10/29/09

Things I heard for the first time today



Waiting outside of Glenn Memorial on the campus of Emory University to hear Cornel West speaking on Race in America I heard,
"I just don't get where there are NON EMORY students taking OUR seats."
As part of Cornel West's lecture on America's racial history he talked about,
"Mustering the courage to cry."
He reminded us that this is not an easy task but that people have been doing it for centuries and without it we wouldn't have JAZZ and HIP-HOP and PAINTING and LOVE.

RE RE RE RE listening to The Messengers as done by J.Period and K'naan and I heard Bob Dylan say,
"Nothing in this story has been changed, except for the words."



Always trying to get better at listening. Don't you always remember those people that listened SO well the first time you met them?

10/27/09

chronicles of my recent kitchen obsession with squash and squash-shaped vegetables

(is eggplant a squash? looked this up. no: in the nightshade family, related to tomatoes and potatos!) 1. butternut: cubed and drizzled with olive oil and rosemary, baked--> couscous with mint, red onion, carrots, peppers etc



2. eggplant- drizzled with olive oil and baked--> pasta with tomatoes and basil


3. summer squash- and zuchini, sauteed w onions--> tomato sauce over pasta



4. butternut- baked with skin on, then scooped out and pureed, with eggs and a couple kinds of cheese--->shells, baked!




5. some other kind of squash, with beets, sauteed with onions and carrots--> couscous that turned a beautiful ruby color from the beet juice (had beet greens with brown sugar and onions on the side)



6. eggplant- sliced into circles, drizzled with olive oil and salt, baked, with fresh mozzarella and polenta





7. butternut squash- sliced and boiled with potatoes, layered with caramelized onions, shredded parmesan and cream sauce (butter, flour, milk and white wine, cooked on the stove), baked (au gratin)




...and then i realized why i keep thinking that the inside of a butternut smells like cantaloupe. (internet says that cantaloupe is indeed related to squash and has a nutrient value in between that of winter and summer squash)

10/24/09

Noose hung from gates of McKenna Museum of African Arts In New Orleans

A noose was found today on the gates of the McKenna Museum of African American Art.


From blogger Kataalyst Alcindor comes this powerful piece about discovering a noose hanging from the gates of the museum. Kataalyst's blog deeper than soil offers power and outrage. deeper than soil.


Today was going to be such a beautiful day, I had willed it to be so. Until my day was shattered by a foot-long inch of nylon looped and crafted after a tool to suffocate the life out of too many of my ancestors. A Noose was found hanging precisely on the onyx bars to keep hate and evil out as an forget-me-not. Proof that hatred will come knocking on your door even if no one will answer. Blinded with rage, The only thing I could do was whisper a prayer to The Most High begging to not let me find whoever done this, it would so easily become a assault with intentions of manslaughter. I raced to The Trolly Stop in hopes to find police officers who so often frequent the restaurant, luckily I find a couple off duties and direct them to the scene of vandalism. Awaiting the squad car I debated on running to the apartment to grab my web camera and thought, "Of all days I would't bring my camera, Today would be the day!" The Caucasian Woman Officer jumped out of her car and asked about the crime. I could only shake my head and point at the unwanted adornment. The color of her face drained away to her knees. "O Shit." all she could say was "O Shit." "Yeah." I said. She kept apologizing for me seeing such a thing and I don't know if it was the rage talking but it felt like Honestly, she was apologizing for her race. I know I shouldn't say that but I'm sure some White folks wish that other white folks would just vanish from the face of the earth.(My first draft picks are Rush & Glen.) We filed out a report and against my will she took down the noose and placed it in the car, the gave me a slip to possibly pick it up from the station as if it was a drunken family member I care enough about to bail out of prison. I still don't don't know how to feel but fury & scorn. This felt like watching a man slap your mother in the face, The McKenna is a place of peace, vibrancy & love. I can only take this as a lesson that ignorance still thrives in this old southern city and it still hides its face in the dead of night rather than face the sun.

Hopeful the vandal knows that realizes that a home build on love will never be conquered by something as small as weathered ropes and a obsolete message.

Peace.



Please hold the museum and the community in the Light.

10/23/09

Images from today in ATL

OCTOBER 22nd -- A Day to call attention to police brutality and the incarceration of a generation.

Today was beautiful. Very positive energy and wonderful people out in the street to support an end to the policing of our communities and the incarceration of our friends and families. People shared stories of being abused by the criminal justice system. We remembered those that we have lost at the hands of the system. We marched from Woodruff in downtown Atlanta to the the Atlanta Detention Center. People joined us along the way.

My sign said, "DEAR MAYORAL CANDIDATES, WE DON'T NEED MORE POLICE! WE NEED RE-ENTRY PROGRAMS! WE NEED JOBS!"

We stood outside of the jail and yelled "no justice! no peace! no racist po-lice!" and heard responses from the people inside the Jail yelling back to us. They heard us. We heard them.









10/20/09

Support ALL Morehouse Students!

Please read this beautiful beautiful piece from brother Michael Brewer.

We need to stand in support of our institutions and more importantly ALL of the people in them. Solidarity with gender non-conforming students at Morehouse and everywhere!

