6.29.2010

'Nous ne sommes pas sortis des années d’hiver' this that that this.... and et and et




















_____________











___A
Postcapitalist Politics
: “As we begin to conceptualize contingent
relationships where invariant logics once reigned, the economy loses its
character as an asocial body in lawful motion and instead becomes a space of
recognition and negotiation.”
2
Gibson-Graham











__Referring to Deleuze
and Guattari’s consideration of desire and power, she distinguishes between de-territorializing
and re-territorializing processes. Yet, while she presents desire as a
deterritorializing force, she also agrees with Foucault, who sees desire as
constituted by sociohistorical power relations, and thus as potentially
compliant with reterritorializations.
37____
efluxjournalview____































Chimères











Sommaire N°72 Clinique et Politique









Edito : Nous ne sommes pas sortis des années d’hiver





__________________




_____






"Who are the departed souls to whom this exhibition is dedicated, an
exhibition which opens with a tribute by the conceptual artist
Christian Boltanski to the former miners of the Grand-Hornu collieries
(some of whom, it should be specified, are still living) and closes
with a visit (wanted by Laurent Busine) to the crypt where their
masters are laid to rest, the owners of this site which was formerly a
thriving coal-mine and now a museum of contemporary art? Who are the
departed souls intended to be retrieved from obscurity and silence by
these works of art and these objets de curiosité through the miracle of
their presentation and commentary? Who are the departed souls whose
names and images have been assembled and laid out (along a circuit
where no cadavers or morbid corpses are to be found, however, and where
the focus is on life), objects as diverse in appearance and provenance
as a meteorite from a natural history museum, the relic of a saint or a
pictor classicus selfportrait?









Just
who are these departed souls ‘hidden in the night’, if not the very
‘equal’ of everything - bright or extinguished like a star, simple or
proud as a man – that is no longer of the living world, other than
through lingering memory, image, legend, name or object? Because
although we are all equal before death, in the tragic sense that
nothing and nobody escapes from eternity, the end of all things, we
have to acknowledge that these departed souls – drawn out of the
shadows here – are not all equal before history, which celebrates some
but forgets others. So, side by side with now-defunct emperors, ‘sun
kings’ and captains of industry, we should also acknowledge in the Book
of the Dead the nameless and voiceless, the strays and the accursed –
less glorious, it is true – all waiting for the recognition afforded
them in these songs, tales and pictures. This exhibition A toutes les
morts, égales et cachées dans la nuit is a collection of just such
testimony-givers: these are works created and objects invented for
these nameless ones, the word ‘for’ as interpreted by Gilles Deleuze,
the philosopher of ‘becomings’, when he felt it was necessary to write
for animals, for savages or for the mad, clearly not for their
attention but on their behalf; in the same way as Gustav Mahler put to
music the Kindertotenlieder for dead children."


Antke Engel from Art Org

--------------------------------------------------À toutes les morts, égales et cachées dans la nuit” (To all the
departed equal and hidden in the night) is the major summer exhibition
at the MAC's (the Museum of Contemporary Art). It opens its doors to the public from 20th June to 10th October 2010.












_____________________________________










Queering Capitalism- cApitalism has never been man's friend nor woman's <--------------------------------------------------


____

democracy now mondAY


Screen capture___ Democracy Now &the show itself

______________________________________________________________








________________________________________* Over 600 Arrested at G20 Protests in Toronto

* G20 Leaders Agree to Cut Government Deficits in Half by 2013

* Elena Kagan Confirmation Hearings Set to Begin

* Report: Karzai Meets with Leading Insurgent Leader

* CIA Director Panetta Defends Drone Attacks in Pakistan

* US to Keep Control of South Korean Military

* Turkey Closes Airspace to Israeli Military Flights

* Blackwater Won’t Face Charges for Deals in Sudan

* Funeral Held for Congolese Human Rights Activist

* Manufacturer of Oil Dispersant Beefs Up Lobbying Force

* 600 Anti-Offshore Drilling Rallies Held

* Sen. Robert Byrd, 1917-2010_________________________


Shame shame shame



as Naomi Klein

and others imply+++ her interview

with Amy Goodman






it was a cash grab


1 billion dollars




using young activists


as their cover


--her article in the Nation

A Hole in the Wall

________________


and from the Nation



Saudi Feminist Wajeha Al-Huwaider: An Open Letter to President Obama





rabble editor's note
about number of arrests in toronto


Editor's note: 'Roughly 900 people have now been arrested, according to police, after a weekend of mayhem on the streets of Toronto during the G20 Summit. This is now the largest-ever mass arrest in Canadian history. No word on how many charges have been laid. Compare it to this: 497 people were arrested during the ‘October Crisis and the war measures act' in 1970, which came before Canada had a Charter of Rights and Freedoms.'

