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Twittering Mel

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    Showing posts with label Scandals. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label Scandals. Show all posts

    Monday, July 4, 2011

    Quote of the Day: Jdmpapgaf

     Jdmpapgaf


    [posted 6.23.11]

    ###

    SURPRISE!


    Today, as I stumbled through my blog, adding a new html code discovery [note to self - add html to all other blogs...], I was unpleasantly surprised to find this lonely, loner post. I know this is my blog, and considering the minimal posts posted throughout its lifetime, I shouldn't have been totally surprised, but - believe me or not; ruin my rep or not -  I truly did just (7.4.11) FIND -  this little treasure.

    Which, upon this moment of way too comfortable confusion...

    I think:

    • did a guest blogger invade my site and post this gibberish?
    • did Blogger run the fate of facebook and was momentarily invaded by 9th grade typing flunkees?
    • wtf?
    • who wrote this? not me, surely?


    and then (now)... taking some responsibility:


    • i obviously must have astrally channeled a new genre, perhaps, flarf II, and/or The Reduced Haiku.
    • did i begin a blog moments before a neurological blackout?
    • did i have a neurological blackout on 6.23.11 at 11:10am?




    and then-then (now-now)... seeing things in a more lucid light:

    • ahhhh, the same person who's been sneaking into my apartment while I'm sleeping or at doc appointments, or on my mad dating schedule (wink, wink), and hiding my debit card, prescription glasses and sunglasses, clean underwear, fresh-made coffee, lighter, my big pink glass full with water, the melanie who did go to the gym to restart aqua therapy, my cat... you get the (scary) picture.


    I'm so glad I figured this one out - now-now-now.

    Saturday, April 9, 2011

    Abe Books E-mail Database Hacked



    It figures that a remaining sense of dignity we have in this country - books, and good books, and people who read, and people who read good books by great authors on great topics published by well-sighted publishers, then sold by good (or greedy) booksellers, and on and on - would be the victims of potential identity theft, or at minimum an invasion into their privacy.


    Image from Blog Patrol
    Read about this (story that's available and linked to this wonderful, not so new, blog I just discovered,  dedicated to books and book-related news that I just discovered and was instantly hooked like [way too many "things that are hooked" entries in the blogosphere..., so here's my own go at defying the cliche] indoor hanging plants, winter coats on rainy days, and a single person in chronic pain to their pain meds, couch, and TV.


    If you haven't yet, subscribe to this and all of my blogs (see right column) and then subscribe to Book Patrol: A Haven for Book Culture too, written a man with a long name and a long list of achievements that make him the dopest blogger on, well the obvious..., the blog's title.

    Saturday, December 4, 2010

    ACT NOW: Call upon the government of Tanzania to halt on-going genital mutilation of girls and women in the Tarime district. - mnm1512914@gmail.com

    Take 1 second (or 60 if you're slower than a neuro gimp), and SIGN this petition.

    Call upon the government of Tanzania to halt the on-going genital mutilation of girls and women in the Tarime district.
    (click above to go directly to the signature page; or indulge yourself (and me) and read my little treatise on female genital mutilation.

    I know exactly where I was standing the moment I learned about this nightmare, a cultural practice, a rite of passage, it's variations in extremes, the death rates, the philistine unsophistication of the doer's butchery, the tacit cultural and cultural antitheses' acceptance of unsurmizable inequities: teen and pre-teen vaginas turned into scar tissue with a pus-filled, sealed entrance... barely the size of a pinhole camera, and that little hole is about the same as her chance of survival - not of her future, not of anything strange or unusual, this is the norm, the expected, dirty scalpels, and unsterile environment.

    It's hard to believe there is worse pain than that. It's hard to believe that CRPS, Chronic Regional Pain Syndrome Stage 4, full body, external/internal,  is a 24/7 pain that could rival even one second of that on a scientific pain measurement chart.

    But female circumcision is not listed. If it were, it wouldn't certainly rise to the top, above finger amputation no Novocaine, natural childbirth, the vast and incurably endless pain of CRPS. And I imagine that in some practicing countries, the men would celebrate this as a victory. We won! We won!

