• 2 recommended Chelsea openings tonight

    baran_kiss.jpg

    I Miss You Already, 2004
    Tracey Baran

    Tracey Baran at Leslie Tonkonow. We have several works by Tracey. We have followed her work since we first bought two photos from Liebman Magnan at the Gramercy Art Fair, before she had even had a show.

    Ester Partegas at Foxy Production. She was in the show “Soft Cell” at Foxy which I mention often.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Column on Haiti

    This column from Mark Weisbrot provides some interesting background on the situation in Haiti. A sample:

    The latest coup is in many ways a repeat of the military coup that overthrew Aristide in 1991. Although many Americans know that President Clinton sent 20,000 troops to restore Aristide to the presidency in 1994, they do not about Washington’s role prior to that.

    The United States, which occupied Haiti militarily from 1915-1934 and had plenty of support for the murderous Duvaliers who ruled the country from 1956-1986, had a problem when Haiti held the first democratic election in its history.

    Aristide, a populist priest who preached liberation theology, was elected by a landslide in 1990.  After serving seven months in office, he was overthrown by the military. The officers who led the military coup were, as later reported by the New York Times, on the payroll of the CIA. But the Washington connection did not end there.

    A death squad organization known by the French acronym F.R.A.P.H was formed, and murdered at least 3000 of Aristide’s supporters over the next three years. The founder of the organization, Emanuel Constant, stated in an interview on CBS’ 60 minutes that he was paid by the CIA to create and maintain the organization during the dictatorship. He now lives in New York.

    Constant’s second in command, convicted murderer Louis-Jodel Chamblain, was one of the leaders of last week’s insurrection. The New York Times report on Tuesday summed up the situation after the coup: “These men, whom Mr. Powell characterized last week as “thugs,” and a few hundred of their followers are for now the domestic face of national security in Haiti.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Theatre non-recommendation

    Ugh. We saw Nicky Silver’s Beautiful Child at Vineyard Theatre last night.

    I hated it so much I don’t even want to talk about it. If I hadn’t been on the second row I might have walked out.

    I was actually angry when I left the theatre. It’s bad enough to see a mess of a play that’s a comedy, but to see an awful play about a child molester is just too much. If I had been The Vineyard, I would have told Nicky, “we’re not producing this one.” It was like bad dinner theatre Albee.

    I wonder what Rex Reed thought? He was in the audience.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Headed out to vote for Kucinich

    I’m headed out to vote for Dennis Kucinich in the primary. Go read Matt Taibbi on the Congressman from Ohio who actually believes we all deserve health care.

    There are a lot of people out there who are inclined to laugh at this candidate. A few do so because they genuinely find him laughable, but most do it because they see him being laughed at in the news media. In this country we generally take our cues about whom we can safely laugh at from the mainstream press, and for the most part we laugh at the weak, the earnest, the sincere, the emotionally vulnerable. We laugh at people who are fat and ugly or who work as temps or at McDonaldÂ’s because none of us want to admit that weÂ’re not the ripped six-pack guy on the cover of MenÂ’s Health, or a member of the Sharper Image target market. WeÂ’re cowards, afraid of admitting to being who we are, and we laugh at people on the margins to avoid being identified as outsiders by the remorseless center.

    ItÂ’s the same with politics. Over and over again we have been told, in a million different ways, that a certain kind of idealism is actually childish weakness, and that the only pragmatic way of approaching life upholds force and commerce as the chief engines of social organization. That is why we laugh at people who use words like peace and community but praise as tough, responsible leaders anyone whoÂ’s willing to drop the most mother-of-all bombs on defenseless foreign populations. We laugh at a person who uses the word peace for the same reason that we laugh at the person who works as a temp or at McDonaldÂ’s: because weÂ’re afraid of being lumped together with him.

    I will never forgive America for what Dennis Kucinich went through this year. Because he has had the audacity to call for an end to all wars, to announce plans for the creation of a Department of Peace, to question the very culture of viciousness and intolerance and crass commercialism that rules our public discourse, he has been labeled a lunatic by nearly every “responsible” press organ in this country and cruelly mocked to a degree that no civil society should allow an honorable man to endure. The New Yorker, that revolting beacon of glib, self-satisfied affluence, runs a cartoon showing Kucinich sweeping to victory in a primary held on Mars. The New York Times first angrily demands that he not waste any more of our time, then actually physically disposes of him after the passing of some self-imposed fictional electoral deadline. Even the more genuinely funny and more intelligent people in American public life–IÂ’m thinking particularly of Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon–canÂ’t resist savaging Kucinich whenever they get a chance. All because heÂ’s funny-looking, and because he uses the word peace without kidding.

