Archive for February, 2011

SHUT DOWN (5)

Posted: February 28, 2011 in Uncategorized

(source)

History’s shifting sands

The revolutions sweeping the Arab world indicate a tectonic shift in the global balance of people power.

Protesters in Egypt offered words of support to union workers in the US state of Wisconsin

For decades, even centuries, the peoples of the Arab world have been told by Europeans and, later, Americans that their societies were stagnant and backward. According to Lord Cromer, author of the 1908 pseudo-history Modern Egypt, their progress was “arrested” by the very fact of their being Muslim, by virtue of which their minds were as “strange” to that of a modern Western man “as would be the mind of an inhabitant of Saturn”.

The only hope of reshaping their minds towards a more earthly disposition was to accept Western tutelage, supervision, and even rule “until such time as they [we]re able to stand alone,” in the words of the League of Nations’ Mandate. Whether it was Napoleon claiming fraternité with Egyptians in fin-de-18e-siècle Cairo or George W. Bush claiming similar amity with Iraqis two centuries later, the message, and the means of delivering it, have been consistent.

Ever since Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti, the great Egyptian chronicler of the French invasion of Egypt, brilliantly dissected Napoleon’s epistle to Egyptians, the peoples of the Middle East have seen through the Western protestations of benevolence and altruism to the naked self-interest that has always laid at the heart of great power politics. But the hypocrisy behind Western policies never stopped millions of people across the region from admiring and fighting for the ideals of freedom, progress and democracy they promised.

Even with the rise of a swaggeringly belligerent American foreign policy after September 11 on the one hand, and of China as a viable economic alternative to US global dominance on the other, the US’ melting pot democracy and seemingly endless potential for renewal and growth offered a model for the future.

Trading places

But something has changed. An epochal shift of historical momentum has occurred whose implications have yet to be imagined, never mind assessed. In the space of a month, the intellectual, political and ideological centre of gravity in the world has shifted from the far West (America) and far East (China, whose unchecked growth and continued political oppression are clearly not a model for the region) back to the Middle – to Egypt, the mother of all civilization, and other young societies across the Middle East and North Africa.

Standing amidst hundreds of thousands of Egyptians in Tahrir Square seizing control of their destiny it suddenly seemed that our own leaders have become, if not quite pharaohs, then mamluks, more concerned with satisfying their greed for wealth and power than with bringing their countries together to achieve a measure of progress and modernity in the new century. Nor does China, which has offered its model of state-led authoritarian capitalist development coupled with social liberalisation as an alternative to the developing world, seem like a desirable option to the people risking death for democracy in the streets of capitals across the Arab world and Iran.

Instead, Egyptians, Tunisians and other peoples of the region fighting for revolutionary political and economic change have, without warning, leapfrogged over the US and China and grabbed history’s reins. Suddenly, it is the young activists of Tahrir who are the example for the world, while the great powers seem mired in old thinking and outdated systems. From the perspective of “independence” squares across the region, the US looks ideologically stagnant and even backwards, filled with irrational people and political and economic elites incapable of conceiving of changes that are so obvious to the rest of the world.

Foundations sinking into the sands?

Although she likely did not intend it, when Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, warned Arab leaders in early January that they must “reform” lest their systems “sink in the sand” her words were as relevant in Washington as they were in Tunis, Tripoli, Cairo or Sanaa. But Americans – the people as much as their leaders – are so busy dismantling the social, political and economic foundations of their former greatness that they are unable to see how much they have become like the stereotype of the traditional Middle Eastern society that for so long was used to justify, alternately (and sometimes simultaneously) supporting authoritarian leaders or imposing foreign rule.

A well known Egyptian labour organiser, Kamal Abbas, made a video telling Americans from Tahrir that “we and all the people of the world stand on your side and give you our full support”. It is a good thing, because it is clear Americans need all the support they can get. “I want you to know,” he continued, “that no power can challenge the will of the people when they believe in their rights. When they raise their voices loud and clear and struggle against exploitation.”

