a General Theory of Rubbish: Apologia? Fuck off
Deposing Saddam Hussein remains something we should be proud to have done. Solidarity with post-liberation Iraq cannot be abandoned now.
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
You're confusing me with someone who gives a...
Drink-soaked Trotskyite Popinjays For WAR: Galloway: a man of charm and wit
Nice story about George Galloway. True or not?
Nice story about George Galloway. True or not?
More stuff like this:
GalloWatch
Googlism
Brockley is a lively community in south east London, and is now, apparently, called Crofton Park
Bob is dead. Long live Bob.
Bobism is entirely embedded within this maxim.
Googlism is visiting you.
(via CroydonLife)
Bob is dead. Long live Bob.
Bobism is entirely embedded within this maxim.
Googlism is visiting you.
(via CroydonLife)
More stuff like this:
Sarf London,
SE4,
vanity press
A unified stupidity theory on terrorism
A great post from The Yorkshire Ranter.
More stuff like this:
Anti-Totalitarianism
Saturday, October 28, 2006
It's getting hot in here, so let's...
Jeff Weintraub manages to identify the good as well as the bad news in the story that Australian cleric Sheik Taj Din al-Hilali think women are asking to be raped if they don't wear the veil.
Then he adds as a post script:
Then he adds as a post script:
According to the Sheikh, atheists and Jews and Christians (including me, IMeanwhile, Shazia Mirza, writing in the New Statesman, worries that, if she dies a virgin, she may end up as one of the 72 who have to sleep with one of the suicide bombers...
guess) will all wind up in hell, "and not part-time, for eternity," since we are
"the worst in God's creation." On the other hand, there will be a lot of
attractive women there, too, since "Satan sees women as half his
soldiers."
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Women, fundamentalism and freedom (event in New Cross tomorrow)
TOMORROW 26TH OCTOBER
Xenos Seminar - Religious Absolutism / Antinomian Lives: Key perspectives
on women, fundamentalism and freedom, 5.00pm, 26 October 2006, Goldsmiths
College, New Cross, London (location)
Religious Absolutism / Antinomian Lives
Key perspectives on women, fundamentalism and freedom - a seminar
5.00pm, 26 October 2006, Room MB 137A,
Goldsmiths College, New Cross, London SE14 6NW.
All welcome - please register and reserve a place by emailing
xenos@gold.ac.uk.
What's God got to do with it? Antinomian resistance and secular feminism
GITA SAHGAL, Women Against Fundamentalism
The Double Discourse: 'Moderate' Muslims and their audiences
CASSANDRA BALCHIN, Women Living Under Muslim Laws
Claiming Spaces: Muslim women speak out
MASJALIZA HAMZA, Sisters in Islam
Faith in the State? Multiculturalism and minority women's rights in the UK
PRAGNA PATEL, Southall Black Sisters
Xenos Seminar - Religious Absolutism / Antinomian Lives: Key perspectives
on women, fundamentalism and freedom, 5.00pm, 26 October 2006, Goldsmiths
College, New Cross, London (location)
Religious Absolutism / Antinomian Lives
Key perspectives on women, fundamentalism and freedom - a seminar
5.00pm, 26 October 2006, Room MB 137A,
Goldsmiths College, New Cross, London SE14 6NW.
All welcome - please register and reserve a place by emailing
xenos@gold.ac.uk.
What's God got to do with it? Antinomian resistance and secular feminism
GITA SAHGAL, Women Against Fundamentalism
The Double Discourse: 'Moderate' Muslims and their audiences
CASSANDRA BALCHIN, Women Living Under Muslim Laws
Claiming Spaces: Muslim women speak out
MASJALIZA HAMZA, Sisters in Islam
Faith in the State? Multiculturalism and minority women's rights in the UK
PRAGNA PATEL, Southall Black Sisters
We answer to the name of liberals
Jeff Weintraub: A Manifesto for American Liberalism - Todd Gitlin & Bruce Ackerman
Jeff passes on Gitlin and Ackerman's important statement - but with reservations. I have even stronger reservations, which maybe I'll blog about some day, but this is certainly worth reading.
(Kind of follows on from this post yesterday)
Jeff passes on Gitlin and Ackerman's important statement - but with reservations. I have even stronger reservations, which maybe I'll blog about some day, but this is certainly worth reading.