------------------------------------
an S RabblE Ca pod cast
Judy Rebick: On Saturday's G20 arrests and detentions



| June 28, 2010
























Show Notes:



The
author, writer and journalist argues that police arrested “the most
important grassroots organizers in the province” on Saturday to try and
discredit them. “Hopefully, the media will smell a rat and start to see
that this whole thing was a setup,” she said, in an interview on Sunday
afternoon.


___________People are being told by friends

stay off the streets

500 arrests is not enough

the police are still

picking folks .... up


------------------



excerpts from




Seeing It All in Toronto

Still Free, Barely Holding On



By DAVID Ker THOMSON






My ten-year-old was almost
fucking killed when he was attacked by police in a free-speech zone. My
fourteen-year-old and I were chased for two hours. Does anyone out
there care? ...
I feel nothing but despair.
My friends are being dragged off to left and right, and the world
watches football. I began the weekend juggling for the troops, holding
out flowers, but I end hunted and in tears, paranoid and sad. It feels
like the end. We are still free, but barely holding on. Why do they
hate us so much?



I include no paragraph
breaks or aids for the reader. If you can’t be bothered to read this
sort of thing because it’s too long, go back to your pictures. As an
English teacher, I hate typos, but I’m too tired to polish this. All I
can say is, we were there, we’ve seen it all.


Toronto,
June 26, Saturday: We’ve done family protests in Washington and London,
amongst other places, and even mingled with some serious ruckus in
Buenos Aires. Never have we experienced anything as terrible as in
Toronto today, Saturday, a mile from the G20 perimeter walls. The
Canadians—if these police/soldiers are even Canadian—are far and away
the most vicious of any military we’ve ever experienced. My wife had
scolded me for the risks I took yesterday (Friday) when I was on my own
without the boys (at 6 o’clock today Sebastian typed in a simple google
search: “G20 Toronto” and got a picture of me juggling as the number
one entry—more on that some other time, together with my “I’m not a
brave man but…” speech involving a red flower and me alone against a
double-wall of riot police) and it was Eva-Lynn’s idea that we would
take the children to the protests to experience the peaceful strong
energy we always get at peace rallies.


. Hundreds of police piled up from the south, but once we got to Bloor
and the plain light of the setting sun and people could see police
attacking unarmed citizens, the police slunk off and hid. I never saw
them again. They’re all too afraid to show themselves in small groups,






and between here and Dundas Square not a single one showed his face,






though for a fortnight we’ve seen nothing but them roving the city in
gangs.




& robbin


neighborhoods


of their liberties


....




We were nice to all the individual security guards keeping
watch over their little buildings all the way to Yonge. With




just
sidearms and sticks, they seemed by this point sort of cute and
picturesque. We bantered with them as we walked (or limped, in my
case). After brief uncertainty about whether we’d take over Yonge and
Bloor and make our last stand there, we moved south down Yonge,
following a trail of smashed windows from much earlier in the day (not
smashed by our group—though I don’t judge the people who did it; there
was a method to their madness I’ll comment on elsewhere). I wanted to
hold up at Dundas Square, but the front of the group had moved on. I
could no longer walk, and I had to get my fourteen-year-old home, or
maybe he had to get me home. Believe me, he will never be the same.

Read this frightening essay

at counterpunch
__________________________



____________

and
making the links radio
which I've just discovered
_______________

_______________


Newsflash
Making the Links Radio has become one of the most comprehensive alternative radio sites in Canada covering international and local issues. (See our most recent features on TILMA , Coal Bed Methane Gas Extraction, and the Green Plan for Saskatchewan). Making the Links Radio can also be heard on on CFCR community radio at 90.5 FM in Saskatoon, on the Sasktel Max provincial cable network at channel 520, and streaming on the internet. Making the Links broadcasts on CFCR at 6 pm on Wednesdays and 7 pm on Fridays.

