organization:congress

  • Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia: Top three stunning admissions from the top U.S. general in the Middle East

    Assad has won, Iran deal should stand and Saudis use American weapons without accountability in Yemen: head of U.S. military’s Central Command’s stunning Congressional testimony

    https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/top-three-stunning-admissions-from-the-top-u-s-general-in-the-region-1.5910

    Haaretz and Reuters Mar 16, 2018

    The top U.S. general in the Middle East testified before Congress on Tuesday and dropped several bombshells: from signaled support for the Iran nuclear deal, admitting the U.S. does not know what Saudi Arabia does with its bombs in Yemen and that Assad has won the Syrian Civil War.
    U.S. Army General Joseph Votel said the Iran agreement, which President Donald Trump has threatened to withdraw from, has played an important role in addressing Iran’s nuclear program.
    “The JCPOA addresses one of the principle threats that we deal with from Iran, so if the JCPOA goes away, then we will have to have another way to deal with their nuclear weapons program,” said U.S. Army General Joseph Votel. JCPOA, or Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, is the formal name of the accord reached with Iran in July 2015 in Vienna.
    Trump has threatened to withdraw the United States from the accord between Tehran and six world powers unless Congress and European allies help “fix” it with a follow-up pact. Trump does not like the deal’s limited duration, among other things.
    Votel is head of the U.S. military’s Central Command, which is responsible for the Middle East and Central Asia, including Iran. He was speaking to a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the same day that Trump fired Secretary of State Rex Tillerson after a series of public rifts over policy, including Iran.
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    Tillerson had joined Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in pressing a skeptical Trump to stick with the agreement with Iran.
    “There would be some concern (in the region), I think, about how we intended to address that particular threat if it was not being addressed through the JCPOA. ... Right now, I think it is in our interest” to stay in the deal, Votel said.

    When a lawmaker asked whether he agreed with Mattis and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Joseph Dunford’s position on the deal,Votel said: “Yes, I share their position.”
    Mattis said late last year that the United States should consider staying in the Iran nuclear deal unless it was proven Tehran was not complying or that the agreement was not in the U.S. national interest.
    A collapse of the Iran nuclear deal would be a “great loss,” the United Nations atomic watchdog’s chief warned Trump recently, giving a wide-ranging defense of the accord.
    Iran has stayed within the deal’s restrictions since Trump took office but has fired diplomatic warning shots at Washington in recent weeks. It said on Monday that it could rapidly enrich uranium to a higher degree of purity if the deal collapsed.
    Syria
    Votel also discussed the situation in Syria at the hearing.
    During the Syrian army’s offensive in eastern Ghouta, more than 1,100 civilians have died. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, backed by Russia and Iran, say they are targeting “terrorist” groups shelling the capital.
    U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley warned on Monday that Washington “remains prepared to act if we must,” if the U.N. Security Council failed to act on Syria.
    Votel said the best way to deter Russia, which backs Assad, was through political and diplomatic channels.
    “Certainly if there are other things that are considered, you know, we will do what we are told. ... (But) I don’t recommend that at this particular point,” Votel said, in an apparent to reference to military options.
    Republican Senator Lindsey Graham asked whether it was too strong to say that with Russia and Iran’s help, Assad had “won” the civil war in Syria.
    “I do not think that is too strong of a statement,” Votel said.
    Graham also asked if the United States’ policy on Syria was still to seek the removal of Assad from power.
    “I don’t know that that’s our particular policy at this particular point. Our focus remains on the defeat of ISIS,” Votel said, using an acronym for Islamic State. 
    Saudi Arabia
    In a stunning exchange with Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, Votel admitted that Centcom doesn’t know when U.S. fuel and munitions are used in Yemen. 
    “General Votel, does CENTCOM track the purpose of the missions it is refueling? In other words, where a U.S.-refueled aircraft is going, what targets it strikes, and the result of the mission?” Warren asked.
    “Senator, we do not,” Votel replied.
    The Senator followed up, citing reports that U.S. munitions have been used against civilians in Yemen, she asked, “General Votel, when you receive reports like this from credible media organizations or outside observers, is CENTCOM able to tell if U.S. fuel or U.S. munitions were used in that strike?”
    “No, senator, I don’t believe we are,” he replied.
    Showing surprise at the general’s response, Warren concluded, “We need to be clear about this: Saudi Arabia’s the one receiving American weapons and American support. And that means we bear some responsibility here. And that means we need to hold our partners and our allies accountable for how those resources are used,” she said.

  • I looked through all 14,227 photos from the Apollo Missions. Here’s what I found.
    https://hackernoon.com/i-looked-through-all-14-227-photos-from-the-apollo-missions-heres-what-i

    The views are out of this world.I don’t think I could get anything done with that view.There’s no flag waving in space.Prior to the Apollo missions, the United Nations passed a treaty stating, “outer #space, including the moon and other celestial bodies, is not subject to national appropriation.” But a young NASA engineer, Tom Moser, was tasked with creating a flag in secret that could be deployed on the moon. “Someone in Congress said ‘make it happen,’” he said. So he created a collapsible flagpole with extendable horizontal rods sewn into the seams and snuck it onto the shuttle hours before the Apollo 11 launch.Do you see the rods sewn into the fabric of the flag?When Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong tried to set up the flag they ran into a snag. “As hard as we tried, the telescope wouldn’t fully (...)

    #technology #funny #photojournalism #future-of-food

  • Paris Breast Rendez-Vous Congress | Free paper session
    http://www.parisbreastrendezvous.com/free-paper-session

    The next«Paris Breast Rendez-vous» will be held from May 24th to 26th 2018 in Paris.

    The aims of “Paris Breast Rendez-Vous” is to encourage surgeons to share their knowledge and experience in breast surgery. We welcome you to submit your abstract for the free paper session of the next Paris Breast Rendez-Vous; The two best communications will receive a special Award from the Scientific Committee.

    Abstracts are invited under the following themes:

    Oncological Breast Surgery - Reconstructive Breast Surgery - Aesthetic Breast Surgery

    Abstract submission deadline on april 1, 2018

    #reconstruction_mammaire
    #chirurgie
    #cancer_du_sein

  • Quand on réécrit l’histoire du féminisme avec Antoinette Fouque
    http://annette.blogs.liberation.fr/2018/03/08/quand-reecrit-lhistoire-du-feminisme-avec-antoinette-fouque

    Il y aura une rue Antoinette Fouque à Paris dans le XXème arrondissement ! Un choc. Je republie donc aujourd’hui la "contre-nécro" que j’avais écrite à sa mort, dans Libération le 22 février 2014, pour rétablir un peu de vérité historique dans la légende du personnage. Replay .

    Quelle étrangeté que d’entendre, ce samedi 22 février 2014, les grandiloquents hommages à Antoinette Fouque, disparue jeudi à l’âge de 77 ans. Sans elle, si l’on croit ce qu’on nous répète en boucle, les Françaises ne seraient ni libérées, ni indépendantes. Horreur, sans Antoinette Fouque nous serions encore, malheureuses, toujours sans le droit à la contraception, à l’avortement, à la parité, harcelées dans les ascenseurs ...? Ainsi de la ministre des Droits des femmes qui a donné le ton : « Sa contribution à l’émancipation d’une génération de Françaises est immense », affirme sans hésiter et sans modération Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, qui a l’excuse d’être née dix ans après le début d’un mouvement de femmes en France. Et c’est de ma génération qu’elle parle.

    « Merci ! Merci ! » tweetent les unes après les autres, les ministres femmes qui semblent dire qu’elles lui doivent leurs postes dans le gouvernement socialiste. Et même Valérie Trierweiller qui nous confie, dans un tweet aussi, qu’Antoinette Fouque est, pour elle, un « modèle d’indépendance pour nous toutes ». Et vice-versa ?

    L’histoire n’est pas aussi rose que « La belle et grande voix du féminisme » que salut Najat Vallaut-Belkacem, qui n’imagine pas, bien sûr, que Fouque détestait le mot « féminisme ». Encore sur France-Info, dans sa dernière interview en février, elle voyait dans le féminisme « la servitude volontaire que font certaines pour s’adapter au journal ELLE ou à d’autres ». Féminisme, Beauvoir ... aux poubelles de l’histoire vue par Fouque.

