Showing posts with label Eid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eid. Show all posts

Friday, September 25, 2015

The Equinox


THE ABSURD TIMES





From a meeting of the Pope and a prior President.


The Equinox
by
Babba Yaga



September 23 or 24 are great days.  Several important things happened.



1) The Vernal Equinox.  This means that day and night are the same length and that from now on the days will be getting shorter, and shorter.  Good.  The temperatures will begin to cool off as well and the damn grass will soon stop growing.



2) Yogi Berra died about this time at the age of 90, reminding us of his famous statement "Always go to people's funerals.  Otherwise, they won't go to yours."  My other favorite is "Nobody eats there any more -- it's too crowded." 



3) The Pope happened to land here, by plane, economy class and then rode in a FIAT Accompli, as I understand it.  I've said that he is the most transformative Pope since Alexander VI, but only one person knew what I meant (and that person studied to become a Priest for awhile).  That was the Borgia Pope.  One other, perhaps, the monster Constantine who edited the Bible is right up there too.



4) Scott Walker dropped out of the Republican Primaries.  He was voted down twice in 4 years by the people of Wisconsin and reinstated by the Koch brothers both times. 



5) I had previously mentioned that I would post the question and answer part of Chomsky's speech, but below is all I could find.



6) I am by no means an authority on the subject, but the Eid started on the 23rd and also the pilgrimage.   717 died in a stampede, attempting to "stone the devil".  You have to stone him 10 times in order for it to count.  Now, it does not seem reasonable that Mohammed envisioned such stampedes and that if he visualized millions trying to carry out that pilgrimage as it is today he would not have prescribed such madness.  Just a guess, mind you. 

7) For a change of pace, however, mobs in Iran are chanting "Death to Al Saud" as a result of the stampede.  Lets the U.S. off the hook for a few days, at least.

8) As a result of Boehner inviting the Pope, and the Pope speaking against the death penalty and selling arms for profit, he resigned for his position as Speaker of the House.  I saw that one coming.


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2015

Noam Chomsky on Trump: "We Should Recognize the Other Candidates are Not That Different"

Noam Chomsky weighed in on U.S. presidential politics in a speech Saturday at The New School in New York. In addressing a question about Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, Chomsky assessed the political landscape: "Today's Democrats are what used to be called moderate Republicans. The Republicans have just drifted off the spectrum. They're so committed to extreme wealth and power that they cannot get votes ... So what has happened is that they've mobilized sectors of the population that have been around for a long time. ... Trump may be comic relief, but it's not that different from the mainstream, which I think is more important."

TRANSCRIPT

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: After his talk, Professor Chomsky read and answered questions from the audience. This is one of those questions.
NOAM CHOMSKY: "What do you think about the antics of Donald Trump, in tangent to your earlier idea about American exceptionalism?"
Well, actually, I think we should recognize that the other candidates are not that different. I mean, if you take a look at—just take a look at their views. You know, they tell you their views, and they're astonishing. So just to keep to Iran, a couple of weeks ago, the two front-runners—they're not the front-runners any longer—were Jeb Bush and Scott Walker. And they differed on Iran. Walker said we have to bomb Iran; when he gets elected, they're going to bomb Iran immediately, the day he's elected. Bush was a little—you know, he's more serious: He said he's going to wait 'til the first Cabinet meeting, and then they'll bomb Iran. I mean, this is just off the spectrum of not only international opinion, but even relative sanity.
This is—I think Ornstein and Mann are correct: It's a radical insurgency; it's not a political party. You can tell that even by the votes. I mean, any issue of any complexity is going to have some diversity of opinion. But when you get a unanimous vote to kill the Iranian deal or the Affordable Care Act or whatever the next thing may be, you know you're not dealing with a political party.
It's an interesting question why that's true. I think what's actually happened is that during the whole so-called neoliberal period, last generation, both political parties have drifted to the right. Today's Democrats are what used to be called moderate Republicans. The Republicans have just drifted off the spectrum. They're so committed to extreme wealth and power that they cannot get votes, can't get votes by presenting those positions. So what has happened is that they've mobilized sectors of the population that have been around for a long time. It is a pretty exceptional country in many ways. One is it's extremely religious. It's one of the most extreme fundamentalist countries in the world. And by now, I suspect the majority of the base of the Republican Party is evangelical Christians, extremists, not—they're a mixture, but these are the extremist ones, nativists who are afraid that, you know, "they are taking our white Anglo-Saxon country away from us," people who have to have guns when they go into Starbucks because, who knows, they might get killed by an Islamic terrorist and so on. I mean, all of that is part of the country, and it goes back to colonial days. There are real roots to it. But these have not been an organized political force in the past. They are now. That's the base of the Republican Party. And you see it in the primaries. So, yeah, Trump is maybe comic relief, but it's just a—it's not that different from the mainstream, which I think is more important.
AMY GOODMAN: Noam Chomsky, speaking at The New School this weekend here in New York City, "On Power and Ideology." Professor Chomsky is institute professor emeritus at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he's taught for more than half a century. A world-renowned linguist and political dissident, Chomsky has written more than a hundred books; his latest, Because We Say So.
For the full transcript and video and audio of the speech, you can go to democracynow.org. We'll also post the full Q&A right there at democracynow.org with Professor Chomsky. What did you find most interesting about this speech? You can tweet us, @democracynow, or go to our Facebook page.
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