Sunday, December 25, 2011

Gheimé Polo
قیمه پلو


Azadeh
My grandmother’s was a legend. My mom’s and my aunts’ were decent, but couldn’t compare with grandma’s. King of beef stews, it’s cooked with yellow lentils and a mysterious sauce whose make up escapes me to this day, and when it’s all ready to be served with saffron rice, grandma tops it up with homemade fries. Fries, yes, it’s found its way into or rather unto a very traditional Iranian meal.

But it’s not the image of grandma’s spacious living room, nor herself, bent over numerous pots in the kitchen that suddenly took hold of me, when the scent of the store-bought Gheimé Polo rose from the aluminium container. It was the image of blood, of tall women in black tchadors, of incessant and suffocating cries and weeping.

In the excruciating summer heat of Tehran, as the air heavy with pollution mimics Karbala’s desert, and tall cement walls give life to images of bloodied martyrs, it’s not difficult to relive the death of Imam Hossein and his 72 disciples back in the 7th century. Ordinarily empty mosque yards are filled with people dressed in dark, with darkness in the eyes, in their voices and even in the way they move. Wide black curtains divide the space between men’s and women’s quarters, but everything and everyone mixes in the sweeping wave of weeping that effaces all individuality. Ô, thou, fierce and victorious force of mourning!

I remember thirst, I remember constant search for yet another cup of water. And I remember long queues for Gheimé Polo distributed by mosques and other “benefactors”, because, of course, mourning is inseparable from pity, poverty, and delicious Gheimé Polo.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

The year 2011
marks the end of
the End of History



http://roarmag.org/2011/10/the-year-2011-marks-the-end-of-the-end-of-history/
by Jérôme E. Roos
on October 23, 2011


When the system forces ordinary people to become revolutionaries, you know you’re no longer at the End of History. You’re at the very edge of it.
The Tunisian and Egyptian Revolutions. The Arab Spring. The looming Greek default. The increasingly likely breakup of the eurozone. The second coming of the global financial crisis. The return with a vengeance of the systemic critique of capitalism. The resounding worldwide call for real democracy. The dramatic rallies against austerity, inequality and neoliberalism in Spain, Greece, Chile and Israel. The riots in Athens, London and Rome. The occupation of Wall Street and the spreading of the movement throughout the US. The mass protests by millions of people in 1,000 cities and 80 countries on October 15. Even the death of Muammar Gaddafi.
The Tunisian and Egyptian Revolutions, The Arab Spring, The looming Greek default, The increasingly likely breakup of the euro zone. The second coming of the global financial crisis, The return with a vengeance of the systemic critique of capitalism, The resounding worldwide call for real democracy, The dramatic rallies against austerity, inequality and neoliberalism in Spain, Greece, Chile and Israel. The riots in Athens, London and Rome. The occupation of Wall Street and the spreading of the movement throughout the US. The mass protests by millions of people in 1,000 cities and 80 countries on October 15. Even the death of Muammar Gaddafi.
All of it points in the direction of a simple but unmistakable truth: 2011 marks the End of the End of History. Beyond the flat horizon of liberal democracy and global capitalism, the events of this year have not only opened up a whole new chapter in the unfolding saga of mankind, but they have laid the very foundation for an endless procession of chapters beyond that. What is being shattered is not so much the democratic capitalist system as such, but rather the Utopian belief that this system is the only way to organize social life in the eternal pursuit of freedom, equality and happiness.
Almost twenty years ago, following the total collapse of the Soviet Union and the final discrediting of state communism, the American political scientist Francis Fukuyama conjectured that “we may be witnessing … not just the end of the Cold War, or the passing of a particular period of post-war history, but the end of history as such: that is, the end point of mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government.” Two decades after the publication of The End of History and the Last Man, Fukuyama’s thesis seems more shaky than ever before.
This is not to repeat the endless Leftist cliché that neoliberalism is dead — as Slavoj Žižek pointed out, the ideology already died two deaths, first as tragedy following the 9/11 terror attacks, and then as farce following the global financial collapse of 2008 — but rather to point out that neoliberalism as such has finally been revealed for what it always already was: a zombie ideology wrapped around the face of humanity, just like Matt Taibbi’s famous vampire squid, “relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.”