    En France, on n’a pas eu de chance. On avait un mouvement joyeux, bordélique, excessif, multiple, périssable et impérissable, un mouvement, et non une organisation politique, ou un parti, et surtout pas une marque privée, « MLF » qui fut un jour déposée légalement, dans le secret, par Antoinette Fouque et ses deux amies, pour leur usage politique et commercial. Une « captation d’héritage », c’était bien ça.

    Quarante-quatre ans après qu’une dizaine de copines - sans elle - a fait l’acte fondateur de mettre une gerbe de fleurs sous l’Arc de Triomphe à la mémoire de « La femme encore plus inconnue du soldat inconnu », la vie d’Antoinette Fouque est une success-story : elle s’est construit sa propre légende.

    Au commencement, donc, dans la vague de mai 68, et inspiré par le Women’s Lib américain, les Françaises ont, elles-aussi, voulu parler de leur libération. Et ce fut l’année 1970, appelée assez maladroitement si l’on y pense, « Année zéro du mouvement de libération des femmes. » Rappelons que nous étions filles et petites filles naturelles de celle qui fut, elle, la véritable inspiratrice de l’émancipation des femmes, en France, et dans le monde : Simone de Beauvoir, qui avait déja écrit Le Deuxième Sexe en 1949...

    Antoinette Fouque, enseignante devenue psychanalyste, entreprend sa marche vers le pouvoir en créant son propre groupe « Psychanalyse et Politique ». Moderne, elle comprend la force du transfert freudien et n’hésite pas à prendre en analyse les jeunes militantes qui la rejoignent. Parmi elle, Sylvina Boissonnas, héritière d’une grosse fortune. Antoinette Fouque vivra dorénavant comme une milliardaire, de l’hôtel particulier du VIIe arrondissement aux magnifiques demeures en France et aux Etats-Unis, elle pourra financer sa maison d’édition Des Femmes et ses librairies.

    De drames en psychodrames, le MLF devenue propriété commerciale, se réduira à une petite secte mais le sigle et les éditions serviront à l’ascension sociale et politique de la cheftaine dont nous racontions déjà le culte hystérique dans un article de Libération (« Visite au mausolée du MLF », 9 mars 1983) : « Sortant de cette exposition sur l’histoire du MLF on a l’impression d’avoir fait un court voyage dans la Corée du Nord de Kim-Il-Sung. »

    Antoinette Fouque fera une carrière politique en se faisant élire députée européenne sur la liste de Bernard Tapie sans qu’on voit très bien le lien entre cet homme d’affaires et l’émancipation des femmes. Elle deviendra ainsi vice-présidente de la commission des femmes à Strasbourg. Elle conseille les ministres spécialisées ès-femmes, elle parle partout au nom du MLF.

    Et maintenant, si on écoute les hommages qui répètent « A Antoinette Fouque, les Françaises reconnaissantes » on risquerait d’en oublier la vraie histoire, le courageux « Manifeste des 343 salopes » - du « star-system » dira une méprisante Fouque - la loi Veil sur l’avortement, les formidables travaux d’historiennes telles que Michelle Perrot, qui a reçu le prix Simone de Beauvoir, justement. Et toutes les lois sur la parité et l’égalité. Un oubli passager.

    Annette Lévy-Willard

    #historicisation #histoire #légende #grand_homme et là #grande_femme vu le contexte
    #psychépo #privatisation #mlf

    • Le mouvement féministe de la deuxième vague au sein du MLF est divisé en trois tendances principales. Le féminisme « lutte des classes », qui constitue l’une d’elles, est issu du marxisme. Il y a un féminisme marxiste qui trouve sa source d’inspiration dans l’ouvrage d’Engels, L’origine de la famille, de la propriété privée et de l’Etat. Selon ce dernier, l’inégalité sociale entre hommes et femmes prend son origine dans l’avènement de la propriété privée. Les femmes ne doivent donc pas lutter prioritairement pour leur émancipation, mais pour celle du prolétariat dans son ensemble. Une fois la révolution réalisée, les femmes également seront de fait libérées.

      Le second courant théorique qui travers le féminisme des années 1970 est le féminisme radical et, en particulier, radical matérialiste. Pour les féministes radicales, les femmes doivent chercher à lutter et à s’allier principalement entre femmes, qu’elles soient bourgeoises ou ouvrières, plutôt que sur la base d’une classe économique où elles se retrouveraient avec des hommes qui ne tiendraient pas compte de leurs problèmes spécifiques. Les féministes radicales matérialistes considèrent plus particulièrement que les femmes sont victimes d’une exploitation de leur travail dans les tâches ménagères et l’éducation des enfants : ce sont des tâches qu’elles effectuent gratuitement. Parmi les théoriciennes de ce courant, on peut citer Christine Delphy.

      Le troisième courant est aussi un courant féministe radical, mais différentialiste. Ce courant insiste sur la différence naturelle qui existerait entre les hommes et les femmes. Pour ces féministes, les femmes doivent revendiquer la reconnaissance de leur spécificité. Ce courant est porté en particulier dans les années 1970 par Antoinette Fouque sous le nom de Psychanalyse et politique (abrégé : psyché-po). Dans les années 1980, ce courant, influencé par la psychanalyse et le travail de Jacques Derrida, devient dominant aussi bien en France qu’aux Etats-Unis sous le nom de French feminism. Des personnalités telles que Julia Kristeva, Helene Cixous ou Sylviane Agazinski peuvent, dans des registres différents, y être rattachées.

      C’est contre le différentialisme de la French feminism qu’un courant théorique qui a eu une importance non négligeable sur la troisième vague (actuelle) du féminisme se constitue à la fin des années 1980. Il s’agit de la théorie queer. Sa représentante la plus connue est Judith Butler dont l’ouvrage Trouble dans le genre est publié aux Etats Unis en 1990. La théorie queer critique la thèse de l’identité féminine du courant différentialiste. En distinguant le sexe biologique et le genre, construction sociale, les théoriciennes du queer défendent la thèse selon laquelle les identités ne sont pas naturelles, mais sont des constructions sociales qui peuvent être déconstruites par les individus, en les jouant dans des « performances ». D’où l’importance dans la théorie queer de la figure du travestissement : l’identité biologique et l’identité sociale d’un individu peuvent ne pas coïncider. Certaines femmes sont considérées comme masculines, certains hommes comme efféminés, certaines personnes sont homosexuelles ou bisexuelles. Les identités de femmes ou d’hommes sont plus complexes dans les faits que ce qu’entendent nous imposer les normes sociales.

      https://iresmo.jimdo.com/2011/12/11/histoire-th%C3%A9ories-et-actualit%C3%A9-du-mouvement-f%C3%A9ministe

    • peut etre d’autres infos là dessus ici :
      Controverses et anathèmes au sein du féminisme français des années 1970
      https://www.cairn.info/revue-cahiers-du-genre-2005-2-page-13.html
      mais je l’ai pas encore lu

      –--------

      Marcel Duchamp et Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven

      Ca serait Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven qui a fait l’urinoir faussement attribué à Duchamp. Duchamp qui se déguisait en femme (Rrose Selavy) pour montrer que les femmes sont favorisées dans le milieu artistique... Et qu’on présente parfois comme un artiste féministe... Je pense que DSK sera probablement présenté un jour comme un économiste féministe.

      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elsa_von_Freytag-Loringhoven

      La controverse de l’œuvre "Fountain" (1917)

      Certaines sources tendent à démontrer que la baronne serait l’auteure de l’oeuvre d’art "Fountain", attribuée à Marcel Duchamp2,3.

