Quantcast
Channel: TOM CLARK
Viewing all 1583 articles
Browse latest View live

Harvest

$
0
0

.
Gaza
 
Smoke billows following an Israeli military strike on Gaza City on August 8, 2014: photo by Mahmud Hams / AFP. 8 August 2014


Ripe are, dipped in fire, cooked
The fruits and proved upon the earth and an Order it is
That all must enter in, as snakes,
Prophetic, dreaming upon
The hills of heaven. And much
As on the bent shoulders
A load of logs
Must be retained. But evil are
The ways. For errantly
Like wild horses, run the constrained
Elements and the ancient
Orders of the earth. And always
Toward unboundedness goes out longing. Much however must
Be retained. And fidelity is required.
Forward however nor back will
We look. And allow ourselves to be rocked, like
A light boat at sea.

 
Friedrich Hölderlin: "Reif sind..." (Ripe are the fruits), Hymnal Draft for Mnemosyne (Third Version), 1803 or 1805/1806 [?], trans. TC


Palestinians report four deaths as Israel resumes airstrikes
 
Palestinians look on as rescue workers continue the search for bodies buried under the Al-Qassam mosque after an overnight Israeli air strike in Nuseira: photo by Oliver Weiken / EPA 9 August 2014

Israel-Gaza conflict

Palestinians remove a body from under the rubble of Qassam Mosque in Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza
: photo by Hatem Moussa / AP, 9 August 2014

Israel-Gaza conflict

Palestinians watch as rescuers work to retrieve bodies from the rubble of the Qassam mosque after an overnight Israeli airstrike in Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza
: photo by Oliver Weiken / EPA, 9 August 2014.

Palestinians gather on the rubble of al-Qassam mosque in Nuseirat refugee camp, central Gaza Strip, after it was hit by an Israeli airstrike, Saturday, Aug. 9, 2014. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

Palestinians gather on the rubble of al-Qassam mosque in Nuseirat refugee camp, central Gaza Strip, after it was hit by an Israeli airstrike, Saturday, August 9, 2014
: photo by Hatem Moussa / AP, 8 August 2014


Desecration (also called desacralization or desanctification) is the act of depriving something of its sacred character, or the disrespectful, contemptuous, or destructive treatment of that which is held to be sacred or holy by a group or individual.




Residents of Nusairat in the Gaza Strip watch from every perch as bodies are excavated from the rubble of the al-Kassam mosque hit by an Israeli airstrike on Saturday: photo by Max Becherer / Polaris Images for The Washington Post, 9 August 2014

Gaza mosques fall to Israeli airstrikes, without any groundswell of outrage: Sudarsan Raghavan and William Booth, Washington Post, 9 August 2014
 
NUSEIRAT CAMP, Gaza Strip — A yellow bulldozer clawed through the rubble of Al Qassam mosque on Saturday, searching for the last body. The crowd looked on without emotion, as it had throughout a day during which two other corpses were unearthed. Someone had planted a green Hamas flag atop the debris, at once a sign of mourning and defiance.
 
“The Israelis have the idea that Hamas owned the mosque, and they do suspicious activities inside,” Ahmed Jabbar, 42, said matter-of-factly, standing near the debris. 

"They think there are tunnels inside. It’s all lies. This is Allah’s house. Anyone can go inside it.”

Once viewed as crossing a red line in conflicts pitting Jews or Christians against Muslims, the mosque has become a military target. Israel’s military says mosques are being used to store weapons, cover tunnels and shelter fighters and serve as command control centers and launch sites for rockets. Palestinians say that when Israel strikes a mosque, it mostly kills civilians and destroys their religious sanctuary.
 
In the month-long war, Israeli airstrikes have struck more religious targets than in Israel’s two previous offensives against Hamas in 2009 and 2012, Palestinians say. According to the Palestinian Liberation Organization, 63 mosques have been destroyed and 150 have been partially damaged. Ten Muslim cemeteries were also targeted.
 
Surprisingly, there has been little outrage from the Palestinian street or from the broader Muslim world. Violent upheavals across the Middle East, political analysts say, have acclimated Muslims to seeing their houses of worship under siege. Arabic news channels and Facebook and other social media have been filled with scenes of mosques pocked with bullets and damaged by attacks in recent conflicts and revolutions in Egypt, Syria and Libya. The shock value is over, say analysts.

*

There have been clear-cut cases where Israel has killed civilians when striking a mosque.

Saturday’s attack on Al Qassam Mosque killed a local Hamas leader who was praying inside during pre-dawn prayers, according to Palestinian news reports. But the identities of the other two who died were unknown. Residents said they all used the mosque to pray, not only Hamas members.
 
As the bulldozer picked up a tangle of concrete and steel, some residents said they were outraged by Israel’s attacks on mosques. But they were too afraid to hold protest rallies. 

The war, they said, has forced them to stay inside their homes or seek refuge in U.N. schools or other areas. They also worried that Israel would target any large gathering of Palestinians.

“We feel so insecure,” Jabbar said. “Do you think we can go out and protest? We’re afraid we’ll be hit by the Israeli jets.”

But the mosque attacks, others said, will have consequences for the future.

“This makes matters worse,” said Bajes Ehsawi, 64, a resident, as he watched the bulldozer. “The only relationship between Palestinians and Israelis will be jihad.”




A Palestinian man embraces the body of a man who was killed when Israel bombed Al-Qassam mosque in the central Gaxan town of Nuseirat on August 9, 2014: photo by Roberto Schmidt / AFP, 9 August 2014


Summary of damage
: via Al Jazeerah: Cross-Cultural Understanding, 9 August 2014


With today's numbers of deaths and injuries as a result of Israeli terrorist attacks on the Palestinian people in Gaza Strip, the death toll has reached 1901, in addition to 9,567 injuries, more than one-third of them crippling for life.

The Palestinian Ministry of Health has stated that a total of 1901, including 432 children, 243 women and 79 elderly Palestinians have been killed. We are still awaiting confirmation of some names.

A total of 9567 Palestinians, including 2878 children, 1854 women, and 374 elderly, have been injured.

***
Five Palestinians Killed In Central Gaza

Saturday August 09, 2014 13:38 by Saed Bannoura -- IMEMC (International Middle East Media Center) and Agencies

The Palestinian Ministry Of Health stated that five Palestinians were killed, and several others injured, some seriously, after the Israeli occupation terrorist army bombarded a mosque in Nussayrat area, and the al-Maghazi refugee camp, in Central Gaza.

The Ministry said resident Moath Azzam Abu Zaid, 37, died under the rubble of the al-Qassam Mosque in Nussayrat.

His remains and a number of wounded Palestinians have been moved to the al-Aqsa Hospital.

Rescue teams continued the search under rubble, and located the remains of two Palestinians, identified as Nidal Mohammad Badran, 34, and Tareq Ziad Jadallah, 25.

 

Israel drones and war jets are still flying over different parts of the Gaza Strip.

The Ministry of Health in Gaza stated on Saturday at dawn, the 1899 Palestinians have been killed, and Israeli missiles and shells have injured more than 9837 since July 8.

Gaza death toll tops 1900, three dead bodies pulled out of mosque rubble

[ 09/08/2014 - 10:35 AM ]

GAZA, (PIC) -- 

At least three dead bodies have been recovered by the Gaza rescue crews from beneath the debris of Izzuddin Al-Qassam Mosque in the Nussayrat refugee camp, in central Gaza, on Saturday while search for other dead bodies continued.

A PIC correspondent said civil defense crews rushed to the bombed are to recover the casualties buried under Izzuddin Al-Qassam Mosque, razed to the ground by a barrage of rocket fire unleashed by the Israeli fighter jets at dawn Saturday.

The recovered bodies were identified as those of Mu'adh Zayed, Tareq Jad Allah, and Nidhal Badran.

Al-Qassam Mosque was the largest in the Nusayrat refugee camp and built over an overall area amounting to 1000 square meters. An Israeli rocket attack reduced the four-floored mosque to rubble.

The incident occurred shortly after the 72-hour ceasefire, brokered by Egypt last Tuesday, expired.

The death toll has reached more than 1,900, while the number of wounded civilians has gone up to about 9,900, mostly children, women and elderly people. Hundreds of civilian homes, mosques, factories and public headquarters were completely destroyed in Israeli attacks.

60 Palestinian mosques destroyed by Israel during Gaza offensive

[ 09/08/2014 - 08:08 AM ]

GAZA, (PIC) --


At least 60 mosques were reduced to rubble while some 150 others sustained partial damages in the ongoing Israeli offensive that has been rocking the blockaded Gaza Strip for more than 30 days, the Palestinian Ministry of Awqaf and religious affairs said.

The Awqaf Ministry stated on Friday that the Israeli occupation destroyed at least 60 mosques in waves of atrocious strikes targeting Gaza since July 7.

According to the ministry, random Israeli rocket fire ruined 20 mosques in Central Gaza, 17 in Khan Younis, 11 north of the Strip, 10 in the Central Province, and two more mosques in Rafah, to the south of Gaza.

Israeli attacks culminated in the shelling of 11 cemeteries, three charity committees, and one religious school for boys.
 
At least 1894 Palestinian civilians were killed in the massive Israeli aggression, while 9817 others suffered injuries.



TODAY: taking out the martyrs from under the rubble of AlQassam mosque in Gaza...: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 9 August 2014



TODAY: taking out the martyrs from under the rubble of AlQassam mosque in Gaza...: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 9 August 2014




TODAY: taking out the martyrs from under the rubble of AlQassam mosque in Gaza...: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 9 August 2014



TODAY: taking out the martyrs from under the rubble of AlQassam mosque in Gaza...: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 9 August 2014

Russell Edson: The Pilot

$
0
0

.

Pilot, Dutch East Indies. Architect: J.F.L. Blankenberg: photographer unknown, n.d. (NAI Collection / Het Nieuwe Instituut)


Up in a dirty window in a dark room is a star which an old man can see. He looks at it. He can see it. It is the star of the room; an electrical freckle that has fallen out of his head and gotten stuck in the dirt on the window.

He thinks he can steer by that star. He thinks he can use the back of a chair as a ship's wheel to pilot his room through the night.

He says to himself, brave Captain, are you afraid?

Yes, I am afraid; I am not so brave.

Be brave, my Captain.

And all night the old man steers his room through the dark . . .


RussellEdson (1935 - 29 April 2014): The Pilot, from The Intuitive Journey and Other Works, 1976



Blücher sinking in the Drøbak Sound. The German heavy cruiser Blücher listing heavily to port in the Drøbak Sound being hit by cannon fire and torpedoes from the Norwegian coastal fortress Oscarsborg: photographer unknown, April 1940 (National Archives of Norway)


The German heavy cruiser Blücher listing heavily to port in the Drøbak Sound after being hit by cannon fire and torpedoes from the Norwegian coastal fortress Oscarsborg: photographer unknown, April 1940 (National Archives of Norway)


Blücher sinking in the Drøbak Sound: photographer unknown, April 1940 (National Archives of Norway)


  During the forced evacuation of Finnmark, Byåsen school is used to house evacuees and as a temporary replacement hospital: photo by Ukjent, c. August 1944 (Municipal Archives of Trondheim)


 During the forced evacuation of Finnmark, Byåsen school is used to house evacuees and as a temporary replacement hospital: photo by Ukjent, c. August 1944 (Municipal Archives of Trondheim)

A very strong energy drink

$
0
0

.


Gaza in crisis
: photo via Chris Gunness / UNRWA on twitter, 12 August 2014


For Israeli arms makers, Gaza war is a cash cow: Haaretz, 11 August 2014
 
Far from the fighting in the Gaza Strip and the rocket attacks that have pummeled Israel from south to the Sharon, some 300 employees of Israel Military Industries in Nazareth haven’t left their assembly lines for a minute in the past four weeks. They have been working in shifts, 24 hours a day, to ensure a regular supply of 5.56 mm bullets to Israel Defense Forces soldiers. Others have been hard at work turning out highly sophisticated Kalanit and Hatzav tank shells for the Artillery Corps. The shells, which are fired above the heads of militants armed with anti-tank weapons, exploding in midair above them and releasing shrapnel, were both used on a massive scale for the first time in Operation Protective Edge.



A shell lies on the ground at the heavily damaged Sobhi Abu Karsh school in Gaza City's al-Shejaea neighborhood on August 5, 2014
: photo by Mohammed Abed / AFP, 5 August 2014
 

For some years now the state-owned IMI has had an image problem, in part due to it[s] enormous debts and management’s cozy ties with the union locals and the political establishment. Next to the two other big government-owned defense companies, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems and Israel Aerospace Industries, until recently IMI looked decided[ly] dowdy, low-tech and crony-ridden. Three months ago the state signed a recovery accord with IMI, which offered a generous severance package of 1.3 million shekels ($370,000) to any employee who took voluntary early retirement. Early next year the government plans to hold a tender to privatize the company, and by early 2016 IMI should be in private hands. 




A Palestinian man inspects the damage of his flat in the destroyed Nada Towers residential neighborhood in the town of Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Monday, August 11, 2014, after a new temporary truce took hold: photo by Khalil Hamra / AP, 11 August 2014


Image aside, for several years IMI has very quietly been developing more sophisticated products than bullets, rifles or hand grenades. For example, its new, super-smart MPR-500 multipurpose rigid bomb, which is designed to penetrate reinforced concrete structures and other difficult targets, was first used operationally in Protective Edge. Today, back orders for the bomb total 5.6 billion shekels.

IMI has built the foundations for a more successful business, and in a market where violence erupts every few years a new round of violence erupts, a dependable customer with the IDF and a classroom to test its equipment.

“IMI cooperates with the IDF and the defense establishment in adapting quick solutions for changing needs,” says UMI chairman Maj. Gen. (res.) Udi Adam. “The defense industry is in a perpetual learning mode together with the IDF and the Defense Ministry to examine the weapons systems that were introduced for initial operational use in Operation Protective Edge, as well as weapons systems that have been in operational use for a long time.” 



Embedded image permalink

This photo was taken from my home my home. Poisonous gas was being fired against civilians: photo via Dr Hasan Mustafa on twitter, 12 August 2014


“Battle-tested” is the best marketing slogan for defense industries the world over, so for Israeli military manufacturers Operation Protective Edge has yielded a major competitive edge.



A Palestinian man cleans up a room in his sister's house as bullet casings left by Israeli soldiers are found on the floor, in Rafah's district of Shawkah, on August 5, 2014: photo by Khalil Hamra / AP, 5 August 2014


“For the defense industries this campaign is like drinking a very strong energy drink -- it simply gives them tremendous forward momentum,” says Barbara Opall-Rome, Israel bureau chief for the U.S. magazine Defense News. “Combat is like the highest seal of approval when it comes to the international markets. What has proven itself in battle is much easier to sell. Immediately after the operation, and perhaps even during, all kinds of delegations arrive here from countries that appreciate Israel’s technological capabilities and are interested in testing the new products.” 


A Palestinian man walks past the remains of a mosque, which witnesses said was destroyed in an Israeli air strike before a 72-hour truce, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip August 11, 2014. (Reuters/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa)

A Palestinian man walks past the remains of a mosque, which witnesses said was destroyed in an Israeli air strike before a 72-hour truce, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip August 11, 2014: photo by Ibraheem Abu Mustafa / Reuters, 11 August 2014


That was also the opinion of veteran military correspondent Amir Rapaport, editor of Israel Defense, which covers the local defense industry. “From a business point of view, the operation was an outstanding thing for the defense industries,” he says. “There are two main reasons for that. First, the cloud of budget cuts and project cancellations has been lifted. I believe that after the operation, Israel’s defense budget will be increased and projects that were frozen will be revived. Second, during the weeks of the war, new products were introduced for the army’s use. The war is an opportunity to cut red tape. Weapons systems that have long been under development suddenly became operational during the course of the fighting."

For Israeli arms makers, Gaza war is a cash cow: Shuki Sadeh, Haaretz, 11 August 2014



A drawing on the wall in the house of the Abu Louli family, who say it was left by Israeli soldiers, in Rafah's district of Shawkah in the southern Gaza Strip, on August 5, 2014: photo by Khalil Hamra / AP, 5 August 2014


A Palestinian woman stands in the rubble of her destroyed home in Gaza City's Shijaiyah neighborhood, Monday, Aug. 11, 2014. An Egyptian-brokered cease-fire halting the Gaza war held into Monday morning, allowing Palestinians to leave homes and shelters as negotiators agreed to resume talks in Cairo: photo by Hatem Moussa / AP, 11 August 2014

Gaza homes 'uninhabitable' as tens of thousands come back to rubble
United Nations says the level of destruction is 'unprecedented' as 30,000 people in Beit Hanoun alone must be rehoused
Jason Burke in Beit Lahia, The Guardian, 11 August 2014

Tens of thousands of people across Gaza have returned to their homes as a tenuous ceasefire held and hopes rose of an end to the month-long conflict between Israel and Hamas.

Local officials and humanitarian workers began to inspect the damage the war had caused in the overcrowded enclave, with initial assessments indicating earlier estimates may have been optimistic.

 Gaza City, which has a population of half a million, between 20 and 25% of the housing stock has been damaged, said Nihad al-Mughni, head of the engineering department.
Mohammed al-Kafarna, the mayor of Beit Hanoun, a northern town which saw fierce fighting and heavy bombardment, said 70% of homes were "uninhabitable".

"Basically the town is unliveable. There is no power, water or communications. There are not the basics for life," he said.


Embedded image permalink

"Our life has been killed": Al Batsh family returns to rubble of home during ceasefire. 18 died here: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 12 August 2014


In Shawkat, a neighbourhood of Rafah city in the south which saw heavy fighting after an earlier ceasefire collapsed within hours, 300 out of 2000 houses had been destroyed, along with the town hall.

"You can't imagine the destruction," said Adel Lubda, the chief council engineer.

Previous estimates of 65,000 rendered homeless in Gaza now look conservative. In Beit Hanoun alone, around 30,000 people will have to be rehoused. The town is just one of around a dozen communities lying in the three kilometre "free fire zone" declared by Israeli troops during the most intense period of fighting to have been devastated.
Gaza has a population of 1.8 million and already suffered from a chronic shortage of housing before this latest conflict, the third in six years between Hamas and Israel.
On Monday, the United Nations called the level of destruction "unprecedented."




During the ceasefire Palestinians try to dig up any remains of what was a home: photo via Layan Baker via twitter, 12 August 2014


Israeli airstrikes in Gaza continued until the ceasefire agreed late on Sunday evening by Hamas under heavy Egyptian pressure came into effect. Israeli military officials said they had attacked "terrorist targets". Around 20 people have been killed since the previous truce expired on Friday. More than 1,900 Palestinians have died, mostly civilians, in the war.
Militant factions allied to Hamas fired mid-range rockets and mortars into Israel over the weekend. More than 3,000 rockets have now been launched from Gaza in recent weeks, killing three in Israel. Sixty four Israeli soldiers were killed.

Humanitarian agencies say so far they have been restricted to "firefighting". Nadia Dibsy, of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said it had been impossible to properly assess the overall magnitude of the damage.

North of Beit Lahia on Monday, people picked through the ruins of a series of apartment blocks facing the border with Israel, which have been almost totally destroyed.

Ibrahim Jassa, 33, said he had been "completely ruined."

"I have nothing, except seven children. No job, no home, just the clothes we were wearing when we left," the unemployed labourer said.


Embedded image permalink

When I returned to my home after 3 weeks of evacuation, I found this: photo via Dr Hasan Mustafa on twitter, 12 August 2014


Sabr al-Gharboui said three apartments she had shared with her sons had all been reduced to rubble. "I have no idea what we will do. We just hope the ceasefire will hold. But what happens next? That's what worried us," the 53-year-old said.

Though local electricity engineers were hopeful of restoring power supply to its pre-war levels of six to 10 hours a day to some areas, it may take years to recommission Gaza's only power station, which was destroyed on 29 July. Pumping stations, power transmission networks and water pipes have all been badly damaged. One major sewage outflow pipe, serving nearly half a million people, has been severed. Huge quantities of raw sewage are flowing into the sea or onto fields.

"Access to clean water has always been a challenge. Now it is a scarcity," said Dibsy of the ICRC.

More than 200,000 remain in UN-run shelters, afraid or unable to return home, with many more staying with relatives. Food prices have risen sharply since the start of the war as fields are inaccessible or full of unexploded ordnance and farms have been badly damaged.

But shops and markets across Gaza were busy on Monday, with restaurants opening for the first time for a month.

The lack of a definitive end to hostilities will mean crucial material needed for reconstruction cannot enter Gaza. The import of cement and other construction materials is a particularly contentious issue as Israel believes Hamas will use it to build cross-border tunnels which threaten its security. More than 30 such tunnels were destroyed during the conflict, Israel has said.

Health provision in Gaza has been particularly badly hit. Ten out of 26 hospitals, comprising 40% of total beds in Gaza, have been shut, officials said, and only a handful reopened.


