Apr 252023
 

Yesterday, There was a fair amount of news which was not all that encouraging. One exception was Tucker Carlson’s departure (and I put up a news alert on that as soon as I saw it). But another exception was in an EarthRights International email. There is a Big Oil accountability case going on in Colorado, and Exxon abd Suncor had petitioned SCOTUS to hear it. SCOTUS just told them to pound sand. That doesn’t mean the case is over, but it does mean that it will be proceeding in Colorado’s State Court system. And that is good news. i’m sorry I don’t have a short take which is as good, but it is what it is.

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Short Takes –

Letters from an American – April 23, 2023
Quote – About 100 U.S. troops used three helicopters to evacuate about 70 U.S. personnel from the [U.S. Embassy in Khartoum], getting them out of Sudan to Ethiopia without major incident. Such a military evacuation is unusual, but the fight between two rival Sudanese leaders has closed the main international airport and given armed fighters control of the roads leading out of the country, making it impossible for U.S. personnel to leave by civilian routes. Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Saudi Arabia helped to get the Americans to safety. There were no major incidents associated with the evacuation. Other nations have also evacuated their embassies, and the United Nations staffers left by road on a 19-hour trip.
Click through for details and more. Been there, done that, and yes, this is a major undertaking, not just for the evacuators and those being evacuated, but for support personnel in more stable areas who contribute in various ways to readying the team. I had no idea it was this bad.

NBC News – Capitol rioter shot at local deputies after FBI informed him of Jan. 6 charges
Quote – Nathan Donald Pelham, of Greenville [TX], who initially faced four misdemeanor charges tied to the insurrection, faces an additional felony charge of being a felon in possession of firearm after the incident April 12, a criminal complaint filed this week shows. An FBI special agent wrote in a filing that he had called Pelham on April 12 and asked him to surrender in a few days. That evening, according to the agent, local authorities went to Pelham’s home after his father requested a welfare check. When the deputies arrived, Pelham fired several shots toward them, prosecutors said.
Click through for story. Pro tip: Shooting at law enforcement when you are already under indictment will never make things better for you.

Slate – Chief Justice John Roberts’ Mockery of Stalking Victims Points to a Deeper Problem
Quote – The reasonableness of that fear was vividly illustrated by the Supreme Court oral arguments in Counterman v. Colorado on Wednesday morning, as members of the highest court of the land joked about messages sent by a stalker to his victim, bemoaned the increasing “hypersensitivity” of society, and brushed aside consideration of the actual harm of stalking to focus on the potential harm of stalking laws.
Click through, but have antacid at hand. This was an egregious stalking case whch happened in Colorado. It had gotten to the point where a message of “Hi. Have a nice day” would be perceived as a threat by any rational person.

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Apr 242023
 

Glenn Kirschner – DA Bragg withdraws appeal; Pomerantz to testify about Trump probe; will expose Jim Jordan’s game (I may well be wrong, but I think I see a hint of “Don’t throw me in that briar patch!” here on Bragg’s part.)

Robert Reich – Is the Republican Party Becoming the American Fascist Party?

Ojeda Live – Richard Ojeda Fights for Working Families

Armageddon Update – Harlan & Clarence Bromance

Cat Is Obsessed With His Tiny Love Bird

Beau – Let’s talk about delays and developments in Georgia….

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Apr 242023
 

Yesterday, I got to see Virgil, and he returns all greetings. The drive was uneventful both directions. We played Scrabble – or I guess I should start saying we played with a Scrabble set, because the object of our playing was not to win but to use all the letters, which requires cooperation. We succeeded three times and started a fourth but did not have time to get very far. The last unfinished game, I picked up the Q, the X, and the Z all in the first 7 letters I picked up. I could not have done that ifI had tried. I managed to play the third just as it was time for us to pack it up, which I’d call an accomplishment.

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HuffPost – Hakeem Jeffries Tears Into ‘Totally Out Of Control’ Marjorie Taylor Greene
Quote – The leadership apparently supports Marjorie Taylor Greene. The rank-and-file Republicans apparently support Marjorie Taylor Greene. She’s allowed to lie. She’s allowed to debase the institution. Apparently, Marjorie Taylor Greene is even allowed to elevate someone who appears to have engaged in espionage and treason against the United States of America.
Click through for more. Keeping it truthful without invective or smears. The article also notes that one Republican, Green without an e, did come down on her on Wednesday for some truly vile stuff. But mostly, they don’t.

