TM Connect


Use "My TM" for log in & register.

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

Archive | April, 2011

It’s Sunday. It’s Your Early Bird Round-Up

Good morning political junkies, welcome to Sunday.

On this day in history, April 3, 1865, Union forces occupied the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia.

Here are some links to start off your morning:

~Guess what? Obama is going to announce he wants to run for re-election.

~In yet another shift away from the values and themes he championed as a candidate in 2008, Obama’s reelection campaign will focus more on big-money donors unrestrained by spending limits, as opposed to focusing on the type of small donor, grassroots fund raising he bragged about in 2008.

~So how does the Côte d’Ivoire fit into the Obama administration’s claim that “we are not just going to sit back and watch a government slaughter their own people”? Whether one agrees or disagrees with our military engagement in Libya, I don’t think there is any denying that both liberals and conservatives are scratching their heads looking for some sort of over-arching foreign policy theme. Secretary Clinton called for Laurent Gbagbo to “step down immediately”- this is the strongest condemnation from the administration to date.

~This morning there is breaking news that French forces have taken over Abidjan airport in Côte d’Ivoire.

~The White House is reportedly divided over how to deal with Syria.

~Arianna Huffington announces what has been obvious for some time now- the HuffPo is not a progressive site anymore. I don’t know how I’d describe it- another corporate news experiment, shameless Search Engine Optimizer, ad revenue generator?

~Did the U.S. get Saudi and Bahraini support for military action in Libya by agreeing to not speak out against Saudi troops going into Bahrain to quash democracy protesters?

~If this is true then the military is moving pretty quickly on repealing DADT. That’s good because if the GOP makes more gains in 2012 (or should I say “when”), things could get tricky.

~Israeli President Shimon Peres will be in Washington this upcoming week to work with President Obama to try to find a way to prevent the UN from recognizing a Palestinian state in September. You know, because this conflict hasn’t gone on long enough, we want to draw it out a bit longer.

~Speaking of Israel and Palestine, the International Crisis Group (ICC)released a report last week that details the rise of extremism in Gaza and how it has been influenced, in part, by rival factions within Palestinian politics but also, notably, the Gaza blockade itself has not only not stemmed the militant tide in Gaza but may actually have increased it. We tend to view Palestinian politics through the lens of Hamas and Fatah but the report details the rise of Salafi-Jihadi groups who are more extremist than Hamas. Given that Hamas did not claim responsibility for the recent murder of the Fogel family and the bombing in Jerusalem, it is actually possible that they in fact weren’t responsible, but rather some of these more extremist groups were. The ICC argues that the situation in Gaza makes it more important than ever to reach a quick, just resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict- in other words, the recent violence should not be seen as a reason to not make peace.

~The pointless, provocative burning of the Koran by that malcontent Pastor Jones in Florida continues to reverberate around the Muslim world, not just in Afghanistan. Some believe Afghan President Hamid Karzai may have added fuel to the fire on Thursday when he openly condemned the burning and called on the U.S. to arrest Jones. Then on Friday during morning prayers, various Imans and Mullahs urged people take action in response to the Koran burning, which clearly was taken to mean “do violence,” whether or not that was the original intent (and it may have been). It was on Friday that the worst violence took place, with nine killed and over 80 wounded at the United Nations headquarters in Afghanistan.

~Our attention has been diverted away from Egypt, but there is trouble brewing as this article makes clear. Pretty soon the U.S. is going to have to pressure the Egyptian military to stop the torture, detentions and repression that continues to take place to this day. The U.S. has a very close relationship with the Egyptian military and in my view, we’ve been giving them a bit too much credit for their “restraint” when in fact, the same repressive system that existed under Mubarak continues to hold [and abuse] power. It’s difficult to see them voluntarily giving up all the power and the perks that go along with military dictatorship.

~Political history according to Newt Gingrich.

~So, is the Capitulator In Chief going to allow the GOP another huge victory by agreeing to over $70 billion in budget cuts, much of it targeted at social programs and the usual stuff that the GOP hates. Naturally, the Defense Department gets a pass on this one. You know, because there is no waste, fraud and abuse there. Maybe Obama should stand up for something and allow the GOP to shut down the government? Oh wait, but he doesn’t stand for anything. Does Obama want to help the average middle class American or does he just want to be liked by the GOP and moderates? Because at this point, his military and economic policies are anything but “progressive” and they still can’t stand him. It’s time for Barack Obama to accept that no matter what he does, the GOP will say “no.” Apparently Obama thinks that “compromise” means giving the GOP almost everything they want and getting little to nothing in return. The compromising of late has been rather one-sided.

~Glenn Greenwald does a nice job illustrating why Obama is totally willing to take the progressive vote for granted- because some Obama supporters, just like the G.W. Bush supporters of yore, will rationalize everything Barack Obama does, even if they don’t agree with it. In another recent post, Glenn Greenwald exposes Obama’s hypocrisy and total about-face on the limits (or lackthereof) of Executive Power, particularly as it relates to war and national security.

~Senators have sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton demanding she insist the Palestinians cease their incitement against Jews and Israel in their media, schools etc. No argument there. Incitement by definition throws fuel on an already-smoldering file. But over at Foreign Policy, Mathew Berkman argues that BOTH Palestinians and Israelis should be urged to cease incitement and that Congress, and Israel, tend to have a double standard on this issue.

