Archive for the 'Politics' Category



13
Apr

The Shifting Art Offensive

Public funding for art has always been a prickly issue. In Canada, the movie industry is rallying against a bill that would deny tax credits to film productions deemed offensive:

The change to the Income Tax Act (Bill C-10) would allow [Heritage Minister Josée] Verner, or a government committee, to deny tax credits to productions deemed offensive and “contrary to public policy.” Members of the Canadian film and television industry have criticized the possible amendment for threatening to deplete Canadian production by casting doubt over its financing.

The amendment has also been condemned by the Canadian Film and Television Production Association for having been possibly motivated by special interest groups.
When asked if Bill C-10 were influenced by the head of the Canadian Family Action Coalition Charles McVety - who has claimed credit for the provision - Verner denied any involvement.

“Offensive” is a relative term, of course – McVety feels that tax credits should be withheld from film films that promote homosexuality, extreme violence or graphic sex. Which acts qualify as such and whether all depictions necessarily constitute promotion is unclear. However, Canada’s fiction-based movie issue pales next to the furor brewing in Costa Rica over the “torture art” of Guillermo Vargas Habacuc. Having received honorable mention at the 2006 Central American Biennial, the 50-year old artist caused a firestorm with his 2007 display Eres lo que lees (“You are what you read”). According to British newspaper The Guardian, Habacuc leashed a stray dog without direct access to any food or water, but within smelling range of the dog biscuits used to create the title. The display also included the Sandinista anthem being played backwards along with a large amount of crack-cocaine smoldering in an incense burner. The dog reportedly died on the scene without any intervention by Habacuc or the audience.

A Central American artist who used a starving dog as the centrepiece for his exhibition has unleashed a storm of protest.  In the name of art, he chained the animal and deprived it of food and water.

Habacuc defended his display as a reflection on society’s treatment of animals:

Hello everyone. My name is Guillermo Vargas Habacuc. I am 50 years old and an artist. Recently, I have been criticized for my work titled “Eres lo que lees”, which features a dog named Nativity. The purpose of the work was not to cause any type of infliction on the poor, innocent creature, but rather to illustrate a point. In my home city of San Jose, Costa Rica, tens of thousands of stray dogs starve and die of illness each year in the streets and no one pays them a second thought. Now, if you publicly display one of these starving creatures, such as the case with Nativity, it creates a backlash that brings out a big of hypocrisy in all of us. Nativity was a very sick creature and would have died in the streets anyway.

Visitors to Central America or the Caribbean have most likely run into a few of the many stray dogs that run around the countryside and occasionally in the city (the strays in Trinidad enjoy walking along very thin brick barriers that separate mountain roads from +100 foot drops). Thus, the informed skeptic’s question is simple: if Habacuc is so interested in drawing attention to the plight of stray animals, why didn’t he just photograph some of readily-available examples?

Furthermore, his statement that the dog would have died anyway smacks of opportunism. Imagine if a Costa Rican government official suggested that dangerous drug experiments should be performed on the sick and destitute since they will probably die anyway.

A Central American artist who used a starving dog as the centrepiece for his exhibition has unleashed a storm of protest.  In the name of art, he chained the animal and deprived it of food and water.

Alas, attaching the word “art” to an act or display seems to invite defense for what would otherwise be considered psychopathic and indefensible. Juanita Bermudez, director of the gallery, asserted that the dog was only tied up during the public display and didn’t die on the premises (which contradicts the implication of Hubacuc’s earlier quote). Similarly, there will be many arguments about how art is supposed to challenge the senses and evoke strong reactions among its viewers.

Perhaps. However, most art accomplishes this through depiction. Action movies, death metal and first person shooter games all deal heavily with the macabre but do not physically commit violent acts to convey the message.

The Central American Biennial is one of a network of general art shows and the official sponsorship list has proven evasive. Assuming there was at least SOME government funding involved, would it have been appropriate to withdraw support for the show based on Hubacuc’s cruelty? Arguably, most Canadians would say yes. But by doing so, are we putting ourselves in league with McVety and his moral police? It seems the best solution would be for the government to get out of the art funding business except when commissioning specific works (e.g. a mural on some government property).

The odds that Canada or any other nation will ever settle on a standard for what is “offensive” are vanishingly small. In a free market, people can determine what is to their liking via purchasing art works and attending art shows. Those who are offended can simply not attend and have no other recourse since their dollars are not being used to fund it. If a market-driven approach is ever proven to be heavy-handed, the government could alternatively pass a law withholding funding to “art” involving real (not depicted) activity that would otherwise lead to an arrest.

29
Mar

Movie Review: Fitna

Title: Fitna
Release: 2008
Genre: Documentary
Run Time: 15 Minutes
Studio/Publisher: Geert Wilders
Rating: 20%

Geert Wilders, leader of the far-right Dutch Party for Freedom (PVV), released a bombshell in the form of Fitna – a self-proclaimed documentary and wake up call to Europe in the face of growing Islamicization. Arabic for “disagreement and division among people”, Fitna has caused much division among nations and even within the ranks of those critical to radical Islam. Kurt Westergaard, the Danish cartoonist whose bomb-laden depiction of Mohammed resulted in worldwide riots and death threats, publicly condemned Wilders’ use of his drawings due to the film’s sweeping indictment of Islam as a whole. Web host Network Solutions suspended film’s website and video streaming company LiveLeak hosted the movie for only two days. Pakistan briefly banned YouTube while Al Qaeda has issued a fatwa against the blonde instigator. Controversy, thy name is Geert.

Fitna The Movie (screenshot)

Information-wise, Fitna offers little new material to those who have spent much time studying radical Islam. The 15-minute presentation consists of gory footage spliced with inflammatory Muslim speeches and confrontational suras from the Qur’an. Some viewers will recognize footage originally seen in Islamist documentaries like Beneath the Veil and Cult of the Suicide Bomber. Other video includes of people jumping from the Twin Towers during the 9/11 attacks and neatly-edited clips of executions by Iraqi insurgents.

The soundtrack consists of passages from Edvard Greig’s brooding “Aase’s Death” and Tchaikovsky’s “Arabian Dance” looping intermittently between apocalyptic Muslim prayers. Much of the dialog is in Arabic so most viewers will rely on the [thankfully minimal] English/Dutch subtitles. There is no narration in the film per se but the violent speeches by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and various Imams set the pace just as effectively.

The latter portion of the film pushes the immigration buttons familiar to Wilders’ PVV platform. Under the title “The Netherlands of the Future?”, a graphic slideshow displays images of gay/female executions, blood-smeared children and female circumcisions. This macabre presentation is followed by a series of inflammatory news headlines:
“We do not agree with freedom of speech, because we denounce democracy”
“Explosive increase honor killings in Amsterdam”
“School closes on muslim holidays”
“Jihad-lessons in elementary school”
“Foreign imams allowed in more quickly”
“Mosques under the spell of radical muslim group”
“Suicide commandos in the Netherlands”
“Hamas gathers in Rotterdam”
“Mosque: turning the Netherlands into a muslim state”

Fitna The Movie (screenshot)

Fitna closes with a short clip of a hand turning a page of the Koran. The image fades as the sound of a page tearing is heard. The implication is quickly followed by the message “The sound you just heard was a page being removed from the phone book. For it is not up to me, but to Muslims themselves to tear out the hateful verses from the Quran”. The film’s final message states that Muslim Europeans have no interest but to conquer the west and that Islamic ideology must be defeated by freedom-loving Europeans as Nazism and Communism were before it.

It shouldn’t even need to be said that Fitna is a hatchet job, plain and simple. Compressing 15 minutes of footage and inspiration from Islam’s violent minority and passing it off as the summation of a centuries-old religion that contains over a billion followers smacks of a “solution” in search of a problem. A structurally identical film could be made in the Islamic world about the invasion of Christian (re: coalition) warriors, splicing scenes of dead Iraqi citizens with violent passages in the old testament and assorted rants by Jerry Falwell. The facts presented would be “true”, but hardly representative of the entire Christian world.

Nontheless, such a film would stand as firm proof to Islamists about the need for Muslim forces to crush the Christian enemy. Fitna will appeal similarly to modern-day crusaders who have already convinced themselves of the necessity for a second Crusade.

Fitna The Movie (screenshot)

Offense is in the eye of the beholder, so it would be difficult for an outsider to say whether this film warrants the extreme outcry and calls for censorship – perhaps that’s a Westerner mindset. Stronger anti-Islamic sentiment has long existed on the pages of FrontPageMag or Little Green Footballs and to my knowledge neither of these online publications have been threatened.

Fitna preaches a drastic scenario to the converted and would likely fail to penetrate mainstream Western thought even if it were given wide release. Wilders’ political associations, combined with his decision to attack all of Islam rather than its extremist elements, will cost credibility among discerning audiences.

26
Mar

No Country for Boorish Men

Toronto’s favourite grandstanding politician has done it again. Not content embarrassing himself in a drunken furor at a Leafs game or offending the Asian community with railway-era stereotyping, Councilor Rob Ford has allegedly spread his venom a little closer to home:

Toronto city councillor Rob Ford, a maverick best known for his campaigns against spending at City Hall, has been charged with assaulting and uttering death threats against his wife after police were called to his Etobicoke home yesterday morning.

Mr. Ford was arrested and taken to 22 Division headquarters in Etobicoke and released without bail after promising to appear in court on April 28.

Mr. Ford’s lawyer, Dennis Morris, confirmed the alleged victim is Renata Ford, Mr. Ford’s wife and mother of the couple’s three-year-old daughter and baby son.

Discretion is simply not in this man’s arsenal. Since criminal proceedings are all but guaranteed, Mr. Ford’s political fortune may finally have run out. The press will have a field day dissecting every public aggression and analyze every sneer / hiccup / utterance for meaning. Perhaps we’ll be treated to a panel of experts who will –in hindsight- proclaim that the signs were all there and that the bombastic Ford was a ticking time bomb.

Is Rob Ford a drunk, a wife-beater or a bigot? Possibly (note to lawyers: “possibly” does NOT equal “yes”), but the term boorish seems more appropriate. Rob Ford is a 1950’s man – a pre political-correctness alpha-male for whom getting the job done entails precisely what is written on paper (at which he excels), with the rest of his conduct being precisely none of your business. Unfortunately, this old school brand of politician is easy prey in an internet-driven world where even a slight slip of the tongue can be posted on YouTube, dissected by the mainstream media and blogged by thousands of publicity-hungry pundits before end of day. The proliferation and endless analysis of damning evidence against public figures that will be forever stored in modern data links renders slim any chance of the whitewashing that yesterday’s politicians enjoyed. Many of our favourite historic figures carried scandal and contradiction that would not be so quickly forgiven today:

  • Christopher Columbus, crowned discoverer of much of the Americas, was far from the first to reach western shores. Of course the natives had migrated tens of thousands of years earlier, but confirmed voyages by the Vikings and rumoured voyages by the Irish/English cast doubt on his title as first European. Crediting Columbus for first conceiving a round earth is also incorrect – Greek records show Plato (427 BCE - 347 BCE) teaching his students the idea of a spherical earth. Indian astronomer Aryabhata and Armenian philosopher Anania Shirakatsi also promoted a round earth model long before Columbus was born. Conversely, Al Gore allegedly tried to take credit for inventing the internet and is pilloried for it to this day – on his own supposed invention, no less.
  • Mohandas (”Mahatma”) Gandhi –revered champion of Indian equality and pacifist inspiration for Martin Luther King Jr- became conveniently colonial in his attitude towards native Africans during his time in South Africa. Contrasting his struggle with that of black South Africans, he stated “Ours is one continued struggle sought to be inflicted upon us by the Europeans, who desire to degrade us to the level of the raw Kaffir, whose occupation is hunting and whose sole ambition is to collect a certain number of cattle to buy a wife, and then pass his life in indolence and nakedness.”. At another point he stated in The Indian Opinion “We believe as much in the purity of races as we think they (the Whites) do…by advocating the purity of all races”. Such demagoguery is far more contradictory than post-racial Democrat Barack Obama consorting with a racially-charged preacher.
  • As late as the 1960’s President John F Kennedy’s powerful oratory skills and general charm were sufficient to keep his image generally unsullied by mounting stories of serial infidelity. Though the FBI possessed reports of immoral sexual behaviour going back to World War II, the media (which at the time really was a small fraternity) upheld JFK and Jackie’s marriage as loving and flawless. If only Bill Clinton commanded such loyalty from the press…

None of these posthumously anointed heroes would have survived present-day media scrutiny and at best would have been labeled flawed benefactors. Rob Ford –having not spread western influence, uplifted a people or stared down a communist menace- will in memoriam be a CityNews punch line. His biggest mistake was being born too late. We should keep this in mind before sending him to the gallows.

15
Mar

Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival

1ST ANNUAL MIXED ROOTS FILM & LITERARY FESTIVAL TO BE HELD AT THE JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM

WHAT: The Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival celebrates those who have created and continue to create works addressing the Mixed racial and cultural experience through film screenings, readings and workshops.

WHEN: June 12 - June 15, 2008, in celebration of Loving Day, the anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court decision affirming the right of people of different races to marry.

WHERE: Japanese American National Museum, 369 E. First St., Los Angeles, CA

WHO: Co-producers Heidi Durrow and Fanshen Cox of Mixed Chicks Chat (www.mixedchickschat.com, also available on itunes, keywords: mixed chicks) will host the event. The Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival is inclusive: anyone who identifies as Mixed, has a trans-racial/cultural adoptive family, or who supports interracial/cultural relationships is welcome. Admission to the Festival is free, however, pre-registration at www.mixedrootsfilmandliteraryfestival.org is highly recommended.

WHY: In the past, artists of Mixed heritage and their works have been forced into mono-racial/cultural categories based on antiquated notions such as the ‘one drop rule.’ The Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival validates and celebrates Mixed identity and experience. The goals for the festival are to encourage emerging storytellers to explore the Mixed experience; introduce and encourage role models for future generations of Mixed artists; provide a safe and positive forum for honest discussions about race and culture; and to promote the Mixed experience as a valuable and important part of World History.
Continue reading ‘Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival’

26
Feb

Evolution of the Lovable Cartoon Coon

(it’s still black history month and not all of it is necessarily positive … or history for that matter)

1867 - The Music-Loving Simpletons (Harpers Weekly)

Harper’s Weekly Black Stereotypical Cartoon

Two ignorant, music-lovin Negroes speaking a nearly indecipherable dialect. Harmless and lovable (except around your daughter). This image was adapted for later media productions like Disney’s “Song of the South”.

Early 20th Century - The Golliwog

Golliwog

Inspired by a childhood minstrel rag doll, author Florence Kate Upton created the fictional character Golliwog. In her words, Golliwog was “a horrid sight, the blackest gnome”. Golli would later have his name and image attributed to jams, cigarettes, perfume, jewelry and badges portraying the playing of jazz music. Golli generally had positive interactions with the people around him, but damned if he didn’t look spooky. Most manufacturers that once used the Golliwog image have since changed it or deny any racial implications.

2008 - The Africentric Teacher (via Globe and Mail)

Globe and Mail Cartoon about Africentric Teachers

Cute - look at that African guy wearing a tie. Using his “hip” street savvy he’s going to put y-y-you on the fast path to counting dem crack rocks even faster. Out the way before he bisects that angle, biiiotch!

*cough*

We can let the full-time activists take care of the protests - I’ll be content to point out the “Mop and Pail” has probably done more to boost the Africentric schooling cause than any of its strongest activists ever could. Reducing black teachers to a crude hip-hop stereotype is only going to heighten suspicion and distrust among the many blacks sitting on the fence about this issue. If the alternative to Africentric schooling is in fact sending black kids to a bunch of white adults with the mindset of this cartoonist … well then quite a few children will be learning their math by counting pieces of Kinte cloth.

Most affected by this small-minded attack will be that small number of non-blacks who are opposing these schools on non-malicious grounds. Trustee Josh Matlow falls in this category, as does my colleague Sandy at Crux of the Matter. It’s going to be extremely hard for either of them to make a reasonable argument against race-based schooling without those points inevitably being lumped in with this garbage.

Even the National Post seemed above taking this type of shot.

Other Comments:

“I will make sure that they get to the right people. I don’t know who drew this cartoon. If it was an African, that makes it sadder than ever. But more importantly, we have to make sure our children know their history and know that we have a lot more going for us than ‘Sup Dog. Ridiculous! And don’t talk to me about having a sense of humour. When it comes to putting Black people down and trying to make us look stupid, the history is just too fresh.”
-Nicole Osbourne James @ AfroToronto

“This issue is not at all similar to the ‘ebonics’ debate sparked in the U.S. Instead, supporters of “Black schools” are attempting to address real educational issues, some of which are akin to those found in gender-based schools. Whether or not “Black schools” are the answer, this debate deserves the respect of thoughtful discussion; not glib, insensitive and dare I say racist commentary.”
-Jason Robinson @ aka Activist

07
Feb

Movie Review: Loose Change - Final Cut

Title: Loose Change - Final Cut
Release: 2007
Genre: Documentary
Run Time: 129 Minutes
Publisher: Louder Than Words, LLC
Rating: 80%
URL: http://lc911finalcut.com/

Loose Change Final Cut represents a refreshing approach to the documentary film in that, like mature software, it has been conspicuously updated over several years. Filmmaker Dylan Avery released the original 9/11 documentary in 2005 and the film underwent a second revision (Loose Change Second Cut) before the third and final release. Film updates were spawned by expanded information as well as user feedback and creative tweaking.

Loose Change Final Cut

Chances are you’ve heard many 9/11 theories, spewed emphatically by the same kind of person who thinks the moon landing was faked and that Martians are watching us. No doubt this tin-foil crowd will enjoy Loose Change’s systematic dissection and indictment of the government’s flaccid response to 9/11. However, the movie goes beyond Bush-bashing to provide evidence supplying many post-9/11 questions that still haven’t been adequately addressed by public officials or commissions. Among them:

  • If an airplane hit the low-lying Pentagon, how did it manage to score a direct hit and not leave much debris larger than a color printer? How was this advanced maneuver accomplished by a hijacker pilot whose piloting skills were so poor that American flight instructors openly questioned the validity of his commercial license?
  • If Flight 93 really went down via internal scuffles between passengers and hijackers then how come the wreckage was spread out much further than similar plane crashes in recent history?
  • Why was the US government seemingly disinterested news of money wire transfers from high ranking Pakistani ISI members to alleged hijacker Mohammed Atta - even though these transfers took place just before the terrorist attacks?
  • How could America’s sophisticated air defense system, now known to engage in war games simulating attacks nearly identical to the 9/11 incidents, fail to intercept airborne threats four times in the same morning?

To address these questions, Loose Change presents a plethora of news clips, expert interviews, graphical recreations and witness testimony, convincingly challenging the “official” version of events that lead up to and succeeded the attack on the twin towers. The film typically stops short of pointing the finger exclusively at any one entity and instead leaves the evidence hanging for viewer debate, with the main exception being the Zeitgeist-like call to arms at the close of the film.

Loose Change Final Cut

Loose Change Final Cut has several powerful moments that give pause to even the strongest skeptic. About 2/3 the way through the film, discussion turns towards WTC tower #7, which collapsed several hours after the twin towers collapsed. WTC #7 contained offices for the IRS, SEC, Secret Service and most interestingly New York’s Office of Emergency Management Command Center (which is supposed to be bullet-proof, bomb proof, and self-generating when need be). A British film crew reported that the tower had also fallen, succumbing to what appeared to be superficial fires. However, the tower is clearly shown standing in the background as the female reporter continues to speak about its collapse. Apparently CNN and BBC made the same mistake …

While not entirely one-sided in its approach, Loose Change could have nonetheless benefited from more attention to contrary evidence and non-conspiratorial alternatives. For example, Avery uses collapse times to prove that the twin towers were felled by an explosion rather than the impact of a plane – the time-lapsed implosion of the towers is shown to be consistent with the free-fall that would result from a building demolition. This evidence is offered as a refutation of the theory that diesel fueled fires caused the tower’s tube-like structure to loosen and disintegrate. However, the film does not address the popular alternative theory that the collapse of a single floor started a domino effect that resulted in a disintegration that just happened to be consistent with the timing of a free fall. Imagine you are standing on the upper of two planks of wood, both suspended by concrete blocks. Chances are you will not go through the first plank with you are standing still. Now imagine yourself jumping up and down on the upper plank – you could crash through the wood, albeit a little slower than you would sink if you had no resistance; however, the combined weight of yourself plus the wooden plank would cause greater strain on a second plank of wood below the first plank, etc. In other words, the diesel fuel or impact could have caused 1 or 2 floors to collapse, with the increasing weight and velocity speeding up the collapse of the entire structure.

In any case, Loose Change Final Cut is effective as a catalyst to debate. Some of my (unwitting) test audience used the evidence presented to unleash their strongest condemnations against George W. Bush and his “imperial war”. Others were highly skeptical and offered unsolicited explanations backing the official versions of certain events. What my test subjects all had in common was a strong opinion and any filmmaker that can accomplish such with today’s increasingly desensitized moviegoers deserves a pat on the back.

29
Jan

Toronto School Board Approves Black-Focused Schools

The seemingly unthinkable has been approved in the center of the universe:

Tuesday night, the Toronto District School Board said yes to so-called Black-focused schools.

Tuesday’s vote actually capped months of heated back-and-forth involving parents, students, teachers and trustees, the end result of which was the board throwing its support behind “four innovative strategies for improving the success of Black students.”

The approved strategies include:

  • Establishing a Program Area Review Team to recommend the program and operational model for an Africentric Alternative School opening in September 2009;
  • Establishing a pilot program in three existing schools integrating the histories, cultures, experiences and contributions of people of African descent and other racialized groups into curriculum, teaching practices and school environment;
  • Establishing a Staff Development, Research and Innovation Centre in collaboration with post-secondary institutions and community agencies to assess best practices for improving the success of marginalized and vulnerable students; and
  • Developing an action plan for addressing underachievement for all marginalized and vulnerable students.

Talking Points:

  1. Poor black performance in school is a consequence of poor black performance in life. Canada is largely to blame, since the nation decided in the 1970’s to limit the number of Caribbean students (read: people with the facilities to deal with discimination) in favour of cheap labour. Some of the cheap labour who arrived were considered trash even back in the Caribbean (as upper class Caribbeans will attest - in private) and there is little cultural influence compelling them to change their violent/non-academic ways here. Imagine Saudi Arabia emptying the trailer parks of Canada for cheap labour in the oil fields, only to complain later about their unwillingness to adapt to the humility of Islam. “What do you expect?” would be our likely response. Based on this pattern, Portuguese and Latino schools can’t be far away.
  2. Anyone who saw the board meeting on TV no doubt noticed the proponents were utterly classless during the proceeding. On more than one occasion the chair requested that there be NO APPLAUSE OR HECKLING after board members speak. The parents ignored requests for civility, bursting out in spasms of applause or hissing after every monologue like they were at a methodist church. They also rudely accosted a black trustee after the vote for daring to oppose the proposal. Is it any wonder so many children in the inner city have disciplinary problems? Look at their role models!
  3. Africentric schools are going be reform schools for the simple fact that they cannot afford to have the same dropout rate as other high schools without being declared failures. Since the proponents themselves are targeting kids that have dropped out of school, the curriculum will have to be dumbed down so the homies can keep up. Expect few A and B students at these schools, as no black student with serious post-secondary aspirations wants to submit an academic record showing graduation from “the ghetto school”.
  4. Where were the Africans during the Africentric debates?  Barely a Somali or Ethiopian in sight.
  5. The most entertaining part of the blog dialog (diablog?) was watching certain conservative websites invoke the ghost of Martin Luther King to oppose the “segregation” of Africentric schools. Virtually any other discourse they engage in involving blacks inevitably leads to discussions over black intellectual inferiority, ridicule of black culture or poorly-veiled fears of miscegenation. Wasn’t white flight from Toronto about escaping darkie? (and slanty and dotty, and..) Of course supporting this school would amount to supporting the transfer of government funds to initiatives favoured by rival liberals/socialists - hence the opposition.
  6. Sandy (a dissenting conservative who cannot in any way be classed with those described in #5) has her work cut out for her. I wish her all the best and hope that one day such schools will no longer appeal to so many people. We are one society, whether we like it or not.



Further Research




Categories


Archives