Friday, March 06, 2015
left behind...,
By CNu at March 06, 2015 2 comments
Labels: Genetic Omni Determinism GOD , Livestock Management , What Now?
as we harvest ever more genomes, one fact remains unshakeable...,
By CNu at March 06, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Genetic Omni Determinism GOD , scientific morality , truth
is there such a thing as dietary racism?
By CNu at March 06, 2015 0 comments
Labels: consumerism , dopamine , food , hegemony
kashrut law
By CNu at March 06, 2015 0 comments
Labels: food , History's Mysteries , Race and Ethnicity , theoconservatism , What IT DO Shawty...
Thursday, March 05, 2015
the real revelation - until Kerry, none of these dirty birds have used state.gov for a long time now...,
By CNu at March 05, 2015 1 comments
Labels: accountability , global system of 1% supremacy , Rule of Law
bank on bill: keeping cashflows, sidechicks, and high-drama straight for generations....,
By CNu at March 05, 2015 1 comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy , individual sovereignty , Pimphand Strong
how y'all know dollar-dollar bill ain't set up a bulletproof paper-stacking messaging architecture in the basement?
'If it is an adequate explanation, after careful evaluation, it should be put to rest; and if it is not adequate, further investigation is warranted to determine if any laws have been violated.'
Reince Priebus, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, wondered aloud on Twitter if the email arrangement was in place so Clinton 'could conduct diplomacy and fundraising at the same time.'
Priebus was taking a swipe about a separate controversy involving the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation, which admitted last month that it had accepted millions of dollars in donations from foreign countries while Clinton ran the State Department.
That violated an ethics agreement with the U.S. government.
The Clintons' family philanthropy had promised to stop cashing checks from foreign governments with which it had not previously done business. But in 2010 it took $500,000 in 2010 from Algeria – a country that was lobbying State at the same time – without asking the federal government for permission.
Reached Monday night, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's spokeswoman Kristy Campbell told Daily Mail Online that 'Hillary Clinton should release her emails.'
'Hopefully she hasn't already destroyed them. Governor Bush believes transparency is a critical part of public service and of governing.'
By CNu at March 05, 2015 0 comments
Labels: comedy gold , not a good look , sum'n not right
need to get office 365 in the cloud and let new delhi handle exchange security...,
By CNu at March 05, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , count zero , helplessness
Wednesday, March 04, 2015
americans don't care about prison rape or what happens when the problem bleeds out from behind bars...,
By CNu at March 04, 2015 2 comments
Labels: domestic terrorism , just-us , niggerization , Rule of Law
illegal overseer violence in chicago as routine as traffic lights...,
By CNu at March 04, 2015 0 comments
Labels: just-us , niggerization , Rule of Law
overseer violence at all ends of the criminal just-us system...,
By CNu at March 04, 2015 0 comments
Labels: just-us , niggerization , Rule of Law
Tuesday, March 03, 2015
"Iran is 3 to 5 years away from obtaining a nuclear weapon" - Benjamin Netanyahu, 1992
By CNu at March 03, 2015 10 comments
Labels: The Hardline
in about half an hour, netanyahu is going to permanently overplay his phenomenally weak identity-politics hand...,
By CNu at March 03, 2015 6 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , FAIL , Race and Ethnicity
sophistry, spells, livestock management and the war of words...,
Building off the civil rights movement and feminist activism of the late 1960s and early 1970s, identity politics as a field emerged in response to the unfair treatment that people from marginalized groups received in daily life and the ways in which American culture did not reflect or include our experience or realities. Identity politics emerged in academia as a response to history’s not including the plight of Native Americans, women or black people. It was a response to racism, sexism and homophobia that pushed back on the assumption that everyone was straight, white, cisgender and middle-class. Identity politics — also known as the fields of women’s studies, ethnic studies, African-American studies, queer studies and the like — paved the way for Edward Said to study colonization’s role in how the West understands “the Orient,” Kimberle Crenshaw to consider a politics of intersectionality and the powerlessness of women invisible to the legal system and Audre Lorde to insist that her words as a lesbian and woman of color mattered.
This group of supposed pc bullies paved the way for generations to feel as though they belong to something even if they don’t see themselves reflected in the world around them. The development of identity politics was a transformative moment: the beginning of a push to make the country a more inclusive, less hateful place for those who are different — the very values politicians of all stripes tout as a great characteristic of a great nation. It was also an important intervention to political dialogue and intellectual thought production and pushed academic institutions to be more thorough and rigorous in their assumptions, values and research. And it refuted the idea that there is an objective truth, as opposed to subjective realities, when it comes to telling stories about our lives.
