Nov 21
2009

Cogito, ergo protesto

Posted by Andrea Teti in underreported storiessocial movementspoliticsnews analysisitalyeuropedemocracyactivism

andrea.teti

Cogito Ergo Protesto Once again, there is a veritable bounty of worrying news from Italy. I know, I know, this is going to start getting tiring quite quickly – the problem is, it’s sadly true. One of the most important elements of what is happening is the slow re-shaping of the law, and the undermining of the judiciary, but this is such a large topic that it requires justice I don’t have enough time for at the

Nov 20
2009

Obama responds to Cuban blogger

Posted by Adriana Cordero Calderon in USAunderreported storiespoliticsLatin Americaindependent mediabarack obama

Acorde

Maybe this hasn't made it to the corporate media. So, here it goes.

 Yoanis Sánchez, once again, demonstrates her strength in character and her professionalism, leaving popularity aside. What this Cuban blogger does is inform all of the world, literally, of what and how things happen in Cuba.

Nov 20
2009

Graffiti: Art or Vandalism?

Posted by Adriana Cordero Calderon in Popular CultureLatin Americacultureartactivism

Acorde
Our environment is full of images, most of them commercial images that promote consumerism. What happens when we find a contradiction among these? 

Graffiti allows for a direct communication with a large audience audience- this is what I want to express, you cannot ignore it, think about it as you wish.  It challenges the dominant culture- it's not commercial; this does not need the approval from an art critic; it may be anti-aesthetical, so what? Let yourself think differently, don't let others think for you. It treats everyone as "creative equals"- if I can paint over a wall, you can too! It's also irreverent- I do it because I want and I can.

Nov 18
2009

Pornography and Patriotism - Mark Eitzel in Madrid

Posted by John Collins in war on terrorUSAsexualityPopular Culturepoliticsmusiccultureart

djleftover

Mark Eitzel Shortly after the September 11 attacks occurred, a colleague and I found ourselves feeling a need to put together a course that would help students put those attacks in some kind of historical perspective.  The course we constructed and taught twice at St. Lawrence University drew heavily on the history of imperialism and sought to position 9/11 as a key moment in the emerging (and at that time, still relatively unacknowledged) story of U.S. imperial decline.  In recent years this notion of imperial decline has slowly begun to seep into public consciousness.  What are the cultural manifestations of this growing awareness?  One of the most provocative cultural interventions of the last several years is the song "Patriot's Heart," written by perpetually underappreciated singer-songwriter Mark Eitzel (pictured at right) and originally recorded by his band, American Music Club on their 2004 album Love Songs For Patriots.  I wrote an extended review of this remarkable album in 2005, focusing on Eitzel's lyrical exploration of the theme of denial and its corrosive influence on American politics and culture.  Last month I had the pleasure of hearing Eitzel perform "Patriot's Heart" in Madrid as part of a solo tour that has drawn rave reviews.  The song draws a close comparison between pornography and patriotism, portraying the U.S. as only Eitzel could...as an aging gay male stripper.

Nov 18
2009

Flying and Buying Out on Your Co2: A Microcosm of Why Cap and Trade Won’t Work

Posted by Milan Sova in Untagged 

Milan Sova

I’ve been flying a lot lately. Recently I’ve traveled from Malmo to Prague, back to Copenhagen, then from Copenhagen to Greece and back by way of layovers in Budapest. On my flight back from Greece I noticed a promotional video being played about how the airline industry is attempting to create more energy efficient ways of flying. Good, right? Greenwashing campaigns seem to make people feel better about consumption. But in the New York Times I found an article which points to why Cap and Trade is a system which is not viable for reducing greenhouse gases. With some airlines you are able to spend a few extra dollars (between $2 and $40), which go towards carbon offsetting programs. What they’ve found is these programs simply give the flyer peace of mind, while the reality is “it has proved difficult to monitor or quantify the emissions-reducing potential of the thousands of green projects financed by customers’ payments, and there are no industrywide standards,” as Elisabeth Rosenthal points out in her article.

Nov 17
2009

Cap your morals and Trade your sins

Posted by Milan Sova in environmentenergyclimate change

Milan Sova

 

Currently amidst all of the Healthcare Reform debates, the war in Afghanistan and Iraq, the worries with our economy the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 is being pushed towards the House and Senate to set the stage for our participation in the up and coming COP15. This system, very like the system expected to be created at COP15, is based around Cap and Trade. Cap and Trade means that the government will give and sell “credits” of pollution (namely CO2) which the companies would be allowed to use in a given time, and as time goes on less and less credits will be dispersed as companies become more energy efficient. This seems to me a panacea for companies to present a front being energy efficient and environmentally sustainable while simply pushing other places to bear their environmental burdens.

