Comment: On the contrary adoption is a pro-life issue – The Catholic Register

In the May 21 issue of The Catholic Register Peter Stockland wrote a sincere Comment piece about the need for renewal within organizations. I agree with him on this point.

I dont mean change for the sake of change, but the meaningful integration of new people with new ways of perceiving challenges. This is not necessarily an age thing. Its about ideas and implementation. Youth does not have a monopoly on good innovation any more than age has a monopoly on good implementation.

He is quite accurate in his analysis of the culture in which the pro-life movement has been working. Losses have accrued in a zeitgeist of relentless and ferocious hostility to life, and against an ideology of personal autonomy that borders on the mad, he wrote.

What prompts this response however, is the absurdity of this statement: I recently spoke with someone deeply involved in promoting and facilitating adoption. She described a truly Byzantine regulatory regime that is the reason adoption is such a distant second choice to abortion. When I asked why more political pressure isnt applied to unravel the crazy rules, she said bluntly its because the pro-life movement monopolizes the policy space with its all-or-nothing-at-all demands on abortion.

As a member of Campaign Life Coalition, there is simply not a pro-life lobbyist I know who would agree with this statement. It is patently untrue.

The all-or-nothing assertion is a bell-whistle term which usually refers to Campaign Life Coalitions non-gestational approach to legislation. It does not reflect the many bills and motions weve supported that have never ascribed an age-limit to this protection. But unknown to many people, in 2014 my colleague and I lobbied federal MPs on the provincial issue of adoption.

In the Harper government, there were many wonderful pro-life MPs who had been touched by adoption. We were allies on this file. A pledge in the 2012 Throne Speech to make adoption more affordable was enacted in the 2013 Economic Action Plans Bill C-60. The government allowed the $11,669 adoption expense tax credit to start basically when adoption paperwork was filed. This was great news and it also signalled to me that the government might be open to doing even more for adoptive parents.

After speaking with counsellors from a local crisis pregnancy centre, we presented several concrete proposals to the federal government.

Over the course of several months, we met with ministers of state, ministry staffers and a minister. It was during the course of our lobbying, between the 2013 and 2014 Canada Action Plans, that the government increased the adoption expense tax credit to $15,000. We put a spotlight on this issue and it led to a favourable announcement. No credit was given and no credit was taken.

Yet, despite a majority Conservative government that held a preponderance of pro-life and pro-adoption MPs, plus ministers of state and ministers who were very supportive of adoption, all we saw was this tax credit increase. Was this really a Campaign Life failure, a pro-life failure or a failure of a majority government that was indifferent to the pro-life movement?

That same year, Health Canada was again reviewing the abortion pill RU-486. I worked closely with some of our trusted MPs. Again, Campaign Life drew public attention to the dangers of the deadly drug combo. At the National March For Life, we used the theme RU 4LIFE to drive the message home. According to the press, approval of RU-486, marketed as Mifegymiso, was subjected to the longest approval process in Canadian history. We absolutely take credit for that.

That was followed by the 2014 federal election, when we worked on the nomination of 40 pro-life Campaign Life candidates. And we still found time to sell fruitcakes.

Too many pro-lifers simply do not know we can chew gum and walk at the same time. This cultural marathon is really a series of organizational sprints, 365 days a year.

Should organizations involved in the pro-life movement reflect on their approaches and strategies? Yes, they should. But perhaps a glimpse into the workings of the largest pro-life group in Canada can help to rebuild confidence in us and in the movements work.

We are one organization, working alongside others, in this zeitgeist of relentless and ferocious hostility to life.

(Brownrigg manages federal government relations for Campaign Life Coalition, Ottawa.)

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Comment: On the contrary adoption is a pro-life issue - The Catholic Register

Are We Witnessing the Battle Involving an Antimary and an Antichrist? – National Catholic Register (blog)

Blogs | Jun. 1, 2017

Mary has vanquished Christian enemies for centuries. It is time we call upon her again to conquer all that is opposed to her and to her Son.

Several months ago, I raised the question as to whether our age is marked by anantimary movementseen in progressive feminism. If there is such a thing as an antimary, what would it look like, I asked:

Well, these women would not value children. They would be bawdy, vulgar, and angry. They would rage against the idea of anything resembling humble obedience or self-sacrifice for others. They would be petulant, shallow, catty, and overly sensuous. They would also be self-absorbed, manipulative, gossipy, anxious, and ambitious. In short, it would be everything that Mary is not.

In case we needed further evidence of how entrenched the antimary is, the recent news cycle features Planned Parenthood abortionists laughing about dismembering babies while Glamour Magazinegives instructionsfor DIY abortionpillsthat pair nicely with Chardonnay. (Okay, they didnt add the wine, but it isnt a stretch). Truly our zeitgeist is captivated (or captured) with distinctive antimary markings. This unprecedented movement of destruction, where a culture is led by female vice, not male brute force, has bled into every area of our culture with no man, women, child(or fetus) left untouched.

One of the more curious and revealing taboos seen in radical feminists, however, is their silence on women in Islam female genital mutilation, headscarves and burkas, polygamy, child marriage, 24-hour marriages to justify rape, and limited career opportunitiesall get a pass by this easily outraged group. Why? The answer seems to lie in the fact that radical Islam is guided by a similar spirit the spirit of an antichrist. Beheadings, rape, torture performed like sport while targeting Christians, Jews, and the innocent, are their calling card. The antimary and this new antichristian movement are opposite sides of the same demonic coin. The two came together with Kathy Griffin's beheading stunt this week.

They share a common mission: to eliminate all that is good, true, beautiful, and holy.

There is a catch, however. While these two are working in tandem now, like all unions with the devil, there will be a bloody divorce. The first stirrings of it are now surfacing in Europe, as we saw with the Manchester massacre.

While the New York Times still cant figure out what could have possibly motivated the suicide bomber, killing 22, Mark Steyn, spells out the issue in a fittingly titled article, Dangerous Woman Meets Dangerous Man. He writes:

Conversely, most other western citizens believe that, to invert Trotsky, if you're not interested in Islam, Islam won't be interested in you. Ariana Grande was eight at the time of 9/11, and most of her fans even younger. They have passed their entire sentient lives in the age of Islamic terror, yet somehow assume it's something compartmentalized and sealed off from them. "Dangerous Woman" is meant to be an attitude, nothing more - an edgy pose in a pop culture that lost any edge long ago; a great T-shirt, like the ones last night scavenged from the merchandising stands and used to bandage the wounded. It must come as a shock to realize there are those who take your ersatz provocations as the real thing, and are genuinely provoked by them.

As Steyn makes clear, women have been playing tough, but there is a chasm between their words and their actions. All the antimary tactics that have worked in the west to keep men in check tantrums, destroying reputations with inflated rhetoric, illogic are not going to be effective against this sort of antichrist.

Among the contributing factors to this antimarian rise are a libertine spirit, declining respect for the rule of law,and our never-seen-before financial wealth. No longer does poverty demand that we live together to scratch out a living with a division of labor suited to male and female gifts. Women simply havent needed men for their safety or material needs. But this too is changing, as women no longer feel free in Europe to go where they want, when they want, how they want. Trains arestarting to offerfemale only cars, pools have women only hours, and blonds are dying their hair black to avoid harassment. Something as commonplace as going to the theatre at night has women (and men) thinking twice about their safety.

Until we start to view the problem of Islamic Terrorism as a spiritual one and one that requires thatwechange there will be more of the same. We will continue to endure wholesale destruction of all that is good, true, and holy either until these two battle it out, with one clear winner. (Good money is on the side that has no fear of spilling blood, and not the side that remains willfully blind.)

There is a third alternative, however, that offers hope and a future. Christians must return to their faith and to the spiritual elements that we know destroy Christs enemy. As I wrote inThe Marian Option: Gods Solution to a Civilization in Crisis,after 2000 years, we know what these are: Mass, Eucharistic adoration, the Rosary, confession, Marian consecration. We know these things work. And there is more than enough evidence that Mary has been behind the vanquishing of Christian enemies for centuries. It is time we call upon her again to conquer all that is opposed to her and to her Son.

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Are We Witnessing the Battle Involving an Antimary and an Antichrist? - National Catholic Register (blog)

6 things to do in Boulder County today, June 5, 2017 – Boulder Daily Camera

(Courtesy Photo)

More than just the 1994 Sundance surprise that launched Kevin Smith's career, it signifies a movement of low-budget (Clerks cost less than $30k, grossed $3 million) self-produced movies, often with non-professional cast and guerrilla marketing. It also captured a post-ironic zeitgeist, with its low-key dialogue, droll humor, and minimal plot. Sometimes seen as social commentary on the plight of the working class and youth without future, it has a loose structure of Dante's nine rings of hell, set in the actual convenience store and video rental where Smith worked, 7 p.m., Dairy Arts Center, 2590 Walnut St., Boulder; $6-$11; 303-444-7328.

Photo Exhibit at St. Aidan's Gallery Boulder area photographer Sandy Backlund is exhibiting her work at the Muriel Sibell Wolle Art Gallery at St. Aidan's Episcopal Church through July. She has lived in Boulder County over 40 years and specializes in photographing gardens, farmers' markets, travels and the outdoors, 8:30 a.m., St. Aidan's Episcopal Church, Boulder, 2425 Colorado Ave., Boulder; Free; 303-443-2503 or saintaidans.org.

Dinosaur Discoveries: Ancient Fossils, New Ideas The Longmont Museum's hands-on summer exhibition series for families is back with an engaging show that reveals what living, breathing dinosaurs were really like. This exhibition highlights current research by scientists from the American Museum of Natural History and other leading paleontologists around the world, 9 a.m., Longmont Museum & Cultural Center, 400 Quail Road, Longmont; $8; 303-651-8374 or longmontmuseum.org.

"Heading Home: Field Notes" by Peter Anderson Heading Home begins with Peter Anderson's dharma-bum passion for the road, which leads him through the mountains and high deserts of the American West, and eventually lands him in an eccentric end-of-the-road town full of mystics, misfits, and other mountain dwellers. This book is a gathering of "field notes" observations, recollections, and stories along the way, where home is understood as a work in progress and the way is a road that never ends, 7:30 p.m., Boulder Book Store, 1107 Pearl St., Boulder; $5; 303-447-2074 or boulderbookstore.net.

Newspapers in Lyons since 1890, Exhibit 125 years of newspapers; five different First Editions, beginning in 1890. Issues will be changed weekly, so visitors can read the news and see what was advertised and reported decades ago. Visitors can also "put themselves in the news" and take home a digital souvenir of their visit through the interactive newspaper photo booth, 9:30 a.m., Lyons Redstone Museum, 340 High St., Lyons; Free; 303-823-5271 or rockymtretreats.com/lyons-event.htm.

