mondoweiss | I’m announcing my new Jewish identity project today. Well actually it’s my old project, but dressed up a little. This is from Haaretz today, Anees of Jerusalem spotted it. Who knew?
Although his alleged sexual exploits are making waves, it is Israel, not women that is in former IMF Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s heart. In an interview with the newspaper “Liberation” back in April, just over a month before he made headlines for attempted rape charges (that are looking increasingly shaky), DSK told the French daily that only three things could prevent him from becoming the next president of France – his money, his women and his Judaism.
The fallen-from-grace financier recounted an interview he gave some years back with the “Tribune Juive”(The Jewish Tribune), in which he said “I wake up every morning and think about how I can help Israel.”
And does this kind of affection have any consequences? You tell me. Don’t be conspiratorial now.
theatlantic | Professor John McAdams is being stripped of tenure by Marquette
University for writing a blog post that administrators characterize as
inaccurate and irresponsible.
Academics all over the United States ought to denounce the firing of
the 69-year-old, a Harvard Ph.D. who taught courses on American politics
and public policy. If tenure can be taken away based upon one
controversial blog post, what protection does it offer? How many tenured
professors will censor themselves from participating in public
conversation to avoid a similar fate? Marquette has violated core
academic values, regardless of what one thinks of McAdams' commentary or
the shabby treatment of the graduate instructor he was criticizing (who
deserves sympathy for the horrifying torrent of misogyny others directed at her).
For purposes of discussion, I'll begin with the version of events as
described by Marquette University Dean Richard C. Holtz, who notified McAdams of his termination.
Even assuming that the factual claims Holtz makes are correct, the move
has set several sweeping, alarming precedents for when tenure can be
revoked.
ourfiniteworld | How does the economy really work? In my view, there are many
erroneous theories in published literature. I have been investigating
this topic and have come to the conclusion that both energy and debt
play an extremely important role in an economic system. Once energy
supply and other aspects of the economy start hitting diminishing
returns, there is a serious chance that a debt implosion will bring the
whole system down.
In this post, I will look at the first piece of this story, relating
to how the economy is tied to energy, and how the leveraging impact of
cheap energy creates economic growth. In order for economic growth to
occur, the wages of workers need to go farther and farther in buying
goods and services. Low-priced energy products are far more effective in
producing this situation than high-priced energy products. Substituting
high-priced energy products for low-priced energy products can be
expected to lead to lower economic growth.
Trying to tackle this topic is a daunting task. The subject crosses
many fields of study, including anthropology, ecology, systems analysis,
economics, and physics of a thermodynamically open system. It also
involves reaching limits in a finite world. Most researchers have
tackled the subject without understanding the many issues involved. I
hope my analysis can shed some light on the subject.
NYTimes | St.
Louis County is a web of 90 municipalities. For those with unpaid
traffic debts and arrest warrants in multiple towns, a trip to one jail
often means a journey, over days or weeks, through others as each
jurisdiction seeks a payment for release until a court date or a payment
of old fines.
Keilee
Fant, a nursing assistant with nine children, has been locked up
repeatedly. She said her problems began with traffic violations decades
ago, then intensified as she was unable to pay the fines, often did not
go to court because she feared the repercussions and kept driving. At
one point in 2013, Ms. Fant was held for several weeks on warrants, as
city after city called on her to put up hundreds of dollars in what
court officials describe as a bond, though the amounts, she said, seemed
to change and appeared to be a matter of negotiation with jail
officials.
“I
was bouncing from place to place, and all I could think was: ‘Wait, I’m
in here for traffic. I haven’t killed anybody,’ ” Ms. Fant, who is 37
and a plaintiff in both lawsuits, said.
“If
I don’t have any money, they send me to jail, so why is it so important
to show up if you’re going to send me back to jail?” she said. “All I
want is my license back. My license and my life.”
The lawsuits were filed on behalf of the plaintiffs by representatives from the Equal Justice Under Law, a nonprofit civil rights organization in Washington; ArchCity Defenders, a nonprofit group in St. Louis; and St. Louis University Law School. They seek to bar the cities from continuing the practices and compensation for people whose rights were violated.
In
some cases, the suits say, prisoners have gone without showers,
toothbrushes, sufficient blankets or sanitary napkins; medical care has
been denied; and food, often honey buns and potpies, has been scanty.
