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June 22, 2007

What I'm tired of seeing

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Q. Why did I turn off the movie "V for Vendetta" after 30 minutes?

1. The main female character (and in the first 30 minutes, the only one with any significant lines) is threatened with a brutal rape in the first ten minutes of the movie. She escapes this fate because she is rescued by a masked white man.

This is not a plot that I want to submit myself to watching. Rape is not a casual shorthand for brutality - it is a tactic of war used against women. I don't want to see it casually onscreen as a minor plot point.

2. Unless I missed one when I blinked, every person in the first 30 minutes of the movie was white. (*OK, turns out that there is a convenient 'ethnic cleansing' plot that explains this....but I am not convinced it was necessary.)

3. The violence was unnecessarily graphic.

Q. Why criticize this movie when it's a remake of a comic book? That comic is the original source of any sexism, racism, or violence in the story; the filmmaker was just bringing that story to the screen.

Well, I probably wouldn't buy the comic either, but more to the point, the stories that we tell shape who we are. If all of the powerful anti-Bush movies (as well as, of course, all of the summer blockbusters and the large majority of American movies in general) are also sexist, racist, and violent, then we are telling ourselves - and especially our children - that only white men:

- have the power to beat Bush
- are interesting enough to build a story around
- have the power to stop rape, and only when it serves their purposes

We are telling our children that women:

- are helpless and dependent
- are instantly rendered terrified and helpless by a threat of rape
- do not fight back

We are telling our children that people of color:

- do not exist

Q. Why do I feel the need to criticize a movie that many progressives support as an anti-tyranny, anti-Bush movie? Shouldn't we be supporting art that supports our cause?

I freely admit to having mixed feelings about this. Yes, I do want to support art that supports the causes that are vital to our survival as a species and to general issues of social justice. But I also feel that in order for social justice to proliferate, I need to remind those with more power than I (like V for Vendetta's male white movie director James McTeigue, and white male writers the Wachowski brothers) that just as it's not cool to invade Iraq, it's also not cool to use rape as a quick way to establish a repressive backstory, or to leave out people of color as if they do not exist.

I am tired of watching women be helpless, brutalized, terrified and useless in movies, whether those movies depict the Hulk or the "War on Terror". I am tired of white men getting all of the good lines and all of the good roles. I won't give those directors my money because my power clearly doesn't matter to them.

When I make my hundred million dollars, my movie production company will tell the stories that I feel need telling: of strong women, multicultural societies, people who fight to end racism, etc. The stories we tell shape who we are.

September 25, 2006

See this movie

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We saw Encounter Point tonight. It's a moving and (seemingly) honest documentary of unsung and little known peace movements in Israel and Palestine.

I highly recommend it if it comes through your neighborhood, or when it comes out on DVD.

image is of Ali Abu Awwad, one of the activists in the film.

July 18, 2006

Madness

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July 17th is the birthday of Chana Szenes.

At the same time, Israel is caught up in yet another bloody escalation. tankfireapstory203.jpg

Save the Children reports that children are bearing the insane brunt of the Israeli bombings and violence, and that a humanitarian crisis is looming fast, especially in Gaza.

I feel so stunned and helpless and deeply angry. How many more innocent people must die, how many lives ruined needlessly, before it is over? The question itself is cliche. It is unbearable.

To give money to help end this madness and suffering:
Middle East Children's Alliance
Save The Children

What is significant about Chana, especially today?

Chana emigrated to Israel before parachuting behind Nazi lines to try and save Hungarian Jews; before being tortured and then executed at the age of 22. By the accounts I've read she was brave, fiery, passionate, a gifted poet. She knew what was worth dying for. I have looked up to her for much of my life.

Yet knowing what is worth dying for is not enough, if the cause is unjust. In Chana's time the cause was just, I think. Today, I don't think it is. Not many people do, outside of the United States and Israel. The blindness of my peoples is terrifying.

I find it a likely, although ugly, truth that as a Zionist who saw the deaths of so many Jews, Chana might in all likelihood have supported Israel's current actions.

But perhaps not everyone would succumb to this madness. Perhaps she would not have. Perhaps she would have the seen the difference between parachuting into Yugoslavia to save European Jews, and killing 200 civilians (as of today, as reported on KPFA as well as the BBC) in Lebanon over two soldiers.

