Latest News: Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

“Do we really want a new Cold War with China? Mainstream media thinks so” — THE WRONG STORY author Greg Shupak writes for Salon

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2020

Corporate media is laying the ideological groundwork for a new cold war with China, presenting the nation as a hostile power that needs to be kept in check.

Read the full article here.

“What Does Art Have to Do With the Coronavirus?” — THE ANIMALS’ VEGAN MANIFESTO author Sue Coe featured in the New York Times

Monday, June 1st, 2020

Art that raises awareness of the state of our planet can be especially important in today’s world. One example of this is the work of the contemporary artist and illustrator Sue Coe, whose pieces on animal mistreatment have been ignored or, at best, marginalized by an art community that seems to privilege meaninglessness over consequential work.

Read the full article here.

“It’s time to end the phony war and take back the streets.” — THE MONSTER ENTERS author Mike Davis writes for the Nation

Monday, June 1st, 2020

A Call to Revolt

Read the full article here.

“Albany County District Attorney David Soares, once a promising criminal justice reformer, faces primary challenge from the left” — BERNIE’S BROOKLYN author Theodore Hamm writes for the Intercept

Monday, June 1st, 2020

UNTIL 2018, New York was behind the curve in terms of criminal justice reform. But spurred by grassroots activists, that year the state legislature surged to the forefront, creating a prosecutorial misconduct commission and initiating debate over the landmark bail reforms passed in early 2019.

The commission was later deemed unconstitutional (because of how its members would be chosen), and the bail reforms were scaled back earlier this year. One of the most vocal opponents of the new measures was Albany County District Attorney David Soares, who served as head of District Attorneys Association of New York, or DAASNY, from 2018 to 2019.

Now, Soares has a target on his back. First elected in 2004 as a promising criminal justice reformer who campaigned on opposition to the Rockefeller Drug Laws, Soares is now being challenged from the left by Albany defense attorney Matt Toporowski, a former prosecutor in Soares’s office.

Read the full article here.

“In American protests, victims of Trump’s policies help the criminal erase the crime” — PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek writes for RT

Monday, June 1st, 2020
Be they against the Covid-19 lockdown or police brutality, the protests gripping the US stem from a ‘money or life’ choice, where people are forced to choose money. The poor are victims, helping to cover up the crime against them.

Read the full article here.

NEW VIDEO: I ACCUSE! author Norman Finkelstein on the ten-year anniversary of the Gaza flotilla raid

Monday, June 1st, 2020

“Intense and eloquent” — I ACCUSE! reviewed in Mondoweiss

Thursday, May 28th, 2020

Norman Finkelstein’s new book indicts the International Criminal Court for whitewashing Israel

This May 31 marks 10 years since Israeli commandos attacked the Gaza Humanitarian Flotilla in international waters and killed 10 people. Norman Finkelstein, one of the world’s most effective critics of Israel, is observing the occasion with a persuasive indictment of Fatou Bensouda, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC)  in The Hague, for refusing to take legal action over Israel’s lethal attack on the Mavi Marmara, the Flotilla’s flagship.

At first glance, Finkelstein’s new book resembles a legal brief. But start reading more closely, and you soon see his trademark indignation, intense and eloquent.

Read the full review here.

“Prescient” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed in Counterfire

Thursday, May 28th, 2020
Mike Davis must be feeling like a modern-day Cassandra…

Read the full review here.

“A sober, unidealized assessment of the paths forward.” — PANDEMIC! reviewed in the Arts Fuse

Thursday, May 28th, 2020

Choosing Reality and Survival Over Panic and Barbarism

The cover of Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek’s slim new volume Pandemic! Covid-19 Shakes the World spells it out: “PANIC!” stands prominently and, stuck in the middle, is “DEM” — the demos, or the people. After all, unknown viruses aside, what is a pandemic beyond the panic of the people? In this small, 146-page book recently published by OR Books (all royalties will go to Médecins Sans Frontières), the self-proclaimed Marxist, Hegelian, and Lacanian provocateur argues that we should ignore three fallacious logics fostered by the panic/pandemic: the desire to succumb to the mysterious threat, the imbuing of the event with superstitious significance, and the machinations of panic itself. Rejecting these three temptations, Žižek posits a sober, unidealized assessment of the paths forward.

Read the full review here.

“The Best New Books to Read This Summer” — TALES OF TWO PLANETS featured in Lit Hub

Wednesday, May 27th, 2020
The third in Freeman’s hat trick of anthologies that examines inequalities, Tales of Two Planets, may be the most important, for it addresses a colossal and irreversible threat: climate change. How to tell this story about a landscape so altered by us it’s reciprocating the abuse, where the more vulnerable and poor are more susceptible to environmental injustices?

Freeman asked 36 writers from Iceland to India, who are living within the penumbra of this bifurcated world of disparity and disenfranchisement, to bear witness to climate change beyond mere data. They are the facts on the ground, and their stories about craven US governance, the depletion of species in Burundi, Iceland’s geologic tragedy, the displacement of 20 million people in Pakistan, and resource pilfering and greed in Lebanon trace the inequalities that have also led to environmental imbalances. The purpose of such essays, fictions, reportage, and poems are to remind us—as Lina Mounzer discovers when developers overburden the sewer system in Beirut and it erupts in biblical proportions—we can’t carry on as if things will sort themselves out. We have to live within limits.

It’s a dark path we walk when the majority of the planet belongs to Hobbes’s First Man, condemned to a poor, cruel and short life, while Frances Fukumaya’s Last Man, (privileged, well fed, with access to technology and globalization’s muse) inhabits the rest. The Last Man will survive environmental stress and scarcity. The First Man will not. Freeman’s collection is critical to understanding our planet beyond the scope of our own personal plights.