    Lucky to survive, the girl and what parts she has left, what life span she is given, waits to be married.

    I could read every article, every Vanity Fair, the Koran, every anthropological study or scientific journal, and I will never understand. Why not even a compromise to start with? Why not remove a kidney? Weigh her down with an antiquated chastity belt? Preach safe sex; the beauty of making love, in love? In how many societies are women all myth, an allegorical Eve?  Why do I not feel guilty eating the last apple in the fruit bowl?

    This "practice", this keeping of culture, ritual, butcherous belief-system - the antithesis (in my view) of sacred -  but not a word turned on the heel of it's latter syllables. She is a SACrificial lamb in a dirt-filled room, watched by family, villagers, and now the remnants -  photographed and published in mainstream and English. It is the most extreme variation on the theme.

    Infibulation,  this is what we  have named it  - this is what we call it in white talk, West talk, activist mottos ripe with rhyming possibilities for emphasis and memorability only.

    She is still a child, waiting, even in severe pain every time she pees, waiting for the naming of the  muslim man who will marry her - only if he can break her open. Literally, break her.

    Rip apart a body part that once had lips. Imagine this, your lips sliced off, the remaining skin pulled taught and sewn together. No anesthesia. No percocet recovery.

    This is called infibulation (a word not even recognized by spell check). A word new to me until I was just passing the latest possible age to be infibulated myself. But I would be stoned instead. That is how a "whore" like me would be treated. What else is there to do to a woman or girl found to be sexually active before, or after the end of marriage?

    More than the photographic analogy (the 1993 or '94 Vanity Fair Article that tangled and untangled me for years following,) saturating page upon page somewhere between George Clooney, or some form of Hollywood Beauty was on the cover(I think) and perfumed perfume ads, were these pages, these horrifying pages, scarier than the madman I lived with at 18 with no escape route either. But I had my art.

    These women, what did they have? It was easier to figure out what the negatives: the did not have anesthesia, no art involved, nor just reason, no hospital, no novacaine, no options, no choice.

    Friday, March 6, 2009

    Our Voices Are Needed in Harrisburg

    As a member of the ACLU, I received this email about two important opportunities to shout out for liberty. Since I can't travel, maybe you'll go in my or someone else's honor. I wish I could stand up and shout out for everyone who needs a voice...one day:


    A message from the state capitol


    Dear friends of liberty,

    March is the month to be in Harrisburg. You are needed at the capitol!

    It’s legal in most of Pennsylvania to fire someone from his or her job simply because he or she is gay. On Tuesday, March 17, the ACLU of PA will team with the Value All Families Coalition for a lobby day and rally at the state capitol for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender equality. It’s long past time for Pennsylvania’s non-discrimination law to include "sexual orientation" and "gender identity or expression." To pass this legislation, your legislators need to hear from you! Learn more online.

    Two weeks later, on March 31, ACLU–PA will gather with Pennsylvanians for Responsible Sex Education (PARSE) for a lobby day for healthy youth. In recent years, the commonwealth’s teen birth rate and teen abortion rate have risen. The folly of abstinence–only-until-marriage education has come home to roost. Join us on March 31 to lobby for legislation requiring comprehensive sex education in PA’s schools. Learn more online.

    Buses from Philadelphia and Pittsburgh are available for both events.

    Let’s rock the dome!

    See you in Harrisburg.

    Sincerely,
    Andy Hoover
    Legislative Director
    ACLU of PA

    Tuesday, January 13, 2009

    Activism In Philladelphia and how you can Help! in Protesting the atrocities in Gaza

    Although....
    • I said I'm on hiatus from this blog while focusing my energies on battling transverse myelitis (which you can read about at http://neurodetour.com)
    • And many of my Jewish relatives will hold me in contempt for this
    • And some of them also live in Israel and have their own experiences to share
    But...
    • I'm sleepless,
    • and as a dedicated member of WILPF servingon both theMiddle East Committee and the National Development Committee, I'm doing what I can to spread the word...
    • copy...paste...publish.