The Neoliberal Emperor
Has No Clothes
While 2001 and 2008 marked, respectively, the political and economic deaths of neoliberalism, 2011 marks the End of the End of History. For it is only now becoming clear to the people of the world that, for the past twenty years, we have simply been living a lie. Indeed, the implicit popular consent that once legitimized democratic capitalism now appears to be coming unraveled faster than the financial Ponzi scheme that sustained the illusion of its moral superiority. After twenty years of stagnant wages, rapidly growing inequality, rampant youth unemployment and widespread social alienation, the bursting of the global credit bubble has finally laid bare the naked essence of the system.
Democratic free-market capitalism is not what we were told it was: as recent years have amply demonstrated, it is neither free nor democratic. Wars have been waged in the name of Big Oil despite overwhelming popular opposition. Tax cuts have been made in the name of Big Money despite an overwhelming budget deficit. And now, failing banks are being rescued and draconian budget cuts pushed through in the name of Big Finance, despite both overwhelming popular opposition and incontrovertible evidence that it is only making the deficit worse. The system has ceased to make sense. Its internal contradictions are eating it up from within. And humanity is finally waking up to this reality.
So today, an entire generation of young people, deprived of hope and opportunity, is rising up to contest the absurd notion that this disastrous state of affairs somehow constitute the culmination of “mankind’s ideological evolution.” Is this really the best we can do? Is this the Utopian world order that Fukuyama envisioned when he decried the eternal victory of liberal democracy and global capitalism over its invisible enemies? With failing banks, bankrupt states and runaway private debt, Fukuyama’s ideal world has certainly started to look a lot more bland now that the credit-fueled consumption spree that underpined it has crashed headlong into its own inevitable finality.
The magic is gone. The spell is broken. And what the people of the world are trying to make clear to those in power is that we know. We know that the system is rotten at the core. We know that its alleged successes do not hold up to scrutiny. We know that most of its grand achievements — from global capital markets to the European single currency — were built on financial and institutional quicksand. And we know the whole damn thing is about to collapse like a house of cards. From Tahrir to Times Square, from Madrid to Madison, from Santiago to Syntagma, we know that the neoliberal emperor has no clothes.

Gaddafi and Fukuyama:
On the Wrong Side of History
One of the most graphic portrayals of the end of the End of History is the bloody demise of Muammar Gaddafi. While skeptics are entirely right to be disgusted by NATO’s imperial campaign in Libya, many on the Left still fail to see the enormous symbolism behind the fall of the Brother Leader. Gaddafi, in a way, was the ultimate embodiment of the End of History. Having come to power as a pan-Arab socialist revolutionary in the late 1960s, he ended up as one of the world’s most successful capitalists. While he continued to rhetorically lament the evils of Western imperialism, he appeared more than willing to offer his country’s spoils to the same neo-colonial powers he so avidly derided.
According to a 2008 report in the Financial Times, Gaddafi “extolled the virtues of capitalist reforms”. Treating Libya like his family business, he cozied up to Big Oil, doling out lucrative contracts to Western corporations like Eni and Shell. He then let the profits accumulate into his privately-owned “sovereign” wealth fund while enlisting Wall Street to recycle this capital surplus for additional profit. In the process, while the Libyan people remained crippled by chronic underdevelopment, Gaddafi siphoned $168 billion of the nation’s riches abroad. No wonder the West was suddenly so happy to be his friend.
Yet what is most revealing about Gaddafi is not his sudden conversion from socialist liberator to capitalist oppressor, nor his close ties with the neoliberal establishment of the West. What is most telling is his personal connection with Francis Fukuyama. Back in 2006-’08, Fukuyama was part of a select group of world-leading intellectuals who were enlisted — and generously paid — by the Monitor Group, a US-based PR firm advised by former MI6 and CIA directors, to help polish Gaddafi’s image in the West as part of a massive charm offensive designed to help legitimize Libya’s foray into the End of History. According to secret documents leaked by former Libyan officials, “Fukuyama made two visits to Libya (14-17 August 2006 and 12-14 January 2007).”
He delivered a lecture at the Greek Book Centre in Tripoli and taught a class on Libya at Johns Hopkins University. He also offered a lecture, entitled “My Conversations with the Leader”, which marked “the first time that The Green Book has been required reading for students at one of the leading public policy schools in the world.” Apparently, not just us, but Fukuyama himself believed Gaddafi to be the embodiment of the End of History. His overthrow, therefore, even if it would never have succeeded without the military might of the imperial West, completely undermines Fukuyama’s thesis. After all, if we had truly arrived at the End of History, how could the author of this thesis so blatantly end up on the wrong side of History himself?