      Duchamp a toujours maintenu qu’il avait acheté l’urinoir du magasin J. L. Mott à New-York. Or, ce magasin ne vendait pas ce modèle particulier d’urinoir. En outre, le 11 avril 1917, soit deux jours après le rejet de l’œuvre, Duchamp écrivit à sa sœur Suzanne Duchamp, à l’époque infirmière de guerre à Paris, que l’une de ses amies avait envoyé un urinoir en guise de sculpture et sous le nom de R. Mutt :

      Raconte ce détail à la famille : les indépendants sont ouverts ici avec gros succès. Une de mes amies sous un pseudonyme masculin, Richard Mutt, avait envoyé une pissotière en porcelaine comme sculpture. Ce n’était pas du tout indécent, aucune raison pour la refuser. Le comité a décidé de refuser d’exposer cette chose. J’ai donné ma démission et c’est un potin qui aura sa valeur dans New York. J’avais envie de faire une exposition spéciale des refusés aux Indépendants. Mais ce serait un pléonasme ! Et la pissotière aurait été « lonely ». à bientôt affect. Marcel4

      Marcel Duchamp n’avait aucune raison de faire référence à une "amie" s’il avait été l’auteur de l’oeuvre. Par ailleurs, le fait que Duchamp parle de sculpture est déjà en soi révélateur, puisque depuis 1913, Duchamp avait cessé de produire de l’art sous l’impulsion du travail de Raymond Roussel, mais produisait déjà des "readymade", destinés à être lus, et non pas vus. Le contenu explosif de cette lettre ne fut rendu public qu’en 1983 lors de sa publication dans la revue "Archives of American art journal"5.

      Elsa aurait explosé de fureur lorsque les États-Unis déclarèrent la guerre à l’Allemagne, son pays natal. Sa cible de revanche aurait été la Société des Artistes Indépendants dont les représentants l’avaient toujours considérée avec froideur. Julian Spalding et Glyn Thompson pensent qu’Elsa aurait soumis un urinoir mis à l’envers et signé de "R. Mutt" dans une écriture que l’artiste utilisait souvent pour ses poèmes.

      La signature "R. Mutt" aurait alors été pour l’artiste un jeu de mots : en allemand, ce nom pouvait se lire comme le terme "armut", pauvreté, ou pauvreté intellectuelle dans certains contextes. La submission d’Elsa fut donc une double attaque : d’un côté elle démontrait l’inhabilité de la Société des artistes indépendants de distinguer un objet quotidien d’une œuvre d’art s’ils acceptaient l’œuvre, mais d’un autre côté, s’ils la refusaient, ils auraient renié leur définition de l’art qui, selon eux, devait être laissée à l’appréciation de l’artiste.

      voire aussi :
      https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/was-marcel-duchamps-fountain-actually-created-by-a-long-forgotten-pio

      et aussi
      https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-elsa-von-freytag-loringhoven-dada-baroness-invented-readymade

      On a regular day, Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven
      wore brightly colored makeup, postage stamps on each cheek, and a shaved head shellacked in various hues. Her accoutrements also included live birds, packs of dogs, a tomato-can bra, arms full of bangles, and flashing lights. Her unconventionally forthright poetry and rugged found-object sculptures—often incorporated into her outfits—erased unsettling social hierarchy and accepted gender norms, and distinctions between art and life. The Baroness was a dynamo in New York’s literary and art scene at the turn of the century, part of the Arensberg Salon group that included Marcel Duchamp
      , Man Ray
      , Beatrice Wood
      , Francis Picabia
      , Mina Loy, and many others. She combined sculpture, fashion, poetry, and performance to embody an anti-bourgeois lifestyle driven by passion and an emotional reactivity to her surroundings.
      Born Else Hildegard Plötz in Germany in 1874, she ran away to the vaudeville theaters of Berlin as a teenager, and before long, she was part of the inner circle of Munich’s Art Nouveau
      movement. Following several sexual flings that took her across Italy, she helped her second husband fake his own death and start a new life on a Kentucky farm. After they parted ways, she traveled through Virginia and Ohio before arriving in New York, where she briefly married an impoverished Baron and took on his title. The Baroness became a downtown Manhattan legend, known as much for her dazzling costumes and aggressive seduction techniques as for her visceral sculptures and witty poetry. Most importantly, she invented the readymade—a sculpture pulled directly from the materials of daily life, radical in its implications that art can be anything.
      The Baroness’s sculptures were more than banal objects—they indicated the artist as an invigorating force of otherwise overlooked material. The painter George Biddle
      wrote of a visit to her 14th Street studio: “It was crowded and reeking with strange relics, which she had purloined over a period of years from the New York gutters. Old bits of ironware, automobile tires, gilded vegetables, a dozen starved dogs, celluloid paintings, ash cans, every conceivable horror, which to her tortured yet highly sensitized perception, became objects of formal beauty.”
      Fountain
      Marcel Duchamp
      Fountain, 1917/1964
      San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)
      Sometimes worn or affixed to garments, the Baroness’s object-sculptures were always resourceful, full of character, and totally absurd. In a letter to artist Sarah Freedman McPherson, Freytag-Loringhoven wrote: “Sarah, if you find a tin can on the street stand by it until a truck runs over it. Then bring it to me.” Her first readymade work was a heavily rusted metal ring, Enduring Ornament (1913), named as a work of art a year before Duchamp created his first readymade, Bottle Rack (1914), though he coined the now-famous term.
      The most scandalous theory that surrounds the Baroness is that she is an uncredited collaborator with Duchamp on his famous Fountain (1917), a urinal signed “R. Mutt” that was first exhibited at the 1917 Society of Independent Artists’ Salon in New York. Irene Gammel puts forth a convincing argument of the Baroness’s influence on Duchamp’s artwork in her outstanding 2002 biography Baroness Elsa. Duchamp must have conspired with others to be able to contribute Fountain to the salon anonymously, and the Baroness was close friends with him, though he had refused her advances.
      A 1917 letter from Marcel to his sister, the painter Suzanne Duchamp
      , reads: “One of my female friends under a masculine pseudonym Richard Mutt sent in a porcelain urinal as a sculpture. It was not at all indecent—no reason for refusing it. The committee has decided to refuse to show this thing.” An account from Alfred Stieglitz
      corroborates that it was a woman who was responsible for bringing a large porcelain urinal on a pedestal to the salon. Stieglitz may have been referring to Duchamp’s female alter ego Rrose Sélavy; even so, she was likely modeled after the Baroness.
      The urinal is consistent with the Baroness’s choice of sexual, bawdy, or otherwise “unseemly” subject matter in her other works. Contemporary newspaper accounts reported that Richard Mutt was from Philadelphia, where the Baroness was living in 1917. Although Duchamp stated that he purchased the urinal from J.L. Mott Iron Works, a plumbing store on 5th Avenue, the specific model has never been found in its catalogues from that time period. The sculpture itself disappeared shortly after the exhibition, and the first reproduction of Fountain wasn’t created until 1950, long after the Baroness’s death in 1927.
      Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, Affectionate (Wheels are Growing), 1921-22. Courtesy of Francis M. Naumann Fine Art, New York.

      Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, Affectionate (Wheels are Growing), 1921-22. Courtesy of Francis M. Naumann Fine Art, New York.
      Yet she never claimed authorship of Fountain, and she was not known for holding back, especially near the end of her life. In bitter destitution, Freytag-Loringhoven begged and threatened her more successful colleagues, publicly thrashing those she felt had wronged her. She caricatured “Marcel Dushit,” among others, in the poem “Graveyard Surrounding Nunnery,” accompanied by a drawing of intertwined phalluses among the tombstones.
      The lasting body of her work is her poetry, published by Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap in The Little Review. The Baroness was the perfect figurehead for the literary magazine’s slogan: “Making No Compromise with the Public Taste.” Her audacious writing broke new ground formally; its fractured punctuation and cantatory sound elements rival the sound poem “Karawane” (1916), a landmark Dada
      work by Hugo Ball. Although her vocabulary is sometimes nonsensical, Freytag-Loringhoven’s work is also steeped in lyricism. In a proto-Beat style, she wrote about sex, death, machinery, and America.
      Her poems appeared side-by-side with James Joyce’s Ulysses, which was serialized in The Little Review. The May 1919 issue included his chapter “Scylla and Charybdis” and her poem “King Adam,” the latter of which offers a thinly veiled invocation of cunnilingus: “Kiss me…upon the gleaming hill.” An asterisk cheekily adds: “donated to the censor.” A 1921 obscenity trial banned the distribution of Joyce’s work in the United States. Few in New York’s avant-garde echoed the Baroness’s vocal defense of his work, yet her edgy texts seemed to intensify the call for censorship against them both.
      Claude McRay (i.e., McKay) and Baroness von Freytag-Loringhoven, before 1928. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

      Claude McRay (i.e., McKay) and Baroness von Freytag-Loringhoven, before 1928. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.
      Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, Facing, 1924. Courtesy of Francis M. Naumann Fine Art, New York.

      Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, Facing, 1924. Courtesy of Francis M. Naumann Fine Art, New York.
      Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven lived to defy the law. Because she never monetized her art, she lived her entire life in extreme poverty, and was arrested frequently for shoplifting. Although Anderson observed in her autobiography that she “leaped from patrol wagons with such agility that policemen let her go in admiration,” she did numerous stints in jail for stealing—and for wearing men’s clothing in public—among other charges.
      Ever the renegade, her lack of financial success and canonization is in part due to her disregard for finalizing her objects as art. She worked against this binary to infuse art into daily life, often in collaboration with those around her. Sadly, it seems that much of the Baroness’s non-written work was not documented or preserved due to her financial straits, and when it was, others sometimes took credit. Her most famous readymade sculpture, a twisting piece of rusted plumbing attached to a miter box, entitled GOD (1917), was long misattributed to Morton Livingston Schamberg
      , who had photographed it.
      On a broader level, Freytag-Loringhoven’s work could precipitate a feminist re-reading of Dada, the readymade, and the history of Conceptual art
      as we know it. In the 2000s, her work resurfaced with several international shows, Gammel’s biography, and a major anthology of her poetry, published in 2011. As Gammel writes, the Baroness’s erotic and embodied approach to art in everyday life was vital, chaotic, and fundamentally perishable. She was the living consequence of challenging the nature of art in society.
      In Apropos of Readymades, Duchamp’s 1961 statement about his sculpture, he writes: “The choice was based on a reaction of visual indifference with at the same time a total absence of good or bad taste…in fact a complete anaesthesia.” Freytag-Loringhoven’s definition of the readymade is the opposite: Where Marcel’s work is thoughtful, yet dry as a bone, Elsa’s is confident and deeply felt. In her readymade, there’s undeniable joy.
      Vanessa Thill

  • Mahmoud Abbas’ health deteriorates, and Israel prepares for bloody succession fight -

    Head of West Bank’s Palestinian Authority was hospitalized for tests in U.S. at end of February

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-health-of-palestinian-leader-mahmoud-abbas-82-deteriorates-in-rece

    Amos Harel Mar 07, 2018

    ❝In recent months there has been a deterioration in the health of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who will be 83 at the end of the month. Information about his health has been submitted to Israeli political and security officials.
    Although the security cooperation between Israel and the PA continues to be managed well, Israel is readying itself for the possibility that a continued worsening of Abbas’ health will intensify the succession wars in the PA and undermine the relative stability that now prevails in the West Bank.
    At the end of last month, while he was in the United States to address the UN General Assembly in New York, Abbas was hospitalized for a few hours for tests in a Baltimore hospital. He also underwent tests in a Ramallah hospital last July. In both instances, the PA spokesman issued denials regarding illnesses Abbas supposedly had and insisted that his medical condition was satisfactory. Abbas himself, in an interview with Palestinian television on February 22, said he was in good health.
    However, Palestinian activists opposed to Abbas’ regime claim that he’s ill and getting worse. There was even a claim on social media that he was suffering from cancer of the digestive system. This claim was never confirmed.
    Some 20 years ago Abbas was operated on for prostate cancer, and the surgery was said to be successful.

    The PA president has cut down his work hours over the past year. People around him say he seems to be getting more short-tempered and argumentative with his aides and other senior PA officials. Aside from his health and advancing age, Abbas’ behavior seems to indicate that the PA, and his leadership, are facing a crisis.

    The main reason is the bad relationship with the Trump administration and the United States clearly positioning itself on Israel’s side with regard to its diplomatic dispute with the Palestinians. This American position is accompanied by other moves that are liable to undermine the Palestinian economy, like pushing the Taylor Force law through Congress (which limits American aid to the PA because of its financial support for imprisoned terrorists and their families) and the plan to reduce support for UNRWA, the United Nations’ refugee agency.
    At Abbas’ orders, the PA security agencies are continuing to closely coordinate with the Israel Defense Forces and the Shin Bet security service, and they are regularly assisting in the rescue of Israelis who stray into Area A, which is under PA control. In closed forums with foreign diplomats, senior PA officials admit that the IDF is showing restraint in the West Bank and its approach is preventing violent flare-ups.
    But as Abbas’ health gets worse, the battle among the many contenders hoping to succeed him will intensify. There are nearly 10 Palestinian politicians and security officials who see themselves worthy of the job, and there could be temporary alliances formed between some of them in an effort to win the leadership of PA. Israel is concerned about the instability that could ensue the closer the end of Abbas’ tenure seems – and is concerned that the internal tension will impact the degree to which the PA security services will work to prevent attacks on the IDF and Israeli civilians in the West Bank.

  • Sales of “Ghost Guns” Are Spiking After the Parkland Shooting

    http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_vault/2014/01/06/child_labor_history_maps_showing_regulation_of_kids_work_in_the_1930s.html

    ... Attendance to school « affecting » employement...

    These maps, which come from a 1933 Department of Labor report on child labor, document the uneven effects of state laws regulating the employment of children and teenagers.

    During the first decades of the 20th century, progressives sought to regulate what they saw as exploitative employment of poor and immigrant children. Photographers such as Lewis Hine documented impossibly tiny newsboys, textile workers, and field hands, making a visual appeal to middle-class Americans, who were properly horrified.

    When Congress tried to regulate child labor on the federal level by passing the Keating-Owen Act of 1916, the Supreme Court ruled the effort unconstitutional. Advocates stepped in and passed a patchwork of laws on the state level. (The Fair Labor Standards Act, passed in 1938, was the first successful federal law to regulate child labor.)

    #travail_des_enfants #états-unis #cartographie #visualisation #sémiologie #esclavage_moderne

  • L’actualité “néandertalienne” est riche en ce moment.

    Une conférence internationale posera la question de savoir s’il y a un art paléolithique avant les humains modernes et si les néandertaliens ou d’autres humains ont-ils créé de l’art ?

    On attend déjà la publication des actes. ;-)

    “NeanderART 2018” – 22-26 August 2018 – International Conference under the aegis of UISPP and the auspices of IFRAO : “Is there palaeoart before modern humans ? Did Neanderthals or other early humans create ‘art’ ?” – Centro Studi e Museo d’Arte Preistorica
    http://cesmap.it/ifrao-2018-international-congress-is-there-palaeoart-before-modern-humans-did

    This International Conference will continue and expand a debate to be organised by CeSMAP at the XVIII° UISPP mondial Congress in Paris from June 3 to June 9, 2018.
    As you can see from the list of the International Conference Committee, the response has been excellent and we anticipate a truly exciting meeting with participants from many different countries. The NeandertART 2018 Conference will offer a unique opportunity to meet colleagues and to combine the exchange of scientific knowledge with the wonderful experience of visiting Italy.

    #Préhistoire #Néandertal #art #Italie #Turin

  • MWC 2018 : tout ce qu’il faut retenir du salon
    http://www.tomshardware.fr/articles/mwc-2018-best-of,1-66912.html#xtor=RSS-100

    Tous les ans à la fin février, c’est un même raz de marée qui s’abat sur Barcelone. La cité catalane devient pour quelques jours le centre du monde des nouvelles technologies avec le Mobile World Congress. >>> Retrouvez toutes les actualités du

    • US : Poor Medical Care, Deaths, in Immigrant Detention

      Poor medical treatment contributed to more than half the deaths reported by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) during a 16-month period, Human Rights Watch, the American Civil Liberties Union, Detention Watch Network, and National Immigrant Justice Center said in a report released today.