Aren’t such lines supposed to be uttered by American presidents instead of Egyptian union activists?

Similarly, in Morocco activists made a video before their own ‘day of rage’ where they explained why they were taking to the streets. Among the reasons, “because I want a free and equal morocco for all citizens,” “so that all Moroccans will be equal,” so that education and health care “will be accessible to everyone, not only the rich,” in order that “labour rights will be respected and exploitation put to an end,” and to “hold accountable those who ruined this country”.

Can one even imagine millions of Americans taking to the streets in a day of rage to demand such rights?

“Stand firm and don’t waiver …. Victory always belongs to the people who stand firm and demand their just rights,” Kamal Abbas urged Americans. When did they forget this basic fact of history?

From top to bottom

The problem clearly starts from the top and continues to the grass roots. Barack Obama campaigned for the presidency on the slogan “Yes we can!” But whether caving in to Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, on settlements, or standing by as Republicans wage a jihad on the working people of Wisconsin, the president has refused to stand up for principles that were once the bedrock of American democracy and foreign policy.

The American people are equally to blame, as increasingly, those without healthcare, job security or pensions seem intent on dragging down the lucky few unionised workers who still have them rather than engage in the hard work of demanding the same rights for themselves.

The top one per cent of Americans, who now earn more than the bottom 50 per cent of the country combined, could not have scripted it any better if they had tried. They have achieved a feat that Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Hosni Mubarak and their fellow cleptocrats could only envy (the poorest 20 per cent of the population in Tunisia and Egypt actually earn a larger share of national income than does their counterpart in the US).

The situation is so desperate that a well known singer and activist contacted me in Cairo to ask organisers of Tahrir to send words of support for union workers in Wisconsin. Yet “Madison is the new Tahrir” remains a dream with little hope of becoming reality, even as Cairenes take time out from their own revolution proudly to order pizza for their fellow protesters in Wisconsin.

The power of youth and workers

In Egypt, workers continue to strike, risking the ire of the military junta that has yet to release political prisoners or get rid of the emergency law. It was their efforts, more than perhaps anyone else, that pushed the revolution over the top at the moment when people feared the Mubarak regime could ride out the protests. For their part, Americans have all but forgotten that the “golden years” of the 1950s and 1960s were only golden to so many people because unions were strong and ensured that the majority of the country’s wealth remained in the hands of the middle class or was spent on programmes to improve public infrastructure across the board.

The youth of the Arab world, until yesterday considered a “demographic bomb” waiting to explode in religious militancy and Islamo-fascism, is suddenly revealed to be a demographic gift, providing precisely the vigour and imagination that for generations the people of the region have been told they lacked. They have wired – or more precisely today, unwired – themselves for democracy, creating virtual and real public spheres were people from across the political, economic and social spectrum are coming together in common purpose. Meanwhile, in the US it seems young people are chained to their iPods, iPhones and social media, which has anesthetised and depoliticised them in inverse proportion to its liberating effect on their cohorts across the ocean.

Indeed, the majority of young people today are so focused on satisfying their immediate economic needs and interests that they are largely incapable of thinking or acting collectively or proactively. Like frogs being slowly boiled alive, they are adjusting to each new setback – a tuition increase, here, lower job prospects there – desperately hoping to get a competitive edge in a system that is increasingly stacked against them.

Will Ibn Khaldun be proved right?

It now seems clear that hoping for the Obama administration to support real democracy in the Middle East is probably too much to ask, since it cannot even support full democracy and economic and social rights for the majority of people at home. More and more, the US feels not just increasingly “irrelevant” on the world stage, as many commentators have described its waning position in the Middle East, but like a giant ship heading for an iceberg while the passengers and crew argue about how to arrange the deck chairs.

Luckily, inspiration has arrived, albeit from what to a ‘Western’ eye seems like the unlikeliest of sources. The question is: Can the US have a Tahrir moment, or as the great Arab historian Ibn Khaldun would have predicted, has it entered the irreversible downward spiral that is the fate of all great civilizations once they lose the social purpose and solidarity that helped make them great in the first place?