Confident Cooking for Teens In this fun, five-day camp, young chefs will practice essential kitchen skills and master the fundamentals of cooking. Teens will enjoy working alongside classmates learning techniques for everything from grilling and searing to making pizza and pasta from scratch. We'll get hands-on and cover all the basics such as rules for handling knives, how to read and follow recipes, measuring and mixing, and the importance of kitchen safety. Teens will build on skills throughout the week and on day 5, they'll create an impressive menu of restaurant-style dishes. Teens ages 13-17 are welcome to join this popular summer cooking camp. Classes run about two hours each and last for five consecutive days, 12 p.m., Sur la Table, 1850 29th St., Suite 1004, Boulder; $250; 800-243-0852, 303-952-7084 or surlatable.com/browse/storeLocator/storeDirections.jsp?storeId=106.

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6 things to do in Boulder County today, June 5, 2017 - Boulder Daily Camera

San Francisco, 50 years on from the Summer of Love | Travel | The … – The Guardian

Californias signature scent of marijuana permeates the warm air in San Franciscos Buena Vista Park. Dogs pant and people strip off. The arrival of an early summer has caught the Haight-Ashbury neighbourhood off guard. It is a distinctive, blissed-out atmosphere but still an age away from the drug-fuelled, music-drenched summer of 1967, when 100,000 people converged on the Haight.

Back then, people came to embrace a higher consciousness and obey the Turn on, tune in, drop out message that Timothy Leary had delivered earlier that year to 30,000 people in Golden Gate Park at the Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In.

The area quickly became a test-ground for 1960s counterculture, with the political activists from Berkeley joining the bohemians of Haight-Ashbury.

Comparisons and reflections are expected this year, though, as San Francisco is busy looking backwards, marking the 50th anniversary of the Summer of Love, remembering and debating its legacy. The summer of 1967 was an optimistic, heady time, following on from the beat generations championing of sexual liberation and freedom, and the Trips festival in San Francisco the year before, when 10,000 people watched the Grateful Dead perform, many of them high on LSD having heeded the festival flyers words: The audience participates because its more fun to do so than not.

This was a short-lived, peak moment of trippy rock posters and social activism, cut short by an influx of violent heroin dealers into the Haight, subsequent overdoses and, eventually, tourist buses arriving to gawk at the hippies. Come autumn 1967, many of the flower children had decamped to rural communes and the original pioneers and visionaries were gone.

Today, Haight-Ashbury is still a living if touristy flashback to that seminal summer, a district of nonconformists, tie-dye stores and emporiums with names like Little Wing (after the Jimi Hendrix song) selling fringed waistcoats, anarchist handbooks and bongs. Distractions boutique declares it has been keeping Haight-Ashbury strange since 1976, while other stores mirror the style of the 60s. Theres Rasputin Records, with a psychedelic sign depicting the Russian mystic in the lotus position; the Blue Front Caf, advertising itself with a fantastic giant muscle-bound blue genie; and Hippie Thai, with its campervan logo and macrobiotic Thai street food. A huge mural above a fast-food cafe called Burger Urge illustrates the Summer of Love with Hendrix playing the guitar and Janis Joplin howling into a microphone. Buskers play harmonicas and Hare Krishna folk in orange robes tour the streets. You either love it or hate it.

From the open doors of Love on Haight, a shop on the corner of Masonic and Haight, Jerry Garcias weathered voice eases out the shop stereo only ever plays the music of former residents the Grateful Dead. Multi-coloured fractals and tie-dye designs cover not only the walls and ceiling but also the staff. Proprietor Sunshine Powers, self-proclaimed Queen of Haight Street, is a well-known local figure and her youthful mop of curly red hair makes her easy to spot amongst the psychedelic pile-up. Despite not being part of the original movement (Powers was born in 1980), she is a keen modern-day promoter of the 1960s message of peace, community and love.

What people forget is that all that hippy stuff sex and drugs and music was just frosting on the cake, says Powers, her signature green glitter facepaint sparkling. Social justice, community and healthcare, thats what really mattered. That was the main drive. This 50th anniversary also gives us the chance to show the original pioneers that were carrying on their causes. After all, they may not be around in 10 or 20 years time.

Its easy to dismiss the peace and love message as corny and pass, but Powers is convincing when she speaks of valuing people over things, and her beliefs are proven later when I learn of her considerable financial support of Taking it to the Streets, a charity helping vulnerable homeless youths, of whom there are many. (This is depressing given the torrent of wealth pouring into the city from nearby Silicon Valley. If the Summer of Love set out to end stark inequality in its own community, it appears to have failed, despite the efforts of people like Powers.)

Back outside, I step over paving slabs painted with large red love hearts, towards family-owned Guss Community Market. Its motto of local produce, local farmers, locally here for you lured me inside, as did the smell of sweet Californian berries mixing with the soft aroma of baked grains. Every conceivable wholefood is packed into every available space. The label on a bottle of organic kombucha, a fermented tea, claims, cringingly, that its number one ingredient is love and that it hails from a batch small enough to hug. Psychedelic posters advertising street-fairs from the past decorate the walls, acting as reminders that common ecological awareness and vegetarian lifestyles have been central to this part of California since the 60s. Organic food and Middle Eastern food, so popular worldwide today, was sold at the Monterey music festival of 1967, where Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead and the Mamas & the Papas all played.

Outside, posters advertise one of the biggest shows of the year: the De Young Museums Summer of Love exhibition (until August 20). I head there next.

De Young is a giant copper-clad museum in the open green spaces of three-mile-long Golden Gate Park, where goldfinches and turquoise jays flit between palm and eucalyptus trees. It is a cool, calming space.

In the garden, signs for the Summer of Love exhibition draw links and contrasts between 1967 and 2017. One reads hippie 1967, hipster 2017, seemingly ignoring the fact that hipsters emerged as a subculture in the 1940s. Another reads free clinic 1967, affordable care 2017, reminding us of the non-judgmental clinic set up in the Haight in 1967, complete with a bad trip room.

Inside, the roar of Jefferson Airplane introduces the exhibition. In one room, Ben Van Meters double- and triple-exposed images from the Trips festival are described as a documentary ... from the point of view of a goldfish in the Kool-Aid bowl. Fashion-focused rooms show the journey from uptight girdles and garter belts to loose, free-flowing maxi dresses and flared trousers. The first bell-bottom jeans, made in San Francisco at the Levis factory then on Valencia Street, are displayed. Flared, or boot-cut jeans, we are told, were originally made to fit over cowboy boots.

Today, the Levis store on Market Street, the main downtown shopping drag , has a rack of Summer of Love clothes inspired by the companys archive, including a two-tone suede jacket at $1,200. Its easy for corporations to jump on the Summer of Love theme, seemingly ignoring key messages about simple living, inclusion and community. In April, the San Franciso branch of department store Neiman Marcus held a pop-up called The Love Boutique, featuring vintage pieces from the 60s alongside new Balmain, Chloe and Alexander McQueen garments that cost thousands of dollars.

One of the best items in the exhibition, however, is one of the smallest. Made of goatskin and decorated with silk chain-stitch embroidery by Haight-Ashbury couturier Linda Gravenites, it is Janis Joplins exquisite handbag from 1967. Suspended in a glass case, it looks like new, its red beads still shining. Joplin told Vogue magazine in 1968 that Gravenites turns them out slowly and turns them out well and only turns them out for those she likes.

Later, I meet Greg Castillo, a counterculture expert and associate professor of architecture at Berkeley. He says some of the legacies of 1967 are more subtle and less dramatic than sex, drugs and rocknroll. The recycling logo, today one of the most recognisable in the world, is a direct product of that era. It was designed in 1970, its spinning, revolving graphic based on the mandala a symbol for the cosmos borrowed from eastern cultures. Its designer, Gary Anderson, has said that the spirit of the 1960s directly influenced his design.

Later, as a sunset turns the Californian sky bubblegum pink, I walk through Chinatown, making a literary pilgrimage to the landmark City Lights bookshop and publishing house. Open until midnight daily, Americas first all-paperback bookstore has been riding the counterculture wave since it was founded in 1953 by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, a veteran of the Bay area now 98 years old. It still publishes books on social and political issues, as well as the poetry it is best known for, much of which influenced the local 60s zeitgeist. Ferlinghetti famously published Allen Ginsbergs controversial 1955 poem Howl. A poster on the wall today announces that printers ink is the greatest explosive, while another reminds us that democracy is not a spectator sport. City Lights, with its wall of zines, still holds regular radical events and has held on to its anarchic charm.

Back at my hotel, the Zeppelin, in the theatre district, a couple of blocks from the alarmingly drug-addled streets of the Tenderloin and the department stores of Union Square, there is also an air of 67. The Doors Light my Fire released in May of that year is playing in the lobby and on the wall a giant mural of a doe-eyed girl with flowers in her hair overlooks the chill-out area. The staff are disarmingly friendly, too, and a general air of liberalism dominates.

The spirit of the Summer of Love does appear to linger in this city. Despite the vast and obvious inequalities which some say are steadily worsening San Francisco feels like a flexible and creative city, somewhere that is still capable of opening minds.

The trip was provided by American Sky (01342 886721. americansky.co.uk), which offers five nights at the Hotel Zeppelin from 999pp, including flights from Gatwick with American Airlines and room-only accommodation.

For Summer of Love events, see sftravel.com/summer-love-2017

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San Francisco, 50 years on from the Summer of Love | Travel | The ... - The Guardian

Z-DAY (Zeitgeist Day) 2017 – Scoop.co.nz (press release)

Z-DAY (Zeitgeist Day) 2017

NEW ZEALAND EVENT

________________________________________

Event - https://www.facebook.com/events/1654894774813489/

The Zeitgeist Movement Presents

Z-Day 2017

9TH ANNUAL EDUCATIONAL SYMPOSIUM TOWARDS GLOBAL UNITY AND ABUNDANCE

On Sunday the 9th of April The Zeitgeist Movement in association with RBENZ present Z-Day, the 9th annual educational symposium towards global unity and abundance.

Z-Day (short for Zeitgeist Day) occurs annually with hundreds of parallel events across 60 countries. Z-Day aims to bring a focus to our current social and economic problems by advocating a new economic paradigm called Resource Based Economics.

This year the New Zealand event will take place on:

Sunday April 9th, 2017, Grey Lynn Community Hall, 510 Richmond Road, Auckland.

