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Table of Contents: Re: <nettime> [IRAQ] 030404 digest #1 [skoric, zehle<->recktenwald, party] Benjamin Geer <ben@beroul.uklinux.net> We the Blog Update: Trail of Death Experimental Party <press@experimentalparty.org> onwar doron <doron@computerfinearts.com> More online Iraq stats... "Jason Handby" <jasonh@pavilion.co.uk> =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Event:_San_Jos=E9_Art_&_Resistance_Summit?= Steve Cisler <cisler@pobox.com> ..."There are things we don't know we don't know" minx@bway.net Special Issue of Bad Subjects: Iraq War Culture Joe Lockard <Joe.Lockard@asu.edu> Fw: euro-dollar "calin" <calin@xs4all.nl> ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 5 Apr 2003 11:51:52 +0100 From: Benjamin Geer <ben@beroul.uklinux.net> Subject: Re: <nettime> [IRAQ] 030404 digest #1 [skoric, zehle<->recktenwald, party] Soenke Zehle wrote: > I actually disagree that the current intervention in Iraq [...] > amounts to an all-or-nothing test for the international system [...] > > So the US is a problem, they say, its [...] > unilateralism is bad for the world, somehow at odds with the Kantian world > republic envisioned by its European critics (which appear, and this is yet > another debate, to draw a historical blank on the rather violent conditions > of cold war intra-European peacefulness). > > Ok. But I think that it amounts to an incredible hyprocrisy if a debate > focuses exclusively on the int'l-law-breaking US but has nothing to say on, > for example, French support for various intra/inter-state conflicts in > Africa, or the ludicrousness of a German-Russian (Chechnya, anyone? > Currently #1 on the US-Museum of Holocaust 'Genocide Watch List,' > <http://www.ushmm.org/>')-Chinese (Tibet, anyone?) 'axis of peace'. The view you are objecting to may be the view of some anti-war activists, but it is surely not that of the national leaders who are opposed to the war. A stable international system has nothing to do with maintaining peace and human dignity overall, still less with anything like a Kantian world republic; it has to do with maintaining a balance between the 'great powers'. Small wars, that do not pit one great power against another, are perfectly acceptable in a balance-of-powers system. When one country becomes more poweful than each of its rivals, it is normal for those rivals to form an alliance in order to restore the balance. During the Cold War, there was a balance between the US and the USSR, and Europe was happy. After the fall of the USSR, the US confined its military interventions, for a time, to Latin America and Africa -- 'peripheral' regions not involved in the balance of powers. Whoever gains control of the world's oil-producing regions clearly becomes a lot more powerful, so those regions play an important role in the maintenance of the balance of powers. The first Gulf War, crucially, did not radically alter the situation; Iraq did not become an American colony or client state. The present war threatens to disrupt the balance because of America's announced intention to install a puppet government in Iraq, and because of its bellicose rhetoric about doing the same thing in other countries, right across the Middle East and Asia. That is what has made pragmatists like Putin react. Benjamin ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 7 Apr 2003 00:52:35 -0700 From: Experimental Party <press@experimentalparty.org> Subject: We the Blog Update: Trail of Death (((((((((((((((((( We the Blog Update: Trail of Death )))))))))))))))))) April 7, 2003 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ http://wetheblog.org/archive/000028.html - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ "It was three hours of organized chaos" - Lt. Col. Eric C. Schwartz, 3rd Infantry Division, US Army This is not Apocalypse Now. This ain't Hollywood. This is George Bush's War on Iraq brought to you live by CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News. Saturday the troops stormed Baghdad. The headlines in the Sunday New York Times, read, "Barrage of Fire, Trail of Death in the Capital." Colonel David Perkins of the Second Brigade estimated that more than 1,000 Iraqi fighters died. Countless civilians were caught in the crossfire. The Army had no intention of occupying Baghdad. Not just yet. No, this is what the military called an "I.O. campaign," or information operation. More shock and awe, you could say. Forty tanks rolled into the city from the Southwest on Highway 8, took a left turn in the central area, and then headed for Saddam International Airport, or rather, what has now been tagged Baghdad International Airport. Oh, how easy it is to rename an airport in time of war. Four of those tanks bear the name of the four airliners that were hijacked on Sept. 11. Apparently the names were placed on the cannons for motivational reasons, even though the men who stenciled them were not