Brewer writes,

On the 'Appropriate Attire Policy' at Morehouse College
There's an old saying at my alma mater that one does not simply choose to attend Morehouse College, rather, Morehouse College chooses her sons, those "Men of Morehouse" to be made "Morehouse Men." She chooses these men, these men called not to curse the wretchedness of the dark, but rather to light a candle in that dark and illuminate within it the truth, beauty and justice that disturbs the universe.

This is my attempt to light a candle in the dark.

It was earlier this year that I first heard vestiges of what was to eventually become the ‘Appropriate Attire’ policy that has temporarily catapulted Morehouse College into dissonant notoriety. During a landmark address to the college last April, Morehouse College President Robert M. Franklin, a Baptist preacher with the most liberal politics the college has seen in that particular office, articulated an unprecedented vision for the Morehouse community, urging for a peaceful integration of the queer experience into the college’s canon of tradition. His words received prodigious and widespread praise for his inclusive, enterprising mission to revive the Herculean image of the Black man while simultaneously seeking to bridge the very public discord between homosexual and heterosexual – at Morehouse and throughout the Black community.

What was missed by most during his speech, though, was the admonishment of feminine dress sported by some of the male students on campus and abhorred by the larger body politic. It was this tacit repudiation and obscuring of the Black queer experience that has recently exploded into a mass cultural debate about how the image of the Morehouse Man juxtaposes with non-conventional expressions of Black male identity, with as many people praising Morehouse’s actions as stalwart leadership as are berating the institution for its regressive candor.

I support President Franklin and the progressive direction in which he is steering the College. However, I cannot condone the subtle, if ill-intended, castigation of transgressive and non-conforming gender expression and identity espoused in this new ‘appropriate attire’ policy. While I appreciate any attempt to incubate Morehouse’s illustrious legacy, I do not believe that such resuscitation of Black male identity should come at the expense of the institution’s queer students, who, while not exclusively targeted by the policy, will possibly be disproportionately disenfranchised by it. But what’s more significant, and disconcerting, is that, as opposed to the named ‘thugs’ and ‘gangsters’ whose dress may now be limited by this new policy but have no history of significant social subjugation at the college, Morehouse’s gay, bisexual, and transgender students may exclusively reap a possible resurgence of latent homophobic sentiment and the recapitulation of heterosexism, heteronormativity and patriarchy that has now been codified (and therefore legitimized) by the institution, a school that has a sordid history of placidly facilitating oppression against queer students. Is the policy itself homophobic? Not neccessarily. Admittedly, the policy does not specifically seek to limit the expression of the college’s queer-identified students exclusively, nor or its restrictions concerning ‘feminine garb’ an overt attack on gay and bisexual students. While gender expression and the expression of one’s sexuality are tangent to one another, they are not the same thing. Likewise, many gay and bisexual students will remain unaffected by the shift in prohibited campus attire. However, will the policy possibly fuel homophobia, transphobia and hinder the revolutionary edict that President Franklin so courageously initiated? In my eyes, yes.

Just as troubling is the reality that, as an academic institution, Morehouse has chosen to subscribe to, and superimpose onto its student body, a very hegemonic and heteronormative prescription of masculinity without genuinely interrogating masculinity as a concept. To be the premiere institution for the education of Black men, there are surprisingly few course offerings aimed at the scholastic investigation of the Black male experience, much fewer that integrate any semblance of sex, sexuality and gender into that sphere of analysis. Morehouse is missing a unique opportunity to lead this burgeoning conversation in the larger Black community about what it means to be a Black man by refusing to incorporate the intersectionality of orientation, gender performance, and sexuality into its curriculum. Leaning on antiquated paradigms of the Black male experience makes it harder to explore this concept in a fresh, erudite, and optimally useful way.

In closing, I offer the following:

To the greater LGBT community: We of Morehouse College acknowledge that we hold a peculiar position of prestige that solicits a slightly more refined look at our evolving legacy. The collective behavior of Morehouse College does not occur in a vacuum and, when it challenges a fundamental percept of ethical code it, like any other institution, need be challenged on its breach of moral decorum and held accountable for its actions. However, I’ve become particularly incensed by the unmitigated gall of the larger LGBT community to continuously criticize Morehouse for supposed “infractions” against queer people when, in aggregate, that same community does nothing to support the institution or its progress towards more LGBT friendly policy and practices at the institution. With a few notable exceptions, there is no concerted effort by the external LGBT community to substantially give of its resources to support the mission of Morehouse College or even the queer students whose interests it purports to serve. So, while you are welcome to express your disdain for perceived prejudice and injustice, please refrain from using my institution as a case study and catalyst for the LGBT social justice agenda – particularly when the larger LGBT community rarely (if ever) engages the institution with any reciprocity of accountability, or in a way that utilizes cultural competency and does not perpetuate the equally problematic oppressions of racism, classism, and cultural imperialism in its intervention.

