Sunday, November 27, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on Iran's amazing revolutionaries

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
November 27, 2022
 
Hello All – Something important is happening in Iran.  The rising up of millions of people, especially young people and people in Kurdish areas, has not happened since the Islamic Revolution of 1979.  This is a national uprising, not isolated in university neighborhoods or middle class areas, as was the Green Revolution of 2009.  Some 400 insurgents have been killed in 25 of the country's 30 states. According to the UN Human Rights Council, more than 14,000 people, many of them children, have been arrested at the protests.  Several dozen of those arrested face the death penalty, and it appears that Iran will soon execute some people, "to discourage the others." The Iranian leadership is now threatening to escalate repression.
 
The uprising in Iran comes at a time when it appears that the Biden administration has abandoned any interest in restoring the Iran Nuclear Agreement, negotiated by President Obama in 2015 and broken off by President Trump in 2018.  There are also political points to be made about Russia's use in Ukraine of drones made in Iran.  And so there is little cost to the Biden people to profess support for the uprising in Iran, as Biden promised to "make Iran free" shortly before the recent election. 
 
Indeed, we are once again at a place where the US leadership promises support for dissenters and protesters in an official enemy nation.  These expressions of support do not mean that the Biden administration will take action to benefit the protesters.  Rather the goal will be to weaken the Iranian state, a bi-partisan project since the 1979.  Since then, our government has placed hundreds of sanctions on Iran for a great many things, including several sets of sanctions on Iranian officials identified as human-rights violators during the current uprising. We should be skeptical about US statements in support of the Iranian revolution, and loudly oppose congressional efforts to apply new sanctions to Iran, which will only injure the "ordinary people" who are trying to free themselves though revolt.
 
Some useful/insightful reading on the revolution rising in Iran
 
(Video) Defiance in Iran: Despite Crackdown, Anti-Government Protests May Grow into "Nationwide Revolution"
From Democracy Now! [November 23, 2022]
---- The situation in Iran is "critical" as authorities tighten their crackdown on the continuing anti-government protests after the September death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in the custody of the so-called morality police. United Nations human rights officials report Iranian security forces in Kurdish cities killed dozens of protesters this week alone, with each funeral turning into a mass rally against the central government. "The defiance has been astounding," says Middle East studies professor Nahid Siamdoust, who reported for years from Iran, including during the 2009 Green Movement, and calls the protests a "nationwide revolution." [See the Program]
 
Also of interest – "US Sanctions on Iran Don't Support the Protests, They Deepen Suffering," an interview with Noam Chomsky, ZNet [November 24, 2022] [Link]; "For Iranian Women, the Uprising Was a Long Time Coming," by Kiana Karimi, The Nation [October 27, 2022] [Link];; and "How the Islamic Revolution Gave Rise to a Massive Women's Movement in Iran," by Behrooz Ghamari Tabrizi, ZNet [November 9, 2022] [Link].
 
News Notes
For people with Other Things to Do, it's hard to follow the in-the-weeds details about what the Hastings Board of Education, or similar entities, are doing with our children and our tax money.  Last week Julien Amsellem, the editor of the Hastings High School newspaper "The Buzzer," published an outstanding article on the big raises received by school administrators and the tiny raises received by actual teachers, and how the real & likely impact of the official disrespect for actual teaching affects students.  To read this, go here.
 
Basketball star Brittney Griner remains locked in the Russia prison system with a 9-years' sentence of having a vape cartridge in her airport luggage.  She has been transferred to a prison colony in Mordovia, 250 miles southeast of Moscow. Not much noise from the world of professional sports or Congress: if she were white or male, would people care more? For an update on her situation and what the chances are of her being released in a prisoner exchange, go here.
 
After months of delay, the US Dept. of Justice has opened an investigation into the killing, last May, of Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh by an Israeli sniper.  It is possible, though not likely, that the investigation could lead to an attempt to enforce the US Leahy Law, which would cut of US funds to the Israeli military for a "gross violation of human rights."  For some useful details on the prospects for this investigation, go here.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held (winter schedule) on the first Monday of each month, starting with December 5th, from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.
 
To learn about our new project, "Beauty as Fuel for Change," go here; and to make a financial contribution to the project, go here. (And for Susan Rutman's video of October 2022 in Vermont, go here.)
 
If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook pageAnother Facebook page focuses on the climate crisis. If you would like to support our work by making a contribution, please send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706. Thanks!
 
Rewards!
This week's Rewards for stalwart readers are in appreciation of the music of the amazing Rhiannon Giddens.  First up, something from her early music: Carolina Chocolate Drops: Southern Voices. I especially like her appreciation of the connections between songs and history: check out the powerful "Julie."    And, finally, here is a moving rendition of the civil rights anthem, "I Shall Not Be Moved."  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
(Video) Family of British-Egyptian Political Prisoner Alaa Abd El-Fattah on Their Struggle for His Freedom
From Democracy Now! [November 22, 2022]
---- In a wide-ranging interview recorded in Cairo, we speak with Laila Soueif and Sanaa Seif, the mother and sister of British-Egyptian political prisoner Alaa Abd El-Fattah, about his health, his case, his family and his hopes for freedom. After visiting him in prison, they describe how El-Fattah started a water strike on the first day of the U.N. climate conference in Sharm el-Sheikh to draw international attention to the country's human rights violations and protest his seemingly indefinite imprisonment. He paused after collapsing and suffering a "near-death experience" when prison officials appeared reluctant to record his full water and hunger strike. Seif says they set a date to restart his hunger strike, once he regains physical and mental strength. [See the Program]
 
'The US can still become a fascist country': Frances Fox Piven's midterms postmortem
By Ed Pilkington, The Guardian [UK] [November 24, 2022]
---- Frances Fox Piven has a warning for America. Don't get too relaxed, there could be worse to come. "I don't think this fight over elemental democracy is over, by any means," she said. "The United States was well on the road to becoming a fascist country – and it still can become a fascist country." … While many observers have breathed a sigh of relief over the rout of extreme election deniers endorsed by Trump, and his seemingly deflated campaign launch, Piven has a more sombre analysis. All the main elements are now in place, she said, for America to take a turn to the dark side. Now, with the Republicans having taken the House of Representatives, she foresees ugly times ahead. … How does America look today perceived through the lens of her years?  "I do think that the only way to live is to live in politics. To me, it's an almost life-transforming experience – to be part of the local struggle. Even a dangerous struggle. You make friends that never go away. You see people in their nobility, and you find your own nobility as well. I would not trade my life for anything." [Read More]
 
Maya Lin's Vietnam memorial blazed a path in 1982, but no one followed
By Philip Kennicott, Washington Post [November 16, 2022]
---- Maya Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which opened 40 years ago this month, changed everything and nothing about how we understand memorials. Its list of soldiers lost in the war, more than 58,000 names carved into black granite, foregrounded not the valor of combat, but the toll of it. Its simplicity and abstraction, just two long walls set at an angle in the earth, broke with centuries of established memorial architecture. Its refusal to editorialize on a war that was deeply unpopular at home and destructive to millions of innocent people in Southeast Asia was a radical departure from the standard cant about noble causes that had defined war memorials for centuries. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
How Terror Came Home and What to Make of It: My 10 Years as a Military Spouse in America's Post-9/11 World
By Andrea Mazzarino, Tom Dispatch [November 2022]
---- Recently, an agent of the Department of Homeland Security called me and started asking questions about a childhood acquaintance being investigated for extremism. I put him off.  My feelings about this were, to say the least, complex. As a military spouse of 10 years and someone who has long written about governmental abuses of power, I wanted to cooperate with efforts to root out hate. However, I also feared that my involvement might spark some kind of retaliation.  … Indeed, the American version of the twenty-first century, marked by our government's devastating decision to respond to the September 11, 2001, attacks with a Global War on Terror — first in Afghanistan, then Iraq, and then in other countries across the Middle East — has had its grim effects at home as well.  It's caused us to turn on one another in confusing ways. After all, terror isn't a place or a people. You can't eradicate it with your military.  Instead, as we learned over the last couple of decades, you end up turning those you don't like into enemies in the bloodiest of counterinsurgency wars. [Read More]
 
It's Time to Cut Off Arms Sales to the Saudi Regime
By William D. Hartung and Annelle Sheline, The Nation [November 25, 2022]
---- Saudi Arabia's conduct should still spur Congress to take action to reevaluate the US-Saudi partnership. Of particular importance: pressure to end Saudi Arabia's involvement in the brutal war in Yemen, which has continued for over seven years at the cost of nearly 400,000 lives. Following the recent expiration of the UN-brokered truce, Saudi Arabia could decide to restart air strikes, which it conducts with US assistance.  A War Powers Resolution focused on ending unauthorized US military support for Saudi Arabia's intervention in Yemen would both have privileged status and require prompt congressional action. It is the best way forward if the goal is to call Saudi Arabia to account. A War Powers Resolution is waiting to be brought to the floor, with the support of well over 100 members of Congress from both houses and parties. However, these cosponsorships will disappear once the 118th Congress convenes: The time for congressional action is now. [Read More]  [FB – Both Reps. Bowman and Jones became co-sponsors of this War Powers Resolution in May 2022].
 
Missiles for Poland Raise Questions on NATO Stance in Ukraine War
November 23, 2022]
---- When a missile slammed into a Polish village just a few miles from Ukraine last week and killed two local residents, fears surged that Russia had attacked a NATO country and threatened a global conflagration — until it turned out that it was probably a wayward Ukrainian air defense missile that had fallen into Poland by accident. Just how risky the situation remains, however, was put into focus this week when Poland announced that it had accepted a German offer of Patriot air defense systems and would deploy them "near the border" with Ukraine. Poland, like the United States, has provided steadfast support to Ukraine since Russia invaded in February, supplying weapons and unwavering diplomatic backing, but it has no desire to get into a war with Moscow. Still, even though the new missiles from Germany will not be fully operational for years, by which time the war in Ukraine may well be over, Poland's plans to deploy them close to the conflict zone signals growing worries that its own security may be at risk, and that the war next door could spread, by accident or by design.  [Read More]
 
The Climate Crisis
Climate Change Should Have Dominated the Midterms. It Didn't.
By Tom Engelhardt, The Nation [November 25, 2022]
---- In case you hadn't noticed, for example, there was one issue that couldn't loom more ominously in this all-American world of ours, that couldn't be more crucial to our future lives, and that was missing in action during this election season. I'm thinking, of course, about climate change, the ominous overheating of this planet thanks to the greenhouse gasses that continue to spew into the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels. This very year, it looks as if fossil-fuel emissions will once again rise to record levels. … Whether we truly know it or not, whether we accept it or not, whether we paid the slightest attention to COP27, the recent UN climate meeting in Egypt, or not, trust me on one thing: The perilous heating of this planet is the topic that will, sooner or later, leave all others in the dust. New cold wars and hot wars will make no sense whatsoever in such a future. After all, we're now on a tipping-point planet. Or rather, let me put it this way: Either attention to climate change will leave all else in the dust, or climate change itself will leave us all in the dust, and how truly sad that would be! [Read More]
 
After Failures of COP27, only a Radical Effort to Slash CO2 can keep Climate from Going Chaotic
By Peter Schlosser, Arizona State University [November 23, 2022]
---- Since the Paris climate agreement was signed in 2015, countries have made some progress in their pledges to reduce emissions, but at a pace that is way too slow to keep warming below 1.5 C. Carbon dioxide emissions are still rising, as are carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere. A recent report by the United Nations Environment Program highlights the shortfalls. The world is on track to produce 58 gigatons of carbon dioxide-equivalent greenhouse gas emissions in 2030 – more than twice where it should be for the path to 1.5 C. The result would be an average global temperature increase of 2.7 C (4.9 F) in this century, nearly double the 1.5 C target. Given the gap between countries' actual commitments and the emissions cuts required to keep temperatures to 1.5 C, it appears practically impossible to stay within the 1.5 C goal. [Read More]
 
The State of the Union
[FB] – It's Not Your Grandfather's Working Class Anymore – In the last few decades the nature of "work" and the shaping of the world's working class has changed dramatically. In the USA, de-industrialization and the loss of manufacturing jobs, so destructive to the working class and the unions it built, has been replaced by a working class largely based in service work (e.g. clerical and nurses and teachers), and by the millions of workers anchored to the new digital economy.  Tightly controlled for years, this new working class is standing up. Last Friday, for example, Amazon workers in 35 countries struck for higher wages and the right to unionize.  On November 17th, Starbucks workers at 112 stores (including 7 in NYC) began strike action. Colleges and universities, which for decades have cut teaching costs while bloating administration, is another sector of action.  On November 16th, and after months of negotiation, hundreds of part-time faculty at the New School in NYC went on strike, while on November 14th, 48,000 academic workers at the University of California went on strike,  making it the largest strike in the nation this year.  Inequality, inflation, and deteriorating working conditions are forcing workers to unite and act in self-defense. And just so we don't forget, the demands of thousands of railroad workers, whose strike was put on hold in October, face a new strike deadline of December 8th. Will Congress force the railway workers back to work?  Will everything then be OK?  We shall see.
 
Israel Palestine
It's Not Antisemitic to Oppose Israel's Apartheid Rule Over the Palestinians
By Jamie Stern-Weiner, ZNet [November 26, 2022]
---- For the last two decades, pro-Israel advocacy groups have been promoting a propagandistic definition of "antisemitism," now known as the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition. Their manifest purpose is to stigmatize and stifle legitimate, accurate criticism of Israel. A concerted effort is currently underway to foist this text on the United Nations. We should firmly resist this effort. The IHRA definition is worthless as a weapon in the struggle against antisemitism, but it can be used — and has been used — to silence Palestinians and those who defend their rights. …. The adoption of this partisan definition by the UN would be a disaster for Israel's Palestinian victims, the integrity of international law, and the many Jews in Israel and the diaspora who have courageously fought to hold Israel to a single, universal human rights standard. [Read More]
 
Why My Organization Has Chosen to Defy Israeli Military Orders
By Shawan Jabarin, Director of Al-Haq [November 21, 2022]
---- Early on the morning on August 18, 2022, the Israeli army raided seven prominent Palestinian civil society and human rights organizations in occupied Ramallah, damaging property and confiscating files and equipment. The army welded the doors of these organizations shut and affixed military orders demanding their closure. Al-Haq was one of those raided; I am the general director. Following the raids, I was summoned for interrogation by Israeli intelligence officers and threatened with imprisonment and other measures should our organization continue operating.  These raids, closures, and threats of imprisonment followed the unilateral and illegal designation by Israel of six leading Palestinian civil society and human rights organizations as "terrorist" organizations in October 2021. They are the result of the one year of inaction by the international community, which has not challenged Israel enough to rescind the designations. For the Palestinian people, this international inaction is all too familiar after seven long decades of Israeli impunity and apartheid. [Read MOre]
 
Our History
Staughton Lynd's Radicalism From Below
By Marcus Rediker, The Nation [November 23, 2022]
---- When Staughton Lynd, Tom Hayden, and Herbert Aptheker traveled to Hanoi to declare peace with the Vietnamese people in 1965, they stopped off in Paris to meet several North Vietnamese officials. After a long discussion, a small, elderly Vietnamese man pulled Staughton aside and said to him, "Professor Lynd, you need to understand that we are going to win this war whether you help us or not. For every soldier killed by the United States military, two will join the National Liberation Front." Staughton enjoyed telling this story about someone who had knocked him off his savior's horse and put him in his place with only two sentences. Staughton would add, recalling the story: "That's the kind of dialectical thinker I would like to become." The last line was pure Staughton. He was always becoming, always changing, always seeking as the times and the movements from below changed.  Staughton sought out the unity among various struggles from below. He campaigned against the Cold War and its nuclear obsession, against white supremacy, against American imperialism, against the closure of steel plants in Youngstown and Pittsburgh, against capital punishment and the prison-industrial complex, against capitalism and its oppression of workers. He believed with all his heart that the major political task of our time was to build a movement culture that would, as he put it, "connect the dots." It would be hard to find a radical thinker who made significant contributions to so many different movements from below. [Read More] Also very interesting is "An Historian in History: Staughton Lynd (1929-2022)," b [Link].  The very good New York Times obituary of Lynd is rescued from its pay wall here.

Sunday, November 20, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - The Ukraine war and humanity's existential crises

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
November 20, 2022
 
Hello All – On Tuesday a missile from the Ukraine war hit Poland, killing two people.  The initial reporting stated that the missile was a Russian one. Poland called for a NATO meeting to be convened.  Immediately, the world had a real-time focus on one of the dangers raised by the Russian aggression against Poland from the start: what if an accident brought the nuclear might of Russia and the United States/NATO face-to-face.  Would it escalate to using nuclear weapons?  Would humanity survive?
 
As it turned out, by Wednesday the official story was that it was a Ukrainian missile that struck Poland, an accident in the course of attempting to counter a Russian missile barrage.  All is well … nothing to see here.
 
But of course we saw it and experienced the foreboding of what might be to come.  Presumably the war planners and deep thinkers on all sides of the conflict did also.  What lessons, what conclusions might they have drawn?  Will there be new openings for diplomacy, for compromise?  Some of the reading linked below addresses this question.
 
And this week the COP 27 in Egypt concluded its work.  While some useful things happened (see below), the world remains on its steady march to unacceptable, un-survivable global heating.  As another article linked below (by professor Rajan Menon) details, the long-term damage of the Ukraine war – whoever "wins" – is likely to be that the world will have lost precious time in responding to the existential crisis of our climate crisis.  The collateral damage done by the war to our world food supply will bring millions face-to-face with famine and death.  Do the contending war parties have the right to inflict this terror on the world?  Millions of people think not.
 
