Thursday, August 31, 2006
Katrina anniversary soundtrack
Randy Newman "Louisiana 1927" and the gorgeous Aaron Neville version, both MP3, (former via some strange opendir, where you can get loads and loads more New Orleans music, latter via Tom Flannery)
Bruce Springsteen "My City in Ruins" (RAM, via Cincheetah)
Willie Nelson "City of New Orleans" by Steve Goodman (MP3, via the wonderful Rocky52). This isn't my favourite Willie version of this song; he has a harsher more acoustic version which I prefer, where he opens a capella and then the music kicks in. In comparison, this version, though lovely, is a bit saccharine. Here's the John Prine and Steve Goodman version, MP3, via that same opendir.)
Planxty "The Lakes of Pontchartrain" (can't work out where I found the version I've got, but here's a lovely instrumental version on MIDI, via contemlator.com)
Nb: If anyone knows I am doing something illegal or unethical by posting these, let me know.
Tags: hurricane, katrina, Hurricane Katrina, hurricaneKatrina, New Orleans, Download, music, mp3, audio
You can't make an omelette without breaking eggs
George Galloway, writing, of course, from Berlin, says: "As the smoke clears from the battlefield of the 34-day war in Lebanon, it would be a mistake to count the cost only in fallen masonry and fresh graves." In other words, who gives a monkeys how many people were killed, so long as the "resistance" triumphs. The classic Leninist ends justifies means when History is on your side. What an evil man.
George also has the inside track on Hassan Nasrallah's prayers. "Nasrallah thanked God that the [Israeli] attack came when the resistance movement was prepared." Who cares about Lebanese deaths, so long as it was a good war.
One of my favourite things about Gorgeous George is his wonderful way with metaphor and simile. How about this: "The myth of invincibility is a souffle that cannot rise twice." (For more examples, see here.)
Final, truly unbelievable words: "If there is no settlement there can only be war, war and more war, until one day it is Tel Aviv which is on fire and the Israeli leaders' intransigence brings the whole state down on their heads... There is still time to choose peace. But make no mistake, with the victory of Hizbullah, a terrible beauty is born."
I liked this post from SCWR on this:
Today's Guardian hosts George Galloway on Hezbollah's 'victory': the usual brown-nosing of clerical fascists made even worse by his quoting from Yeats' Easter 1916, 'A terrible beauty is born.' More appropriate would be this from, irony of ironies, Remorse For Intemperate Speech, 'Great hatred, little room,/Maimed us at the start.'
Better still, this, from The Second Coming, 'The best lack all conviction, while the worst/ Are full of passionate intensity.' The abuse of lines from the greatest poet of the twentieth century by a fourth-rate demagogue ---a galling start to anyone's day.
Previous: Tommy Sheridan, what a twat; I am here to glorify the resistance, Hezbollah. I am here to glorify the leader, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah
Ségolène Royal: socialist in a bikini has the French sweating
Previous: Julia Bonk 1 & 2
Ay que muchacha
Wednesday, August 30, 2006
Tommy Sheridan - what a twat
- The SSP view here.
- The SWP view here (Check the photo illustrating the "great opportunity": Islamofascism's useful idiots draped in Hamas war garb. James Connolly and John MacLean would be grimacing in their graves).
Back again
Friday, August 11, 2006
My bit part in the foiled terror plot
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
Blair isn't our friend
On why Blair is a poor defender of liberal democracy against global extremism
Anti-war Israelis
It suits the movement's mis-leaders to keep the fact out public attention that many Israelis are against their country's attacks on Lebanon - just as it suits the supporters of the Olmert position. Thus Daniel in several recent posts has been highlighting the anti-war movement in Israel, indeed making the point that it is perfectly possible to be anti-war and Zionist. (On that issue, see Yossi Beilin on the test of the Zionist left)
On similar lines, Arieh sent me this JPost article, about the lack of publicity given to mass anti-war events in Israel.
Monday, August 07, 2006
All the News That Fits: Liberia’s Blackboard Headlines - New York Times
Via Jogo, who rightly calls this "a breath-takingly inspiring story".
Ali v Greer redux
Al-Guardian
(Previous: Representing Muslims, Germaine v Monica.)
War dispatches 2
I want an immediate end to the war in the Middle East. I want a ceasefire now. But I did not even consider going to the march at the weekend, because I knew that the majority of people there (at least the more vocal and visible ones) would actually want victory for the side in the war that started it with unprovoked attacks on civilian targets.
It seems the speakers weren't too extreme in comparison to some of the events, but the placards that filled the crowd - particularly those of inminds and the BMI (that's the British Muslim Initiative, a co-organiser, not British Midland airlines) - were pretty horrible.
For some confirmation of my views, see this article (via Arieh), this photo at Indymedia, this post by Eric, this post by Stephen Pollard, etc etc
For more positive accounts, check the Daily (Maybe).
The war in Israel
Ehud Olmert on the West's hypocrisy:
"Where do they get the right to preach to Israel?" Olmert said when asked about criticism from European capitals of Israeli military operations that have led to a heavy civilian toll.
"European countries attacked Kosovo and killed ten thousand civilians. Ten thousand! And none of these countries had to suffer before that from a single rocket.
"I'm not saying it was wrong to intervene in Kosovo. But please: Don't preach to us about the treatment of civilians."
Meanwhile, says Daniel, public opinion in Israel is turning heavily against the war.
The propaganda war
The deconstruction of a Reuters photographer at The Shape of Days (1 & 2) seems pretty convincing to me, whether or not you are convinced by other such deconstruction attempts...
