






Live from Detroit:  Oliver Stone's new movie, Zionism & potato chips
        I'm currently manning a booth at the Detroit Social  Forum, and across the aisle from me is a booth run by Katrina victims  who have driven all the way up from New Orleans.  And guess what?  Katrina is STILL  the issue.
"15,000 perfectly good housing units have been  destroyed in NOLA since 2005," said one woman manning the "Stand With  Dignity" booth.  "Not enough affordable housing is being built to  replace the homes that were lost, and  NO ONE is being issued HUD housing vouchers."
250  Katrina survivors came up here from New Orleans to make their pain  known.  And they gave me a free  breakfast too.  And  sold me a mini Second-Line Club umbrella for my  granddaughter Mena who  loves umbrellas.
Then Forum members were given a sneak  preview of the latest Oliver Stone movie last night.  Did you know that Stone went to South America and did a documentary on the new  "Bolivarist" leaders down there -- including a big long interview  with Hugo Chavez that apparently lasted for days.  They went to  Chavez's hometown. He also drove Stone through some corn fields.  "This  is where we make all those Iranian atomic bombs," Chavez joked.  Stone also  included that famous clip of Chavez saying, "You are a donkey, Mr.  Bush," wherein everyone in the audience laughed.
There was  also an interesting clip of GWB saying, "The best way to revitalize the  economy is war."  Wrong, Mr. Bush.  That's just the best way to  revitalize the rich.  The best way to revitalize the economy is to  invest in jobs, education and infrastructure -- and to tell weapons  manufacturers to go take a hike.
Then Stone interviewed Evo  Morales and the "Bolivarist" presidents of Ecuador and Paraguay.  Who  would have ever thought that Paraguay would go socialist!  Paraguay?   And then Stone interviewed Raul Castro.  I wanna interview Raul Castro!   I'm all jealous.
Anyway, the Stone preview was a big  success.  People flooded the  theater.  People were jamming the aisles and even lying down on the  stage.  Don't tell the fire marshall.
I don't think that  "South of the Border" will ever become a blockbuster at your local  cine-plex but I gave it  two big thumbs up.
Then I trudged back to my newly-found  fleabag motel, past Cadillac Drive and Chrysler Drive and the General  Motors headquarters, which appears to have been built from mostly glass  and chrome.  But its flags were all at half-mast.  In honor of the  long-overdue death of GM's famous gas-guzzlers?  Then I trudged some  more -- past several large buildings that were boarded up and deserted,  and a convenience store where I bought a bag of "Better Made" potato  chips, Detroit's finest chips.  Founded in 1930.  "For your eating  enjoyment, our potato chips are cooked in the finest oils, contain 0  grams of Trans Fat and are flavored with the highest quality  seasonings."  I'm saving them for breakfast.
I also talked  with someone who had just gotten back from Nepal.  "I met an Israeli  girl over there who had just finished her military service and was on  walkabout.   She said that she was a complete Zionist.  She said that Israel used to  be all theirs -- meaning the Zionists of western European origin -- but  now Israel's majority consists of Sephardi and eastern European Jews.   She hated that.  And she kept talking about 'Zionism, Zionism,  Zionism'.  But then she also incidentally mentioned that she planned to  get out of Israel and move to Europe just as soon as she could."   Interesting.
But after working the Free Palestine booth for  three days, I was beginning to fade.  I mean, how many freaking  brochures can one hand out?  Hundreds!  And how many arguments over the  Palestine Question can one survive?  Not all that many happened here,  actually.  Most people here at the Forum tend to agree that the issue of  fairness for Palestinians is right up there with issues like fairness  for Native Americans, oil spill victims, workers laid off when their  jobs  moved to Asia, voters, people who still believe in democracy and the  Constitution, victims of corporate America's war on the middle class,  Afghan and Iraqi women and children caught in war zones, victims of bank  greediness, victims of media war-mongering, victims of environmental  sloppiness, and victims of corporatists, racists, neo-colonialists and  misguided viewers of Fox News.
Then Noor Elashi walked by  my booth and told me her story -- and I was shocked.  Apparently her  father had been happily running a charitable organization called the  Holy Land Foundation, which collected money for Palestinians in need.   The foundation then gave its donations to a zagat committee to  distribute in Palestine -- the very same zagat committee that  distributed monies from the American Red Cross, US-AID, the United  Nations, etc.  Then Noor's father came under viscous verbal attack by  Zionists for helping malnourished Palestinian children.  And while under  such severe attack, Noor's father kept asking the U.S. government to  please tell him if he was doing anything illegal or wrong -- and they  kept telling him, "No.  You're fine."