The Nib (Levi Hastings) – Overfishing, pollution, and urban development are causing the Resident Orca population in the Pacific Northwest to plummet.
Quote – In summer 2018, a female orca known as Tahlequa (J35) made national headlines when she traveled over 1,000 milies through the waters of the Pacific Northwest while dragging the lifeless body of her stillborn calf. She refused to abandon her baby for 17 days. Later that season, scientists and locals watched helplessly as the malnourished four-year-old juvenile known as Scarlet (J50) slowly starved and eventually disappeared, never to resurface.
Click through for the rest. This is another graphic article which I’m sharing a little late for Earth Day.

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Everyday Erinyes #367

 Posted by at 6:05 pm  Politics
Apr 232023
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

Last week was Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) and I was planning to use this article, but the fact that is was also income tax deadline weekend caused me to save it a week so that there would be less distraction and people would be able to think about it – about what we can do every day, to survive fascism and to help others survive fascism.

Some of us, of course, are living under fascism more than others. California and Florida may both have Disney theme parks, but living in one is a very different experience from living in the other – and that is particularly true for marginalized groups, but there is some effect on everyone. No one survives fascism alone.
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Defying the Holocaust didn’t just mean uprising and revolt: Remembering Jews’ everyday resistance on Yom HaShoah and year-round

Samuel Willenberg, the last survivor of the Treblinka uprising, poses for a picture at his art studio in Tel Aviv, Israel, in 2010.
AP Photo/Oded Balilty

Chad Gibbs, College of Charleston

Richard Glazar insisted that no one survived the Holocaust without help. To this Prague-born Jewish survivor, who endured Nazi imprisonment at Treblinka and Theresienstadt, plus years in hiding, it was impossible to persevere without others’ support. Glazar conceded that some of his fellow Treblinka survivors were “loners,” but he nevertheless believed that they “survived because they were carried by someone, someone who cared for them as much, or almost as much as for themselves.”

Carrying someone else took many forms. For fellow Treblinka prisoner Samuel Goldberg, a Polish Jew born in a small town called Bagatelle, it was the moment the women of his work detail stood up to a guard to save Goldberg’s life. For those around Glazar, it was the times he brought them more to eat because his position as a fence builder gave him chances to buy food outside the camp. Still more prisoners benefited from a friend willing to literally hold them up during roll call so no guard would notice they were sick – a near-certain death sentence.

In a place meant to destroy all Jewish life, the smallest acts of support and comfort were resistance.

On Aug. 2, 1943, the Treblinka II extermination camp in Nazi-occupied Poland was the site of one of the most dramatic acts of armed rebellion throughout the Shoah, as the Holocaust is called in Hebrew. Several hundred prisoners managed to escape, though most were recaptured and killed. Nonetheless, at least 70 people survived to recount what happened there. Without their actions, the camp might have continued to operate, and we would likely know next to nothing of its history.

In years of research on this extermination camp, I’ve come to place as much importance on the long trail of smaller acts as on the famous day itself. Long before the revolt, resistance was commonplace at Treblinka. It had to be. Here and elsewhere, prisoner revolt would have been impossible without those everyday acts of support that laid foundations for more.

A black and white photo shows a huge smoke cloud rising across a field.
A clandestine photograph of the burning death camp Treblinka II, taken by eyewitness Franciszek Ząbecki during the uprising on Aug. 2, 1943.
Franciszek Ząbecki/Wikimedia Commons

Defiance and dignity

Between July 1942 and November 1943, Nazi Germany killed as many as 925,000 people at Treblinka II. The vast majority of these victims were Jews, though the regime also murdered several thousand Romani people there.

This terrible place was unlike most other Nazi camps in that its sole purpose was the destruction of life. There were no slave labor industries or construction projects. The Jews responsible for the revolt were among the several hundred men and women kept alive to maintain facilities, sort the belongings of the dead, and dispose of the bodies. As the historian Michael Berenbaum put it, Treblinka was “a factory whose end product was dead Jews.”

In such a hell, life itself is resistance, but those held at Treblinka pushed back against Nazi designs for their destruction in every way possible. Early organized efforts took the form of escapes to warn other Jews. Abraham Krzepicki, for example, escaped Treblinka and went back to the Warsaw Ghetto to tell of what the camp really was – and later died there, fighting in the ghetto’s 1943 uprising.

A black and white photo shows women and children in coats walking beside cattle cars.
Deportation to Treblinka from the Jewish ghetto in Siedlce, Poland, in 1942.
Wikimedia Commons

These messengers of truth helped expose Nazi lies and give others the chance to try to go into hiding, fight or jump from trains.