Some useful/insightful reading on the Ukraine war
 
Chomsky: Options for Diplomacy Decline as Russia's War on Ukraine Escalates
An interview with C.J. Polychroniou, Truthout [November 16, 2022]
---- Let's briefly look back at what we've been discussing for months. Prior to Putin's invasion there were options based generally on the Minsk agreements that might well have averted the crime. There is unresolved debate about whether Ukraine accepted these agreements. At least verbally, Russia appears to have done so up until not long before the invasion. The U.S. dismissed them in favor of integrating Ukraine into the NATO (that is, U.S.) military command, also refusing to take any Russian security concerns into consideration, as conceded. These moves were accelerated under Biden. Could diplomacy have succeeded in averting the tragedy? There was only one way to find out: Try. The option was ignored. [Read More]
 
For more on the (im)possibility of diplomacy – "Why a Diplomatic Solution to the Ukraine War is Getting More and More Elusive," b [Link]; and "Biden proves progressives were right all along on diplomacy with Russia," by Trita Parsi, MSNBC Opinion Columnist [November 15, 2022] [Link].
 
Fighting a War on the Wrong Planet: What Climate Change Should Have Taught Us
By Rajan Menon, TomDispatch [November 13, 2022]
[FB] – Rajan Menon is a professor at City College and Columbia University.  He has written many books, and writes frequently for Tom Dispatch].
---- Washington's vaunted "rules-based international order" has undergone a stress test following Russia's invasion of Ukraine and here's the news so far: it hasn't held up well. In fact, the disparate reactions to Vladimir Putin's war have only highlighted stark global divisions, which reflect the unequal distribution of wealth and power. … Worse yet, the divisions Vladimir Putin's invasion has highlighted have only made it more difficult to take the necessary bold steps to combat the greatest danger all of us face on this planet: climate change. Even before the war, there was no consensus on who bore the most responsibility for the problem, who should make the biggest cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, or who should provide funds to countries that simply can't afford the costs involved in shifting to green energy. Perhaps the only thing on which everyone agrees in this moment of global stress is that not enough has been done to meet the 2015 Paris climate accord target of ideally limiting the increase in global warming to 1.5 degrees Centigrade. That's a valid conclusion. According to a U.N. report published this month, the planet's warming will reach 2.4 degrees Centigrade by 2100. This is where things stood as the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference kicked off this month in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. [Read More]
 
The Cost of Russia's War to Ukraine's Economy
By Rajan Menon, New York Times [November 17, 2022]
---- Despite the Ukrainian Army's battlefield advances and Russia's retreats, most recently from parts of Kherson Province, Ukraine's economy has been left in tatters. A prolonged war of attrition — which seems likely — will subject it to additional strain. … Ukraine's biggest problem may not be the military threat posed by Mr. Putin's army, significant though that will remain, but rather coping with the destruction Russia's attacks wreak on its economy — and at a time when the prospects for the large and continuing flow of aid Kyiv desperately needs could diminish because of deteriorating economic conditions in the West. Despite its recent military reverses, Russia retains immense destructive power. Just within recent weeks, its missiles and drones have struck 40 percent of Ukraine's energy infrastructure, triggering rolling blackouts across the country. Missile barrages left about 4.5 million Ukrainians without electricity. Eighty percent of Kyiv's denizens were deprived of water; 350,000 homes lost power. As this week's missile strikes show, Russia is not about to let up. Amid all this, Ukraine's leaders must meet the many basic needs of their people, whose lives have been upended. [Read More]
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held (winter schedule) on the first Monday of each month, starting with December 5th, from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.
 
To learn about our new project, "Beauty as Fuel for Change," go here; and to make a financial contribution to the project, go here. (And for Susan Rutman's video of October 2022 in Vermont, go here.)
 
If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook pageAnother Facebook page focuses on the climate crisis. If you would like to support our work by making a contribution, please send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706. Thanks!
 
Rewards!
This week's Rewards for stalwart Newsletter readers focus on the music of Eva Cassidy, whose beautiful voice we lost 26 years ago.  This entry was prompted by SR, who sent me to Eva's beautiful "Over the Rainbow."  I think you will also like "Autumn Leaves" and "True Colors."  (And The Historian reminds me to mention that "Over the Rainbow" was written by lifelong socialist Yip Harburg.) Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
Extreme Heat Will Change Us
From The New York Times [November 18, 2022]
---- Half the world could soon face dangerous heat. We measured the daily toll it is already taking. Just how bad it gets will depend on how much humanity curbs climate change. But some of the far-reaching effects of extreme heat are already inevitable, and they will levy a huge tax on entire societies — their economies, health and way of life.
While people in hot climates can build up tolerance to heat as their bodies become more efficient at staying cool, that can protect them only so much. We measured heat and humidity for the scenes in this story to broadly show heat exposure. We also recorded other factors that determine physical risk, including sun exposure, wind and exertion. As we tracked the daily activities of people in Basra and Kuwait City, we documented their heat exposure and how it had transformed their lives. [Amazing Article - Read More[.  Also of (scary) interest – "The Amazon forest is reaching a tipping point and starting to collapse," by Terrence McCoy, Washington Post [November 18, 2022] [Link]. For some more insights, "Ending Amazon deforestation: 4 essential reads about the future of the world's largest rainforest," from The Conversation [November 18, 2022] [Link].
 
