METRO | Alice Embree : Texas stands with Gaza

Thousands march in Austin protesting the Israeli invasion and demanding an end to U.S. complicity.

gaza alice la raza

Thousands march in Austin in support of Gaza. Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | August 6, 2014

gaza march Rami Janoudi

Rami Janoudi / ICPR.

AUSTIN — Thousands convened at the state Capitol in Austin on August 2nd for a rally to protest Israel’s horrific assault on the population of Gaza and demand an end to U.S. complicity in the siege of Gaza.

The rally and march had statewide participation with thousands coming from Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, and Fort Worth, to join the Austin turnout. Six busloads of people came from Houston. The march from Congress Avenue to the Austin City Hall was spirited and diverse.
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METRO | Bruce Melton : Is Austin Energy now against alternative energy?

The future is bright and breezy, not black and dirty. Whatever is going on with Austin Energy misses some very important and fundamental news.

coal train

The light at the end of the tunnel is not a coal train. Photo by Bruce Melton / The Rag Blog.

By Bruce Melton | The Rag Blog | August 5, 2014

AUSTIN — Really? Austin Energy is against alternative energy? A report in the Austin American Statesman on Friday, August 1, says just that. Why? Austin just signed a contract for 150 Mw solar for 5 cents per kilowatt-hour (KWh) — likely a new world record! The cost was so cheap that Austin tripled the size of the new facility from 50 to 150 megawatts.

That Statesman article says Michael Osborne, chair of the Generation Resource Planning Task Force and a former Austin Energy executive, said this is half the price of energy from natural gas. The July report from the Austin Generating Task Force has new coal at 5.5 cents per KWh, new nuclear at 10.4 cents, and new natural gas at 2.9 to 10.8 cents per KWh. The cheapest energy in Austin today is from a contract for wind signed by Council in February for 2.6 to 3.6 cents per KWh.
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METRO EVENT | Austin friends to celebrate
the life of John Muir

Event: John Muir’s Wake
Place: Shoal Creek Saloon
Address: 909 North Lamar Blvd., Austin
When: Sunday, August 24, 2014
Hours: 4-6 p.m.
john muir color

John Muir at 2009 reunion of the 12th Street Law Office, an Austin movement law collective. Photo by Carlos Lowry / The Rag Blog.

AUSTIN — Friends of John H. Muir will gather at Shoal Creek Saloon on Sunday, August 24,  to remember him and celebrate his life. The Melancholy Ramblers will provide music.

John was a long-time Austin resident and social justice activist, widely-known and well-loved. He died of natural causes in his home on June 23, 2014, at the age of 68.

John Muir graduated from St. Mark’s School in Dallas, attended Columbia University in New York from 1964-1966, and the University of Texas at Austin from 1968-1969.
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Ron Jacobs :
BOOKS | ‘Technocreep’ and how we are seduced by surveillance

Thomas Keenan has written a helpful description of the kinds of surveillance undertaken by corporations, governments, criminal enterprises, and just plain creeps every second of every day.

technocreep

The use of the word “creep” is a play on its multiple meanings.

By Ron Jacobs | The Rag Blog | August 5, 2014

[Technocreep: The Surrender of Privacy and the Capitalization of Intimacy by Thomas P. Keenan (Sepember 2014: Greystone Books); Paperback; 224 pp; $17.95.]

We live in a world overwhelmed with intrusive technological gadgets. Most of us have learned to live with this fact and many of us have even embraced it. The latter are those who have apps to close their garage door and check the lights at home while they wait for their plane in an airport a thousand miles away. They are also those who post everything they eat and do on social media apps that then store this information for eternity.
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monster ate austin crop
METRO | Roger Baker asks, ‘Is Austin’s “Strategic Mobility Plan” smart planning or a billion dollar boondoggle?’ This one’s a must-read.
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METRO | Alice Embree : A moving memorial for the victims of the UT Tower shootings

Whitman survivor Claire Wilson James said, ‘It was so important to me that a student group organized this event, and that a younger generation is carrying these stories forward.’

living memorial carlos 1

Living Memorial in front of the Tower at UT-Austin, August 1, 2014. Photo by Carlos Lowry / The Rag Blog.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | August 4, 2014

AUSTIN — Students at the University of Texas held a Living Memorial for the 1966 UT Tower shooting victims on Friday, August 1.

Under a hot August sun, the students led a gathering across the campus from Littlefield Fountain to the Main Mall, the West Mall, and then to an area adjacent to the Turtle Pond on the north side of the Tower. Six times they stopped to hold up photos of the dead and read to those assembled a few words about the 17 lives that were lost. One of the victims recognized was David Gunby who died from injuries years after the event. His death was ruled a homicide.
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Thomas McKelvey Cleaver :
Tonkin Gulf: The event that changed my
life forever

I was a fly on the wall. I was a member of the staff of the operational command under whose authority the destroyers USS Maddox and USS Turner Joy would enter the history books.

uss Maddox

USS Maddox.

