we’ve destroyed it, and we have no excuses

Can you sucker yourself? Maybe, if you’re an incurable optimist. For a few days I actually had convinced myself that this country would redeem itself, and yesterday evening I was bursting with such confidence that I posted this almost giddy secular Te Deum. I’m now cured, almost certainly for good (or evil).
NEWS FLASH: Kerry has just conceded* (Didn’t he repeatedly say something about making sure all the votes are counted this time?)
Right now I’ll only add a few words to the piles accumulating everywhere in reaction to yesterday’s debacle.
Americans have destroyed their own country out of ignorance, superstition, bigotry and fear.
And we have absolutely no excuse. Unlike other nations which have resorted to autocracy, fascism, dictatorship (by party, cabal or leader) our majority decision to endorse this regime was done with eyes wide open, without threat of invasion, not prostrate in defeat, and even absent economic depression or civil war. In fact the U.S. stood on top of the world, the most admired, the richest and most powerful state of all time, and that’s when we blew it, big time:
For four years the gang we have now installed legitimately (although by only a narrow majority), in full view of the rest of the world, has shown that it really believes in our balloting system of “winner-take-all.” Since the beginning of 2000 the Republicans have operated as if there were no interests other than their own; Never before in American history have the welfare or the concerns of the “losers” been so totally eliminated from the agenda of the party in power, and it’s now going to get worse.
From today we will be living in a nation whose Republican executive will have no restraints, whose Congressional Republican majorities will soon be larger and therefore more alarming than ever and whose courts, above all the Supreme Court, will be in the posession of a radical Republican Party for decades, regardless of the longevity of its dominance elsewhere.
And it gets still worse. The more alarming consequence of this election will be the real evil its winners do here and abroad, and attract, here and abroad. But the most depressing thought of all is that things will absolutely have to get much worst before they could get better, and there’s no guarantee of that.
Although the blue sky I included in yesterday’s post is still there (I cannot strike a line through it, like I did everything I wrote), and it is still above New York this afternoon, the heavens never did care what was happening down here. We’re on our own.
Listening to: Gustav Mahler, Adagietto (Sehr Langsam), Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minor (Haitink, Berlin Philharmonic)

*They used us, the Republicans did, to swing their cultists to the polls. So Bush’s victory is ultimately my fault and the fault of every other faggot for choosing our “lifestyle,” even if only some of us were bent on shredding into pieces the other 50 percent of the precious marriages they hadn’t already destroyed themselves.

Bush is history

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The skys are blue again, all over the world.
But the real work is only beginning.
It’s not going to be easy rebuilding a nation and removing the curse which has rested so heavily on the planet [the cultists will remain to plague our wounded polity, and a hundred thousand lives have been wiped out in Iraq alone], but tonight Barry and I will be celebrating a new world with champagne. It will be French, of course, by definiton – and by choice.

Listening to: Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 2 in C minor “Resurrection” (Klemperer, Philharmonia, Schwarzkopf, Hilde Rössel-Majdan)

[image taken on Sunday afternoon outside our windows, about the time I was first convinced that Bush would not survive this referendum, at least without overturning it]

“undecided” about the “anyone”

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Thomas Nast cartoon, featuring Boss Tweed ( referencing the 1876 disputed election)


The caption:
Boss. “You have the liberty of Voting for any one you please; but we have
the Liberty of Counting in any one we please.”
“Do your Duty as Citizens, and leave the rest to take its course.” – New York Times.

My overwhelmed friends in Washington, Wisconsin, Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania and elsewhere will find it difficult to believe, but I’ve barely seen a single political campaign ad, TV or print, all year long. (I’m not complaining, of course, especially since no real information is ever conveyed by this stuff.)
Yeah, so I don’t even watch TV (except Jon Stewart and SNL) and somehow I’ve always been able to turn a blind eye to print advertising of any kind (except for those which include particularly sexy men). Actually however my relative isolation from the campaign (it’s always war metaphors in America) has more to do with the perverse wonders of the Electoral College and the fact that everyone long ago agreed that New York belongs to the Democrats.
So where do I leave my teeny tiny vote for president tomorrow? Not for the Republican candidate of course, but I’m also not going to check the Democratic column. As I’ve said often before, both clubs are Rightwing parties and while only one of the two standard-bearers has a mind, he’s used it to argue, among other things, that the Iraq war must be expanded, that Americans can’t have single-payer universal health care, that he might nominate anti-choice candidates for federal courts, that the WTO is a good thing, that lesbians and gays should not be permitted to marry and that we need the Patriot Act.
But do I have an alternative? Like most of the United States, New York makes it very difficult for parties or candidates to get onto the ballot, the result being this abysmal selection (taken directly from the New York State Board of Elections site).