How Saidiya Hartman Changed the Study of Black Life
By Elias Rodriques, The Nation [November 3, 2022'
---- Saidiya Hartman has shaped studies of Black life for over two decades. Her first book, 1997's Scenes of Subjection, argued that slavery was foundational to the American project and its notions of liberty. Her follow-up, 2006's Lose Your Mother, combines elements of historiography and memoir in exploring the experience and legacy of enslavement. Here she first used a speculative method of writing history given the silences of the archive. And her most recent book, 2019's Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments, examines the revolution of everyday life enacted in the practices of young Black women and queer people that created and sustained expansive notions of freedom. After 25 years, Hartman's influence is everywhere. Her coining of the phrase "the afterlife of slavery" changed the ways that historians consider the long ramifications of the chattel regime on Black life. … I spoke with Hartman earlier this year about the republication of Scenes of Subjection on the occasion of its 25th anniversary, about the ways that people in the 1990s misunderstood race and slavery, and about the expansive visions of freedom that enslaved people cultivated. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
Will Biden Sell Advanced Drones to Ukraine?
By Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept [November 18 2022]
---- The appetite for more powerful armaments and advanced technologies, engulfed in an atmosphere of insatiable "must-have" thinking in Washington, D.C., has heralded a new golden age for the manufacturers of war. At times, Congress has allocated billions of dollars more in defense authorizations than the record-shattering budgets requested by the president. In addition to direct sales for Ukraine, the war industry is getting showered with contracts to replace the weapons that the Pentagon is transferring from its own stockpiles to Kyiv. The White House this week officially requested nearly $40 billion in new aid to Ukraine to fight its war against Russia's invasion, which would — in a single piece of legislation — double the total amount of overt military aid allocated to Kyiv by the U.S. since Joe Biden took office. It is no coincidence that the defense industry is on track to spend less money lobbying the federal government than at any point since the initial years of the Iraq War. Business is booming. …Since Russia launched its invasion in February, the only consequential debates on support for Ukraine have revolved around whether the U.S. and NATO should get more directly involved in confronting Moscow (which Biden has consistently rejected) and, in specific cases, whether the U.S. should give Ukraine sensitive defense technology and weapons systems. The Ukraine war has presented the defense industry the opportunity to have its latest innovations tested on a real battlefield against a powerful nation-state, with the added perceived geopolitical bonus of significantly degrading the war capabilities and stockpiles of Russia, a country the U.S. has, once again, declared its arch-nemesis. At the same time, the Pentagon has expressed clear reservations about how high up the proprietary defense technology chain this trend should extend. [Read More]
 
Additional info on the merchants of death – "Corporate Weapons Heaven Is a Hell on Earth: Joe Biden, the National Security State, and Arms Sales," by William Hartung, ZNet [November 18, 2022] [Link]; and "Why the War Party is the real winner of the midterms," by Connor Echols, Responsible Statecraft [November 14, 2022] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis – The COP27 in Egypt
FB – The COP 27 is over.  Two issues of great interest were the near-death fate of Egyptian political prisoner Alaa Abd Ed Fattah and the question of whether the richer countries of the world would pay the poorer countries "loss and damage," perhaps amounting to tens of billions of dollars, for the impact of the climate crisis, which the poorer countries have (for the most part) done little to bring about.
 
To follow developments at the COP 27, no better sources can be found than the daily reports from 350.org founder Bill McKibben and the daily broadcasts from Democracy Now! from the COP itself (here, here, here, and here).
 
And for a useful overview of how & where the US climate movement is going, read "How Young Climate Activists Built a Mass Movement to Be Reckoned With," by Nick Engelfried, ZNet [November 16, 2022]
----- When I became a climate organizer in college in the early 2000s, the words "youth climate movement" referred more to something activists hoped to bring into existence than a real-world phenomenon. Growing numbers of young people were concerned about the climate crisis and had begun organizing in small groups on college campuses and in communities throughout the U.S. But as much as we talked about building a mass movement, it was mainly just a dream at that point. Almost 20 years later it's impossible to deny a very real, vibrant youth climate movement has become an important force in national politics. … This week, all eyes are on world leaders meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt for the latest round of international climate talks — but whatever agreements come out of that gathering will ultimately be less important than how activists respond. This makes now a particularly good time to share some lessons from the last two decades of climate organizing. [Read More]
 
The State of the Union
Black Liberation Elder to Be Freed From Prison — but Only on His Deathbed
By Natasha Lennard, The Intercept [November 10 2022]
---- Mutulu Shakur will not die in prison. Once he is free, though, he will only be free to die. On Thursday, the U.S. Parole Commission confirmed that the Black liberation elder and stepfather of rapper Tupac will be permitted, after more than 36 years behind bars, to spend his final days outside of prison walls. Shakur's belated release is a poignant example of the criminal punishment system's breathtaking cruelty. While Shakur's case turned on an obscure parole commission that today directly affects several hundred people, the broader forces behind his unnecessary and protracted imprisonment cast a shadow over America's entire sprawling mass incarceration system. [Read More] To learn more about the fate of older prisoners facing the likelihood of dying in prison, check out "Release Aging People in Prison / RAPP," the movement "To End Elder Incarceration and Build Racial Justice." [Link].
 
Israel/Palestine
Reflections on a Decade: when a youth movement attempted to redefine Palestinian politics
ByNovember 16, 2022]
[FB] - Mariam Barghouti introduces Mondoweiss' "Reflections on a Decade" series, a collection of personal narratives by Palestinians who participated in a youth movement that attempted to redefine Palestinian politics in the wake of the Arab uprisings.
---- My aunts and cousins all gather in our humble home located at the entrance of our village, Aboud, 18 km northwest of Ramallah. Our grandfather, 94, sits on the couch as dementia eats away at what little remains of his memory. We remind him of who we are, and in the evenings we reflect on who we were. My younger cousin, now in her mid-twenties, finds old images of us at a protest in Ramallah. It was 2012, and I was barely 18. Defiant and roaring, erupting with inspired courage, I remember frantically looking for my cousin, Sabi, in between the chanting crowds — she was 14 at the time and visiting Palestine for the summer — when we were suddenly caught in a wave of flying batons, the shouts and screams of protestors' anger and pain, the piercing sirens of the ambulances, the journalists trying to protect their cameras from police confiscation, and the rush of Palestinian Authority (PA) security forces coming in from every direction.  … Today, ten years after the brutal beatings and the repression that left us bruised and heartbroken, we face the terrible realization that what was broken cannot be mended except through change.  [Read More]
 
Israeli Raids in the West Bank Push Palestinians to Brink Again
By Alice Speri, The Intercept [November 16 2022]
----- For three weeks this fall, Israeli forces closed all roads leading in and out of Nablus, a Palestinian city of 170,000 people and the economic hub of the occupied northern West Bank. While Israel partially lifted the road closures earlier this month, the 21-day lockdown signaled a remarkable escalation of Israeli force in a part of the West Bank that is — at least nominally — under the control of the Palestinian Authority. But the incursions and blockade of Nablus were only the latest in a growing series of Israeli acts of aggression in the West Bank that have put Palestinians on edge even before an Israeli election returned right-wing former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to power this month. … Outside the West Bank, however, few people took notice. …Both the recent siege of Nablus and a stream of military incursions over the last months in other cities in the West Bank have largely been aimed at suppressing a new crop of armed Palestinian groups that have emerged in response to both the protracted occupation and growing frustration with the Palestinian Authority. The groups — including Nablus's "Lion's Den" and Jenin's "Hornet's Nest" — represent a continuation of a long tradition of Palestinian militant resistance but also a remarkable departure from earlier iterations of it. Made up mostly of young men who were not around during, or are too young to remember, the Second Intifada, these groups conceive of themselves as local defense units, targeting Israeli forces from within the occupied territory. Crucially, they also propose an alternative to long-entrenched factionalism that has dominated Palestinian politics and armed resistance in the past. [Read More]
 