~Israel will ask the United Nations to retract the Goldstone Report after Judge Goldstone wrote an op-ed in Friday’s Washington Post where he reconsidered some of his conclusions. Ethan Bronner of the NYT has a pretty balanced take on Judge Goldstone’s op-ed.

~592 American soldiers have died since President Obama announced the surge in Afghanistan.

~I hope you don’t mind a little pesticide in your water.

~Fox News lowers the bar. Again. They have given The Donald a regular Monday segment where he say outrageous things without having to explain them while promoting himself as a potential Presidential candidate. They are rationalizing that this ok because he’s not a paid contributor like some of their other Presidential candidates.

~Speaking of The Donald, Glenn Beck has…get this…dismissed Donald Trump as a “showboat” candidate. Hahahahaha. And what would Glenn know about showboating?

~More fun with Fox News- A Fox News executive admits he lied on air about candidate Obama during the 2008 election. Now, if this were any other “news” agency heads would roll. But this is Fox, a place where such biased nonsense is not only encouraged, but rewarded.

~The National Organization for Marriage is warning Virginians and whoever else that will listen, that pretty soon Virginia will have “mandatory gay adoptions” whatever the hell that means. Does that mean gay people will be mandated to adopt? Or does it mean straight people in Virginia will have to adopt gay people? Apparently what it actually means is that there shouldn’t be discrimination in the adoption process. The problem is that the religious right and anti-gay groups have mobilized around this issue and could tilt the balance against what appears to be an entirely reasonable regulation.

The End.

Read full story · Comments { 10 }

A Not So Happy Birthday, Marvin



Two former Afghan Mujahedeen and a six-year detainee at Guantanamo Bay have stepped to the fore of this city’s military campaign, training new recruits for the front and to protect the city from infiltrators loyal to Col. Moammar Gadhafi. The presence of Islamists like these amid the opposition has raised concerns, among some fellow rebels as well as their Western allies, that the goal of some Libyan fighters in battling Col. Gadhafi is to propagate Islamist extremism. – Ex-Mujahedeen Help Lead Libyan Rebels

We should not be in Libya.

It is not in our vital interest.

War is not the answer unless there is a clear and present danger to the United States.

In Libya, there is not.

Pres. Obama’s imperial presidency is no different from George W. Bush. It’s irrefutable at this point.

Andrew Sullivan is correct in his “King Barack I” piece. On the subject of Libya, intelligent and thoughtful minds should be able to agree that Pres. Obama has committed an act of incomprehensible recklessness, with Sec. Clinton’s advice and guidance horribly misguided.

Many of us supported this president because he promised to bring back the constitutional balance after the theories of Yoo, Delahunty, et al put the president on a par with emperors and kings in wartime. And yet in this Libya move, what difference is there between Bush and Obama? In some ways, Bush was more respectful of the Congress, waiting for a vote of support before launching us like an angry bird into the desert. Hillary Clinton, channeling her inner Cheney, said in a classified Congressional briefing that her administration would simply ignore the War Powers Resolution of 1973 that requires the president to seek Congressional approval within 60 days of the conflict starting. If the congress voted against continuing the war, it would be irrelevant to the administration. Beat that, King George II. [...] The president is violating his constitutional duty to enforce the laws (to himself as well as anyone else). He has no constitutional right to simply waive the War Powers Resolution. In my view, we need a debate in the Congress on this as soon as possible.- Andrew Sullivan

Of course, this isn’t Hillary Clinton’s administration, which Sullivan throws in. It’s Obama’s fault we’re in Libya, regardless of the women war hawks around him. But there can be no doubt the Libyan intervention has Sec. Clinton’s name in the not so fine print.

We haven’t learned much since Marvin.

Read full story · Comments { 7 }

Progressive Notes: Social Security, FDR, AARP, Unions & Ohio

Texan4Hillary offers his perspective as a movement progressive activist.

Senator Sanders and others held a great rally with seniors to push pols not to touch Social Security in any way.

Next, a letter to the President for today, but written in 1938. In 1937 F.D.R. made a bad move to cut spending in a depression. It was a disaster, raising unemployment and undoing progress made. However F.D.R. was a great president and after he saw how badly the cuts went he went back to pumping federal money into the system to boost American jobs. A public letter written to Roosevelt in 1938 is getting attention. Warnings abound for Obama:

This is the New Republic in 1938 going “I told you so about balancing the budget too early F.D.R..” Listen up, because this is what the liberal econoblogosphere is going to sound like next year if the Democrats cave and try to turn it around later.

Here’s Bruce Bliven, “Confidential: To the President,” New Republic, April 20, 1938:

THE NEWSPAPERS have told us during the past week or so, Mr. President, that you have at last decided to return to the policy of “pump-priming” through large federal expenditures. Amounts running as high as four or five billion are being mentioned. I am one of the millions of people who earnestly hope that these plans will be put into effect.