[REP] REPUBLICAN: George W. Bush
[DEM] DEMOCRATIC: John F. Kerry
[IND] INDEPENDENCE: Ralph Nader
[CON] CONSERVATIVE: George W. Bush
[WOR] WORKING FAMILIES: John F. Kerry
[PJP] PEACE AND JUSTICE: Ralph Nader
[SWP] SOCIALIST WORKERS: Roger Calero
[LBT] LIBERTARIAN: Michael Badnarik

New Yorkers can choose among only five people (all men). There are probably twice as many kinds of premium brands of butter available at each of the two food stores a block away from where I’ll be voting tomorrow!
The Democrats and the Republicans are clearly part of the problem and are both responsible for our current crisis, the Conservatives think the Republicans are too Lefty and the Libertarians would eliminate government from all regulation and welfare responsibilities.
I don’t know whether to admire or ridicule the fact that the only socialist party on the ballot has advanced a candidate who, regardless of his merits, could not Constitutionally become President of the U.S. and who in fact is not even a U.S. citizen. I do think this tells us a lot about support in the U.S. for the kind of social contract other industrial societies take for granted, even the parties on the Right.
Aside from his own heroic history of social contributions which have benefitted the entire world, Ralph Nader once again represents an almost perfect platform, and I will not condemn his campaign for accepting funds from sources to whom he could never be beholden. The money is well-spent. Nader is one of the few true democrats in American politics.
There is still the possibility of pulling the lever for Kerry on the Working Families line, but while that excellent party is worthy of the attention and support of any progressive, that is still a vote for a seriously flawed candidate. Besides, it’s totally unnecessary to keep every one of New York Electoral votes away from Bush.
Whoa, wait a minute. Where are the Greens? What does it say about our fake democracy that so important a party (okay, make that any party) is not permitted on the ballot? But I think we are still allowed a write-in candidate, so in very good conscience we could make it David Cobb, the Green Party candidate for President.
But back to the discussion of the least of many available evils, or at least a resolution of the current dilemma. Even now I can’t say for sure if I’m going to vote for Nader on the Independent Party line, Kerry on the Working families Party line or Cobb as a write-in. Wow! I guess this means that technically I could be labelled as one of those reviled “Undecideds,” even if my indecision does not relate to anything having to do with Bush or the Republicans. At least I don’t have to agonize about deciding between someone who has already demonstrated he’s a bungling idiot and someone without Bush’s extraordinary record.
Anyone but Bush? I don’t think so.
The only point I wanted to make with this post is the fact that in New York and a large number of other states voters with consciences and minds should be able to see that “anyone but Bush” could still mean that there is a choice, even on Election day itself. We don’t have to feel totally powerless when we walk into a polling place. The anti-democratic system we have to work with allows at least some of us to balk at ratifying a slate or a platform not established democraticaly.
Many of us do have some choice tomorrow, and our numbers will be recorded. We have to think ahead – now.

[image from HarpWeek]

fascism, but it’s all-American

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file photograph

Fascism, it’s so US. Are there still any doubters out there?
The Bush campaign is now asking followers to swear allegiance to Bush, right hands extended. The pledge:

“I care about freedom and liberty. I care about my family. I care about my country. Because I care, I promise to work hard to re-elect, re-elect George W. Bush as president of the United States.”

The principle established, the words can easily be rearranged in the future as needed.

[image from Chemtrails]

election night gatherings

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Sooo . . . What do you wear to a civil war anyway?”
A week ago I wrote that I would probably post a list of progressive spaces which are encouraging visitors to hang out next Tuesday evening, on the [first?] day of our federal election agony.
I ended up contributing to a list which Barry assembled and has now posted on his own site. We haven’t yet decided what we’re going to do that night ourselves. The only thing I’ve done so far in the way of preparation is to get half way through a good apartment cleaning, the remainder to be completed tomorrow. I just knew I wouldn’t feel like doing anything once the street fighting began.
Having also done tons of laundry this week, I’m now free to think about the balloon in the last box of the latest “get your war on.”