In
Ferguson, some residents say the authorities seem to have eased off at
times since Mr. Brown’s death on Aug. 9 set off months of
demonstrations. In a series of changes
discussed at the City Council meeting in September, officials said they
would end several fees that had been routinely issued if a defendant
failed to show up in court and would start a special docket for those
who had trouble making payments on their fines.
That
is little comfort to Roelif Carter, who is 62 and has been arrested on
warrants by the authorities in Ferguson at least three times. The counts
he has faced include violating a dog leash law and resisting arrest.
“It’s
the same old thing, just a different day,” Mr. Carter, who is
unemployed, said. “It’s making me feel like you can’t trust them.
There’s no way you could work off the anger.”
bloomberg | Signs of excess and froth in the equity markets.
Exhibit 1: Grilled Cheese Truck Inc., which began trading on the pink sheets last week after receiving OTCQB certification.
Let's look at the fundamentals of the Ft. Lauderdale, Florida-based
company. Based on the 18 million shares outstanding and a recent stock
price of $6 the company has a market value of about $108 million. No
matter how much you like grilled cheese -- and I like a good GAC BAC TOM as much as the next guy -- I can't see this as a reasonable valuation.
If you go to the company’s website,
you will learn that “The company currently operates and licenses
grilled cheese food trucks in the Los Angeles, CA area and Phoenix, AZ
and is expanding into additional markets with the goal of becoming the
largest operator in the gourmet grilled cheese space.” You can see an interview with the founder here. The company employs military veterans, and it even lists retired General Wesley Clark as vice chairman.
However, according to the company’s financial statements, it has about $1 million of assets and almost $3 million in liabilities. In the third quarter of 2014, it had sales of almost $1 million, on which it had a net loss of more than $900,000. The story is much the same for the first nine months of the year: $2.6 million in sales and a loss of $4.4 million.
But forget the losses for a moment, and make the generous assumption
that it will have sales of $4 million this year. This means its shares
trade for more than 25 times sales, a very rich valuation.
Which brings me back to my original comments regarding looking for
contrary indicators to my bullish posture. I can't think of a more
interesting sign of the old irrational exuberance in equity markets than
a publicly traded grilled cheese truck (four in this case) business
trading at a $100-million-plus valuation. That sort of thing doesn't
happen unless there is significant excess in the markets.
newyorker | Within the brain, memories are formed and
consolidated largely due to the help of a small seahorse-like structure
called the hippocampus; damage the hippocampus, and you damage the
ability to form lasting recollections. The hippocampus is located next
to a small almond-shaped structure that is central to the encoding of
emotion, the amygdala. Damage that, and basic responses such as fear, arousal, and excitement disappear or become muted.
A key
element of emotional-memory formation is the direct line of
communication between the amygdala and the visual cortex. That close
connection, Phelps has shown,
helps the amygdala, in a sense, tell our eyes to pay closer attention
at moments of heightened emotion. So we look carefully, we study, and we
stare—giving the hippocampus a richer set of inputs to work with. At
these moments of arousal, the amygdala may also signal
to the hippocampus that it needs to pay special attention to encoding
this particular moment. These three parts of the brain work together to
insure that we firmly encode memories at times of heightened arousal,
which is why emotional memories are stronger and more precise than
other, less striking ones. We don’t really remember an uneventful day
the way that we remember a fight or a first kiss. In one study,
Phelps tested this notion in her lab, showing people a series of
images, some provoking negative emotions, and some neutral. An hour
later, she and her colleagues tested their recall for each scene. Memory
for the emotional scenes was significantly higher, and the vividness of
the recollection was significantly greater.
royalsocietypublishing | Musicality can be defined as a natural, spontaneously developing trait
based on and constrained by biology and cognition. Music, by contrast,
can be defined as a social and cultural construct based on that very
musicality. One critical challenge is to delineate the constituent
elements of musicality. What biological and cognitive mechanisms are
essential for perceiving, appreciating and making music? Progress in
understanding the evolution of music cognition depends upon adequate
characterization of the constituent mechanisms of musicality and the
extent to which they are present in non-human species. We argue for the
importance of identifying these mechanisms and delineating their
functions and developmental course, as well as suggesting effective
means of studying them in human and non-human animals. It is virtually
impossible to underpin the evolutionary role of musicality as a whole,
but a multicomponent perspective on musicality that emphasizes
its constituent capacities, development and neural cognitive specificity
is an excellent starting point for a research programme aimed at
illuminating the origins and evolution of musical behaviour as an
autonomous trait.
silive | Do grand juries really protect the public against overzealous corrupt
prosecutors? Was the Fifth Amendment provision of the U.S. Constitution
requiring grand jury presentment for felony crimes really included in
the Bill of Rights in 1791 to protect the public? I truly believe that
this provision was intended to protect the rich and powerful who wrote
the Constitution and controlled the wealth of the new nation. Consider
the fact that only white male property owners were permitted to sit on
grand juries and that everyone non white and non-male was excluded from
the judicial and legislative process. Thus, the rich, white and powerful
were guaranteed that only their true piers would judge them and
determine their criminal liability.
