But Achmadinejad repeatedly promise to wipe out Israel from the world map.
Does anyone else proclaim similar treat to any other country? So his nuclear
program is dofferent.
Bella Kotik-Friedgut , Jerusalem, Israel
On 9/26/07, Paul Dillon <phd_crit_think@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Funny how memory chains work no?
>
> BTW I agree with you about Ahmadinejad (spelling is irrelevant since Farsi
> uses other sript). I actually believe that Iran has the right to develop
> it's nuclear program anyway it wants . . . as far as I can remember or know,
> Iran never has attacked any other country. I hope someone corrects me if
> I'm wrong. I oppose all nuclear weapons and am skeptical about even
> peaceful uses. But no country has the right to tell another not to do what
> it itself does. add hypocrite to murder, state terrorism, etc. Can one who
> only knows lies even be called a liar, just a danger to humanity. skillet
> black and greasy spoon.
>
> Although I usually change the channel upon the threat or happenstance that
> Alfred E. Bush appear, I actually watched his speech to the UN. What a
> crock. Most interesting was the reaction in the audience. Only about 1 in
> 10 even had their headsets on for simultaneous translation, quite a few had
> mocking smiles on their faces. Sartre should have been able to see the
> specatacle, to study Bush as a case study in the levels to which bad faith
> can descend.
>
> But to illustrate the degree to which South America has spun out of the
> control of the Monroe Doctrine, you should check out Kirchner's lashing of
> the US in his address to the General Assembly, or even Lula's more
> restrained speech. The latter, although having distanced himself from
> Chavez previously, recently signed a pact with Venezuela . . . Would you
> consider persuasion to be among the tools of a dicatorial power? You know
> Chavez often spontaneously breaks out in folk songs while giving a speech .
> . . On the wings of a snow white dove.
>
> Paul
>
>
> Tony Whitson <twhitson@UDel.Edu> wrote:
> Paul,
>
> You might still get lashed, but not by me.
>
> Actually, when I wrote "a case can be made," I thought about something
> more qualified like "I know that there are people who would attempt to
> make a case that ...", but I decided against circumlocution. My point was
> not to say something about Chavez, but to say something about the nature
> of the argument: that it is an argument about power, which is lost when
> Bush uses "dictator" for someone without that kind of power.
> As for your eloquent comments on freedom and democracy, it might be
> worth getting the text of Bush's speech at the UN today. That's what he
> pretended to be talking about. I'm sure that text could be put to good
> use, pedagogically.
> As for fat jowled drooling capitalist pigs, it reminded me of a piece by
> Jonathan Kozol in (I think) the Boston Phoenix, probably early 70's,
> describing an encounter with Daniel Patrick Moynihan (with pork fat
> literally running down his chin), in which Kozol could not persuade
> Moynihan to support programs to aid educationally disadvantaged kids (like
> the ones in Kozol's Death at an early age), but Moynihan did express
> interest in funding a university research project to investigate why such
> programs are unable to attract funding.
>
> On Tue, 25 Sep 2007, Paul Dillon wrote:
>
> > OK Tony,
> >
> > I won't belabor the point. Just finished watching a live broadcast of
> Chavez with the American parents of hostages held by the FARC in Colombia.
> Chavez and a Colombian senator are on the verge of brokering a truce between
> the FARC and the Colombian government, such as was realized in Venezuela
> more than 20 years ago.
> >
> > I believe Chavez is one of the most important political figures to
> emerge in Latin American politics since Fidel Castro -- who has managed to
> keep the torch of socialism alive despite unthinkable pressures, precisely
> because his government represents real, not abstract, democracy. All of the
> babble about "liberties" means little to people who don't have any work, no
> guaranteed eduaction for their kids, no health care, etc., and as a
> consequence can't really contribute to the construction of what Engestrom
> called "humanized" society. . And that assuming that there's no need to
> defend the country against fat, snarling, jowled, and drooling capitalist
> pigs (Cheney comes to mind) who would burn down the Amazon rain forest to
> see their assets fatten and who in this particular case are drooling at
> Venezuela's oil assets. Chavez isn't taking away anyone's liberty unless
> they construe liberty to mean that they can interfere with the project of
> establishing a just society to
> > satisfy their personal interests or allow the foreign intervention in
> their country.