But the rise of identity politics as an academic, political and cultural movement came with some baggage. A side effect of people feeling invisible for generations is anger. While identity politics pushed culture and politics, it also released decades of anger and animosity that previously went unexpressed in our finest educational institutions. This scared those who preferred to assume that everyone was happy in the good old days or believed that certain ideas were universally true. Of course, fear and anger had always been under the surface; it just finally had a chance to breath.
This isn’t to say that the sanctimonious overreliance on saying the right thing can’t be distracting and self-serving. Looking back at my college activism, I am slightly embarrassed by the emotional energy and time I spent judging other people’s politics and decisions. It was a natural part of growing into a political thinker and differentiating myself, but in other ways it distracted me from looking at broader issues outside my day-to-day life.
By CNu at March 03, 2015 0 comments
Labels: cognitive infiltration , hegemony , Livestock Management , Race and Ethnicity
Monday, March 02, 2015
american denial
By CNu at March 02, 2015 8 comments
Labels: American Original , Living Memory , Race and Ethnicity , What IT DO Shawty...
the GOP would squeal like pigs under a gate if the Hon.Bro.Preznit treated them like they demand he treat Islam...,
By CNu at March 02, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Obamamandian Imperative , Race and Ethnicity
Sunday, March 01, 2015
the root of extremism
By CNu at March 01, 2015 4 comments
Labels: niggerization , Rule of Law
are whites unwittingly complicit in racism?
By CNu at March 01, 2015 0 comments
Labels: niggerization , priceless.... , Rule of Law
Saturday, February 28, 2015
the long reach of the sunniphilly beard
But there is more to the story than these superficial inquiries. The synergy between Islam and black music in Philadelphia has a long history. As such, the global spread of the moustacheless beard cannot be understood in isolation from the rich blending that took place between various strands of Islam and music in black America.
City of Brotherly Love
Philadelphia’s Muslim elders are quick to list the jazz greats who lived in or came out of the City of Brotherly Love since the 1930s — John Coltrane, Lynn Hope, Pharoah Saunders, Sun Ra, McCoy Tyner, George Jordan and the Heath Brothers. Many of these artists had an intimate relationship with Islam. Saxophonist Hope was featured prominently in Ebony magazine’s famous 1953 article on Muslim jazz artists, sitting on the floor of his Philadelphia home smoking hookah with his two young sons in fezzes.
“The history of Islam in Philadelphia is reflected in the music. Some artists were openly Muslim, others more private,” says Imam Nadim Ali, a celebrated jazz deejay and community leader who spent his youth in Philadelphia. “We knew Pharaoh Sanders as Abdulmufti. One of his first albums from 1966 was called “Tawhid.” Likewise, George Howard was a great funk/smooth-jazz artist. Kenny G co-opted his style. We knew Howard as Tahir — I grew up with him in West Philly. But when he died, his family buried him in a Christian cemetery. This sometimes happens when converts to Islam don’t leave a will.”
Jazz artists in the 1940s and ’50s came to Islam through the Ahmadiyya movement, a heterodox Islamic movement that emerged in 19th century India and developed a significant presence in Philadelphia. As the Nation of Islam gained followers, it cast its cultural influence on the music scene. Sun Ra, who lived in Germantown for 25 years, for instance, was not Muslim. But he claimed to be a distant cousin of Nation of Islam founder Elijah Muhammad and was inspired by the movement’s teachings. Sun Ra traveled to Cairo and collaborated with Egyptian drummer Salah Ragab, recording numbers such as “Ramadan in Space Time.”
As members of soul and R&B groups such as the Delfonics, the Five Stairsteps, the Moments, Kool & the Gang and Earth, Wind & Fire embraced Islam in the 1960s, the dialogue and tensions between Sunni Islam and the Nation of Islam found expression in music in various cities. In Philadelphia old heads recall Kool & the Gang’s visiting from New Jersey in the early 1970s to perform songs such as “Whiting H&G” (a reference to the frozen fish that the Nation of Islam was selling) and “Fruitman,” both tracks praising the Nation of Islam’s economic initiatives and dietary rules. Even non-Muslim artists paid homage to what they saw as a positive movement that taught self-reliance. Philly native and Grammy-winning crooner Billy Paul never embraced Islam, but he recorded an album called “Going East” in 1971 and gave a shout-out to Muhammad and Malcolm X in his 1976 track “Let ’Em In” — perhaps the first popular song to sample a speech by Malcolm X (“You’ve been misled/ You’ve been had/ You’ve been took …”), years before hip-hop artists began doing so.
