I don't know how many of you saw this on TV, but I did. Notice Bill Richardson and Hillary during the playing of the National Anthem. I wondered at the time, "what the hell is this guy thinking?" Now that he has declared he will no longer wear the American Flag lapel pin (and that is his right and I support his right to make that decision) I understand how someone born a Muslim doesn't want to declare allegiance to OUR country. This is all I need to know about Obama.
The question is, how would he act as President? Perish the thought!
This insanity got me thinking about a lot of things, or course, but I also remembered an article I helped write back in 2002 as a part of the Radical History Workshop at the University of Minnesota on the history of the Pledge of Allegiance. This seems like a good time to look back at that piece published in the University's student newspaper, the Minnesota Daily.
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
History of the Pledge of Allegiance
Mr. Love & Justice, New Billy Bragg Album, coming in March!
The release, out on March 3 in the UK, will be Billy's first new album in six years. It will contain 12 tracks and is produced by Grant Showbiz.
"Life is not just politics and not all love either," Bragg said of the mix of songs on Mr. Love and Justice. "It's a balance. Its that balance I'm trying to have."
Bragg's last album, England, Half-English, was released in 2002. Last year his first book, "The Progressive Patriot: A Search For Belonging," was published.
Cult English psychedelic musician Robert Wyatt provides guest vocals on album opener 'I Keep Faith'.
I know no details of these songs, but the tracklisting is:
'I Keep Faith'
'I Almost Killed You'
'M For Me'
'The Beach is Free'
'Sing Their Souls Back Home'
'You Make Me Brave'
'Something Happened'
'Mr Love & Justice'
'If You Ever Leave'
'O Freedom'
'The Johnny Carcinogenic Show'
'Farm Boy'
Billy released a live recording at Salisbury City Hall. You can download all the songs below.....including one of the NEW SONGS from Mr. Love & Justice, I Keep Faith.
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/10_St_Monday.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/11_I_Keep_Faith.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/12_All_You_Fascists.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/07_Sing_Their_Souls_Back_Home.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/08_Debris.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/09_Tank_Park_Salute.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/04_A_Lover_Sings.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/05_Green_Onions.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/06_The_Price_I_Pay.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/01_World_Turned_Upside_Down.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/02_Levi_Stubbs_Tears.mp3
http://www.billybragg.co.uk/audio/city_hall/03_Greetings_To_The_New_Brunette.mp3
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Myths about JFK assassination researches
What JFK Conspiracy Bashers Get Wrong by Jefferson Morley
"As the 44th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy approaches, you may get caught up in an eruption of the perennial and sometimes tedious conspiracy debate. You want to keep an open mind and make sure you don't fall for any JFK assassination myths. You can, for example, say with confidence that a lot of the crazy JFK conspiracy scenarios have been debunked over the years. No, neither the KGB, the Masons, the Mossad, nor the Red Chinese were behind the gunfire that killed the liberal statesman. No, Abraham Zapruder's famous home movie assassination was not secretly altered to hide evidence of a conspiracy. And, no, the legendary three tramps photographed that day did not whack Jack. They were just a trio of homeless guys in the wrong place at the wrong time.
But no sooner were these fables dispatched by scrupulous JFK researchers, than public discourse on the JFK story was engulfed by a new set of assertions imbued with an anti-conspiratorial animus that is also unhinged from the historical record. These too need the truth squad treatment.
Myth #1 JFK conspiratorial suspicions, like the idea of a gunshot from the so-called grassy knoll, were ginned up after the fact by demagogues like Oliver Stone.
In fact, a significant minority of eyewitnesses at the scene of the crime thought at least one of the gunshots that hit Kennedy came from the knoll, which was actually a grassy embankment bordering a parking lot overlooking the route of JFK's motorcade through downtown Dallas. A survey of eyewitness statements, compiled by conspiracy skeptic John McAdams of Marquette University, found that 42 of 103 bystanders said that the gunfire came from the knoll or from two different directions. To be sure, a larger number said that shots came from a high window of the Texas School Book Depository. And yes, the parking lot on the knoll was searched within minutes and no gunman or ballistic debris was found. And, yes, ear witness testimony is notoriously unreliable.
The fact remains that more than 30 people in the vicinity of Kennedy's limousine--including Dallas sheriff Bill Decker, Secret Service agent Roy Kellerman and a presidential aide David Powers--independently said that they thought a gunshot came from the knoll. Within a week of the crime, pollsters found 62 percent of respondents nationwide said they thought two or more people were responsible. In Dallas, the figure was 66 percent.
Myth #2: JFK conspiracy theories are mostly held by anti-American leftists and credulous liberals.
Try telling that to Bruce Willis. "They still haven't caught the guy that killed Kennedy," the leading Republican in Hollywood told Vanity Fair last spring. Willis was merely voicing a view that has long circulated on the American right. In September 1964, Warren Commission member Senator Richard Russell, a paleoconservative from Georgia, rejected the so-called single bullet theory and attempted to put a dissent into the commission's final report (only to be slapped down by liberal Chief Justice Earl Warren.) By the late 1960s, conservative figures ranging from former congresswoman Clare Booth Luce to columnist William F. Buckley to Nixon White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman dissented publicly or privately from the Warren report. Mary Ferrell, one of the best-informed JFK researchers, was so adamantly opposed to legal abortion that she told friends that she never voted for a Democrat after 1980. Today, the best JFK assassination Web site, MaryFerrell.org, is named after her.
Myth #3: No reputable historian believes in a JFK conspiracy
Wrong. I know of four tenured academic historians who have written directly on the JFK assassination in the past five years. Three of them (Gerald McKnight of Hood College, David Wrone of the University of Wisconsin-Steven Points, Michael Kurtz of Southeast Louisiana University) came to conspiratorial conclusions, while one (Robert Dallek of UCLA) vouched for the lone gunman theory. A forthcoming book by Naval War College historian David Kaiser on Kennedy's Cuba policy and the assassination, to be published by Harvard University Press next year, is likely to demolish this myth once and for all. (Full disclosure: Kaiser is a friend and the book will cite my JFK reporting.)
Myth #4: Serious people of power in Washington overwhelmingly believe there was no conspiracy.
Hardly. The slain president's own brother Bobby Kennedy was, in the words of journalist David Talbot, "America's first conspiracy theorist." He and First Lady Jackie Kennedy quickly concluded that JFK was the victim of a major domestic plot. Lyndon Johnson suspected that the assassination resulted from the struggle for power in Cuba. Richard Nixon hounded the CIA for files on "the whole Bay of Pigs thing," which his aides understood to mean Kennedy's assassination. George H.W. Bush, upon becoming CIA director in 1976 immediately asked for the JFK assassination file, not exactly the action of someone who thought he knew the whole story. Bill Clinton and Al Gore both said publicly in 1992 that they believed there had been a conspiracy. (Once in office, Clinton recanted.) George W. Bush, to be sure, is a firm believer in the lone nut theory. But, when it comes to providing credible explanations of U.S. intelligence failures that culminated in national catastrophe, Bush's track record is not reassuring.
Myth #5. Scientists unequivocally support the lone gunman theory.
The latest peer-reviewed articles indicate otherwise. One piece of scientific analysis, "bullet lead analysis," that was long used to buttress the so-called "single bullet" theory has been decisively debunked, as a recent front page series in the Washington Post shows. A study of the JFK ballistics evidence, published in the Journal of Forensic Science in 2006, concluded that its findings "considerably weaken support for the single-bullet theory." A pair of articles on the medical evidence, published in Neurosurgery in 2004, offered a split decision. One supported the official story; the other provided strong evidence based on sworn testimony from multiple eyewitnesses that the photographic record of JFK's autopsy has been tampered with. The-called acoustic evidence a Dallas Police Department radio recording that some scientists say contains evidence of a shot from the grassy knoll has been called into question but not refuted by other scientists. The issue remains unresolved. My own review of the crime scene evidence, published this month on Playboy.com, concludes that the scientific case for Oswald's sole guilt has been weakened in recent years.
Myth #6: There is nothing significant to be found in the new JFK files identified since Oliver Stone's JFK
Depends on how closely you care to look. The long suppressed CIA records made public since the 1990s certainly do not confirm Stone's depiction of the assassination as a virtual coup d'etat by the CIA and the Pentagon but they do raise new questions about the Dallas tragedy. They demonstrate that a handful of top CIA officials had much greater knowledge of Oswald's travels and political activities in the weeks before Kennedy was killed than they ever let on. At least one of these operatives-- an undercover officer named George Joannides--remained quiet about what he knew of Oswald's Cuban contacts to perhaps a criminal extent.
As I reported in the Huffington Post, CIA attorneys appeared in federal court on last month seeking to block release of dozens of secret records on Joannides's actions in 1963. At the time Joannides served in Miami as the chief of psychological warfare operations aimed at overthrowing Fidel Castro. The CIA argues that release of any portion of more than 30 documents about Joannides--some of them 45 years old-- would harm U.S. national security and foreign policy in 2007. Don't take my word that these records are significant. Just ask the CIA's lawyers.
When you strip away all the tall tales of JFK's assassination, the unsatisfying and infuriating truth is that we still don't have the full story. And that's no myth."
Jefferson Morley, former staff writer at washingtonpost.com, is author of the forthcoming book Our Man in Mexico, a biography of CIA spy Winston Scott. He is the editorial director of newjournalist.org, a national network of online state news sites. His most recent report on new developments in the Kennedy assassination story will be published this month in Playboy.com
Gopher Football lands 4-star JC recruit
Pasadena City College star David Pittman committed to the Gopher football program over the weekend, giving the Gophers their 5th 4-star commitment for the 2008 class and moving the recruiting ranking up to 22nd nationally. Pittman is listed as an athlete, but played QB, WR, and DB in high school and C.C. It will be interesting to see where Pittman plays next year. I expect him to play DB because the Gophers need so much help on defense, but he could also play on offense and even have a shot at QB. Weber's starting job isn't guaranteed, and with their targeted 4-star QB MarQueis Gray having academic problems, Pittman might get a shot at QB.
i'm still hoping there's a chance that MarQueis Gray qualifies academically cause he looks to be the real deal.