      Based on the analysis of independent medical experts, the 72-page report, “Code Red: The Fatal Consequences of Dangerously Substandard Medical Care in Immigration Detention,” examines the 15 “Detainee Death Reviews” ICE released from December 2015 through April 2017. ICE has yet to publish reviews for one other death in that period. Eight of the 15 public death reviews show that inadequate medical care contributed or led to the person’s death. The physicians conducting the analysis also found evidence of substandard medical practices in all but one of the remaining reviews.

      “ICE has proven unable or unwilling to provide adequately for the health and safety of the people it detains,” said Clara Long, a senior US researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The Trump administration’s efforts to drastically expand the already-bloated immigration detention system will only put more people at risk.”

      12 people died in immigration detention in fiscal year 2017, more than any year since 2009. Since March 2010, 74 people have died in immigration detention, but #ICE has released death reviews in full or in part in only 52 of the cases.

      Based on the death reviews, the groups prepared timelines of the symptoms shown by people who died in detention and the treatment they received from medical staff, along with medical experts’ commentary on the care documented by ICE and its deviations from common medical practice. The deaths detailed in the report include:

      Moises Tino-Lopez, 23, had two seizures within nine days, each observed by staff and reported to the nurses on duty in the Hall County Correctional Center in Nebraska. He was not evaluated by a physician or sent to the hospital after the first seizure. During his second seizure, staff moved him to a mattress in a new cell, but he was not evaluated by a medical practitioner. About four hours after that seizure, he was found to be unresponsive, with his lips turning blue. He was sent to the hospital but never regained consciousness and died on September 19, 2016.
      Rafael Barcenas-Padilla, 51, had been ill with cold symptoms for six days in the Otero County Processing Center in New Mexico when his fever reached 104, and nurses recorded dangerously low levels of oxygen saturation in his blood. A doctor, consulted by phone, prescribed a medication for upper respiratory infections. The ICE detention center didn’t have the nebulizer needed to administer one of the medicines, so he did not receive it, and he showed dangerously low oxygen readings that should have prompted his hospitalization. Three days later, he was sent to the hospital, where he died from bronchopneumonia on April 7, 2016.
      Jose Azurdia, 54, became ill and started vomiting at the Adelanto Detention Facility in California. A guard told a nurse about Azurdia’s condition, but she said that “she did not want to see Azurdia because she did not want to get sick.” Within minutes, his arm was numb, he was having difficulty breathing, and he had pain in his shoulder and neck – all symptoms of a heart attack. Due to additional delays by the medical staff, two hours passed before he was sent to the hospital, with his heart by then too damaged to respond to treatment. He died in the hospital four days later, on December 23, 2015.

      “Immigrant detention centers are dangerous places where lives are at risk and people are dying,” said Silky Shah, executive director of Detention Watch Network, a national coalition that exposes the injustices of the US’ immigration detention and deportation system. “The death toll amassed by ICE is unacceptable and has proven that they cannot be trusted to care for immigrants in their custody.”

      In fiscal year 2017, ICE held a daily average of nearly 40,500 people, an increase of nearly 500 percent since 1994. The Trump administration has asked Congress to allocate $2.7 billion for fiscal year 2019 to lock up a daily average of 52,000 immigrants in immigration detention facilities, a record number that would represent a 30 percent expansion from fiscal year 2017.

      “To the extent that Congress continues to fund this system, they are complicit in its abuses,” said Heidi Altman, policy director at the National Immigrant Justice Center, a nongovernmental group dedicated to ensuring human rights protections and access to justice for all immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers. “Congress should immediately act to decrease rather than expand detention and demand robust health, safety, and human rights standards in immigration detention.”

      The new report is an update of a 2017 Human Rights Watch report that examined deaths in detention between 2012 and 2015, as well as a 2016 report by the American Civil Liberties Union, the Detention Watch Network, and the National Immigrant Justice Center that examined deaths in detention between 2010 and 2012.

      The medical experts who analyzed the death reviews for the groups include Dr. Marc Stern, the former health services director for the Washington State Department of Corrections; Dr. Robert Cohen, the former director of Montefiore Rikers Island Health Services; and Dr. Palav Babaria, the chief administrative officer of Ambulatory Services at Alameda Health System in Oakland, California, and assistant clinical professor in Internal Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

      Six of the new deaths examined occurred at facilities operated by the following private companies under contract with ICE: #CoreCivic, #Emerald_Correctional_Management, the #GEO_Group, and the #Management_and_Training_Corporation (#MTC).

      “ICE puts thousands of people’s health and lives at risk by failing to provide adequate medical care to the people it detains for weeks, months, and even years,” said Victoria Lopez, senior staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union.


      https://www.hrw.org/news/2018/06/20/us-poor-medical-care-deaths-immigrant-detention
      #privatisation #mourir_en_rétention #mourir_en_détention_administrative

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VL9IKGoozII

  • Un représentant d’un syndicat norvégien s’est vu refuser l’entrée en israel (et donc en Palestine), probablement parce qu’il s’appelle Mohammed Malik, qu’il est d’origine pakistanaise, et que son syndicat, LO, soutient le BDS...

    Israel deported LO-elected Mohammed Malik
    https://frifagbevegelse.no/nnnarbeideren/israel-deporterte-lotillitsvalgte-mohammed-malik-6.158.530535.5bbdb5

    Traduction en anglais :

    Israeli security people at the airport in Tel Aviv interrogated union leader Mohammed Malik in Tine Dairies about his association with LO. Then they threw him out of the country. “The decision of the LO Congress on Boycott of Israel can have such consequences", said Israel’s ambassador to Norway.

    Mohammed Malik was on a trade union study trip with the Palestinian Committee to Palestine. But Malik did not come beyond the airport in Tel Aviv. While all the others in the group were allowed to enter Saturday evening this weekend, Mohammed Malik spent the hours from late Saturday night and early in the morning Sunday in various waiting rooms and detention cells at the airport. It was a very unpleasant experience, says Malik.

    The security officers who questioned him knew that Malik was a union representative in The Norwegian Food and Allied Workers Union. He experienced it as if they were confronting him with his union affiliation. They wanted to know what LO thought about the Palestine conflict. But he did not want to answer them on that.

    Mohammed Malik is born in Norway and originally has Pakistani parents. "My name was obviously the reason I was taken aside in passport control. But they deported me because I am a unionist. I was thrown out because I am affiliated with the LO, says Mohammed Malik. The experience at the airport was humiliating.

    The LO Congress last year agreed with a large majority that LO should work for international economic, cultural and academic boycott of Israel. The Israeli Embassy in Oslo says it is not familiar with the deportation of Malik before FriFagbevegelse contacted it today. The Embassy now investigates why Israel deported Malik. According to the embassy it may take many weeks to get any answers.

    FriFagbevegelse asked whether unionists in Norway’s LO are a danger to Israel’s security. "LO decided to boycott the only Jewish state in the world. One might assume that such an extreme decision can have consequences when it comes to prominent members of the LO, "Ambassador Raphael Schutz writes in a reply on e-mail to FriFagbevegelse.

    In the end, they gave him a document from the Israeli Ministry of Internal Affairs, which states “a decision to prohibit entry is described in “the entry into Israeli Act”.

    “They took pictures of me, gave me the entry ban and said that “you are forever refused to enter Israel,” says Malik. “The reason the entry in the entry ban was “to prevent illegal immigration.” - I asked them why they deported me. They would not inform me, he says. He would like the Israeli authorities to explain this.

    Une liste d’autres expulsions aux frontières israéliennes ici :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/364741

    #Palestine #Norvège #Expulsion #Aéroport #Racisme #BDS #Douane #Frontière #expulsions_frontières (d’israel)

  • Behind the extravagant hype of an Israeli-Saudi ’courtship’, Israel is setting the price for Riyadh to go nuclear

    The exaggerated reports and rumours about ever-closer ties are trial balloons: Jerusalem is signalling its reluctant assent to Riyadh obtaining a nuclear deterrent – but at a high price

    Victor Kattan Feb 13, 2018

    The real stumbling block between the two countries isn’t just the Palestinian issue. The elephant in the relationship, which is far less often mentioned, is Saudi Arabia’s pursuit of nuclear power.
    Israel is currently fighting a political battle in Washington to stop the U.S. from letting Riyadh develop its own nuclear energy program that would allow it to enrich uranium that could be used to develop a bomb.
    Israel has good reason to be concerned. According to reports, the Trump administration might be willing to lower certain safeguards that prevent U.S. companies from sharing sensitive nuclear technology with Saudi Arabia for fear that it might be used to develop weapons. This administration might not insist on the same precautions that Obama did in its nuclear cooperation agreement with Abu Dhabi, for example, which forfeited its right to enrich uranium or reprocess plutonium.

    Hassan Rouhani, Iran’s president, at a news conference to mark the 39th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Tehran, Iran. Feb. 6, 2018ATTA KENARE/AFP
    In its negotiations with the U.S., Saudi Arabia is not backing down from its demand to enrich uranium under its planned civilian nuclear program – using, ironically, as its rationale, the conditions of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, in which Iran has been allowed to enrich uranium. Prince Turki has made it clear, more than once, that should Iran acquire nuclear weapons, Saudi Arabia and other GCC countries would look at all available options to meet the potential threat, including the acquisition of nuclear weapons. 
    The only snag for Saudi Arabia is the U.S. Congress, because this is where Israel has influential friends. Even if a deal is reached between Saudi Arabia and the Trump administration, Congress could either block the deal or add clauses preventing the U.S. from selling Saudi Arabia technology needed to enrich uranium or reprocess plutonium. 
    It is more than possible that through its media campaign, Israel is sending a signal to Riyadh that it understands very well Saudi Arabia’s desire for a nuclear deterrent regarding Iran - but there’s a price to be paid for Israel reducing the level of its direct and indirect opposition in Congress to an independent Saudi nuclear capability.
    What Israel appears to be saying to Saudi Arabia, via a variety of trial balloons, is that if Riyadh wants Israel’s help with obtaining support from Congress, then Israel wants something in return: Jerusalem, overflight rights for Israeli aircraft, direct military cooperation and intelligence exchanges, lucrative business deals for Israeli companies in Saudi Arabia, and so on.
    The publication of stories about Israel’s ever-closer relationship with Saudi Arabia, which are then magnified by media conglomerates in Qatar and Iran, is certainly one way of ensuring that the messages are received loud and clear.
    Saudi Arabia would likely have anticipated that Congress could give them trouble as it has done before. 
    But this time things might be different - and these changes might scupper Israel’s strategy.

    President Donald Trump meets with Saudi Defense Minister and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington D.C. March 14, 2017Evan Vucci/AP
    A deal between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia could aid the ailing U.S. nuclear industry and have wider benefits for corporate America. Moreover, the U.S. does not have a monopoly on nuclear technology.
    Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman has already visited Moscow and signed agreements with Russia to build 16 nuclear reactors by 2030. Saudi Arabia already has nuclear related understandings with China, France, Pakistan, South Korea, and Argentina. One expert has even suggested that Pakistan could assist Saudi Arabia by supplying Riyadh with sensitive equipment, materials, and the expertise that would aid Riyadh with enrichment or processing.
    Riyadh is also expanding research at the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy and developing a cadre of nuclear scientists. Saudi Arabia is home to large uranium deposits that could be extracted with the appropriate technology.
    Obviously, Riyadh would prefer Washington’s blessing and support in developing its nuclear energy program within the rules of the global nonproliferation treaty rather than having to develop the program clandestinely with the aid of other states. Israel senses this, and would be willing to help Riyadh, but has set the price high.
    Israel would far prefer a covert alliance with Saudi Arabia to contain Iran over the U.S. allowing Riyadh to develop an independent nuclear deterrent. But Jerusalem is working to prepare for both eventualities. Whether that strategy will work remains to be seen.
    But should the Iran deal blow up on Trump’s watch, and Tehran acquires the capability to develop a weapon, no one should underestimate Riyadh’s resolve for self-preservation.
    Victor Kattan is Senior Research Fellow at the Middle East Institute of the National University of Singapore and an Associate Fellow at the Faculty of Law. Twitter: @VictorKattan

  • Where Donald Trump’s Border Wall Would Start - WSJ
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/where-donald-trumps-border-wall-would-start-1518085801

    ALAMO, Texas—Set on the winding Rio Grande, the Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge is home to 400 species of birds, an endangered wildcat and, if President Donald Trump gets his way, a towering border wall.

    The refuge has been identified by federal officials as the first construction site for Mr. Trump’s wall, if it gains funding from Congress. That’s not because the nature reserve is a particular hot spot of illegal crossing of either migrants or drugs, but because the federal government already owns the land.

    “It’s an easier starting point,” said Manuel Padilla Jr., the Border Patrol chief for the sector.

    #mur #mexique #états-unis #trump

  • The sinister reason behind Qatar’s wooing of the Jews

    Doha wants to influence D.C. elites. But rather than targeting Congress or the media, they’re lavishly, and disproportionately, focusing on right-wing, pro-Israel Jews

    Jonathan S. Tobin Feb 08, 2018 2:20 PM

    A debate over the good name of Qatar has become a burning issue in Washington. The Emirate has been waging an all out charm offensive aimed at convincing Americans not to back Saudi Arabia’s efforts to isolate it. 
    But while efforts seeking to influence D.C. elites are commonplace, the most prominent targets of Qatar’s public relations push aren’t the usual suspects in Congress or the media.
    Instead, Qatar’s PR team has focused on winning the hearts and minds of a very specific niche of opinion leader that is not generally given much attention, let alone love, by Arab states: the pro-Israel community in general and right-wing Jews in particular.

    Women walk past artwork on the corniche waterside looking towards the city skyline in Doha, Qatar. Nov. 22, 2012Bloomberg
    This has not only reaped some benefits for the Qataris but also set off something of a civil war on the right between those who buy the Emirate’s arguments and those who dismiss them as propaganda intended to cover up its support for terrorism.
    But as interesting as this nasty intramural quarrel might be, it’s worth pondering if there’s something more to Qatar’s efforts than a generic Washington influence operation. It is, after all, logical for them to seek out those who may have Trump’s ear.
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    Yet the disproportionate attention given the Jews may have a more sinister origin that should be familiar to students of Jewish and Zionist history.
    The obvious explanation for Qatar’s strategy is the increased importance of pro-Israel opinion in the Trump administration, especially when compared to its predecessor. With supporters of the settlement movement appointed to posts like the U.S. ambassador to Israel and an Orthodox Jews like presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner at Trump’s side, the Jewish right’s stock is at an all-time high.
    That elevates the importance of pro-Israel organizations and lobbyists who might otherwise be assumed to be hostile to any Gulf nation, especially one that is host and sponsor of the rabidly anti-Israel Al Jazeera network and is believed to have played a major role in funding Hamas.

    Alan Dershowitz addresses an audience at Brandeis University, in Waltham, Mass. Jan. 23, 2007ASSOCIATED PRESS
    That has led to a stream of invitations for pro-Israel figures to visit Qatar and to hear its leaders make the case that it has gotten a bum rap from critics. Some, like the Zionist Organization of America’s Mort Klein, insist they were only there to insist that the emirate cease funding terrorism. Others returned from a tour of Qatar singing its praises or at least, willing to give its assertion that it no longer has ties with Hamas the benefit of the doubt.

    One prominent convert to the pro-Qatar side is attorney and author Alan Dershowitz, a longtime liberal Democrat who is also a pillar of the pro-Israel community. Dershowitz was impressed by Qatar’s efforts to put its best face forward to the Jews noting that Israeli athletes were welcomed to compete in Doha while Saudi Arabia - which has established strong under-the-table ties with Israel and is a Trump administration favorite - continued its discriminatory attitude towards Israelis. Dershowitz even went so far as to call Qatar “the Israel of the Gulf States.” 
    That in turn generated some fierce pushback from other pro-Israel figures with scholar Jonathan Schanzer of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies pointing out there is proof that Qatar’s alibis about Hamas and terror ring false and urging Dershowitz to stick to topics he knows something about. More extreme was the reaction from the always-incendiary Rabbi Shmuley Boteach who branded Dershowitz a sellout.
    Who is right in this dispute?

