Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
December 31, 2005
A Happy New Year

Thanks for passing by. Thank you for all the good comments and lively discussions that make MoA a satisfying endeavor.

Please keep coming and posting. Next year Billmon will be back with us, I will be less depressed and we will all have lots of scandals and outrages but also funny and amusing stuff to talk about.

Light some fireworks or clap your hands and scare away the old ghosts and greet the new ones.

Happy New Year to you wherever you are.

Uncle $cam asks you to nominate a Comment of the Year 2005. A good reason to take a walk through the archives (monthly links are on the left side of the main page) and to reread some threads.

To Uncle $cam this one is a candidate. So your nomination is … ?

Comments

as debs would say – you are all a good mob
& there isn’t a week that passes that i am not touched by work posted here
for b, outraged, cloned poster, uncle $cam – your linking has delivered packets of knowledge that are essential to my own work & to my understanding
i too like the fact that we can go to the wall with our fury but are also capable of self deprecation & good humour – it is not nothing
beq & anna missed colour my nights
i am an advocate here of – intimité & dstance – & so i treasure those posts where the poster has allowed themselves to be seen in all the complex & contradictory beauty
& for malooga, theodor, monlycus for giving me some earned wacks around the ears
there are so many like debs who are the heart & soul of what is happening here
my diabetes & its complications have not made this year easy for me – but what richness is in it has also come form here – so i thank you – but you know that
& for alabama’s return – a mighty cheer
i give you all thanks & am in your debt

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Dec 31 2005 12:34 utc | 1

First to b, I would like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for your efforts on this site. I enjoy reading the postings and the wide variety of views.
As to the best postings, I am going to take the easy way out and say I enjoy them all. Some are surely deeper and more philisophical than others. I even enjoy the fights once in a while, but, sometimes some comments get carried away (I thought some of the comments on billmon wer uncalled for).
Tonight, we are going to relatives and will celebrate the new year with all the gusto possible. I believe strawberry daiquiris will be my prefered drink for the night. So I will toast to all at MOA and thank you all for a great year and hope MOA has a great year ahead.
Oh yah, billmon rocks.

Posted by: jdp | Dec 31 2005 15:14 utc | 2

cheers. til lykke.
I’m just screwin’ around rgiap. I do miss the twisted metapors in your writing. like lin biao with a banjo.
treat yourselves to some internet bittorrent content:
century of self/power of nightmares; enron: smartest guys in the room; the agronomist, resnais’ Guernica (“the miserable shall pay for their suffering.”)