Embedded image permalink

 Gaza hospitals in dire need of medical supplies: photo via PressTV on twitter, 12 August 2014


In Beit Hanoun, the 60-bed hospital was shut after being hit by shell fire. On Monday, staff swept glass away as they prepared to open a five-bed emergency ward. The hospital had dealt with 348 dead or injured before being closed and was now short of all basic medical supplies, said Dr Ayman Hamdian, the director.

Israel says such supplies can reach Gaza despite the blockade imposed since 2006 and tightened in 2007. Lifting this blockade is a key demand of Hamas.

The concession Hamas most want from Israel, officials from the group have told the Guardian, is the right to build a port and airport in Gaza -- facilities promised to the Palestinians under the Oslo peace deal but currently ruled out by Israel as a potential security threat.

Israel has demanded that Hamas disarm, which the Islamist organisation has said is "out of the question".

Scores of victims of this most recent conflict are still being treated in the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza. They include Yasmin al-Bakri, 11, and her sister Hanin, 9, who were seriously injured when their family tried to flee intense shelling of their neighbourhood in Shuja'iyeh. Five family members, including their mother and two sisters, were killed.

The older of the two girls will recover from 15% burns and a fractured arm, doctors said. Hanin, however, has head injuries, facial burns and may lose her hand.

Another woman, whose seven-year old niece is now paralysed from the neck down, said she welcomed the ceasefire.

"There has been enough killing," said Umm Ibrahim.



Embedded image permalink

UNRWA counselors in Gaza discovering psychological damage is more devastating than the physical and may outlive it: photo by UNRWA spokesman Chris Gunness on twitter, 8 August 2014


United Nations Relief Works Agency spokesman Chris Gunness tweets, 9 August 2014:

Staggering impact of Gaza blockade: in 2000 fewer than 80,000 people relied on UNRWA for food aid. Today it's over 830,000.
*
Gaza update: 27,396 displaced left UNRWA schools. Currently, 209,522 IDPs in 88 shelters. There is a massive homelessness crisis.
*
Gaza education on hold: even if hostilities stopped now and all displaced left UNRWA shelters the school year would not start on 24 August.
*
More evidence of damage/destruction of Gaza homes: 238,097 IDPs now in 90 UNRWA schools, an increase today of 16,543 as people return.
*
Repairing and rebuilding public infrastructure in Gaza; water, sewage and electricity is an urgent priority. Without it people cannot go home.
*
Gaza's catastrophic human displacement crisis is morphing into housing crisis of epic proportions with homes of 65,000 people destroyed.
*
We need to wake from the self-imposed delusion that you can contain Gaza with humanitarian assistance. It is an unsustainable delusion.
*
It is time for the world to recognize the blindingly obvious; that the Gaza conflict requires a political solution.
*
In Gaza we are beyond the realm of humanitarian action alone. All those responsible for the carnage and destruction must engage.
*
Huge swathes of Gaza have been levelled. We cannot rebuild it with our hands tied behind our backs. The blockade must end.
*
The last 7 years have shown that Gaza reconstruction under blockade is unsustainable. 

via Chris Gunness / UNRWA on twitter, 9 August 2014


Embedded image permalink

373 thousand children in Gaza now require urgent counseling. Symptoms include bed wetting, clinging to parents and nightmares: photo via UNRWA USA on twitter, 12 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Amr and Abood were helping us to visit the UN schools. Now they become displaced!: photo via CemDM on twitter, 12 August 2014


A member of the Shabat family inspects the damage upon returning to the family house, destroyed by Israeli strikes in the town of Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip, on August 5, 2014: photo by Lefteris Pitarakis / AP, 5 August 2014


A Palestinian searches for salvageable items from the rubble of his home that was destroyed in Israeli strikes in Beit Lahiya on August 4, 2014: photo by Adel Hana / AP, 5 August 2014


Palestinians inspect the damage at Nada Towers, in a residential neighborhood in the town of Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, on August 5, 2014, the damaged minaret of the Al-Azba mosque in the background: photo by Lefteris Pitarakis / AP, 5 August 2014


The ruins of destroyed houses in the Shejaia neighborhood, east of Gaza City, on August 5, 2014: photo by Mohammed Salem / Reuters, 5 August 2014

 
Palestinians sit next to their destroyed house after returning to the Shejaia neighborhood, which witnesses said was heavily hit by Israeli shelling and air strikes during the Israeli offensive, in the east of Gaza City, on August 5, 2014: photo by Mohammed Salem / Reuters, 5 August 2014 


A donkey stands inside a destroyed shop in the northern Gaza Strip on August 5, 2014, as a 72-hour humanitarian truce went into effect: photo by Mahmud Hams /AFP, 5 August 20144
 

Backdropped by the damaged minaret of the Al-Azba mosque, a Palestinian smokes a cigarette as he sits on rubble of the Nada Towers, at a residential neighborhood in the town of Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, on August 5, 2014. Israel and Hamas began observing a 72-hour cease-fire on Tuesday that sets the stage for talks in Egypt on a broader deal on the Gaza Strip, including a sustainable truce and the rebuilding of the battered, blockaded coastal territory: photo by Lefteris Pitarakis / AP, 5 August 2014


During the ceasefire Palestinians try to dig up any remains of what was a home: photo via Layan Baker via twitter, 12 August 2014


During the ceasefire Palestinians try to dig up any remains of what was a home: photo via Layan Baker via twitter, 12 August 2014

Why Hillary

$
0
0

.



Hillary Clinton: photo via Ask Hillary on twitter, 21 July 2014


Why Hillary Became a Goddess on the Night of Her Acceptance Speech

Because her hair looked cool
Because some of the best alien minds are watching developments closely
Because she is the traditional Daisy poised fragile before the masculine mills
Of production, yet wearing out six black pants suits
To bring us to acculturation and consequence
Because the Nasdaq is plunging and there is a mandate for change
Sweeping through the gentle bacteria that make their home in her tireless campaign shoes
Because the worried market takes comfort in knowing what it must consume
Because choosing is not an issue except to the terrified cartoon eyeballs
In the take-out carton, wondering whose turn is first
Because some of the best alien minds consider "us" the shrill-voiced uncertainty factor
That threatens to bring the whole cosmic chorus to its whimpering knees
Because Utopia is the island in time that forgot itself as it lifted its utensil
At the altar of its great consuming goddess No Memory, with her sadclown smile strained
Because her lofty position at the social fulcrum which is the mercy seat
Takes a terrific toll on black pants suit bottoms
Because some of the best alien minds are surveying developments in numb disbelief
Because 65% of the wood lice aren't losing any sleep at all
Because retreat in the face of even greater problems,
While not a bad idea, won't solve anything
Because acceptance and consumption are just what the market needs
To shake it out of its trance-like belief in what it thinks alien minds are saying
Because acceptance means acculturation to the masculine mills
Because happiness is merely their invention anyway, because Dame Pleasure is wearied
Of Earth, has taken to the air, faded, fluttered down in a still, snow-
Like inwardness to spill, scatter and be raked up with all the sibyl's other fallen leaves
In this enchanted-recount self-enclosure, like a small-town autumn
Where the commoners lie down nightly with what they have made
Happen, amid the bedded reeds of the vigilant event horizon
Because in this collapse its truths are received
By their souls, because of what this means to the odd weightlessness they feel
Because they have no way to grace their laurels
Beyond filling up the best alien minds, intent upon those peerless screens,
With the black pants suits of our resident historian
Who's just keeping a chair among the blond clouds warm for them.

November 2000



File:Hillary Rodham Clinton.jpg

Hillary Rodham Clinton, U.S. Senator from New York: photo by U.S. Senate, 2000


Hillary Clinton kissing Suha Arafat
: photo by Reuters, 11 November 1999

On November 11, 1999, back when she was first lady, Hillary Clinton visited Gaza. She was graciously greeted by Yasser Arafat’s wife, Suha, who spiritedly launched into a blood-libel diatribe.

None of this, incidentally, could be laid at the door of Binyamin Netanyahu’s demonic disrepute. Israel’s then-prime minister was Ehud Barak, whose electoral campaign was enthusiastically aided and abetted by Hillary’s own hubby.

But contrary to conventional wisdom, it never really matters much who’s in power in Jerusalem. Israel is always the regional bogeyman. And so, back in the good old days of post-Oslo Labor rule, America’s first lady, self-satisfied and basking in ultra-liberal sanctimony, smiled contentedly as Suha railed in indignation: “Our people have been subjected to the daily and extensive use of poisonous gas by the Israeli forces, which has led to an increase in cancer cases among women and children."
 
No way could Hillary claim to have gotten the wrong end of the stick. She listened via simultaneous translation to Suha’s prepared script, accusing Israel –- in genuine medieval well-poisoning tradition -– of resorting to all manner of noxious concoctions to kill Arab women and tots (as distinct, presumably, from adult males).

Among its other sins, Hillary’s hostess charged, Israel deliberately contaminated with lethal toxins 80 percent of the water (not 79% or 81%) consumed by Palestinian females and infants.

Hillary listened to the calumny without a hint of displeasure. Indeed, she nodded approval from time to time, and when Suha concluded, Hillary embraced her warmly and planted affectionate kisses on her cheeks.

Thus, the uninitiated onlooker may be forgiven for assuming that Suha listed irrefutable grievances and that her claims won at least the tacit corroboration of her American guest. Significantly, even after the bizarre scene ended, Clinton never bothered to dispel that impression. This, however, should have come as no shocker to anyone familiar with her record...

 
Sarah Honig: Another tack: The poison in the well, Jerusalem Post, 16 December 2011

File:Hillaryandsuha.jpg

Hillary Clinton kissing Suha Arafat, for which she later received a lot of criticism ("...a November 1999 political mistake that she recovered from")
: photo by Reuters, 11 November 1999; image by Tragic Baboon, 8 February 2007

Hillary_w_suha

New York Post: "Shame on Hillary": photo via Boker tov, Boulder! 2 December 2008



 "For many of us, Hillary Clinton's applause and kiss for Suha Arafat after a hateful anti-Israel diatribe..." No doubt that Hillary as Secretary of State is the same Hillary except for the fact that she hasn't had a decent haircut for ages: photo and caption via Shiloh Musings, 15 July 2012

Hildebeest Rampant

The Hillary Doctrine: “Smart Power” or “Back to the Crusades”?: John Cassidy, The New Yorker, 11 August 2014

This past weekend, Tom Friedman, of the Times, sat down with President Obama, and Jeffrey Goldberg, of the Atlantic, posted online a long interview with Hillary Clinton. With the grim events in Iraq, Gaza, and Ukraine dominating the news, it’s fascinating to compare and contrast what the two former colleagues (and 2008 election rivals) had to say.


hillary_clinton_obama_107630827
 
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton: photo via Poltical Discussion, 1 May 2014
 
Goldberg, in a post introducing the interview, highlighted Clinton’s claim that the Obama Administration’s “failure” to build up a credible opposition in Syria created a vacuum that was filled by Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), the Al Qaeda offshoot that U.S. warplanes are now bombing in northern Iraq. Other stories focussed on Clinton’s apparent dismissal of a phrase Obama has reportedly used to describe his approach to foreign policy: “Don’t do stupid stuff.” A Bloomberg headline blared, “HILLARY CLINTON FAULTS OBAMA FORSTUPID STUFFPOLICY.” Politico’s Maggie Haberman wrote, “Hillary Clinton has taken her furthest, most public step away yet from President Barack Obama, rejecting the core of his self-described foreign policy doctrine.”


barack obama
 
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama: photo by via Liberty Voice. 14 January 2014

By Monday, speculation had turned to Clinton's motives. Does this mean that she’s definitely running? (That was Goldberg’s interpretation.) Was it a cynical effort to distance herself from an unpopular President? Is she already looking beyond the Democratic primaries to appeal to independents and to moderate Republicans?



Newly appointed Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with President-elect Barack Obama in Chicago, 1 December 2008: photo by Anne Ryan/Sipa Press, 1 December 2008


For folks inside the Washington politics-and-media bubble, these are endlessly fascinating questions. But what really stands from the interviews is the strident tone that Clinton adopted in her comments on Gaza and radical Islam. In defending the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s deadly response to Hamas’s rocket attacks, she sounded almost like a spokesperson for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. In talking about the threat of militant Islam more generally, her words echoed those of Tony Blair, the former British Prime Minister, who has called for a generation-long campaign against Islamic extremism -- a proposal that one of his former cabinet ministers dubbed “back to the Crusades.”


 
White House War Room during operation to assassinate Osama bin Laden: photo by U.S. Government 2 May 2011
 

Let’s take Gaza first. When Clinton noted that Israel has a right to defend itself from Hamas attacks, Clinton was merely restating what President Obama has said numerous times. But, when she passed on the opportunity to condemn the Israeli strikes on U.N.-operated shelters, which killed dozens of people, she was conspicuously failing to follow the example of her former colleagues in the State Department, who described one of the attacks as "disgraceful." Clinton did acknowledge that the deaths of hundreds of children in the four-week-long military campaign was “absolutely dreadful.” But, rather than put even a bit of the blame on the Israel Defense Forces for its aggressive tactics, she pointed the finger at Hamas, saying, “There’s no doubt in my mind that Hamas initiated this conflict and wanted to do so in order to leverage its position…. So the ultimate responsibility has to rest on Hamas and the decisions it made.”


 

Hillary Rodham Clinton at the Western Wall in Jerusalem in 2005. After awkward episodes as first lady, she proved to be Israel’s friend as senator: photo by Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times, 1 January 2009


Another area where Clinton entered the realm of AIPAC talking points was in accusing Hamas of “stage-managing” the conflict and criticizing the media for going along with it:
What you see is largely what Hamas invites and permits Western journalists to report on from Gaza. It’s the old PR problem that Israel has. Yes, there are substantive, deep levels of antagonism or anti-Semitism towards Israel, because it’s a powerful state, a really effective military. And Hamas paints itself as the defender of the rights of the Palestinians to have their own state. So the PR battle is one that is historically tilted against Israel.
These statements will have delighted Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel, whom Clinton defended several times in the interview. She even endorsed Netanyahu’s recent suggestion that Israel would never give up security control of the West Bank, a statement that some analysts have seized upon as the death knell for the two-state solution. “If I were the prime minister of Israel, you’re damn right I would expect to have control over security,” Clinton said of the West Bank, citing the need to “protect Israel from the influx of Hamas or cross-border attacks from anywhere else.”


View this content on The Times of Israel's website

"Hil[l]ary Clinton does a fine impersonation of Tony Blair"[Hillary Clinton with Benjamin Netanyahu, New York, 27 September 2012]: photo by AP, 27 September 2012 via Tony Gorman on twitter, 11 August 2014

Even for a former New York politician, these were contentious statements. But what is their ultimate import?


Hillary Clinton, Benjamin Netanyahu

United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speak before a meeting at the Regency hotel, Thursday, September 27, 2012 in New York: photo by John Mnichillo / AP, 27 September 2012


The cynical view is that Clinton is simply trying up shore up her reputation as a staunch ally of Israel. Earlier in Clinton’s career, pro-Israeli groups accused her of getting too close to the Palestinian cause. In 1999, a picture of her kissing Suha Arafat on the cheek ended up on the front page of the New York Post, under the headline “SHAME ON HILLARY.” After moving to New York in 2001 and running for senator, she adopted the default stance of most elected officials from the Empire State: unstinting support for Israel. As Secretary of State, in 2009-2010, she took part in efforts to restart the peace process, which, partly as a result of Israel continuing to expand its settlements, didn’t go anywhere. Unlike President Obama, however, Clinton maintained a reasonably cordial relationship with Netanyahu, and that was reflected in her supportive remarks to Goldberg.


Hard day of diplomacy  ... Benjamin Netanyahu and Hillary Clinton during a news conference in Jerusalem on Saturday.

Hard day of diplomacy ... Benjamin Netanyahu and Hillary Clinton during a news conference in Jerusalem on Saturday: photo by Rina Castelnuovo / AP via Sydney Morning Herald, 2 November 2009

If Clinton is courting the pro-Israel lobby, it wouldn’t be exactly surprising. With the Republican Party busy trying to make inroads among wealthy Jewish campaign donors, it hardly behooves her to adopt a more critical approach to the Arab-Israeli conflict shortly before announcing a run for President.


Hillary Clinton (center), flanked by Benjamin Netanyahu (left) and Mahmoud Abbas, opened a day of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.

Hillary Clinton opened a day of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations with a pep talk [from L, Benjamin Netanyahu, Clinton, Mahmoud Abbas]: photo by AP, via Politico, 2 September 2010

If you study Clinton’s words, though, there seem to be more to them than pandering. For one, she clearly believes that the best way to exert pressure on Israeli politicians, such as Netanyahu, is to win their confidence. Implicit in her comments is the suggestion that President Obama, by not making much of an effort to hide his dislike of the Israeli Prime Minister, or to win over the Israeli public, made another error. Referring to the failed negotiations at the end of her husband’s Presidency, the last occasion on which the Israelis and Palestinians came close to making peace, the former Secretary of State said, “Bill Clinton is adored in Israel, as you know. He got Netanyahu to give up territory, which Netanyahu believes lost him the prime ministership” -- in his first term -- “but he moved in that direction, as hard as it was.” A bit later in the interview, Clinton emphasized the point: “Dealing with Bibi is not easy, so people get frustrated and they lose sight of what we’re trying to achieve here.”


sharm140910_ap5

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton meeting at a peace summit in Sharm el-Sheikh on September 14, 2010
: p
hoto by AP, 14 September 2010

In this instance, the difference between Clinton and Obama is a tactical one on how to achieve a goal that they share. There is a bigger issue, however, which rises to the level of foreign-policy ideology. Ever since taking office, Obama has conspicuously tried to avoid making generalizations about Islamic extremism, or lapsing into loose talk about a clash of civilizations. In his interview with Friedman, he described the turmoil in the Middle East in terms of history and economics rather than religion. “I do believe that what we’re seeing in the Middle East and parts of North Africa is an order that dates back to World War I starting to buckle,” the President said. More specifically, he pointed to the rise of a disaffected Sunni population, stretching from Baghdad to Damascus, that was politically alienated and economically isolated: “Unless we can give them a formula that speaks to the aspirations of that population, we are inevitably going to have problems.”


(ISRAEL OUT) Israeli President Shimon Peres (R) and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speak after a joint press conference on July 16, 2012 in Jerusalem, Israel. Clinton is in Israel to discuss diplomacy with Iran, Syria and Egypt in addition to peace talks regarding the Middle East.

Israeli President Shimon Peres (R) and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speak after a joint press conference on July 16, 2012 in Jerusalem, Israel. Clinton is in Israel to discuss diplomacy with Iran, Syria and Egypt in addition to peace talks regarding the Middle East: photo by Lior Mizrahi via Zimbio, 16 July 2012

Clinton, by contrast, placed the threat of radical Islam front and center, and she didn’t shy away from describing it. “One of the reasons why I worry about what’s happening in the Middle East right now is because of the breakout capacity of jihadist groups that can affect Europe, can affect the United States,” she said. “Jihadist groups are governing territory. They will never stay there, though. They are driven to expand. Their raison d’être is to be against the West, against the Crusaders, against the fill-in-the-blank -- and we all fit into one of these categories.”


Flowers

Hillary Clinton and Shimon Peres in Jerusalem today
: photo by Menahem Kahana / AFP, 3 March 2009


The key issue, Clinton went on, is how to contain the jihadi threat, and the appropriate analogy, in her view, is the long battle against Marxism-Leninism. “You know, we did a good job in containing the Soviet Union,” she said. “We made a lot of mistakes, we supported really nasty guys, we did some things that we are not particularly proud of, from Latin America to Southeast Asia. But we did have a kind of overarching framework about what we were trying to do that did lead to the defeat of the Soviet Union and the collapse of Communism. That was our objective. We achieved it.”


Hillary Clinton and Benjamin Netanyahu - Israeli Troops Continue To Gather On Border As UN Call For Truce

In this handout provided by U.S. Embassy Tel Aviv, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton meets with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) on November 21, 2012 in Jerusalem
: photographer unknown via Zimbio, July 2014


Rather than explicitly calling for a new Cold War focussed on radical Islam rather than on Communism, Clinton talked about exercising “smart power” and about engaging an American public that is now instinctively hostile toward foreign entanglements. But, reading the interview as a whole, that appears to be what she is advocating -- a sustained global campaign targeting radical Islam (some, doubtless, will call it a “crusade”) that encompasses all of the options at the disposal of the United States and its allies: military, diplomatic, economic, political, and rhetorical.


Benjamin Netanyahu In this handout photo provided by the GPO, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on July 16, 2012 in Jerusalem, Israel. Clinton is in Israel to discuss diplomacy with Iran, Syria and Egypt in addition to peace talks regarding the Middle East.
 
In this handout photo provided by the GPO, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on July 16, 2012 in Jerusalem, Israel: photographer unknown via Zimbio, July 2014

As I said, the similarity to Blair’s recent call to arms is striking. If Clinton continues with this line of argument, she will inevitably be compared to Henry (Scoop) Jackson, the anti-Communist Democratic senator from the state of Washington who became a hero to the neocons. She will also be compared to modern-day Republican interventionists, such as John McCain. Judging by what she said to Goldberg, Clinton won’t necessarily mind the comparisons: “Great nations need organizing principles,” she said. “And ‘Don’t do stupid stuff’ is not an organizing principle.”