It is still too early to say for sure, but as of today it seems that the reins of history have surely passed out of America’s hands.

Mark LeVine is a professor of history at UC Irvine and senior visiting researcher at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University in Sweden. He has authored several books including Overthrowing Geography: Jaffa, Tel Aviv and the Struggle for Palestine (University of California Press, 2005) and An Impossible Peace: Israel/Palestine Since 1989 (Zed Books, 2009).

SHUT DOWN (4)

Posted: February 27, 2011 in Uncategorized

Use your camera, and use it well. Rules like these can never be acceptable.

Links
Sousveillance
The transparant society
Penn Jillette
A Robot YOU CAN BUY with Camera
Remote controlled helicopters
RC Nanocopter
Construction robotics
Cyber eye
Miniature camera
A Micro-Robotics Revolution

If you still can’t see the implications after all these links then you are really stupid :)

SHUT DOWN (3)

Posted: February 27, 2011 in Uncategorized

I bear witness of protests in Washington. There is something changing in this place. Have a listen to how it works in this excuse for a country.

Can someone do something really awful to this vile wretch? This is corporate fascism, plain and simple.

Fuck is Rachel hot or what?

Shut Down (2)

Posted: February 24, 2011 in Uncategorized

The proof of the pudding is in your face. It must take a lot of money to bribe people to ignore, or media to confuse everyone else that the US is simply failing by any objective standard.

SHUT DOWN (1)

Posted: February 23, 2011 in Uncategorized

I have been a US critic for quite some time now.

My criticism is quite widely scattered, but it centers mainly on the idea that a state (or society) must care for all even if this demands a sacrifice from those better off, and at best can demand from those it helps that they curtail the future costs of this exposure. My criticism entails that the US has been a force for outright ruthlessness in the world, in that it fosters the values of enterprise, freedom, personal empowermenth over the values of humanity and society.

I have argued over this with very dear friends and loved ones, and I have stopped arguing. In the last year I have come to denounce what I call “soulless libertarianism”. I denounce the free market where it destroys human lives or human potential, and I denounce the current systems where these systems perpetuate bureaucratic waste, inefficiency, ‘the tragedy of the commons’, and infantile populism.

I can not longer abide with a world that is hypocritical about values, where it routinely marginalizes the majorities. I can no longer abide with a world where the rich get richer at an obscene rate, and threaten to destroy the fabric of civilization itself by their mere effects on the world.

I have spent the month of February in the United States of America, and have seen the insanity up close, and felt it like an iron gauntlet clenched around my heart.

A loved one has been locked up for close to four weeks in a senseless immigrations procedure. This friend has suffered isolation, physical harm, severe pain, humiliation and considerable fear, apart from the effects of uncertainty and ennui. This person was vulnerable, with a gentle and sensitive mental temperament, and the mere act of having to isolate her in a male facility, in protective custody on grounds of being transgendered, was barbaric by any standard.

She could hear men in adjacent cells talk to her as human beings. She could also hear men in adjacent cells express their intense hatred and loathing and prejudice of her. She could men in adjacent cells masturbate on her effeminate voice. Without any doubt she knew that for a month she was one wall away from a general prison population of which several would instantly rape her and viciously attack her, solely on what she is.

Yet all this abuse cost the US taxpayer more than a thousand dollars per day, for close to 26 days in guards, facilities, corporate costs, food, electricity, transport and a flotilla in legal and bureaucratic activities. And all that time my dear friend could have meaningfully worked, studied, consumed or worked on projects. The waste, the waste.

All that amounts the price of a small family car, or the price it costs to make a young man go to college in my country and get a good education. That is waste far beyond what is sane.

This system is broken. The United States operates at some level of outward functionality, but it is in effect a tangled up cancerous mess that is falling apart.

