"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Jill Carroll

Jill Carroll is a journalist for the Christian Science Monitor who was kidnapped and held captive in Iraq for about three months. Wikipedia as a timeline.

For no fucking good reason that I can see, she's been repeatedly maligned by Right Wing Pundits from Imus to the alleged intellectuals who produce content for The National Review. I find this especially infuriating, because it's the absolute worst in Armchair Soldering (or Keyboard Kommandoism, if you like). These jackoffs don't have anywhere near the courage to put themselves on the line like Carroll has, and yet they feel justified to pontificate on her plight, question her courage, and suggest that she's been sleeping with the enemy.

Ugh. How about you go get taken hostage for three months and then we'll see how everyone feels, ok? Maybe then you can bring us back some of that good news we're all apparently missing.

These people have no shame.

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On Immigration

America's history of immigration is a history of illegal immigration.

Irish? Illegal immigrants, many fleeing famine.

Italians? Illegal immigrants; the slur "wop" is for With-Out Papers.

Chinese? Illegal immigrants, many aided and abetted by railroads and mining interests operating in the western frontiers.

Polish and post-Soviet? Lots of illegals there too.

The truth is that part of what makes America so vital is that it is a multi-ethnic society where people who are truly hungry for a better life have a shot, paperwork or not. These are the sorts of folks who are driven, who are risk-takers, who are in a very real sense entrepreneurs.

Which isn't to say there aren't differences in 21st Centiry immigration patterns. Refugees aside, it's usually an economic thing, and these days you really have to look at it within the context of a globalized economy: as capital moves more freely, labor wants to do the same.

Conservatives who rail against the erosion of the nation (language, culture and borders all becoming more muddled) are reactionary, yes, but not completely paranoid either. Especially where physical geography connects nations, tighter economic integration means more human immigration and eventually closer legal coordination. I for one see this as sort of inevitable, and something we aught to embrace and try to manage rather than ignore or leave up to the whimsical providence of "market forces."

I say let's accept the natural end of post-cold-war Pax Americana -- it wasn't going to last, even without Iraq -- and let more global security fall to the broader G8/UN-Security Council folks. At the same time we should be working towards a more robust and energy-independent economy, and looking to improving things in our own hemisphere for a spell. Let the Empire expire; long live the Republic!

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On Immigration

America's history of immigration is a history of illegal immigration.

Irish? Illegal immigrants, many fleeing famine.

Italians? Illegal immigrants; the slur "wop" is for With-Out Papers.

Chinese? Illegal immigrants, many aided and abetted by railroads and mining interests operating in the western frontiers.

Polish and post-Soviet? Lots of illegals there too.

The truth is that part of what makes America so vital is that it is a multi-ethnic society where people who are truly hungry for a better life have a shot, paperwork or not. These are the sorts of folks who are driven, who are risk-takers, who are in a very real sense entrepreneurs.

Which isn't to say there aren't differences in 21st Centiry immigration patterns. Refugees aside, it's usually an economic thing, and these days you really have to look at it within the context of a globalized economy: as capital moves more freely, labor wants to do the same.

Conservatives who rail against the erosion of the nation (language, culture and borders all becoming more muddled) are reactionary, yes, but not completely paranoid either. Especially where physical geography connects nations, tighter economic integration means more human immigration and eventually closer legal coordination. I for one see this as sort of inevitable, and something we aught to embrace and try to manage rather than ignore or leave up to the whimsical providence of "market forces."

I say let's accept the natural end of post-cold-war Pax Americana -- it wasn't going to last, even without Iraq -- and let more global security fall to the broader G8/UN-Security Council folks. At the same time we should be working towards a more robust and energy-independent economy, and looking to improving things in our own hemisphere for a spell. Let the Empire expire; long live the Republic!