Nov 17
2009

Warm and Cuddly in Turkey #1: Academic Freedom

Posted by Somdeep Sen in underreported storiessocial movementspoliticsMiddle Eastislamglobal perspectiveseuropedemocracyasiaactivism

Somdeep Sen

The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) understands ‘Academic Freedom' as being "...the essential characteristic of an institution of higher education. It encompasses the right of faculty to full freedom in research and in the publication of results, freedom in the classroom in discussing their subject, and the right of faculty to be free from institutional censorship or discipline when they speak or write as citizens." The question of academic freedom in Turkey is often a contentious issue. Protests on November 6th and 7th in Ankara by University students against the country's High Education Board (YÖK) on its 28th anniversary clearly displayed a significant level of discontent against an often-heavy handed involvement of the Turkish government in matters of higher education.

Nov 16
2009

The War on Piracy?

Posted by A. Wesley Ballantyne in warUSAunderreported storiessomaliapoliticsnews analysismilitarymilitarizationMiddle Eastglobal perspectivescrimeafrica

awball04

 "The Government of Seychelles invited us here to fight against piracy and that is its mission. However, these aircraft have a great deal of capabilities and could be used for other missions... that is always a possibility" - Craig White, US Embassy Mauritius deputy chief of mission

Sometimes the best information does not come from the media, but right from the government. This past week in Victoria the capital of the beautiful Seychelles, the AFRICOM website released a recap of a public overview of the unmanned aircraft the MQ-9 (pictured above). The unmanned aircraft carries nor drops any arms and apparently there are "no plans" to do so. Spokesman Vince Crawley did not limit the drones to tracking pirates, but other missions may include "flights over Somalia to track Islamist militants fighting to overthrow a government backed by the US, the United Nations and the African Union".

Nov 16
2009

Bucking the System: When Children find their Political Voice

Posted by Brian K. Lind in Untagged 

Brian K. Lind

 Fighter planes over iraq

In 1990 I was in third grade.  There are two things I remember about third grade: meeting my best friend, Lou Sussman, and refusing to say the pledge of allegiance. 

I remember the day my third grade teacher asking me to step out into the hall with her after the pledge and asking me why I hadn’t recited it with the rest of the class.  I remember explaining to her that I couldn’t pledge

Nov 16
2009

Unwinnable War

Posted by Brian K. Lind in war on terrorwarUSAterrorismPakistannews analysismilitarybarack obamaafghanistan

Brian K. Lind
US troops in Afghanistan
 
This past week two things leaked out of the White House in the battle over Obama’s policy in Afghanistan.  It was revealed that Obama didn’t accept any of the plans presented to him by his National Security Advisors on Afghanistan.  While it is rumored that all of the options presented to him were based on different amounts of troop increase in Afghanistan, Obama wanted to see a plan that set out an exit strategy or a deescalation to the War in Afghanistan, instead of an escalation.  The other leak was of classified cables that US Ambassador to Afghanistan, Karl Eikenberry, sent to President Obama explaining that he felt a troop increase in the face of a highly corrupt and dysfunctional Afghan government was a bad idea .
Nov 15
2009

Pacquiao, Poverty, and the World

Posted by Steve Peraza in USAunderreported storiessportspovertyglobal economy

Steve Peraza
Pacquiao punches Cotto.Last night I watched the Pacquiao-Cotto fight with a few friends. During the match we joked on the fighters several times, especially Pacquiao, who is well-known for his eccentricities. One such joke had to do with poverty. 

In the weeks before the fight an HBO special had provided access to the fighter's training routines. Both prepared rigorously for the match, but in different ways. Cotto, for instance, rented a mansion in Tampa, Florida to serve as his training camp home. (See video: Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto, Episode 1, minute 23:47) Pacquiao, however, packed himself and his staff into condominium at the Palazzo in Los Angeles, California, where his assistant trainer even slept in a converted closet. (See video: Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto, Episode 3, minute 18:42) "The dudes looked cramped," my friend joked. "Pacquiao's trainer was playing video games in closet-looking comfortable though."