Posted by: slothrop | Dec 31 2005 16:43 utc | 3

I am more of a heart thinking person than a brain thinking person, so I nominate R’Giap for this:
no, they don’t get it. imperialism, never known for its genius or for its imagination has even less common sense
this imperial powere has begun a war it cannot win & it is extremely likely it is the crucible on which its entire project will crumble
like mad king leopold of the congo they go about theior business with such avarice & venality they cannot see what is obvious to even the most partisan of witnesses
in afghanistan, far from defeating ‘terrorism’ – they have guven it a leg up – they have construted the possibility for an armed confilct that will see no end. afghanistan has been returned to the lawless state where opium is the most stable & profitable of crops. from opium will come the revenues on both sides of the fence. the coloniser will use the trade as will its erstwhile enemies who will indulge in this business to the happy mutal infantilism of their populations
afghanistan, never in such good shape anyway had become decidedly worse – with control existing only in kabul & only there by the presence of absolute force. this of course will not last & once this little war intensifies i think you will see european troops want to get the hell out of there
this imperial project is so possessed by lunacy that they want black to be white, red to be blue. they cannot see what is in front of their eyes. what is in front of the worlds eyes despite the best attempts of foxnewscnnbbc & the rest of their whorelike contemporaries. u s imperialism has turned this world into a slaughterhouse & it is going to get worse. there can be no doubt about that. a weak beast is much more dangerous than one that is strong. & this beast, u s imperialism & all its works have guaranteed that for the next few decades we will live in a kind of hell
certainly, it is not the hell of the iraqui people who have been forced to suffer beyond reason. they have been obliged to be the point where u s imperialism exhibits its venal power for all the world to see. the hundreds of thousands that are already dead will be joined by hundreds of thousands of others. they have turned a nation of the richest & most cultured history into the stone age where even after all this – for all their money, for all their force – they cannot provide even the most basic of services to the people. they have turned over the iraqi state to a group of criminals – halliburton bechtel etc who have no interest to give the people these services. they want what the nazis wanted in the east – a slave people who can provide america with the resources it so venally demands. there can be no question that the iraqui people enter the equation for the occupiers. it is a sad & cruel joke. no these people will suffer endlessly while the wolf blitzers of the world ejaculate their perfect semen over the screens of our future
the american have created from this most civilised people a barbaric entity & they happy for all that – that is sure – as they did in vietnam with their diems, their thieus, their ky’s – they do not care at all for the people & that is the clearest sign they are sending the world
they are not interested in ‘democracy’ – a term they have soiled with their farce & then with their tragedy. it is clear that in the ukraine – the interfascist struggle is being assisted by u s imperialism. truthout & common dreams have may articles which will prove that. they do not care for the people. they never have
they are the terrorists they pretend their enemies to be & the situation is so sordid in iraq – i would not put it past the american to have been involved in the kidnappings & the executions. i am not the only person to fear that. there is a long history of such machinations because the people in the end do not matter. they do not matter at all
the cries of latin america – so well documented by eduardo galeano that have filled our ears for fifty years were never heard. never. until it was too late. until generation after generation of people were slaughtered to the iperatives of american foreign policy. to not listen to these cries makes us criminals. to not listen to these cries makes us stupid
because the cries we are hearing will turn away from that emotion & they will turn to revenge & the world was lucky once to have a nelson mandela who was capable of transforming that fury. there is no such leader today who can turn the fury of a people into something noble.
what is noble, in this instance is for the people to fight back & that necessarily means american deaths – how couid it be otherwise – it took 50,000 american deaths to end the vietnam war. i do not cy when i see the people’s soldiers that are posted here – at least i do not feel sympathy because at the other end of thats scale is the destruction of a people by the most barbaric means known to man.
there are so many iraqui dead, wounded, destroyed & diminished that their is not enough tears in my body nor yours to cry for them & we do not see their bodies their broken & beautiful bodies – we do not see a human vaporised – we do not see them melting – we do not see them transformed in 50 a 100 pieces – we do not see the blodd skin & brains of the walls of destroyed houses & mosques. we do not see their horror. & we are criminal & stupid to be blind to it
& it has a name – it is a crime of war. it is the reduction of all humanity – not just for the americans but for all the world – if justice had a meaning the people who are making iraq a slaughterhouse would be before an international tribunal but that day will not come
but in their criminality, in their blindness & in their stupidity they do not see what we all witness – that the fight against american imperialism will grow into a ferocious force even if it wears nikes & they listen to music on their ipods. they will also use the americans own weapons against them as the vietnamese did
if vietnam touched the soul of america – iraq will tear its heart out breath by breath
& it will have given birth to armies that make the red brigades, the red army faktion look like the schoolchildren they were – we are going to witness a ferocity unimaginable in this 21st century – it will be in its way a return to 1914-18 because it will affect everybody & everybody will become criminal in our ignorance to its reality
b, no they don’t get it & i am sure they will not get it until it is much too late, for them & for us

Posted by: Cloned Poster | Dec 31 2005 17:31 utc | 4

Thanks b, for all your fine posts, for this corner in cyberspace which attracts so many good minds… I never miss the opportunity to lurk – like walking the beach and finding treasures!
Happy 2006 to all… and as Justin R. at antiwar.com said some months ago,
Fiat justitia
ruat coelum
“Let justice be done though the heavens fall”—
and blessings on Patrick Fitzgerald!

