industryterm:gas chamber

  • The Knesset candidate who says Zionism encourages anti-Semitism and calls Netanyahu ’arch-murderer’ - Israel Election 2019 - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/elections/.premium.MAGAZINE-knesset-candidate-netanyahu-is-an-arch-murderer-zionism-e

    Few Israelis have heard of Dr. Ofer Cassif, the Jewish representative on the far-leftist Hadash party’s Knesset slate. On April 9, that will change
    By Ravit Hecht Feb 16, 2019

    Ofer Cassif is fire and brimstone. Not even the flu he’s suffering from today can contain his bursting energy. His words are blazing, and he bounds through his modest apartment, searching frenetically for books by Karl Marx and Primo Levi in order to find quotations to back up his ideas. Only occasional sips from a cup of maté bring his impassioned delivery to a momentary halt. The South American drink is meant to help fight his illness, he explains.

    Cassif is third on the slate of Knesset candidates in Hadash (the Hebrew acronym for the Democratic Front for Peace and Equality), the successor to Israel’s Communist Party. He holds the party’s “Jewish slot,” replacing MK Dov Khenin. Cassif is likely to draw fire from opponents and be a conspicuous figure in the next Knesset, following the April 9 election.

    Indeed, the assault on him began as soon as he was selected by the party’s convention. The media pursued him; a columnist in the mass-circulation Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper, Ben-Dror Yemini, called for him to be disqualified from running for the Knesset. It would be naive to say that this was unexpected. Cassif, who was one of the first Israeli soldiers to refuse to serve in the territories, in 1987, gained fame thanks to a number of provocative statements. The best known is his branding of Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked as “neo-Nazi scum.” On another occasion, he characterized Jews who visit the Temple Mount as “cancer with metastases that have to be eradicated.”

    On his alternate Facebook page, launched after repeated blockages of his original account by a blitz of posts from right-wing activists, he asserted that Culture Minister Miri Regev is “repulsive gutter contamination,” that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is an “arch-murderer” and that the new Israel Defense Forces chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi, is a “war criminal.”

    Do you regret making those remarks?

    Cassif: “‘Regret’ is a word of emotion. Those statements were made against a background of particular events: the fence in Gaza, horrible legislation, and the wild antics of Im Tirtzu [an ultranationalist organization] on campus. That’s what I had to say at the time. I didn’t count on being in the Knesset. That wasn’t part of my plan. But it’s clear to me that as a public personality, I would not have made those comments.”

    Is Netanyahu an arch-murderer?

    “Yes. I wrote it in the specific context of a particular day in the Gaza Strip. A massacre of innocent people was perpetrated there, and no one’s going to persuade me that those people were endangering anyone. It’s a concentration camp. Not a ‘concentration camp’ in the sense of Bergen-Belsen; I am absolutely not comparing the Holocaust to what’s happening.”

    You term what Israel is doing to the Palestinians “genocide.”

    “I call it ‘creeping genocide.’ Genocide is not only a matter of taking people to gas chambers. When Yeshayahu Leibowitz used the term ‘Judeo-Nazis,’ people asked him, ‘How can you say that? Are we about to build gas chambers?’ To that, he had two things to say. First, if the whole difference between us and the Nazis boils down to the fact that we’re not building gas chambers, we’re already in trouble. And second, maybe we won’t use gas chambers, but the mentality that exists today in Israel – and he said this 40 years ago – would allow it. I’m afraid that today, after four years of such an extreme government, it possesses even greater legitimacy.

    “But you know what, put aside ‘genocide’ – ethnic cleansing is taking place there. And that ethnic cleansing is also being carried out by means of killing, although mainly by way of humiliation and of making life intolerable. The trampling of human dignity. It reminds me of Primo Levi’s ‘If This Is a Man.’”

    You say you’re not comparing, but you repeatedly come back to Holocaust references. On Facebook, you also uploaded the scene from “Schindler’s List” in which the SS commander Amon Goeth picks off Jews with his rifle from the balcony of his quarters in the camp. You compared that to what was taking place along the border fence in the Gaza Strip.

    “Today, I would find different comparisons. In the past I wrote an article titled, ‘On Holocaust and on Other Crimes.’ It’s online [in Hebrew]. I wrote there that anyone who compares Israel to the Holocaust is cheapening the Holocaust. My comparison between here and what happened in the early 1930s [in Germany] is a very different matter.”

    Clarity vs. crudity

    Given Cassif’s style, not everyone in Hadash was happy with his election, particularly when it comes to the Jewish members of the predominantly Arab party. Dov Khenin, for example, declined to be interviewed and say what he thinks of his parliamentary successor. According to a veteran party figure, “From the conversations I had, it turns out that almost none of the Jewish delegates – who make up about 100 of the party’s 940 delegates – supported his candidacy.

    “He is perceived, and rightly so,” the party veteran continues, “as someone who closes doors to Hadash activity within Israeli society. Each of the other Jewish candidates presented a record of action and of struggles they spearheaded. What does he do? Curses right-wing politicians on Facebook. Why did the party leadership throw the full force of its weight behind him? In a continuation of the [trend exemplified by] its becoming part of the Joint List, Ofer’s election reflects insularity and an ongoing retreat from the historical goal of implementing change in Israeli society.”

    At the same time, as his selection by a 60 percent majority shows, many in the party believe that it’s time to change course. “Israeli society is moving rightward, and what’s perceived as Dov’s [Khenin] more gentle style didn’t generate any great breakthrough on the Jewish street,” a senior source in Hadash notes.

    “It’s not a question of the tension between extremism and moderation, but of how to signpost an alternative that will develop over time. Clarity, which is sometimes called crudity, never interfered with cooperation between Arabs and Jews. On the contrary. Ofer says things that we all agreed with but didn’t so much say, and of course that’s going to rile the right wing. And a good thing, too.”

    Hadash chairman MK Ayman Odeh also says he’s pleased with the choice, though sources in the party claim that Odeh is apprehensive about Cassif’s style and that he actually supported a different candidate. “Dov went for the widest possible alliances in order to wield influence,” says Odeh. “Ofer will go for very sharp positions at the expense of the breadth of the alliance. But his sharp statements could have a large impact.”

    Khenin was deeply esteemed by everyone. When he ran for mayor of Tel Aviv in 2008, some 35 percent of the electorate voted for him, because he was able to touch people who weren’t only from his political milieu.

    Odeh: “No one has a higher regard for Dov than I do. But just to remind you, we are not a regular opposition, we are beyond the pale. And there are all kinds of styles. Influence can be wielded through comments that are vexatious the first time but which people get used to the second time. When an Arab speaks about the Nakba and about the massacre in Kafr Kassem [an Israeli Arab village, in 1956], it will be taken in a particular way, but when uttered by a Jew it takes on special importance.”

    He will be the cause of many attacks on the party.

    “Ahlan wa sahlan – welcome.”

    Cassif will be the first to tell you that, with all due respect for the approach pursued by Khenin and by his predecessor in the Jewish slot, Tamar Gozansky, he will be something completely different. “I totally admire what Tamar and Dov did – nothing less than that,” he says, while adding, “But my agenda will be different. The three immediate dangers to Israeli society are the occupation, racism and the diminishment of the democratic space to the point of liquidation. That’s the agenda that has to be the hub of the struggle, as long as Israel rules over millions of people who have no rights, enters [people’s houses] in the middle of the night, arrests minors on a daily basis and shoots people in the back.

    "Israel commits murder on a daily basis. When you murder one Palestinian, you’re called Elor Azaria [the IDF soldier convicted and jailed for killing an incapacitated Palestinian assailant]; when you murder and oppress thousands of Palestinians, you’re called the State of Israel.”

    So you plan to be the provocateur in the next Knesset?

    “It’s not my intention to be a provocateur, to stand there and scream and revile people. Even on Facebook I was compelled to stop that. But I definitely intend to challenge the dialogue in terms of the content, and mainly with a type of sarcasm.”

    ’Bags of blood’

    Cassif, 54, who holds a doctorate in political philosophy from the London School of Economics, teaches political science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Sapir Academic College in Sderot and at the Academic College of Tel Aviv-Yaffo. He lives in Rehovot, is married and is the father of a 19-year-old son. He’s been active in Hadash for three decades and has held a number of posts in the party.

    As a lecturer, he stands out for his boldness and fierce rhetoric, which draws students of all stripes. He even hangs out with some of his Haredi students, one of whom wrote a post on the eve of the Hadash primary urging the delegates to choose him. After his election, a student from a settlement in the territories wrote to him, “You are a determined and industrious person, and for that I hold you in high regard. Hoping we will meet on the field of action and growth for the success of Israel as a Jewish, democratic state (I felt obliged to add a small touch of irony in conclusion).”