> >
> > But thanks for the nice reply, I expected to get lashed.
> >
> > Paul
> > Tony Whitson wrote:
> > Paul,
> >
> > What I said is "a case can be made ...". It's not a case that I am
> making.
> > In fact, on XMCA I have been challenged in the past for not being
> critical
> > of Chavez.
> >
> > My point was that the President of Iran does not have the power to
> decide
> > state policies and positions that it appears that Chavez does in his
> > country -- whether or not he was elected to that position. I was making
> a
> > comparison. I don't think there is a comparable basis for making such a
> > case re: Ahmadinejad. You talk about your freedom while in Venezuela,
> but
> > it seems to me that conflates the question of dictatorial power with the
> > question of suppression of liberties. Those phenomena are often not
> > unrelated, but they are conceptually distinct. My point was that the
> > rhetoric that obscures our awareness of how little power Ahmadinejad
> > actually has in his country, can actually serve his interest in
> expanding
> > that power. When I referred uncritically to Chavez in the past on XMCA,
> I
> > was called to task for that by someone who's much more knowledgeable
> than
> > I am on that situation. I defer to those who know more than I on a given
> > subject. I'm not making any case or statement on Chavez, beyond noting
> > that the case for "dictator" would be a matter of the power that the
> > leader in question is able to wield, and that by all accounts
> Ahmadinejad
> > does not have power in Iran comparable to that of Chavez in Venezuela.
> >
> > On Tue, 25 Sep 2007, Paul Dillon wrote:
> > "
> >> Tony,
> >>
> >> Your statement about the democratically elected president of Venezuela
> really shocked mebecause I really didn't expect you, or anyone else on xmca
> for that mattter, to parrot propaganda.
> >>
> >> I have been in Venezuela and have no idea how any case at all could be
> made for calling Chavez a dictator in the sense of the word you have
> provided. If you choose the blatantly misrepresented example of refusing to
> renew a TV station's license you should remember that the station in
> question actively sponsored, live and on-the-air, a military coup against a
> government that had been democratically elected in elections closely watched
> by international observers, including Jimmy Carter. In the US (whose current
> president was not democratically elected and also might be called a
> demagogue, petty tyrant, liar and murderer ) such an action would result in
> the same consequences for the station -- immediately, not as in the
> Venezuelan case, when the license had expired -- and perhaps even the death
> penalty for those involved since such acts constitute treason in the highest
> of degrees. The consequences of the attempts against the state-owned oil
> facilities in Maracaibo fall
> >> into the same category.
> >>
> >> The US-backed coup against Chavez failed and he was returned to power
> when a million Venezuelans flooded the streets of Caracas and shut the city
> down. There is a good documentary about this made by Irish film-makers who
> happened to be there on another project when the coup took place.
> >>
> >> Opposition newspapers are still published in Venezuela and Globovision,
> a major TV network based in Venezuela, is privately owned and independent.
> The program content of the state-owned TV station, Telesur, is a lot like
> PBS. Runs lots of UNICEF spots concerning AIDS prevention, domestic
> violence, etc.. It's positive content focuses on the cultures and peoples of
> South and Central America and the Carribean; about the people, customs, and
> identity that have absolutely no commercial or political content other than
> the revalorization of these frameworks for identity in opposition to the
> crap, sex-and-violence, globalized, commercial cultures that fill American
> TV programming.
> >>
> >> When one thinks about varieties of totalitarian controls in the XXI
> century, Gramsci's concept of "hegemony" might prove useful for explaining
> the US public's support for an internationally condemned and absolutely
> illegal war; the revocation of civil rights in the Patriot Act; torture and
> invasion of privacy; etc. reveal that there is a "velvet dictatorship" in
> advanced capitalist societies which Gramsci's concept fits quite well. There
> is nothing even close to that in Venezuela, let alone the variety you define
> in "dictatorship."
> >>
> >> I was in Venezuela and wandered freely through Caracas, Barinas, and
> other cities over a period of three weeks. I talked (speak fluent spanish
> with native competence although an obvious accent) with hundreds of
> Venezuelans completely outside the framework of any government surveillance.