To my Morehouse brothers, Morehouse College, the greater Black community and other proponents of the policy: I understand that we have a responsibility to uphold the highest moral standard for the Black male ideal – that how we think, speak, act, and yes, look, are all cuts of the brilliant diamond that is Morehouse College and our history of leadership. However, it is the arguments in favor of this policy, much more than the policy itself, that concerns me about our institutional cognition surrounding issues central to this conversation. That the thinking of some welcomes this policy as a targeted censorship of gay/bisexual identity, however, demonstrates that as an institution and cultural community we have a lot of self-edification to do concerning issues related to gender, sex, and sexuality and are not yet mature enough to police these concepts 'appropriately'.

As a proud alum of Morehouse College, I love my institution with my whole heart and am infinitely indebted to her for making me the open and unapologetic Black queer man -- the Morehouse Man -- that I am today. In all that I do, I seek to only bring continued strength and honor to "Dear Old Morehouse". As we all look forward to the continued leadership of Morehouse College – the Morehouse that is going to be – we must realize that we must divorce ourselves from certain barnacles of paternalism and bigotry that have characterized the Morehouse that was. The Morehouse demagogue cannot ethically be replicated by the same oppressive forces that helped to create it. The Morehouse Man (and thus, the definition of such) is ever evolving because that is what keeps our mission alive – the renewed spirit of the Morehouse College mission inspired in a new breed of distinctive philosopher-kings. Our image is not marred or depleted by creating a space in our trajectory for fluid gender expression and non-heteronormative sexuality. On the contrary, this phenomenon radically fortifies our purpose and cements our name further in the annals of history, transforming the conventional concept of Black masculinity and liberating all Black men from the oppressions of imperial patriarchy that have kept us bound in dysfunction for so long. And, though that heritage of prescribed hegemony may be what brought us to revere Mother Morehouse and her sons, it is incumbent upon us to seek an even higher standard of existence – one that embraces diverse expressions of Black male identity, folding them into to the excellence of Morehouse College. This is how we grow the legacy and lead the people.

This is how we change the world.

10/19/09

OCTOBER 22nd COALITION TO STOP POLICE BRUTALITY


heard about this on the radio this morning (WBAI, which broadcasts my beloved Democracy Now)...haven't yet discerned much about its origens, history, context (beyond the obvious), but worth posting, because it's always important to speak out about police brutality.

"October 22nd is the day when people all over
the country demand a STOP to police
violence, repression, and the criminalization of
a generation. In different cities and through
different means of expression, we raise a
resounding "NO" to these police raids, attacks
on the youth and immigrants, and destroying
of lives."



List of Assembly Points for Oct. 22, 2009
(information is posted as it is received, so check later if your area is not listed yet.)

Atlanta, Ga. oct22atl@gmail.com
1 p.m. rally at Woodruff Park
Peachtree Street & Edgewood Ave (downtown Atlanta)
and then march to Atlanta City Jail

at Georgia State University in Atlanta:
12:15 p.m. rally in the courtyard
speakout and march to Woodruff Park for the citywide event

Chicago, IL. 312 217 2202
12 Noon
Federal Plaza, Adams and Dearborn

Cleveland, OH
3:30 Public Square
(in front of Tower City) in downtown Cleveland

Fresno, CA IWAPGH@aol.com 559-268- 2261
6 p.m. at the park
corner of "N" street and Mariposa St.
Vigil

High Point, N.C.

Humboldt-Eureka-Arcata, CA.
copwatchrwc@riseup.net
707 633 4493
Behind the " redwood curtain", we recognize the 22nd and the 23rd because
16 year old Christopher Burgess, a native youth, was fatally shot by a Eureka cop on
October 23, 2006. We are mobilizing for two continous days of action remembering those who
lost their lives to police, fighting against an international politics of cruelty, and building community
that recognizes everyone's dignity. October 22 and 23rd: guerilla theater, marches,
memorial bike ride, vigil, speak-outs, film screenings, and as always, sharing food, rage,
tears and strength together.

Kansas City, MO.

Los Angeles, CA
contact: aidge@aestheticscrew.com
12 p.m. Gather Crenshaw and Florence in South Central
2 p.m. Marchnorth on Crenshaw to Leimart Park (43rd and Crenshaw)
4 p.m. Rally at Leimart Park
6 p.m. Vigil, and march from Crenshaw to Slauson

Minneapolis, MN
5 p.m. Loring Park
March to Homeless Shelters and other areas strongly impacted by police brutality


New Haven, CT
gather on the steps of New Haven Courthouse
(corner of Elm and Church)
3:30 PM
There will be a speak out
Contact: newhavenrbnyc@aol.com


Newark, NJ.
lvick06@yahoo.com
732 600 2694
Rutgers School of Law, Newark
123 Washington Street, Newark, NJ
Brown bag lunch --
what can law students do about police brutality?
New York, NY
347 586 1773
4:30 p.m. Washington Square Park -- Rally and March (assemble west of fountain)
6:30 p.m. Voices Against Police Brutality -- music and art protesting police brutality
at Gay and Lesbian Community Center, 208 West 13th Street
(7th Avenue and 13th St.)


