11/25 Open Thread - the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women

W00T!
We have an entire day dedicated to the idea of eliminating violence against women. It turns out that that the UN declared November 18 to be something of a day dedicated to the idea of preventing violence against children (and more), so I'll just consider that here too. These are very wonderful ideas, but nobody, not even the UN wallahs responsible for such things, takes them at all seriously. This is blisteringly true in the USA. Is not bombing the shit out of them a form of violence against women, or children, as the case may be? How about machine gunning them or saturating their habitation zone with anti-personnel mines and butterfly bomblets? I'll leave starvation sanctions, including not only those restricting access to food and water, but also those restricting access to medications, drugs and medical care aside so we don't start quibbling about the definition of "violence", even though all such sanctions can exist only because of the implicit threat of physical force and violence against those who violate such blockades.
The USA is responsible for 42% of all of the globe's international arms sales, Forty-Two Percent. This makes us enablers of a lot of the violence against women, children, and all others. We have a clear conflict of interest with respect to eliminating violence, since it is how we make our living. The world's 5 largest arms manufacturers are US companies. And then there is the domestic market - in the first 4 months of 2024 dealers and assorted individuals sold 5.5 million firearms in the domestic market. We are beyond mere enablers, being complicit in a lot of regime change operations, color revolutions, rebellions and other wars. We don't simply sell the arms, we also drop the bombs and fire the guns whenever we feel like it, such as in Kosovo, Iraq, Somalia, and elsewhere. Surely we don't take elimination of violence against women or anybody else seriously, and nobody could take our ceremonies and vocalizations about such seriously either. But, all the weapons buyers do not really have clean hands either, so it is really all just noise and theatrics.
One bizarre aspect of all of this comes from our military. The US military includes 2,079,142 military personnel and 778,539 civilians as of September 2023. As of 2022 17.5% or US active duty troops were women. Should our war-makers be somehow immune from reciprocal violence? If one's job is killing others isn't it unreasonable to expect not to be subject to attacks oneself? And what of the CIA and all of our other sub rosa assassins and killers? Asking for a friend.
N.B. - I lapse into the plural possessive above at times because the USA is a democracy, we the people choose for all of this to happen, do we not?
On this day in history:
1491 – The siege of Granada, the last Moorish stronghold in Spain, ended with the Treaty of Granada unleashing Ferdinand and Isabella's Catholic theocracy and imperium.
1876 – United States Army troops sacked the sleeping village of Cheyenne Chief Dull Knife at the headwaters of the Powder River, slaughtering many and leaving the rest to freeze and starve to death.
1915 – Albert Einstein presented the field equations of general relativity to the Prussian Academy of Sciences.
1947 – The US fascisti brought about the blacklisting of The "Hollywood Ten".
1952 – Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap opened in London to become the longest continuously-running play in history.
1960 – The Mirabal sisters of the Dominican Republic were assassinated.
1963 – John F. Kennedy and Lee Harvey Oswald were both buried but in separate locales.
1970 – Yukio Mishima commited seppuku.
1986 – U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese announced that illegal profits from illegal covert weapons sales to Iran were illegally diverted to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. Echoes of our illegal war on Zelaya, launched 11/18/1909. Nothing ever changes but the names.
Some people who were born on this day:
When we get presidents with brains it's purely by accident. Who was ever selected for his brains? We choose them for other qualities, or because they can be elected.
~~ Helen Hooven Santmyer
1562 – Lope de Vega, playwright and poet
1778 – Mary Anne Schimmelpenninck, author and activist
1841 – Ernst Schröder, mathematician and academic
1844 – Karl Benz, engineer
1846 – Carrie Nation, domestic terrorist
1865 – Kate Gleason, engineer
1895 – Helen Hooven Santmyer, poet and author
1896 – Virgil Thomson, composer and critic
1900 - Helen Gahagan Douglas, actress and politician smeared by Nixon
1915 – Augusto Pinochet, US tool guilty of horrendous crimes against humanity. Part of Kissinger's legacy.
1924 – Paul Desmond, saxophonist and composer
1926 – Poul Anderson, author
1931 – Nat Adderley, cornet and trumpet player
1940 – Percy Sledge, singer
1942 – Bob Lind, singer, songwriter, and guitarist
1943 – Jerry Portnoy, singer, songwriter, and harmonica player
1951 – Bill Morrissey, singer and songwriter
1959 – Steve Rothery, guitarist and songwriter
1963 – Holly Cole, singer and actress
1966 – Stacy Lattisaw, singer
Some people who died on this day:
It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.
~~ Upton Sinclair
1944 – Kenesaw Mountain Landis, lawyer and judge, as if they weren't a dime a dozen, first Commissioner of Baseball
1960 - "Las Mariposas", Patria, Minerva, and Maria Teresa Mirabel, assassinated.
1968 – Upton Sinclair, novelist, critic, and essayist
2011 – Coco Robicheaux, singer, songwriter, and guitarist
2013 – Chico Hamilton, drummer and bandleader
2015 – Svein Christiansen, drummer and composer
2016 – Fidel Castro, held the US at bay for 57 years, accomplishing much for his people in spite of being continuously warred upon in one way or another by the empire.
Some Holidays, Holy Days, Festivals, Feast Days, Days of Recognition, and such:
International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women
Today's Tunes
Granada
Paul Desmond
Nat Adderly
Percy Sledge
Bob Lind
Jerry Portnoy
Bill Morrissey
Steve Rothery
Holly Cole
Stacy Lattisaw
Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis
Upton Sinclair
Coco Robicheaux,
Svein Christiansen
Ok, it's an open thread, so it's up to you folks now. So what's on your mind?