Hillary Clinton
: photo by AP via The New Yorker, 11 August 2014

A Grievous Deception (Fabricating War Out of Absolutely Nothing)

$
0
0
.


President Lyndon B. Johnson listens to tape sent by his son-in-law Captain Charles Robb. a Marine Corps company commander in Vietnam: photo by Jack E. Kightlinger, 31 July 1968 (White House Office Photo Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library / National Archives and Records Administration)

Gareth Porter: How LBJ Was Deceived on Gulf of Tonkin: War Pretext Incident to Justify Vietnam War
via Global Research, 6 August 2014

For most of the last five decades, it has been assumed that the Tonkin Gulf incident was a deception by Lyndon Johnson to justify war in Vietnam. But the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam on Aug. 4, 1964, in retaliation for an alleged naval attack that never happened, together with the Tonkin Gulf Resolution that followed, was not a move by LBJ to get the American people to support a U.S. war in Vietnam.
 
The real deception on that day was that Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara misled LBJ by withholding from him the information that the U.S. commander in the Gulf -- who had initially reported an attack by North Vietnamese patrol boats on U.S. warships -- had later expressed serious doubts about the initial report and was calling for a full investigation by daylight. That withholding of information from LBJ represented a brazen move to usurp the President’s constitutional power of decision on the use of military force.
 
McNamara’s deception is documented in the declassified files on the Tonkin Gulf episode in the Lyndon Johnson library, which this writer used to piece together the untold story of the Tonkin Gulf episode in a 2005 book on the U.S. entry into war in Vietnam. It is a key element of a wider story of how the national security state, including both military and civilian officials, tried repeatedly to pressure LBJ to commit the United States to a wider war in Vietnam.
 
Johnson had refused to retaliate two days earlier for a North Vietnamese attack on U.S. naval vessels carrying out electronic surveillance operations. But he accepted McNamara’s recommendation for retaliatory strikes on Aug. 4 based on reports of a second attack. But after that decision, the U.S. task force commander in the Gulf, Capt. John Herrick, began to send messages expressing doubt about the initial reports and suggested a “complete evaluation” before any action was taken in response.
 
McNamara had read Herrick’s message by mid-afternoon, and when he called the Pacific Commander, Admiral U.S. Grant Sharp Jr., he learned that Herrick had expressed further doubt about the incident based on conversations with the crew of the Maddox. Sharp specifically recommended that McNamara “hold this execute” of the U.S. airstrikes planned for the evening while he sought to confirm that the attack had taken place.
 
But McNamara told Sharp he preferred to “continue the execute order in effect” while he waited for “a definite fix” from Sharp about what had actually happened.
 
McNamara then proceeded to issue the strike execute order without consulting with LBJ about what he had learned from Sharp, thus depriving him of the choice of cancelling the retaliatory strike before an investigation could reveal the truth.
 
At the White House meeting that night, McNamara again asserted flatly that U.S. ships had been attacked in the Gulf.  When questioned about the evidence, McNamara said, “Only highly classified information nails down the incident.” But the NSA intercept of a North Vietnamese message that McNamara cited as confirmation could not possibly have been related to the Aug. 4 incident, as intelligence analysts quickly determined based from the time-date group of the message.
 
LBJ began to suspect that McNamara had kept vital information from him, and immediately ordered national security adviser McGeorge Bundy to find out whether the alleged attack had actually taken place and required McNamara’s office to submit a complete chronology of McNamara’s contacts with the military on Aug. 4 for the White House indicating what had transpired in each of them.
 
But that chronology shows that McNamara continued to hide the substance of the conversation with Admiral Sharp from LBJ. It omitted Sharp’s revelation that Capt. Herrick considered the “whole situation” to be “in doubt” and was calling for a “daylight recce [reconnaissance]” before any decision to retaliate, as well as Sharp’s agreement with Herrick’s recommendation. It also falsely portrayed McNamara as having agreed with Sharp that the execute order should be delayed until confirming evidence was found.
 
Contrary to the assumption that LBJ used the Tonkin Gulf incident to move U.S. policy firmly onto a track for military intervention, it actually widened the differences between Johnson and his national security advisers over Vietnam policy. Within days after the episode Johnson had learned enough to be convinced that the alleged attack had not occurred and he responded by halting both the CIA-managed commando raids on the North Vietnamese coast U.S. and the U.S. naval patrols near the coast.


http://rs16.loc.gov/service/pnp/ds/01300/01310v.jpg

 Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara standing at a podium in front of a map of Vietnam during a press conference: photo by Marion J. Trikosko, 29 June 1966 (U. S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)
 
In fact, McNamara’s deception on Aug. 4 was just one of 12 distinct episodes in which top U.S. national security officials attempted to press a reluctant LBJ to begin a bombing campaign against North Vietnam.
 
In September 1964, McNamara and other top officials tried to get LBJ to approve a deliberately provocative policy of naval patrols running much closer to the North Vietnamese coast and at the same time as the commando raids. They hoped for another incident that would justify a bombing program. But Johnson insisted that the naval patrols stay at least 20 miles away from the coast and stopped the commando operations.
 
Six weeks after the Tonkin Gulf bombing, on Sept. 18, 1964, McNamara and Secretary of State Dean Rusk claimed yet another North Vietnamese attack on a U.S. destroyer in the Gulf and tried to get LBJ to approve another retaliatory strike. But a skeptical LBJ told McNamara, “You just came in a few weeks ago and said they’re launching an attack on us –- they’re firing at us, and we got through with the firing and concluded maybe they hadn’t fired at all.”
 
After LBJ was elected in November 1964, he continued to resist a unanimous formal policy recommendation of his advisers that he should begin the systematic bombing of North Vietnam. He stubbornly argued for three more months that there was no point in bombing the North as long as the South was divided and unstable.
 
Johnson also refused to oppose the demoralized South Vietnamese government negotiating a neutralist agreement with the Communists, much to his advisers’ chagrin. McGeorge Bundy later recalled in an oral history interview that he concluded that Johnson was “coming to a decision … to lose” in South Vietnam.
 
LBJ only capitulated to the pressure from his advisers after McNamara and Bundy wrote a joint letter to him in late January 1965 making it clear that responsibility for U.S. “humiliation” in South Vietnam would rest squarely on his shoulders if he continued his policy of “passivity.” Fearing, with good reason, that his own top national security advisers would turn on him and blame him for the loss of South Vietnam, LBJ eventually began the bombing of North Vietnam.
 
He was then sucked into the maelstrom of the Vietnam War, which he defended publicly and privately, leading to the logical but mistaken conclusion that he had been the main force behind the push for war all along.
 
The deeper lesson of the Tonkin Gulf episode is how a group of senior national security officials can seek determinedly through hardball -- and even illicit -– tactics to advance a war agenda, even knowing that the President of the United States is resisting it.
 
Gareth Porter, an investigative historian and journalist specialising in U.S. national security policy, received the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for journalism for 2011 for articles on the U.S. war in Afghanistan. He is the author of Manufactured Crisis: the Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.



Dean Rusk, Lyndon B. Johnson and Robert McNamara in Cabinet Room meeting, February 1968: photo by Yoichi Okamoto, February 1968 (White House Press Office / US National Archives)



On July 19, 1968, President Lyndon Johnson, right, met with President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam in Hawaii. Although most Americans still supported the idea of a non-Communist Vietnam, many had begun to withdraw their support of direct military involvement, especially following the Tet Offensive earlier that year
: photo by White House Press Office, 19 July 1968 (US National Archives)


"Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Presiden Lyndon Johnson in background."

Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.; President Lyndon Johnson in background, Washington, D.C.: photo by Yoichi Okamoto, 18 March 1966 (Lyndon Baines Johnson Library / National Archives and Records Administration)

File:L B Johnson Model Khe Sanh.jpeg

Situation Room: Walt Rostow shows President Lyndon B. Johnson a model of the Khe Sanh area: photographer unknown, 15 February 1968; image by Soerfm, 5 February 2013 (U.S. Department of Defense)


Khe Sanh under siege: photographer unknown, 1968; image by kaloaloha, 25 March 2008



Khe Sanh, 1968. An American C-123 cargo plane burns after being hit by communist mortars while taxiing on the Marine post at Khe Sanh: photo by Peter Arnett / AP, 1 March 1968; image by mannhai, 3 November 2010



Khe Sanh, March 1968. U.S. Air Force bombs create a curtain of flying shrapnel and debris barely 200 feet beyond the perimeter of South Vietnamese ranger positions defending Khe Sanh during the siege of the U.S. Marine base, March 1968. The photographer, a South Vietnamese officer, was badly injured when bombs fell even closer on a subsequent pass by U.S. planes: photo by AP/ARVN, Major Nguyen Ngoc Hanh, March 1968; image by Tan Hiep, 3 November 2010

File:Marine Corps sniper team, Khe Sanh Valley.jpg
 
U.S. sniper team at Khe Sanh, 1968: photo by David Douglas Duncan, in Jack Shulimson, Leonard A Balisol, Charles R. Smith, and David A. Dawson: US Marines in Vietnam: The Defining Year, 1968; Image by RM Gillespie, 18 November 2006; edit by Quibik, 13 September 2009 (US Marine Corps)
 


BBQ at Khe Sanh: photo by CBMU 301, March 1968 (U.S. Navy Seabee Museum)



Khe Sanh post office, during the 77-day NVA siege of the U.S. Marine base: photo by Dana Stone (1939-?1971), February 1968; image byfredleobrown, 13 January 2008

File:The final evacuation of Khe Sanh base complex, July 1st 1968.png

The final evacuation of Khe Sanh base complex: photographer unknown, 1 July 1968; image by HanLing 7 February 2013


 Bob Hope, Danang, December 1967. Bob Hope on his way to a Christmas show in Vietnam: photo by Dana Stone (1939-?1971), December 1967; image by fredleobrown, 13 January 2008 

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/03200/03208v.jpg

Wounded servicemen arriving from Vietnam at Andrews Air Force Base: photo by Warren K. Leffler, 8 March 1968 (U. S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)

Munitions Madness: Procurement and Disposal

$
0
0

.

Embedded image permalink

 Me holding what I believe is an unexploded drone's missile. This what Israel uses to warn people to evacuate. And yes, it kills: photo by Dr Bassel Abuwarda via twitter, 8 August 2014

Arma virumque cano...
Virgil, Aeneid, Book One

Shadow Government
 
Gaza Crisis: Israel Outflanks the White House on Strategy: White House Now Scrutinizing Israeli Requests for Ammunition: Adam Entous, The Wall StreetJournal, 14 August 2014


JERUSALEM -- White House and State Department officials who were leading U.S. efforts to rein in Israel's military campaign in the Gaza Strip were caught off guard last month when they learned that the Israeli military had been quietly securing supplies of ammunition from the Pentagon without their approval.

Since then the Obama administration has tightened its control on arms transfers to Israel. But Israeli and U.S. officials say that the adroit bureaucratic maneuvering made it plain how little influence the White House and State Department have with the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu —and that both sides know it.

The munitions surprise and previously unreported U.S. response added to a string of slights and arguments that have bubbled behind the scenes during the Gaza conflict, according to events related by senior American, Palestinian and Israeli officials involved. 

In addition, current and former American officials say, U.S.-Israel ties have been hurt by leaks that they believe were meant to undercut the administration's standing by mischaracterizing its position and delay a cease-fire. The battles have driven U.S.-Israeli relations to the lowest point since President Barack Obama took office.


Barack Obama and Binyamin Netanyahu at the White House in 2010

Barack Obama and Binyamin Netanyahu at the White House in 2010. If the US leader is inclined to make nice with his Israeli counterpart, one possibility is a visit to Israel in 2013: photo by Jason Reed/Reuters, 12 November 2012



Now, as Egyptian officials shuttle between representatives of Israel and Hamas seeking a long-term deal to end the fighting, U.S. officials are bystanders instead of in their historic role as mediators. The White House finds itself largely on the outside looking in.

U.S. officials said Mr. Obama had a particularly combative phone call on Wednesday with Mr. Netanyahu, who they say has pushed the administration aside but wants it to provide Israel with security assurances in exchange for signing onto a long-term deal.

As a 72-hour pause in the fighting expired at midnight Wednesday, a senior Hamas official said negotiators agreed to another cease-fire, this one of five days. The cease-fire was holding on Thursday.

The frayed relations raise questions about whether Mr. Obama and Mr. Netanyahu can effectively work together. Relations between them have long been strained over other issues, including Mr. Obama's outreach to Iran and U.S.-backed peace talks with the Palestinians.

Today, many administration officials say the Gaza conflict -- the third between Israel and Hamas in under six years -- has persuaded them that Mr. Netanyahu and his national security team are both reckless and untrustworthy.

Israeli officials, in turn, describe the Obama administration as weak and naive, and are doing as much as they can to bypass the White House in favor of allies in Congress and elsewhere in the administration.

While Israeli officials have privately told their U.S. counterparts the poor state of relations isn't in Israel's interest long term, they also said they believed Mr. Netanyahu wasn't too worried about the tensions. The reason is that he can rely on the firmness of Israeli support in Congress, even if he doesn't have the White House's full approval for his policies. The prime minister thinks he can simply wait out the current administration, they say.

"The allegations are unfounded," said Israel's ambassador to the U.S., Ron Dermer. "Israel deeply appreciates the support we have received during the recent conflict in Gaza from both the Obama administration and the Congress for Israel's right to defend itself and for increased funding of Iron Dome."

A senior Obama administration official said the White House didn't intend to get into a "tit for tat" with the Israelis when the war broke out in Gaza. "We have many, many friends around the world. The United States is their strongest friend," the official said. "The notion that they are playing the United States, or that they're manipulating us publicly, completely miscalculates their place in the world."

American officials say they believe they have been able to exert at least some influence over Mr. Netanyahu during the Gaza conflict. But they admit their influence has been weakened as he has used his sway in Washington, from the Pentagon and Congress to lobby groups, to defuse U.S. diplomatic pressure on his government over the past month.


Embedded image permalink

Israel has turned Gaza into a minefield of unexploded munitions. Who's going to pick them up? : photo by Dr Bassel Abuwarda via twitter, 8 August 2014


Tensions really started to flare after Israel launched Gaza ground operations July 17 and the civilian death toll started to rise sharply, prompting U.S. officials to complain that Israel wasn't showing enough restraint. Israeli officials rejected that notion, saying Hamas was using civilians as human shields.

U.S. officials say Mr. Netanyahu told them he was interested in a cease-fire from the start, but the two sides clashed over the process of achieving one and the players who would take part.

Bracing for a longer military campaign than expected, Israel approached the Defense Department within days of the start of the ground fighting to request money for more interceptors for the Iron Dome, which shoots down rockets aimed at population centers.

After consulting with the White House, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told aides to submit a proposal to Congress for $225 million.

Within the administration, the request was deemed noncontroversial because the Iron Dome was defensive and couldn't be used in Gaza ground fighting, U.S. officials said.

In meetings at the Pentagon, the State Department and the White House, Israeli officials told the Americans Israel had enough Iron Dome interceptors for the current Gaza operation, but wanted to replenish its stocks, according to U.S. officials who attended. So with Israel's consent, the administration didn't seek immediate emergency funding, Pentagon officials said, adding that they expected Congress to approve the request sometime in the fall.

Unknown to many policy makers, Israel was moving on separate tracks to replenish supplies of lethal munitions being used in Gaza and to expedite approval of the Iron Dome funds on Capitol Hill.

On July 20, Israel's defense ministry asked the U.S. military for a range of munitions, including 120-mm mortar shells and 40-mm illuminating rounds, which were already kept stored at a pre-positioned weapons stockpile in Israel.

The request was approved through military channels three days later but not made public. Under the terms of the deal, the Israelis used U.S. financing to pay for $3 million in tank rounds. No presidential approval or signoff by the secretary of state was required or sought, according to officials.

A U.S. defense official said the standard review process was properly followed.

While the military-to-military relationship between Israel and the U.S. was operating normally, ties on the diplomatic front were imploding. For the Americans, they worsened dramatically on July 25, when aides to Secretary of State John Kerry sent a draft of a confidential cease-fire paper to Mr. Netanyahu's advisers for feedback.

The Americans wanted the Israelis to propose changes. The U.S. didn't intend or expect the draft paper to be presented to the Israeli cabinet, but that was what Mr. Netanyahu did. U.S. officials say Mr. Netanyahu's office breached protocol by sending back no comments and presenting the paper to the cabinet for a vote.

The paper was also leaked to the Israeli media. U.S. officials say they believe the Israeli government publicly mischaracterized Mr. Kerry's ideas with the intent of buying more time to prosecute the fight against Hamas because Israeli officials were angry over outreach by Mr. Kerry to Qatar and Turkey.

Israel and Egypt had sought to sideline Qatar and Turkey—two countries that backed Hamas—rather than increase their influence. U.S. officials say Mr. Kerry reached out to the two because they had leverage with Hamas that would be critical to getting the group to agree to another cease-fire.

From Israel's perspective, Mr. Kerry's cease-fire draft reflected an approach "completely out of sync with Israel, not just on a governmental level but on a societal level," said Michael Oren, a former Israeli ambassador to the U.S. under Mr. Netanyahu.

"The best thing that Kerry can do is stay out... We need time to do the job, we need to inflict a painful and unequivocal blow on Hamas. Anything less would be a Hamas victory," Mr. Oren said.

The watershed moment came in the early morning in Gaza July 30. An Israeli shell struck a United Nations school in Jabaliya that sheltered about 3,000 people. Later that day, it was reported in the U.S. that the 120-mm and 40-mm rounds had been released to the Israeli military.

"We were blindsided," one U.S. diplomat said.

White House and State Department officials had already become increasingly disturbed by what they saw as heavy-handed battlefield tactics that they believed risked a humanitarian catastrophe capable of harming regional stability and Israel's interests.

They were especially concerned that Israel was using artillery, instead of more precision-guided munitions, in densely populated areas. The realization that munitions transfers had been made without their knowledge came as a shock.

"There was no intent to blindside anyone. The process for this transfer was followed precisely along the lines that it should have," another U.S. defense official said.

Then the officials learned that, in addition to asking for tank shells and other munitions, Israel had submitted a request through military-to-military channels for a large number of Hellfire missiles, according to Israeli and American officials.

The Pentagon's Defense Security Cooperation Agency, or DSCA, was about to release an initial batch of the Hellfires, according to Israeli and congressional officials. It was immediately put on hold by the Pentagon, and top officials at the White House instructed the DSCA, the U.S. military's European Command and other agencies to consult with policy makers at the White House and the State Department before approving any additional requests.



Embedded image permalink

imagine the level of trauma and pain to this little boy is going through: photo by abdallahsalsadi on twitter, 8 August 2014


A senior Obama administration official said the weapons transfers shouldn't have been a routine "check-the-box approval" process, given the context. The official said the decision to scrutinize future transfers at the highest levels amounted to "the United States saying 'The buck stops here. Wait a second…It's not OK anymore.'"

White House and State Department officials were worried about public reaction.

The Palestinians, in particular, were angry, according to U.S. diplomats.

"The U.S. is a partner in this crime," Jibril Rajoub, a leader in Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Western-backed Fatah party, said of the decision to provide arms to Israel during the conflict.

Even as tensions with the White House and the State Department were spilling over, Israeli officials worked to expedite the Iron Dome money on Capitol Hill.

Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona said Israeli officials told lawmakers the money was urgently needed because they were running out of interceptors and couldn't hold out for a month or more.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, said Congress's goal in approving the money quickly on Aug. 1 was to send a message to the administration to stop calling Israel out about civilian casualties.

A senior Republican congressional aide said Israeli officials told senators they wanted the money sooner rather than later. He said Israel's main purpose in accelerating the vote in Congress to before legislators' August recess was to provide an overwhelming "show of support" for the military operation.

The last straw for many U.S. diplomats came on Aug. 2 when they say Israeli officials leaked to the media that Mr. Netanyahu had told the U.S. ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, that the Obama administration was "not to ever second-guess me again" about how to deal with Hamas.

The White House and State Department have sought to regain greater control over U.S.-Israeli policy. They decided to require White House and State Department approval for even routine munitions requests by Israel, officials say.

Instead of being handled as a military-to-military matter, each case is now subject to review -- slowing the approval process and signaling to Israel that military assistance once taken for granted is now under closer scrutiny.

A senior U.S. official said the U.S. and Israel clashed mainly because the U.S. wanted a cease-fire before Mr. Netanyahu was ready to accept one. "Now we both want one," one of the officials said.

A top Israeli official said the rift runs deeper than that. "We've been there before with a lot of tension with us and Washington. What we have now, on top of that, is mistrust and a collision of different perspectives on the Middle East," the official said. "It's become very personal."


