Radical media, politics and culture.

Palestinian Defiance, Part Two

Mustafa Barghouti Interviewed by Éric Hazan

New Left Review

"Palestinian Defiance"
Mustafa Barghouti Interviewed by Éric Hazan, New Left Review


The Ramallah doctor and activist, general secretary of the Al Mubadara coalition, on struggles against the Israeli Occupation, from the popular movement of the first Intifada to the tactical errors of the second, via the disaster of Oslo. As Abu Mazen is levered into place, what alternatives can combat both IDF stranglehold and the flyblown Palestinian Authority?

"Targeting the University"
Joseph Massad, Al Ahram Weekly

Having usurped political power, the far right has now set its sight on sabotaging the academic world, writes Joseph Massad, an assistant professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at Columbia University.
Targeting the university is the latest mission of right-wing forces who have hijacked not only political power and political discourse in the United States but also the very vocabulary that can be used against them. The campaign of the last three years or so to attack US universities as the last bastion where a measure of freedom of thought is still protected is engineered to cancel out such freedom and ensure that scholars will not subvert the received political wisdom of the day.

Targeting the University

Al Ahram Weekly

Having usurped political power, the far right has now set its sight on sabotaging the academic world, writes Joseph Massad, an assistant professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at Columbia University.

"One Struggle, One Fight:

SHAC 7 and the Future of Dissent"

Pete Spina

Lining the sidewalk outside the federal courthouse in Trenton, NJ on
June 1, 2005, some of the signs they hold show pictures of
restrained, mutilated or tortured animals from experiments worthy of
the imagination of Dr. Josef Mengele, involving elaborate and brutal
head restraints on terrified primates, wired brain implants on
prostrate, living house cats and disemboweled beagle puppies. Other
signs call for the defense of free speech, invoking the First
Amendment of the Bill of Rights.

"Fallujah: An Unnatural Disaster"

Joe Carr

Today, I did what few internationals have dared to do, I went to
Fallujah.


Fallujah is completely surrounded by US Forces, the only way in or out is
through one of four very restrictive checkpoints. People normally have to
wait hours, but since we had our magic US passports, we made it through
in
about 45 minutes. We did not observe them searching any cars, soldiers
just held-up traffic and slowly checked IDs. Like Palestine, these
checkpoints seem to have little to do with security and more to do with
harassment and intimidation.


Fallujah is devastating to drive through. There is more destruction and
rubble than I've ever seen in my life; even more than in Rafah, Gaza. The
US has leveled entire neighborhoods, and about every third building is
destroyed or damaged from US artillery. Rubble and bullet holes are
everywhere, the city is indescribably ravaged. It looks like it's been
hit
by a series of tornados; it's hard to believe that humans could actually
do this. I have a new understanding of the destructive potential of
modern
warfare.

"Toni Negri: Against the Empire ... For a Capitalist Europe!"

Roberto Sarti

In the run up to the [French EU] referendum a very popular intellectual, Toni Negri, decided to weigh in for the debate. Negri has now put himself on the same side as Chirac and Raffarin, the French bosses and the worst social democratic reformists, and come out in favour of a "yes" vote.

nolympics writes:

Reflections on the Case by the U.S. Justice Department against Steven Kurtz and Robert Ferrell
Claire Pentecost[1]

Many people have asked us why the Justice Department is pursuing this case.

Meaning, when the Buffalo Health Department affirmed that there was nothing dangerous in the Kurtz home and that Hope Kurtz died of natural causes, when the FBI saw that the possession of scientific equipment and materials in Kurtz's home studio was completely consistent with his practice as an artist and that his practice has a long, public and institutionally validated record, then, why didn't they drop the case? When it became clear even through the Grand Jury investigation that this was not a case of bioterrorism, why did they pursue it? Couldn't they see that this is art?

"The Real Problems With $50 Oil"

Henry C K Liu, Asian Times

After oil prices peaked above US$58 a barrel in early April, and stayed around
their current $50 range, the White House announced that it wanted oil to go
back down to $25 a barrel.


There is a common misconception in life that if
only things could go back to the ways they were in the good old days, life
would be good again like in the good old days. Unfortunately, good old days
never return as good old days because what makes the old days good is often
just bad memory.


The problem with market capitalism is that while markets can
go up and markets can go down, they never end up in the same spot. The term
"business cycle" is a misnomer because the end of the cycle is a very
different place from the beginning of a cycle. A more accurate term would be
"business spiral", either up or down or simply sideways.

Oil is a good example whereby this market truism can be observed. When oil
rises above $50 a barrel and stays there for an extended period, the resultant
changes in the economy become normalized facts. These changes go way beyond
fluctuations in the price of oil to produce a very different economy. Below
are 10 new economic facts created by $50 oil.

"Late Capitalism"

Bert Stern

I got the last box off the shelf but it was empty.

No mouse holes or telltale top torn open

just the sealed box with nothing in it.


At the meat counter, more of the same,

but this time, feathers for chickens

and for swine the slop that fed them.

I thought, depilatory, I thought

old men shrinking in their bones,

April past, then the summer gone.

Meteors stop for lunch. The wheel

grinds to a stop. Here and there,

like detritus, a man hammering,

the inviting space of a sky

with high clouds scudding

north, the bewildered jetstream

strayed from its path, sunshine

pale and lethal. In the street

you are watched by 78 eyes

that love you after their nature.

You are a blind and frightened mouth,

that believes what it is told and eats

what it is given. What else is man

that anyone should be mindful of him?

Give us back our sky

and constellations, our fiery courses,

our bloom in languages that open

and close like a rose.

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