Posted by: crone | Dec 31 2005 22:32 utc | 5

I would’nt know where to begin in choosing a best post, not the least because there has been no shortage of such, but because it might overshadow the multiplicity expressed here that highlights and puts into stark contrast, such great posts. For this is what I think is the MoA’s strong suit is, by comparison (to other blogs). There is here a wonderful multi- pole, multi-perspective representation whereby the truth of things here, if it is to be captured or known at all, it would be held in a suspension — somewhere between, personal-on-the-ground experience, historical reflection, political, economic, scientific, and philosophical index, and proasic / cultural reification — all of which are elucidated here with regularity. And I think it is important to realize that, in such a (delicate) constelation there is always the vulnerability and risk that some opinion or work done here will be considered, by the author, to be isolated or of little consequence, or just plain unappreciated — by lack or quality of response. While it is impossible to acknowledge every contribution, try thinking of the reverse of best post, or say, most irrelevant post, the task then is decidedly more difficult, for I have no memory of any such post. Which is to say, that it is these point perspectives, seen or not seen, that keeps the moon suspended in the sky. Thanks all (around).

Posted by: anna missed | Dec 31 2005 22:42 utc | 6

I couldn’t choose a best post, b, but I did find a favorite one by Malooga:
It was on a thread titled WB: 50th Anniversary, referring to the publication of Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl.”
There are so many others, this one inspired me with its theme of poetry and Malooga’s personal remembrance and as an example of what anna missed says above, our community’s “personal-on-the-ground experience, historical reflection, political, economic, scientific, and philosophical index, and proasic / cultural reification.”
I struggle to keep up with the more abstract discussions about politics, esthetics and other scholarly pursuits, although believe me I cheer on my favorites when the fur starts to fly. Yet in the same forum, same thread often, these wonderful personal gems bring the discussion back to people and places that at least I can visualize …
Thank you all for your generosity, I am much the better for the education and example of each one of you.
Dobrý nový rok!

Posted by: jonku | Dec 31 2005 23:44 utc | 7

That whole November 3 discussion is of astounding quality.

Posted by: lb | Dec 31 2005 23:46 utc | 8

lb
though, looks to me, that thread is half as big as it used to be.

Posted by: slothrop | Dec 31 2005 23:59 utc | 9

kol aam winto bkhair ya infidels
HERE you’ll find the definitive interpretation of Auld Lang Syne to reflect upon and sing along to.

Posted by: ‘ayyar | Jan 1 2006 0:24 utc | 10

have a smooth transition, everyone! no nominations from me, as i’ve learned & benefited from every moment i’ve spent here. may there be plenty more. thanks b & all!

Posted by: b real | Jan 1 2006 3:52 utc | 11

A Mother’s Prayer
In your next life you won’t know sorrow or pain.
You’ll never be hungry,
You’ll live where it rains.
You won’t have to work like a dog for a bone.
In your next life,
You’ll have land of your own.
In your next life, you won’t be a slave
Your first step from cradle won’t be to your grave.
You won’t be a pawn in some invisible war.
In your next life….
Year end musings from a midlife mystice.
Namaste

Posted by: SME in Seattle | Jan 1 2006 4:34 utc | 12

rather than link i’d rather the whole text of evo morales. it is simple. it is clear. it possesses both knowledge but also wisdom :