The Collapse of the Eurozone
as the End of the End
But Gaddafi was not Fukuyama’s only historical “mistake”. In response to allegations that the End of History was a purely Americentric argument, Fukuyama in 2007 wrote an article for the Guardian retroactively claiming that “The End of History was never linked to a specifically American model of social or political organisation … I believe that the European Union more accurately reflects what the world will look like at the end of history than the contemporary United States.” Judging from the fate of the European Union, it turns out that Fukuyama, ironically, ended up being right in the wrong way.
As the New York Times wrote the other day, “the euro was a political project meant to unite Europe after the Soviet collapse in a sphere of collective prosperity that would lead to greater federalism. Instead, the euro seems to be pulling Europe apart … [t]here is a tension in the political system and doubt about democratic institutions that we have not experienced since the fall of the Soviet Union.” Europe’s deep economic integration, fully in line with the End of History philosophy, produced a situation so crisis-ridden that the future of the world economy now hinges on the fate of a single EU member state — one that only makes up 2 percent of the Union’s total GDP: Greece.
But Greece is only the canary in the coalmine. It is a symptom, not the cause, of Europe’s crisis. When Greece default, it will only be a matter of time before investors lose faith in Italy and Spain. Both are considered too big to fail — but also too big to bail. The European rescue fund is not big enough to save them, and Germany and France are stuck in a deadlock over how to enlarge it. At the same time, Europe’s insolvent banking system is on the verge of collapse. A Greek defaults will tip countless banks into bankruptcy, forcing the governments of the core to dole out massive bailouts once again. This, in turn, will further aggravate their sovereign debt levels and hence their credit ratings, bringing the “Greek” debt crisis right into the very heartland of European capitalism.
The bottomline, in other words, is that there is no easy way out of this crisis – not even the oft-lauded Eurobonds, as Martin Wolf recently pointed out for the Financial Times. The euro, that grand elite project that was meant to be the very pinnacle of European integration, is faltering. In the process, the EU’s post-ideological technocratic institutions have lost the last shreds of legitimacy they had left. The edifice is falling apart, and frankly speaking, our leaders do not even have a clue what to do about it. Europe’s crisis, at the end of the day, is the world’s crisis. And it is far from a merely economic one: at rock bottom, we are facing what Joseph Stiglitz has called the ideological crisis of capitalism. This is obviously a far cry from the “end point of mankind’s ideological evolution”.

The Crisis of Capitalism
and the Return of the Repressed
It is no surprise, therefore, that 2011 has seen the comeback — with a vengeance — of the systemic critique of capitalism. In recent weeks, leading free-market publications like the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, Business Insider and Fortune have all admitted that Karl Marx might actually have been right about capitalism’s tendency to self-destruct. The reason for this sudden revival of the Marxian critique of political economy is twofold: first, the dawning realization among elites that we are about to spiral into another Great Depression. And second, the systematic repression of the radical imagination that Fukuyama’s post-ideological world brought about.
In this respect, a direct line can be drawn from Margaret Thatcher’s conversation-killing slogan, “there is no alternative“, to the neoliberal policy response to the financial crisis. While the bankers have been doling out record bonuses, the rest of the population is being told that there simply is no alternative to draconian austerity measures. The ideological narrative is the same everywhere: “we’re all in this together; we all need to tighten our belts,” but the implicit message is really: “do not dare to imagine an alternative.” Yet as Matt Taibbi recently pointed out, a tiny 0.1 percent tax on all trades in stocks and bonds and a 0.01 percent tax on all trades of derivative could pay for the entire US bailouts, rendering much the “necessary” belt-tightening unnecessary. That is a credible alternative right there. Why is it not being discussed

