Archive for March, 2008
An Article by:
Russell Cole
Mukasey – the United States Attorney General – stated on March 28th that pirating of digital copy righted materials was funding terrorism. The statement by the Attorney General was made after he met privately with executives from the entertainment industry as well as software vendors, such as Adobe.
I do not have much to say about this announcement other than the fact that it appears to be another fabrication that has been injected into the Discourse of Terror: a type of speech that serves as a justificatory device lending support to public initiatives that might otherwise appear undesirable if not absurd. This rhetoric that has been developed by the Bush Administration consists of a linguistic operation in which a policy position – that if viewed independently, might be unpopular - declares the policy to be a subsidiary of the larger War on Terror, even if the connections establishing such a relationship are lacking in evidential support; after all, there is always a black box, States Secrets, to reference if an Administration representative is pressed for empirical substantiation for an alleged scenario in which terror and its prosecution are invoked.
We can observe this same speech pattern in the latest canard; this time attempting to offer credence for increased resources being devoted by the Department of Justice for the investigation of individuals and syndicates engaging in IP, (intellectual property crimes). Under normal speech conditions – since we are, after all, presently fighting a war against terror – such a proposition might be difficult to sell to the public. IP - although not victimless – is certainly not violent, and IP surely does not qualify as publicly harmful. It is damaging to major software vendors and movie industry moguls, not the ordinary public. Therefore, the initiative by the Justice Department against IP might appear, if not cloaked in the prototypical terror-inciting garb, as an allocation of resources that is directed to protect the interests of the few, and the wealthy, and it might seem as though it is a distraction from more pressing matters, such as the actual War on Terrorism.
Therefore, how better alter the public’s opinion of such a policy announcement than to reconstitute its semiology, so that the increased expenditures against IP are subsequently understood as an extension of the War on Terror.
Tags: economics, foreign policy, government, homeland security, justice department, political rhetoric, politics, Terrorism, War on Terror
Categories: Commentary, Economics, government, Politics, Homeland Security, Terrorism, Foreign Policy, War on Terror
No Comments »
Propaganda Banner for those afraid of the Statism Embodied by Hillary Clinton
March 29, 2008 3:17 pm
I found this on a site that had borrowed the image from another site, it appeared,so I do not feel encumbered with referencing any source when presenting this banner image here. Furthermore, the people responsible for this image are also involved in dissimulating descriptions of the Senator that are patently false: i.e., Hillary will outlaw home schooling and limit the amount of pets that anyone person can own. So I do not feel comfortable even providing a back-link to such hysterical ultra-right-wing crackpots. Nevertheless, for those who are looking for an image that captures what I believe to be the ultimate core of Clinton’s ideology, here you go.
R Cole
Categories: Commentary
5 Comments »
Welcome to the United States of Resentment!
March 23, 2008 3:59 pmAn Article by:
Ben Tanosborn
Change… holy change! If only we could be blessed with a light rain from the heavens that would wash away our prejudices, greed and dissipating wastefulness. Cleansed, Americans could then become one whole people instead of the many fractions that now make up this nation of diversity; diversity not just in people but also in rights, hopes and expectations.
Let there be no mistake, ours is a nation where indignation and ill will run much deeper than we would like to believe, or dare broadcast for everyone to hear; and it is these real life-size grievances never addressed fully or with candor – not just imagined ones – that prevent us from attaining national cohesiveness. Instead, all we have done from time immemorial is to lie to ourselves and to others… just by adding patches. Ours has never been a Fourth of July America, the one that our state department sells to the world, but a nation which has provided both: opportunity for some to realize a so-called American dream and, for others, the condemnation to relive an American nightmare.
Patches that cover up the problems of race, economic inequality and wantonly obscene self-indulgence are constantly being affixed to the American psyche as if telling us all that everything is fine with no reason to worry or complain. So truth is patched with lies time and again, as we are all asked to join in that proud chorus of “God Bless America,” an America that really belongs to a few, although most of us are deceived into adopting it as our very own. And the bullshit builds up, as do the patches, until the boiling cauldron overflows… then, the patches temporarily disappear and we come to blows.