----------------------------------
more from rabble

On his first day as a resident of Toronto, Dan Hamilton was a bystander during a protest when he was caught with his boyfriend in a mass arrest for "breaching the peace". Held for approximately 26 hours, the eighteen-year-old was let out at 3 a.m. on Monday, June 28th, 2010, where rabbletv caught up with him for his story.


Interview by Tor Sandberg.


6.27.2010

not being becoming ~ be-ComIng_ BY-ComIng__ be coming has many senses in the hinglish lingwadge a beauty is becoming what is it becoming Beauty? is it unbecoming as in the old story of the prophet in the bible the h'old bibble of hold as the h'older stories tell it of the unlovley prophet_ O Prophet not capture!


 poetry like life lives between these other things . that war. and big molar teeth chomp and grind. poetry.









---------------------------------------------


------------------------------------------------ this came across  ~ intensity continUummm.(bks). meaning? saying_ A Poem should not mean but Be say poet Archibald Macleish  ~(ars) (PoetIca)

___________________Yet I'd say it ought to be ~ Come a thing itself other than it's being as being is not the flowpart of junction/disjuncting  ~
___________________________ If being is molar? no? Is being Molar Parmenidian?

___________________________________ Et tout cas, voila cette ouvrage que j'ai trouve chez Opened blog     ~which is a fine space of becomingspoetry events and   so forth  `



John Hall:
With wonderfully patient intelligence, and without

ever succumbing to polemic,
 ( I have not read the book and ... am interested but I wonder the reviewer means by 'not succumbing to polemic.'___________________
__________________Is this not to put Deleuze?guattarian ideas by into the literary box?



Jon Clay puts to work the lexicon of Deleuze (and Guattari) on a question that has haunted modernist poetics: what is it that

(This is new? Since when has modernist poetics been haunted by Guattari or Deleuze's ideas? And on the other hand of the double articulatiin..

poems do when you read them, especially when they are “difficult”? Very carefully, he sets out the terms and, just as carefully, he demonstrates their

practicality through reading poems, many of them “recalcitrant”, by contemporary UK-based poets,


including Andrea Brady, the late Douglas Oliver, J.H. Prynne and Denise Riley.
(I dont know the work of these authors)

His close readings confirm (that dubious term and its liteary connotations 'close' reading.. its oftenbeen a term of closing down not Opening Out  )

the validity both of the method – one that is necessarily self-unsettling – and of the poems thus encountered.
This book is a very welcome contribution to the poetics and pragmatics of reading.


It shows how it is possible to say what it is that poems do (This statement makes me wanna read the book)


and how this

is not the same as saying what they (seem to) say,
               (a reading then that discusses the technicalities )


all the while arguing that another(’s) reading would be a different reading and thus call,


perhaps, for another writing. (this reviewer is so tentative as if he was fearful to come right out
say WRITE DIFFERENT
___________________________

____________Id like to suggest far reading in contrast to 'close' ..... far reading is the counterparting to further writing...a s writi ng is the 

mac hine to outside the text and its bundles of Joy
and its promise to return  ~  

_________________________

Jon Clay - Sensation, Contemporary Poetry and Deleuze: Transformative Intensities


Judes's picture
This is Judy Rebick's blog. It is simultaneously posted on the web site http://www.transformingpower.ca

Toronto is burning! Or is it?

| June 27, 2010
For people sitting at home and watching TV news last night, Toronto was burning. The same police car on Queen St W. burned and blew up over and over again. The same image of a young man very violently smashing Starbucks windows appeared over and over again. Windows smashed all along Yonge St. None of us had ever seen Toronto like this. It was shocking.
Lucas Oleniuk, Toronto Star

Most of the 400 protesters arrested last night and others who may have avoided arrest didn't see that violence. From their perspective, they were facing a violent police state. These demonstrations, militant but overwhelming peaceful, were resisting the right of the police to hold them to Queen Street. They think the people have a right to protest in a place where political leaders can hear them. They had nothing to do with torching police cars or trashing windows.

TVO host Steve Paiken was down at the Novotel last night with peaceful protesters.  He tweeted his experiences, "Shame on those that ordered peaceful protesters attacked and arrested. that is not consistent with democracy in toronto, G20 or no G20."

 ----------------------------from rabble ca   ~

Fourteen hours after the People First March started, police are still making arrests. The following are the tweets gathered by rabble.ca from our journalists, other journalists there, along with activists and other observers.
Stay up-to-date by following us on Twitter here.
Note: the Tweets run backwards from 2:12 am EST.