Back in 2009, Fukuyama published an article in Newsweek with the triumphant title “History is still over“, in which he asserted that, despite the fact that “the crisis began on Wall Street – the heart of global capitalism — … the legitimacy of the global system may have been bruised, [but] it did not break.” Fast-forward two years and witness the burning streets of London, Rome and Athens; the peaceful occupation of Wall Street, Puerta del Sol, Syntagma, and hundreds of other squares around the world; the unprecedented global day of action on October 15, with protests in almost 1,000 cities in over 80 countries. Witness the anger. The frustration, The indignation. It is here. The legitimacy is breaking. Fukuyama, it appears, was cheering just a wee bit too soon.
In a Freudian sense, we are witnessing the return of the repressed. If you tell people for two decades that there is no alternative to the world in which they live, and if in the meantime you take away their income, their rights, their public services, and their last-remaining shreds of dignity, you can expect that psychological repression of revolutionary potential to come out in some other form sooner or later. If you repress the coherent emancipatory ideology of the masses, as the End of History was meant to do, you literally end up with the incoherent and a-political London riots. In this respect, the most important thing the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions could have done was to help remind humanity that there actually is an alternative to the status quo — that there does exist some “outside” to unfettered global capitalism.

The Rise of the Indignant
and the Crisis of Democracy
The Arab revolutions embolden the alienated youth of Europe and America to start dreaming again, to reclaim their radical imagination in the face of one of the greatest legitimating crises in the history of liberal democracy. As a critical consciousness makes its way back into the mainstream discourse, the cultural hegemony of neoliberalism finds itself under threat anew. The first signs of this emergent critical consciousness began to appear in Madrid on May 15. A few days later, the BBC reported that an Egypt-style rally was growing in Spain. Over the next couple of weeks, hundreds of thousands of people from all walks of life rallied on a nightly basis around the country as the indignados movement spread throughout Europe.
On September 17, the Spanish 15-M movement culminated into a global day of action against the banks and the occupation of Wall Street, called for by the Canadian anti- consumerist magazine Adbusters. The Wall Street protest subsequently helped catathe next global day of action, called for by the Spanish protesters on October 15. Under the common banner “united for global change”, the worldwide resistance grew to truly unprecedented proportions, with simultaneous protests taking place in 1,000 cities in over 80 countries. With his naive declaration that “the legitimacy of the global system did not break,” Fukuyama once again finds himself on the wrong side of history.
After all, if liberal democracy is really the culmination of human ideological evolution, how come millions of people are taking to the streets all over the world demanding something different? If representativedemocracy is the very pinnacle, why are these young people chanting “they do not represent us!”, and why do they cry out for a real democracy instead? As the massive movements in Israel and Chile demonstrate, the phenomenon cannot be reduced to the crisis alone, for even their booming economies could not stop the tide of indignation from flooding into its streets. In truth, the problem runs much deeper. As the indignados like to chant, “it’s not the crisis, it’s the system.”
Zygmunt Bauman put his finger on the crux of the problem: while politics has remained national, power has all but evaporated into global flows. Technological change and neoliberal reforms have conspired to create a situation where democratically elected governments no longer have the power to transform their promises into policies . We end up with a situation where voting is no longer about what policies our governments should put into practice, but rather about who should put into practice the policies demanded by the financial sector. To call that democracy seems preposterous . The rise of the indignant is nothing but the collective realization that liberal representative democracy, under the conditions of deep economic integration, is not really liberal or representative at all. The End of History, rather than solidifying democracy as the final form of human government, has completely undermined it.

