Dave Zirin :
Richard Sherman’s refusal to be a brand

If you’re going to root against the Seahawks, please do it for the right reasons. Not so Richard Sherman gets some kind of lip-buttoning comeuppance.

Photo of Richard Sherman

Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman. Photo by Mark Samia, Flickr.  Image from The Nation.

By Dave Zirin | The Rag Blog | January 26, 2014

I was done writing about Super Bowl bound Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman. I was done writing about the polarizing, perspicacious, Pro Bowler who with one iconic post-game interview morphed into our latest national Rorschach test about racism and sports. I was done partly because I had already written about him and partly because others have said it better. (Find great articles about Sherman and race here, here, and here.) Continue reading

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Steve Russell :
ALEC: All power to the (corporate) people

Those who serve in legislative bodies seldom read what they vote on and virtually never write the bills they drop into the legislative sausage machine.

alec baloon

ALEC provides legislators with ready-made laws. Image from EdVotes.org.

By Steve Russell | The Rag Blog | January 22, 2014

Cheap shots have been taken at the Affordable Care Act — Obamacare — on the ground that most of the Congress that voted for it never read it. The shot is true. What makes it cheap is ignorance.

Cheap shots were taken within my tribal government at former Principal Chief Chad Smith because, working on a law drafting project for the tribe as a young lawyer, he started with a photocopy of the Oklahoma law on the same subject. As best I can tell without asking Smith directly, the shot is true but, again, what makes it cheap is ignorance.
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Robert Jensen :
The ideology problem: Thomas Patterson’s failed technocratic dream for journalism

Paterson’s new book is an excellent account of contemporary journalism’s struggles — as long as one defines excellence within the narrow confines bounded by the ideology of the powerful.

informing the news

Patterson’s book is excellent but limited account of contemporary journalism’s struggles.

By Robert Jensen | The Rag Blog | January 22, 2014

[Informing the News: The Need for Knowledge-Based Journalism by Thomas Patterson (2013: Vintage Books/Random House); Paperback; 256 pp; $15.]

Thomas Patterson’s new book on the current crises in journalism is organized around six specific problems, starting with “The Information Problem” and moving through Source, Knowledge, Education, Audience, and Democracy problems.

All problems, indeed. But, unfortunately, there is no chapter on the most crippling affliction of mainstream journalism in the United States: “The Ideology Problem.” That missing chapter would help explain the routine failure of mainstream journalism at what should be its central task in a democratic society — to analyze and critique systems of power to help ordinary people take greater control over our lives. The fact that this subject is missing helps explain the limited value of Patterson’s analysis.
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Lamar W. Hankins :
War on Drugs and ‘gateway’ madness

We should face up to the failure of the War on Drugs as public policy and seek a better way that is consistent with individual rights and personal responsibility.

pot opens the door

Image from United Kingdom Cannabis Social Clubs.

By Lamar W. Hankins | The Rag Blog | January 22, 2014

There are three good reasons, apart from getting high, to support the legalization of marijuana (cannabis) in the U.S.: it has medical uses; it will correct one of the most egregious injustices in the criminal justice system — the racial disparity in arrests, prosecutions, and sentencing; and it will allow again the cultivation of industrial hemp in the U.S.

Lately, since the popular votes in Colorado and Washington favoring the legalization of marijuana, many talking heads and pundits are weighing in on marijuana use and abuse. Back in the 60s, every pothead I knew thought that we were just months, or at most a couple of years, away from legalization (or at least decriminalization) of marijuana use. They were as wrong about that issue as many pundits today are wrong about marijuana legalization, although a few seem to understand, at least in part.
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David P. Hamilton :
On living in France

Within the narrow parameters of my own life, living in Paris was epic. I returned stunned, trying to determine what the experience had meant to us.

Entrance to the Marche d'Aligre. Photo by David P. Hamilton / The Rag Blog.

Entrance to the Marche d’Aligre. Photo by David P. Hamilton / The Rag Blog.

By David P. Hamilton | The Rag Blog | January 22, 2014

“’Americans should never come to Europe,’ she said, and tried to laugh and began to cry. ‘It means they never can be happy again. What’s the good of an American who isn’t happy? Happiness was all we had.’” — James Baldwin, from Giovanni’s Room

Last year my wife Sally and I spent six months living in Paris. This was our seventh stay of two weeks or longer in Paris during the past decade. But this visit was longer than all the others combined. It was an attempt to get beyond being tourists, to actually “live” outside the U.S. for an extended period, to assimilate another culture to a qualitatively greater degree. Where better than Paris? That ambition was at the top of my “bucket list.”
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Alan Waldman :
‘Murphy’s Law’ is gripping Irish TV series about a gutsy undercover cop

James Nesbitt stars as a Northern Irishman whose daughter has been murdered by the IRA and who goes undercover to fight myriad dangerous criminals.

Murphy's Law (2)

James Nesbitt goes undercover on Murphy’s Law.

By Alan Waldman | The Rag Blog | January 21, 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.]

