Steve Russell :
METRO | Life in the Soviet Republic of Sun City

A friend had this priceless comment: ‘It’s just like Cuba, only with money.’

soviet statue

Street corner at Sun City, Texas. Not! Image from
Wikimedia Commons.

By Steve Russell | The Rag Blog | May 17, 2016

SUN CITY, Texas — We just had a crime wave here in Sun City, Texas, and that moves me to explain to my old pals how I wound up living in any retirement community, let alone this one.

Having watched politics go crazy on the national level since the Reagan Revolution redistributed so much wealth from the bottom to the top and the Republican sweep of Texas government turn it into an exercise in meanness as policy, Tracy and I naturally looked first to becoming ex-pats.

Canada would not take us because of age. We had not paid into the social safety net we were on the verge of needing.
Continue reading

Posted in Metro, RagBlog | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Luis Guerra :
The Return of the Sacred Deer

The Huichol Deer Repopulation Project:
I learned that encroachment and poaching had decimated the deer population in Huichol land.

Guerra Deer4

Tangled doe (see below). All photos by Ismael Trujillo.

By Luis Guerra | The Rag Blog | May 16, 2016

Luis Guerra hat sm crpArtist and storyteller Luis Guerra was our guest on Rag Radio Friday, May 13, 2016. On the show, Luis talks about the amazing and ambitious adventure of securing and moving the Huichol deer that he discusses in this report. He also reminisces on his years with the Rag Radio logo small Huichol Indians, with emphasis on shared mystical experiences, and reads three stories about being in the mountains of Jalisco with the Huicholes.

Listen to the podcast of our interview with Luis Guerra at the Internet Archive or on the player below:


In the last few months, the Huichol Deer Repopulation Project completed the relocation of 33 deer from northern Mexico to the Sierra Madre, in Jalisco. I am happy to offer the following report, which includes photographs of the capture, transport, and release phases, as well as of the people involved.

Background

The dream of repopulating the Sierra Madre of Jalisco with deer actually came to me about 28 years ago, when I attended the Huichol Festival of the Drum, the Corn, and the Squash. It was then that I learned that encroachment and poaching had decimated the deer population in Huichol land. Which was truly tragic, given that deer are sacred to the Huichol, an integral and major part of their cosmology.
Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Thorne Dreyer :
RAG RADIO PODCASTS | Luis Guerra, Paul Buhle, Tom Hayden and Barbara Williams, Classic Bernie Sanders, Leeann Atherton, and Thomas Grace

We visit the Huichol Indians, remember James Connolly and the Easter Rising, revisit Vietnam and Kent State, discuss a gritty new memoir, envision the political revolution, and listen to an iconic blues-rock singer.

Guerra and Dreyer 2016 Studio sm crp2

Luis Guerra and Thorne Dreyer in the KOOP studios, Friday, May 13, 2016.

Interviews by Thorne Dreyer | The Rag Blog | March 31, 2016

The following podcasts are from recent Rag Radio shows with host Thorne Dreyer. The syndicated Rag Radio program, produced in the studios of Austin’s cooperatively-run KOOP-FM, has an international audience and has become an influential platform for interviews with leading figures in politics, current events, literature, and cutting-edge culture.


Mystical Artist and Storyteller Luis Guerra on ‘Repopulating the Huichol Deer’ and More!

Luis Guerra studio2 sm crpArtist and storyteller Luis Guerra talks about the amazing and ambitious adventure of securing and relocating 33 deer from northern Mexico to the Sierra Madre in Jalisco, the land of the Huichol Indians. He also reminisces on his years with the Huicholes, with emphasis on shared mystical experiences, and reads three stories about being in the mountains of Jalisco with the Huicholes.

Read the full show description and download the podcast of our May 13, 2016 Rag Radio interview with Luis Guerra, here — or listen to it here:


Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Kate Braun :
This full moon is a time of high energy and power

Moon Musings: The Full Moon falls on Saturday, May 21, 2016, but can also be observed on Friday or Sunday.

Flower Moon

Flower Moon. Image from Dreamwalker.

By Kate Braun | The Rag Blog | May 17, 2016

You may celebrate this month’s Full Moon on Friday, May 20, Saturday, May 21, or Sunday, May 22.  Saturday is the Full Moon, a Flower Moon or Hare Moon, and activities that will assist you in reaffirming goals would be most appropriate.