    I am a Dennis Kucinich supporter because I believe AmericaÂ’s greatest problem is its incivility, its intolerance to new ideas, its remorseless hatred of weakness and failure, the willingness of its individual citizens to submerge their individual cowardice within the vicious commerce-driven standards of our national self-image. George Bush is a terrible president, but he is merely a by-product of these wider national tendencies, which exist outside of him and independently of him. And these tendencies are symbolized exactly in the laughter directed at Dennis Kucinich. To vote for Dennis Kucinich, I believe, is to vote for manÂ’s right to publicly be who he is and not be ridiculed for it. If we are peaceful people, it is a vote for our right to merely be who we are.

    This is not a small thing, because we are in danger of losing that right in this country. If you are the wrong kind of person, even the New York Times would have you disappear from the stage entirely. That is why it is important to understand this vote not as a pragmatic choice for a winner, but as a passionate act of self-preservation. We must stand with the man who is taking all the abuse that most of us are too afraid to take in our own lives.

    Well, enough of that. Getting back to the conversation with Kucinich on Saturday: I found the congressman in what appeared to be a good mood, as he negotiated the New York Times afterworld. Because IÂ’m interested in this question personally, I first tried to ask him what he thought the reasons were for the mediaÂ’s persistent calls for him to leave the race. After all, heÂ’s not spending their money. But he seemed less interested in talking about the reasons the press insists on thinning the herd than in pointing out why itÂ’s important to ignore them. One interesting point he made was that being ignored by the press was not automatically a bad thing.

    “ItÂ’s like being covered by corporate cops,” he said. “I mean, they certainly didnÂ’t do Howard Dean any favorsÂ… So this idea of having a press corps cover you relentlessly may be overrated.”

    He went on to suggest that even regularly consuming media can be as bad for you as being covered was for Howard Dean. “The thing is,” he said, “if you depend on the media for your life, for approval, then you end up being bound by its logic. I donÂ’t, so IÂ’m not.”

    Kucinich wrapped up his remarks about the media with a classic Kucinichism, taking a moment to expound upon the reasons why people in the media who behave this way should be treated with compassion. One would call this a common rhetorical technique of his, except that most of the time when he talks this way, he appears actually to mean it. This time was no exception.

    “[People in the media] have a terrible cross to bear,” he said. “LetÂ’s look at it from their point of view, okay? What a great responsibility they take on. They have to decide the fate of the world every day. They have to be able to tell people who their leaders should be, what the right decisions are to makeÂ…and itÂ’s very hard to do that, itÂ’s hard to be able to make those decisions.”

    He went on:

    “You have to remember that this is kind of a throwback to another era, when there were vast amounts of people who could barely read, who couldnÂ’t really make decisions on their own. So they had to be guided. So what a difficult position to be in, to know that you always have to guide people as to exactly what to thinkÂ… So you have to have compassion for people in that situation.”

    Q: But a lot of us who were on the outside, who didnÂ’t even have the privilege of being in Congress, we supposed automatically that this whole weapons of mass destruction business was a pretext for an invasion that was planned all along for other reasons. Is that correct? Is the idea that they were fooled a little strange to begin with?

    A: Of course it is. And of course thatÂ’s what was going on. But there were a number of things that went into this, that played a part. One of those things was the whole dramaturgy of the constant threat, the lions and tigers and bears, oh my, and that was played up. And then there was the realpolitik search for hegemony in the region. And on top of that there was the posturing of various political leaders who were engaged in this ridiculous struggle to look tough. So this raises the question of what category of person you want your president to be in. ThatÂ’s not to say that the others arenÂ’t fine people in their own right. But it does say that when we entered a war that was totally unnecessary, thatÂ…I challenged the White House, I challenged the members of my own party, I challenged the media. And they did not [act] and so having given in to the administration on the war, it made it impossible for the party to challenge the White House on economic issues.

