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Full of M.A.G.I.C

[The video clip to Sound of Arrow’s new single “Magic,” a very cheerful indiepop song. It features two children (a presumed boy and a girl) who wake up into a world where all the adults have disappeared from their suburb. They move from their suburb to a petrol station, gather junk food, then move to country where there are large, mysterious beings. There’s much running around and joy, and a Lord of the Flies moment with another child throwing pinecones at them. A friendly monster the boy dubs “Pom Pom” sits with them at a campfire, while others walk far away in the distance. It is, as the title suggests, all quite magical.]

The new videoclip from Swedish band Sound of Arrows is quite amazing. The Sound of Arrows aesthetic is interesting to me not just because it’s so ecstatically jolly but because of the way fantasy figures so heavily. Nostalgia and fantasy can be “lines of flight,” two ways of deterritorialising dominant narratives (though now after having seen the whole of the HBO Game of Thrones season one I stand by my initial assessment of the show as bleakly neoliberal, libertarian even. Engrossing and immaculately staged to be sure but basically an overly pessimistic and reductive view of human nature. But I’m not here to talk to you about jam.)

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For-Profit Colleges: Preying On Hope and Vulnerable Populations

Over at Alternet, Sarah Jaffe recently covered the looming student loan crisis; with youth unemployment soaring even as the costs of college rise while available grants drop, many of the people who graduated this May and June have no jobs, and no prospects of work. Within months, their student lenders are going to come knocking to demand money. Student loan debt is mounting higher than ever before and it’s forcing many young adults back home, to live with their parents while they try to figure out what to do with their lives, and their loans. Loan debt has gotten so bad that Congress is considering debt relief to address the issue.

Some of us in the United States are raised with the expectation that we will go to college, supported as we pursue college applications and encouraged to go even though the promissory notes we sign may look scary. When I was preparing to go to college and blanched at the first one, my father assured me that the money would seem like ‘nothing’ after I graduated with a college degree, found good work in my field, and paid my loan back at generous terms over an extended period of time. Students in positions to be encouraged to go to college are told that it will build them a better future; disadvantaged students are often not encouraged to go to college, let alone presented with college as an option, but when they are, they get the same line: You have to go to college, because it will create opportunities, open doors, and offer a chance out of alternatives like the poverty draft.

College is ‘winning the future.’ For-profit colleges are well aware of this, and this year, they’ve come under increasing scrutiny for their dubious enrollment practices, abuse of government funds, and predatory attitudes toward their students. Frontline’s ‘College, Inc.‘ was an excellent and eye-opening documentary on the subject, if you’re inclined to spend an hour learning about the for-profit college industry in the United States. Highlighting the problem with for-profit colleges is the debt differential:

Bachelor’s degree recipients at for-profits have median debt of $31,190 compared with $17,040 at private, nonprofit institutions and $7,960 at public colleges, according to Education Trust, a Washington-based nonprofit research and student-advocacy organization. (Business Week)

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Loan-sharking Greece

For those that haven’t been following, there’s a huge protest movement going on in Greece at the moment.  People have taken the squares of Athens in an attempt to avoid having an IMF “bail-out” forced upon them (a situation that Flavia has written about here with regard to this decades-long practice in Latin America).  These “bail-outs” are in fact a high finance form of loan-sharking, which “structurally adjust” an entire country’s economy in order to strip the country of its assets.  The debt in Greece incurred by last year’s bail-out is enormous and exponentially growing already–meaning that another “bail-out” would simply add more fuel to the fire–and it is this, and not austerity cuts themselves–that the agnaktismenoi (“outraged”) are resisting.

So, here is a good primer to the situation in Greece, as well as the numerous mischaracterisations going on in the Anglophonic press.  And if that’s too depressing, here is a piece I wrote about Kanellos and Loukanikos, the famous stray dogs of Athens’ protests.

El Roundup Latin@ American@ Week 25

Sorry I am a day late but I’ve been having network card problems since yesterday.

Today’s listicle chock full of news from El Sur!

Deinstitutionalisation: Suing for the Right to Live in Our Communities

I am currently in the lovely city of Chicago, and as I often do when I travel, I started my morning by reading some local news outlets. I always like to see what’s happening in the places I visit, even if I am mostly shuttling between airports and hotels and meetings and things. (And I was also curious to see if anyone had a report on the large number of emergency vehicles whizzing towards the lake last night.) It’s also an interesting test of a community, to see what kinds of items their papers think are important enough to be considered front page news.