This is a time of high energy and power which may be complicated by current retrogrades: Juno, Saturn, Mars, and Pluto are all retrograde during this full moon and these combined energies will work to slow down thought processes as well as progress. Factor in Mercury’s retrograde, which continues until Sunday, May 22, and you add the possibility of incomplete or inaccurate information. Lord Sun’s entry into Gemini on Saturday is another complication as Gemini influences communications of all kinds, which can be more difficult during a Mercury retrograde.
Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

James McEnteer :
The geopolitics of generosity

For the USA, offering little help to Ecuador’s earthquake victims, political calculation takes precedence over compassion.

Ecuador Earthquake 2016

Earthquake in Ecuador. Image from April 17, 2016 BBC News YouTube video / Creative Commons.

By James McEnteer | The Rag Blog | May 11, 2016

QUITO, Ecuador — On April 16, Ecuador suffered an earthquake registering 7.8 on the Richter scale. One week later, the death toll stood at 656, with more than 12 thousand injuries reported and more than 50 people still missing. Hundreds of aftershocks, some very powerful, continued to shake the country’s northwest coast and cause more damage.

The day after the disaster, aid began arriving from Ecuador’s Latin American neighbors, including Colombia, Peru, Venezuela, and Bolivia. Quick responses were crucial, as hundreds of people were still missing, many trapped in crumbling rubble.

Cuba sent 53 medical personnel to help, in addition to the more than 200 Cuban doctors already on the ground in Ecuador. Three Cuban doctors were among the casualties in a building that collapsed in the coastal city of Pedernales. Mexico sent a rescue team. Even tiny, impoverished Honduras offered an aid worker.
Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Alan Waldman :
FILM | Michael Moore’s ‘Where to Invade Next’ is the best film of the young 21st century!

It’s funny, brilliant, and bursting with terrific and practical ideas; don’t miss this treasure!

Michael Moore flag

Michael Moore: Where to Invade Next.

By Alan Waldman | The Rag Blog | May 11, 2016

I loved the Oscar-winning documentary What Happened, Miss Simone?, but I consider Michael Moore’s finest movie yet, Where to Invade Next, the best film of the decade — hell, the best film of the 21st Century so far! It’s funny, compassionate, brilliant, and bursting with vital ideas — and for people who find Moore a tad strident, it is much funnier and gentler than his earlier works (except Canadian Bacon, in which he suggests we go to war with Canada because we can actually defeat them).

In its first 10 weeks on U. S. screens, as of April 17, 2016, Where to Invade Next had a domestic box-office of $3,801,054 and at its widest reached only 308 theaters. That’s tragic, considering that Moore’s anti Iraq-war classic Fahrenheit 9/11 was the largest-grossing documentary in the world to date, with $222.5 million — which rose to about half a billion smackers with subsequent release in 40 more lands.
Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Johnny Hazard :
Massive Mexico City airport would be a disaster

It would spur privatized highway construction, destroy farming communities, increase flooding and urban sprawl, and line the pockets of contractors.

hazard airport army

Mexican police forces invade ejidal lands in San Salvador Atenco near Mexico City where campesinos have resisted the expropriation of their lands for a controversial new airport. Photo from the Global Anti-Aerotropolis Movement.

By Johnny Hazard | The Rag Blog | May 10, 2016

Read “Protestas contra el nuevo aeropuerto de la Ciudad de México” by Johnny Hazard at The Rag Blog en español.

A special report

MEXICO CITY — The federal government of Mexico has begun a project to build a new airport, one of the biggest in the world, in a country where the vast majority of the people have never flown. This project threatens to:

  • spur construction of 16 to 19 new highways in the Mexico City-Toluca-Texcoco metropolitan area(s), all privatized from their inception, increasing dependence on the automobile in an area where car ownership has more than doubled in 10 years. Almost all toll roads in Mexico are privately constructed and owned but publicly subsidized. Giveaways of public money to corporations is the raison de’etre of most of the world’s new airport construction;
  • increase CO2 emissions (from the planes themselves and from cars and buses that would go much farther than before to get to the airport) in one of the most polluted cities in the world;
  • line the pockets of contractors, construction companies, and “starchitects”;
  • increase the risks of flooding and exacerbate the drying of lakes and rivers;
  • damage or destroy what remains of the farming communities around Mexico City and Texcoco;
  • increase suburban sprawl (result of all of the above).

Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Paul Buhle :
‘A Full Life: James Connolly the Irish Rebel’

Historian Buhle writes about ‘The Irish socialist who organized an uprising’ and joins us on Rag Radio. (Listen to the podcast here!)

James Connolly Irish Rebel

By Paul Buhle | The Rag Blog | May 9, 2016

paul buhle 2

Paul Buhle.

Historian Paul Buhle, a leading figure on the American Left since the 1960s who now produces radical comics, was our guest on Rag Radio, Friday, May 8. Buhle is the editor of A Full Life: James Connolly the Irish Rebel, subtitled, “A graphic remembrance 100 years after his cruel murder during the Easter Rising.” Paul also wrote an afterward to the comic which we are publishing below, along with Paul’s Truthout op-ed, “The Irish socialist who organized an uprising.”

On Rag Radio, Paul joined Thorne Dreyer in a discussion of the life of James Connolly, his role in the fight for Irish independence and in the historic Easter Rising rebellion, and his death before a British firing squad. We also talk about Connolly’s time in the United States where he organized for the IWW. And we discuss the history and historical significance of radical comics and graphic histories and the fundamental role in their development played by Rag Radio logo smallAustin-based comix artists Gilbert Shelton, who pioneered much of his work in The Rag, and Jack Jackson (Jaxon).

Listen to the podcast of our interview with Paul Buhle at the Internet Archive or on the player below:


Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Thorne Dreyer and Alice Embree :
The Rag: 50 years of cutting-edge journalism

A series of public events, October 13-16, 2016, will celebrate the 50th anniversary of Austin’s historic Sixties underground newspaper.

Rag Covers

By Thorne Dreyer and Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | May 9, 2016

AUSTIN — In a public celebration of The Rag’s 50th anniversary — “The Rag: 50 Years and Still Raising Hell!” — former Rag staffers, followers, and friends are planning a four-day series of activities October 13-16, 2016, in Austin.  Events will take place at various venues, including the Vortex Theater, Threadgill’s South, and the Austin Community College Eastview Campus.

The Rag, Austin’s weekly tabloid underground newspaper, published 380 editions from 1966 to 1977. Noted for its unique blend of New Left politics and Sixties alternative culture, The Rag was among the earliest and most influential of the Sixties-era underground newspapers; it was the first in the South and the first to grow directly out of an activist and counterculture community.
Continue reading

Posted in Rag Reunion 2016 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

Rag Reunion and Public Celebration:
October 13-16, 2016

The Rag: 50 years and still raising hell! ©Furry Freak Brothers illustration by Gilbert Shelton


rag-reunion-calendar-revised-10-3-16


Moderated Discussions at ACC Eastview

Friday, October 14

1:45-3:30 p.m. Keynote Event: Rag Radio interview with historian Doug Rossinow, author of The Politics of Authenticity, with UT-Austin American Studies professor Julia Mickenberg. Moderator: Thorne Dreyer. Multipurpose Hall (MPH) (EVC8500)

3:30-5:00 p.m. “War & Protest, Then and Now.” Facilitators: Terry J. DuBose (Vietnam Veterans Against the War); Alan Pogue (Veterans for Peace); Benjamin “Hart” Viges (Iraq Veterans Against the War); David Zeiger (Producer and Director, Sir! No Sir; Staff of Oleo Strut Coffeehouse outside Ft. Hood, 1970-72); Roy Casagranda (ACC Government Professor and Middle East scholar). MPH (EVC8500)

3:30-5:00 p.m. “Activist Journalism on Race and Racial Justice Struggles: Then and Now.” Moderator: Glenn Scott, former Rag staffer and retired union organizer. Facilitators: Linda Lewis, voting and human rights advocate, first and only African American Elections Administrator for Texas; Dr. Erna R. Smith, Emeritus Journalism Professor, USC South Africa graduate program, first Black writer on Daily Texan staff; Jan Lawson, retired City of Austin Small and Minority Business Manager; Marion Nickerson, longtime KAZI program director. (EVC 8.105)

3:30-5:00 p.m. “Being the Change: Religion & Spirituality in Social Activism.” Facilitator: Sarito Carol Neiman, original Rag “funnella,” author of The Autobiography of a Spiritually Incorrect Mystic. (EVC 8.111)

Saturday, October 15

1:30-4:30: The Legacy of the ’60s-’70s Underground Press. Moderator: Thorne Dreyer, original Rag “funnel”; editor, The Rag Blog. MPH (EVC 8500)

1:30-2:25: “The Underground Press Becomes a National Force and the Government Tries to Stop It.” Facilitator: Geoff Rips, author of The Campaign Against the Underground Press and former editor, The Texas Observer.