    Cassif grew up in a home that supported Mapai, forerunner of Labor, in Rishon Letzion. He was an only child; his father was an accountant, his mother held a variety of jobs. He was a news hound from an early age, and at 12 ran for the student council in school. He veered sharply to the left in his teens, becoming a keen follower of Marx and socialism.

    Following military service in the IDF’s Nahal brigade and a period in the airborne Nahal, Cassif entered the Hebrew University. There his political career moved one step forward, and there he also forsook the Zionist left permanently. His first position was as a parliamentary aide to the secretary general of the Communist Party, Meir Wilner.

    “At first I was closer to Mapam [the United Workers Party, which was Zionist], and then I refused to serve in the territories. I was the first refusenik in the first intifada to be jailed. I didn’t get support from Mapam, I got support from the people of Hadash, and I drew close to them. I was later jailed three more times for refusing to serve in the territories.”

    His rivals in the student organizations at the Hebrew University remember him as the epitome of the extreme left.

    “Even in the Arab-Jewish student association, Cassif was considered off-the-wall,” says Motti Ohana, who was chairman of Likud’s student association and active in the Student Union at the end of the 1980s and early 1990s. “One time I got into a brawl with him. It was during the first intifada, when he brought two bags of blood, emptied them out in the university’s corridors and declared, ‘There is no difference between Jewish and Arab blood,’ likening Israeli soldiers to terrorists. The custom on campus was that we would quarrel, left-right, Arabs-Jews, and after that we would sit together, have a coffee and talk. But not Cassif.”

    According to Ohana, today a member of the Likud central committee, the right-wing activists knew that, “You could count on Ofer to fall into every trap. There was one event at the Hebrew University that was a kind of political Hyde Park. The right wanted to boot the left out of there, so we hung up the flag. It was obvious that Ofer would react, and in fact he tore the flag, and in the wake of the ruckus that developed, political activity was stopped for good.”

    Replacing the anthem

    Cassif voices clearly and cogently positions that challenge the public discourse in Israel, and does so with ardor and charisma. Four candidates vied for Hadash’s Jewish slot, and they all delivered speeches at the convention. The three candidates who lost to him – Efraim Davidi, Yaela Raanan and the head of the party’s Tel Aviv branch, Noa Levy – described their activity and their guiding principles. When they spoke, there was the regular buzz of an audience that’s waiting for lunch. But when Cassif took the stage, the effect was magnetic.

    “Peace will not be established without a correction of the crimes of the Nakba and [recognition of] the right of return,” he shouted, and the crowd cheered him. As one senior party figure put it, “Efraim talked about workers’ rights, Yaela about the Negev, Noa about activity in Tel Aviv – and Ofer was Ofer.”

    What do you mean by “right of return”?

    Cassif: “The first thing is the actual recognition of the Nakba and of the wrong done by Israel. Compare it to the Truth and Reconciliation Commissions in South Africa, if you like, or with the commissions in Chile after Pinochet. Israel must recognize the wrong it committed. Now, recognition of the wrong also includes recognition of the right of return. The question is how it’s implemented. It has to be done by agreement. I can’t say that tomorrow Tel Aviv University has to be dismantled and that Sheikh Munis [the Arab village on whose ruins the university stands] has to be rebuilt there. The possibility can be examined of giving compensation in place of return, for example.”

    But what is the just solution, in your opinion?

    “For the Palestinian refugees to return to their homeland.”

    That means there will be Jews who will have to leave their home.

    “In some places, unequivocally, yes. People will have to be told: ‘You must evacuate your places.’ The classic example is Ikrit and Biram [Christian-Arab villages in Galilee whose residents were promised – untruly – by the Israeli authorities in 1948 that they would be able to return, and whose lands were turned over to Jewish communities]. But there are places where there is certainly greater difficulty. You don’t right one wrong with another.”

    What about the public space in Israel? What should it look like?

    “The public space has to change, to belong to all the state’s residents. I dispute the conception of ‘Jewish publicness.’”

    How should that be realized?

    “For example, by changing the national symbols, changing the national anthem. [Former Hadash MK] Mohammed Barakeh once suggested ‘I Believe’ [‘Sahki, Sahki’] by [Shaul] Tchernichovsky – a poem that is not exactly an expression of Palestinian nationalism. He chose it because of the line, ‘For in mankind I’ll believe.’ What does it mean to believe in mankind? It’s not a Jew, or a Palestinian, or a Frenchman, or I don’t know what.”

    What’s the difference between you and the [Arab] Balad party? Both parties overall want two states – a state “of all its citizens” and a Palestinian state.

    “In the big picture, yes. But Balad puts identity first on the agenda. We are not nationalists. We do not espouse nationalism as a supreme value. For us, self-determination is a means. We are engaged in class politics. By the way, Balad [the National Democratic Assembly] and Ta’al [MK Ahmad Tibi’s Arab Movement for Renewal] took the idea of a state of all its citizens from us, from Hadash. We’ve been talking about it for ages.”

    If you were a Palestinian, what would you do today?

    “In Israel, what my Palestinian friends are doing, and I with them – [wage] a parliamentary and extra-parliamentary struggle.”

    And what about the Palestinians in the territories?

    “We have always been against harming innocent civilians. Always. In all our demonstrations, one of our leading slogans was: ‘In Gaza and in Sderot, children want to live.’ With all my criticism of the settlers, to enter a house and slaughter children, as in the case of the Fogel family [who were murdered in their beds in the settlement of Itamar in 2011], is intolerable. You have to be a human being and reject that.”

    And attacks on soldiers?

    “An attack on soldiers is not terrorism. Even Netanyahu, in his book about terrorism, explicitly categorizes attacks on soldiers or on the security forces as guerrilla warfare. It’s perfectly legitimate, according to every moral criterion – and, by the way, in international law. At the same time, I am not saying it’s something wonderful, joyful or desirable. The party’s Haifa office is on Ben-Gurion Street, and suddenly, after years, I noticed a memorial plaque there for a fighter in Lehi [pre-state underground militia, also known as the Stern Gang] who assassinated a British officer. Wherever there has been a struggle for liberation from oppression, there are national heroes, who in 90 percent of the cases carried out some operations that were unlawful. Nelson Mandela is today considered a hero, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, but according to the conventional definition, he was a terrorist. Most of the victims of the ANC [African National Congress] were civilians.”

    In other words, today’s Hamas commanders who are carrying out attacks on soldiers will be heroes of the future Palestinian state?

    “Of course.”

    Anti-Zionist identity

    Cassif terms himself an explicit anti-Zionist. “There are three reasons for that,” he says. “To begin with, Zionism is a colonialist movement, and as a socialist, I am against colonialism. Second, as far as I am concerned, Zionism is racist in ideology and in practice. I am not referring to the definition of race theory – even though there are also some who impute that to the Zionist movement – but to what I call Jewish supremacy. No socialist can accept that. My supreme value is equality, and I can’t abide any supremacy – Jewish or Arab. The third thing is that Zionism, like other ethno-nationalistic movements, splits the working class and all weakened groups. Instead of uniting them in a struggle for social justice, for equality, for democracy, it divides the exploited classes and the enfeebled groups, and by that means strengthens the rule of capital.”

    He continues, “Zionism also sustains anti-Semitism. I don’t say it does so deliberately – even though I have no doubt that there are some who do it deliberately, like Netanyahu, who is connected to people like the prime minister of Hungary, Viktor Orban, and the leader of the far right in Austria, Hans Christian Strache.”

    Did Mapai-style Zionism also encourage anti-Semitism?

    “The phenomenon was very striking in Mapai. Think about it for a minute, not only historically, but logically. If the goal of political and practical Zionism is really the establishment of a Jewish state containing a Jewish majority, and for Diaspora Jewry to settle there, nothing serves them better than anti-Semitism.”

    What in their actions encouraged anti-Semitism?

    “The very appeal to Jews throughout the world – the very fact of treating them as belonging to the same nation, when they were living among other nations. The whole old ‘dual loyalty’ story – Zionism actually encouraged that. Therefore, I maintain that anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism are not the same thing, but are precisely opposites. That doesn’t mean, of course, that there are no anti-Zionists who are also anti-Semites. Most of the BDS people are of course anti-Zionists, but they are in no way anti-Semites. But there are anti-Semites there, too.”

    Do you support BDS?

    “It’s too complex a subject for a yes or no answer; there are aspects I don’t support.”

    Do you think that the Jews deserve a national home in the Land of Israel?

    “I don’t know what you mean by ‘national home.’ It’s very amorphous. We in Hadash say explicitly that Israel has a right to exist as a sovereign state. Our struggle is not against the state’s existence, but over its character.”

    But that state is the product of the actions of the Zionist movement, which you say has been colonialist and criminal from day one.