I have often alluded jokingly to the perception that my life has on occasion been led by a strange sequence of events, a destiny if you will, and I may jokingly conclude that my arrival in the US coincides with a critical moment in US and effectively global history. As the flames of revolution ignite across the globe Algeria, Egypt and Libia have fallen and others are sure to fall in this sequence of Dominoes . There is a greater mechanism at work here, mundane or otherwise. In the past I have alluded to oil depletion, to macroeconomic corruption and to many other causes. These causes are no doubt exceeding complex, and the actors in this drama no less paradoxical or hysterical.

The US is not what it says it is, of that I am certain. The US is a scam, a pyramid scheme and at its heart nothing better than a country run my gangsters. The people of the US have become in effect tangled up marionettes. I have met the most beautiful and inspiring people you can imagine – Dan, Alison, Denise, Willow, Teri, Rachel, Keith, Renee, Samantha, Jay, Sean, Andrew and so many I can scarcely remember by name.

America is full of people far less bland and boring than the often so excessively tedious people at home – the Dutch are really frightfully bland and parochial – This is an amazing country – but the country is in a mess. It is as if this whole place is in a state of adolescent puberty, wracked by the pain of growing up into an actual mature society.

But it may die.

There is a tumor in his country, and yes, it transcends blind socopathic government bureacracy, populist futurophobic republicans and conservatives, lame eunuch ineffective liberals and democrats, the fly-over-countries, the shellshocked minorities (that almost invariably are the ones left doing any real work) or even the rampant financial and corporate systems that have laid waste to the infrastructures, morale and moral fabric of this country.

This place has been racking up a massive debt in the last decades, and the United States is patently unequipped to dig itself out of this hole. It is maneuvering to a collapse and no side in the political trench warfare is able to break this stalemate. It is like a bunch of naked grown men soaked in olive oil all trying to strangle another in the dark. It is a very slow and messy death struggle.

At the same time this country throws real economic resources in the ovens of history as if there is no tomorrow. Immigrations issues as indicated are just one. Massive teeming prisons. Swollen bloated government systems. Massive ghettos and systemically underprivileged underclasses. Society-wide contempt. People, even people very smart, that are categorically unable to express their concerns or feelings or emotions, and let small resentments simmer to the breaking point, out of a deluded idea of personal accountability.

This showdown is coming to a close literally this month. I arrive in the U.S. and as far as I can call it it may be 1989 in the United States of America, and there may literally be a collapse unfolding before my very eyes, almost identical in theatrical idiocy as happened in the Soviet Union twenty years ago.

Right here, right now.

I may try and report on this, from my perspective, and as incarnated manifestation of the Goddess that doesn’t take shit anymore, and I’ll try and convey what I see, feel and think is relevant.

Maybe the only one that can make sense of this mad mad country is someone as nuts as I am. :)

Links

  • Gov’t shutdown threat looms over U.S. budget fight
  • Government shutdowns.
  • How to shut down the federal government and live to tell the tale
  • Crash Course
  • The Zeitgeist Movement
  • Empire at the End of Decadence
  • It’s the inequality, stupid
  • Stratification
  • The Saudi loserville
  • Bahrain, the last in a series of Dominos
  • Constraints
  • US government starts losing intestinal content over capitol stairs
  • The longterm problem
  • Overextended. Obama == Gorbachov.
  • Knives are being sharpened. But the billionaires won’t be the ones bleeding.
  • Schools are BROKEN

    Posted: February 21, 2011 in Uncategorized

    How can I possibly comment?

    They decided “THIS MUST STOP”

    Posted: February 21, 2011 in Uncategorized

    ..any way we need to make sure. We do not care if people die. Some cosmetic democratization in Tunesia (who gives a fuck about Tunesia, they‘d say) was great, and a democratization surge in Egypt was regarded as acceptable by AIPAC … but get near our oil and we will instruct our allied right wing puppet regimes to unceremonially splatter some brain matter across the asphalt. We’ll make sure CNNBCBS won’t put it on their evening new.

    We live in a vile, hypocritical world governed by the filthiest vermin in human existence – sell-out corporate humans that make gutter whores look good… politicians. And the mainsteam media are the eunuch servants licking clean these shilling gutter whores.