Now I didn't start this
race business, I'm just dealing with reality. Supreme Court Justice
Roger B. Taney started it in 1857 when Dred Scott asked for his full
rights of citizenship. Justice Taney denied his plea, stating: "The
framers of the constitution believed that a black man had no rights that
a white man was bound to respect."
You remember the Central
Park jogger defendants? Swiftly arrested and indicted by a grand jury
based upon incomplete evidence and police coerced confessions. All
defendants were convicted and sentenced to lengthy prison terms before
the guilty party confessed and exonerated them all.
Its nice to believe that all prosecutors will be fair and honest, but
we need only look at the record of former Brooklyn District Attorney
Charles Hynes. Convictions by Hyne's office of 11, yes 11, black men
have been overturned following the revelation that the testimony and
evidence offered by the assigned detective and accepted by the courts,
was false, shoddy and manufactured. None of these men benefited from a
secret grand jury proceeding, an honest prosecutor or a courageous
judiciary.
We have entered an era when more rather than less
openness is sought in legislative, regulatory and judicial proceedings.
Is a witness more inclined to tell the truth if his/her secrecy is
guaranteed or are they more likely to lie and slip the truth if they
know that their identity and testimony may never see the light of day or
the eyes of a competent defense attorney? I'll take openness and
transparency over protection and secrecy any day.
salon | The Republican’s strategy should be clear by now: at the most
superficial level, it’s about base mobilization, not trying to persuade
those in the middle. Whitehouse was right about that much. But this
doesn’t mean the GOP isn’t targeting the middle, and doing it more
successfully than Digby might suggest—they’re just not doing it
directly. At a deeper level, their play is simple: go hard right with no
concern for facts or any other standard, and pull the “both sides do
it” brain-dead centrist journalists, pundit class and the rest of
Washington along with them, so that they do the actual work of moving everyone in the center to the right.
With
so many attacks made so continuously, even the reporters who’ve helped
debunk them come to accept the situation as normal. But the bottom line
of normal in this instance—the GOP charge that the DOJ under Holder has
suddenly become politicized—is precisely the opposite of the truth. It was actually the Bush
DOJ that was politicized like no other in modern history, save Nixon’s
post-Watergate, and Obama’s biggest mistake (as in so many other things)
was in giving them a pass in hopes of fostering bipartisan cooperation
going forward.
It wasn’t just Democrats complaining about
politicization under Bush, either. The watershed event—though far from
the only violation involved—was the U.S. attorneys scandal—an
unprecedented set of politically motivatied high-level firings that
eventually had politicians of both parties shaking their heads in
disbelief. The scandal took some time to decode, but in late February
2007, Salon identified one key aspect—that high-performing U.S. attorneys had been forced out to make way for perceived Bush loyalists. McClatchy played a key role
in reporting many of the differently inflected twists and turns, while
Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo, who first raised the alarm widely,
was key in drawing attention to the political core of what was
happening. As he explained in March 2007, as the outlines were still coming into focus:
The issue here is why these
U.S. Attorneys were fired and the fact that the White House intended to
replace them with U.S. Attorneys not confirmed by the senate. We now
have abundant evidence that they were fired for not sufficiently
politicizing their offices, for not indicting enough Democrats on bogus
charges or for too aggressively going after Republicans. (Remember,
Carol Lam is still the big story here.) We also now know that the top
leadership of the Justice Department lied both to the public and to
Congress about why the firing took place. As an added bonus we know the
whole plan was hatched at the White House with the direct involvement of
the president.