    “That’s true, but the circumstances have changed. That’s the reason that the majority of the members of the Communist Party accepted the [1947] partition agreement at the time. They recognized that the circumstances had changed. I think that one of the traits that sets communist thought apart, and makes it more apt, is the understanding and the attempt to strike the proper balance between what should be, and reality. So it’s true that Zionism started as colonialism, but what do you do with the people who were already born here? What do you tell them? Because your grandparents committed a crime, you have to leave? The question is how you transform the situation that’s been created into one that’s just, democratic and equal.”

    So, a person who survived a death camp and came here is a criminal?

    “The individual person, of course not. I’m in favor of taking in refugees in distress, no matter who or what they are. I am against Zionism’s cynical use of Jews in distress, including the refugees from the Holocaust. I have a problem with the fact that the natives whose homeland this is cannot return, while people for whom it’s not their homeland, can, because they supposedly have some sort of blood tie and an ‘imaginary friend’ promised them the land.”

    I understand that you are in favor of the annulment of the Law of Return?

    “Yes. Definitely.”

    But you are in favor of the Palestinian right of return.

    “There’s no comparison. There’s no symmetry here at all. Jerry Seinfeld was by chance born to a Jewish family. What’s his connection to this place? Why should he have preference over a refugee from Sabra or Chatila, or Edward Said, who did well in the United States? They are the true refugees. This is their homeland. Not Seinfeld’s.”

    Are you critical of the Arabs, too?

    “Certainly. One criticism is of their cooperation with imperialism – take the case of today’s Saudi Arabia, Qatar and so on. Another, from the past, relates to the reactionary forces that did not accept that the Jews have a right to live here.”

    Hadash refrained from criticizing the Assad regime even as it was massacring civilians in Syria. The party even torpedoed a condemnation of Assad after the chemical attack. Do you identify with that approach?

    “Hadash was critical of the Assad regime – father and son – for years, so we can’t be accused in any way of supporting Assad or Hezbollah. We are not Ba’ath, we are not Islamists. We are communists. But as I said earlier, the struggle, unfortunately, is generally not between the ideal and what exists in practice, but many times between two evils. And then you have to ask yourself which is the lesser evil. The Syrian constellation is extremely complicated. On the one hand, there is the United States, which is intervening, and despite all the pretense of being against ISIS, supported ISIS and made it possible for ISIS to sprout.

    "I remind you that ISIS started from the occupation of Iraq. And ideologically and practically, ISIS is definitely a thousand times worse than the Assad regime, which is at base also a secular regime. Our position was and is against the countries that pose the greatest danger to regional peace, which above all are Qatar and Saudi Arabia, and the United States, which supports them. That doesn’t mean that we support Assad.”

    Wrong language

    Cassif’s economic views are almost as far from the consensus as his political ideas. He lives modestly in an apartment that’s furnished like a young couple’s first home. You won’t find an espresso maker or unnecessary products of convenience in his place. To his credit, it can be said that he extracts the maximum from Elite instant coffee.

    What is your utopian vision – to nationalize Israel’s conglomerates, such as Cellcom, the telecommunications company, or Osem, the food manufacturer and distributor?

    “The bottom line is yes. How exactly will it be done? That’s an excellent question, which I can’t answer. Perhaps by transferring ownership to the state or to the workers, with democratic tools. And there are other alternatives. But certainly, I would like it if a large part of the resources were not in private hands, as was the case before the big privatizations. It’s true that it won’t be socialism, because, again, there can be no such thing as Zionist socialism, but there won’t be privatization like we have today. What is the result of capitalism in Israel? The collapse of the health system, the absence of a social-welfare system, a high cost of living and of housing, the elderly and the disabled in a terrible situation.”

    Does any private sector have the right to exist?

    “Look, the question is what you mean by ‘private sector.’ If we’re talking about huge concerns that the owners of capital control completely through their wealth, then no.”

    What growth was there in the communist countries? How can anyone support communism, in light of the grim experience wherever it was tried?

    “It’s true, we know that in the absolute majority of societies where an attempt was made to implement socialism, there was no growth or prosperity, and we need to ask ourselves why, and how to avoid that. When I talk about communism, I’m not talking about Stalin and all the crimes that were committed in the name of the communist idea. Communism is not North Korea and it is not Pol Pot in Cambodia. Heaven forbid.”

    And what about Venezuela?

    “Venezuela is not communism. In fact, they didn’t go far enough in the direction of socialism.”

    Chavez was not enough of a socialist?

    “Chavez, but in particular Maduro. The Communist Party is critical of the regime. They support it because the main enemy is truly American imperialism and its handmaidens. Let’s look at what the U.S. did over the years. At how many times it invaded and employed bullying, fascist forces. Not only in Latin America, its backyard, but everywhere.”

    Venezuela is falling apart, people there don’t have anything to eat, there’s no medicine, everyone who can flees – and it’s the fault of the United States?

    “You can’t deny that the regime has made mistakes. It’s not ideal. But basically, it is the result of American imperialism and its lackeys. After all, the masses voted for Chavez and for Maduro not because things were good for them. But because American corporations stole the country’s resources and filled their own pockets. I wouldn’t make Chavez into an icon, but he did some excellent things.”

    Then how do you generate individual wealth within the method you’re proposing? I understand that I am now talking to you capitalistically, but the reality is that people see the accumulation of assets as an expression of progress in life.

    “Your question is indeed framed in capitalist language, which simply departs from what I believe in. Because you are actually asking me how the distribution of resources is supposed to occur within the capitalist framework. And I say no, I am not talking about resource distribution within a capitalist framework.”

    Gantz vs. Netanyahu

    Cassif was chosen as the polls showed Meretz and Labor, the representatives of the Zionist left, barely scraping through into the next Knesset and in fact facing a serious possibility of electoral extinction. The critique of both parties from the radical left is sometimes more acerbic than from the right.

    Would you like to see the Labor Party disappear?

    “No. I think that what’s happening at the moment with Labor and with Meretz is extremely dangerous. I speak about them as collectives, because they contain individuals with whom I see no possibility of engaging in a dialogue. But I think that they absolutely must be in the Knesset.”

    Is a left-winger who defines himself as a Zionist your partner in any way?

    “Yes. We need partners. We can’t be picky. Certainly we will cooperate with liberals and Zionists on such issues as combating violence against women or the battle to rescue the health system. Maybe even in putting an end to the occupation.”

    I’ll put a scenario to you: Benny Gantz does really well in the election and somehow overcomes Netanyahu. Do you support the person who led Operation Protective Edge in Gaza when he was chief of staff?

    “Heaven forbid. But we don’t reject people, we reject policy. I remind you that it was [then-defense minister] Yitzhak Rabin who led the most violent tendency in the first intifada, with his ‘Break their bones.’ But when he came to the Oslo Accords, it was Hadash and the Arab parties that gave him, from outside the coalition, an insurmountable bloc. I can’t speak for the party, but if there is ever a government whose policy is one that we agree with – eliminating the occupation, combating racism, abolishing the nation-state law – I believe we will give our support in one way or another.”

    And if Gantz doesn’t declare his intention to eliminate the occupation, he isn’t preferable to Netanyahu in any case?

    “If so, why should we recommend him [to the president to form the next government]? After the clips he posted boasting about how many people he killed and how he hurled Gaza back into the Stone Age, I’m far from certain that he’s better.”

    #Hadash

    • traduction d’un extrait [ d’actualité ]

      Le candidat à la Knesset dit que le sionisme encourage l’antisémitisme et qualifie Netanyahu de « meurtrier »
      Peu d’Israéliens ont entendu parler de M. Ofer Cassif, représentant juif de la liste de la Knesset du parti d’extrême gauche Hadash. Le 9 avril, cela changera.
      Par Ravit Hecht 16 février 2019 – Haaretz

      (…) Identité antisioniste
      Cassif se dit un antisioniste explicite. « Il y a trois raisons à cela », dit-il. « Pour commencer, le sionisme est un mouvement colonialiste et, en tant que socialiste, je suis contre le colonialisme. Deuxièmement, en ce qui me concerne, le sionisme est raciste d’idéologie et de pratique. Je ne fais pas référence à la définition de la théorie de la race - même si certains l’imputent également au mouvement sioniste - mais à ce que j’appelle la suprématie juive. Aucun socialiste ne peut accepter cela. Ma valeur suprême est l’égalité et je ne peux supporter aucune suprématie - juive ou arabe. La troisième chose est que le sionisme, comme d’autres mouvements ethno-nationalistes, divise la classe ouvrière et tous les groupes sont affaiblis. Au lieu de les unir dans une lutte pour la justice sociale, l’égalité, la démocratie, il divise les classes exploitées et affaiblit les groupes, renforçant ainsi le pouvoir du capital. "
      Il poursuit : « Le sionisme soutient également l’antisémitisme. Je ne dis pas qu’il le fait délibérément - même si je ne doute pas qu’il y en a qui le font délibérément, comme Netanyahu, qui est connecté à des gens comme le Premier ministre de la Hongrie, Viktor Orban, et le chef de l’extrême droite. en Autriche, Hans Christian Strache. ”

      Le sionisme type-Mapaï a-t-il également encouragé l’antisémitisme ?
      « Le phénomène était très frappant au Mapai. Pensez-y une minute, non seulement historiquement, mais logiquement. Si l’objectif du sionisme politique et pratique est en réalité de créer un État juif contenant une majorité juive et de permettre à la communauté juive de la diaspora de s’y installer, rien ne leur sert mieux que l’antisémitisme. "

      Qu’est-ce qui, dans leurs actions, a encouragé l’antisémitisme ?
      « L’appel même aux Juifs du monde entier - le fait même de les traiter comme appartenant à la même nation, alors qu’ils vivaient parmi d’autres nations. Toute la vieille histoire de « double loyauté » - le sionisme a en fait encouragé cela. Par conséquent, j’affirme que l’antisémitisme et l’antisionisme ne sont pas la même chose, mais sont précisément des contraires. Bien entendu, cela ne signifie pas qu’il n’y ait pas d’antisionistes qui soient aussi antisémites. La plupart des membres du BDS sont bien sûr antisionistes, mais ils ne sont en aucun cas antisémites. Mais il y a aussi des antisémites.

  • How to Think About #Empire | Boston Review
    http://bostonreview.net/literature-culture-global-justice/arundhati-roy-avni-sejpal-challenging-%E2%80%9Cpost-%E2%80%9D-postcolo

    Another “update” that we ought to think about is that new technology could ensure that the world no longer needs a vast working class. What will then emerge is a restive population of people who play no part in economic activity—a surplus population if you like, one that will need to be managed and controlled. Our digital coordinates will ensure that controlling us is easy. Our movements, friendships, relationships, bank accounts, access to money, food, education, healthcare, information (fake, as well as real), even our desires and feelings—all of it is increasingly surveilled and policed by forces we are hardly aware of. How long will it be before the elite of the world feel that almost all the world’s problems could be solved if only they could get rid of that #surplus #population? If only they could delicately annihilate specific populations in specific ways—using humane and democratic methods, of course. Preferably in the name of justice and liberty. Nothing on an industrial scale, like gas chambers or Fat Men and Little Boys. What else are smart nukes and germ warfare for?

  • Interview with #Forensic_Architecture Founder #Eyal_Weizman | 2018-05-01 | Architectural Record
    https://www.architecturalrecord.com/articles/13367-interview-with-forensic-architecture-founder-eyal-weizman

    Born in Israel and educated at the Architectural Association (AA), Eyal Weizman could be considered more a detective than an architect. In 2011, Weizman established Forensic Architecture, an agency based at the Centre for Research Architecture at Goldsmiths, University of London. He directs the center. The group, whose funders include the European Research Council, combs through data such as smartphone footage, satellite imagery, maps, and phone logs to create three-dimensional spatial maps of conflict sites, using architectural rendering software and other analytic tools. Significant projects have included full-scale replicas of key elements of Auschwitz gas chambers and incinerators for an exhibit at the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale, and an investigation into the U.S. bombing of a Syrian mosque last year. The firm, which was just shortlisted for the Turner Prize, is currently scrutinizing the deadly blaze at London’s Grenfell Tower in June 2017, mining publicly available footage to create a 3-D model that will serve as an open resource for people to better understand the events that led to the fire. Weizman spoke to RECORD from the group’s office at Goldsmiths.

  • 600 refugees in Australian detention centre write open letter demanding assisted suicide | Australasia | News | The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/refugees-australian-detention-centre-open-letter-assisted-suicide-man

    It called on Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Immigration Minister Peter Dutton for “a navy ship that can put us all on board and dump us all in the ocean... a gas chamber... (or) an injection of a poison”.

    It said: “As previously we wrote and asked for help and there was no response to our request to be freed out of detention we realised that there are no differences between us and rubbish - but a bunch of slaves that helped to stop the boats by living in hellish condition.

    “The only difference is that we are very costly for the Australian tax payers and the politicians as our job to ‘stop the boats’ is done.
    ManusIsland.jpg
    Facilities at the Manus Island Regional Processing Facility, used for the detention of asylum seekers that arrive by boat

    “We are dying in Manus gradually, every single day we are literally tortured and traumatised and there is no safe country to offer us protection.”

  • 600 refugees in Australian detention centre write open letter demanding assisted suicide

    Two-thirds of the inhabitants of Manus Island Regional Processing Centre in Papua New Guinea have demanded help end their own lives to escape being ’tortured and traumatised’ every day

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/refugees-australian-detention-centre-open-letter-assisted-suicide-man
    #lettre #suicide #suicide_assisté #mort #mourir_en_détention #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Australie #Manus_island
    cc @reka @albertocampiphoto

    • Voici le contenu de la lettre :

      A Christmas letter from Manus

      On 30 November 2015, Six hundred men in Manus RPC, PNG, wrote the following letter to Malcolm Turnbull, Prime Minister of Australia and Peter Dutton MP, Minister for Immigration and Border Protection.

      The importance of this letter is that it sets a challenge for all of us who are preparing to celebrate Christmas. Read the letter and ask yourself: by treating people this way, are we being true to the Christian spirit, or are we betraying it? Christmas is the time when, according to Christian tradition, Christ’s parents could not readily find shelter as they fled to escape persecution. If they did the same thing today and found themselves in Australia, they would be taken by force to another country where they would be locked up indefinitely in shocking conditions.

      This Christmas, we should all face up to some uncomfortable facts:

      boat people are not “illegal”: they do not break any law by coming here to seek asylum;
      we take them by force to another country (PNG or Nauru);
      we imprison them and mistreat them;
      we vilify them as “illegal” and sanitise the whole exercise by calling it “border protection”
      every aspect of it: the cruelty and the dishonesty, contradicts the most fundamental aspects of Christan teaching;
      all of this has been implemented by people who conspicuously proclaim their Christianity, including Kevin Rudd, Tony Abbott, Scott Morrison.

      Any government which is willing to tolerate these things cannot possibly describe itself as adhering to the Christian tradition. Likewise any Opposition which does not oppose it. If your Federal MP is a member of the government and sends you a Christmas card this year, you can be pretty confident that he or she is a hypocrite.

      Here is the transcribed text of the letter:

      30/11/15
      Hello Dear Mr Malcolm Turnbull and Peter Dutton.
      As the refugees and asylum seekers trapped in Manus Island detention we wold like to request you something different this time.
      As previously we wrote and asked for help and there was no respond to our request to be freed out of detention we realized that there are no differences between us and rubbish but a bunch of slaves that helped to stop the boats by living in hellish condition. The only difference is that we are very costly for the Australian tax payers and the Politicians as our job to “stop the boats” is done.
      We would like to give you some recommendations to stop the waste of this huge amount of money ruining Australian’s reputation and to keep the Australian boarders safe forever.
      1. A navy ship that can put us all on board and dump us all in the ocean. (HMAS is always available)
      2. A gas chamber (DECMIL will do it with a new contract)
      3. Injection of a poison. (IHMS will help for this)
      This is not a joke or a satire and please take it serious.
      We are dying in Manus gradually, every single day we are literarly tortured and traumatized and there is no safe country to offer us protection as DIBP says.
      Best regards
      Merry Christmas in advance
      Manus refugees and asylum seekers.

      http://www.julianburnside.com.au/a-christmas-letter-from-manus

  • Secret World War II Chemical Experiments Tested Troops By Race : NPR
    http://www.npr.org/2015/06/22/415194765/u-s-troops-tested-by-race-in-secret-world-war-ii-chemical-experimentshttp://www.npr.org/2015/06/22/415194765/u-s-troops-tested-by-race-in-secret-world-war-ii-chemical-experiments

    As a young U.S. Army soldier during World War II, Rollins Edwards knew better than to refuse an assignment.

    When officers led him and a dozen others into a wooden gas chamber and locked the door, he didn’t complain. None of them did. Then, a mixture of mustard gas and a similar agent called lewisite was piped inside.

    “It felt like you were on fire,” recalls Edwards, now 93 years old. “Guys started screaming and hollering and trying to break out. And then some of the guys fainted. And finally they opened the door and let us out, and the guys were just, they were in bad shape.”
    About This Investigation

    This is Part 1 of a two-part investigation on mustard gas testing conducted by the U.S. military during World War II. The second story in this report examines failures by the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide benefits to those injured by military mustard gas experiments.
    Three test subjects enter a gas chamber, which will fill with mustard gas, as part of the military’s secret chemical warfare testing in March 1945.
    NPR News Investigations
    The VA’s Broken Promise To Thousands Of Vets Exposed To Mustard Gas

    Edwards was one of 60,000 enlisted men enrolled in a once-secret government program — formally declassified in 1993 — to test mustard gas and other chemical agents on American troops. But there was a specific reason he was chosen: Edwards is African-American.

  • Jewish Iran deal supporters booted from New York town hall meeting | +972 Magazine | Published August 13, 2015
    http://972mag.com/iran-deal-supporters-booted-from-new-york-town-hall-meeting/110205

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttee67RghDI

    When a group of New York activists stood silently in support of the Iran deal at a meeting in Brooklyn, they were accused of being ‘Arabs’ and wishing to send Jews off to the ‘gas chambers.’

  • Excavation of gas chamber at Nazi Sobibor concentration camp completed - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/10/16/sobi-o16.html

    Excavation of gas chamber at Nazi Sobibor concentration camp completed

    By Elisabeth Zimmermann
    16 October 2014

    With the assistance of supporters, archaeologists Yoram Haimi from Israel and Wojciech Mazurek from Poland have excavated the remains of the gas chamber at the Nazi Sobibor concentration camp near Lublin, near the eastern Polish border, as Spiegel Online reported on September 23.

    In a clearing near the old Sobibor train station, one can see the newly discovered finds and remains of the walls. It includes the remains of an estimated four gas chambers, each 5 by 7 metres, which served as death chambers for between 70 and 100 people. Haimi and Mazurek hope that their findings will make the Nazi crimes at Sobibor more comprehensible. The Nazis destroyed the concentration camp 71 years ago, after SS officers and their allies had murdered between 170,000 and 250,000 people, mostly defenceless Jews and Roma.

    #shoah #nazisma #camps_de_la_mort #histoire #sobibor #seconde_guerre_mondiale

  • Marine Le Pen: False messiah for the Jews of France
    There’s not common cause enough either for a shidduch between American conservatives and French nationalists.
    By Seth Lipsky | Sep. 9, 2014 | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.614808

    The new poll showing that Marine Le Pen would defeat Francois Hollande in a run-off election for president of France raises an ironic question. Is it conceivable that the daughter of a rightist demagogue who rose to prominence making remarks at the expense of the Jews, an agitator who called the Nazi gas chambers “a detail in the history of World War II,” could emerge, as Marine Le Pen says she will, as a protector of the last Jews of France?

    If there is a basis for the question it is that the National Front is the nemesis of France’s Arab immigrants, from whose ranks sprang the latest attacks on French Jews. This was underscored during the fighting in the Gaza Strip, when pro-Palestinian protesters attacked the synagogue on Rue de la Roquette. The demonstration of violence horrified at least some of the constituencies that are important to the National Front, I was told by the premier French reporter on the beat, Michel Gurfinkiel.

    This is showing up in two ways. One is that it at least partly contributes to Marine Le Pen’s growing strength. Another is that even within the Jewish community of France there is growing sympathy for the National Front. The numbers are still tiny — moving to 10% from 5%. But that’s a doubling of the number of French Jews inclining toward the National Front. And I’m told that Marine Le Pen’s key foreign policy aide, Aymeric Chauprade, who has a record as being pro-Arab and anti-American, is now saying that “Israel is not the enemy of France,” while radical Islam is.

    “During the last summer,” Gurfinkiel tells me, “the National Front has taken a much more pro-Israel line than it used to. The constituencies — these 30% to 35% of the people who do vote for the National Front — have been instinctively more supportive of Israel this time for two reasons: There has been a revulsion regarding the Islamic State and the feeling that Hamas and the Islamic State are the same thing; and those people likely to vote for the National Front have been shocked by the pro-Palestinian demonstrations.”

    Gurfinkiel and I mark that trend for its newsworthiness. But can one put much stock in it? My own reservations go back to a lunch I had a generation ago with Marine Le Pen’s father, Jean-Marie Le Pen. At the time I was based in Brussels and editing the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal’s European edition. We were getting queries about whether Le Pen, then leading the National Front, could be an ideological partner for the Reaganite revolution, and I invited him to lunch.

    This took place in May 1986 at an elegant eatery near the Hotel La Madeleine. In my naiveté I nursed doubts about whether the rightist firebrand would be even welcome in the restaurant. But, as Le Pen’s car arrived, the restaurant’s entire staff formed a receiving line. It extended the length of the restaurant, and as Le Pan passed, they bowed. I witnessed that myself. Then we repaired to a private dining room, where, at a round table for four, we opened up all the questions, starting with immigration.

    The Wall Street Journal was — and still is — the most pro-immigration newspaper in America (and probably the world). The idea is that if one is for, as we were, the free movement of capital and the free movement of trade one also has to have the free movement of labor. This cut no mustard with Le Pen. His central point, I later wrote, was that he was in favor of France — the nation, its culture and its language.

    Le Pen insisted that immigration itself was not what bothered him, but the rejection by North African Arab immigrants of assimilation. He argued that it was not racist to want to preserve a national culture and identity. He said, as I later summarized his argument, that this should no less true of France, say, than Israel. He made his case in a cheerful, friendly way. It was the following year that he made his notorious remark about the Nazi gas chambers.

    Where our conversation found its dead end was economics. Le Pen, I wrote, may be an anticommunist, but he was not pursuing economic liberty. The idea of free movement of people, goods and capital, he just had no feel for it, and I doubt he would even accept it in principle. In the event, no common cause was ever made between American free market conservatives and Jean-Marie Le Pen, and if there’s sympathy among American conservatives even for Marine Le Pen’s National Front, I’ve been unable to detect it. A shidduch between American conservatives and the French nationalists, I suspect, will have to await a party that gives a central role to the principles of economic liberty as an engine of growth — and assimilation.

  • #Cancer Culture - S. Lochlann Jain
    https://anthropology.stanford.edu/people/lochlann-s-jain

    Usually cancer is studied as a distinct, finite, disease that some unfortunate people get. Nevertheless, over half of all Americans will be diagnosed with an invasive cancer. In this book, based in extensive analysis of the history, politics, and science of cancer, as well as years of fieldwork, I examine the ways that cancer is not separate from, but is central to medical, political, and social economies.

    lire en particulier “Be Prepared” et “Cancer Butch”

    • https://anthropology.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/jain.beprepared.pdf

      Did my mind declare war on my body ?

      J’ai passé un peu de temps pour mettre le pdf en texte ici (en OCR car ce sont des images du livre de mauvaise qualité), de manière à ce qu’il puisse être lu par les non anglophones. J’ai corrigé les premières pages, si j’ai le courage je ferais la suite au fur et à mesure.
      Dans tous les cas, ce texte méritait d’être diffusé, j’espère que l’auteur sera d’accord.

      I don’t blame people for not knowing how to engage with a person with cancer.
      How would they? Heck, I hadn’t either. Despite the fact that each
      year 70,000 Americans between the ages of fifteen and forty are diagnosed
      with the disease and that incidence in this age group has doubled in the last
      thirty years, many of my friends in their thirties have never had to deal with
      it on a personal level.

      I remember when my cousin Elise was undergoing chemotherapy treatment while in her early thirties. When I met her I couldn’t even mention it,
      couldn’t (or wouldn’t, or didn’t) say that I was sorry or ask her how it was
      going---even though it was so obviously the thing that was going on. I was
      thirty-five for God’s sake, a grown—up, a professional, a parent, and cancer
      was so unthinkable that I couldn’t even acknowledge her disease. When my
      former partner’s sister showed up at our house all bald after her chemotherapy, my only remark was, “Hey, you could totally be a lesbian.” I was terrified,
      or in denial. More likely I had picked up the culture of stigma and this disabled me from giving genuine acknowledgment. But whatever sympathetic spin you want to put on it, I sucked in all the ways that I had to learn how to deal with later. Indeed, an assumption of exceptionalism was only the flip side of my own shame.

      Fantasies of agency steep both sides of diagnosis. On the “previvor” side,
      images continually tell us that cancer can be avoided if you eat right, avoid
      Teflon and smoking, and come from strong stock. Alternatively, tropes of
      hope, survivorship, battling, and positive attitude are fed to people post-
      diagnosis as if they were at the helm of a ship in known waters, not along
      stormy and uncharted shores. And yet, so little of cancer science, patient
      experience, or survival statistics seems to provide backing for the ubiquitous
      calls for hope in the popular culture of cancer. After all, who would celebrate
      a survivor who did not stand amid at least a few poor SOBs who fell?

      Everyone who has "battled,” “been touched by,” “survived,” been “made
      into a shadow of a former self,” or has been called to inhabit the myriad can-

      170

      car cliches has been asked to live in a caricature. As poets say in rendering
      their craft, clichés serve to shut down meaning. Clichés allow us not to think
      about What we are describing or hearing about: we know roses are red. People
      with cancer are called to live in and through—even if recalcitrantly—these
      hegemonic clichés by news articles, TV shows, detection campaigns, patient
      pamphlets, high—tech protocol—driven treatments, hospital organizations and
      smells, and everyday social interactions. Such cultural venues as marches
      for hope, research funding and direction, pharmaceutical interests, survivor
      rhetoric, and hospital ads constitute not distinct cultural phenomena, but
      overlap to form a broader hegemony of ways that cancer is talked about and
      that in turn control and diminish the ways that cancer culture can be inhab-
      ited and spoken about. Cancer exceeds the biology of multiplying cells. But
      the paradoxes of cancer culture can also be used to reflect on broader Ameri—
      can understandings of health and the mismatch of normative assumptions
      with the ways people actually live and die. "lhe restricted languages of cancer
      are not innocent.

      For an example of how individuated agency is used in cancer, one might
      look to the massive literature and movement spurred by Bernard Siegel,
      which is based in the moral complex of cancer and what he describes as the
      “exceptional patient.” In Love, Medicine, and Miracles: Lessons Learned about
      Self—Healing from a Surgeon’s Experience with Exceptional Patients, Siegel
      writes about having the right attitude to survive cancer(1). In Siegel’s View and
      its variants, surviving cancer becomes a moral calling, as if dying indicates
      some personal failure. Siegel—style literature offers another form of torture
      to people with cancer: Did my mind declare war on my body? Am I a cold,
      repressed person? (Okay, don’t answer that.) This huge and punishing industry preys on fear as much as any in the cancer complex and adds guilt to the mix.
      As one woman with metastatic colon cancer said on a retreat I attended,
      “Maybe I haven’t laughed enough. But then I looked around the room and
      some of you laugh a lot more than I do and you’re still here.” She died a year
      later, though she laughed plenty at the retreat.

      It’s no wonder that shame is such a common response to diagnosis. The
      dictionary helps with a description of shame: “The painful emotion arising
      from the consciousness of something dishonoring, ridiculous, or indecorous in one’s own conduct or circumstances, or of being in a situation which
      offends one’s sense of modesty or decency.(2)” Indeed, cancer does offend. People in treatment are often advised to wear wigs and other disguises, to joke
      with colleagues; they are given tips on how to make others feel more at ease.
      One does want to present decency, to seem upbeat. And so do others. A quick

      171

      “you look good,” with a response of “oh, thanks,” offers a Welcome segue to
      the next discussion topic and enables a certain propriety to circumscribe the
      confusion of proper responses to illness, to the stigma embodied by the possibility of a short life and a painful death. One person with metastatic disease
      calls herself, semi-facetiously, “everyone’s worst nightmare.” Others Speak
      about how hard it is to see the celebration of survivors while knowing that
      they themselves are being killed by the disease.

      Social grace is a good thing. But given the scope of the disease --- half of all
      Americans die of it and many more go through treatment --- one might wonder what or whom such an astonishing cultural oversight serves. After all how can cancer, a predictable result of an environment drowning in indus:
      trial and military toxicity, be dishonoring or indecorous ? I don’t mean its
      side effects; the physical breakdown of the body is perhaps definitive of the
      word “indecorousf” But these pre- and post-diagnosis calls to disavowal can
      help illuminate the ugly underside of American’s constant will to health, its
      normative assumptions about health and the social) individual, and generational traumas that it propagates. Expectations and assumptions about life span and their discriminatory and generational effects offer but one of many venues for such an exploration.

      Survivorship in America

      Perhaps it’s a class issue, but I didn’t really think about survival until I was
      called to consider being in the position of the one who might be survived.
      I was just tootling along until I was invited by diagnosis to inhabit this category, to attend retreats, camps, and support groups, to share an infusion
      room—to do all kinds of things with many people who have not, in fact,
      survived cancer—and thus to survive them at their memorial services, the
      garage sales of their things> and in the constructing and reading of memorial
      Websites and obituaries.

      To be sure, cancer survivorship (as opposed to either cancer death or
      just plain survival) comes with its benefits. I got a free kayak, albeit with a
      leak. When things are going really wrong I think about how my life insur-
      ance could pay for some cool things for my kids, or that maybe I don’t have
      to worry about saving for a down payment since in order for a home to be
      , a good investment you should really plan to live in it for five years. Some-
      times,when you find yourself buying into those cancer mantras of living in
      the moment, you can look around from a superior place at all the people
      scurrying around on projects you have determined do not matter—and then

      172

      go and do the laundry or shop for groceries, just like everyone else. Or like
      Bette Davis does in the movie Dark Victory as she dies of a brain tumor; you
      can consider yourself the lucky one, not having to survive the deaths of those
      You love. You have that strange privilege of being able to hold the materiality
      of your own mortality up against every attempt to make value stick. You may
      Wonder, as I do, how anyone survives the death of a parent or a sibling or a
      close friend or lover—the things that are purportedly normal life events—
      until you go through it yourself.3

      On the other hand, it may be easy to devolve into the narcissism of unremitting fear.
      I like to keep in mind what a driver once told me when I asked
      him what it was like to drive celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey around New
      York He said, “They like to think they are important. But after every funeral
      I’ve been to, people do the saaaaame thing. They eat.”

      The doctor survives the clinical trial, the child survives the parent, the
      well survive the sick But how have we come to take this survivorship for
      granted, as something to which we are entitled? Even a century or two ago
      there would have been a good chance that several of us would have died in
      childbirth or of some illness. Devastating as it may have been, we would have
      expected this. And we don’t exactly live in a medical nirvana. The United
      States is not even in the top ten for the longevity of its population. In fact, the
      United States is missing from the top twenty or even thirty for longevity in
      the world. In some studies, it’s not even in the top forty.4 Despite this statistic,
      the United States spends more than any other nation on health care. Part of
      Americans’ dismal life expectancy results from the broad lack of access to
      health care as well as the broader and well-documented discrimination in
      health care against the usual suspects: African Americans, women, younger
      people, and queers. But other factors that afiect even those with excellent
      access to excellent care play in as well: the high levels of toxins in the environment, including those in human and animal bodies; cigarettes; guns; little
      oversight for food, automobile, and other product safety; high rates of medical error.

      In short, despite the insistent rhetoric of health, American economies
      simply do not prioritize it. That’s okay. There is no particular reason that the
      general health of a population should trump all other concerns. But given the
      evidence, how do we come to believe this disconnect between dismal health
      status in the United States and the entitlement to normative health and life
      span? What kind of management has this necessary disavowal required? And
      what about the obverse of this question: how do these stories constitute those
      who are forced to drop out? After all, if survival is a moral and financial

      173

      Figure 13.1: The 2006 “Put Your Lance Face On” campaign from American Century
      Investments. This version of the promotional photo omits the warning, required in print
      advertisement publications, that it is possible to lose money by investing (included in the
      original).

      expectation and entitlement, then mortality must be constituted as something outside of normal life, even though these early deaths pay for pension:
      and other deferred payments. Even though everyone will die. I hypothesize
      that stigma and shame offer a way to examine and challenge ideals of health
      and the Ways that normative life spans have been constructed.

      Accumulation

      For analytical wealth in this matter, nothing beats a recent advertisement for
      American Century Investments that featured Lance Armstrong (figure 13.1).

      Armstrong has provided something of a translational figure for the nexus
      of industry, cancer, and humanitarianism that constitutes the discourses of
      cancer survivorship, foregrounding and even heroizing cancer survivors. His
      own story relentlessly underpins this cultural work.

      174

      While some accounts of Armstrong’s success go so far as to credit chemotherapy for literally rebuilding his body as a cycling machine, and others link his drive and success to his cancer experience, Armstrong continually presents himself in public as a survivor, claiming that his greatest success and pride is having survived cancer. In his autobiography, It’s Not About the Bike, Armstrong describes how, when diagnosed with testicular cancer in 1996,
      he actively sought the best care available to overcome a poor prognosis. He
      chose a doctor Who offered a then-new treatment that turned out to revolutionize the treatment for testicular cancer, turning the disease from a highrisk cancer to a largely curable one even in its metastatic iteration. This coincidence in the timing of his disease and this new treatment has enabled him to make his own agency in finding medical care into another inspirational aspect of his cancer survival story.

      In fact, cancer treatments are some of the most rote, protocol-driven
      treatments in medical practice, perfect examples of what historian Charles
      Rosenberg has detected as the rationalization of disease and diagnosis at
      the expense of the humanness of individual patients.5 Yet Armstrong’s story
      serves several purposes. It overemphasizes the role of agency in the success
      of cancer treatment, a View that correlates well With the advertising messages
      of high—profile cancer centers. It overestimates the curative potential of treatments for most cancers, something we would all like to believe in. And it
      propagates the myth that everyone has the potential to be a survivor—even as, ironically, survivorship against the odds requires the deaths of others.

      This Armstrong story comes with real social costs for many people surviving with and dying of cancer. Mixiam Engelberg’s graphic novel, like so many cancer narratives, ends abruptly with the recurrence of her metastatic disease and her subsequent death. One prominent page other book has a cartoon with her holding a placard stating, “Lance had a different cancer,” in response to her friends’ and colleagues’ comparison of her With Armstrong and their terrifying denial of her actual situation.6 So, While many cancer survivors consider Armstrong an icon and inspiration, others feel that he is misrepresentative of the
      disease. He at once gives them impossible standards of survivorship while at
      the same time building his heroism on the high death rates of other cancers.

      The American Century Investments advertisement summons the reader
      to “Put Your Lance Face On.” After gazing into the close—up image of a determined looking Armstrong and thinking quietly to oneself, “What the fuck?”
      one reads that “putting on a Lance face” “means taking responsibility for your
      future. . . . It means staying focused and determined in the face of challenges.
      When it comes to investing . . .” This ad is about Lance the Cyclist, sure; it

      175

      is also about Lance the Cancer Survivor. Control over one’s future h
      together the common thread of cancer survival, Tour de France victor Olds
      smart investing. But all this folds into the tiny hedge at the bottom of tfieand
      Past performance is no guarantee of future results . . . it is possible to lad:
      money by investing.” Even the Lance Face can see only so far into the fumrose

      ’This warning, necessary by law, echoes a skill essential to living in cae:
      talism. In heij study of market traders, Caitlyn Zaloom finds that “a tradJ 1.
      must learn to manage both his own engagements with risk and the ph 31 Z
      sensations and social stakes that accompany the highs and lows of wignc
      and losing. . . . Aggressive risk taking is established and sustained by routiIlTig
      zation and bureaucracy; it is not an escape from it.”7 The conflation of Arm—
      strong as athlete and cancer survivor in this ad offers the perfect personifica-
      tion of market investing, since the healthy functioning of a capitalist orde;
      requires a valorization of focused determination and responsibility for one’s
      future. By now a truism, liberal economic and political ideals require citi—
      zens to place themselves within a particular masochistic relationship to time
      What else but an ethos of deferred gratification would allow such retirement
      plans to remain solvent?

      As offensive as this ad is in its use of disease to create business, Ann.
      Strong’s story constitutes a culturally acceptable version of courage, cancer
      and survival that serves to comfort a population With increasing cancer rates,
      and the ad puts to use and propagates these notions of survivorship. As one:
      person wrote about giving Armstrong’s autobiography to her mother as she
      was dying of cancer, “I wanted her to be a courageous ‘surVivor’ too. I think
      we find it less creepy or at least difficult When people assume the role of sur-
      vivor, where they pretend they’re going to live an easy and long life.”8

      You can be angry at cancer; you can battle cancer. One campaign under-
      written by a company that builds radiation technology even allows people to
      write letters to cancer. But to be angry at the culture that produces the dis-
      ease and disavows it as a horrible death is to be a poor sport, to not live up to
      the expectations of the good battle and the good death witnessed everywhere
      in cancer obituaries. A bad attitude of this genre certainly will never enable
      you to become an exceptional patient. It’s as though a death threat blackmails
      cancer anger and frustration. But more astonishing still is the way in which
      this “poor sport” characterization carries over even into other cancer events.

      There is nothing wrong With having fun while making money. As one
      under—forty person who has been living in the cancer complex for over tWO
      decades said, “A fundraiser is where you invite people to a big fun event,
      serve great drinks, and do everything oossible for them not to think about

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      cancer.”You do want people to feel good and strong so that they will open
      their wallets, but this humanitarian charity model (“Swim for women With
      cancerl”) obscures the politics and paradoxes of such divisions. As one per—
      son organizing a fundraiser for her particular and rare cancer said as she
      thought about asking her doctors to attend her event, “They’ve made enough
      money off my cancer, they could pay some back” I signed on as the mixolo—
      gist for the event and spent several hours designing circus—themed drinks

      with little cotton candy garnishes.

      Time and Accumulationv

      Armstrong’s class, gender, and curable cancer allow his iconic status to
      overshadow the simple fact that cancer can completely destroy your financial
      savings and your family’s future. Sixty percent of personal bankruptcies in
      the United States result from the high cost of health care.11 This news, won—
      derful for people working in the healthcare industry since many people wifl
      pay anything for medical goods and services, means that cancer can be a
      long, expensive disease, paid for over generations.

      When one’s financial planner asks, semi—ironically, how long you plan to
      five, he calls up the paradox of survivorship. Middle— and upper—class Ameri—
      cans are asked to plan for an assumed longevity, and to be sure, a properly
      planned life span combined With a little luck comes with its rewards. But in
      times of trouble, the language of financial service starts to show cracks, even
      for healthy youngish people. The other day, When interviewing a Fidelity rep—
      resentative about my decreasing retirement account, the representative kept
      using the phrase “as your retirement plan grows.” When I pointed out that it
      had, in fact, shrunk by 45 percent, he just stared at me blanldy.‘ When, as an
      experiment, I asked him about people who don’t make it to the age of sixty-
      five, he pleaded, “You really need to think about it as a retirement plan.”

      No matter how we are interpellated to think about these accounts, non—
      normative life spans tell us about the ways that capitalist notions of time and
      accumulation work both economically and culturally. Many kinds of eco—
      nomic benefits, for example, are based in an implied life span: you work now,
      and we’ll pay you later. Social Security benefits are granted on the basis of
      how much you have put into the system over the years, and they last until
      you or your survivors are no longer eligible. Middle-class jobs often include
      not only salaries, but what are known as “deferred payments.” Pensions fall
      into this category, as do penalty—free retirement savings, and the benefit some
      academics get of partial payment of their children’s tuition.

      177

      If you croak, some of these contributions may revert back to your estate;
      others may be disbursed to qualifying survivors; others Will be recycled into
      the plans that will pay for the education of your colleagues’ children. As With
      any insurance policy, such calculations require that the state or the employer
      offer salary packages in the form of a financial hedge on your mortality and
      calculate the averages over the Whole workforce. Payments for those Who
      get old depend on the fact that some will die young. It’s not personal; it’s
      statistical. ‘

      Actually, I take that back. I guess there is not much that is more per50na1
      than your sex life, and if
      you are heterosexual and married—that is, if you say
      you are sleeping with one person only and that person is of the opposite sex
      and over a certain age—your cancer card Will play more lucratively. If you
      fit these criteria, you may be able to pass on these benefits and enable your
      loved ones to pay off some of your medical debts or provide a way toward
      a more comfortable life in (and sometimes because of) your absence. The
      survivorship of a spouse is a state—endowed right, enabled in the form of a
      cash benefit and various forms of tax relief. A husband’s or Wife’s death will
      enable his or her spouse to receive Social Security checks for decades. This
      cash enables a sort of proxy—survival by fulfilling your responsibility toward
      the support of your spouse and possibly the support of your children.

      This is precisely how one person explained to me his reasoning behind
      a recent change of genders: he can now legally have a Wife, legally bring her
      into the country, and legally offer her the protections of Social Security. For
      the same reasons, my lawyer advised me to marry a man, so that my hus-
      band could give the survivor—cash to my girlfriend. For the same reasonS,
      my mother was bummed out When I turned out not to be straight. Health is
      social and institutional as well as physical. Capital and family legitimate and
      live through each other, in some sense rendering each other immortal.12

      Social Security might be seen as ensuring that those Who do not conform
      to its measures of social legitimacy—people with forms of support that do
      not fall into the marriage category—are not given the forms of security into
      Which they are asked to pay while they live. Straight marriage presents a form
      of cultural longevity for the institution of marriage, and the labor of those
      who cannot partake in such survivorship literally underwrites the security of
      the individuals who can.13

      Historians of marriage have documented how ideas about the well—being
      of children led to these forms of social support. But take a closer look, and
      you will see that it’s only some children who benefit from these protective
      policies. Here’s an example. My employer offers a housing benefit that gives

      178

      some employees financial assistance in purchasing a house. It also describes
      death as a “severed relationship.” The relationship between my employer and
      an employee of the university can pass through a surviving partner—they
      included same—seX couples in their benefits plan in 1992, alb eit as taxable ben—
      efits rather than the untaxed benefits that straight people receive#such that
      a surviving partner may continue to live in a house purchased with the help
      of this fringe benefit. However, if an employee has children and no partner,
      the relationship is severed and the children are “SOL” (shit out of luck); they
      must sell the house no matter what the market is like and return the down
      payment loan to the employer. The debt cycles of illness and the early deaths
      of a parent are thus differently borne out through what counts as legitimate
      survival, thus reinforcing and rewarding normative social structures.