[image from “get your war on”]

American Fine Arts must not die

American Fine Arts [no website] opened a smashing new show, “Election,” last night, but the legendary gallery founded by Colin de Land (and currently located in the last home of the equally fabulous gallery created by Pat Hearn) will close when this show is taken down November 18.
This is a very big loss, but I can’t imagine a gallery scene without Daniel McDonald around and I don’t expect we’re going to lose sight of him.
Apart from that, Mrs. Lincoln really enjoyed the show in the space Daniel has been managing full-time at least since Colin’s tragic death last year (just three years after we had grieved for his wife, Pat) is fully worthy of its history. She adds that it’s a must-see, and preferably before the momentous [civil?] war-time election going down just eleven days hence.
The show was organized by James Meyer. There’s no gallery checklist yet, so the images I can show below have only a skeletal description.

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Hans Haacke Star Gazing

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Carl Andre and Melissa Kretschmer Welcome to Bushworld detail

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Claire Pentecost Molecular Invasion detail of installation

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John Waters Have Sex in a Voting Booth

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Paul Chan Baghdad in No Particular Order still from video

Democracy is Fun?

This evening we stopped in at the opening reception for White Box‘s new group show, “Democracy is Fun?,” the latest in a series of intense installations they’ve been mounting as a response to our republic’s desperate cries for help. We stayed longer than we had originally intended, and here are some of the reasons why. I should point out that, as is usual on these pages, the images which appear in the post are those the camera seemed to like. They are definitely not the only interesting works in the show, which was curated by Michele Thursz and Defne Ayas.
The gallery will be open election night with screenings and performances, and I’m sure there will be cable for the actual returns. Many of us will be more comfortable with the crowd which is going to be drawn to 26th Street than we would almost anywhere else. [As we get closer to November 2, I may post a list of the spaces which will be welcoming people who would not really be comfortable in either candidate’s headquarters.]

This work near the entrance went straight to the core of America’s funny democracy:
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Hug and Magnan Escape (2004) duraflex printed mounted on aluminum, installation view

These political footballs were the kinetic sculptures we found rolling underfoot throughout the gallery space; they would occasionally meet a smartly placed toe which launched the scary Bush heads across the floor:
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Kendell Geers Kicking Against the Pricks (2004) 11 political latex masks, footballs, detail of installation view

Michael Anderson had eight collages made up of reconstructed “posters” along the west wall:
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Michael Anderson Empire Strikes Back (2004) street posters from NYC 32″ x 24″ detail

Hug and Magnan again – just because it says it so well and looks so good doing it:
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Hug and Magnan God Bless America flashe on found object, installation view

