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Okay, time to go back to other side now. We've featured a few guys for the gals, now a gal for the guys. EYE CANDY OF THE WEEK
Particia Manterola
NOW PLAYING: In the GUEST BLOGGERS Section, JAMIE MENUTIS provides an OP-ED piece on the under-reported mental health nightmare in New Orleans and its implications. A new film review from me on Alex Karpovsky's quirky and funny new feature "The Hole Story" appeara in the FILM REVIEWS Section. Don't YOU ever wonder why so many Blogs are bull and doring? I know I do. You expect to find the same thing every day. How un-creative! I'd like to visit a Blog where I could expect the unexpected. So I decided to create one. ABOUT ME July, 2007 Archives August 2007 Archives 3 September 2007 Post This Web Blog was haphazardly produced without using Spell Check one danged time. We like it that way. ESOTERICA: In the coming weeks, expect our partnership with CinemActivist.com to provide you with reviews of great documentaries from Cinema Libre Studio, PBS, the History Channel, the Visioneerng Group and Working Films that provide you knowledge and move you toward activism. Just so you know. Depending on the events of the day, we'll likely be bringing you information about a great new film on New Orleans from independent director Alex LeMay, "Desert Bayou," slated to appear in New York City and New Orleans in early October before rolling out across the country. Cities and dates TBA.
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G21: Lightning StrikesRod Amis's BlogTo read this article in Deutsch, Francaise, Italiano, Portuguese, Espanol, Korean, Japanese, Dutch, Greek, Chinese and Russian, copy and paste the complete URL ("http://www.g21.net/ls/index911.html") and enter it in the box after you click through. 11 September 2007 - NOTE: As the sidebar says, I plan for you to expect the unexpected. I have always used a musical metaphor here. When it was magazine, I used to the jazz band idiom. Now that I've gone solo, I must consider myself a composer. - RA
First, some general observations:
CHORUS: We should have seen it coming them - and some now say they did. This is one of the most physically arduous stories I've had to cover in a long time. I'll tell you why below. [See "Editorial Notebook."] A New Century for AmericaTHE BACKDROP: The United States of America, the world's putative only superpower, hadstruggled to elect a new President leaving a bitter taste in the mouths of many of its citizens. For the first time since southern states had broken with the national government over issues of states rights and slavery more than a 100 years prior, leading to a national civil war, the American people were talking of a divided country. Commentators abroad and citizens at home questioned the very legitimacy of the American electoral system. The Supreme Court - normally considered above the poltitical fray - was accused of potentially having faced a conflict-of-interest because of partisan and self-interested statements made during the election by one of its justices. With the popular vote having gone to the official loser of the election by over half a million votes, and electoral college votes being awarded to the winner based on a single of fifty states (where the winner's brother was the chief executive,) it was difficult not to wonder about the need for electoral reform. So now there were two challenges to how America chooses its leaders: 1. Campaign Finance Reform - advocated by a number of the contenders for the two dominant political parties' presidential nominations, and 2. Electoral Reform, including the abolition of the Electoral College, advocated by an increasing number of citizens once this latest US presidency was perceived to have been decided by the Supreme Court rather than the people. Against this backdrop, George W. Bush was inaugurated as the 43rd President of the nation. Against this backdrop, 60,000 people came to the inaugural determined to send a message that they did not support his policies or consider Mr. Bush their President.
LESSONS FROM SEATTLEIf we look at both sides of the inaugural protest - police and demonstrators - as two sides of the same public discourse coin, then both groups responded to the lessons of the WTO protests in Seattle and all subsequent protests as learning tools. Both sides came to the inaugural armed with counter-measures for each others actions. The success for the protestors, in our view, was their ability to both minimize the arrests and violence while effectively delivering their dissident message and expanding their constituency. The success for the police authorities was their ability to both increase their penetration of dissident organizations and lower the impression that they were imposing repressive tactics. That is unless one considers the checkpoints along Pennsylvania Avenue and the barbed-wire-topped fencing. That is an ominous image that even incensed some Republican elected officials... What was made more clear than ever at the Bush inaugural was that Gen-X and Gen-Y have become involved in political activity. By my estimate, the vast majority of the protestors in Washington, D.C., today were in their 20s and early 30s. People my own age were represented, but in rather short supply. The leftist, dissident movement has been effectively taken over by new generations. This is important in far-reaching ways because it represents a new invigoration of the Left and one with a new sensibility and a new sense of humor.
EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK: As reported on our cover in the last edition, I was asked by a member of the Green Party to join a small Green contingent from Connecticut that would be taking part in the inaugural protests. It seemed fitting, as publisher of a magazine whose very name spoke to the vision of the 21st Century, that we be represented. Though our focus is international, and thus we tend to cover stories from abroad, it's impossible to ignore the important stories out of the United States which have international implications in an increasingly globalized world. More significantly, as a publication dedicated to political and social dissidence against multinational corporate dominance - which this US election seemed to validate in the most heinous and roughshod manner - it was our duty to report the "on the ground" view of the story. ABOUT MY COMPANIONS: I received the call Thursday evening. Diamond D, my friend and contact in Connecticut's Green Party, was taking a small group to the inaugural protests and asked if I would come along. Though it was last minute, I said yes. Our plan was that they pick me up in Baltimore at 3 p.m. Friday, we'd check into a hotel in Virginia and take the Metro into Washington. Diamond and I spoke on Thursday evening to confirm. Friday morning, I was having second thoughts. I had watched weather forecasts predicting rain, sleet and then snow by the afternoon. "I'm too old for this crap!" I thought. At 8:30 a.m. I placed a call to Connecticut, hoping to bail out as gracefully as possible. I received an answering machine. I left a message anyway. When no call had come by 11:30 a.m., I resigned myself to making the trip and began packing. Forty-five minutes later I received a call. Diamond had thrown a party the night before and was just getting ready for the journey. He would call me later with a new ETA. Reader's Digest Fast-Forward: Between additonal mishaps and bad weather, the arrival time in Baltimore was advanced to 9 p.m. My party arrived at 11:30 p.m. There was Diamond D, 23 years of age, who I know, and Ethan, Kierstan and Dave, all of whom must have been wondering why this old guy was coming with them. Dave appeared to be the senior person in our group after myself; he was probably all of 25 years old. We arrived at our hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, and had settled in and began planning for the inaugural at 2 in the morning. (I discovered here that we would all crash-out in the same hotel suite. Something I hadn't done - well, in a very long time.) We were all tired, but determined. The Plan was to get up at 6:30 a.m., eat breakfast and then take the Metro into Washington from the Vienna, Virginia, station. We would go to the Justice Action Movement's (JAM) Welcome Center, on 12th, to a coordinating meeting and decide which demonstrations and actions to attend. Let's just say we didn't all get it together to leave Chantilly by 7 a.m. Let's just say that the party at Diamond's didn't end, on the previous night, before 3 in the morning. Let's just say, especially after sleeping on a floor in a hotel room (for about three hours,) I wasn't at the top of my form. GENERAL OBSERVATIONS: This was one of the physically toughest stories I've had to work on in a while. The tough weather conditions only underscored my advancing years. Even my comrades, in their twenties, complained about the bad weather conditions we endured. Rain, cold, long hours of waiting for events to unfold, frozen feet, standing in puddles, rude crowd members crushed in like sardines in a can along the parade route, exhaustion and frustration. This is not an old man's business. I brought an umbrella. I was slow to keep up with my group. My feet hurt, my back hurt, I was ready to bail out when the Bush procession had not arrived at our location by 3 in the afternoon, cold, wet and miserable as I was. I had little patience with people trying to nooge their way into a vantage point many of us had stood in for long, wet, cold hours in order to participate in the unfolding event. MOST people are basically good, I believe. There were demonstrations of that here. Two stand out for me: * When a tall, hefty, (probably) 60-something Bush supporter loudly complained about his view of the parade route being blocked by a protestor holding a sign up in his field of vision, Diamond D said to the guy, "Yeah, and I could probably see too if you hadn't pushed your way in front of me and blocked mine!" The guy immediately stepped aside and allowed Diamond D into his spot ... AND with a smile. * Shortly before 3 p.m., at the 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue corner of the route, a heavy downpour started. A group of middle school teachers from Virginia who had brought their students out, as a Civics lesson I presumed, to view the inaugural had had enough. They had begged the police for an hour to let them take their students out of the throng but, because of security, they had met steadfast resistance. When the newest onslaught of rains came, the police and Secret Service relented. The children -- now antsy, soaked and miserable -- were allowed to leave the crowd and return to their hotel. Some people, of course, were resentful and created a momentary bottleneck. But ultimately the police and teachers prevailed. "We can watch it on TV," one of the lead teachers commented, showing incredible fortitude and patience. I couldn't help but admire this lady. BIG NEWS! You can now and henceforth find all of the G21 PODCASTS over at Blip.tv. Just click on the link http://blip.tv/users/view/g21guy and you can download to your iTunes or iPod and hear some of the thought leaders for this new century that I mean to bring to you. It will be updated with new episodes regularly, as you must know. You're welcome. Here's your music vid for this post (IF you don't get it on the first click, click again and you'll be taken directly to YouTube, where it should work. This is magical!): Cheers! RAKeep me in your prayers as I keep you in my own. Thanks for visiting. "Work like you don't need the money, "Love like you've never been hurt, "Dance like no one is watching ... " Talk to you in a day or so. Be well. Leave a Comment
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