Last week the media did its thing, and presented us with a reverend Wright made to look more like an irreverent Wrong exalting his black congregation with a blasphemous “God Damn America.” No American flag pin adorning his clerical garb, just words of anger and rancor coming from his mouth. An embittered Christian pastor who tells it like he sees it… and that for tens of millions is really the America they live in and not the mythical America that we seem to be patriotically proud of. By so doing, Rev. Wright created political problems for a member of his flock, Senator Barack Obama, and his quest for the Democratic nomination… and the chance to occupy the White House.
Obama’s denunciation of Rev. Wright was one of form as well as substance, but it did appear as a conditional denunciation to the existing racial problems that still afflict this nation. And that is something that most conservative Americans just don’t tolerate… it has to be an unconditional denunciation, and total adherence to the philosophy that “America does no wrong,” or it’s no denunciation at all.
Even if one questions Obama’s path and ability to bring real change to America, he does appear as a person of reason and honor… unlike most other politicians; and that, of course, will hurt his chances of being nominated by his party; and, if nominated, of being elected. After all, he’ll be portrayed as just a letter away from the founding father of Al Qaeda. The lies and denigration against aspiring-president Obama will be in full force and the fascist bloodhounds will be combing the woods and the marshes looking for that half-Negro terrorist who dares tell us that we have racial problems to solve. It has already started. In this morning local paper, The Oregonian, an uncalled for salvo was dishonorably discharged by a reader: “Barack Obama stands by Rev. Wright with glee. President he should not be.” Jubilant delight not from Obama but from the Rovesque nincompoop who wrote such trash! But that’s what the senator will get, non-stop, if and when he receives the Democratic nomination to run against John McCain.
Black rage in America is real, very real, even if it remains patched. The American judicial-prison system is a disgrace, one which affects blacks uniquely and disproportionately, as do other institutions. When Mainstream White America, the America that controls power, fails to address these problems, should people act surprised if criminal trials really become political trials, such as O.J. Simpson’s or Mumia Abu-Jamal’s?
We have only touched on racial resentment – which affects more than just blacks – but it applies with an ever increasing force to the broadening economic inequality and the accelerating disappearance of the middle class. Racial and economic rage affecting the “Other America” is likely to grow in the next few years attaining super-majority status to demand drastic social, economic and political change in this land of ours.
It is not double vision that makes us see two Americas… it is only political blindness that makes us see only one. Distance between the two Americas needs to be dramatically narrowed or we shall continue to remain the United States of Resentment, and not the United States of America we should strive to be.
Tags: american dream, Ben Tanosborn, corporations, economics, Global, government, National, politics, Social Change
Categories: Commentary, National, Global, Economics, government, Politics, Corporations, Social Change, Ben Tanosborn
No Comments »
America’s Right Knight of the Wrong:
March 6, 2008 11:27 am
An Article by:
Ben Tanosborn
Go ahead; tell me what an incredible intellectual genius and fabulously well-liked person William F. Buckley, Jr., was. Repeat it time and again… before, during and after you waterboard me; say it in prose or say it in verse; say in Ovidius’ classical Latin or in low brow Jerome’s Vulgate; force it as invocation before every meal while I’m your guest at Guantanamo; herald it, if you must, as the empire’s political and literary edict to cleanse any liberal curses with patriotically god-blessed jasmine spray; and do it, while you pass it on as a rumor among all fifth columnists that still populate America’s decimated Left.
Ok, so you are turning blue with anger, and I keep shaking a less-than-patrician head! Well…intelligent, learned, erudite, even conditionally affable, I will buy most of it in bulk – with the stipulation that I’d be allowed an opportunity to return it all within 30 days for a full refund. But if you start getting serious, and into the realm of the scholarly, you are then forcing me to challenge those other attributes of genius, thinker, even intellectual; that means I’d have to pass on the sale, even if you throw in a couple of top cabernets, and a Domeq La Ina dry sherry from his Stamford wine cellar in the purchase price.