The Edge of History
and the Return of
Contentious Politics
The End of the End of History is not the same as the end of neoliberalism. As we saw before, zombie ideologies have their way of roaming about beyond their expiry date. As long as there are capitalists (or wanna-be capitalists), there will always be one form or another of capitalist philosophy. The End of the End of History is not so much about eradicating capitalism’s individualist worldview, which is impossible without resorting to the type of repressive state tactics we are trying to overcome, as it is about the return of contentious politics as the defining feature of social life. In other words, the End of the End of History is not so much about overcoming political struggle as about the realization that we can, by definition, never overcome political struggle. As long as there is injustice, there will be struggle — and since there will always be injustice, there will always be struggle.
The End of History, therefore, is neither possible nor desirable. The longing for a final stage of institutional and ideological development, in which disagreement and conflict have been banished from the realm of social reality, is either purely totalitarian or purely Utopian. While certain Utopian longings may inspire us to soar to ever greater heights as a species, we always have to remember that no social order is given forever. Our Utopia must forever remain the spiritual desire that propels us to action, but we have to embrace the fact that it can never become a reality. History simply never ends. As the neo-Gramscian scholar Stephen Gill put it, “history is always in the making, in a complex and dialectical interplay between agency, structure, consciousness and action.” Or, as Subcomandante Marcos worded it slightly more poetically, “the struggle is like a circle: you can start anywhere, but it never stops.”
In an excellent op-ed in the Guardian the other day, Jonathan Jones looked at a picture of Occupy Wall Street and makes a striking observation:
This is a photograph of a turning point in history, not because the Occupy movement will necessarily succeed (whatever success might be) but because it has revealed the profoundly new possibilities of debate in a world that so recently seemed to agree about economic fundamentals. Occupy Wall Street and the global movement it is inspiring may yet prove to be an effective call for change, or a flash in the pan. That is not the point. Nor does it even matter if the protest is right or wrong. What matters is that unfettered capitalism, a force for economic dynamism that seemed unassailable, beyond reproach or reform, a monster we learned to be grateful for, suddenly finds its ugliness widely commented on, exposed among the lights of Times Square. The emperor of economics has no clothes.
“This is an unbelievable moment,” he continues. “Pinch yourself.” For 2011, with all its crises and revolutions, marks what Slavoj Žižek, in his speech in Zuccotti Park, called “the awakening from a dream that is turning into a nightmare.” It marks the return of contentious politics. And, as such, it marks the End of the End of History. Not that History ever stopped — we just got confused for a while by the collapse of capitalism’s arch-nemesis, and thought it did. But the fact that History is still in-the-making is being captured in newspapers headlines, in powerful photographs, and in the words of a simple middle-class lady in Greece during the 48-hour strike of October: “I have never been a leftist,” she said, “but they’ve pushed us to become extremists.” When the system forces ordinary people to become revolutionaries, you know you’re no longer at the End of History. You’re at the very edge of it.

Monday, December 12, 2011

About Zahra’s Paradise
So a Persian writer, an Arab artist and a Jewish editor walk into a room…
Sounds like the beginning of a bad joke. Actually, that’s something like the start of this unusual editorial adventure, the first of its kind. Here for your reading pleasure is an online, serial webcomic in English, Farsi, Arabic, French, Italian, Spanish, and Dutch—with more joining on the horizon. First Second books proudly presents Zahra’s Paradise by Amir and Khalil, together with Casterman in French and Dutch, Rizzoli Lizard in Italian, and Norma Editorial in Spanish.
Set in the aftermath of Iran’s fraudulent elections of 2009, Zahra’s Paradise is the fictional story of the search for Mehdi, a young protestor who has disappeared in the Islamic Republic’s gulags.





Mehdi has vanished in an extrajudicial twilight zone where habeas corpus is suspended. What stops his memory from being obliterated is not the law. It is the grit and guts of a mother who refuses to surrender her son to fate and the tenacity of a brother—a blogger—who fuses culture and technology to explore and explode absence: the void in which Mehdi has vanished.
Zahra’s Paradise weaves together a composite of real people and events. As the world witnessed what could no longer be kept from view, through YouTube videos, on Twitter and in blogs, so this story came to be and had to be told.The author Amir is an Iranian-American human rights activist, journalist and documentary filmmaker. He has lived and worked in the United States, Canada, Europe and Afghanistan. His essays and articles have appeared far and wide in the press.Khalil’s work as a fine artist has been much praised. He sculpts and creates ceramics and has been cartooning since he was very young. Zahra’s Paradise is his first graphic novel.
Amir and Khalil have long dreamed up projects together, but Zahra’s Paradise draws on their talents as though they’ve been preparing for it all their lives—and through it, they answer the calling of their times.

The authors have chosen anonymity for obvious political reasons.

[The writer Amir and the artist Khalil (both have chosen anonymity for political reasons) began publishing the webcomic Zahra’s Paradise online in February 2010. This week, First Second Books will publish Zahra’s Paradise as a graphic novel. Jadaliyya interviewed Amir and Khalil on the occasion of the book’s publication.]

See Zahra’s Paradise offical site:
http://www.zahrasparadise.com/lang/en/about




Sunday, November 20, 2011

A History of Change II:
the Question of Cities

Occupy Vancouver Blog
November 17,
Steve Collis
http://occupyvancouvermedia.com/2011/11/19/a-history-of-change-ii-the-question-of-cities/#comments
November 17, as perhaps as many as 30,000 people marched through downtown NYC in support of OWS, here in Vancouver (as in many North American cities) a smaller group marched from the VAG along Georgia Street to the Royal Centre building, where Brookfield Properties have second-floor offices. Brookfield, as many now know, “own” Zuccotti Park, the once-and-future home of OWS in lower Manhattan; they, along with other members of the corporate 1%, pressured billionaire mayor Michael Bloomberg to evict OWS this past Tuesday morning.