M26: justice has a conniption fit

Innocent until proven guilty? Not anymore. One of the most basic principals of our law has been trashed regularly and systematically by our courts since September 11th. While what is happening to four peace activists here in New York at this moment may not be the most egregious examples of a justice system turned upside down and striking out at people all around the world, it’s no small thing for the victims themselves and for the broad and fundamental evil of the judicial precedent it establishes.
Sixteen people were arrested in Manhatan on March 26, 2003, for (intentionally) tying up rush hour Midtown traffic in a protest against the murder of American peace activist Rachel Corrie by an Israeli soldier in the Gaza Strip, as well as the U.S. attack on Iraq. They were all convicted on March 22 this year on the outrageous, Orwellian charge, “obstructing governmental administration.”
Twelve of the codefendents have been sentenced to community service and fines. Four have not been sentenced yet, because the Manhattan District Attorney had a judge unseal their older records. The D.A. then cited their previous demonstration arrests, most of which resulted in all charges being dismissed, as a reason for the judge to sentence them to an (unspecified) jail term (under the law the judge can sentence each of the four to anything from 0 to 365 days in jail). The twelve codefendants who were earlier given sentences far less severe did not have their records unsealed.
The four remaining now face posssible jail time for alleged acts in the past which were never proven in a court of law.
Every citizen, whether active in political demonstrations or just unfortunate to be arrested for any offense, however minor, and including misdemeaners, must be made to understand that there is no longer any assumption of innocence in the American courts. If you have appeared before a judge at any time in the past, not been tried but rather had your case dismissed and its record “sealed,” the fact that you had been in that court may be used against you years later in order to determine your sentencing for a conviction totally unrelated to the previous offense.
The D.A. and the judge merely have to be really mad at you, and they don’t have to tell anyone why.
The corollary to this incredible development has to be that from now on no one will be able to afford to accept a “dismissal” of his or her offences, regardless of the practical attractions of such a resolution, but must instead pursue every charge all the way through the courts. Of course neither the individual nor the judiciary is actually going to be able to live with that burden; something will have to give – or explode.
Like so much else that falls under the rubric, “everything has changed since 9/11,” the politicization of our courts is swiftly contributing to the destruction of the society we think we are defending.
The four M26 defendents (the name refers to March 26, the date of the action for which they were arrested) who still await their fate have already gone through two appeals, and both have been rejected. The outcome of a third appeal will not be known prior to November 18, the scheduled date of their sentencing.
The range of possible outcomes runs from the best-case scenario – fines and community service, despite their “records” of dismissed charges – to the worst case scenario – taken directly from the courtroom to Rikers Island Penitentiary.
They’ve put out an appeal for people to be with them in the courtroom on the morning of the sentencing, since it’s vitally important to show the judge that they have community support. And of course some of the media will be there.
The people who await the disposition of their cases have one more request to make of their supporters, and it’s characteristically thoughtful and generous. This is Steve Quester:

AP4 will see many cases that day, not just ours. Please come at 9 am so you can get a seat in the courtroom before it fills up. And please keep in mind that there will be many defendants and their families and friends present. Unlike the four of us, few if any of those defendants will be White. Unlike the four of us, none of those defendants will benefit from an outpouring of community support. If you are able to stay for some of the cases that follow ours, please do. I cringe at the thought of an exodus of hundreds of mostly White people from the courtroom as soon as we’re sentenced.

THE LOGISTICS: Go to 100 Centre Street, which you can locate here. They will be on the 4th floor, in Arraignment Part (AP) 4. The nearest subways are the J, M, N, Q, R, W, Z, and 6 trains to Canal Street. You can also take the 4 or 5 to Brooklyn Bridge-City Hall, or the B or D to Grand Street. The closest stop on the A, C, and E trains is Canal Street; Franklin Street on the 1 train, and Chambers Street on the 2 or 3.
Check www.m26.org in the days leading up to the sentencing, to learn about any (unlikely) possibility of a further delay in sentencing.

the House and Peter Hort

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Benjamin Henry Latrobe Design Proposed for the Hall of Representatives, U.S., Section from North to South (1815) ink and watercolor on paper

For weeks now Barry and I have both been dismayed by the strange candidacy which Peter Hort has mounted for Representative of our local Congressional district.
I believe what is happening only shows that even supposedly sophisticated New Yorkers are naive when it comes to politics, or that money can persuade otherwise good people to act quite badly. Both explanations are pretty disturbing, but each is still better than some of the other possibilities.
For his reading of the subject, including both background and foreground, see Barry’s post of last night which links to his previous entries, to Hort’s own site and a number of other relevant sources.

[image of the old House chamber from Library of Congress]

“Arna’s Children”

The powerful documentary, “Arna’s Children,” is now at the Quad Cinema here in Manhattan. I’d be much more excited if it were playing in every town in the U.S., but unfortunately it’s not going to happen. If you want to know why, see what I wrote last May.

I just noticed that of the four films currently being shown at the Quad, Barry and I have actually seen three. This is pretty amazing, since the two of us rarely get around to slipping into a movie theatre in the crush of so many seductive live (therefore more time-sensitive) performance offerings. Like “Arna’s Children,” the other two films would not be described as directed toward mainstream audiences (whatever that means), but I can recommend both “The Child I Never Was” and, most enthusiastically, Bruce LaBruce’s “Raspberry Reich.”
If these films have anything in common, it’s the ability of each to re-arrange minds which might have thought everything was already nicely in place.