2:30-3:25: “The Underground Press and the Post-Stonewall Gay Movement.” Facilitator: Allen Young, veteran of The Washington Post, Liberation News Service, and the Gay Liberation Movement.

3:30-4:25: “Citizen’s Journalism from the Underground Press to Twitter and the Cell Phone.” Facilitator: Mary Bock, UT-Austin journalism professor and former television journalist.

1:30-2:55: “Fifty Years of Raised Consciousness: Women Sharing Our Stories.” Women who worked with The Rag and/or the Women’s Liberation Front share their experiences. Facilitators: Pat Cuney, Lin Smith, Judy Walther, Connie Lanham Moreno, Barbara Hines, Alice Embree, Sharon Shelton-Colangelo. (EVC 8.105)

1:30-4:25: “How the Rag era changed our lives and communities.” Facilitators: Hunter Ellinger and assorted Ragstaffers. (EVC 8.111)

3:00-4:25: “The Struggle for Criminal Justice: Alternative Media and Grassroots Activism.” Moderator: Scott Henson, criminal justice reform activist and blogger; Steve Russell, retired Travis County judge and columnist for Indian Country Today Media Network and The Rag Blog; Alan Pogue, documentary photographer who has photographed jails and prisons since 1972; Sukyi McMahon, Austin Justice Coalition leader. (EVC 8.105)

Events at Austin Community College (ACC) are sponsored by The Austin School with the assistance of Roy Casagranda, ACC government professor.

For more information and links to all the venues, go to the Rag Reunion page at The Rag Blog.


Some Highlights

Gentle Thursday Happening and Reunion Registration
The Gentle Thursday event on October 13 will serve as a reunion and remembrance of the SDS and Rag sponsored Gentle Thursday happenings that helped transform the UT campus and community in the late ‘60s. There will be an outdoor stage at the Vortex Theater, 307 Manor Road, with live music and spoken word, and folks are encouraged to wear lively clothing and to bring dogs, children, balloons, and musical instruments. Wear your tie-dye and peace buttons! There will also be registration for the Rag Reunion at the Vortex.

Alan Pogue at La Peña
There will be a exhibit of Rag-related work by acclaimed documentary photographer Alan Pogue, who was The Rag‘s staff photographer when he came back from Vietnam in 1969. The exhibit will hang at La Peña, 227 Congress Ave., from October 1-30, 2016. There will be an opening reception on Sunday, October 9, from 4-6 p.m. The reception and the exhibit are open to the public.

Rag Radio Keynote Interview with Doug Rossinow
Thorne Dreyer will host a remote Rag Radio broadcast before a live audience at the the Austin Community College (ACC) Eastview campus, 3401 Webberville Rd., from 2-3 p.m., Friday, October 14. The guest will be historian Doug Rossinow, author of The Politics of Authenticity. All are encouraged to join us in the audience. The show will be broadcast live on KOOP 91.7-FM in Austin and will be streamed live.

Workshops and Breakout Sessions
On Friday and Saturday afternoons at Austin Community College (ACC) Eastview, there will be a series of workshops on subjects like the Vietnam War and protest, the women’s movement, spirituality and activism, citizens’ journalism then and now, racism and the criminal justice system, sessions on labor and environmental activism, and how the underground press became a national force and the government tried to stop it. See the schedule above. Events at Austin Community College (ACC) are sponsored by The Austin School with the assistance of Roy Casagranda, ACC government professor.

Documentary Film Premiere
A documentary film, The Rag: Underground Newspaper 1966-1977, produced by People’s History in Texas, will premiere at ACC Eastview on Friday, October 14, from 7-9 p.m. All are welcome.