You are certainly welcome to say that he is the father of modern conservative America; after all, DNA proof does hold water with the same impermeability as good Irish whisky. And Buckley’s conservative DNA is just a cousinship removed from that other neocon monstrosity of the Chicago School. Now, please don’t ask me to venture a guess as to how that fatherhood came about… whether it was uninvited rape or sluttish consent; that’s just not for me to say. It’s really up to serious academics to do the research on the overgrown bastard. And there is over one-half century of “National Review” articles archived amongst soiled diapers that will revive and clarify all biographical material on the little monster. Just ask the brain-indigent young man at the archives’ door, Rich Lowry, to let you in. Condescendingly, eyes looking up, like his mentor, he’ll let you in.
If you wish to assign Buckley any form of a superlative, or give him a title of any sort, you should do so without being blinded by our unique-in-the-world fanatical devotion to celebrities and castes. You can certainly put him on a pinnacle of his very own, for he well deserves it, being the only member of America’s nobility to drink from the papal calyx of truth kept in that sanctum sanctorum right next the alchemic secret formula that allows to turn Right into Wrong. Just how in catholic heavens did Buckley command such Vatican grace that would allow him access to the alchemic secret formula? I mean taking a stand on behalf of the Right for every single issue/thing that ultimately proved wrong? Wow, will any other American noble be gifted such infallible-fallibility again?
His Ivy fights, be it with Yale or with Harvard – as a first time voter or as a mayoralty candidate for the City of New York – say little or nothing about where he stood as the Jouster for the Right in this nation. The Knight of Mirrors and Echoes, as he might have been found to be by Don Quixote, only to enter the books of chivalry and higher order of things as the knight with total compulsion for egotism, and the incomparable orgasmic pleasure he appeared to derive in watching and listening to himself.
Yep, this baron of New England in his quest to turn Right into Wrong, undid the Man from La Mancha at every turn, his excuse not one of insanity but egocentricity and an unloving heart. And he succeeded… in human terms, a success that we call failure.
Buckley succeeded for the Right, but failed for other Americans, as he stood in the 50’s championing McCarthyism as a conservative cause; staying firm and “bush-patriotic” to the bitter end, as Americans started to recognize Joseph McCarthy’s repugnant ways.
Buckley succeeded for the Right, but failed humankind, as he rallied a no-matter-what invasion of Cuba, even after the understanding reached with Russia during the missile crisis.
Buckley succeeded for the Right, but failed for democracy, as he remained loyal to Franco and his duumvirate with the Holy Mother Church in Spain to the very end (1975). As much as he tinted his conservatism in Red, White and Blue, its roots always stayed clearly visible as belonging to oppressive Catholic Spain.
Buckley succeeded for the Right, but failed for his fellow black Americans, as he stood side by side in the 60’s defending an unholy and villainous conservative crusade: the South’s opposition to integration after it had been adopted as the law of the land… not just with sophistry, but what’s even worse: a racist cold heart.
Buckley succeeded for the Right, but failed for peace and international relations, as he became the “erudite” face to a Vietnam War that only made sense to the beneficiaries of the military-industrial-complex and planners/drafters of an emerging empire.
Buckley succeeded for the Right, and in no small way for his own socio-economic class, but failed America in everything it had once stood for: prosperity and ever closer economic equality amongst its people. Shamefully, since he ushered Reagan in 27 years ago, economic inequality has more than tripled.
An American “classic” and an American “original” were two among equally abhorrent descriptions rendered by news anchors, celebrities themselves, describing this political character deserving respect at death, but certainly no accolades… not unless you belong to that elitist group in America who comprise fewer than 1 per thousand of us.
