Economic Aspects of "Love"

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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Jun 13, 2013 8:23 am

http://climateandcapitalism.com/2013/06 ... es-agenda/


Population and poverty: Against the Gates agenda


Last year, multi-billionaires Bill and Melinda Gates announced that their foundation will fund long-lasting injectable hormonal contraceptives for millions of poor women in sub-Saharan Africa.

Anne Hendrixson, Assistant Director of the Population and Development program at Hampshire College, argues that advocates of women’s rights should oppose the Gates plan as population control in a new guise.

Anne has kindly shared the text of her talk on the issue, presented to the opening session of the From Abortion Rights to Social Justice: Building the Movement for Reproductive Freedom conference held in AmherstMassachusetts in April.

The conference, organized by HampshireCollege’s Population and Development (PopDev) and Civil Liberties and Public Policy (CLPP) programs, drew over 1,000 people from 132 campuses and 260 organizations.

Anne’s talk was one of 14 short presentations a wide range of women activists, writers and organizers at the the opening session, Speaking Out for Reproductive Freedom. Videos of all the talks can be viewed on CLPP’s YouTube Page.



by Anne Hendrixson Image

As a long-time advocate for feminist population politics, it is ironic for me that I celebrate my birthday each year on July 11: World Population Day.

And last year on my birthday, all the major international reproductive health organizations and donors —like UNFPA, USAID and the Gates Foundation — convened in London.

They were not there to celebrate my birthday.

They were hosting the 2012 London Family Planning Summit where they rolled out a 4.3 billion dollar family planning strategy. The strategy is focused on voluntary fertility control. Its main goal is to reach 380 million women in the global South with contraceptives by 2020. Abortion is excluded, because major donor Melinda Gates is anti-choice.

Melinda Gates hails this as the biggest investment in women in history.

But this “investment in women” wasn’t made on International Women’s Day. It was made on World Population Day. And this is telling.

Is this so-called “rebirth of family planning” an investment in women?

Or is it a re-investment in retrograde population control thinking?

By focusing on women and fertility on World Population Day, the Summit revived notions that poor, women of color in the global South are victims of their own fertility, and the reason for population growth.

This entrenches gender norms, racial stereotypes, and global power divides.

It reinforces retro ideas that population growth, and therefore women of color, are the reason for poverty.

This “rebirth of family planning” is not a win for reproductive justice. It is a cause for deep concern.

An influx of hormonal contraceptives into Southern Africa and South Asia will not safeguard people’s reproductive health and freedom.

With number-driven targets aimed at women of color, lack of safe abortion, and a limited menu of contraception options, it may be the “rebirth of population control.”

Not that population control has gone away: population control abuses happen today, like forced and coerced sterilization for HIV positive women in parts of Africa, and the two-child norm in states in India.

In anticipation of right-wing backlash against this limited, family planning agenda, the Gates Foundation rolled-out a website: No-Controversy.com. When I first visited the site, it read,No Controversy in Contraceptives.

The argument seems to be that if I agree with contraception access, which I do, I’ll agree with the Gates agenda, which I firmly, and passionately, don’t.

So to the Gates Foundation, I say, Yes Controversy!

Controversy for safer contraceptives!

Controversy for freedom from coerced and forced sterilization!

Controversy to hold international donors and organizations accountable for what they do!

Controversy to end testing unethical contraception testing on human subjects!

Controversy to build an inclusive and righteous reproductive justice movement!
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Jun 13, 2013 8:50 am

Program: Need To Know
Episode: Dying to get back

While the number of illegal crossings at the border has plummeted dramatically — roughly half the number than during peak years — just as many people are dying. Meaning for those coming into the country illegally, it is now more deadly, more lethal, than at any time in recent U.S. immigration history.

http://video.pbs.org/video/2365012816
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Jun 13, 2013 10:19 am

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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Jun 14, 2013 8:31 am

From theory to practice,
taking a critical look at Leninism


Image

Adam Weaver reviews Ron Taber's 1988 book, A Look At Leninism,
which is available in PDF format here.