No one can any longer doubt that the present depression is an extremely serious matter. The Federal Reserve Board index has sunk from 118 a few months ago to 79 at present…

I can well understand, Mr. President, with what grim humor you must have listened, in recent months, to the anguished howls of business men-anguished because you had taken their advice and they didn’t like it. For years, every self-appointed spokesman for business had been demanding that you should balance the budget. To be sure, nobody suggested that we should accomplish this by increasing taxation to the level of the British, for example, which is about three times as high as our own. On the contrary, they wanted you to perform this mystic and sacred rite by economizing in expenditures. Since nearly all the abnormal spending in your administration had been for relief, that is obviously where the wanted the cuts to be made.There is a deadly parallel between the downward movement of the business index and this enormous drop in federal spending. I am not saying that the curtailment of relief was the only cause of the trouble, or even the chief cause…no one can doubt that the sudden withdrawal of hundreds of millions of dollars of federal relief funds, the smashing of thousands of projects all over the country, did contribute materially to the creation of our present misery. Your triumph over your foes-on this point, at least-is complete.

To be sure, they do not hate you any the less because you have demonstrated that on this extremely important matter they were wrong and you were right. If anything, they hate you more than ever. One of the great mysteries that historians of the future will puzzle over is why you have aroused such bitter animosity….Taxes during your administrations have on the whole been amazingly light…Your very mild efforts to regularize Wall Street, to make the electric utilities behave, to obtain recognition of union labor, have been matters on which most sensible men have agreed with you. They have been directed chiefly against the small minority of bandits whom the majority has always wanted to discipline if it could.

Those who were demanding economy, a year ago, and now don’t like it, have gone back to the old cry about “confidence.”

If you would only do something to restore confidence, they say, business would go on zooming across the landscape, full of vitamins…

Meanwhile Feingold, in the Roosevelt tradition, launches a campaign to oust Mr. Immelt, CEO to G.E., from Obama advisor team. G.E. turns out is getting billions in tax “relief” while the company outsources jobs. So:

Former Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.) launched a petition Wednesday calling on President Barack Obama to oust General Electric CEO Jeffrey Immelt as the head of the White House’s jobs panel, if the executive doesn’t step down voluntarily.

Feingold’s complaint stems from recent revelations that GE will pay no taxes this year, despite making more than $5 billion in the United States in 2010.

Feingold’s PAC, which sent the email, launched earlier this year and gained traction during the labor protests in Madison, has registered the web domain, ImmeltMustGo.com

“We cannot stand by and watch while we are led down this road. Mr. Immelt must step down from the president’s jobs panel — and if he won’t, President Obama needs to ask for his resignation,” Feingold wrote. “How can someone like Immelt be given the responsibility of heading a jobs creation task force when his company has been creating more jobs overseas while reducing its American workforce? And under Immelt’s direction, GE spends hundreds of millions of dollars hiring lawyers and lobbyists to evade taxes.”…

“It’s time for policymakers to stop coddling corporate interests, and get to work creating jobs and wealth for Main Street. We shouldn’t reward wealthy CEOs and Wall Street for behavior that undermines the nation’s economy,” Feingold wrote Wednesday.

The Republican House is about to launch a probe on the A.A.R.P.. They want to see if A.A.R.P. will make billions from the health law. Um yeah. Going after A.A.R.P. is very risky, recall the Right got into office with huge numbers of seniors voting them in. As Taylor points out: the Right is trying to take down the A.A.R.P. to weaken it so when they go to gut Medicare A.A.R.P. won’t be able to fight ala ACORN.

Send this video, just released by A.A.R.P., to everyone you know. The C.E.O. of it explains why A.A.R.P. is nonprofit and it’s history. Also they got up a response website to the G.O.P. smears with more information here.

Politicususa gets at the heart of what the G.O.P. is doing and how badly it is likely to backfire:

In a perverse way, it is good that Americans are finally seeing the lengths Republicans are willing to go to destroy America and its democratic form of government. Incrementally, the GOP has assaulted every segment of American society and the voters will get retribution at the ballot box. The recall efforts in Wisconsin should be a wakeup call to Republicans. But like all true believers and liars, Republicans’ arrogance stemming from their success in 2010 has blinded them to the anger they are eliciting from their all-encompassing assault on the American people. Republicans are losing support from gays, working-class Americans, women, students, minorities, the poor, and now the elderly, but they can count on support from corporate America and the 400 richest families in America. They have assaulted, demeaned, disenfranchised and shown abject contempt for every other segment of American society and the population will have their retribution.

Finally late breaking news: Governor Kaisch just got passed S.B.5, the union busting bill in Ohio. It now awaits his signature. Once signed, unions have 90 days to get 260k signatures and get union rights on the ballot for a November election. And yes, the unions will likely get those signatures very fast. Polls show intense interest by voters in undoing the law, and by passing such a bill it is undoing the G.O.P. in a key swing state. See more here.

Read full story · Comments { 6 }

Queer Talk: Queer (In)Justice

Let’s begin with a current incident, via Darren Hutchinson’s Dissenting Justice, and under the headline, “Beyond Bullying: Race, Poverty and LGBT Rights”: “One of the most pernicious but least discussed stereotypes of LGBT persons portrays them as a highly privileged population. According to the legend, the average LGBT person is white, wealthy and highly educated.”

Hutchinson includes this example of “the Intersection of Race, Poverty and LGBT Status” :

Despite their greater vulnerability to antigay violence, the national media typically does not make connections between race and homophobic violence. For example, Damian Furtch, a 26-year-old black gay male was recently severely beaten in New York City. His attackers called him a ‘faggot.’ Police have labeled the incident a hate crime. As of today (March 28, 2011), the only detailed news about this crime appears on another blog.