Tags: Ben Tanosborn, corporations, economics, inequality, institutional economics, neoconservatism, politics, society, socioeconomic
Categories: Commentary, Economics, Society, Politics, Corporations, neoconservatism, Ben Tanosborn
No Comments »
Mythology of Marriage
March 3, 2008 9:17 amHello,
Just reading the religious proclamation [cited below], and I had some additional specifications to add to your institution of marriage, which we seem to suggest is a defining aspect of this timeless culture to which you refer. Since Solomon had 700 wives, I suppose there is Biblical justification for polygamy according to dimensions that I would have thought to have constituted gluttony on the part of the indulgent Hebrew Monarch. Therefore, your proposition that marriage is between a man and a woman needs correction: Marriage consists of a man and as many women as he can acquire. Why God only gave Adam one wife is probably related to physiological concerns that God had for Adam who was already missing a rib. Also, Abraham engaged in a rather peculiar practice in order to bare a descendant. The patriarch committed what I think qualifies as an act of rape, since it was after all a slave that he owned whom he imposed himself upon, in order to get past the inconvenience of having a wife who was barren.
The type of marriage that Christian Fundamentalists often mistake as a transcendental institution was more the byproduct of more recent events occurring during the industrial revolution when the emergent Bourgeoisie invented the modern ideology of sexuality and its correlates, such as the advent of heterosexuality, which they imposed upon the depraved masses in order to maintain the health and vigor of a population that was needed to serve effectively as cogs in the machinery constituting the modes industrial production.
Foucault’s revisionism is hard to accept when one is first exposed to it. However, his research is so thorough and compelling that eventually the student find himself convinced of its veracity.
The Family: A Proclamation to the World
We, the First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, solemnly proclaim that marriage between a man and a woman is ordained of God and that the family is central to the Creator’s plan for the eternal destiny of His children.
All human beings—male and female—are created in the image of God. Each is a beloved spirit son or daughter of heavenly parents, and, as such, each has a divine nature and destiny. Gender is an essential characteristic of individual premortal, mortal, and eternal identity and purpose.
In the premortal realm, spirit sons and daughters knew and worshiped God as their Eternal Father and accepted His plan by which His children could obtain a physical body and gain earthly experience to progress toward perfection and ultimately realize his or her divine destiny as an heir of eternal life. The divine plan of happiness enables family relationships to be perpetuated beyond the grave. Sacred ordinances and covenants available in holy temples make it possible for individuals to return to the presence of God and for families to be united eternally.
The first commandment that God gave to Adam and Eve pertained to their potential for parenthood as husband and wife. We declare that God’s commandment for His children to multiply and replenish the earth remains in force. We further declare that God has commanded that the sacred powers of procreation are to be employed only between man and woman, lawfully wedded as husband and wife.
We declare the means by which mortal life is created to be divinely appointed. We affirm the sanctity of life and of its importance in God’s eternal plan.
Husband and wife have a solemn responsibility to love and care for each other and for their children. “Children are an heritage of the Lord” (Psalms 127:3). Parents have a sacred duty to rear their children in love and righteousness, to provide for their physical and spiritual needs, to teach them to love and serve one another, to observe the commandments of God and to be law-abiding citizens wherever they live. Husbands and wives—mothers and fathers—will be held accountable before God for the discharge of these obligations.
The family is ordained of God. Marriage between man and woman is essential to His eternal plan. Children are entitled to birth within the bonds of matrimony, and to be reared by a father and a mother who honor marital vows with complete fidelity. Happiness in family life is most likely to be achieved when founded upon the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ. Successful marriages and families are established and maintained on principles of faith, prayer, repentance, forgiveness, respect, love, compassion, work, and wholesome recreational activities. By divine design, fathers are to preside over their families in love and righteousness and are responsible to provide the necessities of life and protection for their families. Mothers are primarily responsible for the nurture of their children. In these sacred responsibilities, fathers and mothers are obligated to help one another as equal partners. Disability, death, or other circumstances may necessitate individual adaptation. Extended families should lend support when needed.
We warn that individuals who violate covenants of chastity, who abuse spouse or offspring, or who fail to fulfill family responsibilities will one day stand accountable before God. Further, we warn that the disintegration of the family will bring upon individuals, communities, and nations the calamities foretold by ancient and modern prophets.
We call upon responsible citizens and officers of government everywhere to promote those measures designed to maintain and strengthen the family as the fundamental unit of society.
