Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 2, 2009
Links April 02 09

There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: “The Lord of the Rings” and “Atlas Shrugged.” One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.

Please add your remarks and links of the day in the comments.

Comments

Maldistribution:

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has suffered economic losses amounting to $6 billion during 2007-08 while supporting the global war on terror, Dr Hafiz Pasha, heading a panel of Planning Commission economists, said on Wednesday.
Addressing the Pakistan Institute of Development Economists’ (PIDE) 24th annual general meeting, Pasha said the calculation of losses was based on a US model Washington was using to work out terror war expenses in its own country.
“This loss to the economy, according to the government of Pakistan, is over $8 billion,” said Pasha, adding that the US should double the funds being given to Pakistan for its support to the war on terror in view of the massive losses. He said the prevailing economic situation was ‘not very positive’, as tax collection had fallen, imports were very high, real effecting exchange rate was functioning at the level pf last-year and the ministries’ expenses had increased by Rs 100 billion. He, however, said the expenses of Prime Minister’s House had fallen by 35 percent.
About the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Pasha said its programme for Pakistan focussed on stability rather than growth, “which is not good for Pakistan in the long run”. “Pakistan paid a heavy price for stability at the cost of growth during the previous regime’s tenure … and [Pakistan] should not repeat the same mistake.” Privatisation Minister Naveed Qamar later told journalists that the environment was ‘not conducive’ for privatisation because of the prevailing global economic situation, and the government was acting ‘very cautiously’.

From: ‘Pakistan suffered $6bn terror war losses in 2007-08’.

Last June, when Australian war correspondent Sasha Uzunov and I travelled unembedded in Kandahar, one of our excursions was a tour of a downtown high school. The facility itself was crumbling and in desperate need of repair. But the principal explained that he had 4,000 students enrolled—nearly half of those being females. The pitiful library contained a meagre 400 books and one old computer. While this shortage of educational material made teaching a challenge, an even bigger obstacle was the fact that this school no longer had any teachers. All of the young male instructors had quit their $60-a-month teaching jobs to enlist in the Afghan army—where soldiers now receive close to $150 as a monthly salary.
With the military component taking the lead role in the international intervention and their primary task being to produce a self-sufficient Afghan army as quickly as possible, it is easy to understand that young, literate and educated teachers would be seen as outstanding recruits. However, by draining this rare resource from the school system, we have ensured that the next generation of Afghans is being denied an education. They in turn will have limited employment options—other than soldiering (for either side) and the cycle of violence will be perpetuated.
In hindsight, it is easy to argue that teachers should have been declared essential workers and excluded from joining the Afghan army. However, it was obviously not an expected circumstance wherein a private soldier would earn nearly three times the salary of a high school teacher.

From: Perpetuating Afghanistan’s Cycle of Violence

Posted by: andrew | Apr 2 2009 7:59 utc | 1

Standoff in the Arctic Corral.

Posted by: andrew | Apr 2 2009 8:02 utc | 2

NATO’s demographer.

Posted by: andrew | Apr 2 2009 8:12 utc | 3

Is There Life In Flint… (where Michael Moore Hails from)
Off-the-cuff suggestion prompts discussion on what to do with abandoned neighborhoods in Flint“, The Flint Journal, 17 March 2009 — Destroying neighborhoods to save the city.
Property abandonment is getting so bad in Flint that some in government are talking about an extreme measure that was once unthinkable — shutting down portions of the city, officially abandoning them and cutting off police and fire service. Temporary Mayor Michael Brown made the off-the-cuff suggestion Friday in response to a question at a Rotary Club of Flint luncheon about the thousands of empty houses in Flint. Brown said that as more people abandon homes, eating away at the city’s tax base and creating more blight, the city might need to examine “shutting down quadrants of the city where we (wouldn’t) provide services.”

Posted by: anna missed | Apr 2 2009 8:21 utc | 4

I find Keiser both compelling and disturbing at the same time. For some reason, he reminds me of Rowan Atkinson aka the Black Adder …lol
And even though he says what needs to be shouted from the rooftops at high noon on the town square, in the following, –believe me, you guys don’t want to miss this– I can’t help but think, it is all for naught, though it feels good to have someone say it…
Max Keiser on Bankers Bonuses… And Heroin
Max Keiser on automotive bankruptcies, pension funds and the PBGC.

Max Keiser, Stacy Herbert Recorded 01 April 2009 in a Paris cafe

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Apr 2 2009 10:25 utc | 5

[looots of double posts deleted – b.]

