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Politics

There’s Hope

There’s hope and it lies with the next generation(s.) Obama, in his farewell speech, had urged young  people to get politically involved. They’re doing it, clearly. The link below introduces the youngest city council member in Texas, in fact two of them on a Board of five.

Generally I just needed an excuse to pull up some archival photos of children who are clear eyed and serious. It makes you happy simply looking at them. Well, it makes me happy. (I did have consent to photograph them.)

For today, then, I am putting faith in the future.

This Texas City Just Elected the Youngest City Council Member in the State

Here are some thoughts why there is no reason to be pessimistic – and in any event I could no resist posting a link to an article that contains a sentence like this: Millennials value authenticity over presentation, which explains why so many of them are willing to come out for politicians who look like geography teachers.  

http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2017/05/a-generation-for-itself-millennials-and-the-new-old-left.html


 

 

Stay Brave

After last night’s outcome in the Georgia and South Carolina elections I’m challenged to stay optimistic. At least my search this week for role models that encourage optimism did not have to venture far – it found its perfect target right in Beaverton, or, more precisely, at Powell’s in Beaverton.

Naomi Klein was in town on a book tour for her new book, No is not enough, written with lightening speed during the last 5 months ( it usually takes her that number in years to complete one. ) As you know, she is a Canadian author, social activist, and filmmaker known for her political analyses and criticism of corporate globalization and of capitalism. I closely follow her writing in the Guardian and the Nation, and get regular instructions by progeny to read her books (The Shock Doctrine was the last.) 

The evening unfolded in conversation with Jo Ann Hardesty, who served in the Oregon House of Representatives from 1995 until 2001. You probably know her from her Voices from the Edge Thursday mornings on KBOO. You should, in any event, it’s a terrific program.

Moving introductory remarks and territorial acknowledgement were given by Cathy Sampson-Kruse (she was also part of the water protectors in ND.)

Closing remarks with support for local activists were offered by folks associated with The Leap. https://theleapblog.org/aboutleap/

The house was packed, mean age, due to the presence of babies, probably around 40, modal age more like 65, a sea of us gray going on white-haired folks…..

Below is a link to a short essay that basically encapsulates the discussion that unfolded yesterday. I am quoting the very last paragraph which was mirrored by Klein’s closing remarks.

“For decades, elites have been using the power of shock to impose nightmares. Donald Trump thinks he’ll be able to do it again and again—that we will have forgotten by tomorrow what he said yesterday (which he will say he never said); that we will be overwhelmed by events and will ultimately scatter, surrender, and let him grab whatever he wants.

But crises do not always cause societies to regress and give up. There is also always a second option: that, faced with a grave common threat, we can choose to come together and make an evolutionary leap. We can choose, as the Reverend William Barber puts it, “to be the moral defibrillators of our time and shock the heart of this nation and build a movement of resistance and hope and justice and love.” We can, in other words, surprise the hell out of ourselves—by being united, focused, and determined. By refusing to fall for those tired old shock tactics. By refusing to be afraid, no matter how much we are tested.

The corporate coup that Trump and his billionaire cabinet are trying to pull off is a crisis with global reverberations that could echo through geologic time. How we respond to this crisis is up to us. So let’s choose that second option. Let’s leap.”

The most interesting part of her talk focused on the fact that saying No is not enough, we have to fill it with a Yes that proposes alternatives. For me the urgent question is how to conceive of and formulate alternatives that realistically work as political programs. Not (just) to get elected but to change the dominant system of policies and political philosophy, of the economy at the base of it all.

Klein signed her book with “Stay Brave” – a fitting exhortation from a woman who inspired optimism.

 

Daring to Dream in the Age of Trump

Memorial Day

Today this country remembers its dead in war.  If we consider the fight against religious bigotry, xenophobia, anti-semitism, racism and white supremacy a form of war then we have to mourn our most recent local victims as soldiers as well. It is still difficult to wrap my mind around the fact that I live in a city where, this weekend, in the middle of the afternoon two men were killed and one wounded in a streetcar because they came to the aid of two young Muslima who were attacked by a White supremacist. A war veteran and father of four, a Reed College graduate and a young man who recently won a prize for a poem focussed on Islamophobia all came to the aid of strangers only to have their throats slashed.

The climate of violence is created, intensified and sanctioned from above – the link below from today’s NYT editorial shows the extent to which whole swaths of people have “left morality behind as a viable concept.”

Click on picture for Charles Blow NYT opinion piece.

Images today remind of the mourning for the loss incurred by war; the music is one of the most moving pieces I know commemorating friends who gave their lives in the belief it was for the greater good.