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Spoiling for a Clash

Talkin' about the cat in Afghanistan who's under the gun for apotasty -- converting from Islam to Christianity -- here's the American Enterprise Institute's Richard Coehn, spoiling for the clash of civilizations in a column. Unfathomable Zealotry:

Now, though, this awful thing returns and it is not just a single country that would kill a man for his beliefs but a huge swath of the world that would not protest. There can be only one conclusion: They were in agreement.
...
I can embrace an Afghan for his children, his work, even his piety -- all he shares with much of humanity. But when he insists that a convert must die, I am stunned into disbelief: Is this my fellow man?

An Afghan might ask if you are in fact his fellow man if you insist that wedding parties must be anniahlated so that freedom can march. It's a messy world, and we shouldn't pretend that we're not brutal people too. Stripping away the humanity of the Other just makes it easier to kill.

Sorta makes me mad, this cycle. It is how wars perpetuate, with sweeping generalizations and demonization. It's the same story, and I can't really fathom why people like Cohen or orgs like the AEI (a prominent cheerleader for invading Iraq) really do these things, but the intent is clear.

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Iraq

I've got a feeling Iraq is going to command more attention. The balance of power there seems to be in flux, with US Forces looking to regulat/ban ethnic militias (good luck) and popular Shias calling for an end to the US control over security. While this may or may not be resolved in a face-saving way, it's a bit of a rubicon:

Iraq's security minister accused US and Iraqi forces of killing 37 unarmed civilians in the mosque after tying them up.

That's Iraq's Security Minister, as in part of the new government. The "legitimate" occupation isn't too long for this world. We should have gotten out when we had the chance.

Also, welcome to the new Media Paradigm. It's a little depressing, but it's kind of interesting and important that we can get this kind of amateur/unfiltered view.

Lots of kids on YouTube. The commentary on a lot of these videos is pretty depressing too. Got a long way to go.

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Repression?

I won't be going to this, but I think it's worth posting.

Brecht Forum’s Database Computers Stolen in Suspicious Robbery

Two principal computers at the Brecht Forum were removed on the night of Thursday, March 16, in what appears to be a politically targeted theft. The Brecht Forum is a 30- year old education and cultural center that offers seminars and classes in political organizing and progressive analysis, and serves as a meeting space for scores of local activists, organizers, students and the public.

According to Brecht Forum Executive Director Liz Mestres, there are strong indications that this was a political theft.

  • The two computers stolen held important information on the organization and its constituency.
  • There were several other computers of the same kind in easy reach that were not touched.
  • All the computers were old and not worth much for resale.
  • Audio and media equipment were in plain sight in the next room.
  • There were no signs of forced entry, so it is likely that whoever took these machines not only had access but knew exactly what they were after.

The Brecht Forum recently relocated from a loft in mid-town to a larger space in the Westbeth complex on the far west side of Manhattan. A similar theft of a single computer holding the database occurred about 6 years ago at the old location.

Throughout its existence, the Brecht Forum has been an open meeting space for analysis and discussion within the left and progressive community, and we have never shied away from controversial issues. For example, in the last month alone, we sponsored panels on developments in Venezuela and the elections in Palestine, as well as classes in Marxist theory and an exhibit of Artists Against the Death Penalty.

In the current political climate, when peace groups and dissenters are labeled as terrorist and covertly spied on, the Board of the Brecht Forum believes this has all the earmarks of an act of intimidation. Moreover, because we are a center where people across the left come together, the impact is aimed not just at the Brecht Forum, but against all groups engaged in social change organizing across issues, from supporting immigration rights, improving education, and promoting health care and affordable housing, to opposing the Iraq War and imperial foreign policy.

Because we believe this is not an isolated incident, we would like to hear from other groups and individuals that have had similar suspicious occurrences or overt acts of intimidation.

  • We know we are not the only group being targeted or harassed for our political activities.
  • We need to act together, firmly and fast, to show we won’t be frightened by such strong-arm tactics.

We need to challenge the Patriot Act and the atmosphere of repression that is growing against activists!

Come to an Emergency Community Meeting at the Brecht Forum
Tuesday, March 28 – 7:30p – 451 West St, [Between Bethune & Bank]

Join us to share information about what is happening.