In addition to Hutchinson’s link to What’s Up With This, I’ve since seen the story at Joe My God , and it certainly may be at other places by now. Hutchinson’s statement about the general lack of coverage, however, remains accurate.

The attack on Damina Furtch is the kind of thing the authors – Joey L. Mogul, Andrea J. Ritchie and Kay Whitlock – of the recently released Queer (In)Justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People in the United States (Beacon Press) have in mind. They write:

Violence against LGBT people at the hands of strangers on the streets and family members in our homes continues to be reported at alarming rates across the country. According to the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP) … in 2008 there were over two thousand instances of homophobic and transphobic violence reported to just thirteen local organizations across the country, representing a 26 percent increase over 2006 figures. …

LGBT people across the country consistently report that police often focus on them, rather than their assailants … by questioning their account or blaming them for bringing violence upon themselves. … Often, police refuse to take reports, neglect to classify violence as motivated by anti-LGBT sentiment or as domestic violence, or fail to respond altogether. For many LGBT people, and particularly LGBT people of color, immigrants, youth, and criminalized queers, reliance on the police and criminal legal system for safety is simply not an option because of the risk of adverse consequences.

We’re talking about contemporary USA, contemporary Queerdom. From Queer (In)justice:

“In 2007, during a ratings sweeps week, a Memphis, Tennessee, television station broadcast a news segment called ‘Gays Taking Over / Violent Femmes.’ Alleging the existence of Black lesbian gangs that sexually prey on young, heterosexual women, the story featured a staged dramatization of fictitious bathroom assaults. … Later, under pressure from local LGBT activists, the station acknowledged that their reporting was based on unsubstantiated allegations and that no proof of such widespread violence in the schools existed.”

The Stonewall Uprising occurred on June 28, 1969. “Forty years to the day after Stonewall, Fort Worth, Texas, police, accompanied by alcoholic beverage commission agents, raided a gay bar, injuring several patrons, and hospitalizing one gay man alleged to have groped an officer. The police chief justified the violence by claiming that men in the bar made sexual advances toward police.”

In his review of the book at Windy City Media , Yasmin Nair provides helpful summaries of a few of the many other stories told.

… in 1999, Bernina Mata, a Latina lesbian in Illinois, was sentenced to the death penalty in a case where Assistant State’s Attorney Troy Owen declared that she had ‘a motive to commit this crime in that she is a ‘hard core lesbian.’’ …

In 2001, Freddie Mason, a Black gay nurse’s assistant in Chicago, was arrested after a verbal argument with his landlord ‘and (was) anally raped with a billy club covered in cleaning fluid by a police officer who called him a ‘nigger fag.’

In 2008, Duanna Johnson, a Black transgender woman in Tennessee, was picked up by police despite no evidence of solicitation. At the police station, she refused to answer to an officer who called her a ‘she-he.’ She was beaten so hard that her skull split open. Johnson filed a suit against the police but, before the matter could go to trial, was found shot execution style under mysterious circumstances.

What Queer (In)Justice provides is a very well researched and written, but usually missing from the conversation, “criminal legal system” context for understanding the LGBT equality movement. Or better, movements, plural. In part, what the authors address is how the civil rights efforts are splintered.

Markers of race, class, gender, and relationship to the nation-state have long served to identify who is and who is not a presumptive ‘criminal.’ Normative sexualities and gender expressions alone or in combination with markers of race and class, have also informed the manner in which different instances of similar conduct are interpreted. The responses of police, politicians, judges, religious leaders, and the media are too often determined by already-existing cultural ideas about who is intrinsically ‘innocent’ and who is blameworthy; who is ‘trouble’ and who is respectable.

The authors use a alarming wealth of stories about how real queer people experience our “criminal legal system.” The responsibilities to change the systemic injustices are, of course, a society-wide project. It includes need for changes within the LGBT nonprofit and advocacy organizations. That’s a frequently unpopular, and not easy thing to say or to hear. But mainstream LGBT organizations need an honest internal look. As the authors explicitly state, and I fully agree, this is not a “one-size-fits-all” critique — there are individuals and organizations who are attentive to the bigger picture. But that doesn’t change the need for some serious thinking and acting.

One obvious, but powerful, tool of the Powers That Be is to divide us. Queer (In)Justice could be one powerful resource to help us find some “togetherness.” Focus on the repeal of DADT and DOMA, the passage of Hate Crimes laws, the ongoing efforts to pass ENDA … every step forward is important. But what the authors point out, among other things, is who isn’t included by Queerdom’s near exclusive focus on “respectable” issues, and “we’re just like you” faces and voices — who is often left out. Not just by “society,” but as uncomfortable as it is to acknowledge, by Queerdom.

Read full story · Comments { 10 }

Julian Schnabel’s ‘Miral’ Premieres in Washington

After reading Judge Richard Goldstone’s remarkable piece in the Washington Post today, it’s a further reminder of just how impossible it is to tell any story of Israelis and Palestinians without chasing narratives that inevitably end up colliding.

“Miral” is just such a collision.