Continues at:: http://libcom.org/library/theory-practi ... k-leninism
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sat Jun 15, 2013 9:14 am

TRIGGER WARNING

The Wellbriety Journey to Forgiveness



Documentary on the Abuses of the Indian Boarding Schools. Discusses the intergenerational trauma in native communities. The "Wellbriety Movement: Journey of Forgiveness" is now available on Youtube, http://www.whitebison.org , or free on DVD. Email info@whitebison.org for DVD, include mailing address.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sat Jun 15, 2013 2:17 pm

Image
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sun Jun 16, 2013 12:05 pm

tips on passing for transgender people

Hair: hair is very important for anyone who is trying to pass as their identified gender. for example if you are a girl, cryogenically freeze your hair with liquid nitrogen, then fashion it into a spike like a unicorn horn and use it to run people through. for boys, you can try shaving it all off and burning it in your backyard as a sacrifice to the gods. if you don’t identify within the binary, collect every hair from your body over the course of several years and sticking them all together and using them as a lasso.
Posture: another important one. guys, remember to bend all the way backwards and walk on your hands like in the exorcist. girls, slump over as far as possible when sitting. put your head between your thighs and smile at the people behind you as you walk.
Clothes: ladies, youre going to need to go out and buy some ceremonial robes covered in protective runic symbols. guys and nonbinary individuals, get rid of your skirts and dresses in favor of hooded boiler suits.
Voice: altering your voice can be tricky, and you dont want it to sound forced, so shove a fucking kazoo in yor god damn windpipe, do it you sack of garbage

jst remember, not everyone is going to be accepting of your identity, even if you do everything on this list. if you still get misgendered just pretend to be asleep or dead.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sun Jun 16, 2013 2:34 pm

http://unsettlingamerica.wordpress.com/ ... t-apology/

Indigenous feminism without apology
Posted on September 8, 2011

By Andrea Smith, Unsettling Ourselves

We often hear the mantra in indigenous communities that Native women aren’t feminists. Supposedly, feminism is not needed because Native women were treated with respect prior to colonization. Thus, any Native woman who calls herself a feminist is often condemned as being “white.”

However, when I started interviewing Native women organizers as part of a research project, I was surprised by how many community-based activists were describing themselves as “feminists without apology.” They were arguing that feminism is actually an indigenous concept that has been co-opted by white women.

The fact that Native societies were egalitarian 500 years ago is not stopping women from being hit or abused now. For instance, in my years of anti-violence organizing, I would hear, “We can’t worry about domestic violence; we must worry about survival issues first.” But since Native women are the women most likely to be killed by domestic violence, they are clearly not surviving. So when we talk about survival of our nations, who are we including?

These Native feminists are challenging not only patriarchy within Native communities, but also white supremacy and colonialism within mainstream white feminism. That is, they’re challenging why it is that white women get to define what feminism is.


DECENTERING WHITE FEMINISM

The feminist movement is generally periodized into the so-called first, second and third waves of feminism. In the United States, the first wave is characterized by the suffragette movement; the second wave is characterized by the formation of the National Organization for Women, abortion rights politics, and the fight for the Equal Rights Amendments. Suddenly, during the third wave of feminism, women of colour make an appearance to transform feminism into a multicultural movement.

This periodization situates white middle-class women as the central historical agents to which women of colour attach themselves. However, if we were to recognize the agency of indigenous women in an account of feminist history, we might begin with 1492 when Native women collectively resisted colonization. This would allow us to see that there are multiple feminist histories emerging from multiple communities of colour which intersect at points and diverge in others. This would not negate the contributions made by white feminists, but would de-center them from our historicizing and analysis.

Indigenous feminism thus centers anti-colonial practice within its organizing. This is critical today when you have mainstream feminist groups supporting, for example, the US bombing of Afghanistan with the claim that this bombing will free women from the Taliban (apparently bombing women somehow liberates them).

