about whether the line between free speech and incitement had been crossed. [Associated Press]

One more short thought on the subject of cartoons (although as much as I would like never to have to address this stupidity again, I suspect this is only the beginning):
Our own fundamentalist Christian religio/politicos must be green with envy of their Islamist fellows for what they have been able to accomplish around the world in just a few days.
Contrary to the principles and practice of their open societies, virtually everyone of any authority in what we would like to regard as an enlightened world is currently bending over backwards to apologize (for the normal exercise of hard-won fundamental freedoms) to particularly vocal members of one cult. Our sad, clueless guardians and the institutions they control are going even further and affirming a quite new and unrestricted principle of untouchability with respect to both the practice and beliefs of that cult – and in theory at least that of any other which manages to get noticed.
Where will this end? There are lots of different religious formats out there, with lots and lots of taboos, and lots of cynical people willing to use them for their own political purposes.
We seem to be engaged in a political and cultural suicide which will be mourned by people of intelligence and good will everywhere in the world – if any of us survive the deceased ourselves.

we are all Danes today

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This whole Mohammed image thing is almost perfectly ridiculous, but there is one perfect solution to the problem.
Denmark simply must not be left hanging in the wind. There is a popular, although apparently apocryphal story concerning the Danish resistance to the Nazi occupation. Supposedly the aged King Christian X left the palace on his daily ride wearing the yellow Star of David, the symbol which jews had been ordered to display prominently on their clothing.
Maybe it’s just a nice story, but whatever its basis in fact, the combined efforts of the Danish population saved from extermination all but a few dozen of the nation’s 6500 jews.
Let’s put together a wonderful, real story with the material we’ve been handed sixty years later.
It’s time for all newspapers, and all nations, everyone who has a media outlet, to make themselves a common target of those who would threaten the freedoms which support liberal societies.
I believe the images scorned by ignorant or cynical people who do not, or pretend not, to understand our liberties should be shown everywhere, and as prominently as is possible. Now.
We are all Danes today, regardless of our beliefs.

[image via Dutch MP Geert Wilders, who has published all 12 original cartoons on his blog]

NOTE:
It would be inappropriate under the circumstances were I not to mention the significance of the source of the very elusive image I’ve used and the link I provide. Geert Wilders is more than a little controversial himself.

disorderly conduct before the emperor

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House arrest

If she just had the common decency to wear Old Navy or GAP, it would only have been American business as usual and there wouldn’t have been any fuss.
Even MSNBC can’t make Cindy Sheehan look like a miscreant.

Capitol Police Sgt. Kimberly Schneider said Sheehan had worn a T-shirt with an antiwar slogan to the speech and covered it up until she took her seat. Police warned her that such displays were not allowed, but she did not respond, the spokeswoman said.
The T-shirt bore the words “2,245 Dead — How Many More??” in reference to the number of U.S. troops killed in Iraq, protesters told NBC News.
Police handcuffed Sheehan and removed her from the gallery before Bush arrived.

[image by Jason Reed from REUTERS]

finally it’s right here: a secret police with matching state*

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Jane and Louise Wilson Stasi City 1997 video [still from installation]

All this blithering about to execute or not to execute, for the death penalty or against – all rot, comrades. Execute! And, when necessary, without a court judgment.” – Erich Mielke, GDR Minister for State Security, in a 1982 address to high-ranking Stasi officers [from “Stasiland”]

While still trying to fathom my fellow Americans’ seeming indifference to extraordinary reports about our National Security Agency‘s domestic spying operations I’ve found myself reading Anna Funder’s “Stasiland“.
It’s a terrifying story and it’s incredibly depressing, even if it ultimately ends somewhat happily in 1989 – happily for those who survived. Oddly, and unfortunately, it’s also a story which many Germans seem to want very much to forget.
I have to confess that even I wasn’t very interested in the particulars of Stasi history until recently, in spite of having regularly and almost literally bumped into the physical relics of its power in the eastern neighborhoods of Berlin last fall. It was actually Barry’s idea to order “Stasiland” from the library when we returned from Germany, having heard about its existence while we were there.
Since he was too busy with projects to begin reading it when it arrived, I took up the book myself, at first almost casually, although a somewhat dutifully, and certainly thinking it would be a bit of a drudge. Only then, when I became totally absorbed in this world I wish had only existed in the imagination of George Orwell, did I realize how relevant this brilliant account from both its victims and its perpetrators was to what was going on around me today.
Today’s Germans may entertain the luxury of this selective amnesia about the very recent past, but the course of our own recent political history has made it more and more clear that we, as citizens of the nation which was so important as both model and midwife in the birth of their post-war democracy, must not.
Stasi” was the common name for the East German Ministerium für Staatssicherheit (Ministry of State Security). I think it’s interesting that the increasingly-threatening contemporary U.S. equivalent should go by a name virtually identical to that given to the hated DDR secret police. Ministry of State Security or National Security Agency. There is only the slightest semantic difference between the two, little more than a question of style.
The German victims of an experiment gone very wrong are quite free today, but here in the land of the free and the home of the brave we seem anxious to build our own police state, or we’re at least remarkably indifferent to the construction going on all around us.
If we want to get the attention of a sleeping citizenry, maybe we’ll have to come up with an appropriate nickname for our own National Security Agency, a tab which could hold its own when set next to the one which described the East Germans’ nightmare. My own first thought? “NASY” (with the second letter pronounced “ah” of course)

*
“Well, when the president decides that he can do whatever he wants in violation of the law, including detaining citizens without charges and spying on citizens without warrants, that pretty much is the definition of a police state. It’s the claimed authority that matters, not the extent to which it’s used.” Atrios

[image from Bayerisches Rundfunk]

how bankrupt is the journalism of the New York Times?

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more and more just a punch line?

I suppose that since I’m just a blogger I’m not expected to know much about a journalist’s responsibilities, but I do think I can improve on what New York Times executive editor Bill Keller can come up with. According to Ken Auletta, at the very end of his lightning-rod piece in this week’s New Yorker, Keller has recently defended his publisher, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., for his initial protectiveness of his star reporter, Judith Miller. Her stories in the months leading up to the invasion of Iraq was arguably one of the most important contributions to the administration’s ability to take the country to war in 2003.
Keller is quoted with respect to his boss’s readiness last February to go to the Supreme Court to protect Miller’s sources and keep her out of prison [the paper later thought better of the idea after reviewing Miller’s stories, dropped its aggressive stance, and eventually fired her after her release]: “Yes, Arthur was enthusiastically in favor of going to court. And so was I. In the much larger scheme of things, I’d much rather have a publisher whose first instinct is to stick up for a reporter rather than to drop into a defensive crouch and worry about his ‘fiduciary’ responsibilities.”
I was outraged by this quote, especially as it must have been delivered as a statement of high moral principle.
How about another possible instinct, Bill? Shouldn’t a newspaper be interested above all in “sticking up” for its readers? That doesn’t mean encouraging the fantasies of its reporters or their sources, and it definitely doesn’t mean supporting the fantasies of its editors or their publisher.
As we’re finally seeing today even in the conventional/commercial media, Miller’s stories were never the news and they were never fit to print.
But there’s one story which appeared in the Times yesterday that certainly was! The trouble is, it should have been there a year ago. The “paper of record” wants to protect its reporters’ right to protect their sources, but it won’t use information it obtains from its sources unless the sources tell them it may. “Mother, may I”? Huh?
The Washington Post in a story filed on line late tonight, December 17:

The New York Times’ revelation yesterday that President Bush authorized the National Security Agency to conduct domestic eavesdropping raised eyebrows in political and media circles, for both its stunning disclosures and the circumstances of its publication.
In an unusual note, the Times said in its story that it held off publishing the 3,600-word article for a year after the newspaper’s representatives met with White House officials. It said the White House had asked the paper not to publish the story at all, “arguing that it could jeopardize continuing investigations and alert would-be terrorists that they might be under scrutiny.”
The Times said it agreed to remove information that administration officials said could be “useful” to terrorists and delayed publication for a year “to conduct additional reporting.”

The Daily Kos read it thus yesterday afternoon, December 16:

Whether Bush’s secret order to eavesdrop on Americans constitutes an impeachable offense is debatable. Whether the New York Times has betrayed the American people is not.
. . . .
If we are a nation destined to have a government-controlled media, then for fuck’s sake, have Frist lead the charge to repeal the First Amendment and let’s get it over with. But if we are to have that independent press protected by our Constitution and owed to the American people, then the New York Times must apologize. Not only to its readers, but to all of America for being complicit in this moral crime.