Doors open 2pm to 6pm. Koha or free entry.

We stand at the edge of a new era, in the last year we have seen major shifts in the collective social atmosphere, from Brexit to Trump to increased terrorism. What is going on? How do we prepare for the future and what can be done now?

Join us as we discuss these structural issues, ways to self organize and prepare New Zealand for the new paradigms taking place.

Z-day 2017 will host exciting presentations by the thought-leaders and change-makers from around Australasia.

Our speakers will look at solutions towards a sustainable and equitable future, whilst questioning the roles of politics, social organization, science & technology.

This year's Educational Symposium will host the following speakers:

Michael Kubler - The Price of Zero Transition (TZM Australia)

South Australian TZM chapter founder, Michael, describes himself as 'an innovative geek' who wants to change the world of education, energy and economics. An avid ZM member and renewable energy activist, Michael will share some interesting thoughts on the transition to a Resource-Based Economy.

Geoff Simmons (The Opportunities Party)

Right hand man to Gareth Morgan, The Opportunities Party (TOP) has had somewhat of a controversial debut onto the political floor in New Zealand. Suggestions of stopping the tax loophole cowboys of the land have put them on the front line of the media. Now TOP are saying a Universal Basic Income is needed to help bridge our growing poverty gap.

Hear Geof Simmons speak about their solutions.

Marina Bloom (Moving Stuff / In-Joy)

Marina Bloom is a mother, singer-songwriter, activist, analyst and a lawyer. An advocate for equality she is passionate about the Venus Project and bringing balance into the world. She will speak on the topic of evolution of humanity and what could a life be in the future of the Resource Based Economy.

Richard Osmaston (Money Free Party)

Richard has gone down the political trail with an unprecedented about of success, based in the Nelson region, Osmaston not only advocates RBE hes pushing it into parliament through the Money Free Party.

Wiri Te Moni (TZM New Zealand)

Wiri Te Moni Co-founder of the TZM Movement NZ, Organiser of the Venus Project tour in NZ in 2009, independent alternative news documentor, researcher, vlogger, and activist for a better society and planet. He will be speaking about his experience on advocating a Resource Based Economy while also giving us a brief overview on what it actually is.

Sam Mentink (RBENZ)

Industrial designer, musician, activist and co-founder of RBENZ.

Sam Mentink will be hosting the event, speaking in between our other guests and sparking discussion during question time.

The Farmers Market will be running prior to Z-Day

Light refreshments will be available during the event

We look forward to meeting you on our journey towards global unity and abundance.

Tickets & Info

Entry Is Koha (Donation), https://www.eventbrite.co.nz/e/z-day-annual-educational-symposium-towards-global-unity-abundance-tickets-32788200390

https://www.eventfinda.co.nz/2017/z-day-2017/auckland/grey-lynn

Links

Zeitgeist movement world HQ - http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/

RBENZ - rbe.org.nz

WE MUST BECOME THE CHANGE WE WISH TO SEE IN THE WORLD ~ GANDHI

Resource Based Economics What is it?

It is a socio-economic system in which all goods and services are available without the use of money, credits, barter or any other system of debt or servitude.

RBE utilizes technology to its fullest to provide the most efficient, ecologically safe solution. From products to distribution of resource to transport and housing.

Further Info:

What is the Zeitgeist Movement: http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/faq#faq1

Scoop Media

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Z-DAY (Zeitgeist Day) 2017 - Scoop.co.nz (press release)

The Second-Generation Soul Of Zeshan Bagewadi : NPR – NPR

Zeshan Bagewadi's new album combines American funk and soul with Punjabi lyrics. Courtesy of the artist hide caption

Zeshan Bagewadi's new album combines American funk and soul with Punjabi lyrics.

Zeshan Bagewadi's new album, Vetted, sounds a lot like classic American funk and soul from the 1960s and '70s. The difference? He sometimes sings in Punjabi. Bagewadi was born in Chicago to parents who were Indian Muslim immigrants, and he learned about soul, funk and blues from his father's music collection.

"Through his work as a journalist, [my father] covered concerts," Bagewadi explains to NPR's Scott Simon. "He also did profiles on certain movements here in America literary movements, and did some work on the civil rights movement as well. And that very much informed his taste in music and aesthetics and style.

"My father was enamored of the music that he grew up around in 1960s, 1970s India, and the music of Pakistan. But in addition to that, through his work as a journalist he was given insight into soul music here in America, and he had a collection of records of Otis Redding, of James Brown, Marvin Gaye. ... And I guess the byproduct of that is me," he says.

For Bagewadi, soul isn't just a specific genre it's a feeling that pervades American and Indo-Pakistani music alike.

"There is soul music of India-Pakistan; it speaks of urban despair, of poverty, of unrequited love, of being down and out," he says. "And that was the plight of my parents, that was the plight of my grandparents. That's why they've decided to come here in search of something better. That zeitgeist is present in the music. And we know how to get down, we've got soul. We've got soul it's in our food, it's in our music and I feel very lucky to be a part of that."

Hear the rest of Bagewadi's conversation with NPR's Scott Simon at the audio link.

Web intern Jake Witz and web editor Rachel Horn contributed to this story.

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The Second-Generation Soul Of Zeshan Bagewadi : NPR - NPR

Pepsi Just Showed Us Why Authenticity Isn’t Just A Buzzword – Forbes


Forbes
Pepsi Just Showed Us Why Authenticity Isn't Just A Buzzword
Forbes
The ad drew criticism almost immediately for being disingenuous and trivializing the Black Lives Matter movement. ... When done well, celebrity endorsements can catapult a brand into the zeitgeist and create infinite consumer loyalty, notes Rieckhoff.

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Pepsi Just Showed Us Why Authenticity Isn't Just A Buzzword - Forbes

2017 MLB Preview: Baseball’s Youth Movement Takes Center Stage – RollingStone.com

Dansby Swanson opened his Major League Baseball debut with a bang last August. In a game against the Minnesota Twins, the Atlanta Braves shortstop swatted two singles, going 2-for-4 at the plate. He would later finish out 2016 on fire too, grinding out 39 hits in his rst 37 career games, while batting .302 for the season.

Selected in the 2015 draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks, a trade eventually sent the Georgia-born player back home.

"What I remember as a kid growing up, was the culture of winning", Swanson says by phone to Rolling Stone. "When you put on an Atlanta Braves cap or the uniform it meant that you were going to win the division every year."

Going into his what will be his first full season as a starter with the Braves, Swanson is no less adamant about playing his part to build the club back to its success in the 1990s when Greg Maddux andTom Glavine were at the top of the rotation.

"I have an extreme passion for this place, Atlanta and everything it stands for," Swanson says. He mentions that even though he was a year and a half old when the Braves won the 1995 World Series, "watching Braves baseball was a family ritual almost every single night."

With that big, big moment of Opening Day here, Swanson is one marquee name in an impressive bumper crop of exciting twenty-something players. He's also one of nine young players featured in a commercial for an initiative called #CapsOn, in which Major League Baseball and its 30 clubs are partnering with New Era, to get fans to wear their team's cap as proudly as Swanson wears his own Braves lid. Regarding 2017, Swanson says he hopes to make his contributions early to Atlanta's momentum.

"People don't realize how hard of a mental sport it is," Swanson says. "But when you've got a locker room full of guys who want to win, anything is possible. Being part of that motivates me."

After placing last in the NL East in 2016, the Braves are in the midst of a new beginning. They kick off their season in New York, returning April 14th to their home opener in new digs at Atlanta's new 41,500-seat SunTrust Park. Swanson is the youngest buck in a Braves' starting lineup made up mostly of journeyed thirty-something players that also just added old stallions Bartolo Coln and knuckleballer R. A. Dickey, who are both in their 40s, to their pitching rotation.

"The most telling stat in my mind is consistency night in, night out," Swanson adds. "We have a bunch of guys up and down the lineup who can do that on the mound, or out in the field. It's extremely cool to be able to witness guys who can take care of that business, to get ready for this season."

The Braves' situation probably doesn't constitute a hard rebuild as much as that of the Chicago White Sox, who cleaned house, trading star lefty pitcher Chris Sale and outfielder Adam Eaton for Yoan Moncada and six other young players this winter. To their advantage, Atlanta does currently have the best pool of new prospects in their farm system, according to Baseball America. Elsewhere across baseball, 2017 features a new order of talent that the Braves and others will have to wrestle with.

Since the retirement of legends like Yankee Derek Jeter and more recently Red Sox hit machine David Ortiz, baseball's new youth movement hasn't hesitated to fill in and make an impact. Chicago Cubs MVP Kris Bryant, 25, and Cleveland Indians shortstop wunderkind Francisco Lindor, 23, lit up the boards all season in 2016. And in 2015, young Mets arms Noah Syndergaard and Jacob deGrom together pitched the Mets to their first Series since 2000.

Another place where the future of the game can be seen is in Houston. The Astros have made the postseason just once since they lost World Series in 2005, but in the last two seasons their younger stars have changed infield play into an artform. Shortstop and 2015 AL Rookie of the Year Carlos Correa couples well with the power arms of pint-sized second baseman Jos Altuve and third baseman Alex Bregman. The three are crafting Houston to be a huge part baseball's resurgence and point to the AL West being all Astros for now.

Over in Washington, D.C., the new President may not be throwing out the season's first pitch, but baseball still looks tremendous in the nation's turbulent capital. The Nationals have placed first in the NL East and made playoffs three times in the last five seasons, principally on the strength of world class pitching that includes 2016 Cy Young winner Max Scherzer. Plus their field looks impressive with Eaton joining four-time All-Star Bryce Harper and 23 year old Trea Turner. Last season Turner slugged .567 while stealing 33 bases in just 73 games. If 2017 isn't the year for this 48 year old franchise to win its first Series, who knows when.

AL East-bound and downJust outside the Nats' domain, the Baltimore Orioles have found themselves in a similar circling pattern, with solid season performances, and yet an inability to get deeper into October. With third base ace Manny Machado and their underrated second baseman Jonathan Schoop, the O's future looks bright. But it will be interesting to see if and when Baltimore can wrest away second place from rivals in the AL East anytime soon.

Meanwhile, the New York Yankees, like Atlanta, are also retooling with younger players. Catcher Gary Sanchez and first baseman Greg Bird, both great hitters, are one centerpiece of the Yankees' reboot. Yet both AL East teams have their work cut out with 2017's Boston Red Sox.

A popular favorite for the World Series, Boston is as stacked as the Cubs were last season. Like Swanson, left fielder Andrew Benintendi, 22, stands out as another potential superstar of baseball's newest generation. He'll play across the park from Mookie Betts in right, another future perennial MVP candidate who demonstrated power and consistency with 31 homers, 113 RBIs, and .534 slugging in his first full season. Betts also has speed and finesse enough to bag 26 stolen bases in 2016 and provides a spark in a lineup rounded out by shortstop Xander Bogaerts, second baseman Dustin Pedroia, and centerfielder Jackie Bradley. On top of position players, the Red Sox have an enviable pitching rotation, with Sale joining CY Young winner Rick Porcello, fellow left-hander David Price, as well as Drew Pomeranz and Steven Wright.

Sure, the Red Sox might bleed excitement. But last year their postseason fire was quickly extinguished in by an injury-wracked Cleveland Indians team. A bonus for Cleveland is that two of their best starters, Carlos Currasco and Danny Salazar, seem fit and ready for the mound again, alongside Corey Kluber, who was excellent from April deep into November, not to mention Andrew Miller, arguably the best middle reliever in the game.

Cleveland's elder players, like Jason Kipnis (2B) and Carlos Santana (1B), outperformed at-bat last season in the absence of Michael Brantley, and could do so again for 2017, should Kipnis shake off a reported preseason shoulder injury. Even better, Jose Ramrez and Lindor provide more reliable bats for a city savoring one more championship to match the Cavs' first NBA title.

Can the Cubs repeat, Dodgers rematch?Certainly the defending world champion Chicago Cubs remain strong in their batting lineup and at every field position. Their infield especially boasts much more of that young, exciting stuff that makes for sports dynasties. Bryant, along with Addison Russell, Javy Baez, and Willson Contreras excel as a unit with Anthony Rizzo at first. It's likely that sometime catcher and outfielder Kyle Schwarber will figure in at both positions, depending how manager Joe Maddon chooses to deploy him and 36 year old utility man Ben Zobrist each game. Zobrist, the World Series MVP, is listed for Opening Day at 2B, yet spent much of the postseason comfortably in left field.

Chicago's depth doesn't mean, however, that the Cubs are done churning out top-caliber new talent. Anyone who's kept a close eye on 22 year old Albert Almora this preseason especially last Sunday when he blasted two homers and a double in a 22-4 win over the Reds sees another game changer developing.

Addison Russell tellsRolling Stone that his team's combination of raw talent, postseason experience, and chemistry under Maddon is a great starting point, but the Cubs won't be resting on their shiny new rings.

"Experiencing it all, (the World Series) was good for us moving into the future," Russell says. "We're all good, but only with more hard work are we going to get better at the end of the day."

Aiming to topple the Cubs' long-term imperial aspirations, the Los Angeles Dodgers are also another team to get excited about. During winter they re-upped maestro closer Kenley Jansen with a five year, $80 million contract, a no-brainer move. L.A. also brings back rotation man Rich Hill, along with 31 year old third baseman Justin Turner and Adrin Gonzlez at first, who will be 35 in May. Few baseball pundits have talked about whether age equals depreciation at Dodger Stadium, or how much that creates a sense of urgency to win a World Seriesnow.

But the Dodgers' arsenal also looks dangerous with the '16 NL Rookie of the Year Corey Seager, and 20-year-old left hander Julio Uras in the same rotation as three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw. Each season Kershaw's speed seems to capture baseball's new zeitgeist in his every single pitch.

If 2017 is indeed the Dodgers' year to bring back the Commissioner's Trophy for the first time since 1988, all roads run through the Dodgers' pitching rotation, with the 29 year old Kershaw as the perfect lynchpin.

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2017 MLB Preview: Baseball's Youth Movement Takes Center Stage - RollingStone.com

Kendall Jenner and Skip Marley Want You to Drink Pepsi and Love Cops – SPIN

Over the past three years, people have taken to the streets to demonstrate against police brutality, to stand up for immigration and womens rights, and callfor Donald Trumps removal from office. The revitalized civil rights movement hasnt impeached Trump just yet, but its become a catchy enough trend in the eyes of advertisers to sell us Pepsi by the truckload.

Today, Americas favorite empty-calorie beverage has released an expensively produced ad that features Kendall Jenner, and takes place at a protest. According to the videos YouTube description, which also calls it a short film, the clip centers around capturing the spirit and actions of those people that jump in to every moment and featuring multiple lives, stories and emotional connections that show passion, joy, unbound and uninhibited moments.

The commerciala simulacrum of the revolutionis just as inane as that description. Theres a frustrated Muslim artist marking up photographs with, of course, a can of Pepsi on the table. Theres a brown-skinned celloistwhose burning intensity is only quenched by some Pepsi. How inclusive! Theres protest in the streets,and poor Kendall Jenner in a blonde wig, her routine interrupted by the energy. Theres even the presence of Lions, a misguided wannabeanthemic song from Bob Marleys grandson Skip, of Chained to the Rhythm fame.

Although the scenes arent explicitly anti-Trumpwhich makes sense because PepsiCo CEOIndra Nooyi is a member of his business councilits clearly aware that human rights are part of the zeitgeist and the zeitgeist sells. The whole sequence climaxes when the procession of protestersgrab Kendalls attention. Suddenly, she rips off her blonde wig, and struts with the protesters to lead them to liberty. She even gets the sought-afteraffirmative fist bump from a dude in cornrows.

After all that, the model-turned-activist kindly gives a police officer a Pepsi can. The message is clear:struggle against the powers that be, but make damn sure you remember to buy soda. Watch and be inspired below.

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Kendall Jenner and Skip Marley Want You to Drink Pepsi and Love Cops - SPIN

Re-defining hyperlocalism – Leinster Express

By Killenard based award winning Garden Designer Brian Burke.

So, what do you know about hyperlocalism? Not much, if anything. Well in that case you are in the same boat as I was in up until last Saturday.

Last Saturday night at about quarter past nine when most fully functioning adults are out in pursuit of some form of real world alcohol related cultural enrichment, I was at home opening a tweet from a Garden Design magazine which I imagined was just about to open the door for me to the realm of hyperlocalism.

Narnia, as I thought, for the adult organic enthusiast.

Right so what is it? Well, therein lies the source of much confusion and ensuing hilarity.

Because I assumed from the context, a tweet from a Garden Design magazine, and without reading the follow up link that what we were dealing with here was a recently concocted term to cover all those zeitgeisty organic matters such as local sourcing of materials, concern over the provenance of food items, avoidance of the carbon production associated with movement of goods a long way.

All those ultra-cool, eco things.

But never one to be accused of being negligent when it comes to fact checking I jumped over to dictionary.com to get the definitive low down.

Except you wont find any definition on dictionary.com thats even close to my interpretation.

Thats how new it is, says I to myself. The paint isnt even dry on the hoarding surrounding the kingdom of hyperlocalism, on the electric fence sectioning off the hyperlocalist from the remainder of humanity.

But no, its there all right. Hyperlocalism is covered as follows: Hyperlocal connotes information oriented around a well-defined community with its primary focus directed toward the concerns of the population in that community.

The term can be used as a noun in isolation or as a modifier of some other term (e.g. news).

But it could easily have been my definition.

It could easily have been something like: Early twenty first century movement concerned with countering globalisation and homogenisation. Its pure zeitgeist; it combines hype with local and coins a brand-new way of describing something which was already perfectly adequately described.

So, I was torn. There it was; an immovable definition for one thing which I knew in my heart should have been something completely different.

The thing was snowballing and it was starting to occupy this unique niche as being a very now sounding term that should exist for an entirely different purpose to that for which it does exist.

It was becoming very confusing. A misappropriated, misallocated, misdirected label.

So, what I am proposing is nothing less than a complete and utter redeployment of the term hyperlocalism. Because this news related definition is only nonsense.

Hyperlocalism beautifully describes where we are at. We need this phrase to do more for us, to work harder, to live up to its billing. We need to wrest control of this word back from where it has errantly been squandered all this time.

You know the way you buy your spuds from the local farmer and if someone forced you to describe such activity the best any of us would come up with would probably be a word such as loyalty. Well, under the new regime we are obliged to call that hyperlocalism.

Getting your limestone paving from Liscannor rather than Karachi; hyperlocalism. Buying larch from managed midlands forests rather than imported eastern European softwood; hyperlocalism. Keeping a few chickens; hyperlocalism.

Being lucky enough to be close enough to cycle to work or school; hyperlocalism. Not buying a house in Roscommon when you work in Bray; hyperlocalism. Saving in your credit union; hyperlocalism. Eschewing Amazon to order a book through your local bookstore; hyperlocalism. Or better still, hyperlocalism with an edge; using Amazon to do your research and then ordering it through your local bookstore.

Im hyper. Im local. Its not rocket science.

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Re-defining hyperlocalism - Leinster Express

Why Not ‘A Global Anthem,’ Donald Trump? Who Does ‘Represent the World,’ Steve Bannon? – AlterNet

Photo Credit: United Nations Photo / Flickr

We will serve the citizens of the United States of America, believe me, said President Donald Trump at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on February 24th. There is no such thing as a global anthem, a global currency, or a global flag. Four days later, in his first speech before a joint session of Congress, he continued, My job is not to represent the world. My job is to represent the United States of America.

Donald Trump and his consigliere Steve Bannon (the likely author of those sentences) are hardly the first to nail so precisely this most basic feature of what political scientists call the world order of today. At the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, President George H.W. Bush was hounded and harassed by environmentalists at every turn. He wasnt doing enough, they said. He needed to protect the planet, they said. Finally he lost his cool, and in words remarkably similar to those uttered by President Trump at CPAC exclaimed, Im the President of the United States. Im not the President of the World. And while Im here Im going to do what best serves the interests of the American people.

The sovereign state system these two American leaders so accurately described, exactly a quarter century apart, is likely to persist far into the foreseeable future. But someday, is it possible that people around the world might actually sing a global anthem together? And hoist a global flag? And dwell together as citizens of a United Earth?

Why Not a Global Anthem?

If there is a global anthem floating around out there its not in any way official, hardly anyone knows it, and hardly anyone feels anything about it. The tone of Trumps assertion, however and of much his nascent presidency implies that its self-evident not just that there is no such thing, but that there shouldnt be, and never will be.

Most of us, however, maintain many different kinds of loyalties. Our affection for our schools and hometowns is a huge part of why sports are such a huge part of our culture. People feel fidelity to non-geographic communities as well ones bicycle club or the dog park gang or (for me) ones fellow geeks at the science fiction convention.

Yet the most primal devotion that most people feel today is arguably their allegiance to their nation. What American even those who agitate every day to make their country live up to its ideals has never gotten at least a little bit choked up at spectacular fireworks on July 4th, or singing The Star-Spangled Banner at a ballgame, or seeing a fluttering American flag leading a parade?

But our world grows smaller and more interconnected every day. No grand historical development is more defining of the modern age. Can we imagine the same feelings of camaraderie, kindred spiritedness, and tribal solidarity about our single human community? Can our loyalty to the world as a whole as it does for many for ones nation -- make our blood rush a little more quickly through our veins? Might our allegiance to our nations be accompanied by an allegiance to humanity?

Theres no reason why people cannot declare right now that they seem themselves as both citizens of their countries and citizens of the world. That their national patriotism is for them transcended by their planetary patriotism. And that all of us on this fragile planet must now consider ourselves, in the science fiction author Spider Robinsons memorable phrase, to be crewmates on Spaceship Earth.

One can imagine this becoming a hot button political issue quite suddenly. Imagine a dozen college students, perhaps half from countries outside the United States, enrolled at, oh, the University of California.

Perhaps they constitute the local student arm of Citizens for Global Solutions -- the 70-year-old NGO that openly advocates the establishment of a world republic. These students band together because they embrace th e principl e that above and beyond their devotion to the country where they happen to have been born is their loyalty to the human race.

So they arrange a meeting with the chancellor. They introduce themselves, and then announce that they do not consider themselves to be primarily American or Nigerian or Iranian or Mexican or Chinese. They are Earthlings. So they request that above the flag of the United States on the official university flagpole, the university will now fly a flag depicting our beautiful blue Earth from space.

The chancellor hesitates. She isnt quite sure how this will go over with that $1M donor whose name just went up on the dormitory right across from that flagpole. The Daily Californian school paper does a front page article about the hesitation. Students begin to march and demonstrate. Other students -- declaring that their only patriotism is their American patriotism -- confront the Earthlings. Commotion ensues. Now the San Francisco Chronicle does a front page article about it. That gets picked up by Asahi Shimbun andDeutsche Welle. And a transnational conversation begins to unfold.

These ideals of larger loyalty have been promulgated by some of the greatest figures in the human heritage. Its what Voltaire called "the party of humanity." Its what Victor Hugo meant when he said, I belong to a party which does not yet exist the party of revolution and civilization. Its what the signatories of the 1955 "Einstein-Russell Manifesto" were describing when they claimed to speak "not as members of this or that nation, continent, or creed, but as human beings, members of the species Man, whose continued existence is in doubt."

And in July 1979, Neil Armstrong was asked what had been going through his mind ten years earlier when he stood on the surface of the moon, and saluted the American flag. His reply? I suppose youre thinking about pride and patriotism. But we didnt have a strong nationalistic feeling at that time. We felt more that it was a venture of all mankind.

Who Does Represent the World?

President Trump and the first President Bush were also not wrong about who they represent. Its that way for every president. Theres nothing unusual or unprecedented or groundbreaking about it. The oath an American president swears is about protecting the United States of America and its constitution nothing else!

This is why President Bill Clinton, agonizingly, did not dispatch American military power to rescue perhaps of a million people being hacked into pieces with machetes in Rwanda in the spring of 1994 because the genocide, as horrifying as just about anything could possibly be, did not directly threaten American interests. Its why President George W. Bush DID dispatch attack helicopters from the U.S.S. Kearsarge into Liberia during an eruption of civil war and atrocity there in 2003 to evacuate the American citizens on the scene. (Back home at the same time, the U.S. Navy was running recruiting commercials on ESPN, describing itself as a global force for good.)

But this leads to a rather severe problem in our ever shrinking world. Some 200 separate sovereign units, each pursuing their own individual national interests, can hardly guarantee optimal outcomes for the common human interest. And we see this in cold, hard realities, from the massive displacement and refugee flows generated by economic hopelessness, to transborder cyberattacks and runaway climate change. Stronger multilateralism, robust support for international institutions and enhanced mechanisms of global governance are the optimal policy tools not Donald Trumps cultivation of xenophobia and far-right nativism (which is what these straw men truly represent).

So who, today, which individuals in which elected offices, can we identify whose raison detre is to serve the larger collectivity, the whole of the human community, the global public good?

The answer is no one. Its not Donald Trumps job but its no one elses either. There is no supranational authority that stands above the nation state. There is no institution, no elected official anywhere, whose job it is to represent the human race.

How About a Global Flag?

Although our students at the University of California would undoubtedly design something visually wonderful, President Trump is also right to say theres no such thing as a global flag that officially represents anything. But its hardly self-evident that what those political scientists call the Westphalian state system (originating in the peace treaty of 1648 that ended Europes calamitous wars of religion) will endure as a permanent feature of human history.

We can imagine a redesigned and democratized and empowered United Nations. (Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, and her Commission on Global Security Justice and Governance, have proposed a World Summit on Global Governance during the UNs 75th anniversary year in 2020.) Further down the road its not impossible to envision that the same basic structures of governance long established almost universally at city, state, and national levels worldwide a legislature and an executive and a judiciary might someday be fashioned and founded at the global level as well.

This vision too not just the intangible ideal of global citizenship but the tangible idea of a world state has been put forth by some of the greatest figures in the human heritage. I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see, Saw the vision of the world, and all the wonders that would be Till the war-drum throbbed no longer, and the battle flags were furld, In the Parliament of Man, the Federation of the World." Thats Alfred Lord Tennyson, Poet Laureate to Queen Victoria, in his 1842 masterpiece Locksley Hall.The Earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens. Thats Bahaullah, the founder of the Bahai Faith, in 1857. (By most accounts its the first or second fastest growing religion in the world today.) "Without some effective world supergovernment the prospects of peace and human progress are dark ... (But) if it is found possible to build a world organization of irresistible force and inviolable authority there are no limits to the blessings which all men may enjoy and share. Thats conservative hero Winston Churchill in 1949. (Take that Alt-Right!)

These kinds of possible future developments might someday give tangible content and historical meaning to the planetary patriotism that, perhaps, more and more Earthlings might over time declare. Perhaps this hypothetical future entity might be established, some distant day, by a duly negotiated and legally enacted world constitution. They might call it an Earth Union, or the Federal Republic of the World, or a United Earth. In the fictional future history of STAR TREK, after all, the United Federation of Planets in the galaxy was preceded by a United Federation of Nations on Earth. Hundreds of science fiction novels contain similar depictions of a politically unified human race. If writers can make such a future seem so plausible and believable, is it really so ridiculous simply to ask whether we can aspire to it as an actual historical goal?

We are one people with one destiny, said President Trump toward the end of his speech to Congress addressing himself, of course, exclusively to Americans. But perhaps it is not too much to suppose that someday, some political leader will sit in a position, and maintain the responsibility, and show a sufficient elevation of the human spirit, to say not just to the citizens of one particular country but to all the people of Planet Earth, We are one people with one destiny.

The Road to One World

So which comes first? A sentiment of planetary patriotism or an actually politically unified planet? It's sort of like the proverbial question about the chicken and the egg -- only prospective instead of retrospective. It may be that we'll never see any kind of tangible progress toward world political unity until a substantial number of people feel, deep in their bones, something like an ethic of human unity. Or it may be instead that we'll never have a great many people who see themselves primarily as citizens of the world until every living human being has in fact become a citizen with both rights and responsibilities of a United Earth.

In 1946, the writer Phillip Marshall Brown wrote a cover story on world government agitation for Newsweek magazine. (Yes, for a brief but incandescent few years immediately following the Second World War, the movement to actually create something like a world republic was enough a part of the zeitgeist especially among high school and college students that it generated that kind of attention. My own occasional co-author, former U.S. Senator and JFK White House aide Harris Wofford, served as the founder then of the Student Federalists which established fervent chapters on 367 high school and college campuses around the U.S. , and which still exists today as that student arm of Citizens for Global Solutions.) At the end of the piece Mr. Brown took a stand on the chicken/egg question, and asserted that "all attempts, no matter how idealistic, to establish a world government will inevitably fail unless the people of the world can be united into one brotherhood." That forecast may well eventually prove to be right. Or it may turn out to be entirely the other way around.

In Steve Bannons own CPAC speech, he said that national security and sovereignty were one of the Trump administrations three central purposes. And both he and President Trump have repeatedly used the phrase America First. So the two of them are unlikely to embrace the suggestion that perhaps there ought to be a global anthem and global flag, or any contention that individual national interests might sometimes be trumped by common human interests.

One thing that might mean for those of us open to such expansive future possibilities? It just might make for yet another point on which to resist the Trump agenda. It just might provide yet another vehicle for getting under his skin.

Because maybe, someday though likely long after Trump and Bannon have been consigned to the dustbin of history there will be a global anthem. Maybe, someday, there will be a global flag. Maybe, someday, well all live together in One World.

Tad Daley, author ofAPOCALYPSE NEVER: Forging the Path to a Nuclear Weapon-Free Worldfrom Rutgers University Press, is a fellow with theCenter for War/Peace Studies. Hes currently writing his second book, on the extraordinary history and possible future of the idea of a world republic. Follow him on Twitter @TheTadDaley.

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Why Not 'A Global Anthem,' Donald Trump? Who Does 'Represent the World,' Steve Bannon? - AlterNet

The cake can wait – DAWN.com

The writer is a sociologist based in Karachi.

PAKISTANI liberals and conservatives are politically more alike than they think. In their respective journeys to claim the high moral perch, both groups are easily outraged by sex, religion and politics. Both are on a rescue mission to save the nation, democracy and Islam. In their competitive tussles, the most invaluable capital for both is womens rights the zeitgeist of modernity, cultural purity, international image and the nations progress.

On International Womens Day, this political contest plays itself out through public celebrations, seminars and well-funded chatter. The liberals say, we want womens freedoms (relative but not absolute). Similarly, the religio-culturalists say, We respect womens rights (not to be free but differently equal). They recall the discrimination and tyranny observed by imperial powers but only in the form of Islamophobia not sexism, racism, homophobia.

Then, in the midst of their talk-shops in hotels and many gigabytes of selfies, both groups respectively cut a cake, missing the proverbial irony of eating cake while bemoaning how the masses have no bread. A day marked for the struggles of women workers for fair wage and gender rights on the factory floor has become a narcissistic love-fest. To promote womens causes on all occasions is to be commended and supported. To reduce this opportunity to birthday-like celebrations with repetitive content and empty slogans is just a wasted opportunity.

Neither groups challenge or scrutinise the economic conditions of women in any substantive way. The dependency of liberal womens groups on international funding has limited their activism within a neoliberal framing. At best, they support some income-generation schemes for women. There is no national campaign to lobby for laws and policies to tackle womens unemployment or the hazards and insecurities experienced by women in the informal sector. There is no sustained movement for equal wages or to support a surge from home-based work to the market. In light of the national obsession with CPEC, activists do not even ask, whats in it for women?

Multinational firms and corporations shamelessly peddle womens causes for publicity. Yes, women should promote their cause on all platforms but feminist activists have become incidental guests to sex up these events, rather than organisers and drivers of its content. Sponsored festivals are designed for repetitive, anecdotal discussion and entertainment, instead of relevant, radical or strategic purposes. Womens groups must reject such imposters who masquerade as supporters of womens rights.

Womens empowerment, development, and upliftment are vague, diluted concepts that are no longer objectionable to anyone. Religiously-inspired NGOs now compete for donor funds from the same Western sources that Islamists used to deride. Even the corporate sector has learned to commodify womens religious needs and developed corresponding products to meet such demands. The market is profitable, the message is compelling: buy halal.

International Womens Day needs revision and reframing. It should be an opportunity to discuss the stabilising of womens economic categories, radically restructuring the informal sector beyond safety nets and cash handouts and, for recommending an emergency policy for women agricultural workers. This largest womens labour force needs critical attention.

Anti-imperialists cry hoarse against the horrors of Americas anti-migration policies but are silent on the poverty-inducing burden of internal migration on women agricultural workers. No one cares about the irony of not knowing how to apply the sexual harassment law for this largest group of female labour in the country.

Similarly, the widespread practice of trafficking of women is a straightforward economic issue.

The Benazir Income Support Programme has empowered women in unexpected ways. But protective policies need to be replaced by proactive economic incentives and subsidies of services for working women in the informal sector (transportation vouchers, daycare services, skill improvement). The office of the ombudsmen for sexual harassment at the workplace could be supported by additional mechanisms to deal with complaints by women who face discrimination in wages, promotions and gratuity in the formal sector.

Womens movements should aim to revolutionise womens economic integration. We need to ensure a carefully gendered census. We need a plan that prioritises women agricultural workers, Fatas tribal women, women in the informal sector and which prevents the trafficking of women. Research and strategic thinking, radical policies and activism must break the mould of producing repeat studies and advocacy efforts and centralise the economic agenda, now. Then, women can cut their own cakes if they want.

The writer is a sociologist based in Karachi.

Published in Dawn, March 8th, 2017

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The cake can wait - DAWN.com

‘Poster Design from Berlin’ exhibition to open soon – Macau Daily Times

The Anschlag Berlin Poster Design from Berlin exhibition, organized by the Cultural Affairs Bureau (IC), will open at the Tap Seac Gallery on Tuesday at 6.30 p.m. and feature a total of 70 posters by 35 designers from several Berlin-based design studios.

To complement the exhibition, the Cultural Affairs Bureau will organize a seminar entitled From Berlin to Macau: Designers stage.

With its rich historical background and cultural uniqueness, Berlin provides an environment for designers to enhance their creativity by allowing the coexistence of multiple design ideas. The posters featured in this exhibition are works inspired by the Zeitgeist Movement and contemporary Berlin, created by designers from renowned Berlin-based design studios, including Cyan, LSD, HeSign, EPS51, Ruddigkeit, Ariane Spanier, Fons Hickmann m23, and Surface, among others.

The exhibition includes posters relating to art exhibitions, festivals, concerts, performances and social issues. By sharing works that blend art and design, IC hopes to provide Macanese design professionals with a source of inspiration and an opportunity to exchange ideas. To allow for a more in-depth understanding of this exhibition and Berlins graphic design world, IC will also organize a seminar titled From Berlin to Macau: Designers stage, which will be held on March 15 from 6:30pm to 9.30 p.m. at the Tap Seac Gallery. The seminar will be conducted in English with simultaneous translation into Cantonese.

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'Poster Design from Berlin' exhibition to open soon - Macau Daily Times

X-Cruciating! Why is Liberal Media So Keen to Link Hit Blockbuster ‘Logan’ to Trump? – Heat Street


Heat Street
X-Cruciating! Why is Liberal Media So Keen to Link Hit Blockbuster 'Logan' to Trump?
Heat Street
The X-Men characters have always possessed a knack for tapping into the zeitgeist (the comic book was an allegory for the civil rights movement). While they remain ahead of the curveborder issues and deportation are a big deal right nowhow can ...

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X-Cruciating! Why is Liberal Media So Keen to Link Hit Blockbuster 'Logan' to Trump? - Heat Street

The Zeitgeist Movement | New York City Chapter – Home

OURMISSION

The Zeitgeist Movement is an internationalsustainability advocacy organization focused on educating the public about the many socioeconomic problems inherent to the global market economy, and proposes the adoption of an entirely new, sustainable model known as a Natural-Law Resource-Based Economy.

TZM has no allegiance to any country or political party. The movement recognizes the Earth as an interconnected system,and our species asone human familywhich must learn to share resources & ideas if we expect to survive in the long run.

Sustainability requires a mass value shiftfrom our traditional & cultural way of thinking to a more science-based "train-of-thought". Therefore, TZM advocates the application of the Scientific Method for social concern, problem solving & governance. Decisions of the future will not be "made" by popular opinion. Rather, they will bearrived at through the careful study of data and the latest science & technology.

There are many things one can do to support this worldwide grassroots movement. TZM Chapters hold regularly scheduled meetings and engage the general public through educational projects, annual events, media expressions, non-violent activism, and charity work.

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The Zeitgeist Movement | New York City Chapter - Home

Visa shows you how #KindnessIsCashless via their latest ad campaign – ETBrandEquity.com

Visa has today launched its first long format digital film on #KindnessIsCashless, a movement created in December 2016 following the Indian Governments Demonetization drive. The campaign, launched as the nation was going through a cashless transformation, is built on the key consumer insight small acts of kindness.

Amidst the challenges faced by people, the campaign captures a highly empathetic human response - the younger generation helping hesitant elders to go cashless. The campaign started with print, outdoor, social and digital channels, and now features a new long format digital film.

Watch the spot here:

Frederique Covington, senior vice president of marketing Asia Pacific at Visa, said, Great marketing transcends functional messages and manages to capture the zeitgeist of the moment. Our goal with the Visa #KindnessIsCashless campaign was to tap into a cultural movement we saw emerging in India. We wanted to celebrate the goodness from demonetization rather than the pain points. At the heart of our work is a simple and powerful insight that the younger generation is teaching their elders how to go cashless. Our campaign aims at celebrating, and encouraging all the people creating the new Digital India.

The film is a highly emotional story of Role Reversal that captures a slice of life between a young student and his older professor, to show how through role reversal, the younger generation is teaching their elders how to go cashless. The film then invites consumers to share their stories on the Visa India Facebook page using #KindnessIsCashless.

Josy Paul, chairman, chief creative officer of BBDO India said, Everybody was talking about demonetization. But in this disruptive transformational time, something very profound was taking place. We noticed more and more people stepping forward to help. Strangers helping strangers. It was a new kind of volunteerism A unique explosion of kindness. Thats how we created the platform #KindnessIsCashless. Our film is one such evocative story.

Hemant Shringy, executive creative director of BBDO India said, We know people want to help. All they need sometimes is a small act that can make a big difference. Thats what this film is about. Making digital payments comes naturally to us, #KindnessIsCashless encourages millennials to reach out and teach someone how to go cashless.

Ajai Jhala, CEO, BBDO India said, #KindnessIsCashless is borne out of the fusion of three forces - a massive national social context (Demonetization), brave and inspirational clients who inspired us to break from the past, and an amazing agency team that challenged the category codes and captured the zeitgeist of millennials stepping forward with little acts of kindness to do their bit for society and the nation. No force can stop a juggernaut of an idea birthed from such a potent combination.

Campaign credits:

Client: Visa India Creative Agency: BBDO, Mumbai Chairman & Chief Creative Officer: Josy Paul CEO: Ajai Jhala Executive Creative Director: Hemant Shringy and Sandeep Sawant EVP Planning Rajat Mendhi Sr. Creative Director: Balakrishna Gajelli Copywriter: Hemant Shringy, Yash Modi Account Director: Shrutika Sinha Account Executive: Shonali Hazari Agency Producer: KV Krishna Director: Shimit Amin Producer: Gary Grewal Production House: Red Ice

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Visa shows you how #KindnessIsCashless via their latest ad campaign - ETBrandEquity.com

Inclusive, ‘cool’ Toronto shown in new tourism ad – Toronto Star

Toronto's new ad shows the views from the city -- a seemingly inclusive kaleidoscope of colours and cultures. ( YouTube )

Torontos new tourism ad released Monday has some marketers raving, with some calling it one of the best ads theyve ever seen for a city.

I put a spell on you, coos singer Bethany Lee in the Toronto Tourism ad that takes viewers on a whirlwind tour of the city it dubs Canadas downtown.

It runs for 71 seconds and features vignettes of Toronto ballet dancers on the TTC, Jose Bautistas iconic bat flip, the electricity of a rooftop pool bar, the citys architecture and skyline, food, a Drake performance and the Caribbean Carnival.

The views are different here, reads the fast-paced ad that captures Torontos zeitgeist, created by J. Walter Thompson Canada.

This ad is really good because it reflects sort of the energy, the diversity and also the swagger of Toronto and I think theres something in the ad for everyone and it really makes Toronto look like an appealing place to visit, said David Soberman, marketing professor at Rotman School of Management and the Canadian national chair of strategic marketing.

The quick movement through the many vignettes reduces the chances of wear out, Soberman said.

There are so many different things in it every time you watch it youll see something different, Soberman said.

Richard Powers, an associate professor at the Rotman School of Management, thought the ad was one of the best he has seen and thinks it will have a huge impact.

I think the ads going to go viral. It is that good, he said. It portrayed Toronto as a very cool destination spot: friendly, welcoming and safe. When I saw that ad, I was really proud of Toronto.

The ad also highlights a second view of Toronto its inclusivity and progressive values through vignettes of the annual Pride Parade, a same sex couple together and through phrases like Love is love is love and In this city its ok to let your guard down superimposed on scenes.

Although the ad may seem like a direct response to Donald Trumps America, the chief creative officer at J. Walter Thompson Canada says it isnt.