"10-4, they are going to be arrested" heard over video, as riot cops renege on agreement to let jail solidarity protesters go. #g20 12 minutes ago via web
riot police are refusing to let jail solidarity activists leave - after giving them permission to go



. Watch live: http://bit.ly/aNKBt0 13 minutes ago via web
Watch now: @TOmediacoop is broadcasting, from iPhone, live on Ustream - from jail solidarity http://ustre.am/jCUT #G20 28 minutes ago via web
g20mobilize


over 100 riot cops,on horses are boxing all exits/entrances to jail solidarity action, they can't keep us OUT!still going strong #g20report 33 minutes ago via webRetweeted by rabbleca and 4 others
Thanks tweeps. A producer from TVO got in touch, will make the connection. 32 minutes ago via web



The People First March and the Toronto riot in 600 Tweets | rabble.ca

________________

6.24.2010

g8/G20___________ Let My HarPer go

These and more from
the ever wonderful
RABBLE cA

Ruby Jones G20 MashUp for her HoneyBear Harper














Click here to take action with the Council Of Canadians.







*
The banality of evil or how they turned Toronto into a police state
June 23, 2010
| By
Judy Rebick
|
Toronto has been turned into an occupied city for no apparent reason. What we need now is tens of thousands of people who support democracy to join the protest at Queen's Park on Saturday at noon.

-______________

6.23.2010

Oliver stone on democracy now...

'Academy Award-Winning Filmmaker Oliver Stone Tackles Latin America’s Political Upheaval in "South of the Border", US Financial Crisis in Sequel to Iconic "Wall Street" Academy Award-winning filmmaker Oliver Stone has taken on three American presidents in JFK, Nixon and W. and the most controversial aspects of the war in Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July. He looked at the greed of the financial industry in the Hollywood hit Wall Street and its forthcoming sequel. In South of the Border, his latest documentary out this week in the United States, Stone takes a road trip across South America, meeting with seven presidents about the revolution sweeping the continent. The leftist transformation in the region might be ignored or misrepresented as nothing but "anti-Americanism" in the corporate media, but this film seeks to tell a different story. Stone joins us along with the film’s co-writer, the Pakistani British author and activist Tariq Ali. '  ________________>

6.16.2010

hhhhahahahahhheieiehiiihahah heiheii...



"Heidegger était un homme tout à fait dépourvu d'esprit, dénué de toute imagination, dénué de toute sensibilité, un ruminant philosophique foncièrement allemand, une vache philosophique continuellement pleine [...] qui paissait sur la philosophie allemande et qui, pendant des décennies, a lâché sur elle ses bouses coquettes dans


la Forêt-Noire. ...[...] Heidegger était un camelot philosophique, qui n'a apporté sur le marché que des articles volés, tout, chez Heidegger, est de seconde main, il était et il est le prototype du penseur à la traîne à qui tout, mais alors vraiment tout a manqué pour penser par lui-même."















Mauvais sang



J'ai de mes ancêtres gaulois l'oeil bleu blanc, la cervelle étroite, et la maladresse dans la lutte. Je trouve mon habillement aussi barbare que le leur. Mais je ne beurre pas ma chevelure.

Les Gaulois étaient les écorcheurs de bêtes, les brûleurs d'herbes les plus ineptes de leur temps.

D'eux, j'ai: l'idolâtrie et l'amour du sacrilège; - oh! tous les vices, colère, luxure, - magnifique, la luxure; - surtout mensonge et paresse.

J'ai horreur de tous les métiers. Maîtres et ouvriers, tous paysans, ignobles. La main à plume vaut la main à charrue. - Quel siècle à mains! - Je n'aurai jamais ma main. Après, la domesticité mène trop loin. L'honnêteté de la mendicité me navre. Les criminels me dégoûtent comme des châtrés: moi, je suis intact, et ça m'est égal.

Mais! qui a fait ma langue perfide tellement, qu'elle ait guidé et sauvegardé jusqu'ici ma paresse? Sans me servir pour vivre même de mon corps, et plus oisif que le crapaud, j'ai vécu partout. Pas une famille d'Europe que je ne connaisse. -J'entends des familles comme la mienne, qui tiennent tout de la déclaration des Droits de l'Homme. - J'ai connu chaque fils de famille !