    Members of Qatar’s armed forces during national day celebrations in Doha. Qatar is using its extraordinary wealth to fund a massive push in defense spending. December 17, 2017 STRINGER/AFP
    Until proven otherwise, the skeptics about Qatar have the better arguments. Qatar’s involvement in Gaza can’t be written off as mere philanthropy.
    But as even Schanzer pointed out, there’s no harm in Jews going there to learn more about the place. Nor, despite the close ties it is establishing with Israel, is there any reason for pro-Israel figures to get involved in the politics of the Arabian Peninsula, let alone take the side of the Saudis in their feud with Qatar. The Gulf emirate has always had an ambivalent relationship with the West, with Doha being a U.S. Navy base while also serving as a beachhead for Iranian influence. Drawing firm conclusions about its behavior is probably unwarranted.
    But there’s another factor here that needs to also be examined.
    While their Washington PR representative — a former aide to Senator Ted Cruz - may have told his client that winning over supporters of Israel is the path to success, the attention given the American Jewish community is still disproportionate. Conservative Jewish groups may have loud voices and some influential backers but their ability to influence events, let alone national opinion is limited. That’s why most lobbyists don’t squander that much attention on them.

    The newsroom at the headquarters of the Qatar-based and funded Al Jazeera English-language channel in Doha. February 7, 2011REUTERS
    Another plausible explanation for all this attention stems from the traditional anti-Semitic belief that Jews and Zionists can exert mysterious control over major powers like the United States. Just like the well-meaning British statesmen who really thought the Balfour Declaration would boost the Allied war effort because of the unique and sinister ability of Jews to influence the United States and Russia, others have similarly bought into unfounded notions about Jewish power.
    The contemporary Arab and Muslim world has become a place where anti-Semitic texts like the Protocols of the Elders of Zion freely circulate. Those who demonize Israel and its supporters are prone to attribute exaggerated powers to Jews in this way. If the Qataris are that focused on American Jews and right-wingers at that, it’s just as likely to be as much the product of this sort of distorted thinking as anything else.
    Seen in that light, the dustup on the Jewish right about Qatar is even sillier that it seems. Reports about Qatar dangling the prospect of spiking an Al Jazeera documentary about pro-Israel lobbyists is particularly absurd because few in the U.S. take the network seriously.
    Rather than argue about the virtues of the Emirate, supporters of Israel need to wonder about the reasons they are being wooed and conclude they’d be better off staying out of this dispute altogether.
    Jonathan S. Tobin is editor in chief of JNS.org and a contributing writer for National Review. Twitter: @jonathans_tobin

  • Migrant Deaths Remain High Despite Sharp Fall in US-Mexico Border Crossings in 2017

    The number of migrants who died crossing the United States-Mexico border in 2017 remained high, despite a 44 per cent decrease in border apprehensions reported by the US Border Patrol between 2016 and 2017.

    In 2017, 412 migrant deaths were recorded compared to 398 in 2016, according to IOM, the UN Migration Agency. This data was compiled by IOM’s Missing Migrants Project based in Berlin.

    “The increase in deaths is especially concerning, as the available data indicate that far fewer migrants entered the US via its border with Mexico in the last year,” said Frank Laczko, Director of IOM’s Global Migration Data Analysis Centre, which collects the data for the Missing Migrants Project.


    https://www.iom.int/news/migrant-deaths-remain-high-despite-sharp-fall-us-mexico-border-crossings-2017
    #décès #migrations #asile #réfugiés #USA #Mexique #frontières #mourir_aux_frontières #morts #statistiques #2017 #chiffres #mortalité
    cc @reka

  • U.S. Pays Billions for ‘Assisted Living,’ but What Does It Get? - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/03/us/politics/assisted-living-gaps.html

    The federal government lacks even basic information about the quality of assisted living #services provided to low-income people on Medicaid, the Government Accountability Office, a nonpartisan investigative arm of Congress, says in a report to be issued on Sunday.

    En fait un service aux #copains

    #Etats-Unis #assistanat

  • ’NO.’ God tells Michele Bachmann not to run for Al Franken’s Senate seat / Boing Boing
    https://boingboing.net/2018/02/01/michele-bachmann.html

    A billboard mysteriously appears in St. Paul, Minn. in which God offers a special message to noted crazy ex-congresscritter Michele Bachmann. Hope she obeys The Lord.

    Bachmann served eight years in Congress, and said in an interview late last year with televangelist and noted con man Jim Bakker that she is asking God if she should run for Senate, should Al Franken’s seat become vacant.

    Coïncidence divine ou non ? Bachman Turner Overdrive - You ain’t seen nothing yet
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cFRk0FfaQi0

    #USA #droite #politique #religion

  • America Is Not a Democracy - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/03/america-is-not-a-democracy/550931

    The subversion of the people’s preferences in our supposedly democratic system was explored in a 2014 study by the political scientists Martin Gilens of Princeton and Benjamin I. Page of Northwestern. Four broad theories have long sought to answer a fundamental question about our government: Who rules? One theory, the one we teach our children in civics classes, holds that the views of average people are decisive. Another theory suggests that mass-based interest groups such as the AARP have the power. A third theory predicts that business groups such as the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America and the National Beer Wholesalers Association carry the day. A fourth theory holds that policy reflects the views of the economic elite.

    Gilens and Page tested those theories by tracking how well the preferences of various groups predicted the way that Congress and the executive branch would act on 1,779 policy issues over a span of two decades. The results were shocking. Economic elites and narrow interest groups were very influential: They succeeded in getting their favored policies adopted about half of the time, and in stopping legislation to which they were opposed nearly all of the time. Mass-based interest groups, meanwhile, had little effect on public policy. As for the views of ordinary citizens, they had virtually no independent effect at all. “When the preferences of economic elites and the stands of organized interest groups are controlled for, the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy,” Gilens and Page wrote.

    #démocratie #etats-unis #kleptocratie «#élite»

  • Tech Companies Are Under Pressure Everywhere Except Where It Matters
    https://theintercept.com/2018/01/31/trump-ftc-google-facebook-twitter

    It was the year of the tech backlash. Throughout 2017, Facebook, Google, and Twitter were hauled before Congress to answer for their roles in election hacking. More and more prominent political, business, and media figures warned of the growing power of the technology giants, and some offered solutions rarely uttered in this country : breaking the companies up and/or turning them into public utilities. At Davos last week, Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff attacked his fellow Silicon Valley (...)

    #Google #Facebook #domination #GAFAM #FTC

  • Commentary: The U.S. risks losing an Arctic Cold War
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-apps-arctic-commentary/commentary-the-u-s-risks-losing-an-arctic-cold-war-idUSKBN1FJ2DM

    Last August, a Russian tanker sailed direct from Norway to South Korea through the Arctic Ocean, the first time such a ship had done so without an icebreaker escort. It was a defining moment in the opening up of previously frozen northern trade routes – and it looks to have supercharged an already intensifying arms race and jostle for influence on the roof of the world.

    It’s a dynamic that brings particular challenge for the United States. In part because Washington has never regarded the High North as a major strategic priority, the area has been seen as falling within Russia’s sphere of influence. Now China too is stepping up its plans to become a major player in the region.

    Last week, China issued its first white paper on its national Arctic strategy, pledging to work more closely with Moscow in particular to create an Arctic maritime counterpart – a “#Polar_silk_road” – to its “#one_belt_one_road” overland trade route to Europe. Both the Kremlin and Beijing have repeatedly stated that their ambitions are primarily commercial and environmental, not military.

    Washington, however, is increasingly suspicious and – aware it risks falling behind – the Pentagon has been reviewing its Arctic strategy.

    Speaking to Congress in May, the commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard, Admiral Paul Zukunft, revealed that Washington was considering fitting anti-ship cruise missiles to its latest generation of icebreakers, a major departure from these vessels’ primary research and rescue role.

