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Showing posts from June, 2019

America Goddam

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Alabama's gotten me so upset Tennessee made me lose my rest And everybody knows about Mississippi goddam - Nina Simone, Mississippi Goddam On the 55th aniversary of the murder of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwermer, we share an excerpt from our article on the wonderful film, Freedom on my Mind. One year after the assassination of Medgar Evers, on June 21 of 1964, word started to spread that three Mississippi civil rights workers - James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner - were missing. First the burned-out car appeared, then the bodies were found on August 12. What many suspected was later revealed: the cops and Klan worked hand-in-hand to murder the three Freedom Summer men. Normal Rockwell, Murder in Mississippi (1965)

If the World Ended on a Tuesday

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Black Mirror's 15 Million Merrits When Google Calendar went offline this past Tuesday, CNN wrote, “it took with it a sense of time and stability in offices and households across the country (and parts of Europe, South America, Asia and Africa).” Many took to Twitter to engage in something of a collective, if subconscious, meditation on the nature of the work day. Despite a satirical undertone, the way in which people reacted to a disruption of the work day speaks volumes. Though not as significant as the pause in motion post-9/11 (so severe it warranted a “get back to shopping” plea from Bush Jr . ), the calendar’s disappearance did cause a disruption in the flow of everyday life under capitalism, as millions of workers worldwide faced an unexpected (and very much welcomed) hitch in the wage labor process. The following is my own little meditation on the momentary hitch as expressed through various quotes and Twitter posts. ---- “Work has come to so dominate our existence th

Chicken Feet

You need to let yourself go   you need to loosen up. You’re perfectly safe and just need some fun, Have you drugged my food? No I’ve drugged your cup. La Llorona, don’t look down, don’t listen, don’t drink old haggard pots.   But my mother has seen real death without the need of a frigid absconse. So relax I’m perfectly safe beneath the smirking moon. Still, woman or witch? but tonight will not do, My boy clamors and cries for something old and new. He won’t get it, fear wins, the veil was long stripped so again like tonight tomorrow and the next day I’ll tidy up and sit.

A Russian and West Indian in Revolutionary Sudan

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Born are the beautiful children, hour by hour with brightest eyes, and loving hearts you have bestowed upon  fatherland, they will come, for bullets aren't the seeds of life.  - Mahjoub Sharif, Born are the Beautiful Children The Imprisoned Poet Famed activist and poet Mahjoub Sharif was imprisoned for the first time in 1970 by the National Revolutionary Command Council, chaired by the soon-to-be 15-year president of Sudan, Gaafar Nimeiry. The recipient of a Master’s Degree in Military Science from Fort Leavenworth, Nimeiry retained power until 1985, when one of many military coups (succeeded by one of many Transitional Military Councils) led to the rise of Ahmad Al-Mirghani in what is considered the last democratic election in the country’s tumultuous political history. Enter (via yet another military coup) the first of several starring characters: Omar al-Bashir, chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council for National Salvation from 1989 to 1993, then president from 19

Jimmy

Across the street, you sit cross-legged and bare, my friend and I suspect at your stare. I’m sorry that I — I don’t know your words but in four weeks, I’ll be gone and you’ll be deathly unheard. Jimmy. Jimmy, don’t say a word, sit on your porch and fix at the birds. Sixty, seventy, or eighty years old I don’t know but I’ve seen my twenty untold. In four weeks I’ll be stripped up and back to my school and you’ll, still be here alone in the soil.

White Walls and One Corner

“Can you let me out of here?” The little blue light kept blinking and he took a break from badgering the rectangular fixture. Looking to the middle of the room, he kept talking. “I wish I was hungry so that I could tell you what I wanted to eat. Imagine the endless ideas that would come up in my head. But if I were hungry then I’d have to stop talking to eat it once you gave me whatever I wanted, so I’m also glad I’m not hungry. I actually figured this problem out already… I thought I was a tragic figure condemned to falling asleep because sometimes I’m mute in my dreams. I don’t think you know how to dream and I hardly think you know how to talk. All you have is a ‘yes’ this, strangely enough never a no.” After each morning’s customary requests, he rambled on for hours. The only color in the white cushioned room—besides his flamboyant wardrobe—was the steadily blinking blue light. The space was usually small with just enough room for some sort of comical priso