AFP_523387956_58840820

Benjamin Netanyahu and Barack Obama at the White House: photo by Saul Loeb / AFP, 2012

‘My wife thinks I will come home in a box’ –- and three days later Gaza bomb disposal expert was dead

Rahed Taysir al'Hom

Rahed Taysir al-Hom has died after a 500kg bomb he tried to defuse exploded: photo by Sean Smith for the Guardian, 8 August 2014

Rahed Taysir al-Hom headed northern Gaza’s only bomb disposal unit. He spoke to the Guardian just days before he was killed by a 500kg explosive 

Jason Burke in Gaza City, The Guardian, Wednesday 13 August 2014 09.49 EDT

Rahed Taysir al-Hom was buried in the sandy soil of the cemetery of Jabaliya, the rough Gaza neighbourhood where he had grown up, at 1pm on the third day of the ceasefire.

His funeral was quick, attended by a hundred or so mourners, and accompanied by a short sermon from a white-turbaned cleric, a sobbing father and some shots fired from a Kalashnikov by a skinny teenager.

Two breeze blocks and a ripped piece of cardboard with his name scrawled on it now mark the grave of a personable man with an easy smile, hollow eyes and a quiet intensity that was entirely understandable given his job.

The 43-year-old father of seven lies next to his brother, a Hamas fighter killed in an Israeli air strike two weeks ago. But the Hom who died on Wednesday was not a warrior. He was head of the sole bomb disposal unit of Gaza’s northern governorate and his job was to protect several hundred thousand people from the unexploded ordnance that now litters the streets, fields and rubble of many homes.

Hom, who died when a 500kg bomb he was trying to defuse exploded at 10.30am on Wednesday, was an incidental casualty of a month-long war that no one seems able to stop.

Three of his colleagues and two journalists were killed with him. He was well aware of the risks he was taking but believed in his work.

One day last week, while the last tenuous ceasefire held in Gaza, Hom received 70 calls. In this conflict alone, he had dealt with 400 “objects”.
 

Hom made safe ordnance for five of his 20 years in the Gaza police force. Photograph: Sean Smith

 Hom made safe ordnance for five of his 20 years in the Gaza police force: photo by Sean Smith for the Guardian, 8 August 2014

“I try to do as much as I can,” he said at the weekend as he drove from site to site in the northern town of Beit Lahia, accompanied by the Guardian.

“Every time I hear that someone has been injured by a bomb on the ground I feel very sorry. This is my responsibility. But we are very limited and don’t have proper equipment. My wife thinks I will come home one day in pieces in a box.”

Hom had been defusing bombs, rockets and shells for five of his 20 years in the Gaza police. He had some training from international experts but gained most of his skills “on the job”.

He had no protective clothing and used basic tools -- screwdrivers, pliers and cutters -- as he worked to make everything safe, be it Hamas rockets which had fallen short of their mark or bombs dropped by Israeli warplanes.

Helmets, body armour and screening devices, supplied after the last conflict in 2012, had worn out or were broken.

“We have been working all the time,” he said. “There is a danger to people when there is a bomb in their house. It is risky, of course, but we have to do it.

“So far we have had no injuries in my team, praise be to God,” he added, though one of the team had been killed in an air strike at home a month ago.

Over the weekend, before the latest ceasefire came into force, Hom dealt with a dozen or so urgent incidents. His work was slowed by frequent pauses as Israeli missiles hissed overhead, sometimes exploding only a few hundred metres away.

In Beit Lahiya, he defused a 1,000kg bomb that had landed in a bike repair shop. Hossein Rabieh Salem, the 48-year-old owner, had been sleeping for several nights with his family of 18, above the storeroom and the live weapon. “Where can I go? I shut my eyes and trust in God,” Salem said.


Hom was working amid a heap of explosives – with minimal to no protection. Photograph: Sean Smith

Hom was working amid a heap of explosives –- with minimal to no protection: photo by Sean Smith for the Guardian, 8 August 2014


Unable to immediately render the bomb safe, Hom assured the worried mechanic he would return with a truck to pick it up and transport it to the football field opposite his police station where all the ordnance -- defused or live -- was dumped. There, in untidy piles, lay shells and bombs and Hamas rockets, glinting in the strong Gaza sun.

Among them was a bomb lifted, still live, from the home of the Filfils in a quiet residential neighbourhood in the north of Beit Lahiya.

Jazia Filfil, 60, remembered how, as the dust began to clear from her living room after the air strike last month, she saw a huge metal object half buried in the rubble where a three-piece suite had once been. She had no idea what it was.

“They dropped a truck on our home,” she shouted to her husband and sons. When the family worked out that the object was no truck, they called Hom.

“He is very brave but he was very slow in coming. We had the bomb in our house for weeks,” Filfil said on Sunday. Hom, listening, laughed away the complaint, joking that his “customers” were never happy.

Over a lunch of beef kebabs, snatched rapidly down a Beit Lahiya side street, Hom spoke about his worried wife, his two sons and five daughters, and his wider family.

His 33-year-old brother died in an air strike two weeks ago, he said. Abdel Jawad al-Hom had joined the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam brigades, the military wing of Hamas, after another brother had died following imprisonment in an Israeli jail in the early 1990s when Hamas had set out to derail the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.




This is Gaza thanks to Israhell: photo bi Eddie DiFruscia on twitter, 15 August 2014


“He was very angry and joined as a teenager, maybe he was only 12 or 13, and rose up the ranks. He was a commander in the Beit Lahiya area. He was in a friend’s house on the frontlines when it was bombed and was martyred with two other fighters,” al-Hom said.

So far the conflict has killed 1,900 people in Gaza, mostly civilians. The UN has said that around 200 fighters from Hamas and other groups have been killed. Israeli officials say the total is much higher.

Sixty-four Israeli soldiers have died. Three civilians in Israel have been killed by rocket fire.

On Wednesday, as Hom set out to defuse the 500kg bomb which killed him, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were continuing indirect talks in Cairo aimed at a putting a durable ceasefire in place.

The explosion was so loud it was heard five miles away, said Maher Halewi, the chief of Hom’s police station. Doctors at the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City were working to save the lives of four men wounded in the blast who remained in a critical condition on Wednesday afternoon. The al-Shifa, like hospitals across Gaza, is chronically short of medical supplies after treating thousands of wounded during the conflict.


The funeral of Rahed Taysir al-Hom.

The funeral of Rahed Taysir al-Hom: photo by Sean Smith for the Guardian, 13 August 2014

Within two hours of his death, Hom’s remains were taken to the Beit Lahiya hospital and then to the al-Auda mosque in Jabaliya. After noon prayers and a blessing, a procession jogged through the crowded streets, past the donkey carts, the fruit stalls and the battered Mercedes taxis to the cemetery.

A crackling voice from a loudspeaker a block away called people to a Hamas rally this afternoon to show support for the Palestinian delegation in Cairo.

An Israeli drone buzzed overhead.

Relatives shovelled sand over Hom’s remains, wetted the mound with water from a plastic jerry can and stood back, forming a line to shake hands with the mourners.


 Crowds carry Rahed Taysir al-Hom to be buried next to his brother in the Gaza cemetery of Jabaliya.

The crowd carries Rahed Taysir al-Hom to be buried next to his brother in the Gaza cemetery of Jabaliya
: photo by Sean Smith for The Guardian, 12 August 2014 

  

The cleric called for “revenge on the Jews” and for the blessing of God on the deceased and on the community. Shots rang out as the skinny teenager raised his Kalashnikov once more. Then, within minutes, it was over and the mourners were gone.



Embedded image permalink

Me holding what I believe is an unexploded drone's missile. This what Israel uses to warn people to evacuate. And yes, it kills: photo by Dr Bassel Abuwarda via twitter, 8 August 2014

"Who you out here for?"

$
0
0
.


Embedded image permalink

BREAKING: One person shot and seven arrested in Ferguson after curfew, officials say
: photo via NBC News on twitter, 17 August 2014

Embedded image permalink


"Who you out here for? Better be for Mike Brown." Protesters guarding a liquor store from looters early Saturday a.m.: photo via Trymaine Lee, on twitter, 16 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


CONFIRMED: Tear gas deployed against Ferguson protesters -- police: photo via RT on twitter, 17 August, 2014


Embedded image permalink

Police marching forward, and we're hearing more shots: photo via Alice Speri on twitter, 17 August 2014

Bobby Seale: We built it out of anger and desire and need


File:Drawing for CBS Evening News of Bobby G. Seale with Arnold Markle, State Attorney for the Judicial District of New Haven, in the back ground.jpg

Drawing for CBS Evening News of Bobby G. Seale with Arnold F. Markle, State attorney for the Judicial District of New Haven, in the background: Robert Templeton, 1971, oil pastel, 24.6 x 20.3 cm., from Drawings and sketches related to the trial of Bobby Seale and Ericka Huggins, New Haven, Connecticut (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University)

You have to remember, the Party at one time had 5,000 active members in 45 cities throughout the United States of America.


http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/04300/04304v.jpg

Man on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial holding a banner for the Revolutionary People's Constitutional Convention, at Black Panther Convention
: photo by Thomas J. O'Halloran/Warren K. Leffler, 19 June 1970


45 chapters and branches of the Black Panther Party. The peak of that was January 1969. The Party was almost two and a half years old. Started in October 1966. We had international notoriety seven months later, May 2, 1967.


http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3d00000/3d01000/3d01800/3d01847v.jpg
 

Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X, Washington, D.C.: photo by Marion S. Trikosko, 26 March 1964 (U.S. News & World Report Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)


Martin Luther King was killed April 6, 1968. Up to Martin Luther King I only had 400 members up and down the West Coast, San Diego to Seattle. 


http://rs16.loc.gov/service/pnp/ds/00800/00840v.jpg

Riot damage in D.C.: the ruins of a store in Washington, D.C., that was destroyed during the riots that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
: photo by Warren K. Leffler, 16 April 1968


When Martin Luther King was killed, in a matter of a couple of months, particularly when the colleges let out, it blew my mind that so many young people started flooding into our organization. 


File:Leffler -1968 WashingtonDC MLK riots.jpg

D.C. riot. April '68. Aftermath. A soldier standing guard on the corner of 7th & N Street NW in Washington D.C. with the ruins of buildings that were destroyed during the riots that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
: photo by Warren K. Leffler, 8 April 1968 (Library of Congress


They were so angry that brother Martin Luther King was killed. 


http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/19700/19734v.jpg

Washington D.C. riot, April 1968, Aftermath: members of the D.C. National Guard patrolling streets as pedestrians walk by
: photo by Warren K. Leffler, 8 April 1968 (Library of Congress)Washington D.C. riot, April 1968, Aftermath: members of the D.C. National Guard patrolling streets as pedestrians walk by
: photo by Warren K. Leffler, 8 April 1968 (Library of Congress)


They said, ‘I’m joining the Black Panther Party.’ So we had an influx, 60% of that membership being particularly college students, high school students headed to college who decided to postpone their college education.


http://rs16.loc.gov/service/pnp/ds/00800/00838v.jpg

Smoke rises near U.S. Capitol, during riot, 1968. (Photographer's note: "D.C. Riot, April, '68: After curfew deserted streets in D.C. -- Smoky sky w/capitol -- damaged area.")
: photo by Marion S. Trikosko, 6 April 1968


In a matter of five or six months following the death of Martin Luther King, we had peaked at 5,000 active full-time members of the Black Panther Party.



http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/03100/03197v.jpg

"Don't work" sign promoting a holiday to honor the anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., on a shop on H Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.
: photo by Marion J. Trikosko, 3 April 1969
 

Plus our working coalitions had expanded to a point that by 1969 we were able to create what we called the National Committees to Combat Fascism as an extension organizing effort beyond the Black Panther Party, we didn’t care whether you was white, black, blue, red, green, yellow, polkadot, anyone could be a community worker with the NCCF. And that group was composed of almost 10,000 more people. 



thejazzpoet:  Bobby Seale, Photo by Robert Altman, 1969

Bobby Seale, San Francisco: photo by Robert Altman, May 1969

This was why the power structure was really afraid of us, about that. Because to mobilize those kind of people, to mobilize those brothers and sisters, people who were angry, and to tell them we need to take over all of these political seats. These political seats, whether it’s a city council or making legislation, laws and policies, are not serving the basic desires and needs of the people. So we the young political revolutionary humanists, we can get in there. We’re saying the same thing as to exist now -- in the context of the present, though.


File:Bobby Seale (cropped).jpg

 Bobby Seale: photo by Risa Staszewski. 25 February 2006
 

Embedded image permalink

Black Power, Ferguson: photo by July 27 on twitter, 15 August 2014

You have to remember, I come up in the high-tech world.





Ferguson: photo by AP via The Independent, 14 August 2014


Before I ever got involved with this stuff, I was working on the Gemini missile project in the engineering department at [inaudible] Aerospace and Electronics. I was doing electromagnetic field, black light, non-destruct testing for all the engine frames for the Gemini missile program. For all three stages of exhaust housing for the Gemini missile program. 


File:Gemini spacecraft.jpg

Gemini spacecraft diagram: image by NASA, 26 April 1965 (NASA)


I went to college originally as an engineering design major, and when I went to college, remember this is AFTER the four years in the United States Air Force, structural repair, high-performance aircraft for the USAF, so … raised a carpenter and a builder…architect by the time I’m 18. So I based everything in my life and my understanding, even by the time I got in college, based on it on good, proven, scientific evidentiary fact.


File:Gemini 5 control room.jpg

View of the tracking screen at the front of the Mission Control Center during the Gemini-5 spaceflight: image by NASA, Augustl 1965 (NASA)


So when the Nation of Islam, as religious Black nationalist-type of organization was propagating some very mythical misunderstanding, it’s not scientific fact for me. I have no time for it, you know what I mean? I did respect their call for financial self-sufficiency in the Black community, etc., but in terms of having an organization, we refused to have religious and/or myopic, xenophobic Black nationalists as the ideology or as any part of, we didn’t want that as the head, or the leading ideological notion.


Embedded image permalink
 Missouri governor declares state of emergency and curfew in Ferguson: photo via Saulo Corona on twitter, 16 August 2014


What happened was that in forming the Black Panther Party, Huey and I came up with what we called a functional definition of power. In those days, people were spouting in 1964 or ’65 or ’66, “Black power! Black power!” There was so much rhetoric, you see what I mean. It was so much TALK, it was not really being put together. Huey and I set the word “black” to the side for a minute to come up with a functional definition of the term “power.” And we came up with “Power is the ability to define phenomena and then in turn, make them act in a desired manner.”




Demolition, Deaconess Hospital, Dogtown (St. Louis): photo by chalkdog, 22 April 2014


What I’m getting at here, this is like three-dimensional to me. An engineering design major, an architect, I think three dimensional. [That definition], oh my god, it’s metaphorical, it’s applicable to understanding what the situation is. If the city council are a bunch of low-life avaricious racists, bang! We have defined them for what they are. Now we must unite all the people, vote they butts out of office and make them in turn act in a desired manner, giving greater people’s community political representation power. So this is where we came from.




Protester, Ferguson: photo via Chicago Tribune on twitter, 15 August 2014


So our point was, I think it was a pivot point when we came up with that definition, we looked at and began to see a class analysis, in the sense that it was not only black people that were being oppressed, we had poor whites who were oppressed, poor Mexican-Americans who were oppressed, Native Americans, etc. Crossing the racial lines.



Embedded image permalink


 Incredible night in Ferguson: photo via Julia Macfarlane on twitter, 16 August 2014
 
And that's why we moved not for some Black nationalist, xenophobic-type separatist ideology. Two, I didn’t think that way. Ohmigawd, gimme a break, you know. I looked at the world as being interconnected and interrelated. Thinking three-dimensional. See, we were part of a young Black intelligentsia. We were researchers. We were avid readers. We took time to know. You couldn’t just come up with some platitude, some emotional speech, ha ha ha, to get us all hooked up. Cuz we would question it. “Where you going with it? What do you mean by…?” So much theory. “Well how you gonna put that theory into practice?” In other words: I’m an architect. When I draw and lay out the plans for building a structure, those plans are only theory for the idea, right? [But] When I build the building, it’s real. You have to put it in practice.



Embedded image permalink


After kicking out the police, the people of Ferguson took back their streets: photo via Allah akbar on twitter, 16 August 2014


So you have to put all that together and you can see where we came from. The separatist ideology was absurd. And I used to tell people, “No, we’renot outside the system.” “Oh yes you are.” I says, “Agnew said that!” Agnew, the vice president of the United States, part of a corrupt political structure, telling people we were outside the political system. Which was bullcrap, when we’d already ran for political office. How can you be outside of something that’s oppressing you, I would tell people. “Oh that’s right, how can you be outside of something…”



20 Photos: Clashes in Qalandia following funeral of young Palestinian

Palestinian protesters try to climb the Israeli separation barrier during clashes at the Qalandia checkpoint following the funeral of a young Palestinian: photo by Federico Scoppa/Corbis via the Guardian, 30 November 2013


Then I’d ask the white left radical buddies one time, after Bobby Kennedy was killed, [they were saying] “Oh no Bobby, man, we’re tired of the System, man. We’ve droppedout, man.” I says, “You can't drop out. You cannot drop out of the total system. We have to get rid of the avaricious corporate monopoly capitalism. We have to get rid of the institutionalized framework of racism in America. Those two aspects we must fight against.” “No we’ve dropped out!” I sez, “You think you can drop out of the total System? cuz everything is interconnected and interrelated, then you take all your buddies, go down to Cape Canaveral, I want you to hijack one of those rockets, take your butt to the moon. When you get to the moon, the president of the united states, Tricky Dick Nixon, is gonna send some troops up there, bring you back. There is no such thing as dropping out of the total system!” So my point becomes you must struggle to change the frameworks, the institutions and make those institutions make human sense.



Ferguson tear gas

Ferguson: photo by AP via The Independent, 14 August 2014


So this is the argument and this is where we came from in the 1960s. I mean, yeah we were political revolutionaries, yeah we identified a racist for what he was, and if we said “Black power” as fast as we said “Black power” we said “Red power” and as fast as we said “Red power” we said “Brown power”, “white power” and then we summed it up with “All power to all the people.” See what I’m getting at? So this is where we came from. 

Bobby Seale, from an interview by Jay Babcock, Oakland, 17 March 1999

File:Bobby Seale (cropped).jpg

Bobby Seale: photo by Risa Staszewski. 25 February 2006

A police officer and a protester have a tense moment before a scuffle breaks out between a different protester and police officers near the port during an "F the Police" march held in solidarity with Ferguson, Mo., where there was a fatal shooting of an unarmed 18-year-old black man earlier in the week August 15, 2014 in Oakland, Calif. Photo: Leah Millis, The Chronicle

A police officer and a protester have a tense moment before a scuffle breaks out between a different protester and police officers near the port during an "F the Police" march held on August 15, 2014 in Oakland, California in solidarity with Ferguson, Missouri, where there was a fatal shooting of an unarmed 18-year-old black man earlier in the week
:  photo by Leah Millis / San Francisco Chronicle, 15 August 2014

A woman tries to pull a protester away from police after a scuffle breaks out during a march in Oakland against police brutality held in solidarity with the demonstrators in Ferguson, Mo. Photo: Leah Millis, The Chronicle

A woman tries to pull a protester away from police after a scuffle breaks out during a march in Oakland against police brutality held in solidarity with the demonstrators in Ferguson, Missouri
:  photo by Leah Millis, / San Francisco Chronicle, 15 August 2014

One protester helps a woman up after she was involved in a scuffle between police and a protester during an "F the Police" march held in solidarity with Ferguson, Mo., where there was a fatal shooting of an unarmed 18-year-old black man earlier in the week August 15, 2014 in Oakland, Calif. Photo: Leah Millis, The Chronicle

One protester helps a woman up after she was involved in a scuffle between police and a protester during an "F the Police" march in Oakland, California held in solidarity with Ferguson,  Missouri, where there was a fatal shooting of an unarmed 18-year-old black man earlier in the week
: photo by Leah Millis / San Francisco Chronicle, 15 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


Looks like the 1950s to me
: photo via Warp Drive on twitter, 16 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


If there were any doubt about police presence tonight
: photo via Amy K. Nelson on twitter, 16 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


Store owners in Ferguson say they're going to start defending themselves against looters: photo via Kennan Oliphant on twitter, 16 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


Police, Ferguson: photo via The National Memo on twitter, 13 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


State of emergency, curfew declared in Ferguson
: photo via The Chronicle Herald on twitter, 16 August 2014

Ferguson tear gas

Ferguson: photo by AP via The Independent, 14 August 2014

Embedded image permalink


Ferguson: photo via Ward Harkavy on twitter, 16 August 2014
 Ferguson tear gas

Ferguson: photo by AP via The Independent, 14 August 2014

Lights out in BEAU Y Town

$
0
0
.