(Kind of follows on from this post yesterday)
More stuff like this:
Anti-Totalitarianism,
Decent left
I love Beirut because I see a girl in a Mini skirt and her sister in a Tchador.
Global Voices Online » Lebanon: Communities and Contradictions
This is a really nice post, with links to lotsa Lebanese blogs, including Free Cedar (from which the title of this post is taken), and The Jews of Lebanon (which does what it says on the tin).
This is a really nice post, with links to lotsa Lebanese blogs, including Free Cedar (from which the title of this post is taken), and The Jews of Lebanon (which does what it says on the tin).
More stuff like this:
Meta-blogging,
Middle East
Controversial ex-barmaid etc
Today's best referrals, Google searchs for:
- controversial ex-barmaid
- Jodie Marsh facts - I'm only the 80-somethingeth hit, but when did you ever get the facts here?
- Judea Elephant and castle - Neatly combining my interests in the Levant and South London (which is kind of England's Levant, no?). But what were they looking for?
More stuff like this:
googlism,
Meta-blogging,
Porn,
Sarf London
Tuesday, October 24, 2006
Links for the day, American edition (or: Left is right and right is left)
Conservative Realism or Disingenuous Callousness?
- David Corn in The Nation on conservative "realists" and liberal types looking for, but failing to find, common ground "beyond neo-conservatism". An indictment of any part of the left that it is even interested in finding common ground with the Kissengerites. (Worst offenders: the LRB and all its fans who embrace Kissinger devotees Wald and Mearsheimer.)
The Reality-Based Community: Appeasement
- Mark Kleiman pondering the Bush regime's crypto-doveish freeing of a Mahdi Army thug at the behest of theocratic fascist Moqtada al-Sadr. Appeasement? Kissengerite "realism"? Good PR on the Shi-ite street? You decide.
Barbara's Blog: Is It Safe to Go Back to Church?
- Barbara Ehrenreich reaches out on behalf of the left to America's Christian majority. About time, I say!
- David Corn in The Nation on conservative "realists" and liberal types looking for, but failing to find, common ground "beyond neo-conservatism". An indictment of any part of the left that it is even interested in finding common ground with the Kissengerites. (Worst offenders: the LRB and all its fans who embrace Kissinger devotees Wald and Mearsheimer.)
The Reality-Based Community: Appeasement
- Mark Kleiman pondering the Bush regime's crypto-doveish freeing of a Mahdi Army thug at the behest of theocratic fascist Moqtada al-Sadr. Appeasement? Kissengerite "realism"? Good PR on the Shi-ite street? You decide.
Barbara's Blog: Is It Safe to Go Back to Church?
- Barbara Ehrenreich reaches out on behalf of the left to America's Christian majority. About time, I say!
More stuff like this:
American beauty,
Faith and reason,
Neo-cons,
realism versus radicalism,
US politricks
Links for today
Tommy Sheridan etc
1820: Solidarity, Autonomy, Power and Confusion - Frances Curran on the SSP/Solidarity bust-up, and the SWP's role in it.
Hungary
Harry's Place: 1956
Woolly Days: Blood on the streets of Budapest
Cuba/internet freedom
ICE: Internet Censorship Explorer » RSF Cuba Report
China/internet freedom
Global Voices Online Hong Kong: GFW in HK?
Tags: tommy sheridan, hungary, cuba, china, censorship, Internet freedom
More stuff like this:
Chinese imperialism,
Cuba,
Freedom's flame,
SheridanWatch,
Stalinism
Monday, October 23, 2006
Hungary 2006
A corrupt regime, led by someone who has admitted lying to "win" elections in a sick parody of democracy. Parliament square closed. Media kept confined to the choreographed, Stalinist-style official celebrations: uniformed soldiers highstepping in fascistic formations to officially mark the anniversary of the 1956 Uprising in Hungary. A thousand peaceful protestors shot at.
Breaking news from the BBC here.
Breaking news from the BBC here.
