Wednesday, June 26, 2013

How about "going after" (bringing to justice), instead of Snowden, those responsible for putting in place this vast, Orwellian system of spying on tens of millions of Americans?


And I thought only countries like China, Iran, Cuba, and North Korea used mass surveillance to spy on their own citizens.

If it is being used for purposes of national security, we at least need to be informed by our government that it is being done.   Instead, the federal government/Obama Administration is caught "red-handed" and then makes a big stink about the person who informed the public only because the government would not be honest, cop to what it has been doing.

It's like a man who continues to deny reports of infidelity to his wife until someone furnishes irrefutable proof.  And then the man blames the latter.

What the husband--and the Obama Administration, by the same token, do not like is being caught in a lie, i.e., deceiving the party to whom he/it swore to be faithful.

# # # # #

More to the point, why is all the attention being focused on the alleged crimes of Edward Snowden, one individual caught in an act of civil disobedience instead of bringing to justice those responsible for putting in place this vast, Orwellian system of spying on tens of millions of Americans?

The real crime for which Mr. Snowden is being pursued is to have exposed the enormity of the deception and lies of the U.S. government, which of course is of great embarrassment to the Obama Administration.

And so he is being branded summarily as a "traitor."

He is being punished for telling the truth.  The charges are just a smokescreen.

In America, the worst accusation one can level against another person is that either s/he is a racist...or a traitor.




Tuesday, June 25, 2013

"DEMONIZING EDWARD SNOWDEN: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON?" by JOHN CASSIDY in THE NEW YORKER


from The New Yorker magazine this week:

"As I write this, a bunch of reporters are flying from Moscow to Havana on an Aeroflot Airbus 330, but Edward Snowden isn’t sitting among them. His whereabouts are unknown. He might still be in the V.I.P. lounge at Sheremetyevo International Airport. He could have left on another plane. There are even suggestions that he has taken shelter in the Ecuadorian Embassy in Moscow.
What we do know is that, on this side of the Atlantic, efforts are being stepped up to demonize Snowden, and to delegitimize his claim to be a conscientious objector to the huge electronic-spying apparatus operated by the United States and the United Kingdom. “This is an individual who is not acting, in my opinion, with noble intent,” General Keith Alexander, the head of the National Security Agency, told ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday. “What Snowden has revealed has caused irreversible and significant damage to our country and to our allies.” Over on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” Senator Dianne Feinstein, head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said, “I don’t think this man is a whistle-blower… he could have stayed and faced the music. I don’t think running is a noble thought.”
An unnamed senior Administration official joined the Snowden-bashing chorus, telling reporters, “Mr. Snowden’s claim that he is focussed on supporting transparency, freedom of the press, and protection of individual rights and democracy is belied by the protectors he has potentially chosen: China, Russia, Cuba, Venezuela, and Ecuador. His failure to criticize these regimes suggests that his true motive throughout has been to injure the national security of the U.S., not to advance Internet freedom and free speech.”
It is easy to understand, though not to approve of, why Administration officials, who have been embarrassed by Snowden’s revelations, would seek to question his motives and exaggerate the damage he has done to national security. Feinstein, too, has been placed in a tricky spot. Tasked with overseeing the spooks and their spying operations, she appears to have done little more than nod.
More unnerving is the way in which various members of the media have failed to challenge the official line. Nobody should be surprised to see the New York Postrunning the headline: “ROGUES’ GALLERY: SNOWDEN JOINS LONG LIST OF NOTORIOUS, GUTLESS TRAITORS FLEEING TO RUSSIA.” But where are Snowden’s defenders? As of Monday, the editorial pages of the Times and the Washington Post, the two most influential papers in the country, hadn’t even addressed the Obama Administration’s decision to charge Snowden with two counts of violating the Espionage Act and one count of theft.
If convicted on all three counts, the former N.S.A. contract-systems administrator could face thirty years in jail. On the Sunday-morning talk shows I watched, there weren’t many voices saying that would be an excessive punishment for someone who has performed an invaluable public service. And the person who did aggressively defend Snowden’s actions, Glenn Greenwald, the Guardian blogger who was one of the reporters to break the story, found himself under attack. After suggesting that Greenwald had “aided and abetted” Snowden, David Gregory, the host of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” asked, “Why shouldn’t you, Mr. Greenwald, be charged with a crime?”
After being criticized on Twitter, Gregory said that he wasn’t taking a position on Snowden’s actions—he was merely asking a question. I’m all for journalists asking awkward questions, too. But why aren’t more of them being directed at Hayden and Feinstein and Obama, who are clearly intent on attacking the messenger?
To get a different perspective on Snowden and his disclosures, here’s a portion of an interview that ABC—the Australian Broadcasting Company, not the Disney subsidiary—did today with Thomas Drake, another former N.S.A. employee, who, in 2010, was charged with espionage for revealing details about an electronic-eavesdropping project called Trailblazer, a precursor to Operation Prism, one of the programs that Snowden documented. (The felony cases against Drake, as my colleague Jane Mayer has written, eventually collapsed, and he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor.)
INTERVIEWER: Not everybody thinks Edward Snowden did the right thing. I presume you do…
DRAKE: I consider Edward Snowden as a whistle-blower. I know some have called him a hero, some have called him a traitor. I focus on what he disclosed. I don’t focus on him as a person. He had a belief that what he was exposed to—U.S. actions in secret—were violating human rights and privacy on a very, very large scale, far beyond anything that had been admitted to date by the government. In the public interest, he made that available.
INTERVIEWER: What do you say to the argument, advanced by those with the opposite viewpoint to you, especially in the U.S. Congress and the White House, that Edward Snowden is a traitor who made a narcissistic decision that he personally had a right to decide what public information should be in the public domain?
DRAKE: That’s a government meme, a government cover—that’s a government story. The government is desperate to not deal with the actual exposures, the content of the disclosures. Because they do reveal a vast, systemic, institutionalized, industrial-scale Leviathan surveillance state that has clearly gone far beyond the original mandate to deal with terrorism—far beyond.
As far as I’m concerned, that about covers it. I wish Snowden had followed Drake’s example and remained on U.S. soil to fight the charges against him. But I can’t condemn him for seeking refuge in a country that doesn’t have an extradition treaty with the United States. If he’d stayed here, he would almost certainly be in custody, with every prospect of staying in a cell until 2043 or later. The Obama Administration doesn’t want him to come home and contribute to the national-security-versus-liberty debate that the President says is necessary. It wants to lock him up for a long time.
And for what? For telling would-be jihadis that we are monitoring their Gmail and Facebook accounts? For informing the Chinese that we eavesdrop on many of their important institutions, including their prestigious research universities? For confirming that the Brits eavesdrop on virtually anybody they feel like? Come on. Are there many people out there who didn’t already know these things?
Snowden took classified documents from his employer, which surely broke the law. But his real crime was confirming that the intelligence agencies, despite their strenuous public denials, have been accumulating vast amounts of personal data from the American public. The puzzle is why so many media commentators continue to toe the official line. About the best explanation I’ve seen came from Josh Marshall, the founder of T.P.M., who has been one of Snowden’s critics. In a post that followed the first wave of stories, Marshall wrote, “At the end of the day, for all its faults, the U.S. military is the armed force of a political community I identify with and a government I support. I’m not a bystander to it. I’m implicated in what it does and I feel I have a responsibility and a right to a say, albeit just a minuscule one, in what it does.”
I suspect that many Washington journalists, especially the types who go on Sunday talk shows, feel the way Marshall does, but perhaps don’t have his level of self-awareness. It’s not just a matter of defending the Obama Administration, although there’s probably a bit of that. It’s something deeper, which has to do with attitudes toward authority. Proud of their craft and good at what they do, successful journalists like to think of themselves as fiercely independent. But, at the same time, they are part of the media and political establishment that stands accused of ignoring, or failing to pick up on, an intelligence outrage that’s been going on for years. It’s not surprising that some of them share Marshall’s view of Snowden as “some young guy I’ve never heard of before who espouses a political philosophy I don’t agree with and is now seeking refuge abroad for breaking the law.”
Mea culpa. Having spent almost eighteen years at The New Yorker, I’m arguably just as much a part of the media establishment as David Gregory and his guests. In this case, though, I’m with Snowden—not only for the reasons that Drake enumerated but also because of an old-fashioned and maybe naïve inkling that journalists are meant to stick up for the underdog and irritate the powerful. On its side, the Obama Administration has the courts, the intelligence services, Congress, the diplomatic service, much of the media, and most of the American public. Snowden’s got Greenwald, a woman from Wikileaks, and a dodgy travel document from Ecuador. Which side are you on?"

* * * * *

For exposing the wrongdoing of the U.S. government under the Obama Administration, Mr. Snowden is vilified by the Establishment--including much of it "liberal" in an attempt to brand him by his own compatriots as a traitor.

I recall how in the early '70's the similar storm that ensued when Daniel Ellsberg leaked The Pentagon Papers to the New York Times ("Cela lui a valu d'être poursuivi pour vol, conspiration et espionnage"*).  

It is quite ironic how so many Americans see him as "scum" when, in fact, what he did was to reveal to them how the extent of the spying on virtually all Americans by their own government.  These same Americans, I infer, would prefer simply NOT to know about it, period.  Better to be not to know what is actually going on in the world and, instead, to play video games or watch the latest Hollywood blockbuster.

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Ellsberg

Yes, he did break the law, but how else could he have blown the lid on what the government has been doing, probably in violation of the Constitution and giving "ammunition" to all the right-wing groups who believe they have the right to bear arms?

Anyone who risks the wrath of the world's most powerful government to go after, seize, and imprison him for the rest of his life can hardly be said to be doing it out of self-interest and/or cowardice.

https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/pardon-edward-snowden/Dp03vGYD

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Romanticized views of the Sixties by a generation six decades removed

From the widely respected leftist biweekly national New York Review of Books:  

Berkeley: What We Didn’t Know

MAY 23, 2013

Adam Hochschild


"Was the Black Panther Party’s descent into criminal violence mainly the work of FBI agents provocateurs?

...I think not. Even though new information about FBI manipulation may eventually surface, there was already plenty of madness in the air by end of the 1960s. The trail of Black Panther extortion, beatings, murders, and other crimes—especially in Northern California—is so long as to be far beyond the FBI’s ability to create it. And by 1970, there were also too many white leftists who romanticized third-world revolutionaries, talked tough, wore military fatigues, and spoke a different language than the nonviolent one of the Free Speech Movement leaders of 1964–1965."

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2013/may/23/berkeley-what-we-didnt-know/


Apparently the writers and staff--presumably in their twenties and thirties--of newspapers such as The Stranger do not have anything but their own romanticized views of the decade of the Sixties.

What does a white girl like Jen Graves know about racism?   

I would venture to say that a whole generation has a skewed perspective of the civil rights movement.  

(And I personally lived it).

And very few people care enough to try to correct or revise the record with what they know or actually experienced.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

CENSORED AGAIN: Two drag queens have more courage than the entire staff of The Stranger. A Review of Seattle's Establishment "alternative" newspaper.

[Note:  This review was removed by Yelp about ten days after its publication on June 1, 2013, no explanation given.  So much for free speech:   You write the reviews for Yelp, Yelp removes them if the review doesn't please Yelp or isn't in accordance with their high standards of cowardice and intolerance].


The perfect newspaper to use to line your cat's litter box.

O.K., it is probably no secret that I am not the world's biggest fan of this newspaper.  But there are, after all, certain limits to patience.

The politics and contents of The Stranger is what I call conservative liberalism:  liberalism that is, at heart, conservative in its willingness to change and evolve.   (Actually, The Stranger came into being, like some cosmic goo, in Seattle in the early-'90's.  This fact may be lost on the majority of its current readership, who were in diapers at the time).

What's this constant blathering about "the (3) spicy HImalayan tarragon-flavored yogurt-dipped calamari fries were so cheap!  Only $12!  What a bargain!"  

For people who decry income inequality, they have pretty deep pockets.

* * * * *

On the other hand, I do believe their sincerity about being an S&M newspaper.  For liberal white guilt, that is.

I also get this other thing now, too:  The Stranger does not practice journalism at all.  It has no intention of being objective and fair.  Its purported purpose is to promote the progressive philosophy of "party till you puke."  With plenty of piss and paraphernalia.

(I'm all for paraphernalia but none of the others).

In the marketplace of ideas, don't buy The Stranger (even if it is "free" to the unsuspecting).  Just go straight to the club listings (or to Dan Savage's usually more than tongue-in-cheek humor is a source of unrepentant mirth).

The Stranger finally admits that there is violent crime in idyllic Seattle!!   (Anyone else been mugged or threatened?)

http://www.thestranger.c…

The writer of this article goes into detail about his horrific experience, noting the physical appearance  of the thugs:   age, gender, number, what they were wearing ("black hoodie"), speech ("Do you want to get shot, motherfucker?").  

But he puts a fig leaf on the race/ethnicity belly button.

A couple of weeks ago DRAG QUEEN Robbie Turner had more courage in identifying the race of her attacker on Capitol Hill.  So did Danny Vega (another cross-dresser) in Rainier Valley a year ago.

http://sgn.org/sgnnews41…

Auto-censorship or editorial censorship.    Call it what you will.  The Stranger is to free-thinking Seattle what Vichy France was to Free France during World War II.   (O.K., a  hyperbole, but you get the point).

If 80% of the violent crime in Seattle is committed by (members belonging to) 12% of the population, we must be silent.  Community means accepting some level of responsibility for the actions of its members.

The auto-/editorial censorship does not change the fact that there is a crippling fear in Seattle (and elsewhere) about naming the race of the persons who have attacked and/or threatened you, as in

"I cannot tell you the race of the person who sucker-punched me because I don't I don't remember.  It would be racist if I did. The police came too late."

If a certain senior writer at The Stranger had been mugged in Wedgwood, you can be sure that he would have decried the race of the perps.

In the following week's issue, The Stranger publishes a series of cartoons decrying harassment of women in Seattle.   All the perps (perpetrators) are  Cro-Magnon Caucasians, the victims either white or African-American.







Pretty racist.

(Notice, too, how Asian-Americans--who are the largest racial minority, not blacks, in Seattle,m as well as HIspanics and Native-Americans are treated as if they simply did not exist.  How literally and figuratively true it is that The Stranger sees things in black-and-white).

If you see a group of young black men on the Ave. (University Avenue) in Seattle and instinctively feel anxiety, that is not racism.   Most of the young African-Americans are loitering and not exactly what I would describe as warmhearted and respectful of others.  I have not noticed any gangs of Caucasians, or skinheads, on the Avenue or elsewhere in this city.  (Not to say that they don't exist in other cities). 

* * * * *

If only The Stranger were truly willing to investigate the stories that mainstream newspapers refuse to touch.

Instead it idolizes President Barack Obama, the man who submitted John Brennan as the new director of the CIA.  The covert CIA operations using drone (unmanned) planes to assassinate presumed and approved terrorists in Pakistan, Afganistan, and other places from bunkers in New Mexico receive scant attention from the media.

Granted, Obama is a vast improvement over GBW, but the fact that he is African-American does and should not mean that he gets an automatic pass.

* * * * *

Would that this newspaper fold and another take its place--with a whole new set of editors and writers!

Updated review of the downtown Seattle YMCA (June 2013)

Many women, and some men, have a habit of "saying, it's all fine," as a way of repressing their feelings, when they are actually angry.

I do this immediately after someone acts aggressively towards me.  My defense is to shut down and fold in on myself like a sea urchin.  But I am too slow to not absorb the kicks and stings of a predator.

For example, I was recently abused by a lifeguard, the same one who had defended the actions of "The Hulk" (see my previous review):

Me:  "Thank you for intervening to prevent a collision.  At the same time I did feel disrespected by what you said to me and how you said it."

He: (without a second's delay, jumping on me--angrily, demanding,contemptuously,  loudly--ordering):  "TELL ME WHAT I SAID."

It was very similar to the aggressive tone of voice a socioeconomically disadvantaged mother on a Metro bus telling her child:  "WHAT DID I JUST TELL YOU TO DO??   SHUT YOUR MOUTH!"

Alternatively, it was like being commanded at knife-point to tell the assailant your bank PIN number.  No way of saying, "No, I'm not going to.  Don't you remember yourself?   Since you said it, why do you need to ask me?"

It was characteristic of his scorched-earth approach except exponentially worse.

It took me a long weekend to reflect and for me to admit how angry I was at the red-hot-tongue lashing I received for expressing my opinion in a non-blaming, calm manner (I had been listening to Thich Nhat-Hahn's "Teachings on Love" all weekend before gently confronting this man).  

But we all benefit from open, honest communication.  I am sad and disappointed that the YMCA seems is unable to sanction those who blow their stack at others.

* * * * *

The bully and the bullied of childhood meet in adulthood.  The bullied person is the mirror reflection of the bully, and the bully cannot stand to see himself in the mirror.

The bullied is the invitation to a dance.

http://lilliansblog-d.bl…

As Pema Chodron would state, there is a lot of karmic debt to be paid.
.
* * * * *

I am worried that this YMCA is going to go under, so I'm writing this update in hopes that I can "sound the alarm."  

Frequent wild swings in policy?   A closeted loose cannon?   Changing demographics which favors those from "disadvantaged backgrounds" including the mentally ill, as well as the socially maladjusted ("might is right")?   Young, inexperienced, bored staff (for instance, a year ago, I routinely witnessed lifeguards casually take turns cruelly putting members down)?   

Frustrated  front-desk staff that have to deal with rudeness much of the time?  Lack of staff discipline and/or meaningful training?   Recurrent spates of thefts?   Internecine conflicts?  Out-of-touch administrators, who, in order to resolve a problem, suggest members find another gym?  Who allow staff with anger management issues to continue to work at the Y?

Or young employees who show not one whit of gratitude for the gainful employment they have been given and who should have been, by all rights, kicked in the seat of their pants and sent flying out through the front door of the Y.

They may text, twitter, and yelp, but tell the truth?  methinks not.

* * * * *

Or the Y could simply go under the sheer weight of all the bath towels being used, washed, dried, folded, and stacked.

* * * * *

The Y proclaims it is about "family values," which is great.   It is not just a gym, a place to exercise.   It is, or should be, a place where we evolve by learning to better listen to, support, and encourage others.  

Buzzwords such as "affirmation" are empty unless they are actually put into practice.

In any case, I salute the volunteers who uncomplainingly make such a positive contribution to all of us who use the Y.  Also, every act of kindness and generosity from the community is hereby acknowledged with gratitude.

* * * * *

"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." (Lk 23:34).

At the same time, this is my YMCA as much as it is anyone's.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

We did not invent freedom and democracy. What bullying means to a society.

"We," Americans were responsible for post-World War II prosperity, put on a man on the moon, invented the i-phone, Marilyn Monroe (who?), Michael Jackson, Lady Gaga...
but we did not invent freedom and democracy.  It took centuries...and moments...and other nations.

Many if not most of us have experienced bullying before or live in fear of it.  We have known the feeling in the pit of our stomachs, in the muscles of our neck, the way we contract or freeze, the clenched jaw.

No, we did not invent freedom from bullying or violence.

(And yet we believe that our American freedom is something absolute and immutable, perfect, superior, and eternal).

Bullying and "games" of domination and submission may be part of human nature, but to believe to deny their existence at all levels of society is to not understand the nature of violence.

* * * * *

Individual freedom, the freedom of the individual to think freely and to express his opinions and communicate his observations to others is not something Americans in 2013 particularly respect.

One has only to look at online chat forums where people with dissenting opinions are frequently heckled and disrespected--in essence, to force a hasty retreat.

The law of the mob prevails.  Majority rules, and not only that, the majority opinion imposes itself to the extent that those with dissenting opinions become afraid to express them, to even think them.  Auto-censure becomes the rule, not so different, in essence, from the Inquisition of the 15th century in Europe, which strenuously sought to instill by fear to circumscribe even what people thought.

Now we have fear by ridicule, humiliation, and bullying--a new form of tyranny.

Those who "lose it" and commit acts of horrific gun violence:   I wonder if anyone ever really listened to what they needed to say at least one person.

On the other end of the chain is the conventional wisdom whereby everyone needs to listen to African-Americans and the litany of sins committed against them rehashed, re-framed, and rewritten about.  As if half a century (from the early '60's, with To Kill a Mockingbird and A Raisin in the Sun onward) were not enough and as if no American had not had the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King impressed into his conscience for the entirety of his or her life.

How many more witch-hunts do we need to conduct or justifications for the most egregious acts of physical violence by reference to the past?

* * * * *

Maybe it is time to listen to a new class of "victims."  To be open to other realities impinging on the one that has been taught and recited ad infinitum by schools, media, community, and government.