Embedded image permalink

Police-fired tear gas returned by a protester in Ferguson: photo via Ben Kesling on twitter, 18 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

 I am a woman. Phenomenally. Phenomenal woman. That's me: photo via GrooveSDC on twitter, 18 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

 This protester is an Army reservist. Said he's here to protest police militarization. Just got gassed: photo via Ray Downs on twitter, 18 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

 "Members of the media, please turn off your lights"  -- Ferguson PD: photo via Fight for the Future on twitter, 18 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Insanity as police armored car charges through crowd in Ferguson, lucky no one hurt, seems so reckless: photo via Zeke Johnson on twitter, 18 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
 Protesters have linked arms, marching with backs to cops: photo via Danny Wicentowski on twitter, 18 August 2014

Live from Ferguson, Missouri
  
Ferguson: photo via Alice Speri / Vice News on twitter, 18 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

A protester stands before police in tactical gear showing America's official sign of distress (upside flag): photo via Alice Speri / Vice News on twitter, 18 August 2014

The Human Abstract

$
0
0

.
Embedded image permalink

Gaza this evening!! captured by Yasser Qudih: photo via Dana on twitter, 20 August 2014


Pity would be no more,
If we did not make somebody Poor:
And Mercy no more could be,
If all were as happy as we;


And mutual fear brings peace;
Till the selfish loves increase.
Then Cruelty knits a snare,
And spreads his baits with care.


He sits down with holy fears,
And waters the ground with tears:
Then Humility takes its root
Underneath his foot.


Soon spreads the dismal shade
Of Mystery over his head;
And the Catterpiller and Fly,
Feed on the Mystery.


And it bears the fruit of Deceit,
Ruddy and sweet to eat;
And the Raven his nest has made
In its thickest shade.

 
The Gods of the earth and sea,
Sought thro' Nature to find this Tree
But their search was all in vain:
There grows one in theHuman Brain.

WilliamBlake: The Human Abstract, from Songs of Experience, 1794



Embedded image permalink

 Gaza Ministry of Agriculture estimates direct damages caused by the Israeli war at around $250 million!: photo via Middle East Eye / Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 20 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
A man brought water to dying animals in Gaza Zoo, even in hard times we don't forget animals!: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 20 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
Gaza Strip the symbol of steadfastness ♡: photo via Sabreena-Gaza, 20 August 2014
 

American-made Israeli warplanes turned Gaza morning into blood and smoke and debris: photo via Gaza Writes Back on twitter, 20 August 2014 


RAFAH NOW, most of the injured are kids: photo via Falastinian on twitter, 20 August 2014

 
Initial pix of killed & injured after airstrikes hitting three residential houses in Rafah at the same time: photo via Mohammed M Abu Sadaa on twitter, 20 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
Children of Gaza prepare for more violence: photo via Middle East Eye / Joe Catron on twitter, 20 August 2014
 Embedded image permalink
I don't know how many children must die before Israel is taken to war crimes court: photo via Sabreena-Gaza on twitter, 20 August 2014



Allouh family martyrs in Deir Albalah... martyred after the bombing of their home without any warning...: photo via Said Shoaib on twitter, 20 August 2014

 
Embedded image permalink
 
Official: 22 Palestinian murdered by Israeli strikes since truce collapsed: photo by Anonymous Palestine on twitter, 20 August 2014
 Embedded image permalink
Not how life should turn out for a baby. Children are suffering the most in Gaza Under Attack: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
 
 Heartbreaking: Israel violates ceasefire and terrorizes people and kills an infant: photo via Joe Catron on twitter, 19 August 2014
  
Embedded image permalink
  
What REALLY happens in Gaza: image via AKAoptimistic on twitter, 20 August 2014
  
Embedded image permalink
  
Slaughter in Gaza: the lessons of history: photo via ISM Palestine, 20 August 2014
  
Embedded image permalink

Netanyahu after Al Qassam speech :D: photo by Dana on twitter, 20 August 2014

 

Embedded image permalink
 
 Oh my goooooood another huge explosiiiioooon: photo via HaneenElQadi on twitter, 20 August 2014
  
Embedded image permalink
 
 Huge explosion right now!!!!: photo via HaneenElQadi on twitter, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
  
Another massive explosion shakes Gaza City!: photo via Occupied Air on twitter, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
   
Israeli strike killed Gaza commander's wife and child: Hamas: photo via ISM Palestine on twitter, 20 August 2014


Embedded image permalink
 
 Israel kills several in new strikes on Gaza: photo via ISM Palestine on twitter, 20 August 2014 
 
Embedded image permalink
 
This F16 missile targeted passengers hall at Rafah crossing today. Didn't explode, thanks God: photo via Youssef M. Aljamal on twitter, 20 August 2014
 
 
 He, little, promised much, Too soon untied: He only dreamt he lived. And then he died: photo via Gaza Writes Back on twitter, 20 August 2014 
 
Embedded image permalink
 
 Gaza this morning: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
 
 Israel Government teach their children to hate even before they start to hold the weapons !!!!!!: photo via Dr-Mohammed N. Ziara on twitter, 20 August 2014


Embedded image permalink
 
 Israel's "pinpoint" bombardment of Gaza: image via ronnie barkan on twitter, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
  
Organizers saying this is the 3rd time police have come. Last night they had assault weapons: photo via ShordeeDooWhop, 19 August 2014 
 
Embedded image permalink
  
Fox says man in this picture is beaten nearly unconscious w/broken eye socket. No really, the white dude: photo via the silver burrito on twitter, 20 August 2014 
 
Embedded image permalink
  
St. Louis Police Not All That Interested In How People End Up Shot, Apparently: photo via R Saddler on twitter, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Records show Ferguson police made more than DOUBLE the arrests they reported
: photo via The Root on twitter, 20 August 2014

 

Embedded image permalink
 
 At least 47 people were arrested on the 10th night of Ferguson protests: photo via New York Daily News on twitter, 20 August 2014 
 
Arrested for being out at night without Free Papers: photo via zellie on twitter, 20 August 2014 
 
Embedded image permalink
  
Officer just held a gun up and threatened to shoot me as I was walking to the distraction: photo via {Young}ist on twitter, 20 August 2014



Ferguson: photo via Annie Shields on twitter, 20 August 2014
 
The Rage in Ferguson Resists Containment — And Deserves to Spread

 Ferguson: photo by Claire Ward / Vice News, 20 August 2014


Embedded image permalink

This little boy watched his home being demolished by Israel. This is why we Block the Boat: photo via 14 Friends Palestine, 20 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink

Just walked back to main entrance from side entrance. Crowd is still going strong!: photo via Not Frantz Fanon on twitter, 19 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
 
Israeli ship is blocked from unloading in Oakland for four straight days: photo via ISM Palestine on twitter, 20 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
Around 50 picketers at Berth 22 (1599 Maritime) to Block The Boat one more time: photo via Kumars Salehi, 20 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink

California picketers prevent Israeli cargo ship from docking: photo via Joe Catron on twitter, 19 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink

Israeli ship blockade continues in California: photo via ISM Palestine, 19 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
Solidarity & hugs to West Coast Block The Boat whose protests stopped Israeli ship from docking: photo via Sherry Wolf on twitter, 16 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
Thousands of ppl -- Chanting 7th and Mandela -- Not another nickel not another dime for Israeli crime: photo via Alyssa on twitter, 16 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Won again! Made history! Longshoremen ordered 2 go home. Longest boat has been blocked: photo by Alyssa via Solidarity Gaza, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Oakland police intervening to try and open our picket line at Block the Boat. We are resolved to continue resisting: photo via Todd Zimmer, 20 August 2014


A demonstrator throws back a tear gas container after tactical officers worked to break up a group of bystanders on Chambers Road near West Florissant on Wednesday: photo by Robert Cohen / MCT / ZUMA Wire, 15 August 2014

The General's Son Comes Home: Miko Peled: "Gaza reminds us of Zionism's original sin"

$
0
0
.

Embedded image permalink

Two men were targeted in Rafah on a motorcycle just few minutes ago: photo via Solidarity Gaza on twitter, 21 August 2014

Gaza reminds us of Zionism’s original sin: Miko Peled, The Electronic Intifada, 19 August 2014

The morning after Lailat al-Qadr, the death toll in Gaza was approaching its first thousand.

Al-Qadr -- the night before the last Friday in the holy month of Ramadan -- is believed to be the night when the Quran was revealed to the prophet Muhammad. I spent this special night with friends in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah after participating in the “48K March” for Gaza.

The march began in Ramallah and went to Qalandiya checkpoint. What began as a peaceful event with families bringing their children and even babies in strollers, ended with young Palestinians with gunshot wounds being rushed in ambulances to the local hospital.

Qalandiya crossing was fortified and air-tight, and the Israeli soldiers stationed on top were shooting live ammunition at the crowd.

As the ambulances were speeding through the crowd, I couldn’t help but wonder why there is no hospital between Qalandiya and Ramallah, a good distance which includes the municipalities of Jerusalem, al-Bireh and Ramallah.




Today morning in Beit Ommar, 21 August 2014: photo via CemDM, 21 August 2014


The following night I was scheduled to leave Palestine to return to the United States. But Israeli forces sealed all the roads from Ramallah to Jerusalem for the night, and they were likely to be sealed the following day as well.



Today morning in Beit Ommar, 21 August 2014: photo via CemDM, 21 August 2014

At the crack of dawn, when things had quietened down, my friend Samer drove me to a checkpoint that he suspected would be open. It was open, albeit for Israelis only, and from there I made my way back to Jerusalem.

That evening, as I was preparing to leave for Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv, people around me were trying to calm me down. “Don’t aggravate them, cooperate and they will be nice,” they said. “Why go through all this unnecessary inconvenience?”

They were talking about the “Smiling Gestapo,” Israeli security officers at Tel Aviv airport that go by the squeaky clean name of the Airport Security Division.



Embedded image permalink

Israeli police arrest a protester in Haifa during a protest against the assault on Gaza, 18 July: photo by Faiz Abu Rmeleh /  Active Stills via Electronic Intifada, 19 August 2014


Non-cooperation and resistance

Listening to this, I was reminded of Jewish communities under the Nazi regime who believed that if they cooperated and showed they were good citizens then all would be well. But the road from cooperation to the concentration camps and then the gas chambers was a direct one.

The policies of racist discrimination and humiliation at Ben Gurion airport, and the policies of ethnic cleansing and murder of Palestinians in Gaza, emanate from the same Zionist ideology.

As we have seen over the past seven decades, cooperation and laying low do not make things ok.

Cooperation with the Israeli authorities might lead to short-term relief but it also validates Israel’s “right” to terrorize and humiliate Palestinians with our consent, “we” being all people of conscience. Whether we are Palestinian or not, the call of the hour is non-cooperation and resistance against injustice.



Embedded image permalink

Free Gaza protesters in Oakland  block Israeli cargo ship Zim Piraeus from docking on the West Coast: photo via Block the Boat / Joe Catron on twitter, 18 August 2014

Today, Israel and its supporters lay the blame for the violence in Gaza on Hamas. But Israel did not start its assaults on the Gaza Strip when Hamas was established in the late 1980s. Israel began attacking Gaza when the Strip was populated with the first generation refugees in the early 1950s.

Palestinians, particularly in Gaza, are not faced with an option to resist and be killed or live in peace. They are presented with the options of being killed standing up and fighting or being killed sleeping in their beds.



Embedded image permalink

Shuja'iyya, Gaza City: photo by Heidi Levine / SIPA / REX via Ben White on twitter, 18 August 2014

“Sea of hatred”

Gaza is being punished because Gaza is a constant reminder to Israel and the world of the original sin of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine and the creation of a so-called Jewish state. Even though Palestinian resistance has never presented a military threat to Israel, it has always been portrayed as an existential threat to the state.

Moshe Dayan, the famed Israeli general with the eyepatch, described this in a speech in April 1956. He spoke in Kibbutz Nahal Oz, an Israeli settlement on the boundary of the Gaza Strip where Israeli tanks park each time there is a ground invasion of Gaza.

“Beyond the furrow of this border, there surges a sea of hatred and revenge,” Dayan said then. Ironically, when six months later Israel had occupied Gaza and my father was appointed its military governor, he said that he saw “no hatred or desire for vengeance but a people eager to live and work together for a better future.”




We just want to know.. "HOW" to protect innocent children from the criminal army??!: photo via Sabreena-Gaza on twitter, 21 August 2014

Still, today, Israeli commanders and politicians say pretty much the same: Israel is destined to live by the sword and must strike Gaza whenever possible. Never mind the fact that Palestinians have never posed a military challenge, much less a threat to Israel.

After all, Palestinians have never possessed as much as a tank, a warship or a fighter jet, not to say a regular army.



Embedded image permalink

WATCH OUT!! Israeli warplane is hovering!!: photo via Mohammed Y. Ismail on twitter, 18 August 2014

So why the fear? Why the constant, six-decade-long campaign against Gaza? Because Palestinians in Gaza, more so than anywhere else, pose a threat to Israel’s legitimacy.
Israel is an illegitimate creation brought about by a union between racism and colonialism. The refugees who make up the majority of the population in the Gaza Strip are a constant reminder of this.



Embedded image permalink

Gaza severely short of water for drinking and bathing: photo via Haitham Sabbah on twitter, 21 August 2014

They are a reminder of the crime of ethnic cleansing upon which Israel was established. 

The poverty, lack of resources and lack of freedom stand in stark contrast to the abundance, freedom and power that exist in Israel and that rightfully belongs to Palestinians.





This was Palestine airport after Israel destroyed it... Israel lives off blood and destruction: photo via Gaza Writes Back on twitter, 21 August 2014

Generous offer

Back at Ben Gurion airport that night, I was told that if I cooperate and plead with the shift supervisor it would make the security screening go faster. When I declined this generous offer, I was told they “did not like my attitude.”

They proceeded to paste a sticker with the same bar code on my luggage and give me the same treatment Palestinians receive.



Embedded image permalink

  20 Palestinians killed today, 48 in two days. 2069 killed & 10310 injured since July 8: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 21 August 2014


As I write these words, the number of Palestinians murdered by Israel in Gaza has exceeded two thousand. Ending the insufferable, brutal and racist regime that was created by the Zionists in Palestine is the call of our time.

Criticizing Palestinian resistance is unconscionable. Israel must be subjected to boycott, divestment and sanctions. Israeli diplomats must be sent home in shame. Israeli leaders, and Israeli commanders traveling abroad, must fear prosecution.

And these measures are to be combined with disobedience, non-cooperation and uncompromising resistance. This and only this will show mothers, fathers and children in Gaza that the world cares and that “never again” is more than an empty promise.

Miko Peled is the author of The General's Son: Journey of an Israeli in Palestine



Embedded image permalink


 Three kids from Reefi Family have been killed by Israeli attack this morning while they were played football: photo via MoonNor27 on twitter, 21 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


We will stay as long as our flag Is waving: photo via Culé MD Gaza on twitter, 21 August 2014
 

Embedded image permalink


Questions to Ask Your Pro-Israeli Friends: photo by Haitham Sabbah, 21 August 2014 


Embedded image permalink


Why is Netanyahu unhappy? He heard you weren't engaging with his paid trolls on Twitter: photo via Joe Catron on twitter, 21 August 2014


Embedded image permalink

U.S. accuses Israel Police of targeting slain Palestinian boy's family: photo via Ian56 on twitter, 21 August 2014


"This is GaZa: When one falls, thousands join the resistance. Israel can't bomb us to give up": photo via Aamir - GAZA on twitter, 21 August 2014


 "This is GaZa: When one falls, thousands join the resistance. Israel can't bomb us to give up": photo via Aamir - GAZA on twitter, 21 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


Even the nazism didn't devastate Al Shejaiaa neighborhood like IOF did !!: photo via Hussein - Gaza on twitter, 21 August 2014


Embedded image permalink


A story of a massacre that couldn't kill the will of those young kids to live!: photo via abdallahsaladi on twitter


Embedded image permalink


A Good morning bombardment on Rafah city !!!: photo via Mo'men Ashour on tweiier, 22 August 2014

Thomas Wyatt: Stond who so list vpon the Slipper toppe / Seneca: Chorus Two: from Thyestes

$
0
0
.

 
Dancing Bear, State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)
 

Stond who so list vpon the Slipper toppe
...Of courtes estates and lett me heare rejoyce
And vse me quyet without lett or stoppe
...Vnknowen in courte that hath suche brackishe ioyes
.....In hidden place so lett my dayes forthe passe
...That when my yeares be done withouten noyse
.....I may dye aged after the common trace
Ffor him death greepthe right hard by the croppe
...That is moche knowen of other and of him self alas
...Doth dye unknowen dazed with dreadfull face


ThomasWyatt (1503-1542): Stond who so list vpon the Slipper toppe, c. 1540 (text from Arundel Harington ms.)


1 Slipper = slippery. Cf. Wyatt's translation of Plutarch, Quyet of Mind: "slypper riches".
1 toppe (culmine). Cf. Sir T. Elyot's version of the Seneca chorus.
3 use...stop. i.e., Comport myself quietly without hindrance or impediment from others [R. Rebholz].
4 Vnknowen in courte (nullis nota Quiritibus). Cf. Elyot: "Myyde unknowen".
4 that hathe suche brackish ioyes [Wyatt's addition to the Latin].
4 brackishe: being spoiled to the point of being nauseous by the mixture of the salty with the fresh [Rebholz].
6 withouten noyse (per tacitum): Elyot.
7 common (translates plebeius).
7 after the common trace: (1) a common way or path; (2) like other people. The Latin has "a common man" (plebeius) [Rebholz].
8 dazed with dreadfull face [Wyatt's  addition].
8 dazed: (1) bewildered, stupefied (2) benumbed with cold.
8 croppe (crop): (1) bird's neck; (2) throat.
8 death...croppe: Latin has "Death lies heavy on him"(illi mors gravis incubat).
10 unknowen (ignotus): Elyot.




Side show attraction, State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)

Seneca: Chorus 2: from Thyestes
Stet, quicumque volet, potens
aulae culmine lubrico:
me dulcis saturet quies.
obscuro positus loco
leni perfruar otio;
nullis nota Quiritibus
aetas per tacitum fluat.
sic cum transierint mei
nullo cum strepitu dies,
plebeius moriar senex.
Illi mors gravis incubat
qui, notus nimis omnibus,
ignotus moritur sibi.

Lucius Annaeus Seneca (c 4 BC-AD 65), Thyestes, ll. 391-403



Outdoor ice show, "Pepsi on Ice", State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)

Andrew Marvell: Senec. Traged.  ex  Thyeste  Chor. 2

...Stet quicunque volet potens
...Aulae culmine lubrico &c.

...........Translated.

Climb at Court for me that will
Tottering Favour's slipp'ry hill.
All I seek is to lye still.
Settled in some secret Nest
In calm Leisure let me rest;
And far off the publick Stage
Pass away my silent Age.
Thus when without noise, unknown,
I have liv'd out all my span,
I shall dye, without a groan,
An old honest Country man.
Who expos'd to others Eyes,
Into his own Heart ne'r pry's,
Death to him's a Strange surprise.


Andrew Marvell (1621-1678): The Second Chorus from Seneca's Tragedy, Thyestes (probably composed after 1668; published posthumously 1678)


squaredancer

State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)

John Norris:The Choice (after Seneca)


No, I shan't envy him who're he be
That stands upon the Battlements of State;
....Stand there who will for me,
....I'd rather be secure than great.
Of being so high the pleasure is but small,
But long the Ruin, if I chance to fall.

Let me in some sweet shade serenely lye,
Happy in leisure and obscurity;
....Whilst others place their joys
....In Popularity and noise.
Let my soft moments glide obscurely on
Like subterraneous streams, unheard, unknown.
Thus when my days are all in silence past,
A good plain Country-man I'll dye at last;
....Death cannot chuse but be
....To him a mighty misery,
Who to the World was popularly known,
And dies a Stranger to himself alone.