Based on the autobiographical novel by Rula Jebreal, the Washington, D.C. premiere of “Miral” included a discussion afterward with the film’s director, as well as Ms. Jebreal, who also wrote the screenplay. Schnabel and Jebreal are partners in life, as in art. Amjad Atallah and Daniel Levy of New America Foundation were the hosts, with an educated foreign policy audience keyed in to what was happening on the screen.

Ms. Jebreal said she has “no resentments” of the First Intifada, but she’s now 37 and wants to know just how long this will have to go on without a resolution. Daniel Levy answered her when he said that “since Oslo we’ve gone back” and it’s come to the point that “hearing the other narrative has an illegality to it.”

Jebreal’s story, which is “Miral,” is compelling and heartbreaking. She is a brilliant, compelling and a deeply passionate woman about peace. At one point Schnabel made a comment that he’d like to see Jebreal sit across from PM Bibi Netanyahu and interview him instead of Piers Morgan, which would be something to see.

The accusations that the film is pro-Palestinian or anti-Israel mystify me, because that’s not what I saw at all. As with all of Mr. Schnabel’s films, “Basquiat,” “Before Night Falls,” both of which I’ve seen (“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” I have not), he easily maintains his “It’s not Hollywood, it’s an abstraction” quality, to quote the director, while infusing the characters with heart so that empathy is easily felt.

“If you empathize with the characters the movie does its job,” was the bar Schnabel set for his film, which I believe he reached. When he admits that “you’re watching one kind of movie, then you see another scene and you ask ‘what the hell is happening here?’”, it is the best description of “Miral” that no movie reviewer can replicate. The film is a complicated collage of events that begins in 1947 and goes through Oslo, but does so in a compilation of quick abstractions.

The first large section of the story is the preamble to Miral’s entrance, played by Freida Pinto of “Slumdog Millionaire.” It quickly skims Israel’s creation, introduces Willem Defoe as a token American serviceman, though he has no purpose in the film, which Schnabel admits, but like Vanessa Redgrave’s cameo, both actors are present to give support for Schnabel’s efforts at telling this Palestinian story, which is simultaneously one of an Israeli, something people often aren’t able to digest. It’s Regrave’s known Palestinian support that likely helped inflame some against “Miral,” but it’s hard not to honor artists who want to be part of such an endeavor when many big Hollywood names wouldn’t be caught near the subject for fear of ruining their image. Schnabel noted this after the film.

Of the women who come before Miral in the film, the famous Palestinian icon and heroine Hind al-Husseini deserved much more weight in the screenplay, which is one of the problems from the start, as Jebreal’s talent for fleshing out the female characters is weak and is often put second to scripted political messaging.

“Miral” begins here:

ONE COLD DAY in April 1948, 31-year-old Hind al-Husseini happened upon a group of 55 young children outside the Holy Sepulchre church in Jerusalem’s Old City. They had been dumped in the Old City and wandered near the church after having survived—and been orphaned by—a massacre in their village on the outskirts of Jerusalem, Deir Yassin, by members of the Irgun and the Stern Gang.

Hind rescued the children immediately, bringing them to two rooms she rented for them nearby. Every day, Hind would visit the children with food and spend time with them. She soon brought them to the Sahyoun convent on the Via Dolorosa, following conversations with the head of the convent, who was worried about Hind’s safety en route to visiting the children in their two rooms. Palestine was in the midst of a war, and the Old City of Jerusalem was not spared from attacks. Indeed, shortly after Hind removed the children from the two rooms she had rented, those very rooms were bombed. So, within 10 days, the children had narrowly escaped death—first at their homes in Deir Yassin, and then in the Old City.

After the first cease-fire, Hind brought all 55 children—mostly all under the age of nine—from the convent to her family home, a mansion built by her grandfather in Jerusalem in 1891. Hind had been born there on April 25, 1916. On her 32nd birthday, just two weeks after the massacre of Deir Yassin, she renamed the house the Dar Al-Tifl Al-Arabi (Arab Children’s House), founding it as an orphanage for the young survivors. “It was the worst of times,” she recalled, adding, “It was the end of the Mandate.”

As for other lead female characters, Nadia, Miral’s mother, is a troubled drunk who ends up in prison; the next femme is Fatima, a female terrorist, who meets Nadia in jail. Jamal, Fatima’s brother, ends up raising Miral after her mother’s death. Alexander Siddig, who plays Jamal, whom some of you may remember from episodes of “24,” ends up grounding the entire story, after you get through the beginning narrative.

What struck me from the start of the film was the arc Schnabel was attempting to construct. When I asked him how he managed to edit a piece with such a wide expanse down to 90 minutes he simply replied, “Talent.” It wasn’t a question meant as the set up line it became, but when he quipped “You know the famous line, If I’d had more time it would have been shorter…” I knew his self-satisfaction for getting this ambitious project of love finished, but also getting Harvey Weinstein behind it, which was made possible in part because of the Oscar success of “The King’s Speech,” Schnabel said, was a feat for which he’d be proud, critics be damned.

The critics have not been kind. One reason is because the arc of the film falls in on itself before Miral is even introduced.