No, folks, we couldn’t make this up, even as an exercise in journalism school.

[“Imperial” image from Social Design Notes]

Pinter reminds us that political truth still requires a poet

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Sir Harold

Nobel laureate Harold Pinter addressed the Swedish Academy yesterday. He began with a beautiful description of his own creative process, but very soon stepped up to the broader political pulpit which the prize so generously provides its honorees.
From the brief account in the NYTimes:

Dressed in black, bristling with controlled fury, Mr. Pinter began by explaining the almost unconscious process he uses to write his plays. They start with an image, a word, a phrase, he said; the characters soon become “people with will and an individual sensibility of their own, made out of component parts you are unable to change, manipulate or distort.”
“So language in art remains a highly ambiguous transaction,” he continued, “a quicksand, a trampoline, a frozen pool which might give way under you, the author, at any time.”
But while drama represents “the search for truth,” Mr. Pinter said, politics works against truth, surrounding citizens with “a vast tapestry of lies” spun by politicians eager to cling to power.
Mr. Pinter attacked American foreign policy since World War II, saying that while the crimes of the Soviet Union had been well documented, those of the United States had not. “I put to you that the United States is without doubt the greatest show on the road,” he said. “Brutal, indifferent, scornful and ruthless it may be, but it is also very clever. As a salesman it is out on its own and its most saleable commodity is self-love.”

Earlier in his address [see the Guardian for the entire text, and it’s definitely worth a read] Pinter reminded the world that American narcissism has been exercised at enormous cost, and that the world continues to pay for it today.

The United States supported and in many cases engendered every right wing military dictatorship in the world after the end of the Second World War.

And yet we persist in the myth that we are just a peace-loving, democratic folk continually abused by a world to which we generously offer our highest ideals and material support.

SIDEBAR: Barry and I will be seeing Pinter’s first and most recent plays in a double bill at the Atlantic Theater next Tuesday. I could hardly wait for the day even before the artist’s appearance on the screens in Stockholm; now I can’t help thinking of the opportunity as a small event of world significance.

[image from CamdenNewJournal]

progressives are wrong if they’re thinking Hillary Clinton

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Steve Greenfield, upon his release from arrest during the 2004 Republican National Convention

It’s time more people realized who she really is, and rejected the impressive, carefully-managed hype which disguises the reality. You don’t even have to consider yourself a progressive to realize that in 2005, of all the nations of the Western world, only in Bush’s America could this politician be represented as anything but a right-wing radical.
Clinton now has a Democratic primary challenger, Steve Greenfield. Maybe now we’ll see some light shown on this Democratic/democratic travesty, although the character of our debased media doesn’t offer me much hope.
What’s wrong with Clinton? Barry explains it in a nutshell:

I don’t know why so many liberals, including homos, think she’s great. She says she likes the Defense of Marriage Act, she doesn’t think public health insurance should cover abortion (Viagra seems to be OK), and she voted for both the PATRIOT Act and the Iraq War.

I really have to add that she thinks the 60-foot Israeli Apartheid Wall is just super.

[image from Greenfield for Senate]

Rumsfeld travels to Australia like a beleaguered emperor

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Hyatt Regency is now Hyatt Imperial

We learned from Paul Kidd this morning that the trappings and fears which go with our imperial presidency have now been extended to the president’s cabinet, specifically to our bloody secretary of war. In order to feel comfortable while staying in Adelaide during talks with members of the Australian government [an ally], Donald Rumsfeld apparently needs an entire 25-story hotel for himself and his immediate staff. Kidd, who is attending the 2005 NAPWA Conference and staying in a hotel across the road, reports that Rumsfeld’s Hyatt Regency is surrounded by concrete barriers, wire mesh and barbed wire.
The meetings were scheduled to discuss the direction of the continued involvement of Prime Minister John Howard’s government in America’s unending wars.
The original site of the talks was to have been Sydney, and the change to Adelaide was made because of security concerns, raised by both governments following recent passionate but peaceful protest activity in the subcontinent’s largest city. The Australian government has exercised its brand-new draconian “anti-terrorist” laws and will ban activists and protestors from the venue in Adelaide.

[image from buggery.org]