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Apr 2 2009 10:25 utc | 6

Well, fuck…
I’ve reached the end of my patience w/typepad, I wont be posting anymore for a while unless this issue is resolved.
b, perhaps this may help id the problem, when this issue has happened It happens in this order, I write a post, and click preview, and nothing happens, it doesn’t preview, nor will it post, then I refresh the page, after copying my written post, and the page flickers as if stuck, hense the multiple posts. Sorry for all the work, but I find the typepad’s ‘death of a thousand paper cuts’ too frustrating to continue. I’ll be taking a hiatus, which is what these continued glitches are intended to do, I suspect. Wear us down, and make protocal so frustrating that one says, to hell with it.

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Apr 2 2009 10:45 utc | 7

U$- Don’t let the fucking machine win… Maybe try clearing your computers cache? My post do that weird flicker thing too, kind of strange, but the machine doesn’t post multiple times. I’m on an apple though so that may be why.
I’ll miss your post and your links, hopefully you and b and figure out what’s up.
Peace

Posted by: DavidS | Apr 2 2009 11:27 utc | 8

@Uncle – I have no idea how these tens of multiple posts happen. You seem to be the only one with that problem. I have tried to replicate it on XP, Win95 and OSx but can not get there. (The “flickering” is some javascript overlay that supposed to prevent double posting.)
Is there a key stuck on your keyboard?

Posted by: b | Apr 2 2009 11:58 utc | 9

Uncle, don’t say “uncle”. Your posts are obelisks of reason.

Posted by: plushtown | Apr 2 2009 12:10 utc | 10

Re: Max Keiser’s banker bonus heroin-
Listening to talk on the news about Madoff’s “feeder funds” after U$ Keiser link, and it occurred to me that what is happening is that we’re witness to gang warfare on an international scale… And we’re all caught in the driveby shooting.
Asian stocks must be where all the smart money is slinking off to hide, can’t believe the numbers at the end of the asain close, will be interesting to see if it hits Wall Street this morning…

Posted by: DavidS | Apr 2 2009 12:29 utc | 11

Deep Solar Minimum
in 2008

There were no sunspots observed on 266 of the year’s 366 days (73%). To find a year with more blank suns, you have to go all the way back to 1913, which had 311 spotless days: plot. Prompted by these numbers, some observers suggested that the solar cycle had hit bottom in 2008.
Maybe not. Sunspot counts for 2009 have dropped even lower. As of March 31st, there were no sunspots on 78 of the year’s 90 days (87%).

Posted by: plushtown | Apr 2 2009 12:41 utc | 12

Is there a key stuck on your keyboard?
B it is Not my machine nor keyboard nor browser cache. It is a typepad glitch, further I am not the only one that this happens to, however, I am the only one who has more than a few episodes such as this… This has happened on two different machines one using Opera 10.00 the other, Mozilla 3.1. As I said, each time it happens typepad will not preview or post, until I refresh the page. Then it goes into Java script hell.. I suppose it could be a Java thing, however, I ruled that out as it has happened on two different machines, and my java is up to date and I get no error or indication of Java problems further, MOA is the only blog it ever happens on. Are you inferring that their hasn’t been any typepad glitches?

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Apr 2 2009 12:43 utc | 13

Are you inferring that their hasn’t been any typepad glitches?
Certainly not – and I really would find out what is happening. But so far have no idea.

Posted by: b | Apr 2 2009 12:58 utc | 14

Judging from the masthead, the right is getting ready for war crimes trials with that pre-emptive hatchet job on Moreno Ocampo. Personalize the institution and attack, that’s Plan A. Covers all the bases, especially sexual misconduct, that works best. This is getting interesting.

