miércoles, 1 de diciembre de 2010

Julian Assange and democracy

The U.S. seems sadly determined to end its experiment with democracy and freedom of speech. Bruce Luske thinks it will end formally when Sarah Palin is finally elected president. In my opinion the process began some time ago, but now with all the bululu over the Wikileaks its demise is coming closer.




You can’t conduct democracy in secret.

We should be thanking Julian Assange, but instead we act like soap-opera protagonists where everyone has a secret past that (s)he will fight to the death to keep in the closet. We are prepared to accept all sorts of dirty tricks to keep everything hush-hush.

The dirty trick of the day is to accuse Assange of sexual misconduct. Good grief! They have tried this one before, for example with Al Gore, who was accused of the same offence to neutralize his campaigning for the environment and later acquitted. Luckily Gore has not lost his authoritativeness as one of our moral voices.

Assange was accused of sexual misconduct by Swedish prosecutors as he was seeking legal protection for his web site in Sweden. As we have seen, it’s an old trick. A prosecutor issued an arrest warrant for him late Friday. Dean Takahashi comments, “Then, a day later, a higher-ranking prosecutor rescinded the warrant, saying there were no grounds to suspect Assange of rape. The prosecutor who took over the case yesterday had more information and that was why the earlier prosecutor was over-ruled, according to a spokeswoman for the Swedish Prosecution Authority. “

Now, in addition Wikileaks informs us that Amazon will no longer host their page.

More democracy.

I suppose Assange knew the risks when he started all this, just like soldiers know what may happen to them. That’s why more people with troubled consciences and awareness don’t blow their whistles. But Obama and Hillary were once the people who said they would save democracy. How they are deceiving us now! Both by working in secret and striking out at the whistle blowers.

GW Bush must be so proud of them. Who among us are outraged?

martes, 15 de junio de 2010

"Bloddy Sunday" and Mr. Julian Assange




he British have just given us all an important lesson. They have admitted that the infamous “Bloody Sunday” was a crime committed by their troops against a civilian population.

The U.S. has a long way to go. We have made an institution of state secrets to the point that we allow the most atrocious crimes to go unmentioned. The CIA and the military hide the most horrible skeletons and produce the most terrorific weapons. In their arsenals there are poisons, diseases, and robots that kill from far away. They murder people, imprison them without trial, and make them disappear.


Source of Mr. Assang's
protrait


A very heroic man Mr. Julian Assange, the founder of “Wilileaks”, has had to hide because they might kill him for telling the truth. One of his whistle-blowers, Mr. Bradley Manning, is now in jail for releasing a video of the U.S. army gunning down innocent people from a helicopter in Iraq.

What would happen if suddenly the President were to open the windows and let the sunshine in? They say it’s the best disinfectant. The government has become like a twisted old man writhing in his lies. Can you imagine the sense of release that all Americans would feel?

Of course, after the initial pain of facing the trauma.

Electronic resourse:
Ornate letters: http://retrokat.com/medieval/leil.htm

sábado, 10 de abril de 2010

A good example!



Source of this picture, "Pictures of the week",
Time Magazine


This is what they should do to all of them. The ones pictured here are illegal weapons that were destroyed in Nairobi, Kenya.

domingo, 28 de marzo de 2010

Afghanistan and negotiation



source of image

The Afghan hostilities must be re-formulated. They have become known collectively as an interminable war that needs an “exit strategy”. The problem is that it has been mainly conceived in terms of armed conflict.

It must be accepted, however, that in addition to armed attacks, the coalition has been involved in much constructive activity: the building of schools and hospitals, health-related prevention programs, the inclusion of women in education and political participation, and the institution of a certain democratic, elective and governing political process.

But one crucial element is lacking: negotiation with the Taliban and the Al Qaeda. They exist as a loosely knit amalgamation of discontented men and women, and they won’t be bombed (or wished) out of existence. There are a number of associated groups, probably also weakly-linked clusters of individuals, that acknowledge and identify with the same angry sentiments. Often they have violent and intransigent strategies and beliefs, and they have an undeniable influence in the modern Muslim world. It is important to talk to their representatives.

When you don’t talk to the “enemy” you attribute more power to it than it really has.

There is even evidence that Al Qaeda was invented as a concrete organization; it was part of a U.S. strategy in 2001 to prosecute Bin Laden in his absence. However, what Al Qaeda lacks in any solid organizational reality, it retains as a highly-charged emotional and conceptual rationalization for angry and violent gestures against what must also be called a non-existent enemy: The West. This is all a terrible case of objectifying a number of fantasies. The dead on both sides, however, are very real.

In the dark Bush-years of U.S. politics, any conversation with an American leader was considered a “reward” to be administered like M&Ms in Skinner-type behavioral experiments. This lead to the isolation of the administration’s personnel and the aggrandizement of their own self images.

Negotiation is a tool. You don’t negotiate with people you already agree with; it is an activity you carry out with people who believe differently and who have dissimilar interests, even when you believe the “other side’s” way of thinking is dark and dangerous. In fact, the importance of finding the middle ground increases when divergences are the greatest.



Nik Gowing, a well known reporter, interviewer, and debate leader on the BBC, recently lead one of the “World Debate” sessions with a discussion of the Afghan conflict. He was accompanied by diverse representatives and stakeholders of this multi- faceted struggle.

He ended with a comment that I will paraphrase from memory:

We have to rename what is happening in Afghanistan; it should no longer be called a war. It needs another qualifier.

viernes, 26 de marzo de 2010

Dennis Kucinich and peace



n an article titled "Give Peace a Chance", Mat Bivans mentions a bill in Congress to establish a Department of Peace in the United States Government. The bill was introduced by Dennis Kucinich . The New York times (I don’t have the reference) referred to it as a proposition emanating from the “radical Left”.

Good grief!! Why is peace a radical idea? Why is it associated with the Left? Don’t the Republicans want peace, too? Someone should ask them directly.

martes, 2 de marzo de 2010

From whence the fear of the U.S. Democrats?


ince when does bipartisanship signify democratic process? The electorate chooses which representatives it wants in Congress, and the winning majority certainly doesn’t have to cajole the minority party into agreeing with those principles that the voters used when they picked them. Frankly I do not understand the Democrats! See this article by Peter Grier.

domingo, 28 de febrero de 2010

And then there's the one about Saint Peter...




This is a wonderful Saint Peter I photographed in a local gallery in the high Miranda hills to the south of Caracas. The lady who takes care of the exhibits puts different things in the hand that holds they keys to heaven. This time it’s some kind of branch; sometimes it’s a flower or even a feather: a bit of humor for such a serious subject. I think the Saint has the trace of an ironic smile. Or maybe it's a wry grimace.