 _________________________________ Arthur Rimbaud `

6.14.2010

la betise ~

" Il ne s’agit pas d’opposer à l’image dogmatique de la pensée une autre image, empruntée par exemple à la schizophrénie. Mais plutôt de rappeler que la schizophrénie n’est pas seulement un fait humain, qu’elle une possibilité de la pensée, qui ne se révèle à ce titre que dans l’abolition de l’image. Car il est remarquable que l’image dogmatique, de son côté, ne reconnaisse que l’erreur comme mésaventure de la pensée, et réduise tout à la figure de l’erreur. (…)"




"L'erreur est le négatif qui se développe naturellement dans l'hypothèse de la Cogitatio natura universalis. Pourtant l'image dogmatique n'ignore nullement que la pensée a d'autres mésaventures que l'erreur, des opprobres plus difficiles à vaincre, des négatifs autrement difficiles à développer. Elle n'ignore pas que la folie, la bêtise, la méchanceté - horrible trinité qui ne se réduit pas au même - ne se réduit pas davantage à l'erreur. Mais encore une fois, il n'y a là pour l'image dogmatique que des faits. La bêtise, la méchanceté, la folie sont considérées comme des faits d'une causalité externe, qui mettent en jeu des forces elles-mêmes extérieures, capables de détourner du dehors la droiture de la pensée- et cela , dans la mesure où nous ne sommes pas seulement penseurs. Mais précisément le seul effet de ces forces dans la pensée est assimilé à l'erreur, censée recueillir en droit tous les effets des causalités de faits externes. C'est donc en droit qu'il faut comprendre la réduction de la bêtise, de la méchanceté, de la folie à la seule figure de l'erreur. "
Différence et répétition, Paris, PUF, 1970, p.194.




"C'est que fonder, c'est déterminer l'indéterminé. Mais cette opération n'est pas simple. Quand "la" détermination s'exerce, elle ne se contente pas de donner une forme, d'informer des matières sous la conditions des catégories. Quelque chose du fond remonte à la surface, y monte sans prendre forme, s'insinuant plutôt entre les formes, existence autonome sans visage, base formelle. Ce fond en tant qu'il est maintenant à la surface s'appelle le profond, le sans-fond. Inversement, les formes se décomposent quand elles se réfléchissent en lui, tout modelé se défait, tous les visages meurent, seule subsiste la ligne abstraite comme détermination absolument adéquate à l'indéterminé, comme éclair égal à la nuit, acide égal à la base, distinction adéquate à l'obscurité toute entière : le monstre. (Une détermination qui ne s'oppose pas à l'indéterminé, et qui ne le limite pas.) C'est pourquoi le couple matière-forme est très insuffisant pour décrire le mécanisme de la détermination; la matière est déjà informée, la forme n'est pas séparable du modelé de la species ou de la morphè, l'ensemble est sous la protection des catégories. En fait, ce couple est tout intérieur à la représentation, et définit son premier état qu'Aristote a fixé. C'est déjà un progrès d'invoquer la complémentarité de la force et du fond, comme raison suffisante de la forme, de la matière et de leur union. Mais encore plus profond et menaçant, le couple de la ligne abstraite et du sans fondqui dissout les matières et défait les modelés. Il faut que la pensée, comme détermination pure, comme ligne abstraite, affronte ce sans fond qui est l'indéterminé. Cet indéterminé, ce sans fond, c'est aussi bien l'animalité propre à la pensée, la génitalité de la pensée: non pas telle ou telle forme animalle, mais la bêtise. Car, si la pensée ne pense que conntrainte et forcée, si elle reste stupide tant que rien ne la force à penser, ce qui la force à penser n'est-il pas aussi l'existence de la bêtise, à savoir qu'elle ne pense pas tant que rien ne la force? Reprenons le mot d'Heidegger: " Ce qui nous donne le plus à penser, c'est que nous ne pensons pas encore." La pensée est la plus haute détermination, se ten ant face à la bêtise comme à l'indéterminé qui lui est adéquat. La bêtise (non pas l'erreur) constitue la plus grande impuissance dez la penssée, mais aussi la source de son plus haut pouvoir dans ce qui la force à penser. Telle est la prodigieuse aventure de Bouvard et Pécuchet, ou le jeu du non-sens et du sens. Si bien que l'indéterminé et la détermination restent égaux sans avancer, l'un toujours adéquat à l'autre. Etrange répétition qui les ramène au rouet, ou plutôt au même double pupître. Chestov voyait en Dostoïevski l'issue, c'est-à-dire l'achèvement et la sortie de la Critique de la Raison Pure. Qu'on nous permette un instant de voir dans Bouvard et Pécuchet l'issue du Discours de la Méthode. Le cogito est-il une bêtise? C'est nécessairement un non-sens, dans la mesure où cette proposition prétend se dire, elle-même et son sens. Mais c'est aussi un contresens (et cela, Kant le montrait) dans la mesure ou la détermination Je pense préteznd porter immédiatement sur l'existence indéterminée Je suis , sans assigner la forme sous laquelle l'indéterminé est déterminable. Le sujet du cogoto cartésien ne pense pas, il a seulement la possibilité de penser, et se tient stupide au sein de cette possibilité.



Il lui manque la forme du déterminable: non pas une spécificité, non pas une forme spécifique informant une matière, non pas une mémoire informant un présent, mais la forme pure et vide du temps. C'est la forme vide du temps qui introduit, qui constitue la Différence dans la pensée, à partir de laquelle elle pense, comme différence de l'indéterminé et de l'indétermination. C'est elle qui répartit, de part et d'autre d'elle même, un Je fêlé par la ligne abstraite, un moi passif issu d'un sans-fond qu'il contemple. C'est elle qui engendre penser dans la pensée, car la pensée ne pense qu'avec la différence, autour de ce point d'effondrement. C'est la différence, ou la forme du déterminable, qui fait fonctionner la pensée, c'est-à-dire la machine entière de l'indéterminé et de la détermination.



La théorie de la pensée est comme la peinture, elle a besoin de cette révolution qui la fait passer de la représentation à l'art abstrait; tel est l'objet d'une théorie de la pensée sans image."
 


Différence et Répétition, PUF, Paris, 1981, p.352-355


 

 
  Christian Gaussen bande son de 
l'intervention en real audio
ont eu lieu les
19 et 20 Octobre 1998

École des
Beaux-Arts
de
Montpellier
District
 
.............. 
"L'art et l e l'art après Bouvard et Pécuchet :
de la  bêtise"

Didier Malgor/Texte 
de présentation bande son de 
l'intervention en real audio


6.13.2010

Gd ~ ___ Gd ~


_____________________________>


de savoir si nous sommes ou non portés à les aimer. Nous devons passer outre.




Tous les éléments, pris n'importe où, peuvent faire l'objet de rapprochements nouveaux. Les découvertes de la poésie moderne sur la structure analogique de l'image démontrent qu'entre deux éléments, d'origines aussi étrangères qu'il est possible, un rapport s'établit toujours.

S'en tenir au cadre d'un arrangement personnel des mots ne relève que de la convention.

L'interférence de deux mondes sentimentaux, la mise en présence de deux expressions indépendantes, dépassent leurs éléments primitifs




pour donner une organisation synthétique d'une efficacité supérieure.





Tout peut servir.




                                   Il va de soi que l'on peut non seulement corriger une oeuvre ou
                                        intéger divers fragments d'oeuvres périmées dans une nouvelle, mais encore


changer le sens de ces fragments et truquer de toutes les manières que 





l'on jugera bonnes ce que les imbéciles s'obstinent à nommer des citations. 




Guy Debord died in  1994 almost exactly one year before Gilles Deleuze
[the year or two before Guattari had died away passing away into mountains  ~ ]


 took took his own line of flight   ~


____es déformations introduites dans les éléments détournés doivent tendre à se simplifier à l'extrêm_____________________________





6.12.2010


 ____________________________ aint over over over aint over itaint  ~

 it aint over till the fat lady sings  ~  Oil mylove~
                 u got that oil mateee? ~
                                    ye got that rig  ~  'the crude truth'

 znet as alway  dozen of article /thought/essay about thing/s/events/recent relentless ....pur ..suit..  ener g~ee


&   thinkin' thinkin' ___




6.08.2010

um drum

oil /war/water/climate/ wealth/ shit/gold/silver/ space ~ american _ empire_god dog_pig war _ shit_ culminate/pick crap_ Mona's hanging the cliff of a geology her studies in shahakespeare_ mai's c'est le micro! clifford ~ le micro ~M'ais c'est toujours une question de Mai mais la on a rentree le mois de Juin and les choses sont en train de dormer. Tu marche tu fonctionne de temps a temps comme un ordinateur_ le schizo francais sont mauvais des fois. Des fois de foie de foi de foi Tu mange de foie de foi de grace grace a foi et activité

_____________Somestimes we need a mop ~ ragmop ~


_________________________



__________________________ O yes, it's there in Corialanus

__________________Oil Oil Oil everywhere ... and not a drop to breath_____________ to breath __________________  it's that big company... yea yea cats behind the scenes ... popping them.. clutching them .. click s n' switches...




