Alan Waldman :
Brit TV critics call ‘Line of Duty’ the best cop show ever, and for good reason

The BBC’s riveting, best-performing drama in a decade, starring Lennie James, is an intelligent, surprising look at police corruption.

line of duty

Line of Duty investigators Adrian Dunbar, Martin Compston, and Vicky McClure.

By Alan Waldman | The Rag Blog | July 6, 2014

[In his weekly column, Alan Waldman reviews some of his favorite films and TV series that readers may have missed, including TV dramas, mysteries, and comedies from Canada, England, Ireland, Australia, and Scotland. Most are available on DVD and/or Netflix, and some episodes are on YouTube.]

My wife and I were blown away by the five-part, 300-minute first season of the 2012 British cop-corruption thriller Line of Duty, which was the BBC’s best-performing drama in 10 years. It is available on DVD and Netflix and has aired on Hulu. (To see it on YouTube you have to pay $5 to something called Acorn TV.) Britain is enjoying a six-part second season, and two further series have been ordered.
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Mariann G. Wizard :
SPECIAL REPORT | The Drug War: ‘Against the Wind,’ Part 1

Marijuana prohibition is a house of straw. During the past month, the winds of change have started to rip that house apart and now the DEA may be reevaluating cannabis’ status as a ‘dangerous drug.’

house of straw large

In a perfect storm for prohibition, the “house of straw” — the credibility of anti-marijuana lies — is the first to fall. Image from uni-paderborn.de.

By Mariann G. Wizard | The Rag Blog | July 3, 2014

Part 1: House of Straw

America’s long-running and expensive “War on Drugs,” despite claims that it protects citizens from the harms of dangerously addictive drugs, has been most aggressively focused on cannabis (marijuana, hemp; Cannabis sativa).

Cannabis is not physically addictive and has been consumed by humans for thousands of years without any documented deaths from its use alone. To even begin to catalog the harms of prohibition itself would take a book and cannot be undertaken seriously until the war is over.
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Steve Russell :
Stopping an American jihad

It comes down to what Colin Powell used to call ‘the Pottery Barn theory.’ We will own what we break and we don’t want to own the Sunni and Shi’a argument.

break it buy it

Pottery Barn: “You break it, you own it.” Photo by Sajjad Hussain / AFP / Getty Images.

By Steve Russell | The Rag Blog | July 2, 2014

The talks over Syria have gone nowhere and the radical Sunnis have spilled across the Iraqi border to threaten Baghdad. So the chorus rises again:

“Obama is a wuss!”

“Something must be done!”
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Jonah Raskin :
FILM | ‘Night Moves’ is about ecoterrorists gone awry

It’s hard to imagine that anyone would decide to make a bomb and blow up a dam after watching ‘Night Moves.’

night moves

Jesse Eisenberg and Dakota Fanning star in Night Moves.

By Jonah Raskin | The Rag Blog | July 1, 2014

Kelly Reichardt’s 2013 movie, Night Moves — now in theaters across the country — seems to be two movies in one. The first part might be called a how-to picture. The second part is a searing moral melodrama.

The main characters are ecoterrorists. They live in rural Oregon in what appears to be the present day. While there are almost no events that might locate the movie in time and provide an historical reference point, the characters talk on cell phones. Josh grows organic vegetables on a small local farm. Dena works at a spa where women come to relax and heal and where a grotesque and horrible crime occurs. I don’t want to give it away.
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Thorne Dreyer :
PODCAST | Suzanna Danuta Walters discusses the ‘Sabotaging of Gay Equality’

The author of the provocative cultural critique, ‘The Tolerance Trap,’ joins us in a lively and revealing discussion on Rag Radio.

suzanna walters

Suzanna Danuta Walters.

Interview by Thorne Dreyer | The Rag Blog | June 30, 2014

Our Rag Radio podcast features Suzanna Danuta Walters, author of The Tolerance Trap: How God, Genes, and Good Intentions Are Sabotaging Gay Equality.

Listen to or download the podcast of our June 20, 2014, Rag Radio interview with Suzanna Walters here:


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David P. Hamilton :
The Democrats’ delusions and a strategy for change

A central goal of the left in the U.S. should be to create an independent electoral base, a voice from which the left can speak directly to the mainstream.

dem repub art

Painting by Anthony Freda / AnthonyFreda.com.

By David P. Hamilton | The Rag Blog | June 30, 2014

Sometimes you might have cause to wonder, but the Democratic Party is indeed better than the Republican Party. That says almost nothing. The economic policies of contemporary Republicans are more right wing than those of Benito Mussolini, the founder of modern fascism. Being better than Mussolini is no great distinction.

During the “Obama recovery” since 2009, 95% of all income gains have gone to the top 1% economic elite, the capitalist ruling class. As their income rose 31%, the other 99% saw their income grow by a meager 0.4%. In the process, inequality increased rapidly. Such are the riches Obama’s economic policies have delivered.
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Harry Targ :
The intellectual impacts of historians Joyce and Gabriel Kolko

The ‘Limits of Power’ demonstrated that the United States was committed to expanding its capitalist empire across the globe.

Gabriel Kolko

Historian Gabriel Kolko, September 1970. Photo by Franz Maier / The Globe and Mail.

By Harry Targ | The Rag Blog | June 29, 2014

I have been teaching courses on United States foreign policy since 1966. I came of age politically during the Vietnam War and the modern civil rights movement but was not born into a left-leaning political environment.