Our History
Staughton Lynd, ¡Presente!
From the Zinn Education Project [November 17, 2022]
[FB] – One of my heroes.  A scholar turned activist, never losing his connection to "peoples' history."  Learn more about him.]
---- People's historian Staughton Lynd died on Nov. 17 after an extraordinary life as a conscientious objector, peace and civil rights activist, tax resister, professor, author, and lawyer. Lynd inspired us with his role as a people's historian, always working in solidarity with struggles for justice today. Lynd served as director of the Freedom Schools in the 1964 Mississippi Summer Project. He worked with prisoners and challenged the prison-industrial complex. While teaching at Spelman College, his family and Howard Zinn's developed a lifelong friendship. Zinn said of Lynd, "He is an exemplar of strength and gentleness in the quest for a better world." Among Lynd's many books is Doing History from the Bottom Up, in which he described three key perspectives that are guides for any teacher or student of history.
1. History from below is not, or should not be, mere description of hitherto invisible poor and oppressed people: it should challenge mainstream versions of the past.
2. The United States was founded on crimes against humanity directed at Native Americans and enslaved African Americans.
3. Participants in making history should be regarded not only as sources of facts but as colleagues in interpreting what happened.
[Read More]  ZNet has posted excerpts from the Introduction to A Staughton Lynd Reader [Link].  A writer for Mondoweiss recalls Staugton's concern about Palestinian rights.  Lots more about Staughton Lynd coming soon on-line.

Sunday, November 13, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Is It Time for Negotiations in the Ukraine War?

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
November 13, 2022
 
Hello All – The optimists' verdict on this week's congressional elections is that it could have been worse, or even that we should be heartened by the relative success of progressive candidates. Nevertheless, we can't escape the conclusion that it will be another two years of hard slogging in Congress, most likely achieving little.  For us in New York, we will wear the scarlet letter for our failure to prevent the loss of four congressional seats, perhaps tipping the balance that will give control of the House to the Republicans. We can only welcome some serious thinking about why and how to oust the deadbeats who run and ruin the state Democratic Party.  To get started, check out what our Rep. Jamaal Bowman had to say Friday on Aljazeera.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held each Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell. To learn about our new project, "Beauty as Fuel for Change," go here; and to make a financial contribution to the project, go here. If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook pageAnother Facebook page focuses on the climate crisis. If you would like to support our work by making a contribution, please send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706. Thanks!
       
Rewards!
This week's Rewards for stalwart readers are a gift to us from The Chicks.  (Special thanks to JS.)  First up is their powerful "March. March."  And for Armistice Day, here is their classic, "Travelin' Soldier."  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
The United States, China, and Great Power Competition in the Middle East
By Chas Freeman, former US Ambassador [November 9, 2022]
---- It's official. The Biden administration agrees with the Trump administration that almost everything that happens in world affairs can be explained by two interlocking zero-sum contests. One is geopolitical, as in 'great power rivalry.'  The other is ideological, as in 'democracy vs. authoritarianism.' … But to a remarkable degree, the situation in the contemporary Middle East refutes Washington's current foreign policy dogma. Very little that now occurs in the region can be explained by either great power rivalry or ideological contests between democracy and. authoritarianism. The great powers, notably including the United States, have lost their grip on the place. And no one is trying to impose new systems of governance on it anymore. [Read More]
 
(Video) The Story of Baby O: The Supreme Court Case That Could Gut Native Sovereignty
From Democracy Now! [November 10, 2022]
---- The Supreme Court heard oral arguments Tuesday in Haaland v. Brackeen, a case challenging the Indian Child Welfare Act and ultimately threatening the legal foundations of federal Indian law. ICWA was created in 1978 to address the systemic crisis of family separation in Native communities waged by the U.S. and requires the government to ensure foster children are adopted by members of their Indigenous tribes, as well as blood relatives, before being adopted by non-Indigenous parents. Now right-wing groups are supporting white foster parents to challenge the law as discriminatory. "Not only are our children on the line, but the legal foundation, the legal structure that defends the rights of Indigenous nations in the United States is literally at stake," says journalist Rebecca Nagle, who has been reporting on the case for years and says it's likely the Supreme Court will strike ICWA down. [See the Program].  Nagle expands on these remarks in "The Story of Baby O—and the Case That Could Gut Native Sovereignty," The Nation [November 9, 2022] [Link].
 
Imagining a Memorial to an Unimaginable Number of Covid Deaths
---- One day, probably in the not-too-distant future, somebody will propose, and somebody else will design and somebody else will build, an official memorial to Americans lost to Covid-19 — 1,055,000 as I write this in early October, more than perished in any war in U.S. history. And it is easy to imagine that that memorial will be built in New York City, where so many of the country's most shattering losses occurred in the pandemic's initial months in 2020. But it is harder to imagine what such a memorial will, or should, look like — perhaps because memorials, while they are locations for collective remembrance and mourning, also carry within them a kind of reassurance: That happened. We lived through it. …. But perhaps the most moving tribute is one of the earliest, the AIDS Memorial Quilt — honored last month on its 35th anniversary in a series of artist-led panel-making workshops at the Whitney Museum of American Art, organized by the New York and National AIDS Memorials and the Manhattan-based fabric company Maharam. The quilt — now spanning more than 1.2 million square feet and containing over 50,000 panels — is a collective work of art fashioned from individual expressions of grief. It embraces all the contradictions of memorial art and draws its power from them. [Read More]
 