Still, most people targeted by the Third Reich could not avoid transport to Treblinka or other camps even if they knew what awaited them there. For some, resistance was the way they carried themselves on the way to a certain death, such as saying prayers like the Shema Yisrael. Condemned for being Jewish, they steadfastly remained so to the end.

Samuel Willenberg, who was the last survivor of the Treblinka revolt when he died in 2016, remembered how a young woman named Ruth Dorfmann asked only if the gas would hurt, and calmly acted with such unshakable dignity that he felt compelled many years later to sculpt her final moments.

‘Choiceless choices’

Court testimonies, oral histories, survivors’ memoirs and other sources show that over months of concerted planning, Treblinka prisoners’ “Organizing Committee” laid the groundwork for the August rebellion by building a network of trusted men and women. Organizers found ways to place them in jobs that gave prisoner planners complete access to the camp.

That process was a winding and perilous road. Three earlier plans failed, and Nazi guards killed many Jews they suspected of resistance. It took at least eight months of concerted effort to finally pull off the revolt.

Though resistance at Treblinka eventually meant armed revolt, it could not have achieved that end without the countless little rebellions that came before. The same was true in Warsaw and throughout Nazi-controlled Europe. At its core, resistance is the way a person or a people chooses to stand against the challenges thrown at them. That holds true even if those options are what Holocaust scholar Lawrence Langer called “choiceless choices” between one terrible outcome and another.

In the Warsaw Ghetto, where hundreds of thousands of Jews were crammed into inhumane conditions, residents held each other up by establishing soup kitchens and clandestine schools, organizing the removal of waste to prevent disease, and setting up everyday events to help people feel normal, even for one moment.

People look at a museum display. In the foreground, a single slice of bread sits on a table.
A piece of bread, equivalent of a daily food ration in the Warsaw Ghetto, displayed during a commemoration of residents’ suffering in the ghetto.
Wojtek Radwanski/AFP via GettyImages

Warsaw Jews worked to archive what they endured and documented the medical effects of the starvation they faced. Both acts demonstrated hope for a future that would remember their suffering and use its lessons to ease the pain of others.

Yom HaShoah, the annual day of remembrance for the Holocaust established by the Israeli government, occurs on the 27th of Nisan in the Hebrew calendar: the start of major fighting during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Thousands died in the Germans’ brutal retaliation.

A more complete picture

The full name of Yom HaShoah is “Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day” – which, along with its tie to the Warsaw Ghetto, links remembrance with resistance in no uncertain terms. This pairing held great importance for Israel’s identity as a new state and for a people so deeply wounded by years of terror.

Whenever we remember the Holocaust, we should remember the small rebellions, the individual stands, and the little acts of caring that Glazar found so important. Only in seeing that wider picture of everyday struggles can we understand the true variety and scope of resistance.The Conversation

Chad Gibbs, Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies, College of Charleston

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, if we haven’t already begun thinking about what we can do, not just to survive but to help as many to survive as possible, the time is now. Before the camps open. Because we don’t want it to get to that point.

The Furies and I will be back.

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Apr 232023
 

Glenn Kirschner – DA Fani Willis seeks to kick lawyer off fake electors cases; moves forward in Georgia Trump probe

The Lincoln Project – Bullies

Thom Hartmann – WAR on America Declared By Our Own People? WTF

Friend Dog Studios – GOP Jesus (not new but oh so on target)

Dog Is Obsessed With Watching TV With His Human Sister

Beau – Let’s talk about 3 unrelated but similar incidents….

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Apr 232023
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was “Idomeneo,” an early piece by Mozart, based on the trans-cultural legend of the person away from home, in peril of their life, who vows to sacrifice the first living thing they see when they get home if they can only get there alive. Of course, the first living thing they see is their son (or, if they’re Hebrew, their daughter – cf. Jephthah.) Idomeneus was the king of Crete who went to fight at the Trojan War. That war took ten years from start to finish, and both sides pretty much stayed at Troy the full time, though there were things that happened elsewhere (e.g. Philoctetes), and there were some refugees. One of the characters is Elettra, a jealous (and somewhat nationalistic) princess who is a refugee from Argos and who falls in love with Idomeneus’s son Idamante, who is already in love with Ilia, a Trojan princess who is a POW. So Idomeneus has quite a kettle of serpents to untangle. At the end, Neptune relents – Idomeneus must give up the throne to Idamante with Ilia as his queen, but may live. Only Elettra is left out in the cold, but she has been driving people nuts with her jealousy, so no one much cares. The opera was a great favorite of Pavarotti (if the opera you wrote isn’t getting as many performances as you would like, if you can sell it to a diva or a divo who has the clout to talk an opera company into staging it, you will at the very least get a second chance. This is actually not a bad thing.) Today I’m off to see Virgil. Yes, I’ll pass on all your greetings and I’ll post a comment when I get back safely

