METRO | Life goes on at Austin’s Death Café

Death Cafés are a community-based response to a mass media-plagued modern American culture that has no place for end-of-life discussion.

told you i was sick

Image from Death Café Austin / Facebook.

By Beverly Baker Moore | The Rag Blog | April 16, 2014

AUSTIN — Death Café is a nation-wide salon movement where local people provide pleasant places and spaces where anyone who has anything to say about any issue related to the last stage of life is welcome to say it.

In Austin on a recent mild Thursday evening it took the form of a small group of interesting, nonjudgmental folks passing a talking stick (actually a bone in this instance… and not a human bone it was pointed out to me) among themselves as they shared food and drink at a coffee shop on North Lamar. Any story, concern, statement or question about passing from this world to whatever was welcome.
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Rick Ayers :
Crimea, Obama, and the nostalgia for World War I

The poet Wilfred Owen had the courage to look reality in the face. What can he tell us?

Wilfred Owen's regiment

The poet Wilfred Owen’s World War I regiment. Image from Voices Compassionate Education.

By Rick Ayers | The Rag Blog | April 16, 2014

It is fitting that President Obama should quote the poem “In Flanders Fields” while visiting Belgium and invoking World War I history in seeking to rally Europe into a united front against Russia.

There is something thrilling, almost comforting, for the West to return to the rhetoric and certainties of the Cold War – the evil Russian bear against the peace-loving democracies of the West. Suddenly millions of people in America are passionate about a place they had not heard of a few months ago and they still cannot find on a map.
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Mariann G. Wizard :
VERSE | Stronger and More Dangerous

dope cops

Image from Phawker.

By Mariann G. Wizard | The Rag Blog | April 16, 2014

Stronger and More Dangerous:
April 20, 2014

I read it in the newsfeeds,
I hear it all the time:
the marijuana grown today
is not the same as in my prime!
They say it’s much more potent,
with such a heady buzz,
it’s got to be real dangerous…
Well, let me tell you, Cuz,
I hope the stuff is stronger!
Yes, and much more ‘potent,’ too!
The kids are gonna need it
if they’re gonna make it through
the balled-up mess we’ve made of things
from sea to shining sea!
Too long we’ve trod on other lives –
now they’ll grow reefers tall as trees!

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jayme and dreyer
METRO PAGE | Beverly Baker Moore reports that ‘Life goes on at Austin’s Death Café.’
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Lamar W. Hankins :
The symbolic stoning of Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Brandeis University rescinds speaking invitation to Somali-born writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali, an outspoken critic of denigration of women in Islamic societies.

ayaan hirsi ali 2

Ayaan Hirsi Ali in Paris. Photo by Martin Bureau / AFP / Getty Images.

By Lamar W. Hankins | The Rag Blog | April 15, 2014

The Somali-born writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali was to be the commencement speaker next month at Brandeis University, named for former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis. But voices of hysteria, censorship, and bullying won the day and Brandeis University’s president rescinded the invitation and the honorary degree she was to receive because of Hirsi Ali’s outspoken criticism of the widespread Islamic degradation and denigration of women.

I read her autobiographical book Infidel seven years ago. Her life story is compelling, educational, and unique. She left Somalia with her family as a little girl because of the civil strife in that country and lived in Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, and finally Kenya. At the age of 21 she immigrated to the Netherlands, eventually becoming a member of the Dutch Parliament.
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METRO | San Antonio art show takes on the South Texas ‘fracking frenzy’

frackaso

Exhibit: Frackaso: Portraits of Extraction in Eagle Ford and Beyond
Opening reception: Friday, April 18, 7 p.m.
Place: Esperanza Peace & Justice Center
Address: 922 San Pedro Avenue, San Antonio
Dates of exhibit: Friday, April 18 – Sunday, August 31, 2014
Gallery hours: 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
More information: 210-228-0201

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | April 15, 2014

SAN ANTONIO — An art exhibit opening Friday, April 18, at the Esperanza Peace & Justice Center in San Antonio features photographs, visual and literary art, installations, performance, and film. Frackaso: Portraits of Extraction in Eagle Ford and Beyond takes on the fracking frenzy in South Texas and, well, beyond.
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jayme and dreyer
FRONT PAGE | See Rag Radio interview with Austin school trustee and East Austin community activist, Rev. Dr. Jayme Mathias.
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Thorne Dreyer :
PODCAST | Rev. Dr. Jayme Mathias, Austin school trustee and American Catholic priest, on Rag Radio

The Hon. Rev. Dr. Jayme Mathias is an East Austin community activist and the first openly-gay member of the Austin school board.