Our Struggle is Against US Imperialism
I Believe Only in the Power of the People
By EVO MORALES
This is the text of a speech given on December 24 at the “In Defense of Humanity” conference.
What happened these past days in Bolivia was a great revolt by those who have been oppressed for more than 500 years. The will of the people was imposed this September and October, and has begun to overcome the empire’s cannons. We have lived for so many years through the confrontation of two cultures: the culture of life represented by the indigenous people, and the culture of death represented by West. When we the indigenous people–together with the workers and even the businessmen of our country–fight for life and justice, the State responds with its “democratic rule of law.”
What does the “rule of law” mean for indigenous people? For the poor, the marginalized, the excluded, the “rule of law” means the targeted assassinations and collective massacres that we have endured. Not just this September and October, but for many years, in which they have tried to impose policies of hunger and poverty on the Bolivian people. Above all, the “rule of law” means the accusations that we, the Quechuas, Aymaras and Guaranties of Bolivia keep hearing from our governments: that we are narcos, that we are anarchists. This uprising of the Bolivian people has been not only about gas and hydrocarbons, but an intersection of many issues: discrimination, marginalization , and most importantly, the failure of neoliberalism.
The cause of all these acts of bloodshed, and for the uprising of the Bolivian people, has a name: neoliberalism. With courage and defiance, we brought down Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada–the symbol of neoliberalism in our country–on October 17, the Bolivians’ day of dignity and identity. We began to bring down the symbol of corruption and the political mafia.
And I want to tell you, companeras and companeros, how we have built the consciousness of the Bolivian people from the bottom up. How quickly the Bolivian people have reacted, have said–as Subcomandate Marcos says–ya basta!, enough policies of hunger and misery.
For us, October 17th is the beginning of a new phase of construction. Most importantly, we face the task of ending selfishness and individualism, and creating–from the rural campesino and indigenous communities to the urban slums–other forms of living, based on solidarity and mutual aid. We must think about how to redistribute the wealth that is concentrated among few hands. This is the great task we Bolivian people face after this great uprising.
It has been very important to organize and mobilize ourselves in a way based on transparency, honesty, and control over our own organizations. And it has been important not only to organize but also to unite. Here we are now, united intellectuals in defense of humanity–I think we must have not only unity among the social movements, but also that we must coordinate with the intellectual movements. Every gathering, every event of this nature for we labor leaders who come from the social struggle, is a great lesson that allows us to exchange experiences and to keep strengthening our people and our grassroots organizations.
Thus, in Bolivia, our social movements, our intellectuals, our workers–even those political parties which support the popular struggle ­joined together to drive out Gonzalo Sánchez Lozada. Sadly, we paid the price with many of our lives, because the empire’s arrogance and tyranny continue humiliating the Bolivian people.
It must be said, compañeras and compañeros, that we must serve the social and popular movements rather than the transnational corporations. I am new to politics; I had hated it and had been afraid of becoming a career politician. But I realized that politics had once been the science of serving the people, and that getting involved in politics is important if you want to help your people. By getting involved, I mean living for politics, rather than living off of politics. We have coordinated our struggles between the social movements and political parties, with the support of our academic institutions, in a way that has created a greater national consciousness. That is what made it possible for the people to rise up in these recent days.
When we speak of the “defense of humanity,” as we do at this event, I think that this only happens by eliminating neoliberalism and imperialism. But I think that in this we are not so alone, because we see, every day that anti-imperialist thinking is spreading, especially after Bush’s bloody “intervention” policy in Iraq. Our way of organizing and uniting against the system, against the empire’s aggression towards our people, is spreading, as are the strategies for creating and strengthening the power of the people.
I believe only in the power of the people. That was my experience in my own region, a single province–the importance of local power. And now, with all that has happened in Bolivia, I have seen the importance of the power of a whole people, of a whole nation. For those of us who believe it important to defend humanity, the best contribution we can make is to help create that popular power. This happens when we check our personal interests with those of the group. Sometimes, we commit to the social movements in order to win power. We need to be led by the people, not use or manipulate them.
We may have differences among our popular leaders–and it’s true that we have them in Bolivia. But when the people are conscious, when the people know what needs to be done, any difference among the different local leaders ends. We’ve been making progress in this for a long time, so that our people are finally able to rise up, together.
What I want to tell you, compañeras and compañeros–what I dream of and what we as leaders from Bolivia dream of is that our task at this moment should be to strengthen anti-imperialist thinking. Some leaders are now talking about how we–the intellectuals, the social and political movements–can organize a great summit of people like Fidel, Chávez. and Lula to say to everyone: “We are here, taking a stand against the aggression of the US imperialism.”
A summit at which we are joined by compañera Rigoberta Menchú, by other social and labor leaders, great personalities like Pérez Ezquivel. A great summit to say to our people that we are together, united, and defending humanity. We have no other choice, compañeros and compañeras–if we want to defend humanity we must change systems and this means overthrowing US imperialism.
Evo Morales is the newly elected president of Bolivia

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Jan 1 2006 5:21 utc | 13

I’d also like to wish everyone a very happy New Year. I’m flattered that Unca regarded my observation as highly as he or she did and probably should not diminish it by mentioning that it was written while I was still half-asleep (and that it was more of a response to a science fiction movie I had watched the previous evening than a commentary on any single current event).
I would also have a very hard time suggesting a best post for 2005, for the reasons that anna missed mentioned above. As an experiment, I went through the archives and tried to find a worst post to no avail. The comments here have been in turns painfully blunt, naive, heartfelt, sophisticated, insightful, optimistic, pessimistic… but never superfluous. I would like to make a list thanking everyone here who has given me something worthwhile to chew upon, but I would almost certainly be omitting someone in the process if I tried. Everyone here has, in their turn, contributed something that has touched, titillated or enraged me… and made me think as a result.
After reviewing the content of the last year, I do have a nomination for my idea of “best post”, but it is not because it was any better or more insightful than anything else anyone here has written. It is simply the spirit in which it was provided. FlashHarry tried at one time to initiate an ambitious dialogue to codify the looming problem of “what’s to be done”. Ultimately, it was no more successful at discovering a resolution than any of our other debates here, but I admire the optimism of giving it a shot.
The Moon is continuing to wax, and I look forward to more analyses, community and insights. Thank you to all.

Posted by: Monolycus | Jan 1 2006 7:07 utc | 14

All the best to everyone in 2006 and do not go anywhere, please…

Posted by: vbo | Jan 1 2006 11:34 utc | 15

I was so impressed by Monolycus’ post that I decided to review the thread and see if there were any other gems there. And what do I find? A comment by me indicating how impressed I was by M’s post. Oh well, I guess one of the rewards of age is being redelighted by what one has forgotten!
There were so many excellent posts over the past year. I probably copied and saved over a hundred of them. That’s what makes this place so special: The level of discourse. I too confess to sometimes feeling over my head, but I learn so much from this place. Better to be pulled up to this level, then to descend to common blog invective (CBI), a disease for which no cure has yet been found.
I have, at times, spent hours crafting an individual post for this blog. Beyond the sheer enjoyment of writing and the intellectual challenge of marshalling an argument, this effort, itself, is perhaps the ultimate compliment to all of you out there who share this intimate and yet anonymous space with me. Thank you all.
Oh, Monolycus’ post is good enough for my vote.

Posted by: Malooga | Jan 1 2006 16:02 utc | 16

I’m not into ‘bests’ of anything.
I thank you all from my heart. Special mention to Bernhard. (If money or other is needed, please contact me. I mean it – I can do it, whatever. )
Happy new year. All the very best to all. And again. Drinks all round. All. all…

Posted by: Noisette | Jan 1 2006 16:47 utc | 17

Happy New Year, my friends! I am glad to see 2005 done with and laid to rest. I has not been the best of years for me, though far from the worse. I enjoy our little community very much, though I ‘ve had very little time to post this Fall and Winter: Knee therapy for two months after surgery, presenting a major paper and getting a book chapter (completely different subject) to a publisher, my (successful) tenure application, and testifying at a trial across the country from me (I live in Maine and testified in San Francisco) all kept me in hyper-busy mode. The Federal Court trial resulted from my sending a death threat I found posted against a judge in the Terry Schiavo case on an AOL message board to an FBI tip web page(for the record the odd religious fanatic that made the death threat as a “joke” was convicted).

So much for the quiet life of a rural professor! I am letting my sleep deprived carcass catch up this weekend! I wish you all a Happy New Year. May our efforts in 2006 help turn the tide against the evil forces called the religious right and neoconservatives!

Posted by: Diogenes | Jan 1 2006 17:44 utc | 18

i’ve been gone a few weeks and have much catching up to do here @ moa. i cannot fathom a favorite post but will give it some thought and review my draft pile where i do a little storing.
you all have provided a haven for me this past year but i assume you already know that so i will spare you the teary drivel of my loss w/out you.
bernard , a very special thank you.
everyone really, enjoy what pleasures we have. thank you all from the bottom and top of my heart. a special call out to beq and anna missed for the incredible art. r’giap, what can i ever say. really, it would be hard to name any favorites w/out revealing my crushes. on that note, thanks to billmon once again. you are all my sanity,i am not alone. a student amongst masters, i soak you up. namaste.

Posted by: annie | Jan 2 2006 3:36 utc | 19

I’ve been away (at cold comfort farm) with my S.O. (he warmed it up for me, though 😉 but I’ve missed my cyber family. Happy New Year to my lifeline. You. ALL of you. Diogenes, we need you and more of you. Be well. R’Giap, you be well too, or else! Thank you, annie, for your generosity (I’ve seen your art and it is sublime). Bernhard. You Rock. Be well too. What would we do without you?

Posted by: beq | Jan 3 2006 0:11 utc | 20