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Short Takes –

Letters from an American – April 20, 2023
Quote – There were a whole bunch of seemingly unrelated stories in the news that all seem to point to an important theme…. It hit me as I read through all this news that a key theme seems to be a new shift toward transparency and accountability. It jumps out at me that people are talking to lawyers and to the press about illegalities, irregularities, and, in the Sandy Hook case, horrors that in the past they have kept quiet. Whether it comes from disgust at the excesses of those who are attacking our democracy or from fear of the law, that transparency reminds me of the pivotal importance of McClure’s Magazine in the early twentieth century.
Click through for full letter. From Heather’s keyboard to God’s smartphone! I haven’t seen anyone else make this connection, but I hope she is correct.

Colorado Public Radio – As Colorado considers upzoning, here’s a look at how it’s gone in other states and cities
Quote – Democrats’ controversial land use bill aims to rewrite what kind of housing gets built in many of Colorado’s fastest-growing communities. But while it’s a new idea for this state, Colorado wouldn’t be the first place in the country to embrace this approach. States like Oregon and cities like Minneapolis have adopted similar laws over the last five years, often in the name of enabling construction and driving down housing costs — the same goals shared by Colorado’s bill. In New York, officials upzoned more than a third of the city nearly 20 years ago, a change that sparked a big building boom.
Click through for what is actually several (short) related articles and links to more. I get it. People don’t want to lose the kinds of housing which have “always” existed. But single-family dwellings on fair-sized lots are not only pricey for those who live in them, but also wasteful of resources which will be more and more critical as climate change continues to evlove. Cutting down on land use for housing will not solve all problems, but if it helps cut fossil fuel use, and also makes more land available for farming and wilderness, it can’t hurt.

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Apr 222023
 

Glenn Kirschner – Trump-appointed Judge sides w/Jim Jordan against DA Alvin Bragg; uses Trumpian rhetoric in opinion

Politics Girl – To My Republican Friends…

Twitter – Rep. Jeff Jackson (D-NC)

Farron Balanced – Trump Admits Asking 5 Year Old Child For Foreign Policy Advice

Police Cat Keeps A Close Eye On All The Officers

Beau – Let’s talk about rights, grinding to a halt, and a republican question….

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Apr 222023
 

Yesterday, another much-longed-for update came through. Jamie Raskin had chemotherapy for the last time – because it has worled. This makes me so happy, please forgive me if I miss any errors trying to proofread. Of course he will now need to recover from the chemotherapy, but at least his body will not be constantly getting attacked, and I hope it will be easier and less painful.

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The Conversation – The presidential campaign of Convict 9653
Quote – Debs was behind bars in the federal penitentiary in Atlanta, Georgia, serving a 10-year sentence for sedition…. Debs had defiantly disobeyed a law he deemed unjust, the Sedition Act of 1918. The act was an anti-free speech measure passed at the behest of President Woodrow Wilson. The law made it illegal for a U.S. citizen to “willfully utter, print, write, or publish any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language about the United States government” or to discourage compliance with the draft or voluntary enlistment into the military.
Clivk through for history. Of course Eugene V. Debs is about as far distanced from Trump** as it’s possible to be – politically, as a human being, and proabably other ways as well. But Debs had the experience, and I don’t begrudge Traitor Tot sharing it.

Daily Beast – Little Girl, Parents Shot After Basketball Rolls Into Neighbor’s Yard: Report
Quote – A 6-year-old girl and her parents were injured by gunfire on Tuesday night after a basketball rolled down a residential street in North Carolina and into a man’s yard, enraging him, neighbors told WSOC-TV. Witnesses told the station that the gunman ran up and down the street, firing until he ran out of bullets…. The young girl, Kinsley White, was hospitalized after being seriously wounded. She was released overnight, family members told Queen City News. Her father, William White, remains in the hospital.
Click through for story. A basketball, for heaven’s sake! You’re not safe even if you stay out of the neighbor’s yard. Not even if you’re white. And five years old.

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