In Vancouver, we tried to bring the fight to Brookfield.
This one’s for you, OWS: our sign on the security desk of the Royal Centre.

Brookfield places the issue of the Occupy Movement in an interesting light: a Canadian-based company, “one of North America’s largest commercial real estate companies,” as their website trumpets, one of whose “holdings” became the epicenter of, first, a local act of civil disobedience in NYC, and second, of a global movement for social, economic, and political change. Thus far, the Occupy Movement has been characterized by this duality: it is a movement of particular cities, particular urban “public” spaces, and it is a movement of the global city, writ large.

“Occupy represents not just the taking of space in our cities, but reclaiming the terms of debate in wider society. As the placard at Occupy Wall Street says ‘Apathy is dead.’ This tiny slice of pavement is a catalyst for argument….” (Hannah Borna & Alistair Alexander, The Guardian, November 15).

I can understand why the Occupy Movement is centered upon the struggle for public space in city centers—why the city is, in many ways, its focus (cities are, after all, the centers of accumulation and financial trading in capitalism). What is more puzzling is why the debate about the Occupy Movement has been “contained” (by state and media apparatuses) at the level of the city (rather than, say, the level of the Province/State or nation). Noticed any commentary on the movement from those levels of government? Me neither. The silence is telling.

Containing the “public” debate about the Occupy Movement at the civic level allows officials to approach it as a mere question of public “health and safety” and “sanitation” (the grounds civic governments have most commonly cited for the removal of occupations). It reduces the occupations to the level of mere zoning and by-laws—as though it’s just another permit decision along the lines of parades and public sporting celebrations (note the discussion, here in Vancouver, whether the occupation can legitimately displace the Santa Clause Parade, or what effect it will have on Grey Cup celebrations, as though they are comparable spectacles!).
Brookfield enters the issue here too: as a commercial real estate developer, their main interaction with governments is at the level of the city (building permits etc.). But again, hiding behind mere “locality” here is the issue of the global city: Brookfield is active in the contemporary city writ large, Vancouver, Toronto, NYC and beyond—wherever capital is accumulated through property speculation. It builds the spaces the corporate 1% inhabits, and profits along with them.

If higher levels of government entered the debate about the occupations, they would thereby acknowledge that the movement is in fact a provincial/state or national issue. It would take its place beside other “big” issues states have to deal with. It would no longer be a mere question of “health and safety,” but a question necessarily about the very “state of the union.”

But something else is revealed here: the redundancy of those higher levels of government. New, proto-national and transnational “governments” are being given expression in the Occupy Movement as mayors and police forces enter into inter-city discussions about how to deal with the multitudinous occupations (as Oakland mayor Jean Quan recently revealed), just as the Occupy Movement itself has inter-city committees sharing information and organizing expressions of solidarity between cities.

What does all this tell us? It’s probably still too early to tell for sure, and I would love to hear others’ thoughts (once again, this is an issue I will return to in a future blog), but it suggests two, probably fairly obvious, points of entry for further thought.

First, in terms of the “federated” structure of civic governments, it’s clear that the task of enforcing the compliance of the 99% with the dictates of the 1% is demanding the coordination of policing at a level, and in a way, we have not really seen before in North America. Police tactics have been increasingly “paramilitarized,” and we are increasingly staring in the face of a coordinated global “state police” (and police state) whose main focus is going to be dealing with civil disobedience.

Second, in terms of the Occupy Movement itself, resistance and civil disobedience is similarly taking on a decentered, “federated” structure where tactics and resources are shared and expressions of intra-city solidarity are as important as inner city ones. This is, in part, to say that if civic governments and police forces can “federate” to coordinate their activities, then so can and do the various occupations—both of them, note, operating outside the sphere of the normal centralized state apparatus.

Another way of putting this: at the level of civic governments, the state’s dirty work is being downloaded and outsourced (as it almost always is); at the level of the occupations, well, this is a revolution—we are building the new society in the shell of the old. That shell is resounding increasingly hollow, as it throws more and more police into the echoing streets.