CHALLENGING THE STATE

Indigenous feminists are also challenging how we conceptualize indigenous sovereignty — it is not an add-on to the heteronormative and patriarchal nationstate. Rather it challenges the nationstate system itself. Charles Colson, prominent Christian Right activist and founder of Prison Fellowship, explains quite clearly the relationship between heteronormativity and the nation-state. In his view, samesex marriage leads directly to terrorism; the attack on the “natural moral order” of the heterosexual family “is like handing moral weapons of mass destruction to those who use America’s decadence to recruit more snipers and hijackers and suicide bombers.”

Similarly, the Christian Right World magazine opined that feminism contributed to the Abu Ghraib scandal by promoting women in the military. When women do not know their assigned role in the gender hierarchy, they become disoriented and abuse prisoners.

Implicit in this is analysis the understanding that heteropatriarchy is essential for the building of US empire. Patriarchy is the logic that naturalizes social hierarchy. Just as men are supposed to naturally dominate women on the basis of biology, so too should the social elites of a society naturally rule everyone else through a nation-state form of governance that is constructed through domination, violence, and control.

As Ann Burlein argues in Lift High the Cross, it may be a mistake to argue that the goal of Christian Right politics is to create a theocracy in the US. Rather, Christian Right politics work through the private family (which is coded as white, patriarchal, and middle-class) to create a “Christian America.” She notes that the investment in the private family makes it difficult for people to invest in more public forms of social connection.

For example, more investment in the suburban private family means less funding for urban areas and Native reservations. The resulting social decay is then construed to be caused by deviance from the Christian family ideal rather than political and economic forces. As former head of the Christian Coalition Ralph Reed states: “The only true solution to crime is to restore the family,” and “Family break-up causes poverty.”

Unfortunately, as Navajo feminist scholar Jennifer Denetdale points out, the Native response to a heteronormative white, Christian America has often been an equally heteronormative Native nationalism. In her critique of the Navajo tribal council’s passage of a ban on same-sex marriage, Denetdale argues that Native nations are furthering a Christian Right agenda in the name of “Indian tradition.”

This trend is equally apparent within racial justice struggles in other communities of colour. As Cathy Cohen contends, heteronormative sovereignty or racial justice struggles will effectively maintain rather than challenge colonialism and white supremacy because they are premised on a politics of secondary marginalization. The most elite class will further their aspirations on the backs of those most marginalized within the community.

Through this process of secondary marginalization, the national or racial justice struggle either implicitly or explicitly takes on a nation-state model as the end point of its struggle – a model in which the elites govern the rest through violence and domination, and exclude those who are not members of “the nation.”

NATIONAL LIBERATION

Grassroots Native women, along with Native scholars such as Taiaiake Alfred and Craig Womack, are developing other models of nationhood. These articulations counter the frequent accusations that nation- building projects necessarily lead to a narrow identity politics based on ethnic cleansing and intolerance. This requires that a clear distinction be drawn between the project of national liberation, and that of nation-state building.

Progressive activists and scholars, while prepared to make critiques of the US and Canadian governments, are often not prepared to question their legitimacy. A case in point is the strategy of many racial justice organizations in the US or Canada, who have rallied against the increase in hate crimes since 9/11 under the banner, “We’re American [or Canadian] too.”

This allegiance to “America” or “Canada” legitimizes the genocide and colonization of Native peoples upon which these nation-states are founded. By making anti-colonial struggle central to feminist politics, Native women place in question the appropriate form of governance for the world in general. In questioning the nation-state, we can begin to imagine a world that we would actually want to live in. Such a political project is particularly important for colonized peoples seeking national liberation outside the nation- state.

Whereas nation-states are governed through domination and coercion, indigenous sovereignty and nationhood is predicated on interrelatedness and responsibility.

As Sharon Venne explains, “Our spirituality and our responsibilities define our duties. We understand the concept of sovereignty as woven through a fabric that encompasses our spirituality and responsibility. This is a cyclical view of sovereignty, incorporating it into our traditional philosophy and view of our responsibilities. It differs greatly from the concept of Western sovereignty which is based upon absolute power. For us absolute power is in the Creator and the natural order of all living things; not only in human beings… Our sovereignty is related to our connections to the earth and is inherent.”

REVOLUTION

A Native feminist politics seeks to do more than simply elevate Native women’s status — it seeks to transform the world through indigenous forms of governance that can be beneficial to everyone.