Nov 15
2009

Education in Ethiopia (Part 2): What language should we teach in?

Posted by Matt in underreported storieslanguageglobal perspectivesethiopiaeducationafrica

Matiwos09

According to Derebssa Defera Serbessa (Ph.D), In many parts of Ethiopia, an enormous gap persists between the number of students graduating from school and those among them who master a minimum set of cognitive skills.  One of the main reasons for countless Ethiopians graduating high school and college, yet failing to have developed the skills they need to succeed in the workforce is mastering the language of instruction; English. The problem arises as Ethiopian government and public schools teach English as a single course until the seventh grade, at which time all classes, except a single Amharic class, are taught in English! This creates a particularly acute problem for those students with strong math and science skills but an inadequate handle on English, who are at a loss when the language of instruction suddenly shifts from Amharic to English come seventh grade. 

Nov 15
2009

'It used to be true (antes era cierto)'

Posted by Adriana Cordero Calderon in underreported storiesLatin Americaindigenous issuescultureart

Acorde
(Title quote by Silberio Servio Morales, Costa Rican shaman from the Bribri population)

 

In my previous post , I observed how culture has been commoditized mainly by the structures of power, to sell an idea of "what and who we are" to outsiders.

 

Why do I consider this to be important? Well, because the arts are an essential element of culture, of how our identity is being expressed in an abstract way, and which both insiders and outsiders interpret subjectively. Unfortunately, the arts are being carefully controlled by higher authorities, which to a great extent determine what is presented to different audiences depending on how good that makes them look.


Nov 15
2009

The Question of Identity

Posted by Somdeep Sen in xenophobiasocial movementsracismpoliticsislamglobal perspectiveseuropedemocracy

Somdeep Sen

A week or so back I read a fascinating essay by Andrew Marshall in the Time Magazine issue for the week of November 9th, 2009 (Cover: “Rare Tuna”). Titled “Identity Crisis: What does it mean to be authentically Swiss?”, it delves into the question of identity in a country that is known for its neutrality and self-proclaimed sense of “exceptionalism”  Switzerland’s affinity for purity is exemplified in the slogan of the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry: “Fake watches are for fake people. Be authentic. Buy real.” But, the author identifies a clear discrepancy.

Nov 12
2009

Somali Pirates: No Media Romanticism Here

Posted by A. Wesley Ballantyne in USAterrorismsomaliapovertynews analysishuman rightsglobal perspectiveseuropeethicscrimebig questionsafrica

awball04
pirate
"Bringing to justice suspected Somali pirates captured by international navies in the Indian Ocean has proven difficult as lawless Somalia cannot try them, while most European countries do not want to take in a suspected pirate who may then claim asylum." -LA Times
 
Well, if there was ever one consistent story that the mainstream media in the West never fail to pick up on in Africa,  it is, of course, pirates. And no, we are not talking of the romanticized pirate, you know the one that every
 parent in America has sent their children to see in the theaters? No, those pirates? They are fine, that is lost in ancient history. A new "type" of pirate has emerged, one that might threatens FREEDOM. Their behavior continuing to serve the MSM's purpose of showing Africa as the continent of despair, lawlessness and violence.
 
Nov 12
2009

Selling culture

Posted by Adriana Cordero Calderon in Popular CultureLatin Americacultureart

Acorde
What's the best from Mexico?" asked a friend to his brother who had just returned from a week-trip. "Culture," answered him without giving a chance to his brother. "More than that", he added, "how they have made money with it."

 You board one of those tour buses that show you around the city, then go to the pyramids, perhaps to Cancún or Acapulco. Drink enough tequila for the rest of your life, and sing with the Mariachis on the street. They sell you all of that.

You would probably argue that that is not the essence of the Mexican people. Of course there's more than what I just mentioned, from the way problems are solve on a day to day basis, to what people think of the crimes happening in Ciudad Juárez and the networks of human trafficking .

 

Is it good? Is it bad?


Nov 12
2009

What did we know and when did we know it?

Posted by John Collins in warUSAUS electionsterrorismpoliticsnews analysismilitaryIraqafghanistan

djleftover

US news in recent days, particularly in the shadow of Veterans Day, has been dominated by a series of urgent questions that have left many people scrambling to cover their rear ends:

  • Who had prior knowledge of this man's violent intentions?
  • Why did no one sound the alarm?  And if they did, why did no one take them seriously?
  • Should we have seen it coming? 
  • How could it have been prevented?
  • How should we treat someone who is responsible for the deaths of a group of American soldiers?