Concert at Threadgill’s
On Saturday night, October 15, there’s a big concert at famed Austin music venue Threadgill’s, located at 301 West Riverside Drive. Set for 7-11 p.m., it features vintage rock ‘n roll with Extreme Heat, the Freddy Steady Revue (with special guests Spencer Perskin of Shiva’s Headband and George Kinney of Golden Dawn), and the Uranium Savages. Austin muralist, comic, and actor — and former Rag artist — Kerry Awn will emcee. There is a $20 cover charge — but nobody will be turned away.

Brunch and Closing Session
Sunday from 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m., The High Road at Dawson, 700 Dawson Road (just south of Barton Springs Road), will host the closing event for the 2016 Rag Reunion and Public Celebration. It’s a brunch and final Reunion gathering, and everyone will pose for a group photograph.

All events are free — with the exception of the Saturday night concert at Threadgill’s — and everything’s open to the public.


The Book

PrintCelebrating The Rag: Austin’s Iconic Underground Newspaper will be released during the 50th Anniversary Rag Reunion and Public Celebration. Edited by Thorne Dreyer, Alice Embree, and Richard Croxdale, and designed by Carlos Lowry, the 300-page-plus book includes more than 100 articles chosen from the 11 years of The Rag’s existence, along with several contemporary essays written specifically for the project. Celebrating The Rag also features eye-popping vintage art that first appeared in The Rag, including Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers, Jim Franklin’s surrealist armadillos, and the work of acclaimed documentary photographer, Alan Pogue.


The complete collection of The Rag is now available at Reveal Digital’s Independent Voices digital archive.

For details and background, go here: The Rag: 50 years of cutting-edge journalism.

Go to the Rag Reunion Facebook event page.

For information about accommodations, go here: 2016 Rag Reunion and Public Celebration: Where to stay in Austin this October.

Contact the Rag Reunion Organizing Committee here: reunion@theragblog.com.

Press contact:
Thorne Dreyer
editor@theragblog.com
512-436-9968

Posted in Rag Reunion 2016 | 4 Comments

Alice Embree :
Accessing history in the digital age

Three hundred issues of The Rag are now available in a digital format.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | May 8, 2016

Those of us who came of age in the ’60s remember library research as a visit to “the stacks” or hours spent with spools of microfilm and cantankerous microfilm readers. The Internet has changed all that.

Historical documents can now be accessed online through digital archives. The Rag is moving into the new era, thanks to collaboration between a company called Reveal Digital, two donor libraries and nearly 100 funding libraries.
Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Thorne Dreyer :
A tribute to Maggie, my mother

‘Maggie’s absolute freedom, her hospitality, big floppy hats and committed heart put the art scene in Houston on the side of human rights and general soul.’ — Mimi Crossley, Houston Post

Margaret Webb Dreyer cropped

Maggie Dreyer at my 30th birthday party, Chaucers, Plaza Hotel, Houston, Texas, August 1, 1975, a little more than a year before she lost her long battle with cancer. Photo by Janice Rubin.

By Thorne Dreyer | The Rag Blog | May 8, 2016

This is a slightly expanded version of an article I published in The Rag Blog in May 2014. I want to share it again on this Mother’s Day. Comments from the original posting are included and I encourage you all to add your own, especially those of you who knew my mother. — TD


MAY 13, 2014 — I dedicated my radio show on Friday, May 9, to my mother, Margaret Webb Dreyer. Since I was two days early for Mother’s Day, I now have no problem being two days late with this tribute! (Ah, fearful symmetry…)

Back in the 1970s, when I was working with KPFT, the Pacifica radio station in Houston, I interviewed my mother one Mother’s Day. I still have a cassette from that show but it is sadly silent. I have decided to tell Maggie’s story here through the words of others — and a few vintage ones of my own. For those of you who didn’t have the very special pleasure of knowing her, I would like to introduce you to Margaret Webb Dreyer.


“I was conceived in Houston during a creative collaboration between a newspaper journalist and an abstract expressionist.” — Thorne Webb Dreyer, Rag Reunion Memoir, September 2005

“Margaret Webb Dreyer (29 September 1911-December 17, 1976) — known to many as ‘Maggie’ Dreyer — was an American painter, muralist, mosaic artist, educator, gallery owner, and political activist who spent most of her career in Houston, Texas. Though she worked in a number of styles and media over the years, she was best known as an abstract expressionist painter. Her work won numerous awards in major juried shows and was exhibited widely in museums and galleries. — “Margaret Webb Dreyer” article, Wikipedia
Continue reading

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 19 Comments