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Rev. Dr. Jayme Mathias, center, with Rag Radio host Thorne Dreyer and, far right, engineer Tracey Schulz, at the KOOP studios in Austin, April 4, 2014. Photos by Roger Baker / The Rag Blog.

Interview by Thorne Dreyer | The Rag Blog | April 15, 2014

The Rev. Dr. Jayme Mathias — an Austin community activist, a priest in the American Catholic Church, and the first openly-gay member of the Austin School Board — joins us on Rag Radio, Friday, April 4, 2014, in a lively discussion of issues ranging from Pope Francis and his emphasis on inclusion, to the threat to public education from privatization and charter schools, to gentrification and displacement of minorities and the poor in East Austin and elsewhere.

Listen to or download the podcast of our April 4, 2014, Rag Radio interview with the Hon. Rev. Dr. Jayme Mathias, here:
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Dave Zirin :
SPORT | Pat Tillman, the Boston Marathon, and a Tale of Two Anniversaries

Two upcoming sports anniversaries contain elements of tragedy, honor, and courage. But one won’t get much attention.

pat tillman small

Cpl. Pat Tillman in 2003. A pro football player turned Army Ranger, he was killed by “friendly fire” in Afghanistan in 2004. Photo by AP.

By Dave Zirin | The Rag Blog | April 15, 2014

Two wrenching anniversaries loom in the world of sports. Both are in many respects conjoined by the dominant narratives of the 21st century. Both show how the military adventures of the last decade have even breached the escapist sanctity of the sports page. Both contain elements of tragedy, honor, and courage. But you can guarantee, that one of these anniversaries will get a whole hell of a lot more attention than the other.

On Monday, April 21, the Boston Marathon will take place, and we will be compelled to remember the horror of last year’s bombing attack at the finish line. Three were killed and over 250 were injured. Two immigrant brothers, driven by their anger, ideology, and alienation towards what is called “The Global War on Terror” set the blasts. Two brothers: one now dead the other facing state execution.
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METRO | Proposed system for court-appointed attorneys must have accountability

dog lawyer

Lawyer up. Cartoon from TheDogs.

By Lamar W. Hankins | The Rag Blog | April 14, 2014

TRAVIS COUNTY — The proposal, reported in the Austin American-Statesman on April 12, to create a new system for the appointment of attorneys who represent poor criminal defendants in Travis County may have merit if there is sufficient accountability provided in the new system, a factor largely missing from the current court-appointed process.
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Bob Feldman :
People’s History of Egypt, Part 21, Section 2, 1992-2000

A 2001 Human Rights Watch report outlined the severe human rights violations of the Mubarak regime between 1992 and 2000.

Saad Eddin Ibrahim

Prominent Egyptian social scientist and human rights activist Saad Eddin Ibrahim was imprisoned by Mubarak.

By Bob Feldman | The Rag Blog | April 14, 2014

[With all the dramatic activity in Egypt, Bob Feldman’s Rag Blog “people’s history” series, “The Movement to Democratize Egypt,” could not be more timely. Also see Feldman’s “Hidden History of Texas” series on The Rag Blog.]

An October 2001 Human Rights Watch background report indicated in the following way the degree to which the U.S. government-backed Mubarak regime had still failed to democratize Egyptian society very much between 1992 and 2000:
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Alan Waldman :
‘Dirty, Pretty Things’ with Oscar nominee Chiwetel Ejiofor is a movie you should see

Drama, exposé, thriller, and more, this is a powerful film that grabs and holds you from beginning to surprise ending.

dirty pretty things poster

Chiwetel Ejiofor stars in Dirty Pretty Things.

By Alan Waldman | The Rag Blog | April 14, 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, and Scotland. Most are available on DVD and/or Netflix, and some episodes are on YouTube.]

Dirty, Pretty Things is a powerful 2002 British film, available on DVD, Netflix, and Netflix Instant streaming, about the harrowing challenges facing two undocumented immigrants who work at a posh London hotel and live in constant fear of deportation.
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