    Before you begin reading, I grabbed this interesting
    fact from the ADC Website:
    • Famous Arab Americans include: Ralph Nader, Salma Hayek, Casey Kasem, Doug Flutie, Shakira, Paula Abdul, Spencer Abraham and many more (click here to see an illustrated brochure) The Arab American market is considerable. Arab American consumers have a buying power of $104 billion.

    It's always fun to start with fame, fortune, and fantastic cleavage. But on t
    o the less fortunate we go.

    ************

    The following newsletter was sent to me from my dear friend and Philadelphia WILPF president (Libby forgive me if I've gotten your title wrong). Please note, copy and paste leads to whacky formatting. But activism isn't about formatting, it's about doing.



    Dear Members and Supporters,

    The
    American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee--ADC Greater Philadelphia reiterates its horror at Israel ’s ongoing military attacks on, blockade of, and massacres in Gaza. As the world calls for an immediate ceasefire and protection for civilians as enumerated by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1860, Israel's overwhelming attacks on Gaza resulted in over 919 Dead and 4150 Injured-- 46% Women and Children.

    We need to let our voices be heard.
    We need an end to th
    e Israeli massacres in Gaza.

    As vital as it is to keep up the public protest, and as important as it is that we make sure our elected officials in Washington hear from us, this is also a crucial moment to bring our message to the mainstream media.

    There are many ways you can help:
    1. Attend the events planned in the Philadelphia Area this week (Below).
    2. Make your voice heard in the media! (Write to local papers, Talking points)
    3. Contact your Representatives and President-Elect Obama
    4. Help the Victims in Gaza by Donating to United Palestinian Appeal, Inc. (UPA)
    5. Help the Victims in Gaza by Donating to ANERA
    6. Thank The 5 representatives that voted "against" and 22 representatives that voted "present" on a resolution that framed Israel's disproportionate attack on Gaza as "self-defense". IF you know ANY constituents of any of these representatives, then please urge them to let their voices be heard.
    7. You can view the actual resolution here.

    THIS WEEK’S, PHILADELPHIA ACTION FOR GAZA EVENTS
    Don't hesitate to get in touch with questions.

    • Monday 1.12.09- ADC National Wear-Your-Kaffiyah day
    • Tuesday-1.13.09- ADC day of fasting
    • Fri 1.16.09 @4:30pm- Mourning Vigil for Israel's Massacre of Civilians in Gaza and demanding immediate cease fire--Gathering at Israeli Consulate (1880 JFK Blvd) and March to City Hall planned by Arab community [contact Linda Hannah, aridfishing@verizon.net or Nehad Khader, nehadk262@gmail.com]
    • Monday 1.19.08-Tables at Gallery, Rittenhouse, 69th Street, ect. [contact Betsy, bpiette@hotmail.com]
    • MLK Day Candlelight Vigil focused on impact on Women and children, 5:30, Israeli Consulate: [contact SUSTAIN at sustainphilly@gmail.com]

    RECENT EVENTS OF NOTE

    Last week, ADC held a town hall meeting where various ideas and strategies were discussed and considered. In response to direct community input, ADC NATIONAL Office extended its hours of operation (Monday-Friday from 8am-8pm) and community members are encouraged to volunteer.

    - To volunteer, contact: organizing@adc.org

    - For all media inquiries, contact: laila@adc.org

    - For legal matters, contact: legal@adc.org


    Last Thursday, ADC held a workshop on “Nonviolence Demonstrations and Actions”, which was conducted by Nonviolence International. Participants learned:

    • basic communication techniques
    • history of nonviolent action
    • principles of nonviolent action
    • campaigns for social change
    • direct action techniques, and
    • coalition building

    On Friday, January 9, the House of Representatives passed a resolution that framed Israel's disproportionate attack on Gaza as "self-defense" and failed to hold Israel either responsible or accountable for its role in causing Palestinian civilian casualties and injuries, and extensive damage to Palestinian
    civilian infrastructure.