    Géostratégie de l’#Arctique

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Peter Apps is Reuters global affairs columnist, writing on international affairs, globalization, conflict and other issues. He is founder and executive director of the Project for Study of the 21st Century; PS21, a non-national, non-partisan, non-ideological think tank in London, New York and Washington. Before that, he spent 12 years as a reporter for Reuters covering defense, political risk and emerging markets. Since 2016, he has been a member of the British Army Reserve and the UK Labour Party. @pete_apps

  • Immigration’s Border-Enforcement Myth - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/28/opinion/immigrations-border-enforcement-myth.html

    Congress has about another month before Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, the Obama-era program that protects young undocumented immigrants from deportation (and which President Trump terminated in September), officially comes to an end. It remains to be seen whether Congress will legalize these so-called Dreamers, and what concessions will be made in return. But this much is certain: Any deal will include appropriations for enhanced border enforcement.

    #migrations #asile #états-unis #murs #fontières

  • Lobbyists Have a New Secret Weapon
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-10/lobbyists-have-a-new-secret-weapon

    The tax plan that Congress just passed was most notable for two things : the size of the overhaul—it’s the biggest rewrite of the tax code in 31 years—and the speed with which it came together. Republicans didn’t unveil the details of the plan until November, setting up a two-month lobbying frenzy as industries fought to preserve certain loopholes, deductions, and other goodies. Some won, some lost. Among the biggest winners is the retail sector. That’s in part due to the success it had earlier (...)

    #algorithme #prédictif #lobbying

  • Eight Ways to Build a #Border #Wall - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/11/08/upshot/eight-ways-to-build-a-border-wall-prototypes-mexico.html


    Ils sont tous parfaitement alignés : huit grands panneaux posés sur une parcelle de terre aride à quelques centaines de mètres de la #frontière entre San Diego et le #Mexique. Dévoilés fin octobre, ce sont les prototypes du #mur frontalier que le Président Trump a promis d’ériger à la frontière sud. Plus tard cette année, le gouvernement fédéral testera la solidité et l’efficacité des panels.

    Ces prototypes montrent clairement qu’un mur de bordure n’est pas simple : le matériau, la forme et le coût peuvent varier considérablement. Et même s’il est loin d’être certain que le Congrès paiera pour un mur ou que l’un ou l’autre de ces projets sera construit à plus grande échelle, il s’agit d’une promesse concrète qui a alimenté une bonne partie de la campagne de M. Trump.
    #frontière

    SAN DIEGO — They all stand neatly in a row: eight large panels on a barren dirt patch just a few hundred yards from the San Diego border with Mexico. Unveiled in late October, these are the prototypes for the border wall President Trump has vowed to erect on the southern border. Later this year, the federal government will test the panels for strength and effectiveness.

    These prototypes make clear that a border wall is not simple: It can vary considerably in material, shape and cost. And while it is far from clear that Congress will pay for a wall or that any of these designs will be built at wider scale, they are real-life renderings of a promise that fueled much of Mr. Trump’s campaign.

    Here are the eight prototypes under consideration:

    • Ce sont les fameux prototypes de Trump... tu trouves plus d’info sur seenthis avec le tag #prototype (#prototypes).

      Un artiste suisse a aussi proposé d’en faire un monument... il y a de l’info sur seenthis.

      On sent que tu es en train de préparer le sujet pour une conf !
       :-)

      sur seenthis, utilises le pluriels :
      #murs #frontières

  • Five Things the Government Shutdown Could Mean for Wild Horses & Burros | American Wild Horse Campaign
    https://americanwildhorsecampaign.org/media/five-things-government-shutdown-could-mean-wild-horses-bu

    (January 20, 2018) ... Late last night, the U.S. Senate failed to come to agreement on a Continuing Resolution to keep the government running, sparking a government shutdown. The duration of the shutdown is unknown, as Senators and House members meet todayin another attempt to reach an agreement.

    Here are five ways that wild horses and burros could be affected.

    1. Wild horses and burros in Bureau of Land Management (BLM) holding facilities will continue to be fed and cared for. The BLM has confirmed to AWHC that this is considered an essential government service that will continue during the shutdown.

    2. Pending wild horse roundups – scheduled to start next week — could be delayed or cancelled. That means that the 1,400 wild horses targeted for removal could enjoy a few more days - or weeks - of freedom on our public lands.

    AWHC received word this morning that the pending round up of 100 horses from the Cold Springs/ Hog Creek Herd Management Areas in Oregon has been “suspended until further notice.” No information yet on how the shutdown will impact the planned removal of 1,000 horses from Nevada’s Triple B Complex, scheduled to start next week, or the 300-horse roundup, currently scheduled to begin on January 30 in Utah’s Bible Springs Complex.

    3. Deadlines for public comments on various proposed actions related to federally protected wild horses and burros may be extended. This includes the roundup in Nevada’s Seaman/White River Herd Areas and a scoping period for the Forest Service’s plan to construct an on-range holding facility to facilitate the removal of as many as 2,000 wild horses from the Devils Garden Wild Horse Territory in California.

    4. Congress’ decision on whether to grant the BLM’s request to kill tens of thousands of wild horses and burros will be delayed – again. Even if the Congress comes to agreement to restart the government, it will do so under a Continuing Resolution that will keep the government running under the provisions of the 2017 omnibus spending bill. That’s good news for wild horses and burros, because the 2017 bill prohibits the BLM from destroying healthy wild horses and burros and from selling them for slaughter.

    5. Wild horse and burro advocates will have to remain ready to act … but at the right time. Calls to Congress at this moment urging continued protections for wild horses and burros are likely to be lost in all the noise on Capitol Hill.

    It’s unclear whether Congress will return to deliberating actual Fiscal Year 2018 spending legislation. When and if it does, members will decide between the Senate Interior Appropriations bill (which prohibits killing and slaughter of wild horses and burros) and the House version (which allows for the destruction of healthy wild horses and burros, putting tens of thousands in danger of being killed). That will be the time to weigh in and ensure that the voice of 80 percent of Americans who oppose the killing and slaughter of America’s iconic mustangs and burros is heard.

    So stay informed, stay ready and stay tuned!

    #mustangs #chevaux_sauvages #animaux_sauvages #USA
    #ranchers

  • Teacher’s arrest in Louisiana: Another day, another outrage - World Socialist Web Site

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2018/01/12/pers-j12.html

    On se demande juste comment c’est possible.

    Such injustices and outrages against personal dignity, the diverse consequences of a common cause, social inequality, build up in the consciousness of the working class. And when this sentiment emerges in political form, the target will not just be local school officials.

    Teacher’s arrest in Louisiana: Another day, another outrage
    12 January 2018

    What could be more “American” than a local school board Town Hall meeting? The type of scene portrayed in a Norman Rockwell painting—democracy in action, an opportunity for ordinary citizens to air their complaints and have their voices heard, the embodiment of “civic duty” and accountability. In today’s America, however, Rockwell, witnessing the fate of Louisiana teacher Deyshia Hargrave, might be driven to adopt more the style of Francisco Goya or Hieronymus Bosch.

    • @reka euh, l’article explique la raison de ce type d’événement :

      The ruling elites are so accustomed to doing whatever they please without resistance that they respond to the first signs of opposition with the police baton. This class contempt for the concerns and democratic rights of working people percolates from the White House and halls of Congress in Washington down to the level of the petty bureaucrat tasked with enforcing budget cuts and austerity.

      If this is the response of a local school board to the challenge of a small group of teachers, what would the response of a billionaire like Amazon’s Jeff Bezos be to a real rebellion of the working class and a mass movement that threatened his wealth and the dictatorial rule of his class? Bezos wouldn’t call out deputy marshals and hired security guards, he’d call out the US Army.

      Voici une enquête scientifique qui montre que les mécanismes d’exclusion fonctionnent très bien aux #USA :

      Testing Theories of American Politics : Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens. Martin Gilens and Benjamin I. Page
      https://scholar.princeton.edu/sites/default/files/mgilens/files/gilens_and_page_2014_-testing_theories_of_american_politics.doc.p

      #éducation #politique #lutte_des_classes