Tag: hungary
More stuff like this:
Freedom's flame
Hungary 1956
Some reading for today, the 50th anniversary of the Hungarian Uprising. First, two superb blog posts:
And, from the archive:
And, from the archive:
- Peter Fryer's Hungarian Tragedy - Probably the key test, from an eyewitness shaken out of Stalinism by his experience of the uprising and its crushing
- Andy Anderson Hungary '56
- The Hungarian Revolt
- Council Communist Pamphlet
- Cold War History Project
- Mike Haynes at IS
- Socialist Party archives
- International Viewpoint: The Crushing of the Hungarian revolution
Tag: Hungary
Keywords: Stalinism, Soviet invasion, Budapest, tanks, tankies, Hungarian revolution, Hungarian uprising
Keywords: Stalinism, Soviet invasion, Budapest, tanks, tankies, Hungarian revolution, Hungarian uprising
More stuff like this:
Anti-Totalitarianism,
Freedom's flame,
Stalinism
Galloway, Sheridan and their mis-named parties

I managed to miss the fact that Respect [sic] had its annual conference last weekend. No doubt a demonstration of deliberative democracy at its finest.
Dave's Part notes a report saying that Respect, led by someone who has, shall we say, sailed close to the wind on matters of libel, perjury, truth, that sort of thing, will not support Tommy Sheridan, Working Class Hero, if the latter is charged with perjury. Hmm. Pot/kettle/black moment, no? Dave asks what the SWP, who are the majority of "members" of both Sheridan's new scab party Solidarity [sic] and Galloway's outfit, where will they jump? "For, as the Bible makes plain in Matthew 6:24, no man can serve two masters."
Meanwhile, Dave also notes the Respect logo competition, which the Popinjays have picked up on. The image above is Jew 90's entry. More entries here, here and here.
Also read: Dave's Part: no respect
Previous: We are all Janjaweed; Conspiracy theory and authority-love; Cavorting; Galloway the racial nationalist; Making an omelette; Sheridan; I come to glorify...
Tags: Tommy Sheridan, George Galloway
More stuff like this:
GalloWatch,
RespectWatch,
SheridanWatch,
The New Stalinists
Freedom of the press under attack - Bangladeshi journalist Salah Choudhury faces the death penalty
Jeff Weintraub: Freedom of the press under attack - Bangladeshi journalist Salah Choudhury faces the death penalty
Read more here, and then take action!
This is not just a tale of woe, but also a call to action. Over the past decade there have been several significant cases involving the persecution, arrest, and/or or prosecution of writers and intellectuals where international attention has helped to avert, or at least moderate, unjust and repressive outcomes. Some obvious examples include Said Eddin Ibrahim in Egypt, Orhan Pamuk in Turkey, Ramin Jahanbegloo in Iran (where the outcome was far from ideal, but a lot better than it could have been), Kamal Sayid Qadir in Iraqi Kurdistan, etc. International response to these cases, and international solidarity with the victims, are obviously very important to help preserve some space for freedom of expression and to encourage possibilities for political liberty and political sanity.
The case of the outspoken Bangladeshi journalist Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury, now on trial facing a trumped-up charge of treason with a possible death penalty, is another important challenge of this sort. Bangladesh is generally considered a relatively "moderate" Muslim country, but it is also one in which radical Islamist parties and movements are gaining increasing influence. One sign of these tendencies is the increasingly precarious position of independent journalists, epitomized by the treatment of Choudhury. He has faced years of persecution, including physical attacks and death threats as well as criminal prosecution, for his 'crimes' of criticizing Islamist radicalism and advocating reconciliation with Christians, Jews, and Israel.
Read more here, and then take action!
More stuff like this:
Communalism,
Cosmopolitan intent,
Freedom's flame
Bad faith over Korea
Statement on North Korean Nuclear Test|21Oct06|Socialist Worker: "The nuclear test is the culmination of five years of the US administration's policy towards North Korea."
Read that again. The nuclear test is the culmination of what? Of the escalation of totalitarian North Korea's militaristic culture, war-like posturing and long-held nuclear ambitions? No, of American foreign policy of course!
(It's not just the SWP. Here's someone else who thinks the same thing: Bill Weinberg says "Bush's intransigence essentially prompted North Korea to cross the nuclear threshold".)
Read that again. The nuclear test is the culmination of what? Of the escalation of totalitarian North Korea's militaristic culture, war-like posturing and long-held nuclear ambitions? No, of American foreign policy of course!
(It's not just the SWP. Here's someone else who thinks the same thing: Bill Weinberg says "Bush's intransigence essentially prompted North Korea to cross the nuclear threshold".)
Tag: north korea
More stuff like this:
Fellow travellers,
The New Stalinists
Left trainspotting: Venezuela and Iran
1. I came across this comment from JimJay at a StroppyBlog post on Venezuela.
(Socialist Action, by the way, support Ken Livingstone, think Israel is a terrorist state, and defend China from capitalist attacks. Socialist Appeal also trade under the name In Defence of Marxism, which would be better named "Radically Distort Marxism by Thinking that Stalinist States, though "Deformed", Remain Workers' States", or "Put People off Marxism by Putting out one of the Most Turgid Websites on the Left".)