Posted by: …—… | Apr 2 2009 14:02 utc | 15

Comité de Coordinación
Grupo de Investigación & Red CopySouth
Argentinean professor charged criminally for promoting access to knowledge
By the CopySouth Research Group
A philosophy professor in Argentina, Horacio Potel, is facing criminal charges for maintaining a website devoted to translations of works by French philosopher Jacques Derrida. His alleged crime: copyright infringement. Here is Professor Potel’s sad story.
“I was fascinated at the unlimited possibilities offered by the internet for knowledge exchange”, explains Horacio Potel, a Professor of Philosophy at the Universidad Nacional de Lanús <http://www.unla.edu.ar/index_eng.php> in Buenos Aires. In 1999, he set up a personal website to collect essays and other works of some well-known philosophers, starting with the German Friedrich Nietzsche and Martin Heidegger. Potel’s websites – Nietzsche in Spanish <http://www.nietzscheana.com.ar/> , Heidegger in Spanish <http://www.heideggeriana.com.ar/> and Derrida in Spanish <http://www.jacquesderrida.com.ar/> – eventually developed into growing online libraries of freely downloadable philosophical texts. Nietzsche in Spanish <http://www.nietzscheana.com.ar/> alone has already received more than four million visitors.
One of Potel’s best known websites, http://www.jacquesderrida.com.ar <http://www.jacquesderrida.com.ar/> focused on his favourite French philosopher, Algerian-born Jacques Derrida (1930-2004) <http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/derrida/> , who was the founder of “deconstruction”. On this website Potel posted many of the philosopher’s works, translated into Spanish, as well as discussion forums, research results, biographies, images and the usual pieces of information typical of this type of online resource. “I wanted to share my love for philosophy with other people. The idea was disseminating the texts and giving them some sort of arrangement” declares Potel.
To Potel, what he was doing was what professors have done for centuries: helping students to get access to knowledge. “It is not possible to find the same comprehensive collection of works that was available at Derrida’s and Heidegger’s websites either in libraries or in bookstores in Argentina”, says Potel. In fact, only two bookstores in Argentina’s largest city, Buenos Aires, carry some books by Derrida and many of his works are seldom available to readers. Potel spent decades visiting libraries and bookstores to collect the material he posted on his online library. “Many of those texts are already out of print”, he says. Books that are out of print cannot be purchased, but they are often still protected by copyright laws.
Furthermore, Potel finds the prices charged by foreign publishers, such as the Mexican companies Porrua <http://www.porrua.com/> and Cal y Arena <http://www.edicionescalyarena.com.mx/> , “prohibitive” by Argentinean standards. He gives as an example the price of a recently published booklet of a conference given by Derrida. Printed in large typeface, the booklet has about eighty pages, although the text would certainly fit in twelve. It was being sold for 162 Argentinean pesos, around 42 US dollars at current exchange rates. Even at that steep price copies were very hard to find within two weeks after they arrived in Argentina. Potel relates how he had to walk around Buenos Aires for an entire afternoon in order to find a single copy of the booklet.
But the price of foreign books is not the only concern in this case. For Derrida’s works to be accessible to the Spanish-speaking world they have to be translated. While the Spanish versions of the texts available on the website were not done by him, Potel made corrections to a few of them, since some of Derrida’s Spanish language books have been quite poorly translated. To make the texts easier to understand for readers, Potel also linked each translation to the original text, as well as to other works cited by Derrida.
Eventually, Potel’s popular website caught the attention of a publisher. A criminal case against Potel was initiated on December 31, 2008 after a complaint was lodged by a French company, the publishing house Les Éditions de Minuit <http://www.leseditionsdeminuit.eu/f/index.php> . They have published only one of Derrida’s books and it was in French. Minuit’s complaint was passed on to the French Embassy in Argentina and it became the basis of the Argentina Book Chamber <http://www.editores.org.ar/> ’s legal action against Potel.
The Argentina Book Chamber <http://www.editores.org.ar/> boasts of its doubtful precedents of having been responsible for a police raid at the Faculty of Arts and Letters of the University of Buenos Aires and for having managed to condemn some professors for encouraging the students to photocopy books and articles. “The view of the police entering the Puán building is remembered with astonishment by many members of the academic community” says a report. The next possible effects of the legal action against Potel are the wiretapping of his phone line, the interception of his email accounts and an incursion into his house to “determine the actual place where the illegal act occurred”.
Potel has already removed all the content from his website, a decision which he regards as a tragedy. “These websites are my best work. They are the result of many hours of work and have been entirely funded by me”, he says. Those who access http://www.jacquesderrida.com.ar <http://www.jacquesderrida.com.ar/> today find a warning: “This website has been taken down due to a legal action initiated by the Argentina Book Chamber”. Potel insists that he “never intended to make a profit” out of Derrida’s works. Yet he faces a possible criminal sentence of one month up to six years in prison for violation of Argentina’s intellectual property laws, according to a February 28, 2009 story <http://www.clarin.com/diario/2009/02/28/sociedad/s-01867515.htm> by the online version of Argentina’s largest newspaper, Clarín <http://www.clarin.com/diario/2009/02/28/sociedad/s-01867515.htm> .
If Derrida was alive, he would probably be thanking Potel for bringing translations of his texts to millions of Spanish-speaking readers, who otherwise would never have had the opportunity to read the works of the French philosopher. Here’s what the founder of deconstruction said about freedom within the university:
“And yet I maintain that the idea of this space of the academic type has to be symbolically protected by a
kind of absolute immunity, as if its interior were inviolable; I believe (this is like a profession of faith which I
address to you and submit to your judgment) that this is an idea that we must reaffirm, declare, and profess
endlessly. […] This freedom of immunity of the university and par excellence of its Humanities is something
to which we must lay claim, while committing ourselves to it with all our might. Not only in a verbal and
declaratory fashion, but in work, in act and in what we make happen with events.” (Jacques Derrida, “The
University Without Condition” in Without Alibi, ed. & trans. by Peggy Kamuf, Stanford University Press,
2002, p. 210)
Those who profess to “protect” Derrida’s “intellectual property rights” are now persecuting a professor who is simply following the French philosopher’s teachings and popularising them in the Spanish-speaking world.
The CopySouth Research Group calls on the Argentina Book Chamber <http://www.editores.org.ar/> and the government of Argentina to drop these criminal charges immediately and to respect and protect professor Potel’s academic freedom in providing popular access to philosophical works. In any conflict between intellectual property and the right to education and to access knowledge, we choose education and we urge those who share the same concerns to spread the word widely and rapidly.
You can send letters to Les Éditions de Minuit <http://www.leseditionsdeminuit.eu/f/index.php> (7 Rue Bernard Palissy, 75006 Paris 06, France, email: contact@leseditionsdeminuit.fr), the Argentina Book Chamber <http://www.editores.org.ar/> (Av. Belgrano 1580, Piso 4, C1093AAQ Buenos Aires, Argentina, email: cal@editores.org.ar) and the Argentina Federal Council of Education <http://www.me.gov.ar/consejo/cf_autoridades.html> (Pizzurno 935, P.B. of. 5, C1020ACA Buenos Aires, Argentina, email: cfce@me.gov.ar).
30 March 2009
The CopySouth Research Group