    Share this everywhere.

    BAHRAIN MUST BE FREE.

    SAUDI ARABIA NEXT.

    Interactive map.

    The Meaning Of The 21st Century

    Posted: February 19, 2011 in Uncategorized

    We are outgrowing the Earth. There is only one solution – scientific, sensible, verifiable, prudent management of resources. The is – basing our management of our house on constraints rather than aspirations. In terms you’d know that means an economical and ecological management (sound decision making rather than “politics”) based on what we have in resources, rather than what we want to have. We can not longer have what we want.

    The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.

    Pink :)

    Posted: February 14, 2011 in Uncategorized

    WARNING -ANTI TERROR BOMB PLOT

    Posted: February 13, 2011 in Uncategorized

    *WARNING* not a bomb hoaxxx *WARNING* not a bomb hoaxxx

    The international people’s front of Hope and Ambition claim responsibility for this irreversibly ruthless strike against the forces of Apathy and Dolor. We have spread a subtle generation of neuroral memetic agents in all human brains, and these will DETONATE in a sequence of precisely timed events, 20:45:00 (yor local timezone) on 14 February. All affected neural patterns will achieve total hope overload. Secondary impacts may reverberate back and forth across the memosphere, neurosphere, blogosphere and the spacetime continuum resulting in exaltations of “I am not gona take this shit anymore” to excessive hugging, sincere smiles, and actual feelings of hope “it may get better one day”. Your dreams may in fact be restless in fitful, and the most despairing of affected targets may revert to obsessive masturbation for hours in a vain attempt to find back their spiritual child.

    THIS TIME BOMB WILL DETONATE ON 14th FEBRUARY 2011

    Bomb Components:

    1. Love-Bomb casing: The Future.
    2. Timer: Singularity Awareness @ 20:45 hours (your local time).
    3. 1st Primer-Detonator: Technology.
    4. 2nd Primer-Detonator: Science.
    5. Accelerant-Explosive Matter: Intelligence.

    KABOOM – 14th February 2011 – TIME BOMB

    The IPoFA claims responsibility for this dastardly act. This is a prelude to the golden age of abundance, where people lean that technology used to care for one another is the only world we can and must have. There is no alternative as we funnel into The Singularity. This intelligence&joy explosion on 14th February is a minor prelude to the

    T e c h n o l o g i c a l S i n g u l a r i t y,

    which will occur sometime before year 2045. This intelligence explosion is utterly non-violent and non-destructive. This is a piece of existential art. This is a Merriest Bomb Plot by the Singularity Utopia group. It will also be exceedingly yummy.

    This explosion of awareness is an intellectual love bomb. It differs from typical destructive bombs because this Cerebral Love Bomb is highly creative. We are entering a new age where creativeness triumphs over destructiveness. The goal of this bomb is to ensure the largest amount of people possible feel their neurons firing excitedly due to the extreme power associated with contemplation of the Singularity.

    ► The timer is ticking. Utopia is coming.

    WARNING – DISCLAIMER:

    Under no circumstances should this Love Bomb be mistaken for a real bomb. Only destructive assholes use real bombs. The message in this bomb is LOVE THE FUTURE. Fiction and art are being used regarding this Love Bomb to raise awareness regarding the Technological Singularity, which will happen sometime before the year 2045. The Technological Singularity is a very real explosion of intelligence, and identical to this artistic Love Bomb the Singularity is utterly non-violent and non-destructive. Science and technology are advancing at an accelerating rate. This rapid acceleration of knowledge will culminate in an intelligence explosion, which will create utopia.

    For more information about the Singularity visit:

    http://singularity-2045.org/singularity-love.html

    This bomb plot can also be accessed via these links:

    http://www.facebook.com/notes/singularity-utopia/valentines-day-singularity-bomb-plot/189947674359004

    http://singularity-utopia.blogspot.com/2011/02/valentines-day-singularity-bomb-plot.html