The War in Ukraine – Is It Time for Negotiations?
Top U.S. General Urges Diplomacy in Ukraine While Biden Advisers Resist
---- A disagreement has emerged at the highest levels of the United States government over whether to press Ukraine to seek a diplomatic end to its war with Russia, with America's top general urging negotiations while other advisers to President Biden argue that it is too soon. Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has made the case in internal meetings that the Ukrainians have achieved about as much as they could reasonably expect on the battlefield before winter sets in and so they should try to cement their gains at the bargaining table, according to officials informed about the discussions. But other senior officials have resisted the idea, maintaining that neither side is ready to negotiate and that any pause in the fighting would only give President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia a chance to regroup. While Mr. Biden's advisers believe the war will likely be settled through negotiations eventually, officials said, they have concluded that the moment is not ripe and the United States should not be seen as pressuring the Ukrainians to hold back while they have momentum. [Read More] For an assessment of these developments, read "'Seize the Moment': Gen. Milley Sees Opportunity for Peace Talks Between Russia and Ukraine," by Dave DeCamp, Antiwar.com [November 10, 2022] [Link].
 
When Peace Had a Chance in Ukraine
[FB] - A new book by Benjamim and Davies - War in Ukraine: Making Sense of a Senseless Conflict - revisits the short life of the Minsk II agreement (2015). The following is excerpted from the book.
---- The Minsk II agreement, signed in February 2015, brought the worst fighting of the civil war in eastern Ukraine to an end. While the Ukrainian military cooperated in the cease-fire and the withdrawal of heavy weapons from the buffer zone, efforts by the Ukrainian government to move forward with the political aspects of the agreement, including arranging internationally monitored elections in the breakaway Donbas republics (DPR and LPR) and creating new laws granting them autonomy, quickly ran into domestic and international headwinds. The official position of the United States was always that it supported the Minsk II agreement. Its public statements blamed Russia for its failed implementation and highlighted cease-fire violations rather than the more critical problems with the political aspects of the agreement. But the United States also consistently acted as a "spoiler," a role that conflict resolution experts often observe outside powers playing in the failure of such peace agreements, by quietly incentivizing and supporting its proxy, in this case the Ukrainian government, to pursue military alternatives to the agreed-upon political resolution. [Read More]
 
Senior White House Official Involved in Undisclosed Talks with Top Putin Aides
By Vivian Salama, Wall St. Journal [November 6, 2022]
---- President Biden's top national-security adviser has engaged in recent months in confidential conversations with top aides to Russian President Vladimir Putin in an effort to reduce the risk of a broader conflict over Ukraine and warn Moscow against using nuclear or other weapons of mass destruction, U.S. and allied officials said. The officials said that U.S. national-security adviser Jake Sullivan has been in contact with Yuri Ushakov, a foreign-policy adviser to Mr. Putin. Mr. Sullivan also has spoken with his direct counterpart in the Russian government, Nikolai Patrushev, the officials added. The aim has been to guard against the risk of escalation and keep communications channels open, and not to discuss a settlement of the war in Ukraine, the officials said.  [Read More]  For an assessment of this report, read "Jake Sullivan Has Held Undisclosed Talks With Putin Aides," by Dave DeCamp, Antiwar.com [November 6, 2022] [Link].
 
Exiled Russian Activist Challenges Pacifist Approach to Ending War on Ukraine
By Ashley Smith, Truthout [November 13, 2022]
---- In an exclusive for Truthout, Ashley Smith interviews Lolja Nordic from the Russian activist organization Feminist Antiwar Resistance about the movement against Putin's regime and its imperialist invasion of Ukraine. Lolja Nordic is anarcho ecofeminist, antiwar activist and artist from Saint Petersburg, where until recently she organized for gender equality, human rights and climate justice. She is a co-coordinator of Feminist Anti-War Resistance, a group created in February 2022 to protest the war in Ukraine. Since January 2021 Lolja has been facing political repression, arrest and threats for her activism. In March 2022 she had to flee Russia and continue her work in exile after becoming a suspect in a "phone terrorism" criminal case, which was fabricated by the Russian secret police to put pressure on several antiwar activists. … It is absurd to demand that an occupied country stop fighting for its liberation and essentially give up its land for peace. It's the same as telling a victim of violence to not resist a person who tries to abuse, rape or murder them. Why would we tell that to Ukrainians? Our task is to stop the aggressor. That means first and foremost building solidarity with Ukraine and its people. They have been screaming for help for months. They don't have enough weapons to fight against Russian aggression. They don't have defensive weapons to protect their citizens from missile attacks. They deserve all the military and financial help to liberate their country. Instead of putting demands on Ukraine to stop fighting, we should be focused on doing all we can to weaken Russia's war machine. [Read More]
 
More War & Peace
The Intolerable Price You Pay: A Civilian Addresses American Veterans on Veterans Day
By Kelly Denton-Borhaug, Tomdispatch [November 11, 2022]
[FB] - Denton-Borhaug gave a version of this talk to Veterans for Peace Chapter 102 at a Reclaim Armistice Day meeting at the Milwaukee City Hall Rotunda this Veteran's Day.
---- Dear Veterans, As Americans, all of us are, in some sense, linked to the violence of war. But most of us have very little understanding of what it means to be touched by war. Still, since the events of September 11, 2001, as a scholar of religion, I've been trying to understand what I've come to call "U.S. war-culture." For it was in the months after those terrible attacks more than 20 years ago that I awoke to the depth of our culture of war and our society's pervasive militarization. Eventually, I saw how important truths about our country were concealed when we made the violence of war into something sacred. And most important of all, while trying to come to grips with this dissonant reality, I started listening to you, the veterans of our recent wars, and simply couldn't stop. … Such complexities involving alternatives to Washington's war-making urges are, of course, not part of the national conversation on Veterans Day. Instead, we are promised that war and this country's warriors will somehow redeem us as a nation. … But to convert war-making into something sacred means fashioning a deceitful myth. Violence is not a harmless tool. It's not a coat that a person wears and takes off without consequences. Violence instead brutalizes human beings to their core; chains people to the forces of dehumanization; and, over time, eats away at you like acid dripping into your very soul. That same dehumanization also undermines democracy, something you would never know from the way the United States glorifies its wars as foundational to what it means to be an American. [Read More]  Also of interest is "The Other Way of Celebrating Armistice Day: Soldiers and Vets for Peace," b[Link].
 
