Archive for July, 2007

29
Jul

15th Erase Racism Carnival is up!

RaceWire, the ColorLines blog, has published the 15th Erase Racism Carnival. I could be mistaken, but I believe this is the largest carnival yet! Thanks to everyone at ColorLines who helped put it together and all the folks that contributed. Here is a snippet from the introduction:

This month we wanted to highlight some topics we feel don’t get enough time in the sun. So we sought out several pieces on topics that matter: Media Representations, the Green Economy and Black/Brown relations.

In addition, we grouped the blogs under a few other topics we hope you find pertinent and interesting:

–Race and the Green Economy
–Race, gender, and the media
–Black/Brown relations
–Historical identities
–Whiteness revisited
–Darfur

We still don’t have a host for the August edition. So if you are interested, please drop me a line (veganwonder [at] gmail.com).

20
Jul

6 ways activists can fuck up Darfur

This was gleaned from Saving Darfur or Salvation Delusion? by Steve Fake and Kevin Funk

1. Assume the U.S. Government will act in the interest of the Sudanese people

The contradiction is striking – on one hand, the United States highly prizes Khartoum for its key role in intelligence-sharing in the supposed “War on Terror,” yet simultaneously Washington has taken the lead in declaring (for domestic political reasons) that the Sudanese government is carrying out “genocide” in Darfur. Adding fuel to the fire, Sudan is an area of great to the United States, as it seeks to both prevent the consolidation of Chinese influence in Africa and gain control over Sudan’s substantial oil reserves.

2. Oversimplify the problem by silencing the voices of Darfurians and Muslims

Most prominently, the Coalition has at times been guilty of sidetracking Darfurian and Muslim activists, describing the conflict in harshly oversimplified ethnic terms, receiving official sanction from and doling out praise to the Bush administration, and failing to consider Washington’s potential interest in a UN deployment or “humanitarian intervention” – or the potentially dangerous outcomes of such actions.

3. Blindly support militaristic intervention

The real world demands not allowing genuine concern for victims of atrocities to be transmuted by interventionist hypocrites into apologetics for an imperialism that will ultimately produce more victims of more atrocities. But those same victims deserve better than mere denunciations of intervention and its apologists as hypocrites and warmongers…. Even if well-intentioned, it is entirely possible that an intervening force would cause more harm than it could potentially alleviate, especially given Khartoum’s disapproval of its deployment, and the possibility of an insurgent movement rising against it.

4. Ignore the role of humanitarian funds in Darfur

To take but the most elementary point of departure, one would expect that if actually concerned with Darfur, the United States and the rest of the West more generally would shower humanitarian funds onto the aid organizations operating in the region. This, of course, is consonant with the wishes of Darfur activist groups, and is the bare minimum that could be expected of the munificent leaders of Western Civilization….

5. Marginalize the African Union

Tellingly, less noted has been the West’s position towards the African Union (AU) forces already on the ground in Darfur. Again, if the heated rhetoric from Western capitals contained any meaningful shreds of reality, the AU troops shouldS enjoy boundless support–especially from those declaring “genocide” in the region.

6. Give up on diplomacy

Aside from the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA), which was heavily backed by the United States and deeply unpopular amongst Darfurians, remarkably little interest has been shown in developing a political solution by the United States, nor the Save Darfur movement, which has instead latched onto its cure-all of UN troops. Commenting that those seeking an intervention “are suffering from a salvation delusion,” Alex de Waal, a fellow of the Global Equity Initiative at Harvard and a director of Justice Africa, London, criticizes the framing of the entire debate about Darfur, arguing that: “A political settlement has been completely overlooked or downplayed by the U.S…The whole debate has gone off on a red herring—UN troops.”

18
Jul

the oppressed will eventually fight back

That includes non-humans, as you can see in the photo below taken from the most recent San Fermin Festival in Spain. I can’t really feel too sorry for this guy from Pennsylvania. After all, he traveled thousands of miles to “prove his manhood” by being chased by bulls that have been driven crazy and that by the end of the will have been tortured and killed. This guy will simply walk away with a scar that he’ll probably brag about for the rest of his life.

I still like to see these little acts of rebellion, like the elephants in Africa who destroyed the development that was encroaching on their ancestral lands, even if ultimately they end in the animals’ deaths. To me, it shows a sense of agency. Like when the zapatistas rose up in 1994 in what they originally called their suicide. They figured they were already dead, so why not die with dignity? I don’t think anyone really expected that a decade later they’d still be actively engaged in a model of democracy and self-determination that would be mimicked by movements around the world. Who knows, maybe one day these acts of rebellion from non-human animals will result in the dignity that all life deserves.

bull run injury

From AP: “Michael Lenahan, 23, of Philadelphia, Pa. is gored in the leg by a fighting bull during a traditional bull run in Pamplona, Spain, Thursday July 12, 2007. Two American brothers were gored Thursday during the longest and bloodiest morning bull run at the San Fermin festival in the northeastern city of Pamplona. Lawrence Lenahan, 26, of Hermosa Beach, Calif. and Michael Lenahan, 23, of Philadelphia, Pa. were gored by a bull who strayed from the pack, turned around and ran the wrong way. The older brother suffered a eight-inch (20-centimeter) goring in the left buttock after a dangerous sharp right turn in the course Lenahan described as a ‘dead man’s curve.’ The younger brother was injured shortly before the bull ring, the end point of the daily runs, after the bulls horn entered beneath his skin in his right shin. (AP Photo/ Inaki Porto)”




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