Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Truest statement of the week
America has a unique history with firearms. The settler colonial state enshrined gun ownership into the constitution because of a determination to maintain chattel slavery and the violent enforcement which had to go with it.
More than two hundred years later that imperative remains. All the sound and fury about gun control is useless because this society demands that the slave patrol never disband. There are even arguments made to expand it. Not only must we live with armed police officers but there are new proposals to arm teachers in the classroom. These same teachers target black students for punishments and “zero tolerance” policies made necessary by the deeds of violent white people. Everyone from the buffoonish president to members of Congress weigh in with ridiculous proposals because the obvious solution will not be permitted in this country.
-- Margaret Kimberley, "Freedom Rider: Why the Shooting Will Continue" (BLACK AGENDA REPORT).
Truest statement of the week II
The FBI’s reports on black booksellers were highly invasive but often mundane. The FBI reports note phone calls from Coates’s number to his former comrades in the Black Panther Party—but also to Viking Press and the American Booksellers Association. Agents in New York reported an undercover source’s questionable claim that the Lewis Michaux “was responsible for about 75 percent of the antiwhite material” distributed in Harlem, but another report conceded that he was “no longer very active in Black Nationalist activity as he is getting old.” In Philadelphia, agents traced a car’s license plate at a Republic of New Africa convention to Dawud Hakim, but not long afterwards they quoted sources stating that the RNA was “now defunct in the Philadelphia area” and that Hakim “has not shown interest in any Black Nationalist Activity.”
While perhaps not surprising, it is deeply disturbing that Hoover and the FBI would carry out sustained investigations of black-owned independent bookstore across the country as part of COINTELPRO’s larger attacks on the Black Power movement. But Hoover’s order that agents track these stores’ customers represented not just an attack on black activists, but also an absolute contempt for America’s stated values of freedom of speech and expression. Any citizen who stepped into a black-owned bookstore, it seemed, risked being investigated by federal law enforcement.
-- Joshua Clark Davis, "The FBI's War on Black-Owned Bookstores" (BLACK AGENDA REPORT).
A note to our readers
It's early almost early Wednesday morning on the west coast.
Let's thank all who participated this edition which includes Dallas and the following:
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Trina of Trina's Kitchen, Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends,
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts,
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.
And what did we come up with?
Peace,
-- Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess, Ava and C.I.
Editorial: Who will ask the question?
Just the latest to die in the ongoing Iraq War.
It hasn't ended.
US troops are still on the ground.
When does it end?
Why is that question not asked daily?
The Iraq War hits the 15 year mark next month.
When does it end?
TV: USA tries rebuilding
But the cable network wants more.
For example, being USA-like no longer interests it which is bad news for the likes of MAJOR CRIMES.
The Mary McDonnell sleep inducer was a spin-off from THE CLOSER -- as standard and derivative as THE CLOSER was groundbreaking and innovative. Kyra Sedgwick was a pioneer while McDonnell was a washed out photo copy.
As misguided as MAJOR CRIMES was WILL -- no one was waiting for a CW version of the life of young William Shakespeare.
But slowly, TNT has been building a solid block of entertaining shows.
ANIMAL KINGDOM essays toxic masculinity (and Ellen Barkin's lead performance makes it clear that toxic masculinity can be fostered and exhibited by a woman), CLAWS is delicious and alive and GOOD BEHAVIOR continues to demonstrate that a series can serve up sexy and suspense on a weekly basis.
Now comes THE ALIENIST, their ten-episode limited series set in 1896 New York City where young teenage male prostitutes are being murdered by a serial killer leaving police commissioner Teddy Roosevelt (Brian Geraghty) desperate to figure out how to catch the killer.
What's left to do but CALL THE MIDWIFE?
Wait, wrong century, wrong network.
So instead future president of the United States Teddy decides to hire an alienist Dr. Laszlo Kreizler (Daniel Bruhl) which necessitates also teaming him with NEW YORK TIMES illustrator John Moore (Luke Evans) and police commissioner secretary Sara Howard (Dakota Fanning).
The twists and turns and plot devices are less interesting than the characters.
Luke Evans delivers a first rate performance and is never caught by the camera out of character. There are times when Daniel Bruhl is seen in wide shots and not the character of Laszlo Kreizler but, for the most part, he delivers a strong performance as well. Dakota Fanning doesn't attempt to charm you but goes full out with her performance, committing 100% to Sara.
The three have an interesting dynamic but the chemistry between John and Sara is especially strong.
So strong is the chemistry that you wish more of the book was discarded.
A great deal, especially to do with the tone, has to be discarded from the book because the latent homophobia is more obvious today than it was when the book was published in 1994.
Along with the issue of a different era for the novel's publication, there is also the author's inability to consider that his father, Lucien Carr, did in fact have a longstanding sexual relationship -- not abuse, as Caleb Carr claims -- with David Kammerer and that this affair -- and all the drama it involved -- might be why Lucien Carr killed David Kammerer.
Following the murder, Lucien Carr would portray Kammerer as a predator and himself as an untouched innocent. He was one of the first to use the gay panic defense (a defense no longer available in either California or Illinois).
Caleb Carr clings to the notion that if there was any relationship between the two men, it was one of abuse carried out by David Kammerer.
It's an interesting blindness on the part of Carr, one you can argue he's built his entire life around: the pay it forward of abuse.
It's what he's built his analysis of terrorism around: Violence carried out by nation-states or tribes results in violence carried out against them.
While that can explain terrorism or any violent response -- a response is never a precipitating event, after all -- it's not necessarily accurate in human relations because the response to violence is not always violence.
And sometimes violence itself -- even as terrorism -- can be the initiating event.
Lucien Carr may have initiated the violence, not David Kammerer.
Considering that possibility could be highly liberating to Caleb Carr whose relationships are forever tentative as a result of his beliefs -- his father abused him, therefore he fears abusing others.
This isolationist view comes across in his fiction and is still present in THE ALIENIST limited series via Dr. Laszlo Kreizler. But the writing for the mini-series has been fleshed out and, combined with the acting, has allowed John Moore and Sara Howard to appear as real and interconnected human beings and allowed USA to have one more series worth bragging about.
It's time for Kevin de Leon
The top-two primary system in heavily Democratic California allows
the two highest vote-getters to advance to the general election
regardless of party identification.
It's the first time Feinstein, 84, failed to win the party's backing
since her first successful U.S. Senate campaign in 1994, though she's
lacked a credible Democratic challenger in previous races.
Delegates who withheld their support said they think Feinstein has
been in Washington too long and hasn't stood strong enough for
immigrants.
When she spoke longer than her allotted time, some in the crowd
chanted "Time's up!" -- referring to her lengthy tenure in Congress.
Thirty-seven percent of Democrats backed Feinstein, while 54 percent
supported de Leon.
The vote took place Saturday evening and was counted overnight. On
Sunday morning, de Leon hailed the vote as "an astounding rejection of
politics as usual."
Oh, grow up, Barbra Streisand
And, as the video for "Emotion" demonstrates, sometimes she's flat out -- and embarrassingly -- wrong.
Truly one of the worst videos ever -- and she's clearly never used a vacuum before -- which is why she pushes it around like a mop -- though no one can explain why she takes the stage to sing with such awkward posture.
Well Babs is having another Emotion moment.
She tells VARIETY:
And [Al Gore] lost by 537 votes out of 104 million. And now, in retrospect, Bush looks quite good compared to Trump. At least he’s not mean-spirited. He’s not a guy who is retaliating for what Obama did at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
He makes Bully Boy Bush look good?
Really, Babs?
That may be the worst note you've ever hit.
Has Donald Trump rounded up Muslims?
Has he promoted new legislation as hideous as The PATRIOT Act?
Has he launched a never-ending war like the Iraq War?
We get it, your feelings are hurt that War Monger Hillary didn't win.
Well get over it, like you got over all of Jon Peter's actions that could lead to #METOO moments -- do you really think we don't know -- because Donald Trump has yet to be as bad as Bully Boy Bush -- let alone worse.
A bad day to be Sami Sharbek
- This image widely portrayed as a man fleeing with his daughter in Syria is actually from Mosul when he was fleeing an Islamic State-controlled part of Mosul towards Iraqi special forces soldiers during a battle in Mosul, Iraq on http://bit.ly/2F0upYk #HumanRightsDiedInSyria