And then suddenly Noor's father found himself being charged by the  feds with financing a terrorist organization.  And now he is serving a 65-year jail term -- and on trumped-up evidence too.  Yikes!  Shades of Nelson Mandela and Wen Ho Lee!
"But why aren't the American Red Cross, US-AID and the U.N. being  charged with helping terrorist organizations as well?" I naively  replied.
"Because of pressure brought to bear on the federal  government by  Zionists."  Double-yikes.
Do you know what this means?  It means that anyone who asks for  justice for Palestinians -- or even just tries to raise their standard  of living out of the dust -- may be facing a possible 65 years in jail!   Even me.  Even you.
Right now, all I have to worry about is  figuring out what to eat for dinner tonight.   But who knows?  If I  keep on fighting for justice for Palestinians, I may never have to worry  about what I will be eating for dinner ever again -- or at least not for  the next 65 years -- because I will be having all my meals catered for  me until I'm 133 years old by United States  government correctional facilities.
PS:   Here's an important editorial from the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.  I  usually don't print other people's stuff in its entirety (because I like  my stuff better), but this is important.  The article is called, "Israel  should be thankful it didn't make it to the World Cup":
     An Israeli presence at  this  greatest of global sporting spectacles  would have been guaranteed to attract an unrelenting wave of protests,  PR stunts and bad publicity.  As the World Cup progresses,  Israelis might consider  sending thank-you bouquets to the national soccer teams of Switzerland  and Greece, who knocked Israel out at the qualifying stage.     Of  course, it would be nice to wrap ourselves in blue and white, and cheer  on the likes of Yossi, Guy and Ben.  But on this occasion, one should  probably be thankful that we didn't make it.
There were large  demonstrations in Cape Town last week following the Mavi Marmara  incident.  An Israeli presence at this greatest of global sporting  spectacles would have been guaranteed to attract an unrelenting wave of  protests, PR stunts and bad publicity.
In the days since  Operation Sky Winds, Israel has been able to get a glimpse of the future  and into the abyss that awaits if we continue on our current course.   It  is a future replete with both insecurity and the indignity of global  opprobrium and sanctions.  Palestine has now irrefutably become a  global cause.  That is certainly inconvenient for Israel and maybe  unfair.
     Popular consumer, labor  union, and cultural boycotts are  gathering new momentum.  Israel’s predicament will not be rectified by  better PR or a new foreign minister; it has become structural and  therefore far more worrying.
     The logic of the kind of unarmed  resistance represented by flotillas to Gaza is to shine a light on the  wrongdoings of an offending party.  Ideally, one will succeed in  appealing to the better nature, to the humanity, of the offending party  (Israel), and its behavior (in this case, the blockade on Gaza) will be  corrected.  If not, then one may seek to shame that party in the court  of  global public opinion.  Any over-reaction or additional offensive  behavior will only serve to strengthen the case of the light-shiner and  "prove" the original premise of wrongdoing.
In this  instance,  Israel's leadership played its role with Lionel Messi-like perfection.
In  short, the game is up.  This is not defeatism -- it's an acknowledgment   of a reality that, by ignoring, causes Israel to imperil itself.  It  cannot be reversed by a good YouTube video or by cloning President  Peres.  An occupation that just entered its 44th year and entails  denying  basic rights to millions of Palestinians can no longer be sanitized.   As  long as Israel maintains that occupation, the costs will become  increasingly burdensome.
Having lost the world, Israel's  focus  turns in on itself.  The country's leadership has to work harder to keep   its own public on board for the occupation project.  This requires a  growing suppression of dissent, further ostracizing Israel's Palestinian  minority, and ever-more aggressive appeals to Jewish national pride.   Democratic norms are thereby eroded, further feeding the tarnishing of  Israel's image.  This is the vicious cycle in which Israel is embroiled.
It  is true that there will almost certainly always be unjustified  prejudice toward Israel.  Whatever it does, some people will always be  out to get us.  But prejudice is not what motivates the vast majority of   those mobilizing in solidarity with the Palestinians.  The occupation is   the oxygen of their campaign, and the vast majority seek an end to it --   not to Israel itself.  An Israel that fails to appreciate this and which   sustains the occupation is the single most proximate cause of its own  delegitimization.
It is still in our power, however, to  change  all of this.  We can genuinely end the 1967 occupation and live up to  our  declared democratic ideals.
But if Israel does not take the   lead, then let us at least hope that our remaining friends in the world  will step forward with their own proposals and that we in turn will have  the wisdom to say yes to them.
Enjoy the World Cup, and  let's  look forward to Israel's qualification in 2014 being all about soccer  and blissfully devoid of politics.
http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/israel-should-be-thankful-it-didn-t-make-it-to-the-world-cup-1.298355