MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Not really the image that America would like to project at this moment
Communications from the U.S. State Department show the U.S. government threatened to blacklist Spain by putting it on its Special 301 list unless its government toughened its anti-piracy laws. The cables were based on meetings between top Spanish economic ministers, industry representatives concerned about protecting their copyrights and U.S. officials. Spanish editorial writer Esperanza Hernandez wrote this week that Spanish officials “behaved in a way that was subservient in defending the interests of the United States to the detriment of the rights of Spanish citizens to access culture and knowledge through the Internet.” AHN News
The US embassy in Madrid pressured Spain to shelve court cases against US government and military officials concerning incidents during the Iraq war and alleged torture at Guantanamo, according to WikiLeaks documents. Monsters and Critics
In what could be the first legal case to use filtered WikiLeaks documents as evidence, the family of a Spanish cameraman killed in 2003 by a US tank shell during the battle for Baghdad filed a complaint Monday. They seek to open an investigation into whether high-ranking officials here colluded with the US Embassy to stop charges being filed against three American soldiers, including a colonel. Christian Science Monitor
The story of how the US embassy pressured the Spanish government and judiciary over the News cameraman killed in Iraq is especially galling to Spanish sensibilities:
Among the cables is one from May 14, 2007, authored by Eduardo Aguirre, a conservative Cuban-American banker appointed U.S. ambassador to Spain by George W. Bush. Aguirre wrote: "For our side, it will be important to continue to raise the Couso case, in which three U.S. servicemen face charges related to the 2003 death of Spanish cameraman Jose Couso during the battle for Baghdad." Jose Couso was a young cameraman with the Spanish TV network Telecinco. He was filming from the balcony of the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad on April 8, 2003, when a U.S. Army tank fired on the hotel packed with journalists, killing Couso and a Reuters cameraman. Ambassador Aguirre was trying to quash the lawsuit brought by the Couso family in Spain. The U.S. ambassador was also pressuring the Spanish government to drop a precedent-setting case against former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other Bush administration officials. In that same memo, Aguirre writes, "The Deputy Justice Minister also said the GOS [government of Spain] strongly opposes a case brought against former Secretary Rumsfeld and will work to get it dismissed. The judge involved in that case has told us he has already started the process of dismissing the case." These revelations are rocking the Spanish government, as the cables clearly show U.S. attempts to disrupt the Spanish justice system. Ambassador Aguirre told Spain's El Pais newspaper several years ago, "I am George Bush's plumber, I will solve all the problems George gives me." Amy Goodman
*The United Nations, in which many of us had placed our best hopes for a "world government" appears to have turned into a sort of travel agency for serial rapists.
Comments
So previously, you did not think that globalization and instant communication tools were radiically changing the world? It wasn't until wikileaks that you realized this was happening? Helloooo?
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/22/2010 - 1:09pm
Well for me it just confirmed what I already suspected and made it more obvious. Kind of like painting that elephant in the room electric green and pink.
by cmaukonen on Wed, 12/22/2010 - 2:59pm
Strangely enough, I think the world has changed very little... we are just getting to see "how the sausages are made"... and it won't make a bit of difference.
by David Seaton on Thu, 12/23/2010 - 12:21am
I am convinced that only things that actually bring people out into the streets have meaning anymore. We are flooded with "information"... We see it and cluck, "tsk, tsk". Then we go and vote for Tweedledee or Tweedledum... four years later for Tweedledum or Tweedledee. We change channel. We change our brand of aftershave.
There is this horrible Spanish saying that you cannot deny a man that is being hanged the right to his little dance at the end of the rope. We have found out that Santa Claus does not exist? Mommy and Daddy bring the presents? Do we still want to see the loot under the tree at Christmas? You bet we do! So globalization and instant communication tools are radically changing the world? Plus ça change, plus ça reste la même chose.
by David Seaton on Thu, 12/23/2010 - 1:05am
HA
by cmaukonen on Thu, 12/23/2010 - 9:35am
You said:
by artappraiser on Thu, 12/23/2010 - 11:42am
You seem to be restricting the effects and meanings of globalization in this comment to forms of resistance. This is confusing since the subject was brought up in response to the scene you draw of pax americana coming to an end through the process of globalization. In some fashion, aren't you arguing against your own position?
by moat on Thu, 12/23/2010 - 5:58pm
"Interests of the United States" should probably be read as "interests of the RIAA."
by Orion on Sun, 01/09/2011 - 5:15pm