At the 2005 World Liberation Theology Forum held in Porto Alegre, Brazil, indigenous peoples from Bolivia stated that they know another world is possible because they see that world whenever they do their ceremonies. Native ceremonies can be a place where the present, past and future become copresent. This is what Native Hawaiian scholar Manu Meyer calls a racial remembering of the future.

Prior to colonization, Native communities were not structured on the basis of hierarchy, oppression or patriarchy. We will not recreate these communities as they existed prior to colonization. Our understanding that a society without structures of oppression was possible in the past tells us that our current political and economic system is anything but natural and inevitable. If we lived differently before, we can live differently in the future.

Native feminism is not simply an insular or exclusivist “identity politics” as it is often accused of being. Rather, it is framework that understands indigenous women’s struggles part of a global movement for liberation. As one activist stated: “You can’t win a revolution on your own. And we are about nothing short of a revolution. Anything else is simply not worth our time.”


Andrea Smith is Cherokee and a professor of Native American Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and co-founder of Incite! Women of Color Against Violence and the Boarding School Healing Project.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sun Jun 16, 2013 4:23 pm

The 3 Phases of Gentrification: Hilarious Clip from
Comedian Micia Mosley




http://www.decolonizingyoga.com/the-3-p ... cia-mosley
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Mon Jun 17, 2013 6:51 am

http://marilocosta.blogspot.com/2012/12 ... s-and.html

Eduardo Galeano - A Flood of Tears and Blood: And Yet the Pope Said Indians Had Souls

In 1581 Philip II told the audiencia [An audiencia was a judicial district as well as a judicial, administrative, and advisory body. In Mexico, it was the supreme court of administration and judgment. (Trans.)] of Guadalajara that a third of Latin America’s Indians had already been wiped out, and that those who survived were compelled to pay the tributes for the dead. The monarch added that Indians were bought and sold; that they slept in the open air; and that mothers killed their children to save them from the torture of the mines. Yet the Crown’s hypocrisy had smaller limits than the empire: it received a fifth of the value of the metals extracted by its subjects in all of the Spanish New World, as well as other taxes, and the Portuguese Crown was to have the same arrangement in eighteenth- century Brazil. Latin American silver and gold— as Engels put it— penetrated like a corrosive acid through all the pores of Europe’s moribund feudal society, and, for the benefit of nascent mercantilist capitalism, the mining entrepreneurs turned Indians and black slaves into a teeming “external proletariat” of the European economy. Greco-Roman slavery was revived in a different world; to the plight of the Indians of the exterminated Latin American civilizations was added the ghastly fate of the blacks seized from African villages to toil in Brazil and the Antilles. The colonial Latin American economy enjoyed the most highly concentrated labor force known until that time, making possible the greatest concentration of wealth ever enjoyed by any civilization in world history.

The price of the tide of avarice, terror, and ferocity bearing down on these regions was Indian genocide: the best recent investigations credit pre-Columbian Mexico with a population between 30 and 37.5 million, and the Andean region is estimated to have possessed a similar number; Central America had between 10 and 13 million. The Indians of the Americas totaled no less than 70 million when the foreign conquerors appeared on the horizon; a century and a half later they had been reduced to 3.5 million. In 1685 only 4,000 Indian families remained of the more than 2 million that had once lived between Lima and Paita, according to the Marquis of Barinas. Archbishop Liñán y Cisneros denied that the Indians had been annihilated: “The truth is that they are hiding out,” he said, “to avoid paying tribute, abusing the liberty which they enjoy and which they never had under the Incas.” While metals flowed unceasingly from Latin American mines, equally unceasing were the orders from the Spanish Court granting paper protection and dignity to the Indians whose killing labor sustained the kingdom. The fiction of legality protected the Indian; the reality of exploitation drained the blood from his body. From slavery to the encomienda of service, and from this to the encomienda of tribute and the regime of wages, variants in the Indian labor force’s juridical condition made only superficial changes in the real situation. The Crown regarded the inhuman exploitation of Indian labor as so necessary that in 1601 Philip III, banning forced labor in the mines by decree, at the same time sent secret instructions ordering its continuation “in case that measure should reduce production.” Similarly, between 1616 and 1619, Governor Juan de Solórzano carried out a survey of work conditions in the Huancavelica mercury mines (directly exploited by the Crown, in distinction to the silver mines, which were in private hands): “The poison penetrated to the very marrow, debilitating all the members and causing a constant shaking, and the workers usually died within four years,” he reported to the Council of the Indies and to the king. But in 1631 Philip IV ordered that the same system be continued, and his successor Charles II later reaffirmed the decree.

