Les Liens du ... Jeudi?
Mar. 14th, 2019 06:29 pmShort essays, current affairs, hot takes:
- NITV report on One Nation's plan to DNA test claimants for Indigenous-specific support (hot tip: it's not only racist bullshit, it's impractical racist bullshit)
- Kidspot.com.au reports that Participation requirements for the new 'Parents Next' support scheme are bizarre, to the point of requiring working mothers to attend playgroup without their school age children
- Elad Nehorai has a good tweet thread on anti-semitism as a mythology, one that people use to make sense of the world - in this case, as a simple explanation for the complex problem of Israel's relationship with Palestine and the US's with Israel.
The story can be applied to a nation of Jews as much as Jews as a collective. Just as some rich Jews also fill that role.
— Elad Nehorai (@PopChassid) March 7, 2019
When you refuse to see how discussions about Israel controlling the world or America’s government are connected to the myth, you are erasing anti-Semitism.
Special list of George Pell related Links is back again, thanks to the sentencing hearing
( Cut, all the content warnings you'd expect for a clerical abuse trial )
Longreads - essay, memoir, natural history, other
- Mukahang Limbu (Poetry Society), Review of 'The House of Thirst', a special issue of Poetry In Translation, which I think I may need to read.
- David Schraub, How to avoid the trap of House antisemitism. Link via muccamukk, last week. Note this piece was written *before* the resolution that eventually passed was modified to condemn 'hate of all kinds'. I wonder if Schraub considers that to be a step in the right direction? Here he makes a distinction in *kind* rather than *degree* between the anti-semitism in Omar's remarks and the 'Soros-style antisemitic conspiracy theories' of the GOP, and argues that the former should not be singled out for House resolutions unless the latter is also condemned. That perplexed me a little, because as I understood it the problem with Omar's comments (especially the original comments about AIPAC and 'the benjamins' - which I had to research to realise was a reference to Benjamin Franklin's figure on US dollars, not to a common Jewish name) was precisely that they are either an accidental recycling of tropes related to money, global networks, etc, or an active dog-whistle to said 'soros-style antisemitic conspiracy theories'.
- I also read a handful of good - if wildly conflicting - takes on the Omar controversy via Haaretz.com, but it looks like they were only temporarily out from paywall, because I can't access them again now.
- Sarah Hall (Meanjin summer 2018), The Unsung Hero of the Dish. It's nigh impossible to say what this piece is *about* but the writing is beautiful. Sometimes it is easier to follow a recipe for mushroom noodle soup than to put on a brave face. But only once have I made the soup.
- Amy Littlefield (Rewire News), Not dead enough: public hospitals deny life-saving abortion care to people in need. Deals with US jurisdictions.
- Damon Young (Meanjin Summer 2018), Why are swords still a thing?. Hits on some good points, in other parts is hilariously thin (at least, if you've done any reading on medievalisms and nostalgia and/or the european history of combat weaponry).
- Briohnny Doyle and Mandy Ord (Meanjin Summer 2018), Time Machine
I’s [sic] 1991 and my parents unveil a small grey box with a small dark screen. They have bought a special table for it. They plug it in and stand back. It is the future, they say. A time machine. The screen emanates light. The box is quiet, smells of static. They place me in front of it. I am to be captain, it’s understood. I am eight and suddenly here is a thing I will always know more about than my parents. What a development! I click around. My parents gasp as I squiggle something in paint. A marvel like a moon landing. In its low light, my parents are projected back to their own childhoods; an old anticipation. Vannevar Bush in 1945: ‘The world has arrived at an age of cheap, complex devices of great reliability; and something is bound to come of it.’ They watch me and wait. Dad smokes, chews his nails.
Each day after school I spend an hour in front of an educational game designed to teach geography and history. Mum hovers, excited, but it’s boring. I like the TV more—a pool you fall into, accepting each wave as it comes. The time machine knows that in the future children will not be bored like this, and in the future I will be an adult who feels nostalgic for this boredom. When I am a child I tell mum I’m bored and she says go run around the block. I never take this suggestion but somehow I fill the time and years pass. We put a faded sheet over the time machine so the dust won’t damage its gears.
- Tom Faber (The Guardian), Mashrou' Leila: The Lebanese Indie Band Championining LGBT rights. Really interesting profile, and has resulted in a pleasant Spotify expedition or two on my part.
- Hasslam, McGrath and Wheeler (The Conversation AU), Chaning morals: We're more compassionate than 100 years ago, but more judgemental too
Items of humorous interest:
- If you are not already aware of the instagram-based comic Strange Planet, please be informed. It is an adorable exercise in defamiliarisation.