In The Chicago Tribune, one of the leading stories this morning is about an Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) suit filed by Stanley Ligas, a 43 year old with Down syndrome who wanted community-based care, not institutionalisation. Ligas won, and Illinois has six years to get into compliance with ADA, giving 3,000 people the choice of community-based housing and care. They can choose to remain in institutional settings if they want, but they finally have an opportunity to live in their communities, rather than being isolated in institutions.

The ADA includes a clause known as the integration regulation; put simply, if a disabled person can be served in the community, she must be provided with that choice, rather than being forced into an institutional setting. Anyone who is eligible for community-based services is entitled to ask for them, and the state must comply. This was affirmed in 1999 with the landmark Olmstead vs L.C. case, almost 10 years after passage of the ADA. In the Olmstead decision, the Supreme Court indicated that forced institutionalisation amounts to discrimination against people with disabilities, by segregating us and separating us from our communities rather than allowing us to be integrated.

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Tumblr where your political authorities are American, cis, male and White (and preferably an aggressive anti Abortion activist)

Brace yourselves! Because I am going to do away with this idea that Social Media is horizontal, democratic and a valid means to get your story out there. Moreover, I am about to show you how Social Media is just another White, kyriarchical, status-quo upholding, oppressive medium. You know, just like the rest of the world.

Let’s look at Tumblr as an example. According to figures released this week, this blogging platform is even bigger than WordPress, even though it’s only four years old. Tumblr currently hosts 85,000 blogs more than WordPress, even though WordPress had a four year headstart in this endeavor. With 20+ million blogs, Tumblr is being hailed by specialists as the next darling of Social Media.

Tumblr is also attempting something relatively novel: curating relevant, user generated content in specific areas. There are these “Tumblr endorsed topics” that are selected by a group of dedicated editors that highlight the issues that matter on a given day. Tumblr has supposedly selected these editors to represent a wide spectrum of opinions and backgrounds. So, let’s look at the Politics section to see how representative of a global and (supposedly) inclusive Social Media platform these editors are:

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Changes at the Tiger Beatdown: Please Welcome Our New Team

Readers may have noticed that Tiger Beatdown is a little more awesome lately. And there is a very awesome reason for that! We have a whole new team, these days. In addition to the ever-lovely and stalwart Garland Grey — whose guest blog at Bitch, the charmingly entitled “Sexual Inadequacy,” you should all be reading — the following people have, inexplicably, decided to sign up for this ramshackle little carnival ride we call a blog. AND THEY ARE!

  • s.e. smith, whose credentials are too many to list, and whose patience and sagacity are infinite.
  • Emily Manuel, for whom I have worked many a time, who is quite possibly the busiest woman in the whole entire world, and who still took me up on the offer to post here.
  • Flavia Dzodan, whose blog I read obsessively, and whose offer to post on THIS blog was like manna from Heaven.

I love all of these people! You should love all of these people! You should express your love for them, loudly and without reserve, in the comment section!

Perhaps now is also a good time to remind you that Tiger Beatdown, to a startlingly large degree, relies on user donations. We are like NPR, but for shouting! This blog is coming near to the end of its third year, and it is time to make some decisions about what to do with it next. I feel very lucky that this little nothing blog has been able to grow up, to provide a space for some amazing writers, to start some conversations, and hopefully to help a few people. And I’m proud of what we’ve managed to do, in the year or so since our last pledge drive. We’ve raised funds for RAINN and local rape crisis centers, the Bradley Manning Defense Fund, and NYAAF. We’ve gotten people mobilized around media coverage of the Assange rape case, and around H.R. 358. We’ve told everyone why that thing they like is terrible, whatever it is, we’re just pretty sure it’s not that great. (Okay, so less of that would be nice.) We’ve done more than I could have imagined, frankly, since I kicked this whole thing off.

And I don’t know what we’re going to do next. But I do know that I’ve been lucky. I’m lucky to be talking to you; I’m lucky to know all the amazing people listed above; I’m lucky that there is such a thing as a Tiger Beatdown. There was a time when I thought that Girls Would Save The Internet, and a time when I thought that The Internet Would Save Girls, and I don’t think that I believe either of those things fully any more. (I mean. Two of our contributors are not girls, so. It might have been a pretty narrow mission in the first place.) I’ve gone from believing that I had none of the answers, to being pretty sure I had all of the answers, to being pretty sure that no-one will ever have all the answers, and that all that matters is asking questions. Because asking questions, at least, is a way of keeping the conversation open. Of caring, even when caring is painful or complicated or doesn’t seem to come with any built-in rewards. Of putting your faith in something, even if that something is just the possibility of change — saying that maybe the world won’t always keep the same shape, maybe nothing is as sure or as true as we think it is, maybe no form of human unhappiness or cruelty has to be taken for granted.