This proclamation was read by President Gordon B. Hinckley as part of his message at the General Relief Society Meeting held September 23, 1995, in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Tags: marriage, Modernity, religion, Social Change, society
Categories: Commentary, Society, Social Change, Religion
No Comments »
Obama faces Ohio hearts and minds
March 2, 2008 12:00 pmAn Article by:
Steve Hammons
Originally published in the AmericanChronicle.com
http://americanchronicle.com/articles/53747
The recent controversial remarks from Cincinnati radio personality Bill Cunningham about Barack Obama at a McCain rally can be instructive about the Cincinnati region and Ohio.
I was born and raised in the Cincinnati area, was given the mandatory Ohio history classes in school and later went to college in southern Ohio at nearby Ohio University in Athens, a couple of hours east of Cincinnati.
The Cincinnati and southern Ohio region has a unique history that may be relevant in the run-up to the Democratic primary and the 2008 elections. This history and current flavor of the whole state might also be of interest.
We know that Ohio has been in the news during recent elections. Concerns about questionable election processes in Ohio have been part of this.
After Cunningham made his comments at the McCain rally, another Ohio politician followed him to address the crowd … former Congressman Rob Portman who represented the Cincinnati area.
Portman has been mentioned as a possible vice-presidential running mate with McCain, and a possible presidential candidate in 2012.
SPECIAL ELECTION
Portman left his congressional seat in 2005 to take a position in the George W. Bush administration as U.S. trade representative, which carries the rank of ambassador.
From 2006 to 2007, he took another position in the Bush administration as director of the Office of Management and Budget. He currently is working at a law firm in Cincinnati.
What is interesting is that when a special election was held for Portman’s congressional seat in 2005, the solidly Republican-voting area almost elected another attorney and Marine Corps Reserve major who had served in Iraq, and was running as a centrist Democrat.
That person was Paul Hackett, and during the campaign he said that he had opposed the Iraq war, yet felt it was his duty to volunteer to serve there.
In the congressional race in August 2005, Hackett, who notably opposed gun control, gained attention by referring to George W. Bush as a “chicken hawk” for avoiding combat service in Vietnam during that war.
Hackett also said Bush made “stupid” remarks such as “bring it on,” challenging insurgents in Iraq to attack U.S. troops there.
Hackett reportedly bluntly stated about Bush, “I’ve said I don’t like the S.O.B.”
Hackett’s opponent, Jean Schmidt, strongly supported Bush and the Iraq war.
Hackett lost by about 3,500 votes, getting about 48 percent of the vote in a district that routinely elected the previous Republican congressman there by about 70 percent.
This was a very surprising development in southwestern Ohio.
Obama’s stance on the invasion and occupation of Iraq may resonate in Ohio, where many active duty and reserve Army and National Guard personnel have been killed and wounded. Active duty Marines and Marine reservists from Ohio have also been killed and injured in high numbers in Iraq.
GEOGRAPHY AND DEMOGRAPHICS
The hilly country of southwestern Ohio around Cincinnati is very much like southern Indiana next door and northern Kentucky, just south across the Ohio River.
If you go further east, the southern neighbor becomes West Virginia and southeastern Ohio is considered part of the Appalachian region, as the western foothills of the Appalachian Mountains start there. There is coal mining in this region.
Many people in southern Ohio speak with a slightly or markedly southern-type accent.
An ancient glacier that flattened central and northern Ohio stopped just short of the still-hilly southern part of the state.
In that flat central Ohio area, there are plenty of farms, small and medium-size towns with the state capitol of Columbus right in the middle.
Northern Ohio has a lot of the industrial areas around Lake Erie that have had historical links with Detroit and other centers of the old “rust belt” regions.
Many people here speak with a somewhat northern type of accent.
There are many good union people in Ohio. Sometimes their social and political views are centrist and they might find positions and candidates of either major party to be valid.
Some Ohioans who have benefited from unions and have a middle class or even upper middle class economic status are educated enough to know that the struggles of the union and labor movements over the decades resulted in the benefits they have now.