John Norris (1657-1711), The Choice (after Seneca)




Carousel, State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)



Stuffed pony prizes hang from game booth, State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)


Dancing Bear, State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)



Big Tex is the symbol of the State Fair of Texas: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)



State Fair of Texas
: Tower building houses executive offices and food concessions: photo by Lynn Lennon, 1985 (Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library)


Surgery, Portuguese Institute of Oncology, Lisbon. Architect: Hermann Distel. Conception of project: 1938. Period of construction: 1940-1953. Opening: 1954: photo by Estúdio Horácio Novais, 1950(?)-1953 (Biblioteca de Arte / Art Library Fundaçao Calouste Gulbenkian)


Hospital of Santa Maria, Lisbon. Architect: Hermann Distel. Conception of project: 1938. Period of construction: 1940-1953. Opening: 1954: photo by Estúdio Horácio Novais, 1950(?)-1953 (Biblioteca de Arte / Art Library Fundaçao Calouste Gulbenkian)



Crowd in Rua do Carmo, Lisbon: photo by Estúdio Horácio Novais, 25 April 1974 (Biblioteca de Arte / Art Library Fundaçao Calouste Gulbenkian)


Members of the NSB (Dutch national socialist party) and shaven 'kraut girls' are being brought in by members of the Dutch Resistance. Deventer, The Netherlands: photo by Willem van de Poll, 11 April 1945 (Anefo photo collection / Nationaal Archief)
 

Grande Hotel da Figueira da Foz, Portugal Aechitect: Inácio Peres Fernandes. Opened 1953: photo by Estúdio Horácio Novais, 1950s (Biblioteca de Arte / Art Library Fundaçao Calouste Gulbenkian)

In [Wyatt's] finest imitations... historical consciousness goes... further. Imitation becomes fully heuristic and frequently dialectical; it takes the full responsibility for its cultural moment and location, "in Kent and Christendome," with the vulnerabiity as well as the strength these involve. To demonstrate this degree of consciousness, one need only cite the superb little version of Seneca, doubtless written after the execution of Wyatt's patron [Thomas] Cromwell [in 1540]... this derives from a chorus of Seneca's Thyestes... Wyatt Englishes this by suppressing the Latin leni... otio, the easy leisure that calls up an aristocratic Roman villa. Wyatt's language identifies him as an Anglo-Saxon countryman whose quietude will not be voluptuous, and whose death will not simply go unremarked, nullo cum strepitu, but whose obscurity will adhere to the traditional manner of ordinary folk, "after the common trace". "Trace" is itself one of those rustic words that help to situate the speaker. Wyatt omits the hint of sensual satisfaction in Seneca's saturet, adds the powerful modifier "brackishe" (salty, nauseating) in his fourth line, plays the force of "rejoyce" against the sobriety of "quyet", with its echo of the poet's translation of Plutarch, The Quyet of Mynde. Above all, Wyatt rewrites the closing lines, roughening Seneca's neat antithesis in ll. 12-13 and suppressing his sinister image of suffocation (incubat -- settles down upon, broods upon like a bird) for the more violent clutch of Death's abrupt hand: "him death greep'the right hard by the croppe." The five stressed monosyllables in unbroken sequence violate the rhythmic pattern with a wrench that corresponds to the action, and the harsh Anglo-Saxon words maintain the identity of a speaker hidden in the countryside outside a Latinate court. The control of verse movement, expert throughout, culminates in the majestic rallentando of the last line and a half, its terrible subsiding intensified by the pitiless alliteration. Brilliantly, Wyatt chooses not to explain why the lack of knowledge renders death's grip so much harder, not to explain the brilliant concluding phrase, his own addition -- "dazed with dreadfull face". The great man is "dazed" -- stupefied, bewildered, numbed -- because death's assault has been so sudden, because its numbing physiological effect has already begun or is completed, because we can assume the dying man has fallen from the slipper top of eminence, and perhaps because in his naive egoism he had thought of himself as immune from mortality. He is "dreadfull" -- inspiring reverence, awe, fear -- because as a power at court he has always inspired those, because he is suffering the humiliation of death after so much sway, because conceivably he has been publicly executed like Cromwell, and because, most profoundly, he is suffering this death in the limelight without the redeeming possession or acquisition of self-knowledge; he remains "of him self... unknowen."Wyatt's use of the Latin chorus only serves to help him find an idiom that is radically anti-Latinate and calls attention to its own parochial rusticity; his use of the somewhat facile Stoic morality helps him to adumbrate a drama of his own time and place. By insisting on its English provincialism the text assumes a vulnerability toward the elegant classicism of its subtext, and only by accepting this vulnerability can it implicitly criticize the subtext's facility. This is an intensely Tudor poem and conscious of itself as such, awake to the dialectical distinctions it has created. By achieving this degree of control over potential anachronism, Wyatt made it possible for the first time to speak of mature English imitation.


Thomas M. Greene, from The Light in Troy: Imitation and Discovery in Renaissance Poetry, 1982

 
 
 
Factory, Dogtown (St. Louis): photo by chalkdog, 7 September 2013


Utility poles in moonlight, Dogtown (St. Louis): photo by chalkdog, 18 September 2013
 

Factory, River des Peres, Dogtown (St. Louis): photo by chalkdog, 1 September 2013


Act of State. Vidkun Quisling. Torchlight procession: photographer unknown, 1 February 1942 (National Archives of Norway)


shinjuku, tokyo: photo by wire_paladinSF, 10 April 2014

Erasing the Forgotten: Has Gaza Eluded the Historical Memory of Poetry?

$
0
0

.
Embedded image permalink

The moment Al Zafer building was hit: photo via Issam Sammour on twitter, 24 August 2014



Hamid Dabashi: Gaza: Poetry after Auschwitz

'To write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric.' Is writing poetry after Gaza also barbaric?
via Al Jazeera, 8 August 2014

In a memorable and much cited passage in Cultural Criticism and Society (1949), Theodor Adorno, the eminent German philosopher who spent a good portion of his life in the US following the Nazi takeover of his homeland, famously said: "To write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric. And this corrodes even the knowledge of why it has become impossible to write poetry today."

Later in his thinking, Adorno reconsidered the assessment, but the power and shock of this thinking has endured.

What did Adorno mean, exactly, by that phrase? How could writing poetry after a calamity such as Auschwitz, and by extension a horror like the Holocaust, be something barbaric? Doesn't poetry console in moments of mourning and despair? And more to the point today: Is writing poetry after Gaza also barbaric? What would that mean?

The preeminent Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish is no longer alive. But were he alive today, how would he react to the carnage in Gaza? He would have either committed suicide like the magnificent Lebanese poet Khalil Hawi who did so in protest against the brutish Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, or he would respond with his poetry.

So how would we read Adorno's pronouncement today -- after the barbaric slaughter of Palestinians by Israelis in Gaza?

First, let's put what Adorno said in context. In his essay, Adorno asserts that "the traditional transcendent critique of ideology is obsolete", meaning "there are no more ideologies in the authentic sense of false consciousness, only advertisements for the world through its duplication and the provocative lie which does not seek belief but commands silence".

We have, he is saying, hit a narrative cul-de-sac in our critique of ideology, for we are integral to that ideology. The insularity of that ideology has now metastasised into shades upon shades of advertisements, which engulf and transmute the very nature of our critical faculties. Ideology has become amorphous.
Adorno is after all critic of what he calls "the total society", a society where everything, including cultural criticism, has been brought into being, concretised, the critic and the subject of his or her criticism indistinguishable.

"The more total society becomes," Adorno suggests, "the greater the reification of the mind and the more paradoxical its effort to escape reification on its own."
In other words, you cannot save a society via a cultural critique that in its critical language continues to exacerbate that reification.

It is right here that Adorno suddenly adds: "Even the most extreme consciousness of doom threatens to degenerate into idle chatter. Cultural criticism finds itself faced with the final stage of the dialectic of culture and barbarism. To write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric. And this corrodes even the knowledge of why it has become impossible to write poetry today."

Why that is the case? "Through the crudity and severity of the notion of causality, [cultural criticism] claims to hold up a mirror to society's own crudity and severity, to its debasement of the mind. But the sinister, integrated society of today no longer tolerates even those relatively independent, distinct moments to which the theory of the causal dependence of superstructure on base once referred."

Therefore it is near impossible for cultural criticism to find a moral space outside the culture it wishes to criticise. We are here in a hall of mirrors, where culture and cultural criticism keep reflecting each other, generating the illusion of defiance, consolation, liberation -- but in effect plunging us ever deeper into the abyss.

An open-air prison

It is here that, in an uncanny sentence written in 1949, Adorno uses a metaphor that points decades forward to Gaza:

"In the open-air prison which the world is becoming, it is no longer so important to know what depends on what, such is the extent to which everything is one."

By "open-air prison", he of course means a society in which everything is totalised, homogenised, and has become one -- and thus the fusion of the moral and the material, the ideological and the political, the superstructure and infrastructure has become a concrete totality.

But hasn't Gaza, as a camp -- a concentration or internment camp -- also become that reified totality of the world the way Adorno diagnosed it?

In his Remnants of Auschwitz: The Witness and the Archive (1999), the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben examined the literature of the survivors of Auschwitz, dwelling on the ethical questions they entail. But the testimonial distance between Auschwitz and Gaza is precisely where Adorno's cul-de-sac rests its case. 

This much is all known and familiar to students of Adorno. Now the question is when we fast forward from 1949 when he wrote that essay to today, when we are witness to the Israeli slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza, what do we see? Today how are we to read Adorno's phrase that “to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric"?

Look at Israeli society today, when it has unleashed its gargantuan military machine against a mostly defenceless population. Rape their women, cries one Israeli to his comrades-in-arms, kill their entire population so they won't breed more "little snakes", echoes an Israeli member of parliament. Burn them alive and watch them die, then go on a hilltop to watch even more of them slaughtered by your army.

Kill them as they play on the beach, kill them in the playground, kill their crippled, kill them as they pray in their mosque. Destroy their homes and flatten an entire neighbourhood, maim and murder them in UN school shelters and then gather gleefully to sing: "Tomorrow there's no school in Gaza, they don't have any children left."

Just for good measure, so no one could misinterpret any of this, one Israeli newspaper published a a reader's blog openly calling for the "permissible genocide" of Palestinians.

What does all of this amount to? Doesn't it come together to define what Zionism actually means today, as compared with its original potential? They said there were no Palestinians. Today, Palestinians are Palestinians, if by nothing else, by virtue of a history of unconscionable suffering and heroic defiance. What are Israelis? Who are Israelis? They are Israelis by virtue of what? By a shared and sustained murderous history -- from Deir Yassin in 1948 to Gaza in 2014. Is that not Zionism, the ideological foundation stone of being an Israeli?

'Barbarism manifest'

This macabre chorus of death is the poetry that Israelis are singing upon the graveyard of Gaza. "Death to Arabs", cry mobs in Tel Aviv -- for this is the poetry of Zionism for Gaza. This is what Adorno meant when he said, "after Auschwitz poetry is barbarism". This is what he had diagnosed, this is what he had anticipated. Israel is the puerile poetry after Auschwitz. It is barbarism manifest -- and in that it is the microcosm of the world it inhabits, from Saudi Arabia and Egypt that support it, to Iran and Turkey that feign to oppose it, from the US and Europe that arm it, to China and Russia that look for lucrative business within it. And it is precisely this world at large, crystallised in Israel, that Adorno saw, diagnosed, and feared.

But the terror of that barbaric poetry is heavy. After Gaza, not a single living Israeli can utter the word "Auschwitz" without it sounding like "Gaza". Auschwitz as a historical fact is now archival. Auschwitz as a metaphor is now Palestinian.

From now on, every time any Israeli, every time any Jew, anywhere in the world, utters the word "Auschwitz", or the word "Holocaust", the world will hear "Gaza". That is the sublime truth of Adorno's phrase, for, as Primo Levi saw it as early as 1982, in the aftermath of yet another Palestinian slaughter: "Today, the Palestinians are the Jews of the Israelis." Thus today Zionism -- as sung by these murderous thugs in the streets of Tel Aviv -- is the barbarism Adorno warned after Auschwitz.

But what about Gaza? What about poetry after Gaza -- the poetry of Palestinians, of Arabs, of any human being bearing witness to the slaughter in Gaza? The answer to this daunting question is no longer with Adorno but with another Jewish thinker of his time, who saw the dark clouds of Nazi terror gathering much sooner than all of them combined and ultimately opted to end his life before they flooded his world with their dreadful and deadly rain.

Between Walter Benjamin's suicide in 1940 on the border between France and Spain, running away from the banality of Nazi evil, and Khalil Hawi's suicide in 1982, in protest against the Zionist invasion and occupation of his homeland, the fate of all our metaphors and allegories after Gaza was written and sealed.

Where Adorno saw concrete totality, Benjamin saw ruinous fragments, and from the shattered concrete blocks of Gaza under the mighty bombs of the US and Israel, Benjamin anticipated the messianic rise of earth-shattering allegories for our future fears, foretelling our fantasies of freedom. While in Adorno the vile and diabolic Zionism that Netanyahu interprets and exercises is the confirmation of his thought that after Auschwitz all poetry is barbaric, in the very same ruins of Gaza, right next to the broken skulls of dead Palestinian children, dwells the rising seeds of our future world -- fearful, phantasmagoric, deadening, inaugural.

Hamid Dabashi is Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University.



Embedded image permalink

The IOF asking the people in this building near my house [Al Zafer no. 4 residential tower] to immediately evacuate!: photo via Sabreena-Gaza on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink


Report: AlZafer no. 4 building totally destroyed: photo via WhateverinGaza on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Smoke seen after a Massive Explosion nearby 7:25 pm. The entire tower was shaking: photo via Culé MD Gaza on twitter, 25 August 2014



Al Zafer building, moments after the strike: photo via Shaima' Ziara on twitter, 24 August 2014



Al Zafer building, after the strike: photo via Shaima' Ziara on twitter, 24 August 2014



13-story Al Zafer residential building razed to the ground after IOF airstrike; 16 injuries reported so far: photo via Omar Daraghmeh on twitter, 24 August 2014



13-story Al Zafer building razed to the ground after IOF airstrike; 16 injuries reported so far: photo via Omar Daraghmeh on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

This building used to house 360 people now they are all homeless from Israel strike to the tower..: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Nothing left to tell their stories... except melting metal: photo via Ahmed Tharwat on twitter, 24 August 2014


Embedded image permalink

Some families taking tents as shelters next to their damaged flats the day after Israel's targeting of the 13-story Al Zafer residential tower: photo via Dalia Labadibi-Gaza on twitter, 25 August 2014

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Palestinians search through the ruins of their homes after Israel destroys 13-story Al Zafer residential tower: photo by Dan Cohen, 25 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

 Ali Bin Abi Taleb Mosque: destroyed by israel for being a mosque...: photo via Gaza Writes Back on twitter, 25 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

That moment!: photo via Mohammed Y. Ismail on twitter, 25 August 2014


More and more attacks hit Gaza... As the 50th day comes to an end, people still under attack: photo via Falasteen on twitter,  25 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Israeli occupation forces destroy an entire neighbourhood: photo via ISM Palestine on twitter, 25 August 2014

 
Israeli rockets: destruction: photo via Mohammed M Abu Sadaa on twitter, 24 August 2014


Embedded image permalink

The UN says 70 percent of the Palestinians who have died in Gaza were civilians: photo via Al-Akhbar English on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Nader al-Masri, Palestinian Olympic athlete and his father at the ruins of their family home: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

A Palestinian is carried from the rubble of a building bombed by Israel in Gaza on Saturday: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
Now many injuries at Alshifa hospital after an airstrike on one of the citizens' homes in Gaza
: photo via Solidarity Gaza on twitter, 25 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Doctors, Nurses & Paramedics of Gaza...... these are my Heroes: photo via Sabry Wazwaz on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Family of five killed as Israel bombs Gaza homes, mosques: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Gaza every minute...: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 24 August 2014



Israeli warplanes targeted the House of Al-Dahdouh, South of Gaza City today: photo via CemDM on twitter, 24 August 2014


Israeli warplanes targeted the House of Al-Dahdouh, South of Gaza City today: photo via CemDM on twitter, 24 August 2014


Israeli warplanes targeted the House of Al-Dahdouh, South of Gaza City today: photo via CemDM on twitter, 24 August 2014




Israeli warplanes targeted the House of Al-Dahdouh, South of Gaza City today: photo via CemDM on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Rafah sky covered with smoke after the strike: Israel hit a building in Rafah just moments ago...: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 24 August 2014


The largest shopping center in Rafah city burns in the early morning of 24 August: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 24 August 2014



Good morning from Gaza, 24th August: The remnants of the largest shopping center in Rafah city: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 24 August 2014



Good morning from Gaza, 24th August: The remnants of the largest shopping center in Rafah city: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 24 August 2014


Good morning from Gaza, 24th August: The remnants of the largest shopping center in Rafah city: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Israelis bombed the Italian tower that used to house 100 families now they are all homeless...: photo via Gaza Under Attack on twitter, 25 August 2014


Italian tower that was targeted by Israel last night by Terrorist Israel!!: photo via Sara Alsagga on twitter, 26 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Remains of Italian Mall tower in Gaza, struck in overnight Israeli raids: photo via Ramy Hossain on twitter, 26 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Archived photo of the Basha building, which Israel just now completely flattened with 4 F-16 missiles: image via Linah Alsaafin on twitter, 26 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Albasha tower now: image via Occupied Air / Manic on twitter, 26 August 2014



This is AlBasha tower that was bombed more than five times last night by Israeli F16s...: photo via falasteen on twitter, 26 August 2014



This is AlBasha tower that was bombed more than five times last night by Israeli F16s...: photo via falasteen on twitter, 26 August 2014


This is AlBasha tower that was bombed more than five times last night by Israeli F16s...: photo via falasteen on twitter, 26 August 2014

Embedded image permalink
 
Five Palestinians including three children killed in airstrike on Gaza home: photo via ISM Palestine on twitter, 24 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
One of two twins born during this assault, killed when airstrike targeted their home: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 25 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
It's not a toy -- it's a prosthesis: photo via Gaza Under Attack on twitter, 25 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
"Doctor, please, I don't want to die!" this little girl said: photo via Omar Ghraieb on twitter, 25 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
His eyes: "WHY THE HELL..."?: photo via Mohammed Y. Ismail on twitter, 25 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink
 
The Gaza look...: photo via Falasteen on twitter, 25 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

We never forget Sara Omar Sheikh al-Eid, killed by shrapnel: photo via List of War Victims on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Holding his hand & trying to convince him that one day the World might get better: photo via Dr Bassel Abuwarda on twitter, 26 August 2014 

Embedded image permalink

We Don't Forget Yasser Zaki Abu Madi, killed by tank shells: photo via List of War Victims on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

No loss can be compared to that of a parent losing one or all of his children! A dad's cry of pain: photo via Omar Ghraieb on twitter, 25 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

The day began with the new school year starting in Palestine, while remaining deferred in the Gaza Strip: photo via Shereen ElOkka on twitter, 24 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Gaza children mark first day of school, but no lessons: photo by AFP via Joe Catron on twitter, 24 August 2014

the daily screenshot

$
0
0

.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/01/Caprock_Canyons_Mule_Deer_2005.jpg/1024px-Caprock_Canyons_Mule_Deer_2005.jpg

Mule Deer (Odocoileus hemionus), Caprock Canyons, West Texas: photo by Leaflet, 15 May 2005


Today... dry season continuing after the latest insane war... I made it down the steps oh boy... and saw a doe, in the midst of the full-on mad-dog rush-hour get-and-spend take-no-prisoners commuter traffic stream blasting up the hill to where the rich live, attempting to herd her two scared fawns across the freeway feeder.

Two trips; on the second, the more timid of the young ones finally got the message, moved by her gentle nudgings, and -- as she lagged behind, observing the imminent danger with watchful motherly caution -- somehow made it across unscathed.

But now the red light at the Alameda had again turned green, and she was stranded and beginning to panic, ears pinned, eyes wide, frantically looking for an opening; a car bearing down on her at 40 mph, she leapt over the bonnet, seeming to hang in the air one long heartstopping moment, bounded away...




gas 'n go (view from an Air Force C-17 Globemaster III about to receive fuel from a KX-10A Extender on a training mission above southern Oregon): photo by Robert Couse-Baker (**RCB**), 25 September 2013

Robinson Jeffers: Point Joe

$
0
0

.

Seagull at PointJoe: photo by deb1edeb, 17 August 2009


PointJoe has teeth and has torn ships; it has fierce and solitary beauty;
Walk there all day you shall see nothing that will not make part of a poem.





The restless sea: rock formations at PointJoe, central California coast: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009


I saw the spars and planks of shipwreck on the rocks, and beyond the desolate
Sea-meadows rose the warped wind-bitten van of the pines, a fog-bank vaulted

 
Forest and all, the flat sea-meadows at that time of year were plated
Golden with the low flower called footsteps of the spring, millions of flowerets,

 
Whose light suffused upward into the fog flooded its vault, we wandered
Through a weird country where the light beat up from earthward, and was golden.





Breaking waves and ice plant at PointJoe, central California coast: a point where the sea surges due to submerged rocks: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009


One other moved there, an old Chinaman gathering seaweed from the sea-rocks,
He brought it in his basket and spread it flat to dry on the edge of the meadow.




China Rock, Monterey peninsula #4: a landmark named in honour of the Chinese who settled in the nearby fishing villages in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009


Permanent things are what is needful in a poem, things temporally
Of great dimension, things continually renewed or always present.





Hazy day, Monterey peninsula: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009


Grass that is made each year equals the mountains in her past and future;
Fashionable and momentary things we need not see nor speak of.





The restless sea: underwater rocks create crashing waves at vista point: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009


Man gleaning food between the solemn presences of land and ocean,
On shores where better men have shipwrecked, under fog and among flowers,

 
Equals the mountains in his past and future; that glow from the earth was only
A trick of nature's, one must forgive nature a thousand graceful subtleties.