    Q: WasnÂ’t the vote that Kerry and Edwards made also just generally an endorsement of the whole idea of pre-emptive war?

    A: Absolutely. It licensed pre-emptive attack.

    Q: Because when the newspapers today talk about the vote that the two senators made, they generally discuss it only in the context of their having believed there were weapons of mass destruction. But wasnÂ’t there a larger issue, which involved lessening the standards for going to war?

    A: Yes–but again, what are the implications of their having believed there were weapons of mass destruction? It’s not just about a vote, the vote was what it was, but what information did they have? It just raises the question–what were they thinking? I mean, if they were fooled by George Bush–who else would they be fooled by?

    In case you havenÂ’t seen Kucinich in a debate or havenÂ’t read this in the newspapers: He is the only candidate in favor of ending the for-profit system of health care and replacing it with free, universal single-payer health care. When I asked him how this compares with KerryÂ’s plan of making the Senate health plan available to everyone, he explained:

    “The Senate health plan is a government-subsidized for-profit health plan. IÂ’m talking about eliminating those for-profit costs entirely. Plus my plan covers everything–dental, mental health, ambulatory careÂ…”

    “Wait a minute,” I interrupted, “the Senate health plan doesnÂ’t have dental? Or mental health?”

    “Oh, no,” he said.

    “So what does John Kerry do when he falls down and breaks a tooth?”

    Kucinich didnÂ’t laugh. “I canÂ’t speak for John Kerry, but IÂ’m sure he can make other arrangements. He probably has another plan.”

    ·

    Categories:
  • More on Jay Blotcher and the NY Times

    I’ve set up Jay’s web site (jayblotcher.com) with Movable Type and started putting some more information up for him.

    For people looking for background information or articles and letters related to the NY Times dismissal, that’s the place to look.

    ·

    Categories: ,
  • What country am I in?

    This is considered an appropriate question from a New York Times reporter in a debate between the Democratic presidential candidates?

    Q. Really fast, last, on a Sunday morning, President Bush has said that freedom and fear have always been at war and God is not neutral between them. He’s made quite clear in these speeches that he feels God is on America’s side. Really quick: Is God on America’s side?

    I love the “really quick” part.

    Becoming an expatriate in Germany or France is looking better and better.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Our unexcellent subway adventure

    photo from James

    James and I had an adventure yesterday in the subway – he has a more detailed write-up plus more photos. Around 5:30 our F train stopped between Broadway/Lafayette and West Fourth because of a homeless man throwing debris onto the tracks. Around 6:20 it moved briefly, then there was arcing and noise from the 3rd rail visible from our car’s windows, along with some smoke in our car. People were pretty calm, and they told us to go to the front of the train. We then spent an hour standing around near the front of the train, until they told us to go to the rear of the train to exit via an emegency exit to the street. During that hour, they kept telling us that the police and fire departments were “on their way.” Let me repeat that: they were “on their way” for an HOUR.

    From the stories I’ve seen online we had it pretty easy, as we didn’t have much smoke at all. I think it was much worse in some places.

    New York Times
    Newsday
    New York Post

    Even though what we personally went through wasn’t that bad, I was pretty shaken up once I thought about it later. Why did it take two hours to get us 15 feet to the emergency exit? Is the MTA, and its coordination with city emergency services, really that bad? We couldn’t see significant smoke out the windows and we had the car windows open for the last 30-45 minutes. Is the city really that incapable of dealing with something bad happening in the subway?

    This is the kind of thing that makes me question living in NYC. I’m not sure the people in charge are really capable of preparing this city for possible calamities. A single homeless man throwing some garbage can cause people to be trapped for hours in the subway?

    I’m also disturbed that the “we’re not prepared” angle seems lost to the media. Newsday put the article on page 17, under an article about Joan Rivers and the Oscars. The NY Times story, which didn’t make the print run, is just ridiculous. They can’t even calculate time properly. The last time I checked, 6:20-9 is not two hours, and in any case our train first stopped at 5:30.

    ·

    Categories:
  • What a crappy paper – The New York Times and ethics

    Our friend Jay Blotcher, a freelance writer, has been sacked as a stringer for the New York Times because he was involved with ACT UP over ten years ago.