In three centuries Potosi’s Cerro Rico consumed 8 million lives. The Indians, including women and children, were torn from their agricultural communities and driven to the Cerro. Of every ten who went up into the freezing wilderness, seven never returned. Luis Capoche, an owner of mines and mills, wrote that “the roads were so covered with people that the whole kingdom seemed on the move.” In their communities the Indians saw “many afflicted women returning without husbands and with many orphaned children” and they knew that “a thousand deaths and disasters” awaited them in the mines. The Spaniards scoured the countryside for hundreds of miles for labor. Many died on the way, before reaching Potosi, but it was the terrible work conditions in the mine that killed the most people. Soon after the mine began operating, in 1550, the Dominican monk Domingo de Santo Tomás told the Council of the Indies that Potosi was a “mouth of hell” which swallowed Indians by the thousands every year, and that rapacious mine owners treated them “like stray animals.” Later Fray Rodrigo de Loaysa said: “These poor Indians are like sardines in the sea. Just as other fish pursue the sardines to seize and devour them, so everyone in these lands pursues the wretched Indians.” Chiefs of Indian communities had to replace the constantly dying mitayos with new men between eighteen and fifty years old. The huge stone-walled corral where Indians were assigned to mine and mill owners is now used by workers as a football ground. The mitayos’ jail— a shapeless mass of ruins— can still be seen at the entrance to Potosi.

The Compilation of the Laws of the Indies abounds with decrees establishing the equal right of Indians and Spaniards to exploit the mines, and expressly forbidding any infringement of Indian rights. Thus formal history— the dead letter of today which perpetuates the dead letter of the past— has nothing to complain about, but while Indian labor legislation was debated in endless documents and Spanish jurists displayed their talents in an explosion of ink, in Latin America the law “was respected but not carried out.” In practice “the poor Indian is a coin with which one can get whatever one needs, as with gold and silver, and get it better,” as Luis Capoche put it. Many people claimed mestizo status before the courts to avoid being sent to the mines and sold and resold in the market.

At the end of the eighteenth century, Concolorcorvo, who had Indian blood, denied his own people: “We do not dispute that the mines consume a considerable number of Indians, but this is not due to the work they do in the silver and mercury mines but to their dissolute way of life.” The testimony of Capoche, who had many Indians in his service, is more enlightening. Freezing outdoor temperatures alternated with the infernal heat inside the Cerro. The Indians went into the depths “and it is common to bring them out dead or with broken heads and legs, and in the mills they are injured every day.” The mitayos hacked out the metal with picks and then carried it up on their shoulders by the light of a candle. Outside the mine they propelled the heavy wooden shafts in the mill or melted the silver on a fire after grinding and washing it.

The mita labor system was a machine for crushing Indians. The process of using mercury to extract silver poisoned as many or more than did the toxic gases in the bowels of the earth. It made hair and teeth fall out and brought on uncontrollable trembling. The victims ended up dragging themselves through the streets pleading for alms. At night 6,000 fires burned on the slopes of the Cerro and in these the silver was worked, taking advantage of the wind that the “glorious Saint Augustine” sent from the sky. Because of the smoke from the ovens there were no pastures or crops for a radius of twenty miles around Potosi and the fumes attacked men’s bodies no less relentlessly.