Monday, December 10, 2007
Festivus 2007 Postmortem
NEW! I've uploaded the photos from Festivus, so you can check them out.
So MarxistGopher's annual Festivus party took place last Saturday night (December 8th). I strive to make it the social event of the year, and I hope that I have succeeded. First, I should probably explain, what is Festivus? Well, for a full description of Festivus and its Seinfeld and pre-Seinfeld origins check out the wikipedia entry
I started my annual Festivus celebration last year. Why, you might ask? Well, I was tired of the commercial and religious aspects of Christmas! I don't believe in Jebus. I do my best not to participate in consumer culture(although if you've seen my many collections you know that I often fail). I reject the reverance of the "family." So what I am and others like me supposed to do in December? Are we just supposed to sit alone in our dwellings while the "true believers" gather to celebrate. I say NO! I say we want to have fun too. We want to enjoy ourselves during the Holiday season, but don't want to celebrate Jebus or support an unjust economic system! I say, a Festivus for the rest of us!!!
The 2nd annual Festivus celebration had been in the works for weeks, with invitations going out rediculously early! So finally, at 6pm on Saturday December 8th, a group of heathens and malcontents gathered to celebrate the ultimate anti-holiday!
Now we get to the point where I have to actually break-down the evening and offer a review of my own party. Anyone who was there is encouraged to offer their own reviews and criticisms of Festivus 2007 in the comments section at the end of this post!
FOOD: Festivus (in my incarnation of it) is always a potluck. SO when reviewing and later grading the food Festivus 2007 I will take into account not only the quality of the food, but the variety and amount as well. First, I have to say that all the food was very tasty. I spent most of the night walking between groups of guests and attempting to facilitate activities, and therefore was not able to eat as much as I would have liked. However, one of the benefits of hosting is that you get to eat the leftovers for a few days. So it was on that basis that I was able to review the quality of food. In terms of variety I would say that things worked out very well, in spite of the lack of pre-Festivus coordination. The amount of food was definitely adequate, as I am still eating leftovers. My only criticism in the food area is that not everyone brought something. Damn freeloaders! So, after much consideration....
GRADE: A-
BEVERAGES: This was solely my responsibility. I attempted to provide beverages for the entire party, and I think I was moderately successful. Because of my own niavete in the world of alcohol I may have not provided the selection that my guests would have liked. I had plenty of beer and wine, water, and pop, but in the realm of hard liquor I was empty. Nothing. A couple people did bring some Rum and Egg-Nog, which was much appreciated and helped in the beverages department. Maybe next year I'll have one of the alcoholics help me with the beverage shopping.
GRADE: B-
THUMB WRESTLING: The thumb-wrestling tournament was back for a second year. Only this year, the prizes were much better! This year the top 3 finishers received framed posters from Northland Poster Collective. The winner of the losers bracket (which was new for 2007) received a wonderful stuffed heart with the word “sexy” across the front! A few people chose not to participate and forfitted their matches, but that was to be expected. The only issue was the amount of byes created in the tourney because of opponents arriving too late to participate in the tourney.
GRADE: B+
AIRING OF GRIEVANCES: The airing of grievances did not happen at Festivus 2006. Both because of lack of preparation on my part, and because of a timid guest list. Festivus 2007 was a much different story. The grievances aired that night were amazing! They were funny, sometimes harsh, sometimes sad, but always, always true! A couple people were slightly uncomfortable, but I think everyone enjoyed this part of the evening. My only criticism is that more people needed to participate. This was my favorite part of the evening!
GRADE: A
GIFT EXCHANGE: Another great success of Festivus 2007. The rules for the gift exchange were that you can only give gifts that you wouldn’t want anyone to give you, re-gifting was encouraged, and spending lots of money discouraged. I thought the “white elephant” gift exchange went over really well. The highlight of the night was, of course, mystery gift #2.
GRADE: A-
"FESTIVUS ISN'T OVER UNTIL YOU PIN ME": At the end of the night, I challenged one lucky guest (Butler) to the final feat of strength. Basically it means that Festivus isn't officially over until the person I challenge pins me to the floor. We went at it for about 3 minutes before Butler took me down and officially ended Festivus 2007. It was rediculous and funny, unfortunately most people were gone by this point and didn't get the enjoy the spectacle....oh well, maybe next year.
GRADE: B-
Soooo, that’s about it. I’d like to thank all my friends, comrades and beloved enemies who attended the wonderful Festivus 2007. Please feel free to comment on this post to share your stories, heap praise upon, or air your criticisms of Festivus!
And how was Festivus 2007 overall. I think it was about the same overall as Festivus 2006. I think I had more fun this year, but there was also a little more tension in the group, mainly due to the airing of grievances, in the 2007 incarnation of Festivus. I think Festivus #1 and Festivus#2 were the two best parties I’ve ever hosted and attended.
FINAL OVERALL GRADE FOR FESTIVUS 2007: A-
"The Ideological Cuddle"You can also check out MarxistGopher's 2007 Festivus mix CD The Ideological Cuddle. If you didn't get a copy and would like one, just let me know. You can also read a review of The Ideological Cuddle from LeftSpot.