> In fact as far as I could discover, there was absolutely no surveillance and
> none of the people I spoke with seemed intimidated about expressing their
> opinions to my questions.
> >>
> >> Of course some of the people with whom I spoke, especially those from
> the privileged classes who have been benefitting from Venezuela's oil income
> for decades through a variety of macro-economic transfer mechanisms, might
> not like Chavez' policy to steer Venezuela toward a socialist economy within
> a unified South and Central American framework. Neverthess the vast majority
> of Venezuelan's support him and his policies. So do most leaders of South
> American countries. He is widely respected and only one country, sadly the
> one where I live, has any serious issues with Chavez, but then Peru is also
> the only country in South America that is establishing free-trade agreements
> with the US. He has established bi-lateral and multi-lateral economic and
> political relationships with virtyally evey other country on the continent
> and is at the point of bringing about the first dialogues between the
> Colombian goveernment and the FARC which has been waging war with it for
> many
> >> years.
> >>
> >> So I would really like to know what dictatorial powers you are
> referring to in your statement. I would really like to read your supposed
> case for labelling President Chavez a dictator. And I would really hope that
> in the future you avoid making outrageous and incorrect statements when you
> obviously don't know much about the topic It makes you look bad.
> >>
> >> Paul H. Dillon
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> Tony Whitson wrote:
> >> First, a quick correction: MARTY (not Mary) Moss-Coane (I think she's
> also
> >> the producer for Terry Gross' Fresh Air, which more listeners might be
> >> familiar with).
> >> I was hoping that "Radio Times" transcripts are on Lexis/Nexis, but
> >> apparently they'r not. (Other NPR programs like Morning Edition & All
> >> Things Considered are transcribed there. Looks like Philadelphia WHYY
> >> produced-shows are not).
> >>
> >> To my topic for this post:
> >> This affair illustrates concretely the consequences of eroding
> language.
> >> Bollinger, following Bush and others, have taken to calling Ahmadinejad
> a
> >> "dictator." While a case can be made for calling, say, Hugo Chavez a
> >> dictator, Ahmadinejad is anything but that -- although we could be
> helping
> >> him along.
> >>
> >> Unless the word has lost its meaning, a dictator is somebody with
> >> dictatorial power, as when Julius Caesar became "dictator for life."
> North
> >> Korea's Kim would qualify for that, but Ahmadinejad actually has very
> >> little power to decide or "dictate" the policy positions of Iran. By
> all
> >> accounts, there has been substantial and growing criticism and
> opposition
> >> to his political leadership within Iran. Most people I've heard since
> the
> >> Columbia event yesterday predict that it will only strengthen him, and
> his
> >> political position, within his own country. A bit more informed
> clarity,
> >> and verbal & conceptual precision, might help avoid playing into this
> sort
> >> of development, IMHO.
> >>
> >> You can call him all kinds of things (demagogue, hate-monger, villan
> ...),
> >> including maybe "would-be" or "wannabe" dictator; but an actual
> dictator
> >> he is not, at least not for now.
> >>
> >> On Tue, 25 Sep 2007, Ana Marjanovic-Shane wrote:
> >>
> >>> There was a very interesting talk on the Public Radio "Radio Times" by
> Mary
> >>> Moss-Coane with TRITA PARSI is President of the National
> Iranian-American
> >>> Coalition and with HAMID DABASHI, a professor of Iranian Studies and
> >>> Comparative Literature at Columbia University. If you care to listen
> to it,
> >>> you can download the pod-cast here (probably tomorrow or later today
> when
> >>> they give a link to it: http://www.whyy.org/cgi-bin/newwebRTlookup.cgi
> >>> It will most probably become a pod-cast in a few hours.
> >>>
> >>> Both speakers agreed that the Columbia's President Bolinger did not
> handle
> >>> this occasion well, because by blatantly attacking Ahmadinejad in his
> own
> >>> school he made him (Ahmadinejad) look like a victim. There were many
> >>> interesting points both had to say, and they did not always agree with
> each
> >> -> other.