Tags (lifted from Daniel to ease my life): Israel Israeli Israelisch Haaretz Yediot Ahronot Jerusalem Postpeace Hezbollah Hizbollah Hisbollah Lebanon Lebanese Libanesisch Libanon Hamas Militant Islamic Iran OlmertPeretzIDF
rockets Nasrallah Terror Fundamentalist
Friday, August 04, 2006
Little Richardjohn (vanity post 3)
Not many posts, but they're all good. This one - "Moral surrender: 9/11 attacks excused by Israel" - is pretty controversial.
Blowjobs for intellectuals (vanity post 2)
Pseudo-Marxist hack (vanity press 1)
Someone who puts that on their front page wins a lot of credit in my books, making me regret my slur slightly! Good on you Snowball.What they say
Gay Palestine
(via Arieh)
Mel Gibson's latest movie
Arrests are routinely videotaped. That is why, on one of those American TV cop-shows, viewers saw police tape of George Jones being stopped and arrested for drunk driving. Jones is disgusting, ugly, belligerant. And yet this tape wound up on the public air.
I'm not saying it's necessarily a good thing that this happens. In the case of George Jones, I don't agree that the public needs to see the pathetic side of this great artist. It does nothing but demean him in a moment of degradation.
But I do wonder why Mel Gibson's arrest-tape will be supressed. I can think of one good reason that has nothing to with "special treatment." And that is, the tape, if released, will ultimately wind up on the Internet, widely linked to, emailed to millions, available on youtube.com ... a horrible prospect. Horrible because of what Mel Gibson is saying on it. I do not think it would be good for public order, or public decency, to send this tape out on an irreversible trajectory into the digital universe.
(The story)
War dispatches
Tsumami of anti-semitism
Apocalyptic Muslim Jew-hatred
The American Thinker: Apocalyptic Muslim Jew-hatred
Analysing jihad
The Truth about the attack on the UN
Jogo sez:
Here is the truth, the florking TRUTH, exactly as the Israelis have said it
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Real socialists versus Respect 3
Previous: Real socialists vs Respect no.1 & no.2
Flavor Country
Worth checking out. Currently posting on Mel Gibson, Ethiopia's unnoticed invasion of Somalia, and Lebanon.
Soundtrack to the final extermination of the Israeli people
1. Qana draws a line between good and bad advocacy of Israel. I hope (I've been a good advocate - see here.)
2. MP3 players and the privatization of public spaces describes the purchase of an IPod Nano, and bigs up someone not very politically correct in our corner of the so-called "decent" left: Gilad Atzmon. I've attacked Atzmon several times on this blog (you can google the links if you have energy), but I have to agree musiK is a great album, a fwe tracks of which are on my IPod and ease the pain of the already privatized public spaces I move thru on my Sarf London journey to work. (And Will says it's OK to be this incorrect.)
Tuesday, August 01, 2006
Christians, Muslims and other reprehensible people
Jim again: Clerical fascists at the Palestine Solidarity Campaign.
Bush the fundamentalist: Karen Armstrong talks rubbish, as Shuggy rightly points out.
Previously: Praising Hezbollah, Books burning, rockets falling
Not Little England
Not Little England: News and Comment by Mat Bowles and Paul R. Jones
Celebrity Big Brother, West Bank edition
It's not known exactly how much Channel 4 viewers' money ended up going to them; estimates at the time varied from £30,000 to £100,000. As for Galloway's fee itself, rumoured to be around £60,000, that was to be given to Respect to fund a couple of new staff members, or so Gorgeous said. No such donation was recorded by the Electoral Commission in the first quarter of the year; no doubt the cash will show up in the second quarter's figures. After all, Gorgeous wouldn't lose charity cash... would he?
Tags: celebrities, celebrity big brother, big brother, celebrity, entertainment, television, tv
philistine, sanctimonious, and disgraceful
1. Salman Rushdie strikes back at Greer:
'You sanctimonious philistine' - Rushdie v Greer, the sequel
Good stuff Salman!
2. Natasha Walker in the Graun makes some sensible points:
3. One thing I want to add, in case my posts on this are being read gleefully by those who like to hate Muslims, is that the protesters are very, very different people from those who burnt Satanic Verses. The anti-Monica Ali bigots are secular Bangladeshis, people who often protest against political Islam and Jamaati activity, the good guys in the war on terror.The bad thing about this controversy is not only that one side is barking up the wrong tree, but also that the media have followed the barking of certain voices to the exclusion of other voices in this community. I'm not saying that the troublemakers are purely created by the media. Obviously, and regrettably, Abdus Salique, who threatened to burn the book at a protest, is real enough, as are others who want to suppress the film. But these are not the only voices worth listening to as representatives of the community. Journalists and commentators have to think again about why we choose whom we do to represent a community.
Pola Uddin, the only Bengali woman in the House of Lords, was indignant when I asked her why we weren't hearing more women's voices in this debate: "Our voices aren't sought! The media are not interested in in us."
They are driven by a different version of identitarianism: nationalism, or perhaps more strictly "infra-nationalism". They are Sylheti nationalists, and Sylheti nationalism is all about resentment against Dhaka people. In other words, this is not the clash of civilisations, but the narcissism of minor differences.
URGENT APPEAL FROM LEBANESE TEACHERS' UNIONS
The Education International, representing teachers' unions around the world, has issued an urgent action appeal in support of requests for humanitarian assistance from two Lebanese teachers' unions.
LabourStart is assisting by providing a secure online way to donate in your own
currency using your credit or debit card. Please give generously today:
http://www.labourstart.org/docs/en/000351.html