That same month, Salon highlighted the role of bogus voter fraud claims
in the years leading up to the firings. That story briefly touched on
New Mexico, where, “in 2004, U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, one of the
two fired U.S. attorneys who allegedly failed to pursue electoral fraud
cases, took a pass on an especially dubious prosecution,” but it focused
intently on Missouri, where Salon noted, “three different [Bush era]
U.S. attorneys have launched investigations into electoral fraud…
indicting nine people”—not a very large haul, which was part of the
problem. In Missouri, the replacement U.S. attorney—appointed without
Senate approval, as was then possible, due to a Patriot Act loophole—was
Bradley Schlozman, who had previously supervised the voting section of
the Civil Rights Division of the DOJ, which we’ll soon see was another
hotbed of politicization within the Bush DOJ.
But it wasn’t just
Democrats and a handful of remaining “good government” Republicans who
were upset. By late August, McClatchy’s Marisa Taylor reported widespread internal
criticism based on extensive interviews with “current and former
department officials,” as well as at least one anonymous federal judge.
“Charges of cronyism and partisan politicking have sunk the Justice
Department’s reputation to levels not seen since Watergate and damaged
the Bush administration’s ability to fight crime, pursue the war on
terrorism and achieve its other goals,” Taylor reported in late August
2007.
Forbes | “With marijuana,” declare William J. Bennett and Robert A. White in Going to Pot,
their new prohibitionist screed, “we have inexplicably suspended all
the normal rules of reasoning and knowledge.” You can’t say they didn’t
warn us.
The challenge for Bennett, a former drug czar and secretary of
education who makes his living nowadays as a conservative pundit and
talk radio host, and White, a New Jersey lawyer, is that most Americans support
marijuana legalization, having discovered through direct and indirect
experience that cannabis is not the menace portrayed in decades of
anti-pot propaganda. To make the familiar seem threatening again,
Bennett and White argue that marijuana is both more dangerous than it
used to be, because it is more potent, and more dangerous than we used
to think, because recent research has revealed “long-lasting and
permanent serious health effects.” The result is a rambling, repetitive,
self-contradicting hodgepodge of scare stories, misleading comparisons,
unsupportable generalizations, and decontextualized research results.
Bennett and White exaggerate the increase in marijuana’s potency,
comparing THC levels in today’s strongest strains with those in barely
psychoactive samples from the 1970s that were not much stronger than
ditch weed. “That is a growth of a psychoactive ingredient from 3 to 4
percent a few decades ago to close to 40 percent,” they write, taking
the most extreme outliers from both ends. Still, there is no question
that average THC levels have increased substantially as Americans have
gotten better at growing marijuana. Consumers generally view that as an
improvement, and it arguably makes pot smoking safer, since users can
achieve the same effect while inhaling less smoke.
But from Bennett and White’s perspective, better pot is unambiguously
worse. “You cannot consider it the same substance when you look at the
dramatic increase in potency,” they write. “It is like comparing a
twelve-ounce glass of beer with a twelve-ounce glass of 80 proof vodka;
both contain alcohol, but they have vastly different effects on the body
when consumed.” How many people do you know who treat 12 ounces of
vodka as equivalent to 12 ounces of beer? Drinkers tend to consume less
of stronger products, and the same is true of pot smokers—a crucial
point that Bennett and White never consider.
When it comes to assessing the evidence concerning marijuana’s
hazards, Bennett and White’s approach is not exactly rigorous. They
criticize evidence of marijuana’s benefits as merely “anecdotal” yet
intersperse their text with personal testimonials about its harms (e.g.,
“My son is now 27 years old and a hopeless heroin addict living on the
streets…”). They do Google searches on “marijuana” paired with various
possible dangers, then present the alarming (and generally misleading)
headlines that pop up as if they conclusively verify those dangers. They
cite any study that reflects negatively on marijuana (often repeatedly)
as if it were the final word on the subject. Occasionally they
acknowledge that the studies they favor have been criticized on
methodological grounds or that other studies have generated different
results. But they argue that even the possibility of bad outcomes such
as IQ loss, psychosis, or addiction to other drugs is enough to oppose
legalization.
observer | NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton today called for the state to change resisting arrest to a felony charge.
Mr. Bratton testified today before a joint hearing of four State
Senate committees, where he made a number of recommendations—including
suggesting that the penalty increase for resisting arrest. Currently,
resisting arrest is a misdemeanor carrying a maximum punishment of one
year, which Mr. Bratton argued does not deter the nearly 2,000 resisting
arrest charges each year.
“I think a felony would be very helpful in terms of raising the bar
significantly in the penalty for the resistance of arrest,” Mr. Bratton
told reporters after speaking at the hearing in lower Manhattan.
The top cop reiterated previous statements that resisting arrest is
impermissible, and endangers both law enforcement and civilians.
“We need to get around this idea that you can resist arrest. You
can’t. You just can’t do it. It results in potential injuries to the
officer, to the suspect. And we need to change that, and the way to
change that is to start penalties for it,” he said.
He acknowledged that many cases may not be legitimate—advocates
complain that resisting arrest is often the only charge against someone
who was not resisting arrest for something else and that it’s often
tossed out. Mr. Bratton said the department would expand its CompStat
tracking program to monitor how many such charges are vacated.
“The vast majority might end up being dismissed,” he said, though he
suggested district attorneys at times dismiss such charges out of
hand. “We’re asking district attorneys to treat them more seriously than
they have been treated in the past.”
Mr. Bratton also called for laws instituting more severe penalties
for fatally assaulting an officer, for attacking a school safety agent
or auxiliary cop and for wearing a bullet-proof vest. He also
recommended measures mandating bulletproof glass in all police cars, and
for tighter regulations on civilian window tinting, as well as
punishments for anyone who would publicize the address and other
personal information of a police officer.
NYTimes |President Obama
personally added a reference to the Crusades in his speech this week at
the National Prayer Breakfast, aides said, hoping to add context and
nuance to his condemnation of Islamic terrorists by noting that people
also “committed terrible deeds in the name of Christ.”
But
by purposely drawing the fraught historical comparison on Thursday, Mr.
Obama ignited a firestorm on television and social media about the
validity of his observations and the roots of religious conflicts that
raged more than 800 years ago.
On
Twitter, amateur historians angrily accused Mr. Obama of refusing to
acknowledge Muslim aggression that preceded the Crusades. Others
criticized him for drawing simplistic analogies across centuries. Many
suggested that the president was reaching for ways to excuse or minimize
the recent atrocities committed by Islamic extremists.
“I’m not surprised, I guess,” said Thomas Asbridge, a medieval historian and director of the Center for the Study of Islam and the West
at the University of London. “Any use of the word ‘Crusade’ has to be
made with great caution. It is the most highly charged word you can use
in the context of the Middle East.”
firstlook | One of the many pressing stories that remains to be told from the
Snowden archive is how western intelligence agencies are attempting to
manipulate and control online discourse with extreme tactics of
deception and reputation-destruction. It’s time to tell a chunk of that
story, complete with the relevant documents.
Over the last several weeks, I worked with NBC News to publish a series of articles about “dirty trick” tactics used by GCHQ’s previously secret unit, JTRIG (Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group). These were based on fourclassifiedGCHQdocuments presented to the NSA and the other three partners in the English-speaking “Five Eyes” alliance. Today, we at the Intercept are publishing another new JTRIG document, in full, entitled “The Art of Deception: Training for Online Covert Operations.”
By publishing these stories one by one, our NBC reporting highlighted
some of the key, discrete revelations: the monitoring of YouTube and
Blogger, the targeting of Anonymous with the very same DDoS attacks they
accuse “hacktivists” of using, the use of “honey traps” (luring people
into compromising situations using sex) and destructive viruses. But,
here, I want to focus and elaborate on the overarching point revealed by
all of these documents: namely, that these agencies are attempting to
control, infiltrate, manipulate, and warp online discourse, and in doing
so, are compromising the integrity of the internet itself.
Among the core self-identified purposes of JTRIG are two tactics: (1) to inject all sorts of false material onto the internet in order to destroy the reputation of its targets; and (2)
to use social sciences and other techniques to manipulate online
discourse and activism to generate outcomes it considers desirable. To
see how extremist these programs are, just consider the tactics they
boast of using to achieve those ends: “false flag operations” (posting
material to the internet and falsely attributing it to someone else),
fake victim blog posts (pretending to be a victim of the individual
whose reputation they want to destroy), and posting “negative
information” on various forums. Here is one illustrative list of tactics
from the latest GCHQ document we’re publishing today: Fist tap Arnach.
The Art of Manliness | There’s a scene at the beginning of The Bourne Identitywhere the film’s protagonist is sitting in a diner, trying to figure out who he is and why he has a bunch of passports and a gun stashed in a safety deposit box. Bourne also notices that he, well, notices things that other people don’t. Watch:
That superhuman ability to observe his surroundings and make detailed assessments about his environment? It’s not just a trait of top secret operatives; it’s a skill known as situational awareness, and you can possess it too.
As the names implies, situational awareness is simply knowing what’s going on around you. It sounds easy in principle, but in reality requires much practice. And while it is taught to soldiers, law enforcement officers, and yes, government-trained assassins, it’s an important skill for civilians to learn as well. In a dangerous situation, being aware of a threat even seconds before everyone else can keep you and your loved ones safe.
But it’s also a skill that can and should be developed for reasons outside of personal defense and safety. Situational awareness is really just another word for mindfulness, and developing mine has made me more cognizant of what’s going on around me and more present in my daily activities, which in turn has helped me make better decisions in all aspects of my life.
I’ve spent months researching and talking to experts in the tactical field about the nature of situational awareness, and below you’ll find one of the most complete primers out there on how to gain this important skill. While the focus is primarily on developing your situational awareness to prevent or survive a violent attack, the principles discussed can also help hone your powers of observation in all areas of your life.
WaPo | President Obama has never been one to go easy on America.
As
a new president, he dismissed the idea of American exceptionalism,
noting that Greeks think their country is special, too. He labeled the
Bush-era interrogation practices, euphemistically called “harsh” for
years, as torture. America, he has suggested, has much to answer given its history in Latin America and the Middle East.
His latest challenge came Thursday at the National Prayer Breakfast.
At a time of global anxiety over Islamist terrorism, Obama noted
pointedly that his fellow Christians, who make up a vast majority of
Americans, should perhaps not be the ones who cast the first stone.
“Humanity
has been grappling with these questions throughout human history,” he
told the group, speaking of the tension between the compassionate and
murderous acts religion can inspire. “And lest we get on our high horse
and think this is unique to some other place, remember that during the
Crusades and the Inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the
name of Christ. In our home country, slavery and Jim Crow all too often
was justified in the name of Christ.”
Some Republicans were
outraged. “The president’s comments this morning at the prayer breakfast
are the most offensive I’ve ever heard a president make in my
lifetime,” said former Virginia governor Jim Gilmore (R). “He has
offended every believing Christian in the United States. This goes
further to the point that Mr. Obama does not believe in America or the
values we all share.”
theatlantic |“We must make this battle very violent,” wrote the Islamist strategist Abu Bakr Naji in his 2004 book The Management of Savagery. Naji—whose thinking paralleled that of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
the deceased leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, which has since morphed into
ISIS—argued that merciless violence was necessary for the creation of a
“pure” Sunni caliphate. Softness, he warned, spelled failure, citing the
example of the Companions of the Prophet, who “burned [people] with
fire, even though it is odious, because they knew the effect of rough
violence in times of need.”
The conventional wisdom holds that ISIS’s savagery will be its
undoing—that it will alienate ordinary Muslims, and that without their
support the group cannot succeed. But what this view overlooks is that
ISIS’s jihad, as its progenitor Zarqawi well understood, isn’t about winning hearts and minds. It is about breaking
hearts and minds. ISIS doesn’t want to convince its detractors and
enemies. It wants to command them, if not destroy them altogether. And
its strategy for achieving this goal seems to be based on destroying
their will through intimate killing. This, in part, is what the group’s
staged beheadings are about: They subliminally communicate ISIS’s
proficiency in the art of the intimate kill. And this terrifies many
people, because they sense just how hard it is to do.
The beheadings also serve as a dramatic counterpoint to al-Qaeda’s use
of remote improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in attacks, and to
Western shock-and-awe-style military campaigns. The subtext of the
videos appears to be: You—America and your allies—kill with drones
and missiles. We—the true Muslims—kill with our bare hands. You hide
behind your military hardware and lack the courage to fight. We stand
here tall, holding aloft our swords and the Quran. We will conquer you
because our will is greater than yours, because there is nothing we will
not do in defense of our just and holy cause.
One could argue that there is precedent
in Islamic theology and history for this kind of ruthlessness. But the
approach also has echoes in the Western world. Consider the logic behind
the Allied shock-and-awe “area bombings” of German cities during the Second World War, where thousands
of innocent civilians were murdered for the purpose of ending the war
and stopping the advance of fascism in Europe. Or the logic behind the
bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. “The policy of attacking the civilian
population in order to induce an enemy to surrender or to damage his
morale,” wrote the American philosopher Thomas Nagel, “seems to have been widely accepted in the civilized world.”
hbdchick | make no mistake about it, there is noooo talk about forgiveness in jordan in the case of jordanian pilot lt. muath al-kaseasbeh who was killed by members of isis:
“Islamic State militants released a video on Tuesday appearing to
show a captured Jordanian pilot being burnt alive in a cage, a killing
that shocked the world and prompted Jordan to promise an ‘earth-shaking’
response.
“A Jordanian official said the authorities would swiftly execute
several militants in retaliation, including an Iraqi woman whom Amman
had sought to swap for the pilot taken captive after his plane crashed
in Syria in December….
“‘The revenge will be as big as the calamity that has hit Jordan,’
army spokesman Colonel Mamdouh al Ameri said in a televised statement
confirming the death of the pilot, who was seized by Islamic State in
December.
“The fate of Kasaesbeh, a member of a large tribe that forms the backbone of support for the country’s Hashemite monarchy,
has gripped Jordan for weeks and some Jordanians have criticised King
Abdullah for embroiling them in the U.S.-led war that they say will
provoke a backlash by militants….
“DEMAND FOR REVENGE
“In the pilot’s hometown of Karak in southern Jordan, people demanded:
“‘I want to see Sajida’s body burnt and all the other
terrorists in Jordanian prisons … Only then will my thirst for revenge
be satisfied,’ said Abdullah al-Majali, a government employee among dozens of demonstrators in the centre of Karak.
this is quite a different sort of reaction than the kind often seen
in western nations where the families of victims often forgive — in
public — whoever killed their family member(s).
“Relatives of the pilot also gathered in Karak and urged calm after anti-government protests broke out in the town. They said it was up to the government to take revenge for them….”
NYTimes | In
Japan, where conformity takes precedence over individuality, one of the
most important values is to avoid "meiwaku" — causing trouble for
others. And sympathy aside, the two Japanese purportedly slain by the
Islamic State group are now widely viewed as troublemakers.
So
is Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Many Japanese feel that if the hostages
had not ignored warnings against travel to Syria, or if Abe had not
showcased Tokyo's support for the multinational coalition against the
Islamic State militants, Japan wouldn't have been exposed to this new
sense of insecurity and unwelcomed attention from Islamic extremists.
"To
be honest, they caused tremendous trouble to the Japanese government
and to the Japanese people. In the old days, their parents would have
had to commit hara-kiri (ritual suicide) to apologize," said Taeko
Sakamoto, a 64-year-old part-time worker, after first expressing
sympathy over the deaths of Kenji Goto and Haruna Yukawa.
Sakamoto
also sees Abe as part of the problem, for not being more mindful of the
risks at a time when he had already been pushing to expand Japan's
military role, which is limited to its own self-defense under the
U.S.-drafted pacifist constitution after its defeat in World War II.
"I
don't want Mr. Abe to do anything else that may be seen as provocation,
because that's what would put us at a greater risk," Sakamoto said.
Time | Modern America might be a different place if the
distinction between a lighter-skinned Jindal and a darker-skinned Jindal
was a mere question of artistic vision. But today, in an age of
expanded civil rights, this pick-and-choose attitude toward race has
only heightened. The decision whether to dissect or ignore the paint
color of Jindal’s portraits is but a small yet important choice among
larger, modern issues. It’s about whether post-9/11 airport security
unfairly targets those who appear to be Middle Eastern; whether
affirmative action is anti-Asian; whether grand juries would return
different decisions if the defendant were not black. At its core, what
Plotkin decries as “race-baiting” is question of who has the power to decide when
an issue deserves to be investigated in racial terms. Choosing to throw
the “race-bait” accusation is simply a convenient disengagement from
these issues, all of which are complicated by histories that conflate
complexion with race, and race with power.
Because, really, why would anyone inherently enjoy the idea of unwanted racialization? As Plotkin’s tweets suggest, that stuff is just plain annoying.
Celebrating 113 years of Mama Rosa McCauley Parks
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*February 4, 1913 -- February 4, 2026*
*Some notes: The life of the courageous activist Mama Rosa McCauley Parks*
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Comet 3I/Atlas is on its way out on a hyberbolic course to, I don't know
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This year marks the 90th anniversary of the launch of the Spanish Civil
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
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(Damn, has it been THAT long? I don't even know which prompts to use to
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SeeNew
Can't get on your site because you've gone 'invite only'?
Man, ...
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