We are indeed “occupying everywhere.” But the fact that those “everywheres” are particular cities is crucial—because the city is where we gather to debate what is and is not a just society. And this debate is not simply a matter of elections (Oh Vancouver, this day of our own civic election): it’s a matter of a return to where the real “demand for justice” is made—in the agora. I’ll end with this quotation, to which I will return in my next post:

“The concept of the city is oriented towards the question of justice. It is intended to be modeled on the kind of operations that actors engage in during disputes with one another, when they are faced with a demand for justification. This demand for justification is inextricably linked to the possibility of critique. The justification is necessary to back up the critique, or to answer it when it condemns the unjust character of some specific situation” (Boltanski & Chiapello, The New Spirit of Capitalism 22)

—Steve Collis










See Occupy Vancouver Media Nov. 20, 21 and 22
for "HISTORY OF CHANGE III" and "OUR END IS OUR BEGINNING"
AT:
http://occupyvancouvermedia.com/

Friday, November 18, 2011

Occupy Vancouver
Issues Challenge
to Municipal Elections Candidates
Regarding Campaign Contributions


Occupy Vancouver, Unceded Coast Salish Territory,
November 13, 2011 –
http://www.occupyvancouver.com/index.php?page=5


Occupy Vancouver has send letters to all municipal candidates challenging them to immediately reveal the sources and amounts of all campaign donations greater than $100, including any money collected outside the elections cycle by 11:59pm Thursday, November 17, or face the music on Election Day.

Occupy Vancouver's General Assembly
condemns the influence of corporate money
on Vancouver's elections and municipal decision-making.

“Corporations are effectively buying elections," says Eric Hamilton-Smith, a protester and organizer at Occupy Vancouver, "As a result of this influence, elected officials tend to create policies that benefit their financiers’ interests rather than the interests of the people who elect them into office. This is particularly problematic here in Vancouver, where big developers have contributed to an affordable housing crisis.”
According to Tristan Markle, author for The Mainlander and Occupy Vancouver organizer, “The big developers need prices to stay high in order to ensure maximum profits. To protect these donors, the NPA and Vision will go to great lengths to maintain the unaffordable status quo.”
According to data from the Vancouver Sun, the lion's share of campaign contributions received by both the Non-Partisan Association (NPA) and Vision Vancouver come from big developers. In 2008, approximately two-thirds of campaign money raised by Vision Vancouver was from corporations, including half a million from developers. The NPA also raised half a million from developers that same year.
At the November 13th 2011 General Assembly, Occupiers agreed by consensus to the following two proposals:
1. Removal of the influence of corporate contributions from municipal elections so that citizens—not corporations—are put at the forefront in municipal decision-making.
In order to achieve this, Occupiers suggest the following reforms: • Establish limits on the amount of money candidates can spend while campaigning • Establish limits on the amount of money any one person can donate to a candidate or political party • Prohibit corporations and other entities from donating money to election campaigns • Prohibit donations from non-BC residents
2. Establishment of real transparency in municipal campaign finance by requiring candidates and parties to reveal their donors and amounts before, not long after an election is over as is current practice. Occupy Vancouver is giving all candidates until 11:59pm Thursday, November 17th to make their campaign contributions publicly available online or be held to account by voters on

NPA, Vision and COPE
Have Failed
to Disclose
Campaign Contribution Sources -
'Occupy the Parties!'
Occupy Vancouver Says NPA, Vision and COPE Have Failed to Disclose Campaign Contribution Sources; Will ‘Occupy on the Parties’ at 4:00pm Friday Nov 18. Occupy Vancouver, Unceded Coast Salish Territory, Vancouver, November 17, 2011 — On Sunday, November 13th, Occupy Vancouver issued a challenge to municipal candidates to disclose the source of all contributions greater than $100 by 11:59pm Thursday, November 17, or be held to account by voters on Election Day. The deadline has now past and Occupy Vancouver has received full disclosure of campaign contributions from many candidates and parties including Mayoral candidate Randy Helton and his party—Neighborhoods for Sustainable Vancouver (NSV), Adriane Carr from the Green Party, and from nearly every independent candidate including Mayoral candidates Gerry McGuire and Darryl Zimmerman, city council candidates Dr. Chris Shaw, Lauren Gill, Grant Fraser, Ian Gregson, Michael Dharni, and Amy Fox. Parties and candidates who have failed to provide the information requested by Occupy Vancouver include Vision Vancouver, Non-Partisan Association (NPA), and the Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE). Occupy Vancouver's General Assembly condemns the influence of corporate money on Vancouver's elections and municipal decision-making, which motivates elected officials to create policies that benefit their financiers’ interests rather than the interests of the people who elect them. The Assembly calls on all municipal elections candidates to support the immediate elimination of corporate contributions and the establishment of transparency in municipal elections. The Assembly also calls on the provincial government to immediately establish legislation to limit campaign contributions, and to ensure real transparency in municipal campaign finance by requiring candidates and parties to reveal their donors and contribution amounts before elections, instead of months after elections, as is the current practice. On Friday November 18th at 4:00pm, Occupy Vancouver will march to call attention to parties and candidates who failed to comply with the request for financial disclosure, and to voice the condemnation of corporate money in municipal elections and decision-making. ### If you would like more information or would like to schedule an interview, please contact:


Cmmunications Committee,
Occupy Vancouver
communications@occupyvancouver.com

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation

(APEC)
World Leaders Dinner
Gets Occupied

Yes Lab blog
http://www.yeslab.org/APEC

APEC World Leaders Dinner Gets Occupied Within secure zone, musician sings on behalf of the many.
Honolulu - A change in the programmed entertainment at last night's Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) gala left a few world leaders slack-jawed, though most seemed not to notice that anything was amiss.
During the gala dinner, renowned Hawaiian guitarist Makana, who performed at the White House in 2009, opened his suit jacket to reveal a home-made “Occupy with Aloha” T-shirt. Then, instead of playing the expected instrumental background music, he spent almost 45 minutes repeatedly singing his protest ballad released earlier that day. The ballad, called “We Are the Many,” includes lines such as “The lobbyists at Washington do gnaw.... And until they are purged, we won't withdraw,” and ends with the refrain:
“We'll occupy the streets,


we'll occupy the courts,


we'll occupy the offices of you,


till you do the bidding of the many, not the few.”
Those who could hear Makana’s message included Presidents Barack Obama of the United States of America, Hu Jintao of China, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono of Indonesia, Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada, and over a dozen other heads of state.
“At first, I was worried about playing ‘We Are The Many,’” said Makana. “But I found it odd that I was afraid to sing a song I’d written, especially since I'd written it with these people in mind.”


The gala was the most secure event of the summit. It was held inside the Hale Koa hotel, a 72-acre facility owned and controlled by the US Defense Department; the site was fortified with an additional three miles of fencing constructed solely for the APEC summit.
Makana was surprised that no one objected to him playing the overtly critical song. “I just kept doing different versions,” he said. “I must’ve repeated ‘the bidding of the many, not the few’ at least 50 times, like a mantra. It was surreal and sobering.”
Makana’s new song is inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement, which has taken root in cities worldwide. Last Saturday, eight protesters were arrested when they refused to leave the Occupy Honolulu encampment at Thomas Square Park. Occupy Honolulu has joined other groups, including Moana Nui, to protest the APEC meeting, and while Makana performed, hundreds of people protested outside.


After facing large-scale protests in South Korea, Australia, Peru, and Japan, APEC moved this year's event to Hawaii, the most isolated piece of land on earth. In preparation for the meeting, homeless families were moved out of sight and millions of taxpayer dollars were spent on security—including over $700,000 on non-lethal weapons for crowd control. In a bitter twist, the multi-million dollar security plans backfired when a local Hawaiian man was shot and killed by a 27-year-old DC-based federal agent providing security for dignitaries.
Makana’s action was assisted by the Yes Lab and Occupy the Boardroom. In recent weeks, Occupy protesters have been showing up at corporate events, headquarters and even on the doorsteps of those in power. “Makana really raised the bar by delivering the Occupy message inside what is probably the most secure place on the planet right now,” said Mike Bonanno of the Yes Lab.

“My uncle taught me to feel out the audience and play what my heart tells me to,” said Makana. “That’s what I did tonight.”

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

We Don't Back The Juiceman



(GREGOR ROBERTSON) A website developed by artists



who don't back



GREGOR ROBERTSON



or SUZNNE ANTON



for mayor





http://wedontbackthejuiceman.tumblr.com/