    While the resolution contained substantial language that was "one-sided", it also contained language in support of "a just and sustainable resolution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict", making it appear "balanced" enough to many
    members of Congress to obtain their support. You can view the actual resolution for yourself here.

    While 390 representatives voted for the resolution, 5 representatives voted against the resolution and 22 representatives voted present on the resolution. The names, phone numbers and fax numbers of those representatives are below.

    If you are or KNOW a constituent of one of these representatives, then we ask you to take 5 minutes to follow up and thank them for their votes. We want to demonstrate to these representatives and to their colleagues that, if they stand for an equitable U.S. policy, then we will stand with them.

    VOTED "NO"
    • Rep. Maxine Waters (D), California, District 35 -- Phone: (202) 225-2201 / Fax: (202) 225-7854
    • Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D), Ohio, District 10 -- Phone: (202) 225-5871 / Fax: (202) 225-5745
    • Rep. Ronald Paul (R), Texas, District 14 -- Phone: (202) 225-2831 / Fax: (202) 226-6288
    • Rep. Nick Rahall (D), West Virginia, District 3 -- Phone: (202) 225-3452 / Fax: (202) 225-9061
    • Rep. Gwen Moore (D), Wisconsin, District 4 -- Phone: (202) 225-4572 / Fax: (202) 225-8135

    VOTED "PRESENT
    "
    • Rep. Raul Grijalva (D), Arizona, District 7 -- Phone: (202) 225-2435 / Fax: (202) 225-1541
    • Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D), California, District 6 -- Phone: (202) 225-5161 / Fax: (202) 225-5163
    • Rep. George Miller (D), California, District 7 -- Phone: (202) 225-2095 / Fax: (202) 225-5609
    • Rep. Barbara Lee (D), California, District 9 -- Phone: (202) 225-2661 / Fax: (202) 225-9817
    • Rep. Fortney Stark (D), California, District 13 -- Phone: (202) 225-5065 / Fax: (202) 226-3805
    • Rep. Sam Farr (D), California, District 17 -- Phone: (202) 225-2861 / Fax: (202) 225-6791
    • Rep. Diane Watson (D), California, District 33 -- Phone: (202) 225-7084 / Fax: (202) 225-2422
    • Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D), California, District 47 -- Phone: (202) 225-2965 / Fax: (202) 225-5859
    • Rep. Henry Johnson (D), Georgia, District 4 -- Phone: (202) 225-1605 / Fax: (202) 226-0691
    • Rep. Neil Abercrombie (D), Hawaii, District 1 -- Phone: (202) 225-2726 / Fax: (202) 225-4580
    • Rep. Donna Edwards (D), Maryland, District 4 -- Phone: (202) 225-8699 / Fax: (202) 225-8714
    • Rep. John Olver (D), Massachusetts, District 1 -- Phone: (202) 225-5335 / Fax: (202) 226-1224
    • Rep. Carolyn Kilpatrick (D), Michigan, District 13 -- Phone: (202) 225-2261 / Fax: (202) 225-5730
    • Rep. John Dingell (D), Michigan, District 15 -- Phone: (202) 225-4071 / Fax: (202) 226-0371
    • Rep. Betty McCollum (D), Minnesota, District 4 -- Phone: (202) 225-6631 / Fax: (202) 225-1968
    • Rep. Keith Ellison (D), Minnesota, District 5 -- Phone: (202) 225-4755 / Fax: (202) 225-4886
    • Rep. Donald Payne (D), New Jersey, District 10 -- Phone: (202) 225-3436 / Fax: (202) 225-4160
    • Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D), New York, District 22 -- Phone: (202) 225-6335 / Fax: (202) 226-0774
    • Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D), Oregon, District 3 -- Phone: (202) 225-4811 / Fax: (202) 225-8941
    • Rep. Peter DeFazio (D), Oregon, District 4 -- Phone: (202) 225-6416 / Fax: (202) 225-0032
    • Rep. James Moran (D), Virginia, District 8 -- Phone: (202) 225-4376 / Fax: (202) 225-0017
    • Rep. James McDermott (D), Washington, District 7 -- Phone: (202) 225-3106 / Fax: (202) 225-6197


    ABOUT THE ADC

    The American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), a non-sectarian & non-partisan Civil rights organization, is the largest grassroots Arab-American movement in the United States committed to protecting the rights of Arab Americans by being at the forefront in combating defamation and negative stereotyping. ADC welcomes people of all backgrounds, faiths and ethnicities as members.