RobinsonJeffers (1887-1962): PointJoe, from Tamar and Other Poems (1924)




Cypress, at the coast, Monterey peninsula: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009


China Rock, Monterey peninsula #3. Here and at PointJoe, Chinese fishermen built lean-tos against the rocks in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009



China Rock #2: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009



The restless sea: powerful waves breaking on the rocks at PointJoe, central California coast: photo by California Dreamin' 77, 23 June 2009

College Pigskin Preview: The New Amazing Return of A Crazy American Girl

$
0
0

.
ROYAL CROWN COLA LIFE 11/13/1944 p. 77
 
Nehi Corporation advertisement for Royal Crown Cola: Life, 13 November 1944 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


Pumped for a rhyming line into air
A football falling through registration,
Here I come: That’s Cathy’s Clown,
A song by Don and Phil in her
Consciousness.And mine.A beverage
Passes between lips, they’re her lips;
I am that beverage.Her Royal Crown
Classes break on the hour
Bar, O falcon of the lecture!
Fall, footballs, through the leaves!
We clown in airs of each other’s consciousness:
I bring hers stealthy cigarettes,
Between-halves tears; she brings mine
Contemporary milk of the lectures.

TC: A Crazy American Girl, 1960
 

File:Kooning woman v.jpg
 
Woman V: Willem de Kooning, 1951-52 (National Gallery of Australia, Canberra)
 
File:Woman3.jpg

Woman III: Willem de Kooning, 1951-53 (private collection of Steven A. Cohen)

LONGINES WATCHES LIFE 10/13/1941 p. 106

Longines Watches advertisement for Longines Watches: Life, 10 October 1936 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 


Junge Frau (bunt) / Young Girl (coloured)
: Gerhard Richter, 1965, oil on canvas, 80 x 65 cm (Gerhard Richter Art)
 
ROYAL CROWN COLA LIFE 03/12/1945 p. 123 
 
Nehi Corporation advertisement for Royal Crown Cola: Life, 12 March 1945 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

Phil Everly: Don Everly sits laughing at the table while Phil dances with a friend to th

Don Everly sits laughing at the table while Phil dances with a friend to the jukebox, 1950s
: photo by Alamy, c. 1959
 
File:Red Grange Field.jpg

Red Grange Field, Wheaton, Illinois: photo by Dhalls, 31 May 2006; image by BKLuis, 8 November 2009
 
CHESTERFIELD CIGARETTES LIBERTY 11/29/1936 BACK COVER 
 
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company advertisement for Chesterfield Cigarettes: Liberty, 29 November 1936 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

Ideology

$
0
0
.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a7/Roadblock_in_Palestine.jpg

One-metre-square cement roadblocks used to restrict Palestinian vehicle access at one of the entrances to Beit Ummar village, near Hebron, WestBank; one of 50 such block sites used to obstruct Palestinian vehicle access to settlements and to prevent bypassing of checkpoints when entering controlled access routes: photo by Harry Pockets, 6 July 2006


All
the great
ideologies
of the
world
are
predicated
on Malthus
assumption
that
there is
not
enough
to sustain
both
you
and me.

"All / the great / ideologies...": from TC:  Smack, 1972



File:Fredmeyer edit 1.jpg

Supermarket packaged food aisles, the new Fred Meyer on Interstate on Lombard, Portland: photo by Lyzadanger, 23 December 2004
 

U.S.: Israel's West Bank land grab 'counterproductive' to two-state solution (Haaretz, 1 September 2014)



An Israeli settlement in the Etzion bloc, in the West Bank, April 2014.

An Israeli settlement in the Etzion bloc, in the West Bank, April 2014: photo by Eyal Toueg via Haaretz, 1 September 2014

State Department urges Israel's government to reverse its decision to lay claim to land belonging to five Palestinian villages:Reuters and Chaim Levinson, Haaretz, 1 September 2014

Israel announced the massive land appropriation on Sunday in the Etzion settlement bloc near Bethlehem just days after Gaza ceasefire.

A Palestinian official said the latest land grab by Israel would cause only more friction after the Gaza war that left more than 2,000 Palestinians dead and over 10,000 injured.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas called on Israel to cancel the appropriation. "This decision will lead to more instability. This will only inflame the situation after the war in Gaza," presidential spokesman Abu Rdainah said.

A US State Department official called the announcement "counterproductive to Israel's stated goal of a negotiated two-state solution with the Palestinians".

"We urge the government of Israel to reverse this decision," the official said in Washington.

Peace Now group, which opposes Israeli settlement activities in the West Bank, territory the Palestinians seek for a state, said the appropriation was meant to turn a site where 10 families now live adjacent to a Jewish seminary into a permanent settlement.

International criticism

Construction of a major settlement at the location, known as "Gevaot", has been mooted by Israel since 2000. Last year, the government invited bids for the building of 1,000 housing units at the site.
Peace Now said the land seizure was the largest announced by Israel in the West Bank since the 1980s and that anyone with ownership claims had 45 days to appeal. A local Palestinian mayor said Palestinians owned the tracts and harvested olive trees on them.

Israel has come under international criticism over its settlement activities, which most countries regard as illegal under international law and a major obstacle to the creation of a viable Palestinian state in any future peace deal.

Israel has said construction at Gevaot would not constitute the establishment of a new settlement because the site is officially designated a neighbourhood of an existing one, Alon Shvut, several kilometres down the road.

About 500,000 Israelis live among 2.4 million Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, territory that Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war.




An Israeli flag waves on a hill near the West Bank Jewish settlements of Elazar (rear L) and Efrat (rear R), in the Etzion settlement bloc near Bethlehem May 22, 2011: photo by Ronen Zvulun / Reuters, 22 May 2014

Settlements outside of Nablus

A settlement, seen through separation fence: photo by T, from Nablus: Palestine, The Occupation, 7 July 2009


Children climb on a slide at a playground in a Jewish settlement in the Etzion settlement bloc, near Bethlehem, August 31, 2014. Israel announced on Sunday a land appropriation in the occupied West Bank that an anti-settlement group termed the biggest in 30 years and a Palestinian official said would cause only more friction after the Gaza war. Some 400 hectares (988 acres) in the Etzion settlement bloc near Bethlehem were declared "state land, on the instructions of the political echelon" by the military-run Civil Administration. Construction of a major settlement at the location, known as "Gevaot", has been mooted by Israel since 2000. Last year, the government invited bids for the building of 1,000 housing units at the site: photo by Ronen Zvulun / Reuters, 31 August 2014

Israeli women walk in a Jewish settlement known as "Gevaot", in the Etzion settlement bloc, near Bethlehem August 31, 2014. REUTERS/Ronen

Israeli women walk in a Jewish settlement known as "Gevaot", in the Etzion settlement bloc, near Bethlehem, August 31, 2014. Israel announced on Sunday a land appropriation in the occupied West Bank that an anti-settlement group termed the biggest in 30 years and a Palestinian official said would cause only more friction after the Gaza war. Some 400 hectares (988 acres) in the Etzion settlement bloc near Bethlehem were declared "state land, on the instructions of the political echelon" by the military-run Civil Administration. Construction of a major settlement at the location has been mooted by Israel since 2000. Last year, the government invited bids for the building of 1,000 housing units at the site: photo by Ronen Zvulun / Reuters, 31 August 2014

NEW OUTPOST SETTLEMENT CALLED ELAZAR NEAR EFRAT

Jewish settlers put up plywood walls to a home in the Gush Etzyon block of Jewish settlements in the West Bank in 2005: photo by Olivier Fitoussi-Flash 90 / European Pressphoto Agency via Los Angeles Times, 1 September 2014

'Stab in the back'? Israel grabs nearly 1000 acres of West Bank land, US slams move

Israeli settlements in the West Bank: photo by Zee Media Bureau/Supriya Jha via Zee News, 1 September 2014 
  

Palestunian youth throw stones at an Israeli military tower during clashes near Aida refugee camp in the WestBank town of Bethlehem in protest of Israeli military strikes on Gaza: photo by ActiveStills, 15 November 2012


Mahmoud Darwish: O those who pass between fleeting words
 
 
An olive tree, Bi'lin, WestBank: photo by elena martinez, 12 June 2009

O those who pass between fleeting words

Carry your names, and be gone
Rid our time of your hours, and be gone
Steal what you will from the blueness of the sea
And the sand of memory

Take what pictures you will, so that you understand
That which you never will:
How a stone from our land builds the ceiling of our sky.

O those who pass between fleeting words
From you the sword -- from us the blood
From you steel and fire -- from us our flesh
From you yet another tank -- from us stones
From you tear gas -- from us rain
Above us, as above you, are sky and air
So take your share of our blood -- and be gone
Go to a dancing party -- and be gone
As for us, we have to water the martyrs' flowers
As for us, we have to live as we see fit.

O those who pass between fleeting words
As better dust, go where you wish, but
Do not pass between us like flying insects
For we have work to do in our land:
We have wheat to grow which we water with our bodies' dew
We have that which does not please you here:
Stones or partridges
So take the past, if you wish, to the antiquities market
And return the skeleton to the hoopoe, if you wish,
On a clay platter
We have that which does not please you: we have the future
And we have things to do in our land.

O those who pass between fleeting words
Pile your illusions in a deserted pit, and be gone
Return the hand of time to the law of the golden calf
Or to the time of the revolver's music!
For we have that which does not please you here, so be gone
And we have what you lack: a bleeding homeland of a bleeding people
A homeland fit for oblivion or memory.

O those who pass between fleeting words
It is time for you to be gone
Live wherever you like, but do not live among us
It is time for you to be gone
Die wherever you like, but do not die among us
For we have work to do in our land.

We have the past here
We have the first cry of life
We have the present, the present and the future
We have this world here, and the hereafter
So leave our country
Our land, our sea
Our wheat, our salt, our wounds
Everything, and leave
The memories of memory
O those who pass between fleeting words!


Mahmoud Darwish (13 March 1941-9 August 2008): O those who pass between fleeting words, 1988; translator unknown, via Jerusalem Post, 2 April 1988


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3d/BeitUmmar.JPG

Beit Ummar, WestBank, Palestine: photo by Palobserver, 2 April 2011

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/84/Barrier_Gate_at_Bilin_Palestine.jpg

Barrier gate at Bi'lin, near Ramallah, WestBank: the gate is the only means of entry for the villagers who have been separated from their families by the Israeli WestBank barrier; one of 25 such fences, totalling 37,600 metres, built to impede Palestinians from traveling over major roads to the main cities: photo by Harry Pockets, 6 July 2006



Bi'lin Separation Wall, near Ramallah, WestBank; the wall separates the village of Bi'lin from sixty percent of its farmland: photo by elena martinez, 12 June 2009


A settlement, seen through barrier fence near village of Bi'lin, WestBank: photo by elena martinez, 12 June 2009

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f3/Bil%27in2005.jpg

Protestors fleeing IDF tear gas attack during demonstration against security barrier in Bi'lin, WestBank: photo by socksasgloves, 2005

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/90/Huwwara_Checkpoint_Palestine.jpg

View from Nablus side of Huwwara checkpoint, with people waiting to travel south; one of nine permanent checkpoints in the Nablus region, WestBank, used by the IDF to control pedestrian and vehicle access: photo by Harry Pockets, 10 August 2006

Embedded image permalink

'Biggest in 30 years': Israel expropriates 400 hectares of West Bank land: photo via Haitham Sabbah on twitter, 1 September 2014

Embedded image permalink

Palestinian protesters and a photographer run from tear gas fired by Israeli soldiers, Bi'lin, West Bank: photo by Reuters via Rachel P on twitter, 29 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

The settler division of the IDF throwing rocks at Palestinians in the West Bank, while peace-keeping IDF look on: photo via Israel Defence Force on twitter, 20 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

In the West Bank with VicCNN: funeral today, kids throwing stones -- soldiers respond with stun grenades: photo via Saima Mohsin on twitter, 9 August 2014 

Embedded image permalink

More Israeli soldiers coming out onto the road. Still only kids throwing stones -- more stun grenades: photo via Saima Mohsin on twitter, 9 August 2014


Embedded image permalink
 
Children of the 42-year-old killed in clashes in the West Bank show us a picture of their father: photo via Victoria Eastwood on twitter, 9 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Shame!! Israeli forces shoot dead Palestinian child in West Bank: photo via Solidarity Gaza, 11 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Is an explosion of the West Bank closer than we think?: photo via Solidarity Gaza on twitter, 31 August 2014

Is something broken in the Great Towns? Dougie Wallace: Shoreditch Wildlife

$
0
0
.



From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)

European jihadists: It ain't half hot here, mum

Why and how Westerners go to fight in Syria and Iraq 

The Economist, Cairo, 30 August 2014

Poverty does not explain the lure of jihad for Western fighters. Many of them are quite middle-class. Nasser Muthana, a 20-year-old Welshman who goes by the name Abu Muthana al-Yemeni in IS videos, had offers 
to study medicine from four universities.

Nor does a failure to integrate into the societies around them.

Photographs of Muhammad Hamidur Rahman, another British fighter thought to have recently been killed, show a young man in a snazzy suit with a slick hairstyle. He worked at Primark, a cheap retailer, in 
Portsmouth, a city on the English coast. His father ran a curry restaurant.

Nor does religious piety. Before leaving for Syria, Yusuf Sarwar and Mohammed Ahmed, two young men from Birmingham who pleaded guilty to terrorism offences in July, ordered copies of “Islam for Dummies” 
and “The Koran for Dummies” from Amazon.

Some fighters are religious novices...

More plausible explanations are the desire to escape the ennui of home and to find an identity. “Some individuals are drawn out there because there is not a lot going on in their own lives,” says Raffaello Pantucci,
an analyst at the Royal United Services Institute, a London think-tank.

Images of combatants playing snooker, eating sweets and splashing in swimming pools have sometimes suggested that jihad was not unlike a student holiday, without the booze. 



From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)

Friedrich Engels:The Great Towns (1845)

A town, such as London, where a man may wander for hours together without reaching the beginning of the end, without meeting the slightest hint which could lead to the inference that there is open country within reach, is a strange thing.

This colossal centralisation, this heaping together of two and a half millions of human beings at one point, has multiplied the power of this two and a half millions a hundredfold; has raised London to the commercial capital of the world, created the giant docks and assembled 
the thousand vessels that continually cover the Thames.

I know nothing more imposing than the view which the Thames offers during the ascent from the sea to London Bridge.

The masses of buildings, the wharves on both sides, especially from Woolwich upwards, the countless ships along both shores, crowding ever closer and closer together, until, at last, only a narrow passage remains in the middle of the river, a passage through which hundreds 
of steamers shoot by one another; all this is so vast, so impressive, that a man cannot collect himself, but is lost in the marvel of England's greatness before he sets foot upon English soil.  



http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a5/Canary_Wharf_at_night%2C_from_Shadwell_cropped.jpg/1280px-Canary_Wharf_at_night%2C_from_Shadwell_cropped.jpg

Canary Wharf, London, viewed from Shadwell
: photo by Dave Pape, 13 June 2007; image by Pointillist, 24 April 2010

But the sacrifices which all this has cost become apparent later.

After roaming the streets of the capital a day or two, making headway with difficulty through the human turmoil and the endless lines of vehicles, after visiting the slums of the metropolis, one realises for the first time that these Londoners have been forced to sacrifice the best 
qualities of their human nature, to bring to pass all the marvels of civilisation which crowd their city; that a hundred powers which slumbered within them have remained inactive, have been suppressed in order that a few might be developed more fully and multiply through union 
with those of others.
 
The very turmoil of the streets has something repulsive, something against which human nature rebels.

The hundreds of thousands of all classes and ranks crowding past each other, are they not all human beings with the same qualities and powers, and with the same interest in being happy?

And have they not, in the end, to seek happiness in the same way, by the same means?

And still they crowd by one another as though they had nothing in common, nothing to do with one another, and their only agreement is the tacit one, that each keep to his own side of the pavement, so as not to delay the opposing streams of the crowd, while it occurs to no man 
to honour another with so much as a glance.

The brutal indifference, the unfeeling isolation of each in his private interest, becomes the more repellent and offensive, the more these individuals are crowded together, within a limited space.

And, however much one may be aware that this isolation of the individual, this narrow self-seeking, is the fundamental principle of our society everywhere, it is nowhere so shamelessly barefaced, so self-conscious as just here in the crowding of the great city.

The dissolution of mankind into monads, of which each one has a separate principle, the world of atoms, is here carried out to its utmost extreme.

Hence it comes, too, that the social war, the war of each against all, is here openly declared.

Just as in Stirner's recent book [The Ego and Its Own], people regard each other only as useful objects; each exploits the other, and the end of it all is that the stronger treads the weaker under foot; and that the powerful few, the capitalists, seize everything for themselves, while 
to the weak many, the poor, scarcely a bare existence remains.

What is true of London, is true of Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, is true of all great towns.

Everywhere barbarous indifference, hard egotism on one hand, and nameless misery on the other, everywhere social warfare, every man's house in a state of siege, everywhere reciprocal plundering under the protection of the law, and all so shameless, so openly avowed 
that one shrinks before the consequences of our social state as they manifest themselves here undisguised, and can only wonder that the whole crazy fabric still hangs together. 


File:Die Lage der arbeitenden Klasse in England.gif

Die Lage der arbeitenden Klasse in England (cover): Friedrich Engels, Leipzig, 1845


Since capital, the direct or indirect control of the means of subsistence and production, is the weapon with which this social warfare is carried on, it is clear that all the disadvantages of such a state must fall upon the poor.

For him no man has the slightest concern. Cast into the whirlpool, he must struggle through as well as he can.

If he is so happy as to find work, i.e., if the bourgeoisie does him the favour to enrich itself by means of him, wages await him which scarcely suffice to keep body and soul together; if he can get no work he may steal, if he is not afraid of the police, or starve, in which case 
the police will take care that he does so in a quiet and inoffensive manner.

During my residence in England, at least twenty or thirty persons have died of simple starvation under the most revolting circumstances, and a jury has rarely been found possessed of the courage to speak the plain truth in the matter.
Let the testimony of the witnesses be never so clear and unequivocal, the bourgeoisie, from which the jury is selected, always finds some backdoor through which to escape the frightful verdict, death from starvation.

The bourgeoisie dare not speak the truth in these cases, for it would speak its own condemnation.

But indirectly, far more than directly, many have died of starvation, where long-continued want of proper nourishment has called forth fatal illness, when it has produced such debility that causes which might otherwise have remained inoperative brought on severe illness 
and death.

English working-men call this "social murder", and accuse our whole society of perpetrating this crime perpetually. Are they wrong? 

True, it is only individuals who starve, but what security has the working-man that it may not be his turn tomorrow?

Who assures him employment, who vouches for it that, if for any reason or no reason his lord and master discharges him tomorrow, he can struggle along with those dependent upon him, until he may find some one else "to give him bread"?

Who guarantees that willingness to work shall suffice to obtain work, that uprightness, industry, thrift, and the rest of the virtues recommended by the bourgeoisie, are really his road to happiness?

No one. He knows that he has something today and that it does not depend upon himself whether he shall have something tomorrow.

He knows that every breeze that blows, every whim of his employer, every bad turn of trade may hurl him back into the fierce whirlpool from which he has temporarily saved himself, and in which it is hard and often impossible to keep his head above water.

He knows that, though he may have the means of living today, it is very uncertain whether he shall tomorrow.

from Friedrich Engels: Die Lage der arbeitenden Klasse in England (Condition of the Working Class in England), 1844-1845: published in Leipzig, 1845; English translation by Florence Kelley [Wischnewetzky], New York, 1887; London, 1891





La Proximité de la Mer (Borges), Canary Wharf, London: photo by galaad, 4 April 2010

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/19/Manila_shanty.jpg

Shanty town, Manila, beside Manila City Jail (seen from Recto LRT Station): photo by Mile Gonzalez, 20 May 2007

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/49/Tripoli_cityscape.jpg

Sun sets over the old medina in central Tripoli: photo by Patrick André Perron, 2007

The nun who took down an Isis flag –- and stands up for east London's Muslims

Sister Christine Frost on why young men from Tower Hamlets are going to fight in Iraq and Syria: Jane Kelly, The Spectator, 30 August 2014


(Photo: Christopher Furlong/Getty)

Sister Christine Frost: photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty via The Spectator, 30 August 2014


Not so long ago disaffected youngsters would take to a life of crime and hard drugs, a trajectory which would often kill them. These days, some young men from our Muslim community sign up instead to the so-called Islamic State, and the dream of a distant Caliphate.

Why? Well, forget theology or even the prestige which comes from being a warrior -- if Sister Christine Frost is right, it all comes down to housing.

Sister Christine has worked on the Will Crooks Estate in Poplar, east London, for over 40 years. She accidentally got into the news in early August when she removed the black flag of radical Islam which was flying over the entry to the estate, and the press were fascinated that 
a small, lone woman aged 77, would take such a risk. But if they believed Sister Christine to be a crusader against Islamism, then they got it all wrong. Sister Christine is a committed Christian of course, but if she is fighting on behalf of anyone, it is the disenfranchised, 
ghetto-ised Muslim youth she finds herself living alongside.

I met Sister Christine in the St Matthias Community Centre, where Christians once worshipped when the building was a church. Built in 1654 by the East India Company, it’s the oldest building in Docklands. In the nave, large, lumpy white folk were preparing for a wedding 
reception, though the area is now largely Bangladeshi.