See the full list here.

“For someone with no fixed address, much less country of residence, ‘staying at home’ was a novel and initially terrifying concept.” — EXILE author Belén Fernández writes for the New York Times

Monday, May 25th, 2020
Read the full piece here.

“Best Books of Summer 2020” — TALES OF TWO PLANETS featured in Time

Monday, May 25th, 2020
Climate change is such an enormous and unwieldy thing that it often feels hard to see, like trying to comprehend the Titanic while standing six inches away from its hull. In Tales of Two Planets, writer and editor John Freeman tries to make the danger clear by offering readers a range of views — fiction, essays, even poetry, spanning locations from Florida to the Himalayas — while zeroing in on the way that global warming intersects with disparities. Writers in the collection, edited by Freeman, include Margaret Atwood and Edwidge Danticat.

See the full list here.

“A passionate homage to forgotten writers who speak to our own times.” — THE DEEP END reviewed in Kirkus Reviews

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full review here.

“Provocative and controversial, as always, and a worthy addition to the literature of plague and pestilence.” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed in Kirkus Reviews

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full review here.

“Will this crisis lead to something better or worse?” — CAUTIVOS author Ariel Dorfman interviewed in the Observer

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full interview here.

PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek interviewed by Patrick Bet-David

Monday, May 25th, 2020

“As Workers Face Dangerous Conditions Amid Reopening, We Need Unions & Medicare for All” — THE MONSTER ENTERS author Mike Davis interviewed on Democracy Now!

Monday, May 25th, 2020

“Far from being totally alien to the American way, the sort of socialism Bernie advocates was commonplace where he grew up” — BERNIE’S BROOKLYN excerpt published on ScheerPost

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full excerpt here.

“The Best Books of 2020 (So Far)” — TALES OF TWO PLANETS featured in Elle

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
In this eye-opening anthology about climate change, an impressive cast of contributors including Edwidge Danticat, Mohammed Hanif, and Margaret Atwood reflect on how the grim horror of our current ecological reality is being felt around the world.

See the full list here.

PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek interviewed on Going Underground

Thursday, May 21st, 2020

“Global Cockfights, Viruses, and the Monsters Within” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed in CounterPunch

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
Read the full review here.

“A global collection of discussions on film and video as an essential medium for conveying the world’s most urgent concerns” — LUCID DREAMING reviewed in Modern Times Review

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
Conversations behind the movie camera

Read the full review here.

PANDEMIC! featured in the New York Times

Thursday, May 21st, 2020

Read the full article here.

“Introduction into new communism?” — PANDEMIC! reviewed on N1

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
Read the full review here.

“In Run-Up to Election, Both Parties Blame China and Offer Little” — THE WRONG STORY author Greg Shupak interviewed on By Any Means Necessary

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
In this episode of By Any Means Necessary hosts Sean Blackmon and Jacquie Luqman are joined by Greg Shupak, media studies teacher at the University of Guelph-Humber in Toronto and author of the book, “The Wrong Story: Palestine, Israel and the Media,” to talk about his new article on FAIR, “Corporate Media Setting Stage for New Cold War With China,” the ongoing attempt by the Trump administration to shift the blame for the pandemic to China and the World Health Organization, and where Mitt Romney’s recent op-ed painting China as “uniquely predatory” fits into the centuries-long history of ‘yellow peril’ racism in the US.

Listen to the full interview here.

“Is this the end of productivity?” — AUTOPILOT featured in New York

Monday, May 18th, 2020
Amid the pandemic, workers whose jobs once defined their lives are questioning what it was all for.

Read the full article here.

“How a Pandemic Happens: We Knew This Was Coming” — THE MONSTER ENTERS excerpt published in Lit Hub

Monday, May 18th, 2020
Mike Davis on the Inevitability of Catastrophe

Read the full excerpt here.

“[A] tour de force… Read Mike Davis’ new updated book before the monster rebounds and we spiral down again” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed in CounterPunch

Monday, May 18th, 2020

Monster Capitalism

I read Mike Davis’ tour de force, The Monster Enters (O/R Books), when I was sick and in bed and thought that I might have COVID-19. Originally published in 2005, the book has just been reissued with a new, nifty wham bam introduction that lays the blame for the current pandemic where it rightfully belongs on the doorstep of the noxious nexus that has brought about monstrous slums, industrial farming, corrupt political regimes and the failure of public health services in the U.S. and many other countries in the world.

Read the full review here.

“Relentlessly practices an endangered, if not nearly extinct, species of journalism: dissident anti-imperialist muckraking” — EXILE reviewed on Middle East Eye

Monday, May 18th, 2020

Exile: A tale of Washington’s twisted role in the world

What Fernandez does in this book is so old-fashioned, and has so quietly evaporated from the how-to guide of being a leftist journalist, that it is worth noting. In case after sordid and bloody case, roving from Tegucigalpa to Diyarbakir, Turkey, to Beirut, she insists that the target of critique cannot simply be bad people doing bad things.

People writing on places where the US is responsible for doing bad things ought to convey the US role. It is usually enormous: shipping Blackhawks and Apaches to the Turkish counterinsurgency forces, embargoing infrastructural repair and water purification equipment from a war-devastated Iraq. In reminding us of that role, Fernandez does us all – except for those profiting from such mayhem – a great service, and it there that the book’s central contribution lies.

Read the full review here.

“The Schmidt-Cuomo digital future is a highway to the Matrix” — PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek writes for RT

Monday, May 18th, 2020
The basic functions of New York state could soon be “reimagined” under the alliance of Governor Andrew Cuomo and Big Tech personified. Is this the testing ground for a dystopian “no-touch” future?

Read the full piece here.

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