eric's blog

The art of (anti) war

The art collective known as We are Dorothy has produced a set of plastic toy soldiers that brilliantly expose the reality of war -- the aftermath and toll it takes on those that come home alive.

http://www.wearedorothy.com/art/casualties-of-war/

Detail from one of the images from their project is reprinted to the right (without permission). Click through and check out the rest. Do it now!

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today's photo:

cool and not cool

25 Abandoned Yugoslavia Monuments that look like they're from the Future
http://www.cracktwo.com/2011/04/25-abandoned-soviet-monuments-that-look....
some of these are really cool.

Former Military Interrogator Matthew Alexander: Despite GOP Claims, "Immoral" Torture "Slowed Down" Effort to Find Osama bin Laden
http://www.democracynow.org/2011/5/4/former_military_interrogator_matthe...
not in any way cool.

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photo, no content

I spent the evening at the ABC No Rio benefit party so I really don't have anything to say other than please support abc no rio. It's a great project that deserves your support.

A few well reasoned statements about the death of Bin Laden

Today, I have little to say other than "can we please, as a nation, regain our sanity? please!"

Obama vs. Osama Smackdown:
What Just Happened?

http://mediastudy.com/articles/av5-5-11.html
Then came all the jubilation – which is actually quite frightening in its own right. Granted that that Bin Laden, one of the world’s most outspoken and aggressive social conservatives, was certainly a Class A Scumbag. And granted that his vision of a global theocratic misogynist dictatorship would be hell for most of us. And granted also that his tactical strategies of using terror to impose minority tyranny over a majority is why we have revolutions against leaders like him. It still is beneath us as humans to outwardly celebrate his killing. So pardon me for raining on anyone’s parade by using terms such as “bloodlust” to describe mobs celebrating assassinations or “targeted killings.” It’s just that I’m a wee bit uncomfortable with the whole barbarism ethos. We could tastefully be happy that Bin Laden’s gone and congratulate those who risked their lives to try to bring him to justice. But no.

We got spontaneous fireworks in Los Angeles. Time magazine’s Michael Grunwald began his May 2 nd editorial, writing “This is an exciting day–I can’t remember ever feeling jubilant about someone’s death before . . .” Vanity Fair’s Todd Purdum, wrote that “it was both shocking and giddily uplifting last night to see the cheering throng that flocked to the North Front [of the White House], every bit as ebullient as the British crowds that pressed against the fence at Buckingham Palace on Friday for the much-ballyhooed royal wedding.” What does all of this hoopla say about us?

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"USA! USA!" is the wrong response
Bin Laden's death is a great relief, but by cheering it we're mimicking our worst enemies
http://www.salon.com/news/politics/war_room/2011/05/02/osama_and_chants_...
There is ample reason to feel relief that Osama bin Laden is no longer a threat to the world, and I say that not just because I was among the many congressional staffers told to flee the U.S. Capitol on 9/11. I say that because he was clearly an evil person who celebrated violence against all whom he deemed "enemies" -- and the world needs less of such zealotry, not more.

For decades, we have held in contempt those who actively celebrate death. When we’ve seen video footage of foreigners cheering terrorist attacks against America, we have ignored their insistence that they are celebrating merely because we have occupied their nations and killed their people. Instead, we have been rightly disgusted -- not only because they are lauding the death of our innocents, but because, more fundamentally, they are celebrating death itself. That latter part had been anathema to a nation built on the presumption that life is an "unalienable right."

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Chris Hedges Speaks on Osama bin Laden’s Death
http://www.truth-out.org/chris-hedges-speaks-osama-bin-laden%E2%80%99s-d...
I spent a year of my life covering al-Qaida for The New York Times. It was the work in which I, and other investigative reporters, won the Pulitzer Prize. And I spent seven years of my life in the Middle East. I was the Middle East bureau chief for The New York Times. I’m an Arabic speaker. And when someone came over and told Jean and me the news, my stomach sank. I’m not in any way naïve about what al-Qaida is. It’s an organization that terrifies me. I know it intimately.

But I’m also intimately familiar with the collective humiliation that we have imposed on the Muslim world. The expansion of military occupation that took place throughout, in particular the Arab world, following 9/11 – and that this presence of American imperial bases, dotted, not just in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Doha – is one that has done more to engender hatred and acts of terror than anything ever orchestrated by Osama bin Laden.

When I was in New York, as some of you were, on 9/11, I was in Times Square when the second plane hit. I walked into The New York Times, I stuffed notebooks in my pocket and walked down the West Side Highway and was at Ground Zero four hours later. I was there when Building 7 collapsed. And I watched as a nation drank deep from that very dark elixir of American nationalism … the flip side of nationalism is always racism, it’s about self-exaltation and the denigration of the other.

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4 months later

I'm now 4 months into this experiment with posting some content and photos here every day. A third of the year has passed and I'm still going. When I started this, I did not expect that I would make it this far. It has been a healthy experience.

The idea of posting new photos every day has become a bit of an obsession. If it gets late in the afternoon and I have not yet done my walk around the neighborhood with my camera, I get anxious. This means that even on days when I am overloaded with work to do; even when I am fighting with a server or code problem that would normally keep me in front of the computer for days, I get my ass up, step away from the desk and go outside every day. Surprisingly, this has made it easier to focus on getting things done.

Even when I was so sick I could not get out of bed for more than 10 minutes at a time, I managed to get something posted which led to an interesting sense of having at least accomplished something with my day.

The idea of using my father's camera to show him my life has been really therapeutic as well. Yesterday, it was 6 months since he passed away. The photographic daily ritual has helped me make my peace with him and his death.

I think there are about 5 to 10 people actually reading my daily babble; on some days that might go as high as 100. Considering I'm not saying much, I find that to be a lot of eyes. I'll do my best to make the content more interesting in the next few months.

Props to Noah Scalin for instigating this experiment.

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