Ideological justifications were never in short supply. The bleeding of the New World became an act of charity, an argument for the faith. With the guilt, a whole system of rationalizations for guilty consciences was devised. The Indians were used as beasts of burden because they could carry a greater weight than the delicate Ilama, and this proved that they were in fact beasts of burden. The viceroy of Mexico felt that there was no better remedy for their “natural wickedness” than work in the mines. Juan Ginés de Sepülveda, a renowned Spanish theologian, argued that they deserved the treatment they got because their sins and idolatries were an offense to God. The Count de Buffon, a French naturalist, noted that Indians were cold and weak creatures in whom “no activity of the soul” could be observed. The Abbé De Paw invented a Latin Arnerica where degenerate Indians lived side by side with dogs that couldn’t bark, cows that couldn’t be eaten, and impotent camels. Voltaire’s Latin America was inhabited by Indians who were lazy and stupid, pigs with navels on their backs, and bald and cowardly lions. Bacon, De Maistre, Montesquieu, Hume, and Bodin declined to recognize the “degraded men” of the New World as fellow humans. Hegel spoke of Latin America’s physical and spiritual impotence and said the Indians died when Europe merely breathed on them.

In the seventeenth century Father Gregorio Garcia detected Semitic blood in the Indians because, like the Jews, “they are lazy, they do not believe in the miracles of Jesus Christ, and they are ungrateful to the Spaniards for all the good they have done them.” At least this holy man did not deny that the Indians were descended from Adam and Eve: many theologians and thinkers had never been convinced by Pope Paul III’s bull of 1537 declaring the Indians to be “true men.” When Bartolomé de las Casas upset the Spanish Court with his heated denunciations of the conquistadors’cruelty in 1557, a member of the Royal Council replied that Indians were too low in the human scale to be capable of receiving the faith. Las Casas dedicated his zealous life to defending the Indians against the excesses of the mine owners and encomenderos. He once remarked that the Indians preferred to go to hell to avoid meeting Christians.

Indians were assigned or given in encomienda to conquistadors and colonizers so that they could teach them the gospel. But since the Indians owed personal services and economic tribute to the encomenderos, there was little time for setting them on the Christian path to salvation.

Indians were divided up along with lands given as royal grants, or were obtained by direct plunder: in reward for his services, Cortés received 23,000 vassals. After 1536 Indians were given in encomienda along with their descendants for the span of two lifetimes, those of the encomendero and of his immediate heir; after 1629 this was extended to three lifetimes and, after 1704, to four. In the eighteenth century the surviving Indians still assured many generations to come of a cozy life. Since their defeated gods persisted in Spanish memory, there were saintly rationalizations aplenty for the victors’ profits from their toil; the Indians were pagans and deserved nothing better.

The past? Four hundred years after the papal bull, in September 1957, the highest court in Paraguay published a notice informing all the judges of the country that “the Indians, like other inhabitants of the republic, are human beings.” And the Center for Anthropological Studies of the Catholic University of Asunción later carried out a revealing survey, both in the capital and in the countryside: eight out of ten Paraguayans think that “Indians are animals.” In Caaguazü, Alta Paraná, and the Chaco, Indians are hunted down like wild beasts, sold at bargain prices, and exploited by a system of virtual slavery— yet almost all Paraguayans have Indian blood, and Paraguayans tirelessly compose poems, songs, and speeches in homage to the “Guarani soul.”
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Mon Jun 17, 2013 6:53 pm

i will crawl for white beauty.
eat my arms
barter my legs (make my thighs into altars of grief)
for
skin that does not drink night
hair that is not angry
body that is not soil.
i place curses on my flesh
call them diets
tell my ancestors
they are ugly
howl at my nose until it bleeds.
run my heart across my teeth, repeatedly
i am dying
to be beautiful
but
beautiful is something
i will never
be.

by the time we are seven, nayyirah waheed
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Jun 18, 2013 10:44 am

http://www.buddhistpeacefellowship.org/ ... -the-goal/

Being Well-Adjusted is Not the Goal
Posted by: Kenji Liu Posted date: June 17, 2013

Image

Unexpected things happen in your brain when you’re on an extended silent meditation retreat. For example, sometimes I see issues about sexuality and body image rise in my mind. I’ve realized over time that what mindfulness helps with is practicing a new approach to the self, one that doesn’t surveil for conformity to dominant norms. In other posts I’ve called mindfulness a decolonization practice.