> >>> Ana
> >>>
> >>> ERIC.RAMBERG@spps.org wrote:
> >>>> David:
> >>>>
> >>>> Providing a stage for a polarizing figure such as Ahmadinejad is
> exactly
> >>>> how colleges have faired over the years. How does this preclude not
> >>>> asking
> >>>> difficult questions?
> >>>>
> >>>> eric
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> David
> >>>> Preiss
> >>>>>> cl>
> >>>> cc:
> >>>> Sent by: Subject: [xmca] Columbia events
> >>>> xmca-bounces@web
> >>>> er.ucsd.edu
> >>>> 09/24/2007 09:36
> >>>> PM
> >>>> Please respond
> >>>> to "eXtended
> >>>> Mind, Culture,
> >>>> Activity"
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> Dear XMCArs,
> >>>>
> >>>> I followed from Chile the strange sequence of events at Columbia at
> >>>> the international press. I was wondering if somebody wants to comment
> >>>> the issues raised by the occasion. At least, for me, it is hard to
> >>>> understand the final move made by L. Bollinger: to invite the iranian
> >>>> president, and then to attack him verbally. What was that? If he
> >>>> really thinks what he says, he should have not invited him, first
> >>>> place. But if he made that, to excoriate the guy his institution was
> >>>> inviting as a result of context pressure, then he is acting
> >>>> hypocritically and using the hate the iranian president raises to
> >>>> gain publicity. Too contradictory for me and anything but the way
> >>>> academic life and free speech should be handled, in my opinion.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> David Preiss, Ph.D.
> >>>> Subdirector de Extensión y Comunicaciones
> >>>> Escuela de Psicología
> >>>> Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile
> >>>> Av Vicuña Mackenna 4860
> >>>> Macul, Santiago
> >>>> Chile
> >>>>
> >>>> Fono: 3544605
> >>>> Fax: 3544844
> >>>> e-mail: davidpreiss@uc.cl
> >>>> web personal: http://web.mac.com/ddpreiss/
> >>>> web institucional: http://www.epuc.cl
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> _______________________________________________
> >>>> xmca mailing list
> >>>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> >>>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> _______________________________________________
> >>>> xmca mailing list
> >>>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> >>>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> __________ NOD32 2549 (20070925) Information __________
> >>>>
> >>>> This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system.
> >>>> http://www.eset.com
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> --
> >>> //
> >>>
> >>>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> /Ana Marjanovic-Shane, Ph.D./
> >>> /151 W. Tulpehocken St./
> >>>
> >>> /Philadelphia//, PA 19144///
> >>>
> >>> /(h) 215-843-2909/
> >>>
> >>> /ana@zmajcenter.org /
> >>>
> >>> /http://www.speakeasy.org/~anamshane /
> >>>
> >>> _______________________________________________
> >>> xmca mailing list
> >>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> >>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
> >>>
> >>
> >> Tony Whitson
> >> UD School of Education
> >> NEWARK DE 19716
> >>
> >> twhitson@udel.edu
> >> _______________________________
> >>
> >> "those who fail to reread
> >> are obliged to read the same story everywhere"
> >> -- Roland Barthes, S/Z
> (1970)_______________________________________________
> >> xmca mailing list
> >> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> >> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
> >>
> >>
> >>
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> >>
> >
> > Tony Whitson
> > UD School of Education
> > NEWARK DE 19716
> >
> > twhitson@udel.edu
> > _______________________________
> >
> > "those who fail to reread
> > are obliged to read the same story everywhere"
> > -- Roland Barthes, S/Z
> (1970)_______________________________________________
> > xmca mailing list
> > xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> > http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
> >
> >
> >
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>
> Tony Whitson
> UD School of Education
> NEWARK DE 19716
>
> twhitson@udel.edu
> _______________________________
>
> "those who fail to reread
> are obliged to read the same story everywhere"
> -- Roland Barthes, S/Z
> (1970)_______________________________________________
> xmca mailing list
> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>
>
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-- Sincerely yours Bella Kotik-Friedgut _______________________________________________ xmca mailing list xmca@weber.ucsd.edu http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmcaReceived on Thu Sep 27 06:19 PDT 2007
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