Even before Trump, you could feel the creep of sort of different values starting to resonate even more and I like how this campaign pushes off that not only in terms of the sort of mental views, if you will, but also the physical views, Ryan Spelliscy said. We liked this notion that this city is more than the sites, its also an incredible collection of progressive views and values.

Andrew Weir, the chief marketing officer at Tourism Toronto, said this is what Toronto is.

The views are different here and were now being confident enough to say it and I think Toronto wants to say it, Weir said. I think the people of Toronto are showing a sense of civic pride that we havent seen in years here.

Last year marked another record year for tourism in the city, said Weir, who called the growth remarkable.

There was more than a 10 per cent increase of tourists from U.S. and overseas markets from the previous year, Weir added, driven largely by visitors flying in, rather than driving.

The ad was funded by a partnership with the Greater Toronto Hotel Association and the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sports and didnt use tax dollars, said Weir.

It will run in major U.S. cities including Boston, Washington, Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and New York City, primarily on YouTube, said Spelliscy.

There will be three more follow-up videos coming out in April that will focus on Torontos food and nightlife, arts and culture and progressive views that will run for 30 seconds each online.

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Inclusive, 'cool' Toronto shown in new tourism ad - Toronto Star

Donald and the Dominatrix: How the White House Inspired a BDSM Movement – Salon

Soon after Donald Trump joined the presidential race, a professional dominatrix named Tara Indiana announced her plans to follow suit. If a carnival barker like Donald Trump can run for president, why not a dominatrix? she said during an interview with GQ. Her slogan? Whipping America back into shape, one middle aged white man at a time.

Her platform included decriminalizing all consensual sex acts between adults, funding scientific research to show that S&M is a sexual orientation and adding kink into laws dealing with discrimination. She also favored the idea of the prohibitioning of middle-aged white men from holding office without permission from their Mistress, and requiring men to carry purses so they can look after their own belongings.

The women in my field, we dont live as victims. When we want to make change, we make changes, says professional dominatrix and sex educator Sandra LaMorgese. When we want to influence the world around us, we take action.

Women are feeling a little powerless right now, she notes. And shes right. In the weeks following election, sex therapist Kimberly Resnick Anderson noticed a steady decline in sex drive among her female clients. They appeared irritable and easily annoyed. Often, it was the men in their lives that bore the brunt of these developments. Anderson dubbed the phenomenon The Donald Trump Bedroom Backlash. The misogyny displayed by Trump throughout his entire presidential bid. . . has undermined the hard-fought progress to de-objectify women, she wrote in a think piece on the subject. This general malaise can easily zap libido and ruin your sex drive.

But there are those in the sex-o-sphere who havent abandoned their prowess. Instead, theyre using it to get even.

In an interview with Vice, Indiana explained, Ive noticed being in the scene for over 25 years, that fetishes and kinks come in trends, just like fashion, music, et cetera. And these trends tend to be reactions to the social and political zeitgeist.

When I got into the business in 1989 your garden variety slave was into foot worship, and cross dressing. I see this as a reaction to changing gender roles and a need to work through those issues. Then when AIDS started to affect the straight community, things like heavy medical, blood sports, and scat became popular. People were tired of safe sex they wanted to do things that were dangerous and risky.

In the world of sex, theres only one equal and opposite reaction to an apparent uptick in female devaluation: complete female domination.

Any time that we express empowerment during sex, that will trickle into other areas of our life, says LaMorgese. Its the transmutation of energy. Everything you do influences everything else. If you can be more aggressive, and dominant and powerful, sexually, it gives you a sort of moxie. It gives you some swagger.

And its not just women pushing the trend. After the election results came in, submissive guys started posting ads on Craigslist in search of women looking to relieve some stress. One guy from New York wrote, This is not a solution, but maybe a small, fun, cathartic escape. Take out your anger by putting me over your knee and giving me a hard spanking!

In the week that Trump was elected, I saw such a shift in people reaching out to me for sessions, LaMorgese revealed. Her clients, overwhelmingly male and financially successful, fall on either end of the political spectrum. Still, the requests were more or less the same. These clients were not looking for passive sessions, they were looking corporal punishment. They were looking for very intense sessions.

Its like they were in shock, she says. When youre doing BDSM, you have to be present. You really have to be aware of whats happening. Maybe thats why the clients are asking for more intensity. Its almost like it can get them out of shock.

Donald Trump is not sexy. But sex tends to follow the trends, and for the moment, Trump is it. His unlikely climb to power has given us great porn parodies like Donald Tramp and Make America Gape Again. Its also inspired some terrific pieces of erotic literature, like Humpin Trump and of course, President Trumps Gay Hairpiece and the Revenge of the Were-Water Buffalo. These days, those who chose to take their creativity into the bedroom might just find themselves somewhere between a whip and a hard place.

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Donald and the Dominatrix: How the White House Inspired a BDSM Movement - Salon

It’s Not McCarthyism, Stupid – New Matilda

Donald Trumps likening of false claims his office was bugged by the White House to McCarthyism is not just ridiculous, its laced with deep irony, writes Claire Connelly.

In Aaron Sorkins West Wing, fictional President Bartlet is in an argument with his speech writer and communications director Toby Ziegler over his writing a speech. Zeigler is condemning Hollywood for its gratuitous use of sex & violence in entertainment. Bartlett says, Do I look like Joe McCarthy to you?, to which Ziegler replies Nobody ever looks like Joe McCarthy, Mr President. Thats how they get in the door in the first place.

[Thank you to awesome word nerd @HowPeculeah for making me this gif special for the story]. Well, on Saturday morning at around 3am, the world got a reminder of just how that may occur when the very real President Donald Trump sank to a new low, claiming that President Obama had tapped the phones at Trump Towers during last years election campaign. In the explosive tweet, he captioned the event without the slightest hint of irony McCarthyism alluding to the Cold War anti-Communist sentiment.

And he should know. Trump was trained by McCarthys right hand man, Roy Cohn, who is perhaps the strongest link between these two eras. He may have died in 1986, but Cohns legacy lives on in the bloated orange buffoon that occupies the oval office (Ill get to this momentarily).

Lets put to one side momentarily that Trump confused McCarthyism with Watergate: only a Federal Judge can authorise a tap on the grounds the subject was an agent of a foreign power (there are a few exceptions to this, I wont get into here. You can read about it here, here and here).

For those not born before the mid-70s and who were not alive to remember a time when people were actually against and afraid of government blacklists, surveillance, censorship and, you know, Communism (shoutout to Pauline Hanson)

allow me to refresh your memory:

McCarthyism is what spurred the (second) reds beneath the bed scare of the 1940s and 50s, during which time employees of the White House, the public service, private sector and even the military were subject to mass firings and investigations for communist sympathies under a host of government panels set up by Senator Joseph McCarthy. And all under the approving eye of President Harry Truman.

The press was subject to intense scrutiny, and in more than one case news outlets were forced to fire journalists, reporters, radio hosts even comedians on the demand of the government.

President Truman required all public servants be screened for loyalty or sympathy for communism, fascism or other isms deemed a threat to the continued dominance of the American dream.

Hundreds if not thousands of people lost their jobs, economics textbooks were suppressed, economics teachers intimidated, and the direction of the whole discipline changed (one could argue the same thing is happening across university campuses right now, though I dont think its fair to put that development at Trumps feet. Thats a topic for another essay).

While we sit in the eye of the storm, on the brink of a rapidly changing economic system, its hard not to recognise the similarities.

Much like the ongoing war in the Middle East, the gaping power struggle that beset the globe following the devastation of WWII created the perfect power-struggle between the Soviet Union, America, China, North and South Korea, Greece, Turkey and of course all of their relevant allies, (Gday).

In 1949, the White House was drawn into a national security and PR disaster when Attorney General, Alger Hiss was convicted of espionage and perjury by the House of Un-American Activities Committee (shout out to Jeff Sessions).

In 1950, the Korean War pitted America, backed by the United Nations and South Korea, against North Korea and China. Russia upped its espionage activities.

Emil Julius Klaus Fuchs, a German theoretical physicist and Soviet spy involved in the creation of the worlds first nuclear weapon, was convicted of leaking information about the US, UK and Canadian Manhattan Project to Russia. And the infamous Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for stealing atomic bomb secrets and selling them to the Soviets, after a widely publicised trial which made the nuclear threat ever more real for the general public.

This backdrop, and the economic devastation caused by the war, created the perfect set of social and international and intercultural tensions for the Red Scare.

Reform became a term to be feared as civil rights, industrial relations, child labor laws, and womens suffrage were quickly rhetorically associated with the secret Communist plot to overthrow America. Anyone considered to be remotely progressive or vaguely Eastern European or Jewish looking was quickly dubbed an un-American traitor, to be feared, scorned and to always be the subject of scrutiny and suspicion.

Enter Joseph McCarthy, the United States Senator from Wisconsin. On February 9th, 1950 he gave a speech to the Republican Womens Club of Wheeling in West Virginia in which he claimed to be in possession of a list of known Communists working for the State Department. The speech pretty much made him the informal leader of the movement which would soon come to bear his name.

The result was the rapid establishment of government sanctioned committees, panels, departments, loyalty review boards and portfolios across all levels of government, not to mention the proliferation of private agencies to do the dirty work government wasnt legally allowed to do itself to protect America from those pesky Reds out to convert America to their way of life.

Companies were required to conduct investigations for Communists employed amongst their workforce.

Of course, in progressive Hollywood, many executives, writers, directors, actors and producers accused of having Communist sympathies were blacklisted from working in the industry. Careers were ruined. Many never worked again.

Interestingly, the provision of public health services was one of the tenets of McCarthyism, where things like vaccination, mental health care services and fluoride were considered to be part of some Communist plot to poison or brainwash Americans. Under the instruction of J Edgar Hoover, the FBI distributed propaganda flyers under the guise of various experts or research claiming as much. Much of the language had a distinctly anti-Semitic tone and was often cased in moralistic terms.

Back to Roy Cohn, described by the New York Times as McCarthys red-baiting consigliere, the attorney was instrumental in sending Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to the electric chair, helped elect Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and also mentored Trump for 13 years. His client included FBI director J Edgar Hoover and mafia boss Fat Tony Salerno.

Cohn helped deliver some of Trumps signature construction deals, was involved in his suit against the NFL for conspiring against him, and countersued the federal government for more than $100 million for defaming the Trump name.

He was central in Trumps long-running discriminatory rental feud where Trump and his father were accused of refusing to rent to black tenants.

Cohn would eventually, in 1964, after many failed attempts, be charged with bribery, conspiracy, and fraud by the US government, including coercing a dying millionaire client to amend his will from his hospital death bed making Cohn executor of his estate.