    Blotcher, who has been involved with gay and AIDS groups in the past, joined the newspaper as a stringer––a freelance reporter––in 2001 after he left New York City for the Hudson Valley. For much of his employment he contributed stories or reporting without ever getting a byline in the paper.

    In late 2003, Blotcher published two stories and, under a new Times policy, his name appeared on those pieces. One story dealt with the trial of a woman who was accused of killing her three children. The second concerned some vandalism on a college campus.

    “I never dealt with gay issues or AIDS issues,” Blotcher said.

    Someone, an editor, another reporter, or a reader noted BlotcherÂ’s name and recalled that he was once a member of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, or ACT UP.

    “There was no complaint,” wrote Susan Edgerley, the Times metropolitan editor, in response to a Gay City News e-mail query. “We recognized the name from his work with ACT UP.”

    That was it for Blotcher. On January 12, Lew Serviss, a Times editor, told him the paper would no longer use him in any section. When he appealed to Edgerley she responded, “I am setting the bar high to protect against any appearance of conflict of interest that might result through the hiring of stringers and leg-people. My motivation is expediency as well as ethics––we simply do not spend as much time checking into the backgrounds of independent contractors as we do of fulltime staff people.”

    The real problem here is that The Times isnÂ’t committed to its own ethics policy. LetÂ’s look at just two Times reporters.

    Lawrence K. Altman is a former employee of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and he regularly reports on that agency. Altman also sits on an advisory board that administers a CDC fellowship program. In other words, his relationship with the CDC continues. That would be an actual conflict of interest.

    Bernard Weinraub covers the film industry in Los Angeles and his wife heads Columbia Pictures. A portion of their household income, probably the majority, comes from a major player in the industry Weinraub covers. That would also be an actual conflict of interest.

    If The Times believed in its ethics policy then it would defend a Jay Blotcher when he follows that policy, but then the newspaper would have to do something about Weinraub and Altman. Neither man returned a phone call seeking comment.

    The Times isn’t serious about ethics. The paper, to use Edgerley’s word, is concerned with “expediency.”

    Updated: Atrios has more information on The Times’s idea of ethics. Also, I see that this was mentioned in the Washington Post last week in Howard Kurtz’s column.

    ·

    Categories: ,
  • War, poetry, and music

    There is no such thing as the State

    And no one exists alone;

    Hunger allows no choice

    To the citizen or the police;

    We must love one another or die.

    — From September 1, 1939 by W.H. Auden

    James and I went to an amazing concert by the Orchestra of St. Luke’s on Thursday night. Go read his account.

    ·

    Categories:
  • John and Robert

    Two of my mother’s closest friends in the town where she lives, Conway, Arkansas, are a gay couple named John and Robert.

    john-and-robert.jpg

    John Schenck and Robert Loyd

    There was an article about them in the local paper recently. I’m not crazy about how it’s written, but the fact that it was given such prominence is pretty cool.

    History

    Schenck grew up in New York with five brothers. One brother would later hold Schenck’s new boyfriend, Loyd, while another pistol whipped him. A football player, Schenck was beaten by several members of the team after rejecting sexual advances from one of the players. In 1969, Schenck participated in the Stonewall riots in New York, he told the class.

    Loyd was born in Germany and came to America when he was 3 years old. He grew up in Damascus. His family has a strong military background. Loyd denounced his German citizenship when he was 18 to join the United States Army. He fought in Vietnam.

    During an earlier interview, Loyd discussed fighting for his rights. He was naive, Loyd said, and later felt like some of the rights he fought for seemed to be jerked away.

    “I was born with those rights,” Loyd said to the class.

    “My life is about all of us being equal and sharing equally in the burden of life, or the joys of life,” Loyd said.

    The couple celebrated 29 years together Jan. 19.

    My mother just e-mailed me:

    My friends are having a wedding ceremony Sunday on the steps of the State Capitol. While I was there this afternoon they got permission to gather there from the Secretary of State’s office. There was a problem at first getting permission because the Boy Scouts have a gathering there at same time. They have been talking with ACLU and the Arkansas Diversity Assoc. about being there in support as the news media have been notified.

    ·

    Categories: