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Taylor Marsh has been writing on line since 1996, with the archives provided here a representation of that work.

Archive | June, 2009

Saudis Deliever Ultimatum to Traveling Press Corps

TM NOTE: Scherer has an update at the link below–

From Michael Scherer of Time:

The Saudi government is permitting journalists accompanying President Obama entry into the country without a visa or the usual customs procedures. While in Saudi Arabia, therefore, journalists are expressly prohibited from leaving the hotel or engaging in any journalistic activities outside of coverage of the POTUS visit. Those who do so risk arrest and detention by Saudi authorities.

This is not exactly helpful in pushing the case that the Saudis should be major partners in pushing Middle East equilibrium forward.

The section on “freedom of speech and press” from the State Department human rights report is a classic:

According to the Basic Law, the media’s role is to educate the masses and promote national unity. Media outlets can legally be banned or publication temporarily halted if they are deemed to promote “mischief and discord, compromise the security of the state and its public image,” or if it “offends a man’s dignity and rights.” The government continued to restrict freedom of speech and press by interrupting publication and dissemination of news sources critical of the royal family or of Islam. Authorities prevented or delayed distribution of foreign print media, effectively censoring these media and publications. …

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Maliki on Unreleased Photos: ‘Baghdad Will Burn’

There’s been a lot of back and forth about the torture photos that have not yet been released, including a Salon.com scoop that reported Taguba denying the Telegraph report, but also what Scott Horton had reported as well. What’s been lost lately is the backgroun on why Obama made the reversal. McClatchy has a report that adds a new angle:

When U.S. officials told Maliki, “he went pale in the face,” said a U.S. military official, who along with others requested anonymity because of the matter’s sensitivity.

The official said Maliki warned that releasing the photos would lead to more violence that could delay the scheduled U.S. withdrawal from cities by June 30 and that Iraqis wouldn’t make a distinction between old and new photos. The public outrage and increase in violence could lead Iraqis to demand a referendum on the security agreement and refuse to permit U.S. forces to stay until the end of 2011.

Maliki said, “Baghdad will burn” if the photos are released, said a second U.S. military official.

Neither the White House nor Maliki is responding for request for comment for this story.

The talk had been that it was Gen. Odierno, through Gates, who had the real influence in getting Pres. Obama to change his mind, which McClatchy says took “considerable lobbying.”

The ACLU isn’t budging.

“The Pentagon should release the photos while reaffirming to the world that the U.S. repudiates such barbaric behavior and is committed to dismantling the culture that allowed it to occur. In the end, full disclosure of the crimes committed by our government will make us all safer.”

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Neocon Replay, This Time It’s North Korea

Michael Goldfarb doesn’t get that talking about striking North Korea’s nuclear sites is not exactly what any person would call productive strategy to be hawking on the Sunday shows.

Yglesias makes another interesting point.

Brit Hume chimes in that he’s all for it too, but that Obama likely won’t do it.

This is the kind of back and forth that belongs in Monty Python Flying Circus.

SecDef Gates is more circumspect. But then again he’s not a Fox News channel talking head. He’s also dealt with managing the challenge, something that Kristol and Hume aren’t interested in doing, because their basic strategy on all things foreign policy is shoot, then aim.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates raised the idea of a tougher approach toward North Korea’s recent nuclear test in meetings here with Asian allies on Saturday, including the prospect of building up United States military forces in the region should six-nation diplomatic talks with North Korea fail, American defense officials said. … But another defense official cautioned that talk of any military buildup was premature and that it was merely a “prudent option” in terms of “what should we be thinking about in the event that we need to start enhancing our posture, our defenses?”

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‘Pro Life Feminism’ is a Fantasy

–updated–

Today on Women on the Web, an interview about “Pro-Life Feminism” takes a walk through the whole feminism debate. The irony that it appears the day after a right wing fanatic murdered a women’s health care doctor is not missed, though this event is being ignored by some. Did you check out “Morning Joe” this morning? Dr. Tiller’s murder was reduced to the “Daily Grind” segment and the crawler. It further drives home the point of the pro selective life crowd, which simply do not want to deal with where reality is leading. According to Women on the Web, “an entirely different group of women are reclaiming the F word: ‘the pro-life feminists.’”

I was one of the people interviewed. One excerpt is below:

Like Ellen Malcolm, Taylor Marsh, a blogger who describes herself not as “pro-choice” but as “pro-civil rights,” also described “pro-life feminism” as an “oxymoron,” but goes one step further:

[The pro-life feminist] platform is a pro-selective life, because if they really were pro-life then these individuals that want to curtail a woman’s civil rights would also be for preventing pregnancy, they’d be for contraception … And then we could get into the stem-cell debate and what that does for quality of life and pro-life. Their argument is morally bankrupt.

Marsh has equally harsh words for “maternalism,” which she calls “propaganda placed on someone because you want to control them. “It’s guilt,” she asserts.

Full stop. (See update below)

I want to address the part regarding my supposed “equally harsh words for ‘maternalism’”. The response above was to a question that had nothing to do with “maternalism,” which is traditionally defined as a mother’s innate instinct to care and protect her child, something that is real and to be respected, which I assure you I do.

The author’s question to me, verbatim (we tape all interviews), which inspired the response I gave, was actually as follows:

ANDREW: “I think so, too. Another argument that has come up from the so-called pro-life feminists is the idea that the ability to have a child, that maternity is an essential part of a woman’s being. What do you make of that, that it’s like a woman’s duty to have a child almost?”