      But more important to my argument here, these retirement and Social
      Security benefits offer one means by which the terms of life span come to
      be taken for granted by the middle class in the United States. They make life
      span into a financial and moral calling, albeit one that the state will be will—
      ing to partially subsidize in the event of the deaths of the citizens who fulfill
      its principles of economic and sexual responsibility

      All this rests on a premise critical to economies in America: time and
      accumulation go together. You need the former to get the latter, and you have
      more smfi as you get older. No wonder people want to freeze themselves.
      Seriously. Cryonics offers an obvious strategy to maximize capitalist accu—
      mulation. On my salary, I’ll be able to pay for my kids’ college tuition in one
      hundred and fifty years. If I could freeze myself and my daughters and let
      my savings grow over that time, then come back to life after all the work of
      accumulation has been done for me, well, I could take full advantage of both
      the deferral and the gratification.” This may sound ludicrous, but it’s basi-
      cally the next step of what is already happening; people already freeze their
      eggs and sperm in order to maintain their fertility to a point at Which they
      have gained the sort of financial security that time and accumulation (are
      supposed to) bring.

      While cryonics suspends biological life as capitalism proliferates, uncon-
      trollably duplicating cells work to immobilize biological life. Cancer paro-
      dies excess. It could not be farther from the metaphors of an external enemy
      attacking the body imagined by visions of targeted chemotherapy, the broad
      political imaginary of the war on cancer, or the trope of the courageously
      battling and graciously accepting patient. If wealth rots the soul, accumulat-
      ing tumors rot the host. It just grows, sometimes as a tumor you should have
      noticed but didn’t, sometimes as a tumor you can’t help but notice but can’t

      179

      remove. It may just live there; you may touch it each day. It may disappear 0r ‘-
      it may wrap its way around your tongue. Either way, its changing size may 7’,
      make it seem living or dying. It inhabits a competing version of time, not ,
      yours, to which such things as savings and retirement are supposed to cor. ’

      relate, but its own, to which such words as “a o tosis” and “runawa ” ,
      Y aCCrue.

      These versions of competing time reveal a lot about life spans in capitalism ,

      Conclusion

      Alas, the Lance Face aims not toward the growing demographic of cancer

      survivors whose bodies experience the fissures of the immortal pretensions of :

      economic time. Unlike manypeople who calculate their odds and cash out their

      retirement policies after diagnosis, or the friends of mine Who told me thatI L
      was the inspiration for them to live in the moment and renovate their home, or ~
      those ads that regularly appear in Cure magazine that offer to buy the life insux. 3
      ance policies of people with cancer in exchange for a percentage, the Lance ad;

      replays tiresome injunctions to future thinking, saving, and determination. :
      The ad encourages the potential consumer of banking products to workin the ;
      broader interests of capital. Simply put, the ad uses cancer for its own ends and ’

      is able to do so because of the way that cancer rhetorics have so unquestion—
      ingly oyerlapped With notions of progress and accumulation in capitalism.

      The cultural management of cancer terror follows to some extent the,
      Cold War strategies of damping nuclear terror. You may have wondered why

      the phrase “you are the bomb” presents itself as something of a compliment

      Whereas, in a romantic situation, the comment “you are the gas chamber”,
      may not go over that well. Anthropologist Joseph Masco has analyzed how

      Americans didn’t just turn the threat of nuclear annihilation into atomic

      cafes, bikinis, and B—sz cocktails on their own; we were taught to survive

      through specific governmental programs sought to manage the emotional
      politics of the bomb. Nuclear terror, as a paralyzing emotion, was converted
      into nuclear fear, “an affective state that would allow citizens to function
      in a time of crisis.”5 Such emotional management required a two-pronged
      approach. First, citizens were asked to “take responsibility for their own
      survival.” Second, enemy status was displaced from nuclear war onto public
      panic, such that the main threat was perceived as inappropriate reactions to‘
      detonation, rather than to the bomb itself. Even With increased bomb testing
      and its release of radiation into the atmosphere, the discovery of high levels
      of radiation in American flesh and teeth, and the corresponding increasing
      of cancer rates along fallout routes and among nuclear workers, the nuclear

      180

      threat was always constituted as coming from the outside, never as the pre-
      dictable and calculated risk of American nuclear programs. In that sense, the
      forms of emotional management that resulted from military technologies
      underpin cancer culture in the United States as much as the technologies of
      Chemotherapy and radiation do.

      To be sure, the increasing use of the language of survivorship in main—
      stream cancer culture offers a welcome change from the days when people
      with cancer were asked to use plastic cutlery so as not to infect those around
      them or were not told of their diagnoses in order to protect them. Now, the
      Person who survives cancer walks a fine line between courage and deception,
      horror and the quotidian, in ensuring that American models of health retain
      their normative status. Lance Armstrong offers the perfect venue for such
      disavowals, as he currently rises as if in a second coming, high above the
      Nike building at Union Square in San Francisco and other American cities,
      his Lance face in perfect shape, With another sufficiently vague, sportsmanly
      tag line: “Hope Rides Again.”

      What if, instead of some broad and grammatically, if not afiectiyely,
      meaningless aim as marching and riding “for hope,” fundraisers attempted to
      ban any one of the thousands of known carcinogens in legal use? What if we
      walked, ran, swam, rode not for hope, but against PAH, MTBE, EPA or any
      other common carcinogen? Such an effort would require naming. the prob—
      lem rather than the symptom, and recognizing how we are all implicated. It

      would require that we invest in cancer culture not as a node of sentimentality
      but as a basic fact of American life.

      NOTES

      1. Bernie S. Siegel, Love, Medicine, and Miracles: Lessons Learned about Ser—Healing
      from a Surgeon’s Experience with Exceptional Patients (New York: Harper and Row, 1986).

      2. Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., s.v. “Shame.”

      3. Again, I think it is easier to speak facetiously from the position of having a non—
      metastatic diagnosis.

      4. Stephen Ohlemachter, “US Slipping in Life Expectancy Rankings,” Wash—
      ington Post, August 12, 2007, httpzllwww.washingtonpost.com/wp—dyn/content/arti-
      c1e/2007/ 08/12/AR2007081200113html.

      5. See Charles E. Rosenberg, “The Tyranny of Diagnosis: Specific Entities and Indi—
      vidual Experience,” The Milbank Quarterly 80, no. 2 (June 2002): 237—60.

      6. Miriam Engelberg, Cancer Made Me a shallower Person (New York: Harper,
      2006).

      7. Caitlin Zaloom, “The Productive Life of Risk,” Cultural Anthropology 19, no. 3
      (Angust 2004): 365.

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      8. Personal correspondence with author, April 10, 2008.

      9. Personal correspondence with author, March 15, 2009.

      10. Personal correspondence with author, April 11, 2009.

      11. See David U. Himmelstein, Deborah Thorne, Elizabeth Warren, and Steflie W001-
      handler, “Medical Bankruptcy in the United States, 2007: Results of a National Study)” "me
      American Journal ofMedicz’ne 122, no. 8 (August 2009): 741—46. -

      12. These structures carry invisible costs even for straight people Who believe
      themselves to be outside of these cycles. Think for example of the shooting of Harvey
      Milk and George Moscone. The short sentence given to Dan White for the shooting is
      usually ascribed to the fact that, since Milk was queer, the judge believed that his life Was
      not worth much. Moscone Was considered collateral damage. See The Times of Harvey
      Milk, dir. Rob Epstein, 90 min, Black Sand Productions, 1984.

      13. This kind of structural attention to cultural institutions and actual care are
      understudied For example, When President Barack Obama made an exception to his i
      usual homophobic platform to call for allowing same-sex couples to be able to visit their
      partners in hospitals, he was making a way for partners to be able to love each other
      and to be able to share a deep experience. Advocacy and protection are huge parts of
      contemporary medical care. I have eome across hundreds of examples of this in my years
      of research. This aspect of contemporary medical care includes everything from making
      sure that medical records are transferred properly or read, that medical allergies are made
      known, that machinery is working, that people wash their hands and are given the proper
      doses of medication. Such bedside advocacy is an enormous, and understadiei part of
      healthcare provision.

      14. Tiffany Romain is working on an important dissertation on this subject in the
      Department of Anthropology at Stanford University.

      15. Joseph Masco, “Survival Is Your Business: Engineering Ruins and Affect in Nuclear
      America,” Cultural Anthropology 23, no. 2 (May 2008): 366.

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