Can we not harness these deep passions for something better?

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Found in Chana's cell after her execution:

One - two - three... eight feet long
Two strides across, the rest is dark...
Life is a fleeting question mark
One - two - three... maybe another week.
Or the next month may still find me here,
But death, I feel is very near.
I could have been 23 next July
I gambled on what mattered most, the dice were cast. I lost.

May 01, 2006

Notes from today's media...

Laughing while the world burns... Isn't there something else pressing on his agenda? Hmmm...coulda sworn...Iraq or Darfur or...something...
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Beginnings of reports on what I hope are huge rallies today (and I also hope that they are well-reported in the media, but that's just crazy talk)

New York Times

BBC

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And while I kept thinking all weekend, "What more can I do about Darfur?..I need to look into that..." this happened. Woops. Woulda been nice to be there. I need to keep up better! Thanks to all who were there.

April 25, 2006

Activist Alert: On Yom Ha-Shoah, time to say never again NOW!

Today is Yom Ha-Shoah, the annual day of remembrance for the six million Jews murdered by Hitler.

It's a good day to think about my Jewish roots, about survivor stories, and about what I know of the European Jewish culture that the Nazis nearly exterminated...

...AND, of course, to work to end another genocide that is currently happening.

Please, go to this site to send a quick letter to President Bush asking him to stop the genocide in Darfur NOW.

Thanks.

p.s. I should give credit to my super cool jewish mother for forwarding me this alert. Thanks Mom!

April 23, 2006

Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia...and Tibet has never existed...

275px-Flag_of_Tibet.svg.pngApparently, according to Google maps, Tibet no longer exists. At all.

Go to Google maps and type Nepal into the search bar. Note that while Tibet and Nepal are generally known to be neighbors, there is no mention of Tibet on this map. At all.

Now type in Tibet.

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Here's another interesting one...WorldAtlas doesn't allow you pick Tibet from its list of countries.

So, OK. I know it's not recognized as a country, so this is understandable, if transparent. But as far as I can tell, Tibet does not exist on this site at all.

There's even an apologia on this page that explains why you might not find Palestine or Taiwan on the list, but Tibet? Nope, never heard of 'em. Not even on this list of dependencies and territories!

So here's my question. I feel that an atlas should have Tibet in its search terms, even if it is only described with something like "the former name for this disputed chunk of land, which the Chinese Government claims is part of China, and Tibetan people claim should be an independent country."

Am I off? Is it the job of an atlas only to describe government-sponsored entities, and not lands whose governance is disputed? It seems to me that analysis (or at least passing mention!) of cultural and geopolitical conflicts are very rightly placed on an atlas.

How about Taiwan? Is there any salient difference between Taiwan's situation and Tibet's...other than fifty years of memory and resistance to the Chinese Government? Will Taiwan cease to exist in atlases in fifty years?

In case you'd like to actually read about Never Never Land...I mean, Tibet, Wikipedia actually discusses the matter.

Until Google buys them out.

April 20, 2006

in case you still know anyone who thinks we "liberated" Iraqi women...

CODEPINK has just published a report documenting that life for women in Iraq is much, much worse than before, and that Americans are DISTINCTLY making the problem worse...read it all here.

(and keep up on all their great work here.)

from the e-mail I received describing the report:

"The report shows that from 1958 to the 1990s, Iraq provided more rights and freedoms for women and girls than most of its neighbors. Though Saddam Hussein's dictatorial government and 12 years of severe sanctions reduced these opportunities, Iraqi women were active in all aspects of their society. After the occupation, with the exception of women in Iraqi Kurdistan, women's daily lives have been reduced to a mere struggle for survival."

A choice section from the report:

"THE U.S. IS PART OF THE PROBLEM. Some U.S. military personnel have committed crimes of sexual
abuse and physical assault against women. Many women have told stories about rapes and routine sexual humiliation, particularly at detainment centers....U.S. military tactics have also victimized women and their families—displacing them from their homes, subjecting them to aerial assaults, and occasionally using women as bargaining chips in exchange for suspected male insurgents."