Murphy’s Law stars multiple-award-winning Irish actor James Nesbitt, who is excellent as a London police detective who goes undercover to infiltrate groups responsible for murder, car theft, drug trafficking, blackmail, identity theft, money laundering, counterfeiting, smuggling, and more.
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Marilyn Katz :
Women vs. the Catholic Church, Round 2

Just whose rights was the Constitution written to protect? It is women, not institutions, who are at the center of this debate.

hospital health care cartoon

Graphic from Bilgrimage.

By Marilyn Katz | The Rag Blog | January 20, 2014

Exactly whom — or what — do the constitution’s guarantees of freedom protect? That’s the question that the Supreme Court has indicated it will take up when Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor surprised many, including me, by putting a temporary injunction against implementation of the aspects of the Affordable Care Act that require institutions to provide birth control coverage in its insurance offerings.

For those who might somehow have missed it, Judge Sotomayor’s actions came in response to a lawsuit filed by two organizations affiliated with the Catholic Church — both of which claim that the requirement violates the Constitution’s guarantee of freedom of religion.
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Thorne Dreyer :
Austin Music Award-winning singer-songwriter Gina Chavez joins us on Rag Radio

Gina Chavez sings for us and talks Pope Francis, her mission work with young women in El Salvador, and the Internet-era music scene.

gina chavez studio small crop

Gina Chavez in the studios of KOOP-FM in Austin, Texas, Friday, January 10, 2014. Photo by Roger Baker / The Rag Blog.

By Rag Radio | The Rag Blog | January 20, 2014

Austin Music Award-winning singer-songwriter Gina Chavez was our guest  on Rag Radio Friday, January 10, 2014. She joined us in discussion and performed live on the show.

Rag Radio is a weekly syndicated radio program produced and hosted by long-time alternative journalist and Rag Blog editor Thorne Dreyer and recorded at the studios of KOOP 91.7-FM, a cooperatively-run all-volunteer community radio station in Austin, Texas.
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Bob Feldman :
A People’s History of Egypt, Part 13, 1948-1949

The movement to democratize Egypt: King Farouk confronts Zionist forces, imposes martial law.

king farouk 1948

Egyptian King Farouk at Battle of Nitzanim, 1948. Image from Yad Vashem Photo Archive.

By Bob Feldman / The Rag Blog / January 20, 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.]

Despite its  earlier business links with some pro-Zionist Egyptian businesspeople, in 1948 the Egyptian monarchical regime joined other Arab governments in attempting to block the eviction of Palestinian Arabs from Palestine and the establishment of a Zionist state in Palestine by militarily opposing the Zionist movement’s military forces.
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Paul Krassner :
Predictions for 2014

The all-seeing and all-knowing one lifts the veil. Just a little. Enough for a peek.

Uh oh.

By Paul Krassner | The Rag Blog | January 15, 2014

  • Steve Jobs, the late founder and chief designer of the Apple Empire, will be honored posthumously by the Wall Street Journal for morphing the concept of planned obsolescence from a negative aspect of capitalism into a shrewd marketing virtue.
  • Toddlers who can turn the pages of an electronic magazine on iPad with the swipe of a finger will get frustrated and have tantrums trying to turn the pages of a physical print magazine.
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Alice Embree and Phil Prim :
Remembering Judy Smith

Judith Hart Smith, 1944-2013

judy smith telephone pogue

Judy Smith answers the women’s reproductive rights hotline at the University YMCA, next door to the Rag office, in Austin, Texas, 1970. Photo by Alan Pogue /The Rag.

Judy Smith was the face of feminism
at The Rag for many years.

Judy Smith, who had a great and lasting impact on all who knew and worked with her, died November 6, 2013, in Missoula, Montana, after a lengthy battle with cancer. Alice Embree knew Judy from the Austin women’s movement and, along with Phil Prim and photographer Alan Pogue, worked with her at Austin’s underground newspaper, The Rag.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | January 14, 2014

Judy Smith was the face of feminism at The Rag for many years. She was tall, athletic, smart, and comfortable with leadership. She was a driving force for women’s liberation and a mentor to many women. Sarah Weddington in her book, A Question of Choice, credits Judy Smith as being instrumental in the decision to take Roe v. Wade to court. The case resulted in the 1973 Supreme Court decision protecting choice.
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Bill Meacham :
Learning from Zarathustra

Zarathustra is appropriately called the First Prophet. He spoke of themes later to be found in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam: a single universal God, the battle between good and evil, the devil, heaven and hell, and an eventual end to the world.

fravashi

Image from Philosophy for Real Life.

By Bill Meacham | The Rag Blog | January 15, 2014

The universe, as they say, gave me an opportunity recently to read a couple of books on Zarathustra and Zoroastrianism. (Why we seem to want to personalize such events and attribute agency to them is a topic for another time.)

A few years ago I had traveled to Uzbekistan and seen for myself the land in which Zoroastrianism first arose, so I jumped at the opportunity to learn more. This essay is a summary and interpretation of what I found out. Don’t take it as an authoritative account of Zarathustra’s teachings; it’s just an account of some things that seemed noteworthy to me.
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