One of the things I believe kills the hook to audiences that a storyline requires to support the artistry of “abstraction” is a way in to relate early on so you can jump in and follow the narrative. If you’re hooked on Vanessa Redgrave you’re in, but if you’re not you’ll spend the first chunk of the movie baffled, with Willem Defoe’s cameo nothing akin to what you expect of him in any film making it worse. Even understanding that any ticket buyer is going to be predisposed to “Miral” or they wouldn’t go, the arc of beginning in 1947, while constructing a narrative of a Palestinian girl’s life, then ending at Oslo, with all the inherent politics in between, requires a great deal of athletic film viewing, even by the most dedicated person.

The film poster asks “Is this the face of a terrorist?” It’s the question that no doubt puts some people off seeing the film, while drawing people to it, as the answer seems so obvious, because the girl can’t possibly be that evil. So what makes a terrorist?

We find out through Miral’s boyfriend in the film, because regardless of Hind al-Husseini’s warnings for her to stay away from politics it’s impossible. To be a Palestinian or Israeli in Jerusalem is to be political. It’s inescapable.

TM Note: The Washington Post sat down with Schnabel and Jebreal the day after the Washington screening. Christian Science Monitor reviewed “Miral,” as did the NYTimes.

Read full story · Comments { 3 }

My $0.02/Saturday: Hillary, Jeannette, and Perditta

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives for the funeral mass for former vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro, Thursday, March 31, 2011 in New York.

Morning, news junkies. Note: You’ll have to read all the way to the bottom of this one for the tie-in to “Jeannette” and “Perditta.” There’s also some comic relief from the Onion waiting there at the end as a reward for making it through. My Saturday reads are often on the ‘heavy’ side I know, and this weekend is no exception.

I’d like to start with a story I touched on in a roundup about a month ago. You may recall that I linked to Glen Ford/BAR’s commentary on the pogrom-like massacre against sub-Saharan black migrant workers in Libya, at the hands of so-called anti-Gaddafi rebels. The Western media has virtually blacked this story out–or if they are covering it in any substantive or sustained way other than in passing, I must have missed it over the past month. Leave it to the WSWS (World Socialist Web Site) to have one of the few informative pieces I’ve seen covering the story at all (h/t paperdoll for pointing me to it.) The WSWS piece references a March 22nd article, in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung by Gunnar Heinsohn (which cites as its source a report by Zimbabwean journalist and documentary filmmaker Farai Sevenzo).

From the WSWS link:

The article states:“Because mercenaries from Chad and Mali are presumed to be fighting for him [Gaddafi], the lives of a million African refugees and thousands of African migrants are at risk. A Turkish construction worker told the British radio station BBC: ‘We had seventy to eighty people from Chad working for our company. They were massacred with pruning shears and axes, accused by the attackers of being Gaddafi’s troops. The Sudanese people were massacred. We saw it for ourselves.’

The zombie in place of the fourth estate, our corporate US media, has either glossed over or omitted the massacre altogether. Meanwhile, Al Jazeera, unsurprisingly, has had more to say on the killings than I’ve seen from CNN or Fox over the last few months combined. Again, from the WSWS link:

On February 28, the Arab TV station Al Jazeera reported the racist massacre of black African workers by so-called “freedom fighters” as follows: “Dozens of workers from sub-Saharan Africa, it is feared, have been killed and hundreds are hiding because angry opponents of the government are hunting down black African mercenaries, witnesses reported…. According to official reports, about 90 Kenyans and 64 people from southern Sudan, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Zambia, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sierra Leone and Burundi landed in Nairobi today.

One of them, Julius Kiluu, a 60-year-old construction manager, told Reuters: ‘We were attacked by people from the village. They accused us of being murderous mercenaries. But in reality they simply refuse to tolerate us. Our camp was burnt down. Our company and our embassy helped us get to the airport.’“Hundreds of black immigrants from the poorest African countries, who work mainly as low-wage day labourers in Libya, have been wounded by the rebels. From fear of being killed, some of them have refrained from going to a doctor.”

I went digging for the Al Jazeera report:

“But why is nobody concerned about the plight of sub-Saharan African migrants in Libya? As victims of racism and ruthless exploitation, they are Libya’s most vulnerable immigrant population, and their home country governments do not give them any support,” Hein de Haas, a senior fellow with the International Migration Institute, writes in his blog.

In clicking on the link to de Haas’ blog and perusing the comments, I stumbled upon a link to this February blog post at the Independent by Michael Mumisa: Is Al-Jazeera TV complicit in the latest vilification of Libya’s Blacks?

Mumisa wrote:

Even Al-Jazeera TV has based most of its news coverage of bands of marauding savage Africans on information posted via tweeter, facebook, and other social networks. That there may be African mercenaries operating in Libya is very possible but there are also credible reports from Serbian military sources as well as other Western agencies that Serbian mercenaries are fighting to protect Muammar Gaddafi. Yet nothing has been said about Gaddafi’s Serbian and Russian mercenaries.

Black Africans have always been a ‘visible’ and persecuted minority in Libya. By giving credence to potentially dangerous and unverified reports and rumours posted on social networks without taking into consideration the racial context of Libyan society Al-Jazeera and other foreign media outlets are complicit in the latest vilification and scapegoating of Libya’s Black minorities and its African migrant workers.

I don’t claim to be an expert on what’s happening on the ground in Libya, but I would like some answers on the deaths of these migrant workers. I would really love to hear someone put this humanitarian issue to Madame President Hillary Clinton for comment.