    For more information on the ADC's Philadelphia Chapter, visit www.adcphiladelphia.org.
    For the main ADC Website, visit www.adc.org

    Sunday, March 9, 2008

    Scandal Scandalizing Scandal

    Kafka is dead!

    But today the New York Times published “A Bug’s Life. Really,” an Op-Ed spoof by novelist and screenwriter Mark Leyner, supposedly discrediting Franz Kafka’s novella “The Metamorphosis” as non-fiction.

    Fiction as truth, Oh my!

    The article begins, “In a scandal that’s sending shock waves through both the publishing industry and academia, the author Franz Kafka has been revealed to be a fraud.

    “‘The Metamorphosis — purported to be the fictional account of a man who turns into a large cockroach — is actually non-fiction,’ according to a statement released by Mr. Kafka’s editor, who spoke only on the condition that he be identified as E.”

    How literary it is to be simply called E.!

    What is Leyner trying to do? Demonstrate that the New York Times is a literary nightmare? That the recent scandals regarding fictional or historical or autobiographical integrity are McCarthy-esque witch hunts against an already marginalized and misunderstand profession? Offer his name into the coveted gated world of ping-pong-name-tossing-blaming-Oprah-interviewing-NY Times-covering-book store shelf space-rescinding publicity? Place himself at the zenith of literary genius, above the entire-museum-dedicated-to-his-work-and-life Kafka, the “con man” as he’s referred to Leyner’s article? To become a neologism, That Op-Ed piece was so Leyneresque! Wow, what a Leyneresque outfit! You are thus sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for this Leyneresque crime of treason. Don’t Bogart my Leynerism!?

    But the real scandal is in the positioning that fiction cannot be fact-based. Leyner has exposed what has long been recognized; most writers write from experience.

    There are numerous books on writing titled just that: “Writing from Experience”, by Richard A. Condon, “Writing from Experience” by Brian Taylor, “I Felt Like I Was from Another Planet : Writing from Personal Experience” by Norine Dresser, “A time in their lives;: Writings from personal experience” by Jerry Herman, “Writing from Experience, Revised Edition: With Grammar and Language Skills for ESL/EFL Students” by Marcella Frank, “Writing from Personal Experience: How to Turn Your Life into Salable Prose” by Nancy Kelton, “Writing from Experience: A Step by Step Approach to Freelance Writing” by Amanda Wilkins, “Talking and Writing from Experience” by Judith Atkinson and John Foster, “Writing Personal Poetry: Creating Poems from Your Life Experiences” by Sheila Bender, “Write from Life: Turning Your Personal Experiences into Compelling Stories” by Meg Files, and the list goes on and on and on and on.

    What is so new and disturbing about experience-based, or truth-based writing? At best, it makes for tangible, palpable, unparalleled, fully realized writing. At worst, it’s self-aware, self-indulgent, and predictable. But these categories could be extended to any kind of writing.

    In Leyner’s article, he quotes P., “a professor of literature at Princeton” who laments, “To find out that [“The Metamorphosis” is] actually true is devastating.”

    Devastating.

    And according to "A Bug's Life. Really," Mr. Kafka (despite his current state of burial) is devastated by this sudden exposure as well. He quotes a “contrite and tearful” Kafka as professing, “I know what I did was wrong. I’m very alienated from myself, but that’s no excuse to lie.”

    Lies.

    So we know Kafka is dead. Even if the Times doesn’t. Or maybe they were in on it. And according to Leyner, Kafka’s still living-breathing publishers are fact-checking his fiction. Fact-checking fiction, now there’s an oxymoron.

