• Good antidote to the “stupid celebrity” stories

    A pretty intelligent article on Sean Penn’s visit to Iraq.

    Penn spoke quietly, with evident sincerity. This was the time for a kind of summing up. For the most part during his three-day visit, Penn had gone out of his way to avoid the cameras, saying that he would share his thoughts at a press conference just prior to leaving Baghdad.

    Now, as he continued with his statement, the room was still. Penn said that he was “privileged to have lived a life under our Constitution that has allowed me to dream and prosper.” And he continued: “In response to these privileges I feel, both as an American and as a human being, the obligation to accept some level of personal responsibility for the policies of my government, both those I support and any that I may not. Simply put, if there is a war or continued sanctions against Iraq, the blood of Americans and Iraqis will be on our hands.”

    And then, Sean Penn added: “My trip here is to personally record the human face of the Iraqi people so that their blood – along with that of American soldiers – would not be invisible on my own hands. I sit with you here today in the hopes that any of us present may contribute in any way to a peaceful resolution to the conflict at hand.”

    Remember, as long as we’re pretending to be a democracy, the actions of our government are the responsibility of all of us. The citizens of Iraq, or Afghanistan, do that have that privilege or responsibility.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Could it be… Jews?

    Is this code for “blame the Jewish-controlled media?”

    Trent Lott on his critics — emphasis mine:

    When you’re from Mississippi, when you’re conservative and when you’re a Christian, there are a lot of people that don’t like that. But I fell into their trap and so I have only myself to blame.

    ·

    Categories:
  • 2 Recommended Chelsea Shows

    Dana Schutz at LFL Gallery — no pressure to buy, since they’re all sold.

    Andy Warhol Still Lifes at Paul Kasmin — no pressure to buy, since you can’t afford them.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Stop him!

    The cover of yesterday’s Daily Mirror:

    mirror-cover.jpeg

    ·

    Categories:
  • Far Away / Antigone

    Caryl Churchill’s latest play, “Far Away,” is at New York Theater Workshop, and it’s brilliant. I don’t feel like I can write a good review of it, but the people that call it a “tiny epic” are correct. It’s about an hour long, but it has more substance than most plays I’ve seen lately. Frances McDormand is brilliant, as are the other members of the cast. The equally fabulous Kathleen Chalfant will take over in McDormand’s role soon. The sexy Chris Messina, last seen (by us at least) in “This Thing of Darkness,” by Craig Lucas and David Schulner, also stars.

    I know most of my friends in NY don’t have a lot of money to spend on culture, so check out the “Cheap Tickets” link at the top of the NYTW site for information on rush tickets or ushering.

    NY Times review

    Tonight we saw Mac Wellman’s “Antigone” at Dance Theater Workshop, a collaboration with Annie-B Parson. It’s great fun, and it was one of the most beautiful — visually, musically, and verbally — evenings of theatre I’ve had in years. The cast is awesome, and the music and sound design are by Cynthia Hopkins. The Village Voice review seems pretty fair to me.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Blue Button Project

    The Nation has a good essay by Adrienne Rich, titled “Making the Connections,” regarding the fact that the pro-corporate, pro-war, anti-civil liberties activities of the current regime are all parts of the same agenda.

    This makes a good excuse to link to the Blue Button Project — I set up the web site.

    Head over to James’s site to read more about it.

    ·

    Categories:
  • The French really know how to advertise

    An ad for lube:

    gel-manix.jpg

    ·

    Categories:
  • Frist to be next majority leader?

    Good blog post from Nathan Newman on Bill Frist.

    Remember my post a few days ago about the Eli Lilly protection amendment mysteriously appearing in the Homeland Security Act?

    The language was taken from Frist’s original version of a bill to protect them.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Why isn’t this getting more coverage?

    The LA Times is covering this story, but I haven’t seen it anywhere else except from bloggers.

    I find it very disturbing that other major newspapers seem to be ignoring it, or burying it away from the front page.

    Hundreds Are Detained After Visits to INS

    Hundreds of men and boys from Middle Eastern countries were arrested by federal immigration officials in Southern California this week when they complied with orders to appear at INS offices for a special registration program.

    The arrests drew thousands of people to demonstrate Wednesday in Los Angeles.

    Immigration and Naturalization Service spokesmen refused Wednesday to say how many people the agency had detained, what the specific charges were or how many were still being held. But officials speaking anonymously said they would not dispute estimates by lawyers for detainees that the number across Southern California was 500 to 700. In Los Angeles, up to one-fourth of those who showed up to register were jailed, lawyers said.

    The number of people arrested in this region appears to have been considerably larger than elsewhere in the country, perhaps because of the size of the Southland’s Iranian population. Monday’s registration deadline applied to males 16 and older from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria. Men from 13 other nations, mostly in the Mideast and North Africa, are required to register next month.

    Many of those arrested, according to their lawyers, had already applied for green cards and, in some instances, had interviews scheduled in the near future. Although they had overstayed their visas, attorneys argue, their clients had already taken steps to remedy the situation and were following the regulations closely.

    “These are the people who’ve voluntarily gone” to the INS, said Mike S. Manesh of the Iranian American Lawyers Assn. “If they had anything to do with terrorism, they wouldn’t have gone.”

    I’ve only seen an AP story from the NY Times.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Random political data

    From 2000: McCain and Bush flirted with neo-Confederate movement.

    FBI warns corporations to look out for violence from anti-war protesters.

    50 Trent Lott Facts. My favorites:

    41. As youngest member of the House Judiciary Committee, he voted against impeachment of Richard Nixon in 1974. Twenty-five years later, he voted for the impeachment of Bill Clinton.

    46. Once declared he feels closer to Jefferson Davis “than any other man in America.”

    47. In mid-’90s, organized the Dark Ages Weekend, a mid-winter outing for ultra right-wingers at Miami’s posh Doral Golf Resort and Spa in Miami.

    49.In 1981, helped Jackson, Miss., annex white suburbs to dilute political strength of black voters.

    ·

    Categories: