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Old 10-02-2009, 09:14 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Racism

Since racist accusations are flying around everywhere more than ever before, I wanted to share this little tune with you to brighten up your day

-Hedons

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Old 10-03-2009, 12:22 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Everytime a NOOSE story gets overlooked... smoke a joint!

Last updated September 23, 2009 1:58 p.m. PT

Human rights activist finds noose on porch
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho -- The education director of Coeur d'Alene's Human
Rights Education Institute says someone left a noose on the porch of her
Spokane home, in an apparent threat against the black family.

Rachel Dolezal said she found the noose Sunday morning just outside her
front door, the Coeur d'Alene Press reported.

Spokane Police Department spokeswoman Jennifer DeRuwe says a detective
has been assigned to the case, and it's being investigated as a hate crime.

It was the latest in a series of unsettling events for Dolezal. Last week, her
home was broken into and $13,000 worth of personal belongings - including
two guns - were taken. Earlier this year, Dolezal says white supremacists
confronted her while she was working at the Human Rights Education
Institute.
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Old 10-03-2009, 12:24 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Saturday, September 12, 2009
Nation Digest: NTSB Orders Sensitivity Training After Noose Incident - washingtonpost.com
NTSB


Sensitivity Training Follows Noose Incident


The National Transportation Safety Board has hired an outside consulting firm to provide
sensitivity training after two of its top managers left a noose hanging inside the
agency's headquarters last month.

An NTSB spokesman said Friday that administration action had been proposed against
the two men -- one held a GS-15 rating, and the other a higher, Senior Executive Service
rating
-- but he declined to reveal their names, exact positions or the proposed
punishment.

The noose was fashioned out of piece of soft rope used for crowd control. The two
executives placed it around a nameplate bearing the name of a career NTSB executive
who recently left the agency and hung it from a wall fixture, according to Peter Knudson
of the NTSB. All three individuals are white.
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Old 10-03-2009, 12:27 AM   #4 (permalink)
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http://www.stlamerican.com/articles/...ocalnews03.txt

EEOC sues over noose incident



Thursday, October 1, 2009 3:14 AM CDT




Dollins Construction charged with race discrimination

By American staff

Dollins Construction Company of Sikeston, Mo., violated federal law by racially harassing
three African American construction workers and then taking reprisals against them when
they com¬plained, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) charged
in a lawsuit it filed Monday.

In a suit filed in U.S. District Court in St. Louis, the EEOC claims that Buford McClendon,
Anthony Jones and Eric Moore were subjected to unlawful racial harassment at a work
site in Corydon, Ind., in the fall of 2006 by supervisors Joe and Roy Dollins, brothers of
the company’s owner, Philip Dollins. The harassment included the use of racially charged
comments and the display and use of a noose. The suit said that after one of the victims
complained about the Dollins brothers’ conduct to Philip Dollins, he did not send any of
them out on any other jobs.

“All racist displays are unacceptable, but a noose is a particularly cruel and violent
symbol that should be eradicated from any place of employment,” said EEOC Acting
Chairman Stuart J. Ishimaru.
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Old 10-03-2009, 12:34 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Cherry Story

Harsher discipline for next noose, Davlin vows - Springfield, IL - The State Journal-Register

Posted Sep 15, 2009 @ 09:52 PM
Last update Sep 16, 2009 @ 05:37 AM

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.Springfield Mayor Tim Davlin said he couldn’t recall a tougher disciplinary action — short
of termination — than the 60-day unpaid suspensions given to the three City Water,
Light and Power employees involved in two noose incidents.

But he had a warning: Next time, the punishment will be even tougher.

The city’s discipline was handed out on Friday, two days after a
Sangamon County grand jury declined to file criminal charges against the three men.


The employees’ suspensions haven’t started yet, Davlin said, and schedules
are trying to be coordinated to avoid overtime. The suspended employees
can’t use vacation or sick time to make up for any of the 60 days, he said.


Springfield police were called to the city water plant on July 26 after City
Water, Light and Power employee Mike Williams, who is black, found a noose
that reportedly had been hanging for a couple of days in the work area he
shares with others. Williams believes the noose was intended as a racial
taunt.

According to the police report, Kevin Conway, a white CWLP employee, told
police he was playing with a piece of rope to pass time and that he had no
racial intent in making the knot, which he called a “sportsman knot.” A
second white employee, Greg Selinger, told police he saw the rope near a
computer and he hung it on a wire rack “just to get it out of his way.”


The two men were never arrested and remained on the job.

Bradley Barber, a white storeroom clerk, allegedly hung a noose from the roll
cage of a forklift he was driving at CWLP’s Groth Street plant on Aug. 6,
according to a police report. He told police “he was making a point that
nothing was wrong with tying a knot, into a noose, when it is directed toward
yourself,” the report said. Barber reportedly told police the noose wasn’t
meant to offend anyone.

Barber was arrested on the job and put on paid leave.

Davlin didn’t answer questions about why the two cases were handled differently.
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Old 10-03-2009, 12:35 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Personally, I don't consider myself racist. I pretty much hate gooks, niggers, beaners, towel-heads, snip dicks, honkeys, zipper heads, and the french equally.



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Old 10-03-2009, 12:37 AM   #7 (permalink)
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Noose left in front of black family's house | News | theGrio
09/08/2009
Police and investigative reports indicate a clothesline in the shape of a noose and about
two feet long was laid at the base of this tree in Frederick Howery's front lawn.

The Howery family is African American. They moved here just nine months ago.

Darrell Mayo is a husband and father of three. He and his family were some of the first
African Americans to move to West 223rd Street.
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Old 10-03-2009, 12:43 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Teen Sentenced for Dragging Boy in Noose Around Parking Lot - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News - FOXNews.com

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio — A central Ohio teenager accused of putting a noose around a
Hispanic boy's neck and dragging him in a parking lot has been sentenced to 10 days in jail.

The 18-year-old was sentenced Wednesday in juvenile court in Mount Vernon.
He dropped his original plea of not guilty and pleaded no contest to ethnic intimidation.

A charge of aggravated menacing was dropped.

Seventeen-year-old Robert Cantu says in May 2008 he was dragged from a sidewalk to a
parking lot with the noose wrapped around his neck by a group of teenagers shouting
racial slurs. He says the teens threatened to hang him before a bystander intervened.
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Old 10-03-2009, 12:48 AM   #9 (permalink)
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Judge who displayed hangman's noose retires

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

A federal magistrate judge who once displayed a noose in his chambers has retired from
his position overseeing the tiny court in Yosemite National Park

Judge William Wunderlich had said colleagues gave him the noose as a joke more than
20 years ago.

But in April, U.S. District Judge Oliver Wanger dismissed Wunderlich's conviction of a
Native American filmmaker on the grounds that the judge was "oblivious to the negative
messages of injustice and bigotry that the hangman's noose communicate."

The filmmaker, Lorenzo Baca, had appealed his conviction for trespassing on a cultural

resource and doing business in the park without a permit.
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Old 10-03-2009, 12:58 AM   #10 (permalink)
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Images of nooses, Confederate flags tighten racism's grip in town of Paris, Texas -- latimes.com
February 25, 2009


A noose inside Turner Industries in Paris, Texas. Racist graffiti, a hangmanÂ’s noose
and a Confederate flag have reportedly been displayed for months to intimidate black
employees. Photo taken in January by Karl Mitchell, 41, an employee at the Turner
Industries plant who has also filed a formal EEOC complaint alleging a pattern of
discrimination at the plant.

HOUSTON — Only a few weeks ago, race relations had reached such a low point in the
troubled east Texas town of Paris that federal Justice Department mediators were called
in to try to bring together black and white citizens, but the public meeting quickly
dissolved into rancor.

Now fresh racial tensions are erupting inside one of the town's biggest employers, the
Turner Industries pipe fabrication plant, where black employees charge that hangman's
nooses, Confederate flags and racist graffiti have been appearing throughout the
workplace for months.

One worker, Karl Mitchell, took pictures of the offensive symbols in early February and
filed a formal complaint with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission last
week. Other African-American employees assert that they've repeatedly complained
about the racist symbols to their bosses, only to be ignored or told to keep quiet.


The racial flare-up at Turner Industries comes just as Paris leaders were hoping to finally
fall out of the spotlight after several troubling racial incidents focused national attention
on the town of about 26,000.

Paris first drew national scrutiny in 2007, the year after a 14-year-old African-American
girl, Shaquanda Cotton, was sentenced by a local judge to up to 7 years in a youth
prison for shoving a hall monitor at Paris High School.


Three months earlier, the same judge had sentenced a 14-year-old white girl to
probation for the more serious crime of arson.

Less than a month after a Tribune story contrasting the two cases triggered national civil
rights protests and petition drives, Texas authorities ordered Shaquanda's early release
from prison.

Then last year, a 24-year-old African-American man, Brandon McClelland, was slain,
allegedly at the hands of two white men who authorities charge dragged him beneath a
pickup truck until his body was nearly dismembered.


The accused men are awaiting trial for murder, but McClelland's family and civil rights
leaders have pressed prosecutors to add hate-crime charges as well.
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Old 10-03-2009, 01:02 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Cop on Cop Racism

Noose found on DPD undercover truck | Rebecca Lopez | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News

09:07 PM CST on Monday, January 26, 2009
By REBECCA LOPEZ / WFAA-TV

NOOSE MYSTERY

DALLAS - Police are searching for answers after a noose was found dangling from the bed
of a truck that was parked in a secure lot at the Dallas Police Department's
headquarters.

The noose was found Friday on a truck used by undercover narcotics officers.

"That's not a public place where people walk around," said Sgt. Sheldon Smith, Black
Police Association. "We want to find out what happened and get down to how this
occurred."

A white officer was the last person to drive the truck. The officer was recently passed
over by a black officer for a promotion and filed complaint against his black supervisor,
who made that choice.

Investigators don't know if the noose was put there as a message to the white officer, or
if white officers are sending a message to black officers.

"A noose in itself is racially offensive regardless of the color of the officer or whoever put
it out there," Sgt. Smith said. "It's something we can't stand for or something we don't
want to see."

While the Black Police Association said there is not racial tension among officers, others
said there has been racial tension brewing in several areas of the department, including
narcotics and the traffic division.
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Old 10-03-2009, 01:07 AM   #12 (permalink)
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Workers fired over noose at airport facility | Rhode Island news | projo.com | The Providence Journal

April 18, 2009

Three workers have been fired from Allied Aviation Services at T.F. Green Airport in
connection with a noose that was hung over the desk of a Cape Verdean coworker in
February. Two of the men have admitted tying the noose, a company spokesman said
Friday. A third man says he was unjustly fired for taking a picture of the noose. He said
he took it as proof.

A lawyer for John Valles, 23, the alleged target, said she is preparing to file a complaint
with the Rhode Island Human Rights Commission against Valles’ employer, Allied
Aviation Services Inc., for maintaining “a hostile and discriminatory work environment.”


The lawyer, Sonja Deyoe, said she will ask the commission to seek an investigation by
the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunities Commission. She said airport police are also
continuing an investigation.

Allied Aviation last year entered into a $1.9-million settlement agreement for
harassment of black and Hispanic workers that included racial slurs, graffiti, cartoons and
hangman’s nooses in a facility at the Dallas/Fort Worth Airport. The company also agreed
to provide diversity training for all of its U.S. employees. The international company
owns facilities at 24 major U.S. airports, including T.F. Green.

Valles, a tank farm maintenance worker who also fuels planes, said the two coworkers
who allegedly hung the noose had previously used racial slurs against him — often
behind his back. At one point, he went to his boss, and “we all sat down” to discuss it.

“About two weeks after that, is when the noose went up,” Valles said. He said he was
not at work on Feb. 15 — the day it was discovered hanging inside his work shack. When
Valles came to work the next day, “there was already an investigation.”
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Old 10-03-2009, 01:11 AM   #13 (permalink)
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Source of noose at TVA power plant remains mystery Knoxville News Sentinel

June 23, 2009

KNOXVILLE - Investigators are still looking for leads in the discovery last year of a
hangman's noose at a Tennessee power plant where a massive coal ash spill occurred in December.

The Tennessee Valley Authority's Inspector General's Office said in a semi-annual report
released this week that the noose was found near a stairway at the Kingston Fossil Plant in September.
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Old 10-03-2009, 01:17 AM   #14 (permalink)
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Smoke a joint for every noose story!... It'll help race relations; helps me.

Pa. co-worker acquitted in noose threat case - TimesObserver.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Community Information - The Times Observer
POSTED: August 6, 2009

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A white electrician has been acquitted of a federal charge of intimidating a black co-worker by hanging a noose in a work space shared by both men.



Prosecutors alleged that William Gould was angry because his co-worker had been accepted into a management training program for minorities at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.



An all-white jury of eight men and four women deliberated for five hours Wednesday before finding Gould not guilty of the misdemeanor charge of interfering with employment by threat of violence.



Gould's attorney, David Kozlow, called last year's incident "a foolish joke."



The co-worker testified that he felt "threatened and intimidated." He declined comment after the verdict.
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Old 10-03-2009, 01:26 AM   #15 (permalink)
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Lynching Station set up at Church by White Christian Racists

Deputies Investigating Noose Found At Valrico Church



March 30, 2009
VALRICO - Hillsborough County sheriff's deputies are investigating a structure
at a Valrico church that the pastor calls a "makeshift lynching station."

The object, discovered by church members on Saturday, is made of PVC pipes
and propped up by several tires. At the end of the pipe, vines were bent into
a circular shape resembling a noose.

Antonio Hawkins, the pastor of Exciting Faith Alive at Tampa Bay, said he
saw the structure about 11:30 a.m. Sunday when he stepped out a side door
during church services.

"Immediately, chills just ran down my body," Hawkins said. "To me, this is
what I would describe as a lynching station."

Hawkins took the structure down because he said he did not want to alarm
the members of the predominantly black congregation. He rebuilt the
structure on Monday and called the sheriff's office to show it to them.

After a preliminary investigation, deputies disassembled the structure and
have ruled the incident as a trespassing, sheriff's office spokeswoman Debbie Carter said.

Hawkins said the church moved to the Valrico location in October. Before
Exciting Faith Alive's arrival, the buildings on the property were used by a
congregation that was mostly white, Hawkins said.


The pastor said vandals have struck his church in recent months, taking
doorknobs off and pulling light fixtures out of the ground. Hawkins said he did
not call authorities after those incidents.
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Old 10-03-2009, 01:32 AM   #16 (permalink)
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spiked-culture | Article | 'The one measure of true love is: you can insult the other' 15 Nov 2001

Has 11 September thrown new light on your diagnosis of what is happening to the world?

Slavoj Žižek: One of the endlessly repeated phrases we heard in recent weeks is that nothing will be the same after 11 September. I wonder if there really is such a substantial change. Certainly, there is change at the level of perception or publicity, but I don't think we can yet speak of some fundamental break. Existing attitudes and fears were confirmed, and what the media were telling us about terrorism has now really happened.

In my work, I place strong emphasis on what is usually referred to as the visualization or digitalisation of our environment. We know that 60 percent of the people on this Earth have not even made a phone call in their life. But still, 30 percent of us live in a digitalised universe that is artificially constructed, manipulated and no longer some natural or traditional one. At all levels of our life we seem to live more and more with the thing deprived of its substance. You get beer without alcohol, meat without fat, coffee without caffeine...and even virtual sex without sex.

Virtual reality to me is the climax of this process: you now get reality without reality...or a totally regulated reality. But there is another side to this. Throughout the entire twentieth century, I see a counter-tendency, for which my good philosopher friend Alain Badiou invented a nice name: 'La passion du réel', the passion of the real. That is to say, precisely because the universe in which we live is somehow a universe of dead conventions and artificiality, the only authentic real experience must be some extremely violent, shattering experience. And this we experience as a sense that now we are back in real life.

Do you think that is what we are seeing now?

Slavoj Žižek: I think this may be what defined the twentieth century, which really began with the First World War. We all remember the war reports by Ernst Jünger, in which he praises this eye-to-eye combat experience as the authentic one. Or at the level of sex, the archetypal film of the twentieth century would be Nagisa Oshima's Ai No Corrida (In The Realm Of The Senses), where the idea again is that you become truly radical, and go to the end in a sexual encounter, when you practically torture each other to death. There must be extreme violence for that encounter to be authentic.

Another emblematic figure in this sense to me is the so-called 'cutter'- a widespread pathological phenomenon in the USA. There are two million of them, mostly women, but also men, who cut themselves with razors. Why? It has nothing to do with masochism or suicide. It's simply that they don't feel real as persons and the idea is: it's only through this pain and when you feel warm blood that you feel reconnected again. So I think that this tension is the background against which one should appreciate the effect of the act.

Does that relate to your observations about the demise of subjectivity in The Ticklish Subject? You say the problem is what you call 'foreclosure'- that the real or the articulation of the subject is foreclosed by the way society has evolved in recent years.

Slavoj Žižek: The starting point of my book on the subject is that almost all philosophical orientations today, even if they strongly oppose each other, agree on some kind of basic anti-subjectivist stance. For example, Jürgen Habermas and Jacques Derrida would both agree that the Cartesian subject had to be deconstructed, or, in the case of Habermas, embedded in a larger inter-subjective dialectics. Cognitivists, Hegelians - everybody is in agreement here.

I am tempted to say that we must return to the subject - though not a purely rational Cartesian one. My idea is that the subject is inherently political, in the sense that 'subject', to me, denotes a piece of freedom - where you are no longer rooted in some firm substance, you are in an open situation. Today we can no longer simply apply old rules. We are engaged in paradoxes, which offer no immediate way out. In this sense, subjectivity is political.

But this kind of political subjectivity seems to have disappeared. In your books you speak of a post-political world.

Slavoj Žižek: When I say we live in a post-political world, I refer to a wrong ideological impression. We don't really live in such a world, but the existing universe presents itself as post-political in the sense that there is some kind of a basic social pact that elementary social decisions are no longer discussed as political decisions. They are turned into simple decisions of gesture and of administration. And the remaining conflicts are mostly conflicts about different cultures. We have the present form of global capitalism plus some kind of tolerant democracy as the ultimate form of that idea. And, paradoxically, only very few are ready to question this world.

So, what's wrong with that?

Slavoj Žižek: This post-political world still seems to retain the tension between what we usually refer to as tolerant liberalism versus multiculturalism. But for me - though I never liked Friedrich Nietzsche - if there is a definition that really fits, it is Nietzsche's old opposition between active and passive nihilism. Active nihilism, in the sense of wanting nothing itself, is this active self-destruction which would be precisely the passion of the real - the idea that, in order to live fully and authentically, you must engage in self-destruction. On the other hand, there is passive nihilism, what Nietzsche called 'The last man' - just living a stupid, self-satisfied life without great passions.

The problem with a post-political universe is that we have these two sides which are engaged in kind of mortal dialectics. My idea is that, to break out of this vicious cycle, subjectivity must be reinvented.

You also say that the elites in our Western world are losing their nerve. They want to throw out all old concepts like humanism or subjectivity. Against that, you say it is important to look at what there is in the old that may be worth retaining.


Slavoj Žižek: Of course, I am not against the new. I am, indeed, almost tempted to repeat Virginia Woolf. I think it was in 1914 when she said it was as though eternal human nature had changed. To be a man no longer means the same thing. One should not, for example, underestimate the inter-subjective social impact of cyberspace. What we are witnessing today is a radical redefinition of what it means to be a human being.

Take strange phenomena, like what we see on the internet. There are so-called 'cam' websites where people expose to an anonymous public their innermost secrets down to the most vulgar level. You have websites today - even I, with all my decadent tastes, was shocked to learn this - where people put a video-camera in their toilets, so you can observe them defecating. This a totally new constellation. It is not private, but also it is also not public. It is not the old exhibitionist gesture.

Be that as it may, something radical is happening. Now, a number of new terms are proposed to us to describe that. The one most commonly used is paradigm shift, denoting that we live in an epoch of shifting paradigm. So New Age people tell us that we no longer have a Cartesian, mechanistic individualism, but a new universal mind. In sociology, the theorists of second modernity say similar things. And psychoanalytical theorists tell us that we no longer have the Oedipus complex, but live in an era of universalised perversion.

My point is not that we should stick to the old. But these answers are wrong and do not really register the break that is taking place. If we measure what is happening now by the standard of the old, we can grasp the abyss of the new that is emerging.

Here I would refer to Blaise Pascal. Pascal's problem was also confrontation with modernity and modern science. His difficulty was that he wanted to remain an old, orthodox Christian in this new, modern age. It is interesting that his results were much more radical and interesting for us today than the results of superficial English liberal philosophers, who simply accepted modernity.

You see the same thing in cinema history, if we look at the impact of sound. Okay, 'what's the problem?', you might say. By adding the sound to the image we simply get a more realistic rendering of reality. But that is not at all true. Interestingly enough, the movie directors who were most sensitive to what the introduction of sound really meant were generally conservatives, those who looked at it with scepticism, like Charlie Chaplin (up to a point), and Fritz Lang. Fritz Lang's Das Testament des Dr Mabuse, in a wonderful way, rendered this spectral ghost-like dimension of the voice, realising that voice never simply belongs to the body. This is just another example of how a conservative, as if he were afraid of the new medium, has a much better grasp of its uncanny radical potentials.

The same applies today. Some people simply say: 'What's the problem? Let's throw ourselves into the digital world, into the internet, or whatever….' They really miss what is going on here.

So why do people want to declare a new epoch every five minutes?

Slavoj Žižek: It is precisely a desperate attempt to avoid the trauma of the new. It is a deeply conservative gesture. The true conservatives today are the people of new paradigms. They try desperately to avoid confronting what is really changing.

Let me return to my example. In Charlie Chaplin's film The Great Dictator, he satirises Hitler as Hinkel. The voice is perceived as something obscene. There is a wonderful scene where Hinkel gives a big speech and speaks totally meaningless, obscene words. Only from time to time you recognise some everyday vulgar German word like 'Wienerschnitzel' or 'Kartoffelstrudel'. And this was an ingenious insight; how voice is like a kind of a spectral ghost. All this became apparent to those conservatives who were sensitive for the break of the new.

In fact, all big breaks were done in such a way. Nietzsche was in this sense a conservative, and, indeed, I am ready to claim that Marx was a conservative in this sense, too. Marx always emphasised that we can learn more from intelligent conservatives than from simple liberals. Today, more than ever, we should stick to this attitude. When you are surprised and shocked, you don't simply accept it. You should not say: 'Okay, fine, let's play digital games.' We should not forget the ability to be properly surprised. I think, the most dangerous thing today is just to flow with things.

Then let's return to some of the things that have been surprising us. In a recent article, you made the point that the terrorists mirror our civilization. They are not out there, but mirror our own Western world. Can you elaborate on that some more?

Slavoj Žižek: This, of course, is my answer to this popular thesis by Samuel P Huntington and others that there is a so-called clash of civilizations. I don't buy this thesis, for a number of reasons.

Today's racism is precisely this racism of cultural difference. It no longer says: 'I am more than you.' It says: 'I want my culture, you can have yours.' Today, every right-winger says just that. These people can be very postmodern. They acknowledge that there is no natural tradition, that every culture is artificially constructed. In France, for example, you have a neo-fascist right that refers to the deconstructionists, saying: 'Yes, the lesson of deconstructionism against universalism is that there are only particular identities. So, if blacks can have their culture, why should we not have ours?'

We should also consider the first reaction of the American 'moral majority', specifically Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, to the 11 September attacks. Pat Robertson is a bit eccentric, but Jerry Falwell is a mainstream figure, who endorsed Reagan and is part of the mainstream, not an eccentric freak. Now, their reaction was the same as the Arabs', though he did retract a couple of days later. Falwell said the World Trade Center bombings were a sign that God no longer protects the USA, because the USA had chosen a path of evil, homosexuality and promiscuity.

According to the FBI, there are now at least two million so-called radical right-wingers in the USA. Some are quite violent, killing abortion doctors, not to mention the Oklahoma City bombing. To me, this shows that the same anti-liberal, violent attitude also grows in our own civilisation. I see that as proof that this terrorism is an aspect of our time. We cannot link it to a particular civilisation.

Regarding Islam, we should look at history. In fact, I think it is very interesting in this regard to look at ex-Yugoslavia. Why was Sarajevo and Bosnia the place of violent conflict? Because it was ethnically the most mixed republic of ex-Yugoslavia. Why? Because it was Muslim-dominated, and historically they were definitely the most tolerant. We Slovenes, on the other hand, and the Croats, both Catholics, threw them out several hundred years ago.

This proves that there is nothing inherently intolerant about Islam. We must rather ask why this terrorist aspect of Islam arises now. The tension between tolerance and fundamentalist violence is within a civilisation.

Take another example: on CNN we saw President Bush present a letter of a seven-year-old girl whose father is a pilot and now around Afghanistan. In the letter she said that she loves her father, but if her country needs his death, she is ready to give her father for her country. President Bush described this as American patriotism. Now, do a simple mental experiment - imagine the same event with an Afghan girl saying that. We would immediately say: 'What cynicism, what fundamentalism, what manipulation of small children.' So there is already something in our perception. But what shocks us in others we ourselves also do in a way.

So multiculturalism and fundamentalism could be two sides of the same coin?

Slavoj Žižek: There is nothing to be said against tolerance. But when you buy this horticulturalist tolerance, you buy many other things with it. Isn't it symptomatic that multiculturalism exploded at the very historic moment when the last traces of working-class politics disappeared from political space? For many former leftists, this multiculturalism is a kind of ersatz working-class politics. We don't even know whether the working class still exists, so let's talk about exploitation of others.

There may be nothing wrong with that as such. But there is a danger that issues of economic exploitation are converted into problems of cultural tolerance. And then you have only to make one step further, that of Julia Kristeva in her essay 'Etrangers ŕ nous męmes', and say we cannot tolerate others because we cannot tolerate otherness in ourselves. Here we have a pure pseudo-psychoanalytic cultural reductionism.

Isn't it sad and tragic that the only relatively strong - not fringe - political movement that still directly addresses the working class is made up of right-wing populists? They are the only ones. Jean-Marie Le Pen in France, for example. I was shocked when I saw him three years ago at a congress of the Front National. He brought a black Frenchman, an Algerian and a Jew on the podium, embraced them and said: 'They are no less French than I am. Only the international cosmopolitan companies who neglect French patriotic interests are my enemy.' So the price is that only right-wingers still talk about economic exploitation.

The second thing I find wrong with this multiculturalist tolerance is that it is often hypocritical in the sense that the other whom they tolerate is already a reduced other. The other is okay in so far as this other is only a question of food, of culture, of dances. What about clitoridectomy? What about my friends who say: 'We must respect Hindus.' Okay, but what about one of the old Hindu customs which, as we know, is that when a husband dies, the wife is burned. Now, do we respect that? Problems arise here.

An even more important problem is that this notion of tolerance effectively masks its opposite: intolerance. It is a recurring theme in all my books that, from this liberal perspective, the basic perception of another human being is always as something that may in some way hurt you.

Are you referring to what we call victim culture?

Slavoj Žižek: The discourse of victimization is almost the predominant discourse today. You can be a victim of the environment, of smoking, of sexual harassment. I find this reduction of the subject to a victim sad. In what sense? There is an extremely narcissistic notion of personality here. And, indeed, an intolerant one, insofar as what it means is that we can no longer tolerate violent encounters with others - and these encounters are always violent.

Let me briefly address sexual harassment for a moment. Of course I am opposed to it, but let's be frank. Say I am passionately attached, in love, or whatever, to another human being and I declare my love, my passion for him or her. There is always something shocking, violent in it. This may sound like a joke, but it isn't - you cannot do the game of erotic seduction in politically correct terms. There is a moment of violence, when you say: 'I love you, I want you.' In no way can you bypass this violent aspect. So I even think that the fear of sexual harassment in a way includes this aspect, a fear of a too violent, too open encounter with another human being.

Another thing that bothers me about this multiculturalism is when people ask me: 'How can you be sure that you are not a racist?' My answer is that there is only one way. If I can exchange insults, brutal jokes, dirty jokes, with a member of a different race and we both know it's not meant in a racist way. If, on the other hand, we play this politically correct game - 'Oh, I respect you, how interesting your customs are' - this is inverted racism, and it is disgusting.

In the Yugoslav army where we were all of mixed nationalities, how did I become friends with Albanians? When we started to exchange obscenities, sexual innuendo, jokes. This is why this politically correct respect is just, as Freud put it, 'zielgehemmt'. You still have the aggression towards the other.

For me there is one measure of true love: you can insult the other. Like in that horrible German comedy film from 1943 where Marika Röck treats her fiancé very brutally. This fiancé is a rich, important person, so her father asks her why are you treating him like that. And she gives the right answer. She says: 'But I love him, and since I love him, I can do with him whatever I want.' That's the truth of it. If there is true love, you can say horrible things and anything goes.

When multiculturalists tell you to respect the others, I always have this uncanny association that this is dangerously close to how we treat our children: the idea that we should respect them, even when we know that what they believe is not true. We should not destroy their illusions. No, I think that others deserve better - not to be treated like children.

In your book on the subject you talk of a 'true universalism' as an opposite of this false sense of global harmony. What do you mean by that?

Slavoj Žižek: Here I need to ask myself a simple Habermasian question: how can we ground universality in our experience? Naturally, I don't accept this postmodern game that each of us inhabits his or her particular universe. I believe there is universality. But I don't believe in some a priori universality of fundamental rules or universal notions. The only true universality we have access to is political universality. Which is not solidarity in some abstract idealist sense, but solidarity in struggle.

If we are engaged in the same struggle, if we discover that - and this for me is the authentic moment of solidarity - being feminists and ecologists, or feminists and workers, we all of a sudden have this insight: 'My God, but our struggle is ultimately the same!' This political universality would be the only authentic universality. And this, of course, is what is missing today, because politics today is increasingly a politics of merely negotiating compromises between different positions.

The post-political subverts the freedom that has been talked about so much in recent weeks. Is that what you are saying?


Slavoj Žižek: I do claim that what is sold to us today as freedom is something from which this more radical dimension of freedom and democracy has been removed - in other words, the belief that basic decisions about social development are discussed or brought about involving as many as possible, a majority. In this sense, we do not have an actual experience of freedom today. Our freedoms are increasingly reduced to the freedom to choose your lifestyle. You can even choose your ethnic identity up to a point.

But this new world of freedom described by people like Ulrich Beck, who say everything is a matter of reflective negotiation, of choice, can include new unfreedom. My favorite example is this, and here we have ideology at its purest: we know that it is very difficult today in more and more professional domains to get a long-term job. Academics or journalists, for example, now often live on a two- or three-year contract, that you then have to renegotiate. Of course, most of us experience this as something traumatising, shocking, where you can never be sure. But then, along comes the postmodern ideologist: 'Oh, but this is just a new freedom, you can reinvent yourself every two years!'

The problem for me is how unfreedom is hidden, concealed in precisely what is presented to us as new freedoms. I think that the explosion of these new freedoms, which fall under the domain of what Michel Foucault called 'care of the self', involves greater social unfreedom.

Twenty or 30 years ago there was still discussion as to whether the future would be fascist, socialist, communist or capitalist. Today, nobody even discusses this. These fundamental social choices are simply no longer perceived as a matter to decide. A certain domain of radical social questions has simply been depoliticised.

I find it very sad that, precisely in an era in which tremendous changes are taking place and, indeed entire social coordinates are transformed, we don't experience this as something about which we decided freely.

So, let's return to the aftermath of 11 September. We now experience a strange kind of war that we are told will not end for a long time. What do you think of this turn of events?

Slavoj Žižek: I don't quite agree with those who claim that this World Trade Centre explosion was the start of the first war of the twenty-first century. I think it was a war of the twentieth century, in the sense that it was still a singular, spectacular event. The new wars would be precisely as you mentioned - it will not even be clear whether it is a war or not. Somehow life will go on and we will learn that we are at war, as we are now.

What worries me is how many Americans perceived these bombings as something that made them into innocents: as if to say, until now, we had problems, Vietnam, and so on. Now we are victims, and this somehow justifies us in fully identifying with American patriotism.

That's a risky gesture. The big choice for Americans is whether they retreat into this patriotism - or, as my friend Ariel Dorfman wrote recently: 'America has the chance to become a member of the community of nations. America always behaves as though it were special. It should use this attack as an opportunity to admit that it is not special, but simply and truly part of this world.' That's the big choice.

There is something so disturbingly tragic in this idea of the wealthiest country in the world bombing one of the poorest countries. It reminds me of the well-known joke about the idiot who loses a key in the dark and looks for it beneath the light. When asked why, he says: 'I know I lost it over there, but it's easier to look for it here.'

But at the same time I must confess that the left also deeply disappointed me. Falling back into this safe pacifist attitude - violence never stops violence, give peace a chance - is abstract and doesn't work here. First, because this is not a universal rule. I always ask my leftist friends who repeat that mantra: What would you have said in 1941 with Hitler. Would you also say: 'We shouldn't resist, because violence never helps?' It is simply a fact that at some point you have to fight. You have to return violence with violence. The problem is not that for me, but that this war can never be a solution.

It is also false and misleading to perceive these bombings as some kind of third world working-class response to American imperialism. In that case, the American fundamentalists we already discussed, are also a working-class response, which they clearly are not. We face a challenge to rethink our coordinates and I hope that this will be a good result of this tragic event. That we will not just use it to do more of the same but to think about what is really changing in our world.
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Old 10-03-2009, 04:09 AM   #17 (permalink)
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surely that could have just been linked.
Racism happens everywhere! You know, my solution is the identify the stereotypes and then make reational decisions about weather there is truth to them and augment your behaviour accordingly. We all hve to change a little bit if we want it to work yea?

For me, I don't drink alcohol in public places (walking down the street and stuff). Before the Cronulla Beach riots it had never occured to me that while there is nothing culturally wrong with drinking in public for most aussies, it may appear quite threatening for a minority in australia to see white people everywhere drinking alcohol (we do this for sports, public holidays. hell youtube australia day celebrations or anything). so now i dont do it.
many muslims here seem to have relaxed the hijab laws amongst themselves too. not too much but equally it can make someone nervous to ave someone covered up so absolutly. esp while the media whips fear in the stupid and ignorant.

Im with Rev. . i like to say simply in my bogan way

'im not racist. fuckwit comes in every colour!'

we also have a problem with some people attacking indian students. This I really DONT understand. In my experience they are fun to drink with, are marijuana friendly. svvy pool players and due to the reasons for them being here (uni) rather articulate proud and inteligent. However there is a pattern of indian student attacks in Australia, concentrated in inner Melbourne. I don't understand that one except some sort of supped up fucktard bogan aussie pride. Some people here dont realize that importing people is part of what makes this country tick.


and thats makros' two cents
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Old 10-03-2009, 06:26 AM   #18 (permalink)
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i think pretending you dont see color, is just as bad as being strait up forward racist. because if you dont see the beautiful colors around you... the whole picture isnt worth very much at all. our differences are beautiful. and if you pretend to see everyone as the same, thats a little bit sad to me. i have asian friends, and black friends, and indian friends. I love them all the same. But I embrace how different and beautiful they are becasue its what makes our individual portraits beautiful.
 
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Old 10-03-2009, 08:04 AM   #19 (permalink)
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The Human Family Tree | National Geographic Channel




Why are people racist if we are all the same?

I am guilty of "stereotyping" people though.
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Old 10-03-2009, 08:38 AM   #20 (permalink)
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Nice link. Check Out our Newest Ancestor

Hello, Ardi: New Oldest Humanoid Fossil A Million Years Older Than Lucy | Popular Science

Posted 10.01.2009

The new fossil indicates that our ancestors were less chimplike than heretofore thought

This morning, scientists revealed an analysis of a female skeleton that seems
to be the best example of early hominids around, about a million years older
than the famous Lucy specimen that has been a prime example of early
humanoids for about 40 years. New species Ardipithecus ramidus, which
scientists nicknamed "Ardi," lived in the woodlands of present-day Ethiopia
and had a blend of human and chimplike features.

By analyzing the skeleton (which included hands, feet, limbs, pelvis, and
skull), researchers estimate that she was about four feet tall and weighed
about 110 pounds. She was adept at both climbing through trees (with help
from opposable big toes) as well as standing on two legs.

Ardi lived 4.4 million years ago, about a few million years after the lineages
of people and chips split. All in all, the research suggests that humans' and
chimpanzees' last common ancestor was pretty different from current-day
apes, which have gained a lot of adaptations for swinging through the trees
since then. Read: You certainly did not descend from a chimp, and the thing
you descended from wasn't as chimpy as you might have been picturing.

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