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Apr 2 2009 14:05 utc | 16

@…—… Julie Flint and Alex de Waal are certainly not “the right” or even near “the right”.

Posted by: b | Apr 2 2009 14:17 utc | 17

I’m judging not from the authors but from PJ O’Rourke, The New Republic and some AEI sinecures in there. I don’t have an opinion on Moreno Ocampo’s competence or libido but the adverse information does have a remarkable coincidental way of coming out when the right is threatened.

Posted by: …—… | Apr 2 2009 15:12 utc | 18

There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: “The Lord of the Rings” and “Atlas Shrugged.” One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.

Just laughed out loud in the quiet computer lab … terrific

Posted by: Cloud | Apr 2 2009 15:27 utc | 19

@ counterpunch today: Something is rotten at PBS
the gist: T.R. Reid did a documentary called sick around the world, looking at how other countries take care of their people. the major commonality was not allowing for profit with regard to ensuring health care.
T.R. Reid made a companion documentary, called Sick Around America, but when the producers did their thing, the message of T.R. Reid took from the first film was scuttled and distorted in a blatant attempt to promote the continuity of for profit insurers in the states.
this is Frontline we’re talking about, a media source that those who value its “left” leaning commentary hardly ever question it.
disgusting.

Posted by: Lizard | Apr 2 2009 15:57 utc | 20

re: two novels
I read Atlas Shrugged when I was about 19, on the recommendation of my father. I was an unsufferable Randroid asshole for several years, but eventually grew out of it (reading R. A. Wilson helped immensely, as did reading Barbara Brandon’s bio of AR). My dad hasn’t ever quite gotten over John Galt. Don’t think he ever read Tolkein.

Posted by: catlady | Apr 2 2009 16:54 utc | 21

b,
If you haven’t seen this yet, I’d be interested in your opinion:
AIG CDS null and void.

Posted by: biklett | Apr 2 2009 17:47 utc | 22

@biklett – interesting theory by Chris Walen, but little proof. The alleged ‘siteletters’ would probably not hold up in court. I don’t think it hits the real issue.

Posted by: b | Apr 2 2009 18:03 utc | 23

I doubt Atlas Shrugged appeals to teenagers today. Ot that they even read it. Those hyping it will be 40 at least, generally 60 or more. Objectivism is a sort of crack-pot medley philosophy, and ‘philosophical novels’ are right out of style.

Posted by: Tangerine | Apr 2 2009 18:31 utc | 24

re Tangerine #24:
a brilliant cost effective thing: $81,250 in Prize Money
Hadn’t realized it was so much money nowadays, but think how little it still is per young mind. How many read, ponder, idiocize selves in pursuit of the prize?

Posted by: plushtown | Apr 2 2009 18:45 utc | 25

Israel: Changing the rules of war.