2. International Viewpoint, the organ of Reunified Fourth International, actually has some articles worth reading about Iran, Islam, Islamism and Islamophobia:
My understanding is that the [Socialist Action-led Venezuela Information Centre (VIC)] calls for defending democracy in Venezuela and wants to mirror the method of the Cuba Solidarity Campaign (nice music, Tory peer supporter, etc., low level of demands) and the [Socialist Appeal-led Hands of Venezuela (HoV)] call for solidarity with the 'Bolivarian Revolution', the revolutionary union UNT and have a far higher / more left wing set of demands and more international links (including in Venezuela)Great piece of analysis!
HoV has branches and activists, VIC seems to be made up of top brass. Also HoV seem to be willing to criticise Chavez when they think it's due (although they do support Chavez even though they express worries about particular things, eg foreign policy) VIC only want to get their picture taken with him
Personally if I had to choose one it would be HoV, particularly as VIC seem to delight in calling meetings at the same time as their "rival". Having said that I wouldn't advise people NOT to go to VIC stuff...
(Socialist Action, by the way, support Ken Livingstone, think Israel is a terrorist state, and defend China from capitalist attacks. Socialist Appeal also trade under the name In Defence of Marxism, which would be better named "Radically Distort Marxism by Thinking that Stalinist States, though "Deformed", Remain Workers' States", or "Put People off Marxism by Putting out one of the Most Turgid Websites on the Left".)
2. International Viewpoint, the organ of Reunified Fourth International, actually has some articles worth reading about Iran, Islam, Islamism and Islamophobia:
More stuff like this:
Chavez,
Iran,
Islam,
Left sectariana,
Middle East,
Queer,
The New Stalinists
Friday, October 20, 2006
MEMRI, Apple and Islam
MEMRI, the site which monitors Middle Eastern news sources, is often attacked by anti-Zionists and fellow travellers of militant Islam for being a biased source. I usually reject that charge, as it is a useful resource, passing on stuff that would otherwise slip thru' the net for non-Arabic speakers. No one has managed to show that it mis-translates, simply that it shows Arabic sources saying horrible things.
This time, though, I agree with the critics. Here's a dispatch from MEMRI:
And, of course, it gets picked up. "Muslims slam Apple" blah blah blah. More ammunition in the clash of civilisations. Except, of course, hardly any Muslims think this. See this response on Apple Gazette.
(I heard the story verbally, then read this at City of Brass.)
This time, though, I agree with the critics. Here's a dispatch from MEMRI:
On October 10, 2006, an Islamist website posted a message alerting Muslims to what it claims is a new insult to Islam. According to the message, the cube-shaped building which is being constructed in New York City, on Fifth Avenue between 58th and 59th Streets in midtown Manhattan, is clearly meant to provoke Muslims. The fact that the building resembles the Ka'ba (see picture below), is called "Apple Mecca," is intended to be open 24 hours a day like the Ka'ba, and moreover, contains bars selling alcoholic beverages, constitutes a blatant insult to Islam. The message urges Muslims to spread this alert, in hope that "Muslims will be able to stop the project."AN Islamist website. No attribution.
And, of course, it gets picked up. "Muslims slam Apple" blah blah blah. More ammunition in the clash of civilisations. Except, of course, hardly any Muslims think this. See this response on Apple Gazette.
(I heard the story verbally, then read this at City of Brass.)
More stuff like this:
Islam
Thursday, October 19, 2006
Chomsky on the Legitimacy of Israel
Regular readers will no I am no Chomsky fan, but this is kind of interesting:
For me, the point is simple. EITHER you recognise that all nation states are based on violence and exclusion and are essentially racist - in which case Israel is just a state like any other, no worse, and Palestinian nationalism tends to the same thing - OR you think that nation states are broadly a good thing and national self-determination is a right - in which case you have to accept the Israeli state and Jewish nationalism.
Interviewer: There has been much debate regarding the legitimacy of the Israeli state. To what extent is Israel a legitimate, or an illegitimate, state?