We Need to Break the Wall of Indifference Around the War in Yemen
By Laurent Bonnefoy, Jacobin Magazine [November 2022]
[FB] – This is a review of Helen Lackner, Yemen: Poverty and Conflict.
---- Western states and arms companies have facilitated a destructive war in Yemen that's already claimed 400,000 lives. A six-month truce recently ended without agreement on a peace deal — ending this horrific conflict must now be an international priority. Interest in the war that has been ongoing in Yemen since 2015 has been persistently limited, whether among diplomats, the media, or the general public. This is surprising when one thinks of the war's wider ramifications across the Middle East. Those consequences have included Iranian encroachment in Yemen through Tehran's support for a rebel group, the Houthis, and daily air bombardments by a foreign power, Saudi Arabia, with the assistance of other states — first and foremost the United Arab Emirates (UAE) — and armed by Western military companies. This indifference is even more puzzling when one takes into consideration the multiple violations of international law that have occurred in Yemen and the immense humanitarian tragedy that the conflict has produced. According to UN figures, the war has claimed four hundred thousand victims, directly or indirectly, yet it remains largely under the radar in the West as well as in Arab countries. … Much like the United States in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan, or France in Algeria and the Sahel region, Saudi Arabia has proved incapable of accomplishing a mission that seemed feasible on paper. The imbalance between the Houthis and the Saudi-led coalition in terms of military equipment, funding, and control of airspace has not enabled the latter to achieve anything more tangible than the destruction of human lives and infrastructure. [Read More]
 
For more on War & Peace – "The US military is operating in more countries than we think," by Jim Lobe, Responsible Statecraft [November 8, 2022] [Link]; and "The 2022 Nuclear Posture Review: Arms Control Subdued By Military Rivalry," by Hans Kristensen and Matt Korda, Arms Control Association [October 27, 2022] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
Grim outlook on global warming emerges from UN conference
By Anatol Lieven, Responsible Statecraft [November 9, 2022]
---- The 27th United Nations conference on climate change, or COP27, meeting in Egypt, has seen two realities take hold among delegates: The goal of keeping the overall rise of global temperatures below 1.5 degrees by 2100 has almost certainly been lost; for preventing this requires cuts in emissions of 45 percent by 2030 — hardly a feasible prospect. The second recognition is that whatever we now do, some very unpleasant consequences of climate change are not just inevitable, but are already happening. The result has been a new emphasis at COP27 on the need to build resilience against the effects of climate change in especially vulnerable regions. These growing disasters pose severe challenges for all states. For the United States and Europe, the biggest is the consequences for mass migration, which has already reached record levels this year.  … The UN has warned that a combination of climate change and the war in Ukraine is putting an additional 45 million people around the world at risk of starvation. The largest concentrations are in Africa, including the Sahel, where the impact of drought combines with local civil wars. Apart from the humanitarian consequences, this has led to concern about radically increased political instability, and an enormous surge in migration. [Read More]  Also of interest is (Video) "Alaa Abd El-Fattah's Sister Speaks Out at U.N. Climate Summit as Pressure Grows on Egypt to Free Him," from Democracy Now! [November 8, 2022] [Link].
 
The State of the Union
Extremists in Uniform Put the Nation at Risk
Editorial, New York Times [November 13, 2022]
---- There has been a steady rise in political violence in the United States — from harassment of election workers and public officials to the targeting of a Supreme Court justice to an attack on the husband of the speaker of the House of Representatives and, of course, the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6. An alarming number of Americans say that political violence is usually or always justified, and this greater tolerance for violence is a direct threat to democratic governance. … One of the most troubling facts about adherents of extremist movements is that veterans, active-duty military personnel and members of law enforcement are overrepresented. One estimate, published in The Times in 2020, found that at least 25 percent of members of extremist paramilitary groups have a military background. Still, only a tiny number of veterans or members of the active-duty military or law enforcement will ever join an extremist group. Their overrepresentation is partly due to extremist groups focusing on recruiting from these populations because of their skills. But the presence of these elements within the ranks of law enforcement is cause for extra concern. Of the more than 900 people arrested in connection with the Jan. 6 attacks, 135 had military or law enforcement backgrounds. [Read More]
 
Israel/Palestine
Extreme Right in Netanyahu's Government Won't Dent Western Support
By Jonathan Cook, Antiwar.com [November 8, 2022]
---- The most disturbing outcome of Israel's general election this week was not the fact that an openly fascist party won the third-biggest tally of seats, or that it is about to become the lynchpin of the next government. It is how little will change, in Israel or abroad, as a result. Having Religious Zionism at the heart of government will alter the tone in which Israeli politics is conducted, making it even coarser, more thuggish and uncompromising. But it will make no difference to the ethnic supremacism that has driven Israeli policy for decades. Israel is not suddenly a more racist state. It is simply growing more confident about admitting its racism to the world. And the world – or at least the bit of it that arrogantly describes itself as the international community – is about to confirm that such confidence is well-founded. Indeed, the West's attitude towards Israel's next coalition government will be no different from its attitude towards the supposedly less-tainted ones that preceded it. [Read More] Also of interest is "Israel's Far-Right Turn Is Nothing New," by Mairav Zonszein, International Crisis Group [Link].
 
Our History
[FB] – Arguably, the war in Ukraine is the outcome of 30 years of failed negotiations, and/or 30 years of the failure to negotiate. I think of the classic ballet that I saw 50 years ago (h/t RM), and share it with you here.
 
The Green Table by Kurt Jooss
Dutch National Ballet
---- The German choreographer Kurt Jooss created the ballet The Green Table in 1932, but its choreography still moves and engages audiences to this day. Jooss' initial inspiration for this magnum opus was the medieval Danse Macabre, but events in 1930s Germany soon transformed this work into an indictment against abuses of power – stressing the futility of war. We see the 'big shots' at a conference table, deciding the fate of soldiers and civilians; while – at the opposite end of the spectrum – the victims of war come together in a silent circle dance, led by a triumphant death. [See an introduction from the Dutch National Ballet].  To see the full half-hour ballet, by the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago, go here.