Michel Foucault talks about certain technologies of the self, techniques of the self, that we in what’s generally known as the West have inherited. Many of these techniques of self have developed and evolved over centuries. To make a complex and nuanced body of scholarship painfully short, in his three-part History of Sexuality, Foucault discusses techniques that emerged alongside Christianity, ones that assumed the existence of a capital “t” Truth deep inside every person that could be discovered and modified (the soul). Sometimes the person might not know what that Truth was since they might be deluded or tricked by evil forces (Satan). So along with this came techniques to hunt down the unwanted qualities, to give voice to the sin, confess, and become “good.” Churches became the institutional promulgators of these techniques of self.

In later centuries, these techniques were secularized through the new science of psychology. No longer would people confess to a priest, but to a doctor. The doctor-priest could help a person distinguish the inner voices and determine what was good or bad, normal or abnormal, healthy or unhealthy. In our psychologized, medicalized society, we measure ourselves against the dominant norm of health, and we try to learn every technique possible to become a happy, healthy, productive, and well-adjusted individual. The problem is we are trying to become well-adjusted to a sick society, to paraphrase the well-known Krishnamurti quote. This isn’t to say that being able to function well in our everyday lives and relationships is a bad thing. But at what point do we cross over into trying to be well-adjusted to the thing that makes us ill, in order to be better people, when we should be aiming at larger targets? At what point do we stop trying to be the good worker bee within the capitalist hive?

Mindfulness can sometimes fall into this trap as we try to develop equanimity towards the world as it is, or psychologize the practice, thinking it’s a technique for healing our individual wounds and making us happy. Buddhist practice has only one purpose — to end suffering everywhere. Which means even our conceptions about what we think we’re doing with mindfulness will be called into question if they get in the way.

The interesting thing about Buddhism is that there is no true self. There is no good, healthy, whole, happy self underneath everything else just waiting to be discovered or grown. There is no solid Truth to get to inside if we strip away enough layers.

But there are plenty of things happening in this thing we call self. We’ve internalized so many messages about what constitutes happy, healthy, productive, and normal. So when fears arise, for example, that my body isn’t quite right, or my sexuality isn’t the right kind, or my skin color is too dark, or my gender expression is abnormal, recognize these for what they are — internalized, individualized, psychologized suggestions for fitting into an unhealthy society. Then, work for freedom for everyone.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Jun 18, 2013 4:26 pm

Franca Rame’s rape: Fascists, carabinieri and ‘a higher wish’ - Girolamo De Michele

Submitted by StrugglesInItaly on Jun 7 2013

Article on Italian state and police involvement in the rape and torture of a radical activist by fascists, translated by Struggles in Italy.

Trigger warning for discussion of sexual violence.


http://libcom.org/blog/translation-franca-rame’s-rape-fascists-carabinieri-‘-higher-wish’-girolamo-de-michele-0706

(Cut and paste the link)
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Jun 19, 2013 4:34 pm

http://chaka85.wordpress.com/2013/06/19 ... by-queers/

the revolution will be shaped by queers

Posted: June 19, 2013 | Author: chakaZ


Straight men

they always try conflate our power with ego

Accusing us of narcissism

when we fight for ourselves

in these spaces

in revolution

trying to carve out room

in the crampness

of their straightness

and misogyny



we try to work with our brothers

so that they may understand

that their own liberation

is connected to our struggle for wholeness

our struggle to shed objectification

through the wage

through the gaze

and force of empires

on our land

and in our intimacy



we struggle to be free

and we will not apologize.



they say we are selfish

not understanding the patriarchy that clutches at such accusations

You say im selfish

because you expect a certain kind of womyn in the movement

that self sacrificing, positive, femme

working thru the back doors

of your male dominated struggle

as you stroke the cock of the next ego filled man ‘runnin shit’



No.

I say my truth is my power and I use it for my people

and you will not break it to hold on to the white mans power.