Chomsky: I don’t think that the notion of legitimacy of a state means very much. Is the United States a legitimate state? It’s based on genoice; it conquered half of Mexico. What makes it legitimate? The way the international system is set up, states have certain rights; that has nothing to do with their legitimacy. Every state you can think of is based on violence, repression, expulsion, and all sorts of crimes. And the state system itself has no inherent legitimacy. It’s just an institutional form that developed and that was imposed with plenty of violence. The quetion of legitimacy just doesn’t arise. There is an international order in which it is essentially agreed that states have certain rights, but that provides them with no legitimacy, Israel or anyone else.
For me, the point is simple. EITHER you recognise that all nation states are based on violence and exclusion and are essentially racist - in which case Israel is just a state like any other, no worse, and Palestinian nationalism tends to the same thing - OR you think that nation states are broadly a good thing and national self-determination is a right - in which case you have to accept the Israeli state and Jewish nationalism.
More stuff like this:
ChomskyWatch,
Cosmopolitan intent,
Izzy/Pal,
Marxish,
patriotism and nationalism
Help Mirza Tahir Hussain
UK Commentators on Mirza Tahir Hussain
A good cause.
UPDATE: Mirza has been given a two-month reprieve, so as Pakistan doesn't have to embaras Price Charles.
A good cause.
UPDATE: Mirza has been given a two-month reprieve, so as Pakistan doesn't have to embaras Price Charles.
More stuff like this:
Islam
Notes from the Island
I've been a bit slack about Sarf London posting lately. This caught my eye.
Transpontine: Notes from the Island:
Transpontine: Notes from the Island:
"Notes from the Island is a project exploring the mysteries of the traffic island at the junction of New Cross Road and Queens Road: 'The Island welcomes everybody. Every day many visit and thousands pass close by, though few notice it. It is a place of brief encounters, of buried secrets, of moments glimpsed in rear-view mirrors. A brief pause on a journey. The Island has no border controls, no prisons, no buying and selling. Is it a utopia? Perhaps it could be, a sanctuary of non-interference amidst the surveillance cameras'."
More stuff like this:
Sarf London,
SE8/SE14,
urbanism
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
More juice than Andrew
More stuff like this:
Meta-blogging,
vanity press
Tom Friedman on the Jihadi media offensive
The American Thinker (busting the NYTimes Select wall) posts this Tom Friedman articlet. Worth reading.
And, while I'm here, a little anti-boycott snippet.
And, while I'm here, a little anti-boycott snippet.
More stuff like this:
Boycott,
Decent left,
Iraq,
Islam,
War on terror
Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury
This blog has long been a supporter of Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury, the incredibly brave Bangladeshi journalist who has had the temerity to say one or two positive things about Israel, thus getting him put on trial and attacked on the street by lynch mobs.
Please support him! The links below will tell you more about the case and how to do so.
More from: Terry Glavin (1 & 2); Norm; IFEX; MidEastWeb; Israpundit; Carl in Jerusalem; NeoZionoid; Sepia Mutiny; B&W; American Thinker; Peejz; City of Brass.
Please support him! The links below will tell you more about the case and how to do so.
More from: Terry Glavin (1 & 2); Norm; IFEX; MidEastWeb; Israpundit; Carl in Jerusalem; NeoZionoid; Sepia Mutiny; B&W; American Thinker; Peejz; City of Brass.
More stuff like this:
Freedom's flame
Veil fetishism 2
I work at a university and the new intake of students arrived a couple of weeks ago. I don’t have much contact with students, but it has struck me how many more students there are this year wearing hijabs – but, so far, no veils. This week, I’ve seen two young Asian women wearing headscarves plus very tight, figure-hugging black stretch denim jeans. What’s that all about?
Looking around, I came across this book:
“Whether seen as erotic or romantic, a symbol of oppression or a sign of piety, modesty, or purity, the veil carries thousands of years of religious, sexual, social, and political significance. Using examples from both the East and West—including Persian poetry, American erotica, Iranian and Indian films, and government-sanctioned posters—Faegheh Shirazi shows that the veil has become a ubiquitous symbol, utilized as a profitable marketing tool for diverse enterprises, from Penthouse magazine to Saudi advertising companies.”Anyway, a good article in The Guardian by Ziaba Malik on what it is to wear a niqab for the day. The BBC provides a useful little graphic on the veil and headscarves, to help you distinguish between the different types. I love public service broadcasting!