Stonewalled

So many captivating things to report on today – still in the mode of looking at people whose hearts are not cold as stone.

For one, there is the magnificent speech by Mitch Landrieu, Mayor of New Orleans, addressing the removal of monuments dedicated to the cause of the confederacy.  One of the best sentences in it:  “The Confederacy was on the wrong side of history and humanity. It sought to tear apart our nation and subjugate our fellow Americans to slavery. This is the history we should never forget and one that we should never again put on a pedestal to be revered.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/23/opinion/mitch-landrieus-speech-transcript.html

Then there is a fabulous article on African American activists in the 1850s, who were living examples of how individual engagement and courage can change history.  Kantrowitz’s writing is clear, historically oriented and instructive for all of us who try to apply lessons of the past to the present.

http://bostonreview.net/race/stephen-kantrowitz-refuge-fugitives

And finally, there is Bessie Springfield – 1930s Black motorcycle queen road tripping through the states! Read it in awe.

http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/bessie-stringfield-motorcycle-queen?utm_source=Atlas+Obscura+Daily+Newsletter&utm_campaign=273d72b811-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_05_22&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f36db9c480-273d72b811-66214597&ct=t(Newsletter_5_22_2017)&mc_cid=273d72b811&mc_eid=1765533648

Photographs today are stone stoops in Maryland, Virginia and Louisiana.

 

 

 

 

Leaving no Stone unturned

The last two blogs reported on infuriating political shenanigans. Today, for counterbalance, I am linking to two essays that portray the best in wo/mankind – I actually searched hard to find something up-lifting….

The first is about a poet, a single person who shifted the fate of Jews in Norway with a poem accusing his fellow citizens of neglect of their Christian values. Jews were constitutionally banned from Norway in 1814, jailed and expelled if discovered. It took until 1851 – and truly revolutionary commitment by the poet Hegeland – to have the ban lifted and Jews granted religious rights and citizenship just as Christians.

The Poem That Ended Norway’s Constitutional Ban on Jews

The second essay is a deeply interesting exploration of how traditional Black colleges in the South granted refuge to those fleeing the Nazis.

http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2017/5/21/1659766/-Fleeing-from-swastikas-in-Germany-they-found-refuge-at-HBCUs-in-the-Jim-Crow-south

And since the week’s photographs are devoted to stone, today’s images are from Jewish graves and KZ Buchenwald.

Thick as a Brick

Realizing that our worst fears about Betsy deVos’ plans for the public education system have come true make me want to bang my head against a brick wall.

Luckily I have numerous beautiful ones in my archives to choose from.

Then again I would like all of us to come down on her like a ton of bricks, to change directions, if possible.

Maybe someone can drop a brick that sufficiently weakens her ability to go through with her devious plans.

Maybe she’s a brick short of a load to really pull off segregation, which, in the end, is what all the republican plans are about.

Yes, the 90 degree heat is obviously melting my brain which is why my writing today bricked….

Read this, then, and admire the skill of builders who created the photographed walls by hand…

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/05/education-privatization-charters-public-schools-betsy-devos

Heart of Stone

As cold as stone, a heart of stone, trying to squeeze blood out of a stone – so many phrases come to mind when reading about the Trump administration’s plans and strategies. But just like developmental psychologist Alison Gopnick, our esteemed colleague at Berkeley, argued that comparing Trump to a 4-year old was an insult to children, I find that these catchy phrases are an insult to stones – some of the most beautiful sights to be found on this planet.

 

(Click on picture to open Gopnick’s NYT op-ed.)

During this week, then, I will offer stories that describe social and political issues that are related to hearts of stone or, alternatively, prove that there are always people who rock. They will be juxtaposed with photographs of stone in various forms and guises.

Let’s start with an interesting analysis how the GOP is using its anti- abortion rights playbook to further its voting rights agenda.  The key legal issue that can and will be applied to the suppression of voting rights are so called TRAP laws – something that enabled antiabortion forces to undermine the rights granted by Roe vs Wade. TRAP stands for Targeted regulation of abortion providers, and emerged from legal reasoning that claimed “Medical uncertainty underlying a statute is for resolution by legislatures, not the courts.” Claim some, any scientific uncertainty and the state can swoop in and legislate. The essay below spells out how that transfers to gerrymandering…..

https://thinkprogress.org/gop-anti-abortion-playbook-voting-rights-aa0ccac3304e

The photographs are from Enchanted Rock National landmark in Llano County, Texas.

Throwing

This week we had marching, hiking, flying, switching lanes and finally: throwing. As in throwing obfuscation out there, sowing confusion.

Despairing mermaid?

Meet Robert Proctor, a science historian at Stanford, who studies how people deliberately obfuscate evidence that undermines their claims and, more importantly, their bottom line. He coined the wonderful term agnotology, the study of deliberate propagation of ignorance. Now why would we, at this point in time, be so interested in willful acts of spreading confusion or deceit, to sell a product or win a favor? You tell me 🙂

Wooden statues at base of crane

The link below is a wonderful article about Proctor’s work – starting with an investigation of the actions of the cigarette industry, continuing with a look into climate change denial and a focus on the current administration’s skills in deliberately keeping people ignorant or worse, convincing them of things that are not true to fact.

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20160105-the-man-who-studies-the-spread-of-ignorance

 

Stained glass windows in a derelict building

Photographs are of some of the more confusing vistas I encountered over the last months and a face that mirrors confusion pretty accurately, in my opinion.

Now what?

Switching Lanes

If you google Wilfrid Voynich, Wikipedia lists his professions as: Revolutionary; Antique Book Seller. How’s that for an interesting shift in live(s)?  If you read up on him, he was switching lanes many, many times in his life, sometimes voluntarily, sometimes forced, in politics, relationships, (pre)occupations and more.

Voynich, Voynich you mutter, where do I know that name from? Most likely in connection with the famous  medieval manuscript that to this day has never been deciphered – a vellum codex filled with an unknown language, drawings of scientific matters, and all kinds of other riddles now residing at Yale. The articles below provide you, in turn, with the newest insights about the manuscript and a short history of Voynich’s life.

Regarding the former, I simply adore the idea that it was after all a hoax perpetrated by some person in the 14oos (carbon dating proved that the codex was indeed generated at that time) trying to make a quick gold ducat from some gullible aristocrat. The smartest cryptographers of our century have not been able to break the code, and the drawings do not concur with any realistic botanicals of our world. It sure fooled many, seemingly continues to fool, for a long time.

Secret Knowledge—or a Hoax?

Regarding the latter, the life of this Polish Leftie, it was one hell of a ride and certainly he’d be on my list of people to take to a deserted island.  (As, for that matter, would be his wife Ethel Boole Voynich, an amazing character in her own right, allied with Karl Marx’ offspring, supporter of revolutionary causes, novelist – here is a video of her on her 95th birthday  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYoxNOJ5fwk in 1959.) Check her out.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Traversing the Globe….

Just think of a life like this:

http://www.historyfiles.co.uk/FeaturesEurope/EasternPoland_Voynich01.htm

Short summary : Voynich was born in 1864 to a Polish family in Lithuania. While a student at the University of Moscow in 1884 graduating in chemistry, he joined the Polish nationalist movement. A year later, he was arrested and accused of engaging in revolutionary activity. He spent 18 months jailed in the Warsaw Citadel and was sentenced without trial to five years exile in Siberia. There he acquired a working knowledge of some 18 languages (!)  – and here I was proud that I have working knowledge of 4…..

He escaped into Mongolia in 1890, made his way through China and eventually reached Hamburg, Germany, boarding a ship to England.

He joined a circle of political exiles in London and worked for a period translating and publishing revolutionary propaganda for distribution in Russia; he abruptly stopped when his political mentor accidentally died; on recommendation of someone from the British museum who knew about his language skills, he opened a bookshop  in London and quickly gained a reputation as a resourceful and knowledgeable dealer. Unclear where his starting capital came from, although he has been rumored to be allied with wealthy female admirers. In any case, he discovered several astounding books, the Voynich manuscript included, and was convinced until his death that we would crack the code to figure out the black magic contained in it.

The flexibility, the stamina, the determination to survive, the smarts and the ability to adapt all truly impress me.

Please don’t touch. ART!

Hiking

Yesterday it was all about marching. Today it’s going to be about hiking.  Alas, not the real thing, given that trails are muddy streams and/or blocked by landslides wherever you look in this extraordinarily wet state this spring.

Instead, it is about what a Black woman experienced when hiking the Appalachian Trail last year. A young friend sent me the link in response to my “profiles in courage” some weeks back.  The article is long, revealing worlds most of us simply never encounter much less understand, heartbreaking and uplifting at the same time. Do yourself a favor and read it through to the glorious end. I felt that if only an iota of the gleaned knowledge sticks in my memory and helps me act differently in this world, there might be progress.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.outsideonline.com/2170266/solo-hiking-appalachian-trail-queer-black-woman

Photographs are of young people of my acquaintance. I experience them as quite resilient right now and try to imagine that that carries over into their young adulthood – I even have the occasional fantasy that things might have improved by the time they hit their twenties. Probably groundless optimism, or wishful thinking or both. I so want them to be not harmed permanently  by racism.  It almost hurts how much I want that.