Olympia, WA
Contact: mailto:ersatzcats@gmail.com

Pensacola, Florida
october22pensacola@gmail.com
5 p.m. corner of Hayne and Cervantes
(near the Pensacola Police Department), then
Marching to Pensacola City Hall meeting that
begins at 7 p.m. at 180 Governmental Center/ 222 West Main Street

Phoenix, Arizona
contact: 602 232 5884

Pittsburgh, PA
Contact: taylorceleste@hotmail.com, kennethalanmiller@yahoo.com
Freedom Corner


San Antonio, TX
Contact: jgemgaiton@aim.com

San Diego, CA
Contact: Jjordan@janicejordan.org

San Francisco/Bay Area oct22BayArea@gmail.com
12 noon
Oakland City Hall Plaza, 14th and Broadway
Rally and March
and then to the neighborhoods


Seattle, WA
Contact: oct22seattle@hotmail.com/ 206-264-5527
Occidental Park (between S. Washington St. and S. Main St.,
and between 1st Ave. S. and 2nd Ave. S. in Seattle's Pioneer Square District)
5 p.m. gather
5:30 Rally
6:15 March
Disperse at Westlake Park (4th Ave and Pine St.)


Sonoma County, CA

St. Louis, MO
contact: 314 454 9005
capcr_cob@hotmail.com


Bahamas:
Sharaht@gmail.com Thebrentonfoundation.org
March for Justice October 12
9 a.m. Arawak Cay
Justice for Brenton Smith

CANADA:

Guelph, ON:
Contact: guelphunionoftenants@yahoo.com

Montreal, QC
Contact: cobp@hotmail.com






here's a little more on who this is coming from:



National Coordinating Committee (NCC)
The core of the NCC is the six representatives of groups who participated in the finalizing of the date, call and slogan. These are Pam Africa (International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal), Akil Al-Jundi (Community Self-Defense Program), Angel Cervantes (Four Winds Student Movement), Omowale Clay (December 12th Movement), Carl Dix (Revolutionary Communist Party) and Keith McHenry (Food not Bombs).

10/16/09

Justice Denies Interracial Couple Marriage License

Evenin friends,

Just thought you should know that a justice of the peace in Louisianna denied an interracial couple a marriage license because of the potential difficulties their kids would face. He explains that he has "piles" of black friends and that personal racism is not present in this situation.

There are many articles on it. Here is one.

He says that he has denied four couples licenses in the past and always checks to see if he is speaking with an interracial couple before deciding to proceed. Its been a few years since I was very invested in interracial rights issues and up on the all of the current literature on interracial issues.

IT IS SO PAINFUL TO REALIZE HOW HARD IT IS TO TALK ABOUT RACISM NOW WHEN THE LAWS ARE IN PLACE. IT IS SO EASY TO WRITE HIM OFF AS A RACIST SOUTHERN JUDGE. IT IS SO much more than that.


I wish i could figure out what our sit ins need to look like. I know they need to look different. I know what our demands are. I just wish i knew how to demand them. I'm sick of asking. I'm sick of pretending like "non-violent protest" means that there isn't violence around us all the time.

I am sick of this.

I am sick over this.

10/15/09

Ok Utne, We see you!

Utne magazine published an unbelievably dope list of people making the world better! The movers and lovers and shakers of 2009.

Shout out to two of the Radical Kids Clubs' "people-that-we-are-so-inlove-with-it-hurts" Lex Gumbs! and Dave Zirin!

See the list in its entirety!

10/14/09

WHAT HELPS YOU REMEMBER WHAT IS IMPORTANT AND WHAT IS JUST IMPORTED?

10/12/09

10/9/09

This artist's rendering released by NASA on Friday shows the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite as it crashes into the moon to test for the presence of water.

Call Me the Poor Girl Cause I Love to Fight Them

gchat: where real talk happens


8:53 AM me: omgggg

8:54 AM Ishta: this is ridiculous
i dont know about you, but im personally not down for the moon or the prize
it's all a little fishy
especially because he wasn't even nominated

me: agreed

8:56 AM Ishta : but whatevs im a total conspiracy theorist half the time

me: oh me too
we are prob right too

8:58 AM Ishta : conspirators tend to be mad obvious though anyway
and wtf we bombed the moon on the same day that obama got the prize
projecting, anyone?
trying to distract us

me: obvi

8:59 AM Ishta : i don't know who to be suspicious of...nasa or....the us gov...wait aren't those like almost the same thing
plusss
i was watching msnbc this morning and they said the patriot act was supposed to be getting an expansion
wtf?

me: mama came into my room at 7 and said obama won the peace pirze and i was half asleep and i said ..."why"

Ishta : yeah
they said he's giving a speech at 10:30
this is so weird

9:01 AM me: ugh
Ishta : yeah
pigs have flown
on that avian swine flu tip

9:02 AM me: is unthankful a word?

Ishta : haha

me: im putting this conversation on my blog

9:03 AM Ishta : oh boyzies

me: haha
no really, is it a word?