Nov 12
2009

Crucifix Crisis? The Conceits of Italian Secularism and Berlusconi’s use of the media

Posted by Andrea Teti in politicsnews analysisitalyglobal perspectiveseuropedemocracy

andrea.teti

 

Here is an example of a 'scandal' - albeit a relatively minor one - which has grabbed headlines abroad as well as in Italy, but which is important not in itself but rather because it shows how Berlusconi uses such scandals to deflect attention from more serious issues. Like a sort of paradigmatic Newtonian action and reaction, to a relatively straightforward event Berlusconi reacts by completely blowing it out of proportion, provoking and then manipulating a debate which bamboozles audiences at home (understandable: he controls so much media!) and abroad (less understandable).

Nov 11
2009

Plan B: Don’t end up in jail

Posted by Andrea Teti in underreported storiespoliticsnews analysisitalyglobal perspectiveseuropedemocracy

andrea.teti

 

 

Berlusconi simulates handcuffs

Equal before the Law? Not in Italy...

There are so many developments since my last post which are so far beyond worrying in Italy that it’s tough to know where to start. There has been a sustained attempt to undermine press freedom in Italy, and nothing suggests won’t be successful. In the midst of the ‘economic crisis’, when the ‘Mr. B’ government tells us that Italians are doing so much

Nov 11
2009

Veterans Day

Posted by Brian K. Lind in war on terrorwarUSAmilitarymilitarizationIraqglobal perspectivesafghanistan

Brian K. Lind

 US servicemen return home

4362The number of US troops killed in Iraq

 918The number of US troops killed in Afghanistan

 2266The number of US Veterans that died in 2008 due to being uninusured

 8,436 - 28,028: The estimated number of civilians killed in Afghanistan as a direct result of US military action

94,008 - 102,547: The estimated number of civilian deaths in Iraq due to violence

Nov 11
2009

Poverty on the National Stage Pt. III

Posted by Steve Peraza in USAunderreported storiessocial movementspovertycitiesactivism

Steve Peraza
 
Will America's poor join a national anti-poverty movement?

 The idea of a national movement, to me, is a misleading one. On the one hand, it suggests that throughout the nation, people have committed to a single cause and have begun to express their convictions in public, en masse, and intending to effect a desired result. It thrives on the unity of thousands, even millions, of people and their concerted efforts to change the circumstances of their

Nov 09
2009

What is REDD?

Posted by Nicole Szucs Guzman in indigenous issuesenvironmentclimate change

nicoleszucs

No,  I am not talking about a term to refer socialism. In climate talks, REDD stands for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation. It is the foreseen mechanism to tackle deforestation at a global level.

Nov 09
2009

Exposing Scandals on Wikileaks

Posted by Daniel Shafer in whistleblowersunderreported storiesCartography of Social Consciousness

dshafer
While there is still the instance when newspapers and networks get “whistleblower” exclusives, the safest way to come out against the corruption you saw at work while you were twiddling your innocent thumbs is to write a book after you quit, then do an interview with Oprah or be a panelist on Bill Maher’s HBO show. But what about those whistleblowers we… *gulp… don’t care about? For those who
Nov 09
2009

Our Afghan Obligation

Posted by Brian K. Lind in womenwar on terrorwarUSAterrorismreligionpoliticsmilitarymilitarizationMiddle Eastislamhuman rightsethicsbarack obamaafghanistan

Brian K. Lind

 

Newsweek: McChrystal's War

 

While I remain unsure on withdrawing US troops from Afghanistan, I find it hard to create a strong argument around staying.  Regardless, there are many that support staying.  In late October NBC/WSJ conducted a poll on support of the US mission in Afghanistan .  The poll found that support had grown to 47 percent for a troop increase in Afghanistan. 
Nov 08
2009

Education in Ethiopia: Where are we coming from? (Part 1)

Posted by Matt in global perspectivesethiopiaeducationafrica

Matiwos09

Education in Ethiopia (part 1)

Why do we go to school? To learn to read, to get a better job, to find a passion? People go to school for many reasons. In Ethiopia, many people go to school for many of the same reasons that we do in the US. While many Ethiopian youngsters now have the chance to learn in a classroom that their parents lacked- according to the World Bank the percentage of children

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