SocraticGadfly

May 01, 2024

Mayday, Mayday! Russia IS a problem child

I see what I did there with that headline.

I've long, on this forum, called out the US and other NATO countries for pushing a proxy war in Ukraine. I've fought back against the Uki-tankies of NAFO Fellas on Twitter. That said, I do not, contra a Norman Finkelstein, call Russia's invasion "justified." Per Walter Kaufmann, this is one of those times that word doesn't work for me.

Plus, beyond war crimes (which Ukraine also commits) I see that Putin's Russia is back almost to the USSR days on suppressing religious freedom. Actually, Tsarist days would be more accurate. The Russian Orthodox Church's relationship with the Russian state under Putin is similar to the caesaropapism of Tsardom. Judaism is certainly in a better state. I'm not sure what the Tsarist angle on Islam is, as the first semi-significant Islamic lands only came under Russian rule in the last century of the empire, and the real significant lands of Central Asia only in its last 40-50 years. It seems relatively benevolent, though, for one simple reason, which leads us to the next paragraph ...

But? Ties to a church perceived as "American"? Here, it's USSR days. No Baptists allowed. Not in occupied portions of Ukraine, per the story, nor, more and more, in "mother Russia" itself.

That said, we, as in the USG, created this problem by and large. The Slickster gave drunken Boris Yeltsin drunken sailor money so he wouldn't lose to the Commies in 1996. This was after Jeff Sachs and others pushed Yeltsin into shock therapy that wrecked the Russian economy and led many people to consider putting them back in power? His fault? No. Blame Russia! And,  yes, this is the same Jeff Sachs who is now at Columbia, supporting the proxy war idea and supporting Jill Stein. Penance?

At the same time, we didn't force Putin to become president for life. Some of this is the old Brer Rabbit and Tar Baby syndrome.

Texas 2036 tries to ignore away climate change

ForFor the unfamiliar, Texas 2036 is a Texas think tank that, because of Texas exceptionalism, focuses on Texas issues. Its top level staff and advisors are primarily old Bushies, like Shrub's Secretary of Education, Margaret Spellings. Its raison d'etre is to play footside with ConservaDems in the mutually delusional belief that they can stop the Tin Dunnification of TEx-ass, including, perhaps, the Christian nationalism (a phrase Christofascist Dunn rejects.

Anyway, to the smackdown.

Texas 2036 last week had a piece about increasingly extreme weather in Tex-ass. Covers the usual ground: More drought, more wildfires, etc.

Missing? The phrase "climate change."

Now, it says at top that it's just a precis of a newsletter, but, if I'm not a ConservaDem, if you're offering me that as bait, why would I be interested?

And, that's essentially a lie anyway. I clicked the link up top and the MailChimp e-newsletter is totally the same as the web piece.

Besides that? Look at that graphic at left? If you're chiding people for setting their air conditioning at 68, you're giving them a fucking pass to set it at 70. And, that's a picture of AC, not heating.

Shock me that this would interest the likes of Kuff.

And, yeah, I'm at the point of bitching on him ever more.

April 30, 2024

Texas bullet train gets fluffed again

Please make it stop, at least while all the old mindsets are in place.

The Chronic plays up Amtrak's looking at Texas high-speed rail. As long as Amtrak keeps itself wedded to the Texas Central concept, including a stop at Roans Prairie (ie BFE) and the real estate grifting of whatever sort that is attached to that, it ain't going nowhere — and shouldn't. Kuff, Brains and any other current (active or inactive), or former, members of Texas Progressives who live in the Houston area need to be real — and, even more, need to be honest about the Texas Central route. 

In my opinion, following Texas 6 from Helltown to College Station and Waco, then up I-35, has always made much more sense.

Beyond that, given its operations elsewhere in Texas, Amtrak involvement doesn't guarantee good routing.

 

Texas Progressives talk Californication, runoffs and more

Texas isn't being Californicated by so many tech-neoliberal dudebros. Shouldn't wingnuts like Havana Ted Cruz rejoice? CD Hooks has the receipts, led by Oracle, which ditched the Bay Area for Austin just four years ago, now moving to Nashville. Oracle's being heavily bribed to make the move. Tesla, with massive layoffs, just sux as Elmo Musk runs it into the ground along side of Twitter. Beyond that, the reality is, as Beto-Bob, aka Rump Fuck O'Rourke, knew in 2018, native Texans are less wingnut than the Californicators, at least the ones not tech-neoliberal dudebros. (There's plenty of tech-libertarian nutters, and non-tech world people, among the Californicators.)

I live in the SD 30 runoff land. I think it's funny that Brent Hagenbuch and Jace Yarbrough are splitting some winger GOP receipts. But, I expect Hagenbuch to win walking away, though not running away.

SocraticGadfly, in two items tied to his years in the Metroplex, says RIP to a former Lancaster mayor and then looks at a Dallas Observer story on Wilmer and adds some needed background.

Off the Kuff looks at the past history of May elections in Harris County. 

Stace, in a provocative edition of Thoughts on Viernes opines on the local DA; the local mayor; and local Dems avoiding the subject of student protesters. (Now do Kuff, Stace.)

Big coal-fired power plant owners, facing new EPA music on carbon emissions, pollutants and coal ash, blame ERCOT for not letting them retire their plants. Bullshit.

Twenty-five potential members of the House side of the next Lege want to make it even more wingnut than Danny Goeb's Senate.

The White House Correspondents Association reached a new low in shamelessness.

Zionism and genocide abetting is a problem in the UK as well as the US, including in academia, per Mondoweiss.

Neil at the Houston Democracy Project said the Houston Chronicle endorsed a Republican for one of the HCAD positions knowing full well his attacks on democracy.

The Dallas Observer brings the harrowing story of a local band having their music deepfaked.

City of Yes notes the prominence of LGBTQ-identifying lawmakers in the "yes in my backyard" housing reform movement.

The ConservaDems and Bushies at Texas 2036 warn that our state's weather is indeed getting wilder — and "manage" to never use the words "climate change," another piece rounded-up by the lower-grade environmentalist Kuff.

 Observer celebrates 70 years of its political cartoons.

April 29, 2024

Did MLK cut blank checks for Israel? Do today's anti-Zionists claim too much?

Probably not, according to Martin Kramer, though he elsewhere, in a Jewish magazine, tries to modify himself. Actually, he expands upon his earlier writing, and does so enough that I added the second half of the header as a second rhetorical question, once I started reading.

First, from page 8 of the 15-page PDF at that first link, the famous Seymour Martin Lipset quote:

One of the young men present happened to make some remark against the Zionists. Dr. King snapped at him and said, “Don’t talk like that! When people criticize Zionists, they mean Jews. You’re talking anti-Semitism!”

Kramer goes on to defend that it was indeed said, and was said in 1968, not 1967.

That said, on page 5, he notes what King said approximately 9 months earlier, shortly after the end of the Six Day War:

I mean the very survival of Israel may well depend on access to not only the Suez Canal, but the Gulf and the Strait of Tiran. These things are very important. But I think for the ultimate peace and security of the situation it will probably be necessary for Israel to give up this conquered territory because to hold on to it will only exacerbate the tensions and deepen the bitterness of the Arabs.

He then puts that into larger context, noting that King had a quasi-evangelistic tour of Israel previously planned, but realized he would now be a political target whatever he said. He delayed any announcement above officially cancelling, but a couple of months later, he did pull the plug.

I know that other anti-Zionists have seen the second sentence of that paragraph before. Maybe they haven't seen the first, or else have ignored it.

What King is saying, it seems to me, is NOT a moral judgment but a political one. Let us remember that he was a Baptist minister, not an AME one. I've not read anything about what thoughts he had on the "end times," but, as a Baptist and not a Methodist Episcopal, he was surely open at least to some variety of futurist millennialism, as well as politically supporting Israel's future, and supporting it for SCLC reasons, too. Many of his top supporters were Jewish. His right hand man, Stanley Levinson, was, though he was not a Zionist.

But, we're not done. Kramer then puts King's Harvard statement into context — very important context.

There is plenty of room to debate the precise meaning of King’s off-the-record words at the Cambridge dinner. Was he only referring to the clearly antisemitic meaning of “Zionists” in the rhetoric of SNCC militants? [This is discussed by Kramer, the background, on the previous couple of pages.) Or was he making a general statement? We will never know. And just how much weight should be accorded to words spoken privately and never repeated publicly? (Had Lipset not written an article more than a year after the event, King’s words would have been lost forever.) My own view is that this dinner table remark can’t always bear the oversized burden imposed on it.

Food for thought a plenty.

Then, on page 12, Kramer talks about King's "balancing act." That deserves quoting of Kramer himself in some depth:

(I)t is an offense to history, if not to King’s memory, whenever someone today summons King’s ghost to offer unqualified support to Israel or the Palestinians.

There you go.

As for the second link? It's not so much modifying himself as extending himself.

Kramer cites new background material on King's 1959 visit to Israel, including above all, West Jerusalem. Let us remember this being after the Nakba (a word not mentioned by Kramer) but long before the Six Day War and any occupations. 

Kramer's take on King's visit then, including a private dinner with top Palestinians, and his later comments are that, while not dismissing Palestinian concerns, they were on a back burner for him. Kramer notes that he had visited India, laden with poverty, just before.

Then, there's this:

Years later, in 1968, King would allude to this demand as indicative of the weakness of the Arab approach to the conflict, an approach he described as “a stubborn effort to reverse history.”

Well, that does mention, in King's words, the right of return. And, his disinterest in it AFTER the Six Day War.

Kramer then notes that while the Israel-Palestine conflict was national, and to a degree then (tho less than today) religious, it was not racial. And, Israelis calling Palestinians names aside, it really wasn't.

Finally, Kramer speculates that the thought of Reinhold Neibuhr was having an influence on King. He cites this as his top reason King wasn't more emotionally invested in the Palestinian cause. This, because it shows Niebuhr's own Zionism, deserves its own quote:

Given his influence upon King, it’s important to recall the vigor with which Niebuhr supported both the establishment of Israel and its right to defend itself. He had expressed sympathy for Zionism as early as 1929, and in 1942 he founded the Christian Council on Palestine, a pro-Zionist association that grew to include thousands of (mostly Protestant) clergymen. In 1946, he testified in favor of a Jewish state before the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry on Palestine. “The fact that the Arabs have a vast hinterland in the Middle East,” he said there, “and the fact that the Jews have nowhere to go, establishes the relative justice of their claims and of their cause.”
In 1948 and again during the Sinai campaign of 1956, Niebuhr defended Israel’s military actions and chastised American policymakers for not standing firmly behind “our only secure bastion in this troubled area.” The Arab refugees, he believed, would have to be resettled elsewhere than in their former homes: “The Jews cannot absorb [them] except in small numbers without imperiling the security of their nation.” In 1967, he justified Israel’s preemptive action in what would become known as the Six-Day War: “Obviously a nation that knows that it is in danger of strangulation will use its fists.” Shortly after the war, he backed Israel’s unilateral unification of Jerusalem.

Basically, if one goes on to read the next page or two of that piece? Niebuhr had swallowed whole the Jewish and British Imperialist mix of opinion about Arabs in general and Palestinians in particular, without caring to look at any background. He also viewed all of this through a Cold War lens.

That's pretty serious. Especially if you tie it with my speculation about King's millennialist theology.

As for what stance he might have taken today? He didn't even live to the First Intifada. He would have been nearly 60 when it happened, and perhaps "on the bench" of day-to-day civil rights activity by then, had he not been assassinated. Given the stresses of his life, he might have had a heart attack by then.

That said? If we're doing research, we're doing all of it. Kramer is a neocon, teaches at Tel Aviv University, is tied to neocon think tanks, specifically, the AIPAC-connected Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and likes to hate on Palestinian refugees. He is surely right about the King of 1967-68, including via his own connections to neocon nutbar and Zionist supremo Marty Peretz.

Had King lived past the First Intifada, I think he would have realized that, for his legacy if nothing else, his "balancing act" would have to shift to a different center of gravity.

Bottom line? To riff on Kramer, I won't claim that King "really" would have been pro-Palestinian today if his Zionist fellow travelers will follow his own words and stop making much more out of King's comments in Boston than is warranted.

April 26, 2024

Counterpunch drops an antisemitic dime

Disgusted by Counterpunch running actual antisemitism, not anti-Zionism.

David Yearsley, who is a regular contributor at Counterpunch, as in for more than 15 years, ran a piece about the intersection of O.J. Simpson and culture, "Sounding Out O.J." At the end is an embedded video of a Jay-Z rap.

At 2:36, it says:

You ever wonder why Jewish people own all the property in America?

That's antisemitic, period and end of story. Not anti-Zionist, antisemitic.

Dude is a tenured music prof at Cornell and a published author. I have no doubt he knows the full video, especially given the way he teed it up.

No mention of football or murder is made in what I consider the towering musical monument to Simpson erected in 2017: Jay-Z’s “Story of O.J.” I cannot find its refrain—“I’m not Black, I’m O.J.”—anywhere before this song engraved his epitaph in sound seven years before his death.

I listened through to that point to hear the refrain he mentions. And, did a WTF. Yearsley nowhere says something like: "It's good except for this," or, "I'm posting this ONLY for the OJ angle; I disagree with Jay Z's antisemitism," or anything similar.

We're getting nearer to deblogrolling Counterpunch.

And, this is of importance ever since Oct. 7. To have ethical standing in calling out Zionists for conflating anti-Zionism and antisemitism, I have to call out actual antisemitism.

And, as part of that, I Tweeted both Counterpunch and St. Clair. (We follow each other.) No response. I emailed Yearsley. No response.