Ishta : i'm all about making shit up
ishta is a word in arabic and it means cool

9:04 AM me: :-)

Ishta : i thought that was just the sound people made when they censored the word shit on the radio
anything is possible.
and yet they are interchangeable in english, look:
ruby-beth is the ishta

9:05 AM im scared for this blog post :-{

me: dont be
the gov is watching us already

9:06 AM ill change your name
to
ishta

Ishta : ok
haha
i'm so curious about what he's going to say

me: nothing

10/6/09

B.O.B.

Dear World,
If you aren't on B.O.B, Get on B.O.B.

enjoy in joy





Love,
RB

10/5/09

Time To Start Strategizing

about how I am going to tell this guy I am in LOVE with him and his words...
Any ideas?





-typewriterblues

10/4/09

arundhati roy fascinating analysis of democracy/neoliberalism/terrorism/occupation/progress/genocide/THE STATE OF HUMANITY AND THE WORLD

on my way to work a few days ago, I caught part of Democracy Now's hour-long interview with Arundhati Roy. I just went back and re-read it, and this may be one of the most all-encompassing and powerful pieces I have come across in a long time. I've copied most of it below, and highlighted some of the parts i found particularly astute/important, but really the whole thing is just incredible. (also-- she describes in india how the indigenous peoples have been labeled 'maoists' by the government/media as a reaction to their resistance, which is ALL TOO parallel to the situation with the mapuche in the south of chile, down to a T--check out previous posts for more about the relationship between democracy, economic growth, and military repression of the indigenous in chile). full text of DN broadcast available here.

ARUNDHATI ROY, sep 28 2009

"But as we know now, because of the way the global economy is linked, countries are not—you know, the political systems in countries are also linked, so democracies are linked to dictatorships and military occupations and so on. We know that. We now that some of the main military occupations in the world today are actually administered by democracies: Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Kashmir. 

But what I think is beginning to be very clear now is that we see now that democracy is sort of fused to the free market, or to the idea of the free market. And so, its imagination has been limited to the idea of profit. And democracy, a few years ago, maybe, you know, even twenty-five years ago, was something that, let’s say, a country like America feared, which was why democracies were being toppled all over the place, like in Chile and so on. But now wars are being waged to restore—to place democracy, because democracy serves the free market, and each of the institutions in democracy, like you look at India, you know, whether it’s the Supreme—whether it’s the courts or whether it’s the media or whether it’s all the other institutions of democracy, they’ve been sort of hollowed out, and just their shells have been replaced, and we play out this charade. And it’s much more complicated for people to understand what’s going on, because there’s so much shadow play. 

But really we are facing a crisis. And that’s what I ask. You know, is there life after democracy? And what kind of life will it be? Because democracy has been hollowed out and made meaningless. And when I say “democracy,” I’m not talking about the ideal. You know, I’m not saying that countries that live in dictatorships and under military occupation should not fight for democracy, because the early years of democracy are important and heady. And then we see a strange metastasis taking over. 

---

You know, when September 11th happened, I think some of us had already said that a time would come when poverty would be sort of collapsed and converge into terrorism. And this is exactly what’s happened. The poorest people in this country today are being called terrorists. 

And what you have is a huge swath of forest in eastern and central India, spreading from West Bengal through the states of Jharkhand, Orissa and Chhattisgarh. And in these forests live indigenous people. And also in these forests are the biggest deposits of bauxite and iron ore and so on, which huge multinational companies now want to get their hands on. So there’s an MoU [Memorandum of Understanding] on every mountain, on every forest and river in this area. 

And about in 2005, let’s say, in central India, the day after the MoU was signed with the biggest sort of corporation in India, Tatas, the government also announced the formation of the Salwa Judum, which is a sort of people’s militia, which is armed and is meant to fight the Maoists in the forest. But the thing is, all this, the Salwa Judum as well as the Maoists, they’re all indigenous people. And in, let’s say, Chhattisgarh, something like the Salwa Judum has been a very cruel militia, you know, burning villages, raping women, burning food crops. I was there recently. Something like 640 villages have been burned. Out of the 350,000, first about 50,000 people moved into roadside police camps, from where this militia was raised by the government. And the rest are simply missing. You know, some are living in cities, you know, eking out a living. Others are just hiding in the forest, coming out, trying to sow their crops, and yet getting, you know, those crops burnt down, their villages burnt down. So there is a sort of civil war raging. 

And now, I remember traveling in Orissa a few years ago, when there were not any Maoists, but there were huge sort of mining companies coming in to mine the bauxite. And yet, they kept—all the newspapers kept saying the Maoists are here, the Maoists are here, because it was a way of allowing the government to do a kind of military-style repression. Of course, now they’re openly saying that they want to call out the paramilitary. 

And if you look at—for example, if you look at the trajectory of somebody like Chidambaram, who’s India’s home minister, he—you know, he’s a lawyer from Harvard. He was the lawyer for Enron, which pulled off the biggest scam in the history of—corporate scam in the history of India. We’re still suffering from that deal. After that, he was on the board of governors of what is today the biggest mining corporation in the world, called Vedanta, which is mining in Orissa. The day he became finance minister, he resigned from Vedanta. When he was the finance minister, in an interview he said that he would like 85 percent of India to live in cities, which means moving something like 500 million people. That’s the kind of vision that he has. 

