From Syria to Sunshine
Another World Is Possible, Outside of the Shadows
by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
And so we find ourselves, once again, on the brink of sending our military to attack another country, about which, again, we seem to know pathetically little.
Will it be possible to perform a “surgical strike†in Syria, preventing the government armed forces from using chemical weapons without actually taking sides in the civil war?
To what extent have the “rebel forces†been infiltrated by radical Muslim fighters coming over from Afghanistan and Iran?
What are the motives of the shadowy big players looming in the background — China, Russia, Saudia Arabia, Iran, Israel?
Why has the United Nations been so silent?
But here’s the big question that no one is asking: why aren’t we working like banshees to reduce our dependence on Middle East oil?
The fact is that the sheikdoms of the Persian Gulf were insular, off-the-the-beaten track kingdoms until the advent of the modern Western addiction to oil. It’s all about resources. (more…)
Opposition to a U.S.-led attack on Syria is growing rapidly in Europe and the United States, drawing its strength from public awareness that the case made for attacking Iraq had holes in it.
The top stories on Google News this morning (Monday) are chemical weapons in Syria and Miley Cyrus’s gyrations and crotch grabbing as she performed “We Can’t Stop.†We. Can’t. Stop.
Gloria Anzaldua, who has been one of my heroines since I first read her seminal work Borderlands/La frontera back in the 1980s, always insisted that queer folk have a special role to play in bringing about a change in human consciousness — moving us from the patriarchal mold of the past 5,000 years or so to what she called “a new mestiza consciousness,†a much more holistic, inclusive, planetary awareness.
complexity of Egypt’s ongoing revolutionary moments will not lend themselves easily to short statements or translated sound bites . . . but we remain distant from, declarative regarding, or dispassionate about these events at our own grave peril. Nothing less than our collective, twenty-first century understandings of such terms as “democracy,†“revolution,†and “violence/nonviolence†are being forged on the streets of Egypt today.
“Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Perhaps that’s why it’s so fitting that I’ve partnered with a minister to join theÂ
In March 2012 when the story of Trayvon Martin’s murder became national news, I waited to comment. Like those who took to the streets in hoodies, I could not understand how George Zimmerman could shoot and kill an unarmed teenager who was simply walking home from the store, be taken into custody by the police, and then go home to sleep in his own bed the same night without being charged with a crime. Zimmerman told the police that he acted in self defense, and that was enough. Trayvon Martin’s family had to hire a lawyer and the lawyers had to contact national civil rights leaders before a prosecutor brought charges. I did not comment.