Writing about it may change things, and it may not, but it is a way of keeping the questions open. And a way of keeping each other company. All we do, when we write, is put a part of ourselves out into the world, in the hope that someone else might be able to use it. And in the hope that they might respond, might bridge the gap with their own insights or challenges or support. We provide company to each other. We all have the power to make things worse for each other, and we all have the power to make them better, but the most important thing we can do is to make each other less alone. The company we provide each other can be painful, or it can be joyful, but it’s always potentially transformative. At least you’re out there, bumping into other people, letting them leave a mark. Keeping another commitment, to that faith: Maybe nothing about the world is unchangeable. Maybe nothing has to be taken for granted. And maybe nothing about you can be taken for granted, either.

I’m so, so happy to have these people in this space. I appreciate s.e’s relentless commitment to challenging orthodoxies; I appreciate Garland’s huge, unbelievably generous heart; I appreciate Flavia’s bravery, the fact that she will not let necessary shit go unsaid; I appreciate Emily’s strength and perspective, the fact that she knows how much everything matters, how much is on the line, and still knows that you can’t let it corrode you. I appreciate all of these people, for how they can challenge me, and for how they can get through to me. I’m happy for the fact that my answers, or questions, are not the only answers, or the only questions, that matter. I’m happy for their company.

And I’m happy to have your company, too. In the next year, who knows? Maybe we’ll form some manner of Voltron and SOLVE FEMINISM FOREVER. Or something. But your company is appreciated. So, if this space matters to you, and you would like to have some way to keep it going and fuel it, please donate what you like, if you can. And  no matter what you do, please, please welcome all of these lovely people to Tiger Beatdown.





Meet the rising star of rape culture politics: MA State Representative Ryan Fattman

A youthful, Republican political star seems to be in the making: Massachusetts State Representative Ryan Fattman. Yesterday, Mr. Fattman was part of a debate with Michele Bachmann, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum. Local news outlets are hailing Ryan Fattman as a young, Republican hopeful with a future in national American politics. Quoted by The Milford Daily News, he said in the debate: “Being a Republican in Massachusetts isn’t always that easy, as I’m learning in the Legislature… We need you to help us fight the fight.

And what fight would that be? A fight that involves fear and injustice for rape victims. Especially if the victims in question are among the most vulnerable: undocumented immigrants. Because, as Change.org News reports:

Massachusetts State Rep. Ryan Fattman believes that rape and abuse survivors ought to be afraid to report their assault, assuming they are undocumented.

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El Roundup Latin@ American@ – News from Latin America

It’s time for a new installment of our weekly feature of news from El Sur!

To reiterate my call from last week, my list of sources and issues is likely to be incomplete, so, I’d like to put out a call for Latin American bloggers/ writers/ content producers who write in English about Latin America, and especially bloggers or writers who are touching upon gender/ equality/ LGBTQ issues, and would like to share a post or opinion piece at “El Roundup Latin@ American@”, contact me and I’ll be happy to post them in future editions. I am not including the Caribbean Region in my roundup because it is one I am not entirely familiar with (we share many cultural traits, but each region faces unique situations). However, if bloggers, writers, opinion makers from the Caribbean would like to share links I’ll be very happy to include them as well.

Without further ado, this week’s roundup:
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Horror Innovator Innovates Horror

So, friend. Let us say that you are a director. A director of films! Films for entertainment purposes! But, sadly, no-one is paying enough attention to your films, for the public, they are crude and tasteless. What do you do? How do you handle yourself? How do you advance your art?

Well, if you are director Tom Six, you basically just stop trying. Or, no, scratch that: You pioneer the art of anti-trying. You, director Tom Six, must now consciously try to make the worst movie ever. Something so reprehensible that people will have to talk about it. They will have to have conversations which include the phrase “[MOVIE DIRECTED BY TOM SIX]”, just so that they can tell each other, “you should never, ever watch [MOVIE DIRECTED BY TOM SIX], for real, it is the worst.”

And thus, Poop: The Motion Picture Experience, AKA The Human Centipede, was born. For the three human beings on earth who haven’t read the plot: Um, don’t? But also,  to get a vague idea of it, just think about the fact that there are a few things that most people would not enjoy experiencing and/or watching, such as involuntary dental surgery and eating dooky. Thus, a movie where a guy gives you involuntary dental surgery, and then you eat dooky. And then, I guess, you die? HORROR!

Ah, but the real horror has only just begun. Because, sad to say, The Human Centipede has paid off well enough for director Tom Six to make a sequel. A sequel that has already been banned in the UK. And with that, let’s consider all the [TRIGGER WARNINGS] you might need to be in effect, OK? And let’s talk about why.

SPOILER: “Why” is rape.

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