My formative college experiences of foreign policy came from articulate professors who had embraced the skeptical but limited vision of the United States role in the world shaped by the theorists of “political realism.” I was exposed to a later edition of Hans Morgenthau’s classic international relations textbook, Politics Among Nations, which declared that politics was about the struggle for power. Big or small nations, powerful or weak political actors of all kinds, were engaged in the pursuit of power for purposes of material gain or just to achieve more power.
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Tom Hayden :
Who is creating a terrorist threat?

The imminent danger is that Obama is preparing to go to war not to ‘save Baghdad’ but to attack the perceived threat of a Sunni jihadist ‘sanctuary.’

no new war on iraq

Demonstration Saturday, June 21, outside the White House. Photo from AP.

By Tom Hayden | The Rag Blog | June 25, 2014

Contrary to the original spin, there seems to be no need or rationale for “saving” Baghdad from invading ISIS hordes. As I predicted, the growing Shiite counteroffensive seems to be a sufficient deterrent. It appears that al-Maliki will be forced out politically, perhaps to be replaced by a new Humpty-Dumpty and a patchwork agreement to “reform” the Shiite regime.

The imminent danger is that Obama is preparing to go to war not to “save Baghdad” but to attack the perceived threat of a Sunni jihadist “sanctuary” in the vast zone from southern Syria into northern Iraq. It has been U.S. policy, however, that is partly responsible for fostering the terrorist sanctuary threat, if one actually transpires.
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Bob Feldman :
People’s History of Egypt, Epilogue/Update, Section 2, November 2013-April 2014

Despite the brutal tactics of the counterrevolutionary Sisi military regime, a struggle for political, economic, and cultural democracy continues in Egypt.

People walk past huge banner for Egypt's army chief, Field Marshal al-Sisi in front of High Court of Justice in downtown Cairo

Eqyptians walk past banner showing Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in downtown Cairo, March 13, 2014. Photo by Amr Abdallah Dalsh / Reuters. Image from Al-Monitor.

By Bob Feldman | The Rag Blog | June 25, 2014

[With all the dramatic activity in Egypt, Bob Feldman’s Rag Blog “people’s history” series, “The Movement to Democratize Egypt,” which concludes here, could not have been more timely. Also see Feldman’s “Hidden History of Texas” series on The Rag Blog.]

According to a December 28, 2013 press release of Human Rights Watch, between July and December 2013 Egyptian government authorities “killed more than 1,000 pro-Muslim Brotherhood protesters; arrested thousands of its supporters, including the majority of its leadership; and engaged in a systematic media campaign to demonize the group” and “a Cairo court in September [2013}” then “found the Brotherhood to be an illegal organization.”
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Alan Waldman :
‘Exile’ is touching, thrilling, surprising three-hour Brit drama

Superb acting by award-winners Jim Broadbent, John Simm, and Olivia Colman, plus powerhouse writing, make this a must-see.

Exile

Exile is a British psychological thriller.

By Alan Waldman | The Rag Blog | June 23, 2014

[In his weekly column, Alan Waldman reviews some of his favorite films and TV series that readers may have missed, including TV dramas, mysteries, and comedies from Canada, England, Ireland, Australia, and Scotland. Most are available on DVD and/or Netflix, and some episodes are on YouTube.]

Exile is a terrific British psychological thriller TV series dealing with the topic of Alzheimer’s disease against a background of vile corruption. This gripping 2011 three-hour, three-part drama is available on Netflix and Netflix Instant streaming, and here too.
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Jack A. Smith :
Obama’s foreign policy bait and switch

Obama focused on defending his policies from the warhawks instead of the ‘pivot’ to Asia and maintenance of unilateral global hegemony.

obama for pol speech

President Barack Obama deliverers  commencement address at West Point on May 28. Image from U.S. News.

By Jack A. Smith | The Rag Blog | June 22, 2014

President Obama chose to ignore the most important strategic aspect of U.S. foreign policy in his major address May 28 at West Point graduation ceremonies. It was perhaps thought politically wise to emphasize current events rather than military preparations for a possible major future confrontation with China.

Instead Obama mainly focused on defending his policies against mounting criticism from warhawks in both parties variously demanding that the U.S. attack Syria, or Iran, or Venezuela, and adopt more provocative measures toward Russia. He was even criticized for not being tougher toward China, which is preposterous, as we shall discuss in this article when deeds, not words, are examined.
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METRO | Alice Embree : Grassroots Leadership takes on the prison profiteers

The group helped end immigrant family detention at T. Don Hutto private prison and is challenging Travis County Sheriff Hamilton’s deportation policies.

chief deporter crop

Grassroots Leadership is challenging Travis County Sheriff Greg Hamilton deportation policies.

By Alice Embree | The Rag Blog | June 22, 2014

AUSTIN — Grassroots Leadership says that Texas is “ground zero” with “more incarcerated people, immigration detention beds, and for-profit prisons than any other state.” That is why the national organization, founded in 1980 by activist and musician Si Kahn, moved its program operations to Austin in 2012.

I spoke with Executive Director Bob Libal about Grassroots Leadership and the group’s current organizing efforts in Travis County, Texas, and nationally. They have a solid track record of success. They helped shut down the notoriously bad Dawson State Jail, end the immigrant family detention at the T. Don Hutto Detention Center, and stop the expansion of the private prison industry. They also have an ambitious agenda for the future.
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