No

you will not.
American Dream
 
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Jun 21, 2013 9:38 am

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/04/05/v ... ained.html

Afro-Cuban author who complained of racism demoted

BY JUAN O. TAMAYO

A black Cuban author, Roberto Zurbano, whose scathing criticism of racism on the island was published in The New York Times last month, has been demoted from his top job at the government-controlled Casa de las Americas book publishers.

“To question the extent of racial progress was tantamount to a counterrevolutionary act,” the dreadlocked Zurbano wrote. “This made it almost impossible to point out the obvious: racism is alive and well.”

Zurbano’s case reflects the growing black-rights movement in Cuba, where 35 percent of its 11 million people are black or mestizo, at a time when its activists are complaining that Raúl Castro’s open-market economic reforms favor whites unfairly.

Maria Ileana Faguaga Iglesia, a Havana academic who specializes in black studies, said she was not surprised by Zurbano’s demotion — “it would have been news if he was NOT fired,” she said — because Castro’s reforms don’t extend to politics.

“This ratifies for me their lack of understanding and tolerance for diversity, for the range of all the problems that Cuba faces in all areas, racial, social, political and economic,” she told El Nuevo Herald by phone from Havana.

Faguaga said Zurbano, an acquaintance and neighbor in his early 50s, battled often at Casa de las Americas to publish more books on black issues and especially the works of Frantz Fanon, a black, Martinique-born Marxist and revolutionary.

Zurbano announced he had been “relieved” of his job as an editor and publisher, selecting books to be published, and transferred to a lesser job during a meeting of the Cuba chapter of the Regional Coordination of Afro-descendants in Latin America and the Caribbean (ARAAC), according to a post Friday in the blog Havana Times.

The post included a statement from ARAAC which did not mention him but said it “resolutely supports the free expression of ideas by all its activists” and opposes any “repressive or obstructive measures against any participants in such polemics.”

ARAAC member Esteban Morales confirmed Zurbano, who also writes poetry and essays, had been demoted by Casa de las Americans but said he was not at the meeting and did not know whether the reassignment was linked to the New York Times column.

Zurbano “of course has the right to give his opinion,” Morales said. Casa de las Americas in any case has the right to reassign or dismiss any of its employees, he told El Nuevo Herald by phone from Havana.

“He’s not been kicked out of Casa. Casa has simply removed him from that job,” he added.

Morales, a well-known Havana economist, was himself kicked out of the Communist Party in 2010 after penning an Internet column in which he complained about Cuba’s burgeoning corruption. He was reinstated in 2011.

Zurbano’s 982-word column for the New York Times on March 23 argued that while the island still has a strong social safety net, Castro’s market reforms are providing better opportunities to the already better-off white Cubans.

Whites have better homes that they can turn into restaurants or bed & breakfasts, he wrote. Cash remittances arrive from the mostly white exile community. And blacks are still “woefully underrepresented” in tourism, the island’s most profitable sector.

Cuba now has two realities, he added, one “of white Cubans, who have leveraged their resources to enter the new market-driven economy … The other reality is that of the black plurality, which witnessed the demise of the socialist utopia from the island’s least comfortable quarters.”

Although Castro has brought more blacks into the legislative National Assembly of People’s Power, Zurbano noted, “much remains to be done to address the structural inequality and racial prejudice that continue to exclude Afro-Cubans.”

“Racism in Cuba has been concealed and reinforced in part because it isn’t talked about. The government hasn’t allowed racial prejudice to be debated or confronted politically or culturally, often pretending instead as though it didn’t exist,” the column added.

A key first step would be to get an accurate count of Afro-Cubans, Zurbano argued, because the number of blacks on the streets belies census figures showing that 65 percent of the island’s population is white. Cubans mark their own race in the Census.

Faguaga said the ARAAC statement defending Zurbano’s right to express his opinions was itself surprising because members of the group tend to be “officials and semi-officials” of the ruling system who regularly toe the government line.

She attended one of its founding meetings in 2011 but was not invited to a follow up session last year because she was too independent, she said.

One of its documents from the 2012 gathering noted that among the group’s goals was to increase coordination in the “fight against racism and capitalism” and to consider “the advances made by the Cuban revolution in different political and social areas.”
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