Urban renewal
At the heart of these decades-old attempts to use faith and art for community building stands Luqman Abdul Haqq, a real-estate developer who has harnessed the energies of diverse Muslim groups to revitalize Philadelphia’s southeast area. Better known as Kenny Gamble, he is the founder of Philadelphia International Records and is considered one of the fathers of disco and R&B — specifically, a subgenre called the Philadelphia sound. In the 1970s, with longtime partner Leon Huff, he recorded dozens of hits for artists such as the O’Jays, Teddy Pendergrass and Patti Labelle, producing almost 200 gold and platinum records.
In the early 1990s, Luqman moved back to Philly and established Universal Companies, a nonprofit that includes a housing-development initiative, a charter school and a social services agency. Universal has since refurbished more than 1,000 homes and created enclaves where Muslims own businesses and live near mosques. “We are continuing the cultural revolution that began among African-Americans in the 1960s, a cultural revolution based on Islam,” he says. “The Nation of Islam was a vehicle that came to the need of African-Americans, teaching do for self.”
By CNu at February 28, 2015 9 comments
Labels: American Original , hegemony , Race and Ethnicity
rap and radicalism: does hip hop create extremists?
About a week later - just after the attacks on Charlie Hebdo, Medine was back in the news again, this time explaining his lyrics, noting that when he rapped about crucifying "les laicards" and chopping down the "tree of their secularism" - he was actually presenting a "caricature" of secularism; that version which looks down upon the religiously observant. His critique of laicite, he said, was very much in the spirit of Charlie Hebdo.
Hip hop in France - and in Western Europe more broadly - has come under scrutiny in the last few weeks. Prominent French artists - Youssoupha, Diam's, Kool Shen, Maitre Gims, Oxmo Puccino - have denounced the attacks in no uncertain terms, some even composing impromptu tracks in honour of the victims.
Called for explanations
But hip hop artists have also been called upon to explain the reasons for youth alienation, and the relationship between hip hop and extremism. The fact that Cherif Kouachi, the younger brother, was at one point an aspiring rapper, featured in a television documentary, where he is up on stage, cap backwards, rapping and dancing, has counterterrorism experts again asking if youth are radicalised through rap.
By CNu at February 28, 2015 0 comments
Labels: American Original , niggerization , Race and Ethnicity
Friday, February 27, 2015
brooklyn isis sting: jes dayyum....,
By CNu at February 27, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , you used to be the man
the newburgh sting: terrorists or targets?
By CNu at February 27, 2015 9 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , Collapse Casualties , Rule of Law
i wonder if this applies to overseer unions too....,
By CNu at February 27, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , clampdown , niggerization , What IT DO Shawty...
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Technological progress in a market economy is therefore self-terminating, and ends in collapse
By Dale Asberry at February 26, 2015 6 comments
Labels: agenda , consumerism , contraction , corporatism , de-evolution , ecosystems , externalities , industrial ecosystems , institutional deconstruction , Irreplaceable Natural Material Resources , Peak Capitalism
it's natural, every country does it....,
By CNu at February 26, 2015 0 comments
Labels: AI , governance
why WaPo call this a dangerous revolt?
By CNu at February 26, 2015 14 comments
Labels: debt slavery , presstitution , What Now?
why don't lawful overseers check and correct awful overseers?
By CNu at February 26, 2015 0 comments
Labels: accountability , Race and Ethnicity , Rule of Law
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
homan square is definitely an unusual place...,
- Keeping arrestees out of official booking databases.
- Beating by police, resulting in head wounds.
- Shackling for prolonged periods.
- Denying attorneys access to the “secure” facility.
- Holding people without legal counsel for between 12 and 24 hours, including people as young as 15.
By CNu at February 25, 2015 1 comments
Labels: Rule of Law , wikileaks wednesday
Fuck Robert Kagan And Would He Please Now Just Go Quietly Burn In Hell?
politico | The Washington Post on Friday announced it will no longer endorse presidential candidates, breaking decades of tradition in a...
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theatlantic | The Ku Klux Klan, Ronald Reagan, and, for most of its history, the NRA all worked to control guns. The Founding Fathers...
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Video - John Marco Allegro in an interview with Van Kooten & De Bie. TSMATC | Describing the growth of the mushroom ( boletos), P...
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dailybeast | Of all the problems in America today, none is both as obvious and as overlooked as the colossal human catastrophe that is our...