Let us know if similar incidents have happened to your organization.
Call us at 212-242-4201 or email us at mail@brechtforum.org

Founded in 1975, The Brecht Forum is an educational and cultural center dedicated to advancing social justice and equality. Each year, more than 6,000 people attend over 200 public events that are a mix of political panels, classes, lectures, book signings, music and performances. www.brechtforum.org

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Injun Abortion

South Dakota Indians To Offer Abortion Clinics Safe Harbor

This is an interesting development. There are few states without a Rez, and although they are often remote, if these state bans stick, it could be part of an answer. Planned Parenthood will need to raise a few million dollars for constuction, and NAARAL can do something useful by offering to subsidize transportation to and from Soverign Territory for women in need.

The wingers heads will 'splode of course, but I think it would work.

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Payback

Via Atrios, we find that Chris Matthiews is finally realizing the Iraq wasn't, in fact, payback for 9/11:

MSNBC's Chris Matthews: "Well I am just going to stick to this point that the president led us in there with the background music of American culture. Everybody was led to believe that we were getting payback, we were avenging what happened on 9/11 and that we are going to get them."

That's why we're at war -- because we had to get them. It was fucking obvious from the start to anyone who cared to take a deep breath and think about it that this was irrational and bullshit.

I wonder, when will Mr. Matthiews begin to question and contemplate his own complicity in all this?

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Daily Kos: Getting It Straight with the Wrong-Headed Right

I agree with basically everything here, which reminds me of the old days of Kos. Anyway, Georgia10 is right fucking on:

It's not groveling that we critics want; we don't want conservatives to face years and years of personal humiliation over this. The admitted emotional satisfaction we can get from that is minor, more appropriate for the schoolyard than the national political stage.

What the right doesn't understand - and why they're screaming that we're meanies over this insistence on an unconditional mea culpa - is that we anticipate a repeat, with a more competent executive in charge, of a scenario that most people with a grounding in Middle Eastern history knew had no chance of success from the get-go. You could put the most efficient, brilliant leader in charge, but if the idea is simply bone-headed and undoable, all you've got is a longer time period before the unraveling becomes apparent, which in some ways presents a bigger danger. A competent executive that marshals a bad idea through its initial stages has a greater ability to hide the signs of an impending disaster. Just ask Enron employees who had their life savings tied up in company pension plans.

I also find it disingenuous that the right claims sole ownership of the "Saddam is a bad, bad man" banner. Please. Compared to the liberal left, they are decades late to that particular party. Progressives were screaming into the void about Hussein's human rights violations, his gassing of the Kurds, his terrorizing of political opponents long, long, long before it conveniently bubbled up into the consciousness of the neocon right. While Donald Rumsfeld was famously shaking hands with and arming Hussein, we were saying: Bad idea. Bad man. This is gonna come back and bite us in the ass.

For this, we were labeled too "sensitive," not reality-based enough to operate in the real world, where sometimes you have to arm a strongman to keep a worse scenario at bay.

Well, shove it. We were right. You were wrong. Period.

It's always been a supreme frustration of mine that for three years Republicans have been able to portrey criticism of Bush and the war as somehow a vestigial political reflex from the 60s. It's a frame that anti-war protest groups admittedly walked right into, but I think a clear majority of people opposed to the invasion were acting out of rationality and true patriotism. This in contrast to the chest-beating Nationalistic melodrama that the GOP spin machine -- with the aquiesence and sometime full-on participation of the Press -- whipped up in the wake of 9/11.

Facts matter. History matters. This war is the result of a bad idea, poorly planned, dishonestly presented, and then mismanaged in execution. It should prompt a complete and open review of our national security priorities, much as the acceptance of the lessons of Vietnam did. Really, 9/11 should have done this but it never happened; maybe we'll get a second chance here. The only way to do this in a democracy is to have a wide-open and fact-based debate.

I'm not holding my breath, but maybe if Dems take back some of congress and there are some real investigations, a critical mass of the Power Elite will come to their senses and turn away from the GOP's brand of irrational Nationalism. Maybe.

If not, there's always the State of Jefferson!

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Rationale for Redeployment

(Updated, below)

My Trellon colleague Dan offers a couple responses to my previous post agitating for a withdrawal from Iraq in the comments. His thoughts pretty closely map to ideas I used to have, so I'll reply with a new post for greater clarity/visibility.

His first post is a rebuttal to the idea that reconstruction would be better served if we were to generously fund locals:

Nowhere, ever, has there been a case where "generously supporting indigenous reconstruction" has worked without a lot of oversight... none of the civilian organizations who would normally oversee that sort of disbursement, for building things, training people, buying supplies, etc, are willing or able to do it right now...

Actually, most reconstruction contracts have gone through civilian corporations like Bechtel and Halliburton, often on a cost-plus basis. Most of the actual work, though, is done by subcontractors, most of them locals, with huge margins for the contract holder. There are at most a few thousand US Nationals in Iraq working on reconstruction. Most of the work is being done by Iraqi Citizens, but Iraq is retaining maybe maybe 10% of the funds we allocate at most.

Clearly there are issues with corruption whenever any endeavor of this nature is undertaken. However, I think the net effect would be positive if that corruption slushed to Iraqis rather than Americans.

Right now reconstruction is arguably a failure, with total oil, electricity and other key outputs stuck below pre-war levels. It's also failed to create strong Iraqi entities which can manage and maintain the infrastructure. These used to exist: prior to the first Gulf War Iraq was the most developed country in the region, and that was all done by locals, although under a command rather than market economy.

The point is, that the expertise and will exists there for these people to rebuild and manage their own critical infrastructure. It was always a mistake to run that through US corporations.

i think there are a fair amount of internal struggles going on in iraq that would explode overnight if we left... i'm sure we're also causing such death, and suffering it as well, but do you think there will be less if we left? why? if you're saying that we have to leave and let them find balance on their own, by killing each other for a while, and reaching peace on their own, you gotta come out and say that.

That's pretty much what I'm saying, although I don't know how good or bad it has to be. Here's the logic:

It's not possible for Iraq to have stability and peace as long as we remain an occupying power. It's not just that we kill people. It's because we're a catalyst for killing, and no government that relies on our forces will ever have real legitimacy in terms of the monopoly on violence because they will face insurgent attacks.

We're not going to "win" against the insurgency, which isn't actually surprising, so this situation can go on for as long as we can afford to continue it, and never really get better. There's no "corner" to turn here.

Further, it seems unlikely that the Iraqi Army and paramilitary "police" forces -- which we are arming and equipping -- will remain non-partisan when it comes to sectarian tensions, or even be reliable against insurgents. Again, this lesson was there to learn from previous occupations of Iraq and our own experience in Vietnam, but since the architects of this thing believed we were at the "End of History," I guess they thought that didn't count.

At best, out continued presence keeps the underlying tensions in Iraq at a slow burn. As long as we stay, we continue to loose lives, torture and kill people, run down our military, and run up our deficit. When eventually/inevitably we do leave, that explosion will still be primed and waiting to happen. It is beyond our power to defuse the situation.

Unfortunately, I actually think it's more likely that we'll face a worse scenario: shit blows up before we're gone, and we're caught in the middle. That'll be fucked up on a whole new level.

And so I believe the best we can do is withdraw our forces in an orderly and structured fashion, starting now. It's not a lovely idea, but I really can't see how our continued presence is going to improve things.

Update: And another thing: Iraq is currently a huge terrorist training ground. It's like Afghanistan and Beirut combined, with a 21st-Century edge! The minute we leave, that's over. The Iraqis won't tolerate the attacks on their own people, civil and cultural institutions without the justification of occupation; Iraq will cease to be an autonomous zone for terrorists.

Also, on the GWOT: total withdrawl from the Middle East is key. Without us there to inflame tensions generally, we will be able to throw serious money, expertise and effort at busting down on known and emerging terrorist networks throughout the region. Our inability to do this is part of Bin Laden's fucking plan!

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