Mike Davis :
A week in the death of Alfred Olongo: This
is a journal

In El Cajon, long histories of racial and anti-immigrant violence have fused together in a matrix of fanatical Christian conservatism.

alfred-olongo

Alfred Olongo. Public domain image.

By Mike Davis | The Rag Blog | October 25, 2015

(Wednesday, September 28)

Alfred Olongo, a 38-year-old Ugandan refugee and the latest unarmed victim of a U.S. police execution, died yesterday only a few streets away from where I grew up in El Cajon, California, a city of 100,000 20 minutes inland from San Diego.

To be precise, Olongo was shot in the 800 block of Broadway, where an apartment complex adjoins one of the score of mini-malls that line a road that once divided raisin vineyards from lemon groves. The site is down the street from the Extreme Gospel Worship Center and a creepy gun store, catering mostly to burly militia types, where you can buy a handbook on how to discreetly dispose of dead bodies.
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David P. Hamilton :
Why I’ll vote for Dr. Jill Stein

The contrast between Stein’s program and Clinton’s record of fealty to the capitalist class is stark.

jill-stein-gage-skidmore

The Green Party’s jill Stein. Photo by Gage Skidmore / Creative Commons.

By David P. Hamilton | The Rag Blog | October 22, 2016

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily of the editors. The Rag Blog is published by the New Journalism Project, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, and we do not endorse political candidates.


A.  Dr. Jill Stein and the Green Party have hands down the most progressive platform of any candidate on the ballot.  The Green Party now identifies itself as eco-socialist, in recognition of the fact that unbridled capitalism is incompatible with human survival.

If you consider yourself a socialist, the contrast between Stein’s program and Clinton’s record of fealty to the capitalist class is stark.  And whereas the major party platforms are window dressing they don’t really intend to accomplish, the Green Party platform is what they would actually try to see enacted were they elected.
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Thorne Dreyer :
METRO EVENT | Gentle Thursday is back!

The legendary ’60s Austin happening returns as part of a 4-day celebration of the original Rag.

gentle-thursday-flyer

Poster designed by Trudy Stern. Trudy, then Trudy Minkoff, also
created the art for the first Gentle Thursday in 1966.

By Thorne Dreyer | The Rag Blog | October 12, 2016

Event: Gentle Thursday
What: Do-it-yourself happening with outdoor stage
Occasion: 50th Anniversary Rag Reunion and Public Celebration
Music and Spoken Word: Open mic
When: Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016, 4:30-7:30 p.m.
Where: Vortex Theater
Address: 307 Manor Rd., Austin, TX 78722
Cost: Free and open to the public

freak-brothers-reunionGentle Thursday returns! The “celebration of fun” is at Vortex Theater, Thursday, October 13, 2016, 4:30-7 p.m. This outdoor event serves as a reunion and remembrance of the SDS- and Rag-sponsored Gentle Thursday happenings that helped transform the UT campus and community in the late ‘60s.

The original Gentle Thursday was organized by SDS and The Rag in October 1966, “as a celebration of our belief that there is nothing wrong with fun.” (See “Gentle Thursday” article from Celebrating The Rag, below.)

This event also marks the beginning of a four-day 50th Anniversary Rag Reunion and Public Celebration at multiple Austin venues, Thursday-Friday, October 13-16.
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Steve Russell :
Dakota Access Pipeline: Legal encounters of
the third kind

The Indians do not claim their right to safe drinking water as U.S. citizens, but as human beings.

standing-rock-people-over-pipelines-crp

Solidarity rally against the Dakota Access Pipeline, St. Paul, Minnesota, September 13, 2016. Photo by Fibonacci Blue / Twitter / Creative Commons.

By Steve Russell | The Rag Blog | September 28, 2016


Rag Radio logo smallListen to the podcast of Thorne Dreyer’s September 23, 2016 Rag Radio interview with Steve Russell and Geronimo Son about the Native American protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline, here:


Briefcase warriors who start out meaning to defend their people quickly discover the practical meaning of a lawyer Latin phrase, sui generis. It’s a fancy way to describe a class of one, and it’s the only way to make sense of federal Indian law.

U.S. law everywhere but Louisiana is rooted in the English common law. Historians pretend that the modern nation-state came to be in the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648. If that pretense were true, the elevation of secular law over canon law would date from that time. Some other fake dates for the common law are 1066, when William the Bastard became William the Conqueror by completing the Norman conquest of England and reshuffling the feudal land titles at the base of the law, and 1215, when King John was forced to sign the Magna Carta and admit that the power of kings is not absolute.
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Alice Embree :
METRO | Remembering Frank Erwin and the Waller Creek trees

This feature is in the book ‘Celebrating The Rag’ to be released during festivities, set for Oct. 13-16, honoring Austin’s iconic underground newspaper.

frank-erwin-fkln-trees-rag

Frank Erwin, former chairman of the UT-Austin Board of Regents. Art by Jim Franklin / The Rag / October 28, 1969.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | September 20, 2016

AUSTIN — The following post, is a brief description that accompanies Jim Franklin’s cover art for the October 28, 1969 issue of The Rag.  It will be included in a book, Celebrating The Rag: Austin’s Iconic Underground Newspaper, scheduled for release in October 2016.  The book will be available at the upcoming Rag Reunion and Public Celebration of Austin’s historic underground newspaper, The Rag, that published from 1966-1977.

The Rag: 50 years and still raising hell! ©Furry Freak Brothers illustration by Gilbert SheltonCelebrating The Rag includes more than 100 articles from the original Rag, accompanied by art and photography, including work by artists Jim Franklin, Gilbert Shelton, Kerry Awn, Trudy Minkoff, and Marie Valleroy and photographers Alan Pogue and Danny Schweers, as well as several contemporary essays reflecting on the history and impact of the paper.  This is the third Rag Blog post of material to be published in the Rag book.
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Alice Embree :
METRO | Remembering Lt. Burt Gerding,
Austin Red Squad cop

A feature on Gerding is included in ‘Celebrating The Rag,’ a book to be released during festivities honoring Austin’s iconic underground newspaper.

Bert Gerding by Belmer Wright

Photo by Belmer Wright published in The Rag, January 15, 1968.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | September 5, 2016

The Rag: 50 years and still raising hell! ©Furry Freak Brothers illustration by Gilbert SheltonAUSTIN — Lt. Burt Gerding was the best known face of Austin’s Red Squad in the ’60s and early 70s.  He was omnipresent, often with his camera as shown in the photo above by Belmer Wright.  The following post, a brief description to accompany Wright’s photo, will be included in a book, Celebrating The Rag: Austin’s Iconic Underground Newspaper, scheduled for release in October 2016.  The book will be available at the upcoming Rag Reunion and Public Celebration of Austin’s historic underground newspaper, The Rag, that published from 1966-1977.

Celebrating The Rag will include more than 100 articles from the original Rag, accompanied by art and photography, including work by artists Jim Franklin, Gilbert Shelton, Kerry Awn, Trudy Minkoff, and Marie Valleroy and photographers Alan Pogue and Danny Schweers, as well as several contemporary essays reflecting on the history and impact of the paper.  This is the second post of material to be published in the Rag book.
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Steve Russell :
Two wars for the American West

The older war is known collectively as the Indian wars. The second is a continuation of the bloodiest conflict in the history of the nation, the Civil War.

stand off at standing rock

Native Americans, based at the Sacred Stone Spiritual Camp, in stand-off during protest against Dakota Access Pipeline which is crossing treaty lands. Image from Bronx Climate Justice North.

By Steve Russell | The Rag Blog | September 5, 2016

Two wars are simmering in the Western United States, both thought to have ended long ago and both making a job with the federal government a potential assignment to the front lines. An interactive map, published by High Country News,  shows how dangerous it is these days to work for one of the government agencies managing public land.

The older war is known by a collective description, the Indian wars. The newer war is the one so far causing more danger to government employees. It’s a continuation of the bloodiest conflict in the history of the nation, the Civil War.
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Lamar W. Hankins :
Donald Trump, white resentment, racism,
and a ‘great’ America

More than 40 years of racist actions and comments demonstrate what we normally call racism.

Donald Trump treatment cc

Donald Trump. Creative Commons image.

By Lamar W. Hankins | The Rag Blog | August 6, 2016

I have been aware of white resentment toward blacks since at least 1954, but this presidential election campaign brought back a memory from 1958, when I was in junior high school. I was active then in the Methodist Youth Fellowship (MYF). During a discussion group one day, led by an adult youth leader from our church, we talked about race and race relations, though I don’t remember how we got on that topic.

The MYF leader worked at the Gulf Oil refinery in Port Arthur. Neither of the local refineries (the other one was Texaco) hired black employees then. The MYF leader argued against letting blacks work at the refinery because they would compete for his job. He did not want the competition. He had a family to support and would never favor any changes that might threaten his job. Though some of us challenged our leader about his clearly racist views, he saw nothing wrong with denying blacks such opportunities, which were a privilege that white people had, but not blacks.
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Alice Embree :
The murder of George J. Vizard IV

George, a Ragstaffer and leading force in the Austin left, was found dead in the cold locker of an Austin convenience store in 1967.

George Vizard Sells Rag

George Vizard, shown selling Austin’s underground newspaper, The Rag, in front of the University Co-op on the Drag across from the UT campus. Seated is his wfe, Mariann Vizard. Photo: October 1966.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | July 27, 2016

The Rag: 50 years and still raising hell! ©Furry Freak Brothers illustration by Gilbert SheltonRag Blog associate editor Alice Embree wrote the following article — about the life and murder of original Ragstaffer George Vizard — for a book that will be released this October in conjunction with a 50th Anniversary “Rag Reunion and Public Celebration” of Austin’s historic underground newspaper, The Rag, that published from 1966-1977. The Rag has been reborn into the digital age as The Rag Blog, with many original Ragstaffers involved in the paper’s online resurrection, including George’s widow, Mariann (pictured above), who later changed her last name to “Wizard.”
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David McReynolds :
Donald Trump, the unexpected guest
with my curry

When I found my young friend, the attorney, was considering voting for Trump, it suggested to me that Trump might win.

Donald Trump mouth open

Feed me! Grab from No Holds Barred / YouTube / Creative Commons.

By David McReynolds | The Rag Blog | July 15, 2016

NEW YORK — A few weeks ago a couple of friends invited me to dinner at a nice little place, Heart of India, on Second Avenue and Fifth Street. One friend is a multi-talented master of film, and the other is a lawyer. I got to the restaurant early, and the first one to arrive was the young lawyer.

We were making idle conversation, waiting for the final friend. I was rambling on about how I had never seen any candidate so totally shredded as Donald Trump. The late night show, The Daily Show, every comic strip, The New York Times, the Washington Post, the Daily News.
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Jeff Shero Nightbyrd :
Should we disarm the police?

A policeman who kills becomes prosecutor, judge, and executioner without facts and a trial.

Rat Cover sm

This cover of RAT, the New York undergrounder which Jeff edited, is from the August 12-26, 1969 issue. There’s also a new RAT website.

By Jeff Shero Nightbyrd | The Rag Blog | July 15, 2016

Five policemen were assassinated in Dallas. No surprise. In America on average 25 blacks are killed by police a month. And Dallas exists in a sort of negative vortex, a predictor of violent trends.

Once again, there’s been great hand-wringing over America as a twisted violent culture. But in fact violence has dropped precipitously over the last two decades. Despite more gun ownership, victims of non-fatal violent crime have dropped from 7,976 per hundred thousand to 2,254 per hundred thousand. In 1993, seven people were killed, today the figure is 3.6.
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The Rag Blog :
METRO EVENT | ‘The Big Luauski’: Thorne Dreyer Birthday Bash and Rag Blog Hawaiian Shirt Blowout!

Legendary Austin band Greezy Wheels headlines the festivities at The High Road on Dawson.

Hula Dog

By The Rag Blog | The Rag Blog | July 13, 2016

AUSTIN — Dude. It’s the Big Luauski!

Greezy Wheels will be rolling at the Thorne Dreyer Birthday Bash and Hawaiian Shirt Blowout at the High Road on Dawson, 6:30-9:30 p.m., Thursday, July 28, 2016. The legendary Austin band performs at the event which celebrates Rag Blog editor and Rag Radio host Dreyer’s 71st birthday (which, to be technical, actually falls on August 1).

Guests are invited to wear Island gear or to pick up a shirt, for a $15 donation, from a beautiful collection of vintage Hawaiian shirts donated for the occasion by Eileen Hatcher. There will be Hawaiian munchies and a cash bar.

Also performing will be the “environmental troubadour” Bill Oliver (with a bag of Hawaiian goodies!) and our special guest will be filmmaker Keith Maitland, whose film, Tower, about the UT Tower sniper is receiving widespread acclaim.

The High Road on Dawson, the former Elk’s Club, is located at 700 Dawson Road, just south of Barton Springs Rd., in the Bouldin Creek neighborhood. There’s plenty of parking on the premises. The phone number is 512-442-8535.

A suggested $15 dollar donation at the door and proceeds from the sale of Hawaiian shirts benefits the New Journalism Project, a Texas 501(c)(3) nonprofit that publishes The Rag Blog and sponsors Rag Radio. Donations are tax-deductible.

Check out the Big Luauski event page at Facebook.

Event: The Big Luauski
What: Thorne Dreyer Birthday Bash & Hawaiian Shirt Blowout
Sponsor: Benefit for The Rag Blog & Rag Radio
Musical performance: Greezy Wheels
When: Thursday, July 28, 2016, 6:30-9:30 p.m.
Where: The High Road on Dawson
Address: 700 Dawson Rd., Austin, TX 78704
Suggested donation: $15 at door; $15 for Hawaiian shirt
Who can come: You!
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