And now he’s the home minister, calling out the paramilitary, calling out the police, and really forcibly trying to move people out of their lands and homes. And anyone who resisted, whether they’re a Maoist or not a Maoist, are being labeled Maoist. People are being picked up, tortured. There are some laws that have been passed which should not exist in any democracy, laws which make somebody like me saying what I’m saying now to you a criminal offense, for which I could just be jailed. Even sort of thinking an anti-government thought has become illegal. And we’re talking about, you know, as you said, 75,000 to 100,000 security personnel going to war against people who, since independence, which was more than sixty years ago, have no schools, no hospitals, no running water, nothing. And now, now they’re being—now they’re being killed or imprisoned or just criminalized. You know, it’s like if you’re not in the Salwa Judum camp, then you’re a Maoist, and we can kill you. And they are openly celebrating the Sri Lanka solution to terrorism, to terrorism. 

---

ANJALI KAMAT: Arundhati Roy, can you explain a little bit more about how India has so successfully hidden this side of it, this underbelly of democracy that you bring out in your book—murder, disappearances, torture, rapes, thousands—millions of people displaced, whether it’s for development projects or in the process of fighting wars, tens of thousands disappeared in Kashmir, the insurgency that’s being fought, the military that’s fighting the insurgency in the northeast? How is India, on a global stage, continues to be seen as this successful democracy, a place where investors are flooding to? 

ARUNDHATI ROY: Well, precisely because it is a democracy for some of its citizens, you know? And so, in a way, it has—this whole system has somehow created an elite that is now suddenly enriched in the last, you know, twenty years since the advent of the corporate free market. We have a huge middle class that is hugely invested in this sort of a police—or, you know, a police state that isn’t acknowledged as one. So you have—it’s not just a small sort of coterie of generals, like in Burma, or a kind of military dictatorship that’s supported by the US in America. You have a huge constituency in this country that completely supports this whole enterprise, and you have a free media where 90 percent of the turnover of those media houses comes from corporate advertisements and so on. So they’re also free, but free to also embrace this particular model, in which, you know, a small section of people—well, not a small section; there are millions and millions of people, but they are not the majority of the people of this country. The light shines upon this rising middle class, which is, as I said, such a huge number that it’s a very, very attractive market for the whole world. 

So, when India opens its markets, you know, because it has opened its markets, and because it’s—you know, international finance is flooding in, and all of that is so attractive, it is allowed to commit genocide in Gujarat; it’s allowed to commit civil war in the center; it’s allowed to have a military occupation in Kashmir, where you have 700,000 soldiers, you know, patrolling that little valley; it’s allowed to have laws like the Armed Forces Special Powers Act in the northeast, which allows the army to just kill on suspicion. And yet, it’s celebrated. It’s allowed to displace millions of people, but yet it’s celebrated as this real success story, because it has all these institutions in place, even though they’ve been hollowed out. 

So you have, for example, a Supreme Court in which there are very erudite judges, and there are some very erudite judgments, but if you look at how it’s actually functioning, it has hollowed out. To criticize the court is a criminal offense. And yet, you have judgments where a judge openly says something like—you know, that—I’ve forgotten the exact words, but how corporate—you know, a corporate company cannot basically commit anything illegal, cannot commit an illegal act, you know? Or you have a judge in court openly talking about, let’s say, Vedanta, which is mining in Orissa for bauxite. And the Norwegian government had pulled out of that project because of the human rights violations and so on; and, you know, for a whole lot of ethical reasons, they pulled out. And in India, you know, the company was taken to court, and a judge openly, in an open court, says that, “OK, we won’t give this contract to Vedanta. We’ll give it to Sterlite, because Sterlite is a very good company. I have shares in it,” omitting to mention that Sterlite is a subsidiary of Vedanta. 

You know, but there’s so much fancy footwork. If it was a military dictator, they have would have just said, “Shut up” and “Vedanta will get the project.” But here, there are affidavits and counter-affidavits and a little bit of delay and everything; everyone thinks it’s democracy. You know, you have the Supreme Court hearing on, let’s say, the Parliament attack, where openly the Supreme Court of the world’s greatest democracy says, you know, on the one hand, “We don’t have evidence to prove that the person who was charged is—belongs to a terrorist group,” and a few paras later says, “but the collective conscience of society will only be satisfied if we sentence him to death.” And it’s just said so, blatantly, out there, you know? And you can’t criticize it, because it’s a criminal offense. 

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Well, I think, you know, when people would ask me what I thought of Obama, I said I hope that he would land the American empire gently, like the pilot who landed the—who crash-landed the plane in the Hudson.

Yes, he’s expanding the war in Afghanistan. I think, basically, people, including Obama, just don’t know what to do in Afghanistan, and expanding the war is certainly not going to end that war or create any kind of just peace in that region. It’s, in fact, going to exacerbate the situation, draw Pakistan into it, and when Pakistan is drawn into it, so will India, and so on. So it goes.

I think, you know, the real change that has taken place in the last, you know, ten years is also the rise of India and China as kind of imperial powers, you know, playing out their games in Africa and also in parts of Latin America. So it’s a very—and, of course, the rise of Russia.