—The anger is palpable across the Mississippi Delta. As the Deepwater Horizon oil geyser, almost a mile underwater, continues unabated,spapers in Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, and Winnipeg are reporting this morning that, “A fake lake being built inside the media centre for the upcoming G8 and G20 summits should be called ‘Harper’s Folly’, says the Council of Canadians. The protest group has formally applied to the Geographical Names Board of Canada to make the lake name official.” “The fake lake, complete with docks, Muskoka chairs, canoes, and a giant television screen which will show the sights and sounds of cottage country, is part of a $1.9-million ‘Canadian Corridor’ project being built inside the Direct Media Centre in Toronto,      ______________________________________________________________________________


Humberto Da Silva on Stephen Harper, his buddy Benjamin Netanyahu, and their lost photo op -- thanks to Israeli commandos killing of nine peace activists in international waters.
Humberto Humberto Da Silva on Stephen Harper and his buddy Benjamin Netanyahu.                                                       Not Rex's Humberto: Shalom         

from  Rabble ca 
                      



erview with flotilla survivor posted by lenin

Kevin Ovenden explains:

"At 4.25am the attack began. The warship had neared and commandoes were lowering themselves onto the deck from helicopters. There were two motorised dinghies, carrying 14-20 commandoes, on either side of the boat.
Democracy now ______________
_______________U think the oil's connected to this other event...?
 O yea... yea oil ... attacking boats.. sending messages.. war... of 

rhetoric ... to the Others... and death to the innocent..... O yea h O yeah ... for that's how that machine works...





  • Flotillabutton20100607










    Israel Rejects Call for International Probe into Attack on Gaza Flotilla

    While international condemnation of Israel continues, inside Israel the mood is quite different. An Israeli parliamentary panel recommended today that the Knesset revoke the privileges of Israeli Arab lawmaker Hanin Zoabi for participating in last week’s Gaza-bound aid flotilla. Right-wing demonstrators targeted a peace protest in Tel Aviv Saturday and reportedly attacked veteran Israeli activist, the eighty-six-year-old Uri Avnery. For more on the fallout of the flotilla attack and the reactions inside Israel, I’m joined now from Jaffa by Max Blumenthal. [includes rush transcript]
  • 20100607bp_indigeneous










    BP Oil Spill Threatens Future of Indigenous Communities in Louisiana

    During our recent trip to southern Louisiana, we visited Grand Bayou, a village accessible only by boat, that feels they are on the brink of extinction. The indigenous Atakapa-Ishak people in this coastal Louisiana village have relied on the land and water around them to survive for generations. They live mostly off the oysters, shrimp and fish they draw from the marshes. [includes rush transcript]
  • 20100607-johan_galtung






    Search Results for 'zizek'

    Slavoj Žižek will be headlining the London Literature Festival at the Southbank Centre on July 5 to launch his new book Living in the End Times – more information and tickets. He will also be taking part in Marxism 2010, along with Sheila Rowbotham, Tariq Ali, Alberto Toscano, Tony Benn,Gareth Peirce, Peter Hallward and Ghada Karmi. Watch his debate with [...]
    Read Full Post »








    Johan Galtung on "The Fall of the US Empire"

    The amount of money the United States has spent on wars in Afghanistan and Iraq surpassed the $1 trillion mark last week, according to the National Priorities Project Cost of War counter. . [includes rush transcript]


    __________________________________________

    The Government Is Drowning Us All”. Uri Avnery attacked by rightist thugs.
    A disaster was averted yesterday (June 5) at Tel-Aviv’s Museum Square, when rightists threw a smoke grenade into the middle of the protest rally, obviously hoping for a panic to break out and cause the protesters to trample on each other. But the demonstrators remained calm, nobody started to run and just a small space in the middle of the crowd remained empty. The speaker did not stop talking even when the cloud of smoke reached the stage. The audience included many children.
    Half an hour later, a dozen rightist thugs attacked Gush Shalom’s 86 year old Uri Avnery, when he was on his way from the rally in the company of his wife, Rachel, Adam Keller and his wife Beate Zilversmidt. Avnery had just entered a taxi, when a dozen rightist thugs attacked him and tried to drag him out of the car. At the critical moment, the police arrived and made it possible for the car to leave. Gush spokesman Adam Keller said: “These cowards did not dare to attack us when we were many, but they were heroes when they caught Avnery alone.”

    that quote
    from
    Gush Shalom


6.04.2010





_________________image s of the
"occupation" of MiddleSex. IMages of then and Now Vincennes Middlesex

Vingt & images






Vingt scènes à Vincennes



























________________To see this film and others
head to the Paris v111 audio visual site and you can see the whole film for free ~ . Its utterly delightful


CP __ and you saw these scenes in life C D?


Vingt scènes à Vincennes







Film n&b de Patrice Besnard / Laboratoire VAO / UFR Arts


2009 / Durée 63mn


Extraits de films et documents réalisés par Marielle Burkhalter, Yolande Robveille, Annie Couëdel,

le Service des Moyens Audiovisuels / 1974 - 1980



Avec l'avènement du magnétoscope portable vers 1975, beaucoup ont filmé en vidéo à l'Université de Vincennes. Plusieurs de ces documents avaient fait l'objet à l'époque de films montés en standard analogique, d'autres après numérisation ont été finalisés récemment. Mais il subsistait beaucoup d'images jamais utilisées et finalement visionnées exclusivement par leurs auteurs. Ce film propose donc un assemblage d'extraits de l'ensemble des enregistrements disponibles pour une reconstitution partielle des « années Vincennes ».


Les morceaux choisis sont graves ou drôles mais toujours émouvants pour ceux qui ont connu ce lieu maintenant disparu, les membres de cette communauté et certains moments de l'histoire de cette Université.


Voir un article sur l'histoire de Vincennes par Annie Couëdel :

http://perso.sans-papiers.mageos.com/vincen.htm



Film (63mn)



CD Yes I saw some of them and lived as I've mentioned previously....! what joy in those
days and Deleuze is funny
in that other video
talking about this man he
met
who shopped
over
there
and happened on the lectures at Vincennes

and thats true
thats the way it was there
and in a lot
places

. _____________ in those days
and in our days ~ here there and around the detailed


deltas of the deterritorialized



places and spaces we live in

_______________


Its really worthwhile watching yourself

and make your own Vincennes

and lets hope thats

what

happens at Middlesex

and elsewhere
because all institutions

are pretty awfullll



Paris 8 link here.

6.03.2010

A LA RECHERCHE DES BERGERS DE VINCENNES

A LA RECHERCHE DES BERGERS DE VINCENNES DE YOLANDE ROBVEILLE EN JUIN 2004 SUR LE SITE DE L UNIVERSITE PARIS 8 DE VINCENNES DANS LE BOIS DU MEME NOM AVEC LES FANTOMES DE GILLES Deleuze....


'


Film couleur réalisé par Yolande Robveille en juin 2004 sur le site de l'Université de Vincennes dans le bois du même nom
Durée 16mn
Restauration et conformation : Patrice Besnard / Labo VAO / 2010
« Je voulais, pour la réalisation de mon film concernant l'université de Vincennes (Roman noir pour Université rouge), interviewer René Schérer qui a participé à toute l'aventure de cette institution. En tant que professeur émérite, il continue à animer un séminaire au département de Philosophie un jeudi par mois.
La perspective d'un entretien l'ennuyait beaucoup et il m'a proposé une expédition sur les lieux d'une époque où une certaine félicité sévissait - d'où le titre « Et in Arcadia ego » - pour y déposer une stèle en souvenir de cette université. Notre stèle était en carton et l'équipée une bande d'explorateurs disparates à la recherche de traces et jouant aux bergers de Vincennes à l'image de ceux du tableau de Nicolas Poussin « Les bergers d'Arcadie ».
Ce document, tel un hommage à la communauté vincennoise, allie un certain sens critique et une vraie joie de vivre. »

Yolande Robveille








envoyé par soukaz. -