Archives for the month of: September, 2006

This mix (YASHWATA’s first musical offering) was inspired by Linda Nagata’s spellbinding novel of the far future, Vast. Can a music mix be “about” ethics, or politics, or philosophy? That’s a topic for another time. For now, just listen.

This mix is not posted here so that people can download music for free. It is posted here to introduce some beautiful but obscure music to people who might not otherwise have been aware of it. We have linked each song name to a merchant page where you can buy the album. (This will not necessarily be the best place to buy the album. We trust you to decide that.)

For information on the composers themselves, try discogs.com.

Download the Vast Mix (mp3 format, 192K quality, 103 megabytes) | Download the booklet (pdf format)

0:02 Isan Working in dust 3:49
3:48 Yasume Peculiar fascination 4:26
7:47 Markus Guentner Chrom 7:45
15:29 Proem When frailty fails 4:02
19:14 Modul Shift II 9:47
28:55 Yagya Magik journey 7:28
36:14 Seefeel Plainsong 7:44
43:52 Alva Noto and Ryuichi Sakamoto Moon 6:07
49:40 Xela Her eyes sparkled and she walked away 5:55
55:28 Underworld Thing in a book 20:14

… Plato’s idea that physical reality consists of imperfect imitations of abstractions seems an unnecessarily asymmetrical stance nowadays. Like Plato, we still study abstractions for their own sake. But in post-Galilean science … we also regard abstractions as means of understanding real or artificial physical entities, and in that context we take it for granted that the abstractions are nearly always approximations to the true physical situation. So, whereas Plato thought of Earthly circles in the sand as approximations to true, mathematical circles, a modern physicist would regard a mathematical circle as a bad approximation to the real shapes of planetary orbits, atoms and other physical things.

– David Deutsch: The fabric of reality (1997), p. 243

Really, that’s what Bush said; the agreement “clears the way” for the government to actually detain and interrogate terrorists – as if they weren’t able to do that before. What he means, of course, is that the ability to torture alleged terrorists – snatched arbitrarily, anywhere in the world, simply on the say-so of the Leader or his designated minions – will be preserved. Bush obviously has a deep psychological need to feel that someone is being tormented at his orders at all times.

But the demented psychology of this sad little shriveled-up nothing of a man is of slight import. What matters are the actions and policies that are being carried out by the junta operating in his name – and the countenancing of this gang’s crimes by the United States Congress. And that is what we have seen today: the countenancing of torture and kangaroo courts by some sad sacks of shinola lauded by the media as “men of principle.” This is what we’ve come to, this is where are today: sick bastards and cynical bastards openly and eagerly gutting the very core of American law.

What we have seen today is no “grand compromise,” no “great debate,” no “act of principle” and certainly no “preservation” of the Geneva Conventions. What we have seen instead is a small group of rich, cynical, power-hungry old bastards belch forth lies in the service of torture and tyranny. And if you’re not angry about that, if you’re not “shrill” about that, then by God you are one piss-poor American citizen. You shame every man and woman who have fought and died and marched and worked and dreamed for our freedoms.

Chris Floyd

This is the bottom line on the torture debate: we should not be having one. Among civilized people the topic is not open for negotiation or compromise. Among civilized people, when anyone says, “Wait, can’t I torture some people, some times, under some circumstances?” anyone else will say, “No, you can’t. Now leave me alone, you’re creeping me out.”

To torture is, by definition, to deliberately make another human being suffer more than anyone would ever want to suffer. Therefore, torture is by definition one of the worst things you can do. I do not understand how this could be any more obvious. Torture is wrong. It’s that simple. Civilized people do not use it, ever, for any reason. It is to be abjured, always, every single time, period.

What kind of sorry, twisted, pestilent, crater-pocked planet are these torture apologists from? In which depraved universe is torture sometimes a good idea? What kind of miscreant would stand up and say, “I’m in favor of it!”? Don’t they know how disgusting that makes them? – how others hold their breath and turn away, avoiding eye contact? – how we retreat into the crowd, discreetly, so as not to embarrass the lunatic in the middle, who has lost touch with the world and with the body he pollutes with his presence? – who has soiled himself, and stinks so badly, and doesn’t even know?

From Le Blog Bérubé:

All you have to do, in order to become a leading national figure … is to get out there and say something like this: “Torture and ‘extraordinary rendition’ are contrary to everything this nation stands for, every tradition of liberty and the rule of law for which our brave fighting men and women have died over the past 230 years. This administration’s craven and reckless policy will not only endanger our servicemen and women overseas … it will also erode our moral fiber and damage us irreparably in the fight against totalitarianism and political extremism around the world. No one who proposes such a policy is fit to lead this land of the free, and the political party that supports such a policy, and such a leader, can rightly be called anti-American.”

There! It’s that easy. You say a bunch of true things, you defend your country’s best political traditions, you remind millions of your fellow citizens that your party opposes the other party on some core issues, and you get some face time. It’s a win-win-win-win!

As Bérubé implies, the terrifyingly obvious question is this. Why has not a single member of Congress said anything like this? What is holding them back? What is their fucking problem?

[Added 24 September:] It’s possible that “not a single member of Congress [has] said anything like this” is an exaggeration. I don’t think so, however. A search of the Congressional Record for all of 2006 got me nothing. New York’s Charles Rangel had a good moment, but even this was not as strong as it could have been. And this was the only one that was even in the ballpark. Am I an inept researcher? If so, please help me out. If any of y’all can find any other instances where a U.S. senator or representative has stood up and said something strong about torture, I’d love to read it.

It is, frankly, embarrassing to have to listen to an American president utter such nonsense aloud on the world stage, all the while preening and lecturing the assembled delegates as if he were some sort of Universal Hegemon, the Emperor of the Earth. If you’re an American, the overweening arrogance of Bush’s act is breathtakingly painful to watch. One dares not imagine how the rest of the world takes it.

Antiwar.com

Isn’t it enough to simply point out that watches need watchmakers because they don’t reproduce?

Pharyngula

There was a most peculiar piece in the August 29th New York Times, headlined Details Emerge in British Terror Case.

The “details” that have “emerged” are just… what is the right word? I’m going to say, retarded. For example, British police said that:

… the suspects still had a lot of work to do. Two of the suspects did not have passports… the suspects had neither made reservations nor purchased plane tickets…

In other words, the suspects had not done anything on an airplane, nor were they in a position to do anything on an airplane.

… investigators have still not determined whether there was a target date for the attacks or how many planes were to be involved… police [are] still investigating the basics: “the number, destination and timing of the flights that might be attacked.”

In other words, we don’t know what they were planning to do, if anything. Nothing is known about the plan. Nothing. Forgive me, I’m confused: why the fuck are you calling it a plan?

Look at what the article says the police found in the houses of the men who were arrested. All their houses were searched. Here’s what they managed to find.

  • a plastic bin filled with liquid
    • presumably water
  • batteries
    • present in every household in England
  • empty drink bottles
    • present in every household in England
  • rubber gloves
    • present in every household in England
  • digital scales
    • perfectly ordinary
  • a disposable camera … leaking liquid
    • present in almost every household possessing both a small camera and a small child
  • a computer memory stick that showed … airline schedules for flights from London to the United States
    • perfectly ordinary
  • a list … items included batteries and Lucozade bottles … [and] a reminder to select a date
    • perfectly ordinary
  • jihadist literature and DVD’s about “genocide” in Iraq and Palestine … a book called “Defense of the Muslim Lands”
    • Scary perhaps, but so’s this book I have, The Book Your Church Doesn’t Want You to Read – and this CD, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb.

This is the evidence they found, pointing to a terrorist conspiracy. Oh, it’s terrifying all right – terrifyingly stupid. But here’s the real kicker.

… officials [are] still unsure … whether any of the suspects was technically capable of assembling and detonating liquid explosives while airborne.

So, they’re accused of formulating a plan that probably would not have caused much damage even if they had tried it. In fact, experts are not sure whether anyone could ever assemble and detonate liquid explosives while airborne.

So, to sum up.

  1. These men had done nothing wrong.
  2. We do not know that they were planning to do anything wrong.
  3. We do not know that their plan, if they had one, could have succeeded.

The war on terror – what terror? Have you seen any terror? The only terror I’m seeing comes straight from the White House (and its annex at 10 Downing Street). We have the sole source of a trillion wasted dollars’ worth of terror; a million ruined lives’ worth of terror, living right here on Pennsylvania Avenue.

Total external debt of the world’s lowest-income countries: $523 billion.

Total amount the U.S. has already spent on the war in Iraq: $282 billion. (This is just the direct cost of the war effort. It does not include many other huge related costs, such as the Department of Homeland Security.)

At TED, Richard Dawkins told a marvelous story I’ve never heard before.

We’re now so used to the idea that the Earth spins, rather than that the Sun moves across the sky, it’s hard for us to realize what a shattering mental revolution that must have been. After all, it seems obvious that the Earth is large and motionless; the Sun, small and mobile.

But it’s worth recalling Wittgenstein’s remark on the subject. “Tell me,” he asked a friend, “why do people always say it was natural for man to assume that the Sun went round the Earth, rather than that the Earth was rotating?”

His friend replied, “Well, obviously because it just looks as though the Sun is going round the Earth.”

And Wittgenstein replied, “Well, what would it have looked like, if it had looked as though the Earth was rotating?”

There is of course no real link between the 9/11 attacks and the past leadership of Iraq. But Tom Engelhardt has found a metaphorical one.

As is often the case, under such lies and manipulations lurks a deeper truth. In this case, let’s call it the truth of wish fulfillment. The link between 9/11 and Iraq is unfortunately all too real. The Bush administration made it so in the heat of the post-9/11 shock.

Think of that link this way: In the immediate wake of 9/11, our President and Vice President hijacked our country, using the low-tech rhetorical equivalents of box cutters and mace; then, with most passengers on board and not quite enough of the spirit of United Flight 93 to spare, after a brief Afghan overflight, they crashed the plane of state directly into Iraq, causing the equivalent of a Katrina that never ends and turning that country — from Basra in the south to the border of Kurdistan — into the global equivalent of Ground Zero.