    In Leyner's article, he names the man-as-cockroach condition as “entomological dysplasia.” GoogleTM this, and one finds nothing but links back to Leyner’s article. (NOTE: When I began writing this, there was one page of results for "entomological dysplasia" in Google. A few hours later, there were two.)

    It doesn’t take a literary genius or a master of sci-fi to figure out that there’s no such condition and that Leyner’s article is no more truth-based than “The Metamorphosis.”

    Thanks to Leyner, the question of truth's significance in writing is yet again under consideration, but with a twist. He's taken the memoir verifiability debate to extreme. Let's just hope the literary police don't turn their radar to the gloriously unverifiable genres of fiction and poetry.

    Sunday, February 17, 2008

    Is Empathy Necessary?


    According to the very candid historian and author Inga Clendinnen, the "novelist's gift of empathetic imagination" is misleading.

    In her 70-page essay, The History Question: Who Owns the Past? (published in Quarterly Essay, Issue 23, 2006) she writes, "the 'insights' of empathy are untestable...Historical novelists spend time getting the material setting right, but then, misled by their confidence in their novelist's gift of empathetic imagination, they sometimes project back into that carefully constructed material setting contemporary assumptions and current obsessions."

    The question is, misleading to whom?

    Is it misleading to the author herself? to the reader? to the critic? to the egotistically-infringed academic? to the babysitter, the cat in the alley, the doorman, the barrista, the v.p. of marketing, et al?

    And, who cares?

    As I am reading a work of fiction, regardless of its origins, do or should I care if I’m being mislead? Only if what I’m reading is shallow and predictable, but then if it were, would I be mislead?

    Should the author care if she’s been mislead by her subject? Only if it results in bad writing, I presume.

    Should the barrista care if he’s been mislead? Ask the barrista. If he works at Starbucks, at least he has health insurance. Who can't empathize with that BASIC HUMAN RIGHT? (Note shifting pronoun throughout for sake of equality.)

    Being mislead is a personal choice, if not a preference. And those that don’t want to be mislead, should not be reading the newspaper, let alone a novel, or a memoir for that matter.

    Novel - a fictitious prose narrative of considerable length and complexity, portraying characters and usually presenting a sequential organization of action and scenes*

    But empathy is such a beautiful and relevant quality. We (as in myself and people I know...I dare not assume a universal we in this format) can not relate without it. Empathy is what allows us to move past judgment to compassion. And compassion is what drives us (ditto). While not all people are capable of empathy, whether due to mental or genetic disorders, it's what keeps my humanity busting out of its bones, and dare I presume, yours as well.

    Last night, I fortuitously watched The Hoax, a much lauded factual movie about a washed-up author (played by Richard Gere) who receives a million dollar contract to write the autobiography of the reclusive Texan billionaire, Howard Hughes. Only everything, including the verified letter of agreement from Hughes, is a hoax.

    A great premise for a movie, right? Historically based no less, right?

    But the characters. Oh, the characters. I could not, for the empathetic life of me, empathize with them. They were just too unlikable for me to become engaged, to care. And in their inability to evoke empathy from me, their experiences and actions became pigeonholed as…predictable.

    So, is the “novelist’s empathetic imagination” misleading?

    Probably, to a certain extent, if you’re a lawyer or the editor of HIPAA policies and procedures (which I have been the latter not the former), but one of the reasons for reading Philip Roth's fiction, Anne Waldman's poetry, Inga Clendinnen's accounts of history, People Magazine, or the Sunday funnies** is to exit
    one reality, that world of presumed innocence/guilt/right/wrong and enter into a new one. What really should be said, is that the writer's imagination is leading.

    The empathetic imagination is what leads us into the realm of the text - believable or unbelievable as it may inherently be.


    *novel. Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/novel (accessed: February 16, 2008).

    **According to Wikipedia,
    the Reading Eagle boasts the "Biggest Comics Section in the Land".