So, I think the situation in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kashmir is very volatile. And, of course, let’s not forget that these are nuclear powers, even though a scientist recently has announced that India’s nuclear tests were a damp squib and that they were not successful, but I don’t know what that’s about and why he’s coming out with it now.

But I think we are headed for a lot of chaos. And in India, you know, as I said, while the situation in Kashmir—even now, as I speak in the studio, there’s news coming in of what they call “encounter killings,” you know, almost a few every day. So, obviously, given that nonviolent protest has been put down violently, things are going to go back to a previous era of some kind of militant violence there. And, you know, the heart of India being sort of hollowed out by this civil war and this assault on its poor.

I really don’t know what to say or what to expect, except to say that this kind of pressure can never result in an orderly submission, even if people wanted to submit. What’s going to happen and what is happening is that unpredictable kinds of battles and chaos is erupting all over the place, and, you know, the government is constantly firefighting and trying to douse those flames.

But out of this chaos, something new has to come, and will come, because it cannot go on like this. And I don’t know whether that thing will be worse or will be better, but it can’t go on like this. You know, the kind of polythene bag over our heads has to burst open at some point. You know, we have to be allowed to breathe. And this kind of surveillance and drone attacks and all this that’s being planned is not going to be able to hold down millions of people who are just getting impoverished and hungry and homeless.

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In fact, I was actually—you know, when I was in this place, Chhattisgarh, Dantewada, where the war is unfolding, a senior policeman told me, “You know, Arundhati, as a policeman, I can tell you that the police are not going to be able to solve the problem of these indigenous, you know, these Adivasi people”—“Adivasi” is the word for tribal people—“and I have told the government that the problem with these people is that they don’t have any greed. So, the way to solve the problem is to put a TV in every house. Then we’ll be able to win this war.”

So, you know, you have a situation where more and more people are just outside the barcode. You know, they are what you would call “illegible.” And we have a very, very serious situation here, where now they are planning, you know, once again, to make a—what do you call it—a electronic ID card. Of course, once again, to people who don’t have water, who don’t have electricity, who don’t have schools, but they will have ID cards, and people who don’t have ID cards are not going to exist.

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AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to Arundhati Roy. She’s speaking to us from New Delhi, India. She has just published a new book called Field Notes on Democracy: Listening to Grasshoppers. Arundhati, why “listening to grasshoppers”?

ARUNDHATI ROY: Oh, it was the name of a lecture that I did in Turkey last year on the anniversary after the death of Hrant Dink, the Armenian journalist who was shot outside his office for daring to talk about the Armenian genocide of 1915, which you’re not supposed to talk about in Turkey. And my lecture was really about the historical links between progress and genocide.

And “listening to grasshoppers” was—referred to the testimony an old lady called Araxie Barsamian, who’s the friend—mother of my friend David Barsamian, who is Armenian and who talked about how, you know, the wheat had ripened in her village in 1915, and suddenly there was this huge swarm of grasshoppers that arrived. And the village elders were very worried about this and said it was a bad omen. And they were right, because a few months later, when the wheat had ripened, the Turks came, and that was the beginning of the Armenian genocide for her.

And so, I talk about—the whole lecture was really about how societies are prepared for genocide and how genocide is, you know, it’s like part of free trade, and how, you know, genocides that are acknowledged, and denied, and prosecuted, all have to—all depend on world trade, and always have done, and about how I worry that a country like India, that is poised on the threshold of progress, could also be poised on the threshold of genocide.

And that essay was written in January of last year. And now, as you see, the troops are closing in on the forest areas where the poorest people live. And they will be sacrificed at the altar of progress, unless we manage to show the world that we have to find a different way of seeing and a different way of going about things.

But here in India, there’s the smell of fascism in the air. Earlier, it was a kind of an anti-Muslim, religious fascism. Now we have a secular government, and it’s a kind of right-wing ruthlessness, where people openly say, you know, every country that has progressed and is developed, whether you look at Europe or America or China or Russia, they have a quote-unquote “past,” you know, they have a cruel past, and it’s time that India stepped up to the plate and realized that there are some people that are holding back this kind of progress and that we need to be ruthless and move in, as Israel did recently in Gaza, as Sri Lanka has recently done with its hundreds of thousands of Tamils in concentration camps. So why not India? You know? Why not just do away with the poor so that we can be a proper superpower, instead of a super-poor superpower?

AMY GOODMAN: Arundhati Roy, we just have less than a minute. What gives you hope?

ARUNDHATI ROY: What gives me hope is the fact that this way of thinking is being resisted in a myriad ways in India, you know, from the poorest person in a loincloth in the forest saying, “We’re going to fight,” right up to me, who’s at the other end, you know. And all of us are joined together by the determination that, even if we lose, we’re going to fight, you know? And we’re not going to just let this happen without doing everything we can to stop it. And that gives me a tremendous amount of hope.


10/3/09

Paideia is on Fire


One buildings of my high school is on fire right now. Please hold us in the light. They are thinking it was intentionally set. Many of us reacted to the new as if it was our own home. It was in many many ways.