As is obvious, my response was to his question “that it’s like a woman’s duty to have a child almost.” Here’s my complete response:

TAYLOR: That’s propaganda placed on someone else because you want to control them. Its guilt, it’s marketing, it’s making it laudatory without . . . without considering the personal woman’s own life. Again, pro-selective life, the life they want you to lead has nothing to do with her civil rights and her willingness to find her own soul’s journey. Each person is not in it for . . . as much as I want to move the collective forward, each of us is not in this world to simply be part of a collective. Through our own soul journey we find answers and our own bliss, which leads us to a higher place that makes us more valuable in that group that can push forward and make change. But the first thing you’ve got to do is go through your own soul journey. And they want to cut that off and make it . . . make women feel a duty to do something other than they’re being called to do. It’s coercion.

The reason this is very important is that when feminists are asked to speak on issues of life, including motherhood and abortion, we’re often cast in a light that is harsh, projected as being anti motherhood, etc. I have no doubt that this was not the author’s intent at all, so perhaps it morphed in editing. But nevertheless, by turning the definition of “maternalism” on its head and following it with a quote of mine that had nothing to do with the actual definition of “maternalism,” that’s exactly what happened.

However, the premise of the article, that is that “pro-life” women are reclaiming “feminism,” is not only absurd, but a bizarre fantasy. It seems Ms. Malcolm and I have joined in sisterhood on this one:

“[Pro-life feminism] is a bit of an oxymoron,” says Ellen Malcolm, the IBM heiress who founded Emily’s List, a political machine designed to elect pro-choice female lawmakers. “To say that women should be able to make decisions about their own lives, except when it comes to their bodies — that seems contradictory to me.”

Evidently, the site Women on the Web is working to give voice to a new type of feminism:

Reproduction as Political Action

Preferring to call herself “feminine” rather than a “feminist,” Giroux explains that she and her peers hope to save the nation by “encouraging women to again have more children.” A mother of nine who’s also a registered nurse, Giroux feels American women were duped into thinking they could find happiness at the workplace, thereby leading many to choose to stop reproducing after a couple of offspring. WIN’s website describes the phenomenon as a “China mentality,” and states, “Mothers today carry an enormous burden. We live in a world where it is now a luxury if one is able to stay home full-time with her children. Yet we truly believe that ‘the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world’.”

… She and her allies, says Giroux, are intent on undoing “the severe damage that has been done to women through contraception and abortion by the pro-abortion feminist movement.” And that damage can be repaired through reproduction, an assertion at odds with many “mainstream” feminist activists.

Offering at least a beginning definition of feminism helps:

Marsh characterizes feminism as “insuring that every woman has the God-given civil rights that we were born with, to be totally free to envision her life as she wants without restriction, except by law … and the Golden Rule.” Carrie Lukas of the more conservative-minded Independent Women’s Forum, seems to have a similar definition and describes feminism “as the belief that women are men’s equals – the ideal that women should have the same opportunities, responsibilities and protections as men.”

One would hope in the 21st century we could at least agree what feminism is not: “encouraging women to again have more children.”

Feminism isn’t about somebody else, including creating something else. It’s about a woman finding her own expression of how to manifest her own life, which could include the joys of motherhood, but also could be something that has nothing to do with this. Instead, choosing to expand her own individuality through work, study and accomplishments. Both choices are equally valid. It’s up to each woman to conclude what suits her soul journey best.

Feminism at it’s core is about freedom and civil rights to do what we choose while being rewarded equally for those choices and taking responsibility for them as well. Everything else is about your intent to create.

TM NOTE: Thanks to Women on the Web and Andrew for correcting the article, taking out the portion that I felt was a misrepresentation of my views.

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Blame It On Reagan

I’ve said this innumerable times over the last ten years. It’s just more convincing when a Nobel Prize winning economist says it. Paul Krugman’s “Reagan Did It.”

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For the more one looks into the origins of the current disaster, the clearer it becomes that the key wrong turn — the turn that made crisis inevitable — took place in the early 1980s, during the Reagan years.

Attacks on Reaganomics usually focus on rising inequality and fiscal irresponsibility. Indeed, Reagan ushered in an era in which a small minority grew vastly rich, while working families saw only meager gains. He also broke with longstanding rules of fiscal prudence. … The increase in public debt was, however, dwarfed by the rise in private debt, made possible by financial deregulation. The change in America’s financial rules was Reagan’s biggest legacy. And it’s the gift that keeps on taking. …

When Ronald Reagan signed the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act in 1982 it was the beginning of an era that would lead to where we are today. And by the turn of karmic justice, where we are today levels the final verdict on all things Reaganomics, but also the philosophy the Republicans continue to embrace.

It’s ironic that it was also Ronald Reagan who opened the door to invite the Jerry Falwell’s of this world into our politics, which led to people in groups like Operation Rescue, as well as the gullible right wing lunatics who listen to radio and drink up their violent swill by the gallons.

As we see GM enter bankruptcy through a lens that in the background shows pictures of a murdered doctor, it’s good to know when we turned into the direction we ended up in today.

There’s plenty of blame to go around these days. But the prime villains behind the mess we’re in were Reagan and his circle of advisers….

That last line excerpted above actually ends with the financial reckoning we’re now facing, but it just as easily could have stopped with what I offered, because it renders the proper verdict as it reads now.

Oh, and that goes for Pakistan too, because it was Reagan, after Carter’s initial funding, who allowed William Casey to build up the Taliban through Zia without a thought of what would happen later.

Reagan may have been charismatic, after all, people like me fell for him in 1980 –standing in gas lines in NYC, while hearing unending news reports about Iran and hostages, while donning sweaters, didn’t seem like leadership to me– but by 1982 it was clear. There was no there there.

So when Barack Obama touted Reagan during the primaries as being transformational all I could think was, He has to be saying that in a negative way, right? Not all “transformation” is good. Reaganism certainly was not.

So as long as Republicans pine for the Gipper’s good old days we all have to keep the watch. Because people have short memories and in America nostalgia is a trap.

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