Switching gears now… because yep, you heard me correctly…

I just called her Madame President Hillary Clinton.

If the aliens visiting for the upcoming royal wedding were to observe what was going on right now, what else would they conclude? Hillary’s leading, Obama’s not, and everyone knows it.

Nothing new there, of course, except for the part about everyone knowing it. If Obama is the Where’s Waldo president, our media was the Where’s Waldo fourth estate in 2008, as well as during the entire past decade. That Where’s Waldo media, by the way, very much included left blogistan, guilty of its own version of the “Village” insularity and hegemony in the traditional media that the prog blogs cut their teeth railing against.

In 2008, access was more important than our country’s future to journalists and bloggers, and I have no reason to believe in 2012, the story will be any different.

Which brings me to my next set of links… Continue Reading →

Read full story · Comments { 16 }

Fanatical U.S. Preacher Inspires Murder in Afghanistan

This is not the beginning of the end for the international community in Afghanistan. This is the end. Terry Jones and others will continue to pull anti-Islam stunts and opportunistic extremists here will use those actions to incite attacks against foreigners. Unless we, the internationals, want our guards to fire on unarmed protestors from now on, the day has come for us to leave Afghanistan. – This Attack is Different – UN Dispatch

The last time something even close to this occurred it was over cartoons of Mohammed.

A cleric in Afghanistan drives around inciting citizens about something a crazy American did and people end up paying with their lives. All because of something that happened 12 days ago.

The religious fanatic, Terry Jones, made good on his threats and miles away Afghans, foreign and UN workers paid for it, 12 killed, because Jones burned a Koran in Florida. Pres. Karzai has demanded that Jones be held accountable. This is a unique moment in international relations for the U.S.

From the New York Times:

The Ulema Council recently met to discuss the Koran burning, Mullah Kashaf said in a telephone interview. “We expressed our deep concerns about this act, and we were expecting the violence that we are witnessing now,” he said. “Unless they try him and give him the highest possible punishment, we will witness violence and protests not only in Afghanistan but in the entire world.”

Mr. Jones was unrepentant. “We must hold these countries and people accountable for what they have done as well as for any excuses they may use to promote their terrorist activities,” he said in a statement. “Islam is not a religion of peace. It is time that we call these people to accountability.”

The demand from Afghanistan to hold an American citizen responsible for burning a holy book represents a challenge for U.S. diplomacy in the world that is unprecedented.

It’s understandable that people are immediately declaring that this event signifies the need for a change in our presence in Afghanistan, because our involvement should have ended the second McChrystal was fired because he blew a fuse in public. It’s not every day a revered general goes off and a member of the press is privy.

But the Pastor Terry Jones incident and the inciting Muslim clerics of this world shouldn’t be allowed to hold the rest of us hostage, because of their religious sensibilities. A connected world gives these people a lot more power than they’d otherwise have. Freedom of speech and action in America is just that, as we had to swallow recently when the Supreme Court announced Westboro Baptist church protests at funerals were protected.

On the other end of the spectrum, Rep. Peter King’s un-American House hearings symbolized the willful ignorance of religious bigots, something that sends a terrible message to a large group of people that don’t deserve to get lumped in with killers.

Let’s hope this doesn’t escalate into our very own Mohammed cartoon catastrophe, which could escalate into something even bigger.

Read full story · Comments { 7 }

Michele Bachmann Beats Romney on 1st Quarter Fundraising

Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., raised a combined total of $2.2 million in the first quarter of 2011, outgaining presumed presidential contender Mitt Romney who raised $1.9 million over the same period. Bachmann’s political action committee, MichelePAC, raised $500,000 while her Congressional reelection fund took in $1.7 million. The funds raised for her Congressional reelection could be transferred to any federal campaign, including one for president. – Fox News

Well, this is embarrassing.

Rachel Weiner does the math differently than Fox News, but comes out basically in the same place.

No wonder Mitt just announced he’s going on a fundraising blitz in April.

Romney’s likely to sit out Iowa, which is Bachmann’s home base and could be hers to win unless Mike Huckabee makes a move. Palin’s been losing steam for quite some time, but if she revved up she could still be formidable.

Read full story · Comments { 10 }

Union Busting Backfires, Cops & Firefighters Turning on GOP

Many cops and firefighters have thrown their allegiance to the GOP for years — union members who frequently stray from labor’s longtime support for Democrats. A host of new Republican governors is changing all that. [...] Chuck Canterbury, the national president of the Fraternal Order of Police, said his members are “shocked” by the turn of events. “Who are these evil teachers who teach your children, these evil policemen who protect them, these evil firemen who pull them from burning buildings? When did we all become evil?” said Canterbury, whose union endorsed Bush in 2000 and 2004 and John McCain in 2008. – Politico

The midterm elections were a rout. But voters weren’t giving a mandate to Republicans to come after collective bargaining rights or to weaken the unions that protect cops and firefighters. A massive overreach on their mandate is threatening Republicans for 2012 even more than their lousy presidential candidates.

Gallup also finds that people back unions over the marauding governors, 48% to 39%.