quite sure there was a direct connection between the attack on the World Trade Center and the one grinding its way through Baghdad. Oh well. Later that day, a captured Republican Guard colonel, who spoke a little English, was asked if he thought it was the right thing to take out Saddam. The Iraqi replied that it was. Whew. Eventually, the first battalion of tanks made its way to the newly occupied airport, leaving in its wake an endless of trail of burning military vehicles, charred soldiers, families and children dead, lying in the streets. A Sergeant Casady, who manned a .50-caliber machine gun on the roof of an armored command vehicle, waxed, "Being a dad myself, that's the hardest part. I've got six kids at home, and I can't imagine it. I'd just as soon die than see that happen to my kids. Just to drive by and be helpless, man. It makes you feel selfish." This is one selfish war. The horror. Randall M. Packer Secretary, US Department of Art & Technology ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 08 Apr 2003 12:49:18 -0400 From: doron <doron@computerfinearts.com> Subject: onwar checkitout > http://www.designverbund.de/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 8 Apr 2003 17:54:34 +0100 From: "Jason Handby" <jasonh@pavilion.co.uk> Subject: More online Iraq stats... ...this time with a nicer interface: http://www.iraqometer.com/ Jason ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 7 Apr 2003 13:31:26 -0700 From: Steve Cisler <cisler@pobox.com> Subject: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Event:_San_Jos=E9_Art_&_Resistance_Summit?= San José, California San José Art & Resistance Summit April 21-28, 2003 A brazen exploration of the divine unity between art and justice, the San José Art & Resistance Summit promises seven glorious days and nights of dissention, poetry slams, film screenings, experimental theater, subversion, multimedia performances, outdoor concerts, guerrilla workshops, self-determination, speaker panels, visual exhibitions, hip hop shows, and conspiracy! Formerly known as the Floricanto Festival and Conference, the new and improved San José Art & Resistance Summit features over 75 artists. Its goal: to arm attendees with the practical and philosophical tools needed to think of and use art as a tool (weapon) of resistance. To this end MACLA, and several invited presenters, have assembled a unique and stimulating schedule of guerrilla workshops and a keynote panel in conjunction with an art exhibition and performances and by local and visiting artists in the areas of film, theater, spoken word and music. For tickets and information on all events call (408) 938-3594. Monday, April 21 Opening Reception w/Art Exhibition sponsored by DeBug Exhibition sponsored and curetted by DeBug. 6:00 p.m. MACLA - 510 S. First Street, San José FREE Find out more about the week's events and performances, register for workshops, and enjoy complementary hors d'oeuvres. Also, check out a special exhibition centered around the theme of art and resistance featuring the work of emerging Bay Area artists. South Bay Teen Slam League – Grand Slam Prelims Co-presented by Metro Silicon Valley Poetry Slam. 7:30 p.m. MACLA-510 S. First St. & San Jose Stage Company-490 S. First St. FREE Teen troubadours battle in a public demonstration of wit and wordplay judged by five randomly selected audience members. Slam teams representing Fremont, Lincoln, Pioneer, Academia Calmecac and Belarmine high schools face off in two concurrent bouts scheduled to take place at MACLA and the San Jose Stage Company. Top three teams advance to the Grand Slam Finals on Wednesday. Tuesday, April 22 Theatre: No Man's Land Written & performed by James Kass, Mark Bamuthi Joseph, Paul Flores and Jason Mateo 7:30 p.m. MACLA - 510 S. First Street, San José $14.00 General/$8.00 Students A cross-cultural journey through archetypes of maleness and machisimo written and performed entirely in spoken word. Four leading purveyors of the art form open issues of competition and definitions of "manhood" in today's multiethnic America. Pushing new boundaries in theater, collaboration, spoken word and identity politics, No Man's Land engages audiences in a narrative setting with the accessibility and excitement of a poetry slam. Wednesday, April 23 Film: Flipside Written and Directed by Rod Pulido Presented by Contemporary Asian Theatre Scene. 