Update: One more thing! Loads of leftish people seem to make the comparison between the excessive covering up represented by the veil or scarf and the excessive uncovering represented by bare midriffs or lads' mags. "I find the amount of female flesh on display offensive Mr Straw" is more or less the line I've read again and again in places like The Guardian from people like Mike Marqusee. Yet another form of bankrupt moral equivalence.
Update 3 (March 07): I'm getting over 100 hits a day most days now, but still no searches for yarmulke porn...
More stuff like this:
googlism,
Islam,
Meta-blogging,
Porn,
vanity press
The Israeli ban on Palestinian students
ENGAGE is leading opposition to the outrageous ban on Palestinian students attending Israeli universities. Calls to boycott Israeli Jewish academics (apart from those who pass a McCarthyite political test) are a viscious attack on academic freedom. But de jure or de facto bans of Palestinians from Israeli universities are a much more serious attack on academic freedom. Engage are to be congratulated for bringing this to wider attention in the UK.
Their post gives some practical suggestions for solidarity.
The Israeli universities are also taking a strong stand on this issue. See here.
Their post gives some practical suggestions for solidarity.
The Israeli universities are also taking a strong stand on this issue. See here.
Now even Yanks claim UK asylum
Jogo, our American correspondant, writes,
Here comes a new bunch of bogus asylum-seekers. Let's see what your "human-rights" organizations have to say about them.
More stuff like this:
Jogo
Andrew Adonis on Jim Callaghan and education
Particularly resonant was this quote from Callaghan’s education advisor:
"I said that what was worrying most parents was not the ideological structure of the system - grammar schools versus comprehensives - but [something] more basic: will their children be taught to read and write and to add up; [will they] be protected from bullying and intimidation; will basic educational skills and discipline be maintained and some social values inculcated?"I have argued before on this site for the value of a decent local school, against the ideologically motivated extension of so-called “choice” – including the choice for faith schools.
So it grated when Adonis concluded that
“A continued transformation of secondary education is needed to bring [higher and more equal educational achievement] about: hence trust schools, academies and the extension of specialist schools.”To me, these are precisely ideological initiatives, which have showed no evidence so far of working to deliver better and fairer outcomes for
See also: Andrew Brown on integrating schools
Previous: Blair's Thatcherism; Neo-liberalism's assault on civic culture
Update: Daniel on faith schools
Keywords: faith school, faith schools, education policy, socialism
Tag: New Labour
More stuff like this:
New Labour,
UK politricks
Fairwell Archontan
Archontan is becoming an archive rather than a live blog, but is still worth delving into - there's all sorts of meaty stuff to chew on.
More stuff like this:
Meta-blogging
Monday, October 16, 2006
The HIV Libya trial
Declan Butler, reporter gives the lowdown on this important human rights test case
More stuff like this:
Dictators,
Freedom's flame,
Libya
The Lancet report
Drink-soaked Trotskyite Popinjays For WAR: The Lancet report
Important analysis by Shuggy of Iraq death figure scholarship
Added: More from 'Aqoul
Important analysis by Shuggy of Iraq death figure scholarship
Added: More from 'Aqoul
More stuff like this:
Iraq
Is Your Country a Democracy?
More stuff like this:
Anti-Totalitarianism
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Hungary in Sarf London
Commemoration of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 on Thursday, November 2 at 5.30pm in Room 143 of the Richard Hoggart building of Goldsmiths College, Lewisham Way, New Cross, London, SE14. The meeting is sponsored by Revolutionary History journal and the London Socialist Historians Group.
There's also good stuff about the anniversaries of Cable St, Suez and Hungary '56 in the brand new issue of Jewish Socialist (not [yet] available on-line).
There's also good stuff about the anniversaries of Cable St, Suez and Hungary '56 in the brand new issue of Jewish Socialist (not [yet] available on-line).
More stuff like this:
Stalinism
Veil fetishism
I can't be bothered to blog about the veil, although obviously I should. So, some quick ones:
- For once, I liked a Lenin's Tomb post: Veil Fetishism
- Scribbles talks sense
- John McConnell panders shamelessly
- Vikram Dodd wilfully misses the point (like most liberals)
That's enough for now eh?
By the way, sorry about my relative absence lately. I've been really busy at work and my computer is ill.
More stuff like this:
Islam
Men in Tights
The Daily (Maybe): Wild bees and the redistribution of wealth
I liked this piece about the new Robin Hood series on telly.
I liked this piece about the new Robin Hood series on telly.
More stuff like this:
Marxish
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