By Thomas McKelvey Cleaver | The Rag Blog | August 4, 2014

[Thomas Cleaver will be Thorne Dreyer’s guest Friday, August 8, on Rag Radio, 2-3 p.m. (CDT) on KOOP 91.7-FM in Austin, Texas, and streamed live here.]

Fifty years ago, on August 4, 1964, an event happened that turned my life inside-out, upside down (or so I thought at the time; in retrospect it was turned right-side-up), and 180 degrees from what it had been. As I came to deal with it, I would question everything I thought I knew about the history of my country, and my relationship to that country.

History knows the event as the “Tonkin Gulf Incident,” the beginning of formal American combat involvement in the war in Vietnam, that would spread to Southeast Asia, the causus belli that would send half a million of my fellow Americans into combat, leading to the death of more than 58,000 of them over the next nine years. More than a million Asians would die as a result. The United States would nearly be torn asunder, its future changed irrevocably.
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living memorial carlos 1
METRO | Alice Embree reports on a
moving memorial for the victims of the UT
Tower shootings.
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Alan Waldman :
New Zealand’s ‘Outrageous Fortune’ is an extremely clever comedy-drama TV series

An adorable cast creates a West Auckland criminal family struggling to go straight after its leader is imprisoned.

outrageous fortune1

Outrageous Fortune cast: Prebble, Starr (as Jethro), Malcom, Starr (as Van), Marshall, Bowler, Whitten.

By Alan Waldman | The Rag Blog | August 3, 2014

[In his weekly column, Alan Waldman reviews some of his favorite films and TV series that readers may have missed, including TV dramas, mysteries, and comedies from Canada, England, Ireland, Australia, and Scotland. Most are available on DVD and/or Netflix, and some episodes are on YouTube.]

I am currently watching (on Netflix Instant streaming) and thoroughly enjoying the fourth of six seasons of the lively New Zealand criminal family comedy-drama Outrageous Fortune. It is a guilty pleasure I have become addicted to. Airing 107 episodes from 2005-2010, it is the longest-running drama series made in New Zealand.
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Susan Van Haitsma :
Remembering our roots: Equality rejects war

As the failures of war strategies have become increasingly obvious, the benefits of nonviolent approaches based on the principle of equality have become more obvious.

mother earth

Image from Educating Humanity.

By Susan Van Haitsma | The Rag Blog | July 30, 2014

At the root of every major religious tradition in the world is the belief that all human lives are equally valuable: our neighbors as ourselves. The fundamental equality of persons is also the thesis of the U.S. Declaration of Independence. Though declared within a system of vast inequalities, the statement rang true from the beginning as an acknowledgement that equality and freedom are inextricably linked.

In my lifetime, freedom movements have made the strongest gains when they’ve modeled equality through a commitment to nonviolence. By guarding the right of one’s adversary to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, one is holding open the possibility that the adversary could become an ally, and that’s the way a healthy movement grows.
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Larry Ray :
A little bombing quiz for you

In the two photos below please identify which bombing was ordered by Bashar al-Assad and which one by Benjamin Netanyahu.

gaza bombing

Still Winning Hearts and Minds.

By Larry Ray | The Rag Blog | July 30, 2014, 2014

There are two photos below and both are middle Eastern neighborhoods in different countries where families lived… husbands, wives, elderly relatives and lots of kids. Both neighborhoods were destroyed in a show of force by political leaders who called up ruthless and incessant shelling and bombing against civilians, all the while denying they were doing so.

These were political and tactical decisions to use deadly force to achieve total control of a populace… the old “bombing your way to peace” is still happening with a vengeance.
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Jim Simons :
The 50-year lawyer: Defying the systems of power

I knew that what I would write would never be published by the ‘Bar Journal.’ So I happily write it for ‘The Rag Blog.’ Here I stand, though the road was not exactly what I expected.

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Lawyer Jim Simons at his Austin law office. Image from the Feb. 25, 1977 Texas Observer special issue on Texas lawyers. Jim wrote an article entitled, “Memoirs of a Movement Lawyer.”

By Jim Simons | The Rag Blog | July 30, 2014

AUSTIN — In 1964 I was sworn in to practice law in the old Supreme Court Building just northwest of the Capitol. I had many notions of what I was in for. Some were just the stuff of bad dreams, some absurdly romantic or idealistic.

There was a still small voice that told me I did not want to do this. Lawyers were said to be stuffy and conservative. I knew I was not the latter and hoped I was not the former. I had deep-seated doubts about how I might fit in. I knew I was very much an outsider in law school. I had rebelled against the phony solemnity of the institution.
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