7:00 p.m. Camera Three Cinemas – 288 S. Second Street, San José $9.00 General Admission Darius Delacruz is on a mission. Determined to get his family to embrace their Filipino culture, Darius spends his summer wearing only a tribal loincloth and encouraging his family to speak Tagalog, their native language. Darius' family, of course, thinks he's crazy. The first feature film by a Filipino American to be accepted to the renown Sundance Film Festival, The Flip Side combines sharp dialogue and unexpected twists and takes a funny look at identity, family and sibling rivalry. South Bay Teen Slam League – Grand Slam Finals Co-presented by Metro Silicon Valley Poetry Slam. 8:00 p.m. MACLA - 510 S. First Street, San José $6.00 General/$3 Students under 18 The inaugural season of the first and only teen poetry slam league in the South Bay comes to its climactic end as the three highest ranked teams throw down in a grisly two round bout for literary supremacy. Thursday, April 24 Workshop: Guerrilla Marketing 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art - 451 S. First Street, San José FREE Basic techniques for alternative messaging. While young people are often viewed as voiceless, there is a great deal of creativity and communication within youth sub-cultures. Using techniques of street marketing, we will explore how young people without access to media outlets can voice their opinions and talents. Limited space, call MACLA to register in advance. Theatre: Three Lives Written and Performed by Alex Luu 8:00 p.m. MACLA - 510 S. First Street, San José $12.00 General/$7.00 Students A one-man "performance theater" piece that tells the autobiographical tale of Luu's harrowing escape from war-torn Saigon as a Chinese/Vietnamese refugee in 1975. What follows is a tumultuous journey seen through the eyes of four distinct characters – Grandpa Luu, Pops Luu, Alex Luu himself and a younger cousin Albert. Spanning four generations and covering roughly three and a half decades (mid-70's through late 90's), these men's lives and experiences intertwine and collide, creating a rich and powerful mosaic that reflects the comical yet painful aspects of assimilation in America. Friday, April 25 Workshop: Independent Production 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art - 451 S. First Street, San José FREE Would you like to learn how to produce your own show and maximize alternative spaces? Independent artists are yearning for more venues and spaces to present their works. This workshop will teach the basics for producing an independent arts event. From open mics to hip hop shows, mural art to outdoor movie screenings, workshop presenters will focus on the use of alternative and public spaces, we will explore show production for the people. Limited space, call MACLA to register in advance. Spoken Word Showcase feat. Ursula Rucker, Ishle Yi Park, Bonafide Rojas, and Jocelyn De Leon 8:00 p.m. MACLA – 510 S. First Street, San José $14.00 General / $10.00 Students / $5.00 17 & under An all star line up of the very best spoken word performers from both coasts. Philidelphia's Urslula Rucker, known for her poetic collaborations with the hip hop group, The Roots, joins Bronx native and 2002 NYC Slam Champion, Bonifide Rojas to headline along with Bay Area poets Ishle Yi Park (2002 Oakland Slam Team) and Jocelyn De Leon (8th Wonder). A show not to be missed. Saturday, April 26 Keynote Panel: Got Cultura? History of San Jose's Underground: Grassroots Arts & Resistance. 12:30 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. MACLA – 510 S. First Street, San José FREE - Includes lunch. Where has all the culture gone? How does San José as a technologically advanced, sterile, metropolis nurture its arts scene & community? What is the role of gentrification and police presence in limiting arts development in the downtown area? Joe Rodriguez of the San Jose Mercury News, Peggy Flynn, Redevelopment Agency spokesperson, Chris Esparza of Giant Creative Services along with several other panelists will discuss the state of independent arts production, its obstacles and achievements in this informative panel. Artist and people interested in or currently producing independent arts events encouraged to attend. Limited space, call MACLA to register in advance. 5th Element: Women's Hip Hop Showcase 8:00 p.m. MACLA – 510 S. First Street, San José $7.00 General / $3.00 High School Students 5th Element, a collaboration of women hip hop artists and organizers, will showcase some of the best contributions of women in hip hop, hosted by legendary b-girl Aiko. Featured artists and performers include renowned b-girls, deejays, spoken and visual artists from across the nation. The 5th Element project seeks to acknowledge the contributions of women to hip hop as well as create a space that empowers women to develop their urban arts skills and social consciousness. Presented by 5th Element. Sunday, April 27 People's Earth Day Co-presented by Plata Arroyo Neighborhood Association, Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, Resources for Families and Communities and DeBug. 11:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Plata Arroyo Park, San José (corner of King and McKee) FREE The San Jose Art & Resistance Summit closes with a community celebration featuring music, poetry and storytelling, health and environmental justice workshops, children's art activities, food booths, mural painting, dancing and community building. Two stages feature music performances by Firme, Dub Wise, Pocho Son, Lado Oriente, Cherokee storyteller Gayle Ross, guerrilla theater by Los Illegals Comedy Clica and many other cultural performances. Resource fair with booths from over 30 local social service, cultural and community based organizations. Sponsored by San Jose Water District, Office of Council Member Cindy Chavez, and the Latino Peace Officers' Association. - --30-- ============================== MOVIMIENTO DE ARTE Y CULTURA LATINO AMERICANA (MACLA) website: www.maclaweb.org email: info@maclaweb.org 408/998-ARTE (phone) 408/998-2817 (fax) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 8 Apr 2003 13:31:24 -0400 (EDT) From: minx@bway.net Subject: ..."There are things we don't know we don't know" spoken by U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld "There are known knowns. These are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say there are things that we know we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we don't know we don't know." ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 08 Apr 2003 08:54:32 -0700 From: Joe Lockard <Joe.Lockard@asu.edu> Subject: Special Issue of Bad Subjects: Iraq War Culture This message is in MIME format. Since your mail reader does not understand this format, some or all of this message may not be legible. - --Boundary_(ID_ioMVQSR5jngeas6EOcwOOg) Content-type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Special issue of Bad Subjects: Iraq War Culture Bad Subjects has just released an Extra Bad! issue (#63) on the culture of the Iraq War. This is an unscheduled edition that responds to the US invasion of Iraq and the massive global anti-war movement in opposition. The issue includes protest narratives; cultural and political analyses; articles on media, visual and rhetorical culture; and essays on anti-war tactics. The issue features 19 essays originating from nine countries and by writers including Joe Lockard (issue editor), Boaventura de Sousa Santos, Leslie Roberts, Dickie Wallace, David Manning, Niaz Kasravi and A. Rafik Mohamed, Michelle Renee Matisons, Max Fraad-Wolff and Rick Wolff, Debra Benita Shaw, Arturo Aldama, Cynthia Fuchs, Babak Rahimi, Michael Hoffman, Steven Rubio, Jo Rittenhouse and Elisabeth Hurst, Nathan Snaza, Binoy Kampmark, Claire Norton, and tobias c. van Veen. Read this Extra Bad! anti-war issue of Bad Subjects at http:eserver.org/bs/63. Bad Subjects is an online/print e-zine and academic-popular 'bridge journal' concerned with the 'politics of everyday life.' - --Boundary_(ID_ioMVQSR5jngeas6EOcwOOg) Content-type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-transfer-encoding: quoted-printable <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN"> <HTML> <HEAD> <META HTTP-EQUIV=3D"Content-Type" CONTENT=3D"text/html; = charset=3Diso-8859-1"> <META NAME=3D"Generator" CONTENT=3D"MS Exchange Server version = 5.5.2655.35"> <TITLE>Special Issue of Bad Subjects: Iraq War Culture</TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY> <P><FONT SIZE=3D2>Special issue of Bad Subjects: Iraq War = Culture</FONT> </P> <P><FONT SIZE=3D2>Bad Subjects has just released an Extra Bad! issue = (#63) on the culture of the Iraq War. This is an unscheduled edition = that responds to the US invasion of Iraq and the massive global = anti-war movement in opposition. The issue includes protest = narratives; cultural and political analyses; articles on media, visual = and rhetorical culture; and essays on anti-war tactics. </FONT></P> <P><FONT SIZE=3D2>The issue features 19 essays originating from nine = countries and by writers including Joe Lockard (issue editor), = Boaventura de Sousa Santos, Leslie Roberts, Dickie Wallace, David = Manning, Niaz Kasravi and A. Rafik Mohamed, Michelle Renee Matisons, = Max Fraad-Wolff and Rick Wolff, Debra Benita Shaw, Arturo Aldama, = Cynthia Fuchs, Babak Rahimi, Michael Hoffman, Steven Rubio, Jo = Rittenhouse and Elisabeth Hurst, Nathan Snaza, Binoy Kampmark, Claire = Norton, and tobias c. van Veen. </FONT></P> <P><FONT SIZE=3D2>Read this Extra Bad! anti-war issue of Bad Subjects = at <A HREF=3D"http:eserver.org/bs/63" = TARGET=3D"_blank">http:eserver.org/bs/63</A>. Bad Subjects is an = online/print e-zine and academic-popular 'bridge journal' concerned = with the 'politics of everyday life.'</FONT></P> </BODY> </HTML>= - --Boundary_(ID_ioMVQSR5jngeas6EOcwOOg)-- ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 8 Apr 2003 12:13:58 +0200 From: "calin" <calin@xs4all.nl> Subject: Fw: euro-dollar rather high on conspiracy theories, my Romanian fellows are mentioning on the sister list for quite a while now the competition euro vs. dollar in the oil transactions as THE reason of the ongoing war. here a potential source for this string of comments. i would be curious to hear an authorized opinion on this. http://slash.autonomedia.org/article.pl?sid=03/03/20/1330253. ------------------------------ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net