Posted by: andrew | Apr 2 2009 19:12 utc | 26

It’s dinner time in Detroit: Blues Plate Special

Posted by: biklett | Apr 2 2009 23:38 utc | 27

Re #24 “I doubt Atlas Shrugged appeals to teenagers today. Ot that they even read it. Those hyping it will be 40 at least, generally 60 or more.”
No, that’s not true. I’m 22 and to quite a few of my peers Atlas Shrugged is cool. In ‘red state’ USA at least, I’m certain that more people my age are mentoring themselves with Rand than, well, any other ‘classic’ political novelist except Orwell. (And with Orwell, his anti-Communism is well known while his pro-Democratic Socialism is overlooked)

Posted by: Cloud | Apr 3 2009 0:05 utc | 28

i wouldn’t have pissed on ayn rand if she was on fire & i i have felt that orwell is one of the most overrated essayist of all time – i much prefer martha gellhorn

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Apr 3 2009 0:48 utc | 29

Andrew @ 26–the article you link to is chilling. And the US has no doubt been part of pushing this change. Gave me chills.

Posted by: jawbone | Apr 3 2009 0:56 utc | 30

rgiap, non painful health to you,
just wiki’d Gellhorn, had heard name (Hemingway connection) but haven’t read. As Gelllhorn also covered Spanish Revolution surmise you don’t like O’s Homage to Catalonia. Very curious re basis.

Posted by: plushtown | Apr 3 2009 1:42 utc | 31

plushtown
its very simple – i think martha is the better writer – the professional anti communism of the 30’s-50’s – of orwell & koestler et al – the worst of them the poet stephen spender – talking of their god who failed were wholly presumptious men who despite their down & outs & roads to wigan pier learnt nothing at all from the working class – & it seems to me the best mindes of their generation died fighting fascism in spain – christopher caudwell, john cornford or became spies like kim philby
it is clear that martha is one of the inspirers of the great writer john pilger & the much underrated wilfred burchett who brought news to the world of the atom bomb
i studied orwell – rereading him here in france – he appears very dated to me – strangely enough homage to catalonia is a piece i prefer as a piece of writing
but in real term john cairncross – the spy who told the russians of what the germans were preparing in their war against russia did a great deal more good for humanity
& the scientists who refused to allow russia to be isolated, or for the atom bomb to be the knowledge of one nation – with great courage gave their secrets to the soviet union
i hope i answered yr question in my own troubled way
amité et force

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Apr 3 2009 2:13 utc | 32

I’m always all ears about this stuff. Pilger, huh? Gotta look into him if you say so. Burmese Days is a very effective novel, though, in much the same way that slamming your nuts in the drawer is very effective for certain purposes.

Posted by: …—… | Apr 3 2009 2:41 utc | 33

Re the AIG piece @22:
The side letters are long gone by now. It might have been an interesting meeting though, the AIG chief sitting around the table with the Wall Street chiefs and Hank Paulson. I’m sure the words “multiple felony charges” were spoken more than once. The side letters vanished and AIG started posting collateral the next day.
Here is the smoking gun that tells you the side letters certainly existed: the CDS contracts AIG sold were priced too cheaply. Think about what that means. I smelled fraud of some sort as soon as I read that fact.

Posted by: jeff65 | Apr 3 2009 4:44 utc | 34

Maybe the Mayans saw through their blood sacrifice more than we give ’em credit for.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
As long as human willpower continues to be expressed through display human sacrifice, the blood will continue to flow. No doubt though, that the Mayans had their fair share of non-believer skeptics. Credit given is credit due. So long over due.

Posted by: anna missed | Apr 3 2009 9:16 utc | 35

r-giap #32, thanks. must read Gellhorn, Pilger. think all good for humanity done so far is just spicing of our carcasses.
anna missed # 35, missed the quoted line, want context (have looked above, done machine search) do think human sacrifice (especially child) important and continuous, and 1 of 2 points elite are attackable. human willpower is mostly steers horning each other.

Posted by: plushtown | Apr 3 2009 12:45 utc | 36

heh…plushtown (thx for the link) and others I guess it still has some impact in the US but I live in Europe, and here Ayn Rand went from an icon to total oblivion. I’m perhaps too involved to judge properly, as I was introduced to her writings by a family member of hers and followed this stuff (heh, so called, alternative epistemology) for years…I note that on Mish’s Economic blog Ayn Rand is adulated and quoted by a few posters, even videos are linked.
Still, it must be minor influence?
Pilger’s latest may have been posted on one thread or another if not here it is from his site, 1 april 09:
link

Posted by: Tangerine | Apr 3 2009 16:53 utc | 37

plushtown, my post got messed up by typepad, was posted on the magic thread with parts cut off – but ended up here.

Posted by: anna missed | Apr 3 2009 19:18 utc | 38