Some realize that the social, economic and political forces in America that supported or opposed working people and the unions were associated in certain patterns with the two major political parties. Some Ohioans who have benefited from unions may not fully understand this history.
Obama’s efforts and results in Ohio will be related to many of these these factors.
OHIO HISTORY AND ETHNICITY
Will Obama’s mixed-ethnicity be a factor? Probably. There are not too many Ohioans who had a father from Kenya, Africa.
Although Ohio is not as diverse as Hawaii, where Obama mostly grew up, raised by his grandparents from Kansas, there is some interesting ethnic and historical background.
Today, you can find people of virtually every ethnic background living in Ohio.
Italian-Americans in northern Ohio, German-Americans in southwestern Ohio, you name it. People from Eastern Europe often came to work in Ohio’s steel mills and mines.
In the early 1800s, Germans were a dominant ethnicity that settled early Cincinnati.
There reportedly were German or even Nazi sympathizers there before and during U.S. entry into World War II.
At the same time, some local German-Americans, including some distant relatives of mine, thought about changing their very German names to avoid problems during the war years, such as being thought of as “the enemy.”
It could be that some German-Americans in Cincinnati then went overboard the other way, feeling that being a “super American patriot” required certain political and social positions.
Going further back in history, during slavery, for a period of time, laws provided that escaping slaves who crossed north of the Ohio River into southern Ohio could not be returned to slave owners and were, as a practical matter, free.
Subsequent laws required escaping slaves to reach Canada to be free from slave catchers.
Amish and Quakers are found throughout areas of Ohio. The Underground Railroad was very active in southern Ohio during the slavery era. Some Quaker relatives of mine, according to stories and rumors, were involved in the Underground Railroad in the rural areas of southwestern Ohio.
There is a problematic element here. Next door in southern and central Indiana, the KKK is quite strong and active. This is also an aspect of the region in general.
My grandfather told a story about a relative of ours who, decades earlier, had run for sheriff in Kentucky. One night the KKK came to visit him, white robes and all. They told him if he was not on board with the KKK, he would not get elected.
He apparently told them he was not on their side … and he did not get elected sheriff.
Many people entering southern Ohio in the 1800s and 1900s were migrating from the Appalachian Mountain regions in Kentucky, such as some relatives of mine, and from elsewhere in the Appalachian region.
In more recent decades, many Appalachians chose to escape the poverty, oppression and violence of the coal-mining regions. Cincinnati was a center for these escapees too.
Among these migrating groups were people who were mixed-ethnicity European and Native American Indians such as the Cherokee whose native lands were in the Appalachian region.
Many early explorers in the 1700s had intermarried with the Cherokee and generations of mixed English-Scottish and Cherokee families lived in the region.
In the years before the 1839 “Trail of Tears” forced march west, and the confiscation of Cherokee lands and homes, many mixed-ethnicity families blended into the mainstream society, with only a few family stories or suspicions remaining about the Indian connections in the family tree, such as my own family.
Another interesting aspect of Ohio is that after the American Revolution, many Revolutionary War veterans and their families moved over the mountains to settle in eastern Ohio. Today, in the cemeteries of southeastern Ohio, you can find the gravestones of many who fought in the American Revolution.
Ohio University, where I went to college, was founded by Revolutionary War veterans.
I am happy to say that I had ancestors who fought in the Revolutionary War and were associates and relatives of George Washington and the other American leaders of that period.
I also recently learned that, according to a genealogy researcher in the family, Obama and I are distantly related too.
How do all of these and many other cultural, ethnic, geographic and historical elements fit together in our current political landscape as we approach the Democratic primary and then the general election?
We will soon be finding out.
Obama will probably have significant support in Ohio from a wide variety of people.
I bet that many Ohioans will be thinking long and hard about Obama, about the invasion and occupation of Iraq, about the direction our country has been going in for the last few years and about themselves and their core beliefs, deep down inside.
Tags: democracy, ohio, politics, race, race relations, society, sociology, Steve Hammons
Categories: Commentary, Society, Democracy, Politics, Sociology, Steve Hammons
No Comments »