This is not rocket science. When you attack the main vein of how the middle class stays the middle class this was very predictable, especially when you have CEO pay exploding. From USA Today:

The heads of the nation’s top companies got the biggest raises in recent memory last year after taking a hiatus during the recession. At a time most employees can barely remember their last substantial raise, median CEO pay jumped 27% in 2010 as the executives’ compensation started working its way back to prerecession levels…

Add to this Donald Trump’s birther front man show and you’ve got a real circus on the Right.

UPDATE: LiberalJoe makes an excellent point in the comments that Politico forgot, which I hadn’t considered either:

Many Police officers/Law Enforcement, Firefighters/EMT’s, and building trades folks are married to, or have relatives who are, teachers, nurses, and other unions under attack by the GOP. The GOP in all their studidity, and desire to crush unions and the Dems forgot that simple truth. The GOP was attacking spouses, brothers /sisters. parents, relatives, and probably neighbors. When you start doing that to loved ones , family differences in political leanings are thrown out the window. You protect and fight for your own.

Read full story · Comments { 8 }

The Ad Progressives Should Have Run



Okay, so it needs some work.

That’s because this one is from the GOP.

Read full story · Comments { 1 }

2012: ‘Ultra-paranoid’ Jim Messina and Obama’s Re-elect

Says one Democratic operative of Messina: “I hope he’s better at political campaigns than at managing big, important pieces of legislation.”Jim Messina, Obama’s Enforcer, by Ari Berman

Absolutely nothing frosted me more than watching the White House bungle the health care messaging. Jim Messina is the guy who got beat by Sarah Palin’s “death panels” squeal and led the Democrats into a legislative quagmire and electoral strife that will follow them into the 2012 election cycle.

Jim Messina is also the guy who bought Andrew Breitbart’s smear tactics, then praised the quick firing of Shirley Sherrod to staffers, which I wrote about here, based on the reporting of Ben Smith at Politico.

From Berman’s piece:

Messina begins the re-election campaign with a significant amount of baggage. As a former chief of staff to Baucus and deputy to Emanuel, Messina has clashed with progressive activists and grassroots Obama supporters both inside and outside Washington over political strategy and on issues like healthcare reform and gay rights, alienating parts of the very constituencies that worked so hard for Obama in 2008 and that the campaign needs to reinspire and activate in 2012. Obama’s fixer has arguably created as many problems as he’s solved. “He is not of the Obama movement,” says one top Democratic strategist in Washington. “There is not a bone in his body that speaks to or comprehends the idea of a movement and that grassroots energy. To me, that’s bothersome.”

[...] Under Messina, Obama ‘12 could more closely resemble the electoral strategy of Baucus or Bill and Hillary Clinton—cautious, controlling, top-down in structure and devoted to small-bore issues that blur differences between the parties—than Obama ‘08, a grassroots effort on a scale modern politics had never seen. “It was a major harbinger to me, when Obama hired him, that we were not going to get ‘change we can believe in,’” says Ken Toole, a former Democratic state senator and public service commissioner in Montana. “Messina has a lot of talents, but he’s extremely conservative in his views on how to do politics. He’s got a tried-and-true triangulation methodology, and that’s never gonna change.” The Democratic National Committee declined to make Messina available for an interview.

To refresh, Messina is the “veal pen” man and was instrumental on muscling the health care bill away from anything progressives wanted and toward the private deal with insurers, particularly PhRMA, that sunk and stunk up the plan. More from Berman:

The administration deputized Messina as the top liaison to the Common Purpose Project. The coveted invite-only, off-the-record Tuesday meetings at the Capitol Hilton became the premier forum where the administration briefed leading progressive groups, including organizations like the AFL-CIO, MoveOn, Planned Parenthood and the Center for American Progress, on its legislative and political strategy. Theoretically, the meetings were supposed to provide a candid back-and-forth between outside groups and administration officials, but Messina tightly controlled the discussions and dictated the terms of debate (Jane Hamsher of Firedoglake memorably dubbed this the “veal pen”). “Common Purpose didn’t make a move without talking to Jim,” says one progressive strategist. During the healthcare fight, Messina used his influence to try to stifle any criticism of Baucus or lobbying by progressive groups that was out of sync with the administration’s agenda, according to Common Purpose participants. “Messina wouldn’t tolerate us trying to lobby to improve the bill,” says Richard Kirsch, former national campaign manager for Health Care for America Now (HCAN), the major coalition of progressive groups backing reform. Kirsch recalled being told by a White House insider that when asked what the administration’s “inside/outside strategy” was for passing healthcare reform, Messina replied, “There is no outside strategy.”

As for the never ending promises to the gay community, Joe Subday says DADT passed “in spite of Messina.” If Joe says this is the truth, it is. Many people won’t be so blunt, because progressive groups don’t want the backlash and to be frozen out.

But if there is one thing that resonates with what I hear constantly it is this sentence from Berman’s piece:

Corporate America no longer regards Obama as an ally, while many donors from 2008 are disillusioned with the administration’s legislative compromises and political timidity.

Couple all of this with progressive disappointment and disgust over the trajectory of Obama’s first term and you’ve got a whole lot of depressed Democrats and progressives as 2012 rolls around and the Republicans get ready to do what they’ve been waiting to do since 2008. Defeat Pres. Obama at all costs.

The most committed wins and 2012 won’t come close to 2008 on the enthusiasm meter for Barack Obama. That’s a fact that’s already baked into the election.

Could it make the difference?

Read full story · Comments { 11 }