Cohn was subsequently disbarred for unethical, unprofessional and particularly reprehensible conduct. Trump claims they only got him because he was so sick (Rohn had been suffering from AIDS).

Unsurprisingly, and much like the current zeitgeist, Cohn and McCarthys policy agenda had majority public support. Both McCarthy and Trump are examples of lunatics of who overreach. One quickly became a public joke and died shortly after. Weve yet to see the outcome of the Trump era, and though there may be public consensus that he may be one sugar granule short of a fruit-loop, there also seems to be consensus across the political divide that Trump is what the system needs, whatever the cost.

Im not denying the economic system is broken. And Im not saying it doesnt need a massive overhaul. But Im not prepared for millions of people to suffer for that to happen. Weve seen what occurs when we allow that kind of thinking to permeate public policy.

The country I was raised in, the education system I was taught in, it told me, it told all of us, why it wasnt worth it. Today, as rising white supremacy, and socially and domestically acceptable casual racism rears its ugly head, Im not sure so many people would agree.

Just yesterday Pauline Hanson endorsed Vladimir Putin. For McCarthy it would take a comedian and a stand-off between the President and the US military to bring him down. What is it going to take to get rid of Trump? And what fresh hell follows forth?

McCarthyism was brought to an abrupt halt during the spring of 1954 after he unsuccessfully picked a fight with the US Army, subjecting it to a three-month long nationally televised spectacle in which members of the military were interrogated for alleged communist sympathies.

The buck stopped with Joseph Nye Welch, chief counsel for the US Army, who, during the hearings, infamously coined the six words which would end McCarthys career: Have you no sense of decency.

On national television Welch berated the Senator: Until this moment, I think I never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness, he said. When McCarthy tried to intervene Welch interrupted, Let us not assassinate this lad further, senator. You have done enough. Have you no sense of decency?

The trial was seen as a significant turning point in the publics attitude towards McCarthyism.

The US government suddenly turned on McCarthy. And the same party which gave rise to Trump tossed him under the bus at its earliest convenience.

On December 2nd, 1964, McCarthy was censured by the Senate, ostracised by both parties and eviscerated in the press. He would die three years later at the age of 48.

Meanwhile, in 1957 NBC radio talkback host and comedian John Henry Faulk sued AWARE, the agency which investigated him for his alleged Communist sympathies and won. Ultimately it was a financial, not moral imperative that did it, though arguably the press coverage the trial brought at the time might support an argument to the contrary. Knowing they could now be held legally and financially liable for the professional and financial losses caused by their firings, companies began to knock it off.

McCarthyism would soon after faded into history, burned into the public consciousness as the time where, for a brief moment, America lost its damn mind. Were at that point again. And its not clear what it will take for this terrifying new chapter to come to a close.

Historian and Senior Lecturer at Adelaide University, Dr Tom Buchanan says that though they may have been mentored and guided by the same man, it would be a long bow to draw between Trump and McCarthy, but certainly they both were instrumental in leading moral panics to serve a greater agenda.

Trump has the country whipped into a panic about womens modern roles, gay rights, minority criminals, immigrants, job stealers, and Islam, he said. The 1950s had discrimination against all these too but they were folded into the larger Communist Panic, (here mostly with homosexuals, though single people unmoored from family life were at risk too as being susceptible to spy seduction).

There was of course concern about women and minorities who strayed from their proper roles, but nothing like today where women and minorities are being depicted by many in government and the peanut gallery as having taken control via weird liberal programmes like affirmative action. There were panics in both times, but there were differences too.

Dr Buchanan told New Matilda that McCarthyism was a way to target various groups under the accusation that they were not fully American.

Its a moral panic, he said. In the same way the Islamaphobia we are seeing today is very similar.

Most distinctly, he said, it is the distinct consensus of opinion between Democrats and Republicans against Islam in todays zeitgeist that resembles the very same moral panic of the 1940s, simply replacing the label Communist with Muslim.

Let it be clear, McCarthy was not the reason for Trump, anymore than Trump is the reason for the state of moral panic and the escalating social tensions occurring the world over hes the symptom of the holy war being waged between left and right, black and white, men and women and the LGBTQI communities, workers against employers, voters against the government.

He is the symptom of a system which appoints deranged lunatics to whip the public into a moral panic to distract them from the financialisation, deregulation and privatisation of an economic model designed to deliberately and systematically manipulate the market in favour of the few, and to the detriment of the majority.

Dr Buchanan says the irony is that Trumps whole movement is predicated on a return to the 1950s, which he now uses as an example of his persecution. Even though the 1950s was actually a time of great fear and persecution of many to the social and economic advantage of the few.

He imagines a return to the racial/gender/middle class privileges of that time for his supporters, Dr Buchanan says. The idea of victimhood (however twisted the logic) resonates very strongly with them because of the changes of the last 40 years.

Trumps McCarthy style persecution only highlights the imagined promise land a return to power in which the hierarchies of old can be resurrected.

And they can be the hunters again.

Originally posted here:

It's Not McCarthyism, Stupid - New Matilda

David Duchovny Hits the Road to Seek the Musical Truth That’s Out There – PopMatters

15 Feb 2017: Social Hall SF San Francisco

Its Wednesday night in the middle of SF Beer Week, and theres a sense of alternate realities from the realm of science fiction seeping into the current timeline. Hogwash in Lower Nob Hill is hosting a Star Wars-themed Lagunitas tap takeover complete with an appearance by a lifesize wookie, drawing in a gathering of rebel rogues and would-be Jedi Knights. Theres no band like at the Mos Eisley Cantina, although some of the recordings are piped through. But those seeking live music with a Hollywood twist need only walk a half mile up Sutter Street to catch the artist best known as FBI Special Agent Fox Mulder live in concert at Social Hall SF.

Its said that the truth can be stranger than fiction and actor David Duchovny probably knows something about that. Duchovny has become a living legend around the world for his iconic portrayal of Agent Mulder on FOX TVs The X-Files, where he spent a decade from 1993-2002 searching for the truth about aliens, the UFO cover-up and a slew of paranormal phenomena and government conspiracies. The show tapped the dark pulse of the modern zeitgeist like few others have and won Duchovny and co-star Gillian Anderson (as Agent Dana Scully) a legion of lifetime fans.

Pop cultures affinity for The X-Files surged again in 2016 when Duchovny and Anderson were reunited for a series reboot of six episodes, including a mind-blowing season premiere in which Mulder summed up the entire UFO cover-up in the episodes opening minutes. With a tagline of The Truth is Still Out There, Americas fascination with seeking the truth about UFOs and extraterrestrials was rekindled. Duchovny has done some fine work on other projects too like Californication and his scene-stealing cameo as the worlds greatest hand model in Zoolander, which mined pop cultures love of conspiracy theories for comic gold.

Then theres his recent turn as a hard-boiled detective in late 60s Los Angeles on the trail of Charlie Manson in the vintage noir of Aquarius. Duchovnys character Sam Hodiak plays a little bit of acoustic guitar when hes at home on the show, and this apparently was a direct result of the actor requesting such a character trait, so he could continue trailer guitar lessons hed started in his last season as Hank Moody on Californication.

Duchovny apparently caught the songwriting bug and cut an entire album, releasing Hell of Highwater in 2015. The album mixes low-key blues and brooding folk rock with flashes of country and alternative and holds together fairly well with its character-driven songs. Now Duchovny has put together a full band to go out and play some shows. His fans cant wait to check it out as a line forms over two hours before showtime for those who bought the VIP ticket package, of which there were many. And While hes done excellent work on those other projects, the concept of witnessing the man who plays Mulder live on stage in a rock band seems like its whats providing the buzz here for one of the more unique pop culture moments of recent years.

The band opens with 3000, utilizing one of the albums more rocking tracks to kick things off on a high note. Some of the lyrics may seem to rhyme a bit too easily, but when Duchovny sings of 3,000 steps between heaven and hell, it feels like Fox Mulder is there opening up his soul. Let It Rain features a sharp Americana style chord progression with some bluesy leads and Duchovny singing to his low vocal registers strength.

Some of the slower songs find Duchovny singing in an odd Leonard Cohen-esque drawl that doesnt seem to suit him as well. The vocals seem a little flat at times during the set, but its still interesting to watch an accomplished artist daring to put himself out there in a different realm. Duchovny introduces the new Strangers in the Sacred Heart as being about a church where people pray for others instead of themselves, an interesting theme in a crazy world where the gods offer no refunds for over-praying.

A cover of David Bowies Stay finds the band getting more funky with some stinging blues mixed in and Duchovny with some serviceable vocals. More vibe boosting occurs when Duchovny takes multiple trips out into the audience to give out handshakes, high fives and stir the vibe up ala Buddy Guy playing his guitar out in the audience. Its a classy move to break down the invisible wall between performer and audience, giving fans a chance to get even more up close and personal.

Duchovny seems somewhat obsessed with the concept of rain on his album, even dropping a box of rain line into The Rain Song that seems like a nod to the Grateful Dead and trying to find the splintered sunlight that can break through even the darkest clouds (and pictures from the VIP soundcheck session indeed show him sporting a shirt with the Deads Steal Your Face logo). When the Time Comesintroduced as a post-apocalyptic love songmines a similar bluesy Americana sound and both songs feel like they could be coming from a weary Mulder serenading Scully, conjuring an endearing vibe.

Duchovnys vocal delivery seems to work best on the more up-tempo rocking material, however. This is confirmed in the encore when he and the band break out a surprise rendition of the Velvet Undergrounds Sweet Jane. The band plays through the extended introduction, leading to a cathartic breakthrough when they launch into the main progression. The crowd eats it up, especially when Duchovny sings Me, babe, Im in a rock n roll band. Then its more classic rock goodness with The Weight, as Duchovny dons one of the trending pink pussyhats that have become a symbol of solidarity with the feminist movement against the Trump regimes assault on womens rights. Another endearing audience sing-along ensues, and its been a fun night out at the very least.

Duchovnys musical soul searching may not hit quite as deep as Mulders quest for the truth, but he seems to somehow tap into a similar existential journey.

Greg M. Schwartz has covered music and pop culture for PopMatters since 2006. He focuses on events coverage with a preference for guitar-driven rock 'n' roll, but has eclectic tastes for the golden age of sound that is the 21st century music scene. He has a soft spot for music with a socially conscious flavor and is also an award-winning investigative reporter. Follow him on Twitter at @gms111, where he's always looking for tips on new bands or under the radar news items.

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David Duchovny Hits the Road to Seek the Musical Truth That's Out There - PopMatters