10/2/09

The WelfareQueens

If you don't know this group PLEASE check them out. try to see them if they are ever performing near you. I saw them a couple years ago and it was striking and groundbreaking.

Groundbreaking as is breaking the earth and forcing you to listen in new ways.

From RaceWire
Like many innovative ideas, welfareQueens, a multi-media performance project, was born over a series of kitchen table conversations between a group of poor women in anti-poverty organizing sharing their personal stories with poverty, racism and sexism. Jessica Hoffman for ColorLines.com writes:

One recalled how the welfare system had invaded her family’s life in the 1970s, and how the same struggles against poverty and racism persist today. Another had been told she made a few dollars too many to qualify for public assistance while struggling to care for a disabled elder. A third described the hardships she experienced in seeking health care through the Medi-Cal system.

They met monthly in that kitchen for almost two years. To facilitate the gatherings, they provided each other with food, childcare, and other supports. Over time, they started calling themselves the welfareQueens, a name coined by founder Tiny, aka Lisa Gray-Garcia, and turned their stories into a scripted play. Today, they perform in settings ranging from street protests to classrooms. Since their debut stage performance in summer 2007, they’ve expanded to become a multimedia art, education, and advocacy project. Their mission is to radically alter the public discourse around poverty.

Check out the rest of the article where you can also find a clip of one of their performances.

are we still even trying to pretend we care about democracy?

(then again, what kind of democracy do WE have, even without coups like this one? see recent post of Arundhati Roy's analysis of democracy's relationship to free trade, progress, and genocide)
Republican Lawmakers Travel to Meet Coup Government in Honduras

Republican Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina and three Republican congressmen are heading to Honduras to meet with the coup government in defiance of the Obama administration. Senator John Kerry, the chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, initially blocked the trip from happening but relented late yesterday. Also traveling will be Republican Congressmen Aaron Schock of Illinois, Peter Roskam of Illinois and Doug Lamborn of Colorado. All four have been vocal supporters of the June coup that ousted the democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya. Zelaya secretly returned to Honduras last week and is currently inside the Brazilian embassy. On Thursday, a group of Brazilian lawmakers traveled to Honduras and condemned the coup government for attacking the embassy with toxic gas.
-Democracy Now Oct 2

10/1/09

The Southern Breakfast


One of the most difficult cultural changes for me in going to college in the Northeast was the loss of southern breakfast. The creation and explosion of the Facebook group I MISS WAFFLE HOUSE > MY MOM signaled that I was not alone. Breakfast is an experience. At many Southern schools people dress up for Sunday brunch more than for the night of partying that precedes it. Eggs and Biscuits are just the beginning.

We do it all down here.

I have been a vegetarian my entire life and I still get immense joy out of the wonderfulness of breakfast. Yes, that's right I have NEVER had a one piece of bacon in my entire life and breakfast is by far my favorite meal of the day. There is nothing like waking up and making a colorful meal that is easily accompanied by Orange Juice or Coffee or Tea or ALL THREE OMG. The problem with breakfast in the south and particularly Atlanta is that there are so many places that do it so much better than I do. So I always want to go to them. and I do.

My two favorite spots which happen to be famous and classic ATL spots are The Flying Biscuit (opened by emily sailers of the indigo girls among others, they have since sold it) and Ria's Bluebird Cafe. Both of these spots are with in 10 minutes of my house. At the Biscuit I always get the egg-ceptional eggs which is two over medium eggs over two blackbean cakes with salsa, sour cream and feta cheese. I always get greens with it as my side which has a light vinaigrette on it that is mouth watering in its simplicity. I also always get coffee. I am not a coffee drinker but their coffee is so good and just enough of a jolt of a day-starter that it compliments my meal beautifully. I have tried so many times to get something else but it is such a well proportioned meal that I know I would just spend the entire time regretting it if I tried anything else. (kind of like not getting pad thai, i always reset whoever DID get pad thai) Eating the same thing every time is completely ridiculous considering the bites of other people's meals that I've tried over the years. I went recently (who am I kidding I went TODAY) with a friend who got raspberry french toast. I'm not kidding you I ended up almost begging for them not to finish just so I could have a couple more bites.

The vibe at the biscuit is also legendary. Today I spent my entire meal making faces at the toddler at the next table who giggled every time I smiled. At the end of the meal we started chatting with the adults that belonged to the toddler. One of them was the lead singer of Arrested Development and they all invited us to a celebration their church was having. I love bringing people from out of town (esp the aforementioned northeast) because the servers are notoriously nice and kind. They will cater to your every need but not in an annoying way. Everyone is smiling and like many intown ATL restaurants it is extremely racially diverse. I bring friends and just then just sit back as they take it all in. Yes, I say, this IS ATL. Yes, This is really what its like. Enjoy your Breakfast.


PS The Flying Biscuit RECENTLY FRANCHISED.. COMING SOON TO A CITY NEAR YOU... KNOW THAT IT WILL NEVER BE ANYTHING LIKE THE ORIGINAL... NOT HATIN, JUST SAYIN.


carpool


typewriterblues


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