Poplar is in the borough of Tower Hamlets, where the Palestinian flag flies over the town hall and there is the highest percentage of Muslims in England. Sister Christine’s patch also has the lowest proportion of Christians and there have been reports of Muslim patrols in the area 
threatening locals seen drinking, wearing short skirts, or looking overtly gay.


Demotix 08/08/2014

Will Crooks Estate
: photo by PA Images via The Spectator, 30 August 2014


In recent weeks the tensions between ‘them’ and ‘us’ have got markedly worse, as it’s come out that at least 20 young Britons a month are heading to Syria and Iraq to join terrorist groups. Ibn Hamdan al Bengali, 24, has stated on Facebook that 
he is a former student at Tower Hamlets College, just up the road from the St Matthias Centre.

But though Sister Christine deplores the jihadis, she also thinks we must address the real reasons it seems attractive to young Muslim men, which is that they feel victimised. ‘It used to be mainly Pakistani youths who were radicalised,’ she says, 
‘but now the  Bengali youth are getting involved too. They feel themselves targeted and they become angry.’ Sister Christine’s point is that a feeling of persecution makes a young man ripe for radicalisation. The persecution complex began, she says, when Tony 
Blair led the UK into war in Iraq, but now it’s mainly linked with Israeli attacks on Gaza. ‘There is a sense of victimhood, and they have a narrow vision,’ she says.

Their anger is also fed by the deprivation in which they live. ‘Housing is the worst problem here,’ she says. ‘The lack of provision amounts to a kind of social cleansing.’ The mostly Muslim poor she cares for are being pushed out in favour of the 
new gentry in nearby Canary Wharf. 

The cost of one of the early Victorian terraced houses near the Matthias Centre is over £2 million.

‘There is a huge housing estate being developed,’ she says, ‘1,500 new homes, but they are all beyond the means of people around here and rents are going up too. People can look across and see homes where people have millions to spend, while 
they can’t afford basic heating.

'I’ve seen four families sharing one flat, a family in every room. That causes tension — nowhere for children to do their homework, nowhere to relax, no privacy. Then there are no jobs or apprenticeships when they leave school. I see Bengali mothers, 
some with little English, struggling with all that. They should be canonised.’

Sister Christine is particularly angry with the Prime Minister, whom she sees as representing the gentry. ‘David Cameron does not have a clue about housing here,’ she says. ‘He’s never spent even a day with the sort of people who live in Poplar. I 
challenge him to come and live in one of our council blocks for a week, with just £35 in his pocket. See how he survives.’

'I’m driven by a sense of injustice,’ she says, ‘particularly when I see the powerlessness of people here.’

She has been given MBE for her work on the estate. In the past she’s represented locals against the council when they tried to introduce bizarre health and safety laws banning doormats and washing lines, but she’s not an apologist for Islamism. She once 
took down Islamist notices criticising  Christmas, and though she lives alone, there are five other sisters in the order who live together close by. They are also committed to loving all peoples. The other sisters are older, and she indicated that they don’t 
share her direct involvement with the crisis currently affecting young Muslims, but all their work comes under the term ‘befriending’. They run old people’s clubs and get the young people to take the elderly out on day trips. At Christmas she makes sure 
people have cooked dinners delivered to them.

'Many older white working-class people are isolated,’ she says, ‘especially the proud, independent Cockneys who are still here.’

Sister Christine has an immigrant edginess herself, coming from Limerick, Ireland. She left her convent school aged 17 and won a place at Guy’s Hospital in London to study physiotherapy. Instead she joined a religious order.

‘My parents wanted me to do the medical course,’ she says, ‘but I had a personal conviction.’ This ‘conviction’ has, she says, only grown stronger over the years. She believes that the world is getting less caring, and she is fighting to change that course.

‘We have to find a way of getting people to change,’ she says. ‘I want the wealthy people who have millions and live in Canary Wharf to come over here and help the young people, get them into training. Make that an attractive alternative for them.’

She really believes that with a little encouragement the rich and pampered will come out of their apartments to take an interest in their deprived neighbours. That with care and attention she can persuade young Muslims to reject jihad and embrace life 
in Britain.

‘We must find a way of bringing people together,’ she says. ‘We must create cohesion, or we will have a Bosnia/Serbia situation here.’




From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)


London-based photographer Dougie Wallace grew up in Glasgow hence his moniker, “Glasweegee”. He is known best for his expressive social documentary and a distinct direct style of street photography.

‘Human behaviour motivates my pictures. People, their interactions and emotions fascinate me. My stories are thematic… they have similarities of expressions running through them.

'My work is informed by today’s growing culture of commercialization, the effect this has on our leisure time and global tourism and the inescapable consequences of corporate and brand domination that have ensued.


'Translating this into social wit, criticism and humorous vignettes through my lens is what stimulates me.


'I’m based in East London and Shoreditch, which has been an ideal training ground to practice my photography over the past 15 years. Brandishing my Glasgow upbringing has helped shape my style, which has been described as ‘visually exaggerated’. My photos convey 

a personalised point of view that is both believable and absurd.

'I took a course in photojournalism after finishing my degree in sports, but I consider myself self-taught as I’ve spent years taking photos to realise my ambition. As my photos became prolific on social networks I’ve attracted international clients like the New York 

Times and Germany’s Stern Magazine.

'Whereas I was a camera geek in the past my new obsession is photography books. I’m getting three books published this year and I’m continually working on new projects.
 

'Shoreditch Wildlife, my ongoing autobiographical account of living in Shoreditch for 15 years, will be published by Hoxton Mini Press, October 2014.'



From Shoreditch Wildlife: photo by Dougie Wallace, 2014 (via Dougie Wallace Glasweegee)

Daniel Abdal-Hayy Moore: Faced

$
0
0

.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/84/JodhpurIndia.jpg

The blue city, dotted with green (Jodhpur, India): photo by Soylentgreen23, 10 August 2004


I'm faced with what I've got, Lord.
No two walls the same, no two doors.
No two hills under clear blue sky, no two thoughts.
It's a long journey when we take the
....long way around.
I'm bereft. Uncertainty is a single heartbeat in an
..echoing room. Nothing we say can
really be far from the truth. If words
sound so, look so, they link so
......closely to
Majesty's cloud of white light
come explosively from
inside horizons of space brought
together in one drop of
water hanging balanced perfectly from the
....water-tap.
Look in there. We are
all in there. Lord, I'm
..faced with
....what I've got.


Daniel Abdal-Hayy Moore: Faced (1989), from Facing Mecca (2014)


File:Wassertropfen.jpg

A water drop: photo by Sven Hoppe, 2005

File:2006-01-28 Drop-impact.jpg

Impact of a drop of water on a water-surface: photo by Roger McLassus, 2006

File:2006-01-14 Surface waves.jpg

Surface waves of water (expansion of a disturbance): photo by Roger McLassus, 2006

Borderlands: Between the Dream and the Reality

$
0
0

'

 
Fog settles on the deserted streets of San Miguel Cuevas, a Mixtec village in the highlands of Oaxaca; over 80% of its population has emigrated to the United States, leaving it little more than a ghost town: photo by MattBlack (Matt Black Photography)
 
 

...Jimmy Santiago Baca: Immigrants in Our Own Land

We are born with dreams in our hearts,
looking for better days ahead.
At the gates we are given new papers,
our old clothes are taken
and we are given overalls like mechanics wear.
We are given shots and doctors ask questions.
Then we gather in another room
where counselors orient us to the new land
we will now live in. We take tests.
Some of us were craftsmen in the old world,
good with our hands and proud of our work.
Others were good with their heads.
They used common sense like scholars
use glasses and books to reach the world.
But most of us didn’t finish high school.

The old men who have lived here stare at us,
from deep disturbed eyes, sulking, retreated.
We pass them as they stand around idle,
leaning on shovels and rakes or against walls.
Our expectations are high: in the old world,
they talked about rehabilitation,
about being able to finish school,
and learning an extra good trade.
But right away we are sent to work as dishwashers,
to work in fields for three cents an hour.
The administration says this is temporary
So we go about our business, blacks with blacks,
poor whites with poor whites,
chicanos and indians by themselves.
The administration says this is right,
no mixing of cultures, let them stay apart,
like in the old neighborhoods we came from.

We came here to get away from false promises,
from dictators in our neighborhoods,
who wore blue suits and broke our doors down
when they wanted, arrested us when they felt like,
swinging clubs and shooting guns as they pleased.
But it’s no different here. It’s all concentrated.
The doctors don’t care, our bodies decay,
our minds deteriorate, we learn nothing of value.
Our lives don’t get better, we go down quick.

My cell is crisscrossed with laundry lines,
my T-shirts, boxer shorts, socks and pants are drying.
Just like it used to be in my neighborhood:
from all the tenements laundry hung window to window.
Across the way Joey is sticking his hands
through the bars to hand Felipé a cigarette,
men are hollering back and forth cell to cell,
saying their sinks don’t work,
or somebody downstairs hollers angrily
about a toilet overflowing,
or that the heaters don’t work.

I ask Coyote next door to shoot me over
a little more soap to finish my laundry.
I look down and see new immigrants coming in,
mattresses rolled up and on their shoulders,
new haircuts and brogan boots,
looking around, each with a dream in their heart,
thinking they’ll get a chance to change their lives.

But in the end, some will just sit around
talking about how good the old world was.
Some of the younger ones will become gangsters.
Some will die and others will go on living
without a soul, a future, or a reason to live.
Some will make it out of here with hate in their eyes,
but so very few make it out of here as human
as they came in, they leave wondering what good they are now
as they look at their hands so long away from their tools,
as they look at themselves, so long gone from their families,
so long gone from life itself, so many things have changed.
... 

Jimmy Santiago Baca (b. 1952): Immigrants in Our Own Land, 1977, from ImmigrantsinOur Own Land, 1979



Embedded image permalink

Adriana Gil Diaz, right, hugged her mother, Maria Antonia Diaz, who is on the Mexican side of the border from Nogales, Arizona: photo by Nick Oza via NYT Photo on twitter, 11 August 2014


President Obama (Evan Vucci/AP)

Immigration activist asks of Obama, "Where is his courage?""I don't understand why the President doesn't have the courage to really face Republicans and what they're saying," says Erika Andiola: photo by Jonathan Capeheart via The Washington Post, 3 September 2014

sterling immigration

Immigrants use a raft to cross the Suchiate River: photo by Nick Oza via Newsweek, 10 July 2013

sterling immigration 

Arizona’s law SB 1070 essentially made it a crime for the undocumented to set foot in the state: photo by Will Seberger / Zuma via Newsweek, 10 July 2013

sterling-fe0125-immigration-embed9

The undocumented often equate law enforcement with immigration enforcement: photo by Eric Thayer / Reuters via Newsweek, 10 July 2013

sterling-fe0125-immigration-embed11

The border: photo by Larry W. Smith / EPA via Newsweek, 10 July 2013



Left behind by his migrant children, an ailing man lies in his yard, San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico: photo by Matt Black, 2011 (Matt Black Photography)

Saint's Day celebration. San Pedro Chayuco, Mexico.

Dressed for ceremonial dancing, a boy awaits the start of his town's Saint's Day celebration, San Pedro Chayuco, Mexico: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

A man leads a Saint's Day celebration. San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico.

 A man leads the Saint's Day celebration, San Pedro Chayuco, Mexico: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

Sisters empty their family's corn crib. San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico. 
Sisters empty their family's corn crib. San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

Rocks litter the ground of an eroded farm field. Santiago Mitlatongo, Mexico.

Rocks litter the ground of an eroded farm field. Santiago Mitlatongo, Mexico: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

Harvesting a wrecked corn field. Santiago Mitlatongo, Mexico.
 Harvesting a wrecked cornfield. Santiago Mitlatongo, Mexico: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

An elderly man walks home from his remote corn field. San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico. 
An elderly man walks home from his remote cornfield. San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

Awaiting the start of a burial at the village cemetery. San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico.

Awaiting the start of a burial at the village cemetery. San Miguel Cuevas, Mexico: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

An immigrant girl stands in the bathroom of a migrant camp. Hillsboro, Oregon.

An immigrant girl stands in the bathroom of a migrant camp. Hillsboro, Oregon: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

A Oaxacan immigrant mother feeds her daughter in a migrant worker's cabin. Hillsboro, Oregon. 
A Oaxacan immigrant mother feeds her daughter in a migrant worker's cabin. Hillsboro, Oregon: photo by Matt Black (Matt Black Photography)

Embedded image permalink

Immigration and Customs Enforcement Officers detained suspected human smugglers with 108 immigrants in West Phoenix. Most of the men and women were from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador
: photo by Nick Oza via NYT Photo on twitter, 11 August 2014


Embedded image permalink

Marcos Soto, a Border Patrol agent, used high-tech security cameras to keep an eye on the United States border at one of the remote locations: photo by Nick Oza via NYT Photo on twitter, 11 August 2014

Embedded image permalink

Immigration activists gathered to pray outside House Speaker John Boehner's office in Washington: photo by Nick Oza via NYT Photo on twitter, 11 August 2014
 
Embedded image permalink

Immigrants used a raft to cross the Suchiate River: photo by Nick Oza via NYT Photo on twitter, 11 August 2014

Alien Emergency

$
0
0
.



Zippy: Welcome to Dingburg (detail)
: Bill Griffith, 2008 image by fantagraphics. 24 October 2008

Breaking News:
Autonomous University of Dingburg invaded by undocumented alien copper thieves!
Huge muffled explosions reported for miles around!




 from Dal Tokyo (detail): Gary Panter, 1983; image via Fantagraphics Books, 2012


Smoke after explosion at UC Berkeley

Smoke billowing from generator explosion on UC Berkeley Campus: photo by Kohar Minassian, 30 September 2013
  • Students watch smoke from the East Asian Library after an explosion on UC Berkeley's campus on September 30, 2013 in Berkeley, Calif. Photo: Michael Drummond, The Daily Californian
  • Students watch smoke from the East Asian Library after an explosion on UC Berkeley's campus: photo by Michael Drummond / The Daily Californian, 30 September 2013
  • This image provided by The Daily Californian shows emergency crews at the scene of an explosion on the University of California Berkeley campus on Monday, Sept. 30, 2013 in Berkeley, Calif.  At least one person was hospitalized and a mandatory evacuation was ordered after the explosion followed a power outage across campus.  Fire crews freed about 20 people trapped in dormitory elevators across campus as a result of the outage, said UC Berkeley spokesman Dan Mogulof. (AP Photo/The Daily Californian, Alex Turney) MANDATORY CREDIT: THE DAILY CALIFORNIAN Photo: Alex Turney, Associated Press
  •  
  • Emergency crews at the scene of an explosion on the University of California Berkeley campus: photo by Alex Turney /The Daily Californian, 30 September 2013



 from Dal Tokyo (detail): Gary Panter, 1983; image via Fantagraphics Books, 2012


UC-Berkeley-explosion-img-093013640.jpg

An electrical explosion on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley forced the campus to be evacuated: photo by Kelley Fang / Daily Californian, 30 September 2013

REVERE WARE  COOKWARE WOMAN'S DAY 02/01/1954 p. 19

Revere Copper and Brass Inc. ad for Revere Ware Cookware: Woman's Day, 1 February 1954 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


 from Dal Tokyo (detail): Gary Panter, 1984; image via Fantagraphics Books, 2012


Undocumented Aliens -- the usual suspects

"All life is a blur of Republicans and meat!"
-- Zippy


Zippy: "I Am Muffler Man": Bill Griffith, 23 January 2004, via The Comics Journal, 21 March 2012

"In that case, let's go shopping!"
-- Zippy


 from Invasion of the Elvis Zombies: Gary Panter, 1984; image by Artists' Books in the TNS Libraries, 11 July 2012

File:All your base are belong to us at US-50.jpg

"All your base are belong to US" on US-50 south of Fallon, Nevada: photo by Gerd Badur, 13 August 2004


Tokyo Invasion: "All your base are belong to US". The Empire sent three Stormtroopers to invade Tokyo. One went off dancing and the other two decided to take some time off instead, seeing the sights at Akihabara, Shibuya, Asakusa and more: photo by Danny Choo, 25 January 2011


Hot dog! Everything's OK! It's Muffler Man! Let's not sweat the stupid documents!


File:Muffler Man with Hot Dog.jpg

A Muffler Man holding a hot dog at Bunyon's on Ogden Avenue in Cicero, Illinois: photo by Mykl Roventine, 6 July 2007

This towering fiberglass Paul Bunyan  figure stood outside Hamlet Arthur Stephens' hot dog stOgden Cicero for decades.  Richard

This towering, fiberglass Paul Bunyan figure stood outside Hamlet Arthur Stephens' hot dog stand on Ogden in Cicero for decades: photo by Richard A. Chapman via Chicago Sun-Times, 4 June 2012

Hamlet Arthur Stephens seen age 81 this 2003 phowith giant Paul Bunyan figure thstood outside his hot dog stOgden Cicero

Hamlet Arthur Stephens, seen at age 81 in this 2003 photo with the giant Paul Bunyan figure that stood outside his hot dog stand on Ogden in Cicero for decades. The figure, which was moved downstate after Stephens retired, became a well-known bit of Americana: photo by Richard A. Chapman, 2003, via Chicago Sun-Times, 4 June  2012

File:Muffler man in Rocky Mount, North Carolina 001.jpg

Bunyan Muffler Man, named after Paul Bunyan. It is located in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, on the west side of I-95 near Exit 145 Gold Rock and is visible from the highway. It was formerly located at the Stan the Tire Man facility in Salem, Illinois and was purportedly moved to the new location in Rocky Mount in 2007
: photo by Leonard J. DeFrancisci, 23 March 2009


File:Muffler man in Albuquerque, New Mexico 001.tif

Muffler Man at the May Cafe, 111 Louisiana Boulevard Southeast, Albuquerque, New Mexico. This muffler man can be seen from Route 66
: photo by Leonard J. DeFrancisci, 28 June 2013


File:St Maries, Idaho School Mascot.jpg

Heyburn Elementary School Mascot Muffler Man, St Maries, Idaho: photo by Nils Peterson, 17 November 2010

File:Paul Bunyon statue in Bangor, Maine.jpg

Paul Bunyan Muffler Man in Bangor, Maine: photo by Dennis Jarvis, 4 September 2006

File:Gemini Giant on 66.jpg

The famous Gemini Giant Muffler Man outside the Launching Pad Cafe, a drive-in restaurant on Route 66 in Wilmington, Illinois: photo by Skyring, 22 April 2011

File:Casino Dude Muffler Man (Rockvale, Montana) 001.jpg

Casino Dude Muffler Man at the Fort Rockvale Restaurant and Casino, 101 Rockvale Road, Joliet, Montana: photo by Leonard J. DeFrancisci, 23 June 2013

File:Big Mike, Muffler Man, Hayward, California.jpg

 Advertising statue, nicknamed Big Mike, photographed on Mission Blvd in downtown Hayward, California. A classic Muffler man. Statue removed in late 2011. Fully restored and re-erected at Bell Plastics on National Ave. in Hayward, March 2013
: photo by Mercurywoodrose, 2 October 20113


File:Chincoteague Viking 1.jpg

The Chincoteague Viking located on the north side of Ridge Road across from the end of Pony Swim Lane on Chincoteague Island, Virginia. The approximate address is 3376 Ridge Road. This hollow fiberglass statue is approximately 20 feet tall and is a Muffler Man
: photo by Leonard J. DeFrancisci, 23 June 2013


File:Chicken Boy statue Los Angeles.jpg

Chicken Boy Muffler Man on Route 66 in Los Angeles, Highland Park, California: photo by Marilyn Nix, 1 January 2012

File:Babes and Lightning muffler man 0947.JPG

The Muffler Man in front ofthe Babes and Lightning muffler shop at 808 The Alameda in San José, California, USA. View is looking south across SR 82 ("The Alameda"): photo by Pedro Xing, 12 September 2012

File:Santa in Brookfield 017.JPG

Santa waves to passing freight trains on the Housatonic Railroad from an "auto recycling facility" on Vail Road in Brookfield, Connecticut. Perhaps this fiberglass Muffler Man Santa was originally used at the Danbury Fair
: photo by Pedro Xing, 21 April 2012

"What, Me Undocumented?"



 

Zippy: "What, Me Muffle?"
: Bill Griffith, 23 January 2004, via Th' Official Zippy the Pinhead Website Archive


 DINGBURG-cover2

"Dingburg, the city inhabited entirely by pinheads": Bill Griffith, from Gary Panter: Questions for Griffy, in The Comics Journal, 21 March 2012

INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS SATURDAY EVENING POST 06/04/1955 p. 7

American Cyanimid ad for Industrial Chemicals: Saturday Evening Post, 4 June 1965 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

INTERNATIONAL PARTS MUFFLER SATURDAY EVENING POST 06/11/1960 p. 19

International Parts Corp. ad for International Parts Mufflers: Saturday Evening Post, 11 June 1960 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
Viewing all 1583 articles
Browse latest View live