Cross posted from http://caucus99percent.com
Open Thread, Violence against Women, Granada, Dull Knife, Einstein, Hollywood Ten, Upton Sinclair, Paul Desmond, Nat Adderly, Percy Sledge



Comments
Hey, good morning
.
All for outlawing violence. But that would put
too many cops and military types out of work.
Might put a bind on warmonger kickbacks,
weapons contractors cash flow and other assorted
associated Klingons (prison industry for one).
No, violence is the 'murican way doncha' know.
Thanks for covering earthling's gig.
Zionism is a social disease
Good morning Cap'n Q. Yep, the US is deeply
violence oriented, committed, funded and more. It has been out way of life since before we became a nation, back when we were just murderous settler colonists working to exterminate the rightful occupants of the land as well as competing bands of settler colonists (the Frenchies and Spaniards). Who, of our general age, did not grow up on tales and movies of cowboys and indians, lawmen and bandits, wars and, eventually wars against mutated animals and weird alien life forms? It is in the nation's blood.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Yukio Mishima's uprising
It wasn't just sepuku, it was an attempt to overthrow the government in unsuccessful attempt to incite a militarist uprising. The giant in modern Japanese literature, the atavistic far right advocate of Japan's fascist zeitgeist, weaseled out of military service in WWII, and suffered self doubt his entire life, based upon suspected cowardice that he felt a need to vindicate. He admired the "kamikaze spirit" demonstrated by Japan in WWII. I'm sure he'd feel right at home, with the nationalist right wing revival taking place in Japan currently. From the wikipedia bio on Mishima :
Thanks for noting the anniversary of his suicide/attempted coup EL. It provides an interesting window on modern Japanese politics.
What's to misunderstand? From the linked Asahi article:
Looking forward to listening to your music selections later today. Thanks EL for the OT!
語必忠信 行必正直
Good morning Soryang. Thanks for all the information.
All I ever knew about Mishima was that he was a renowned author and that he committed suicide, or such is my memory from the brief flap about his suicide that quickly spread across certain circles in the US and then quickly died.
The only Japanese person I have ever read beyond the poets and snippets of koan from celebrated zen masters is Miyamoto Mushashi.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Went to a concert
last evening with some friends, for a major dose of 80s nostalgia. Pat Benatar and her husband Neil Giraldo opened for Bryan Adams. Ms. Benatar, in keeping with the topic of this thread, very pointedy no longer performs "Hit Me With Your Best Shot", in solidarity with all of those victims of domestic violence out there- which I can agree is a good idea.
The gig was at the Ball Arena. Back when PepsiCo was paying for the naming rights, and it was dubbed the Papsi Center, we called it the Can. Now that Ball has those rights, we simply call it the Sack. And that moniker sets the stage for my description of this concert remarkably well.
Ms. Benatar, bless her heart, is 72. She still kicks out the jams, as best she can, having left the upper two octaves of her range somewhere back in the 90s. But opening for Adams, the sound stunk- I'd like to have found the mixing board and laid waste to the yokels standing behind it and *not* doing her mix. Her vocals were intelligible, but everything else was pure mud- and they could not bring themselves to put the bass guitar in the mix. I suppose that that was inevitable, given that Mr. Adams is a bass player...
Mr. Adams, bless his heart, is only 66. Coulda knocked me over with a feather: I remember his early MTV videos. I thought he was in his 40s already, back in the 80s. Time has been very kind to him, and his show was pretty good, all things considered. This is entitled the "Roll with the Punches" tour, whether or not that is a good idea, and perhaps the high point was the introduction of a giant 20-foot lighted boxing glove blimp that flew randomly around inside the arena for a time.
However, both artists crossed the Rubicon for me- by performing to prerecorded tracks. In the case of Mr. Adams, they even played along note-for-note with his videos, run on a giant LED screen behind the band. That is the cardinal sin for me: if I am going to pay those astronomical prices, I want to see live performance- not soulless syncing to a track.
We left halfway through his set. And I suspect that that will be our last outing to the Sack for a musical performance. If arena rock isn't dead, it is certainly bleeding badly...
And now we return you the the actual content of this thread, already in progress.
Twice bitten, permanently shy.
funny, but I don't do gigs anymore
.
think the last one was California Jam
way back in the 70's or 80's
enough for me to last a lifetime.
Good on you for trying anyway.
Zionism is a social disease
The last live gig I attended was the Stones'
Bridges to Babylon at the Oakland Coliseum. Before that, no doubt, it was the dead, there or elsewhere. I gave up live concerts long ago, for a variety of reasons, including the fact that music seems to have lost its way.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Dutch girl’s murder — some blame “migrants”, others “society”
… (for not doing enough to prevent “femicide”)
https://www.brusselstimes.com/1716887/schoolgirls-brutal-murder-unleashe...
Good morning lotllizard. My vote is for society insofar as
violence against eash other, especially women, including femicide is as old as the hills and well predates today's assorted "migrants".
Thanks for the link
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Remember how outraged folks were
when the Salem witches were killed?
Oh, wait... I am thinking of something else. Sorry for the confusion!
I will say I would not travel alone in Western Europe now. But then, I can say the same thing about strolling the streets in Houston or Austin.
Protecting the weaker sex from violence is a great idea, imho!
Thanks for the OT, dear pal o' mine!
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981