Archive for the 'Politics' Category
Racial Tensions at UCSD
A recent party at UC San Diego has sparked a lot of controversy. The name of the party was the Compton Cookout. The part was to mark “a very important month in American society. No, i’m not referring to Valentines day or Presidents day. I’m talking about Black History month.” To read the full invitation see here. This party decided to honor black history month by promoting a slew of racial stereotypes. Here is a small section of the party invitation:
For girls: For those of you who are unfamiliar with ghetto chicks-Ghetto chicks usually have gold teeth, start fights and drama, and wear cheap clothes … have short, nappy hair, and usually wear cheap weave, usually in bad colors…Ghetto chicks have a very limited vocabulary, and attempt to make up for it, by forming new words, such as “constipulated”, or simply cursing persistently, or using other types of vulgarities, and making noises, such as “hmmg!”, or smacking their lips, and making other angry noises,grunts, and faces. The objective is for all you lovely ladies to look, act, and essentially take on these “respectable” qualities throughout the day.
The person taking claim for the party is someone calling himself Jiggaboo Jones (shown below).
If you don’t mind heavy amounts of swearing then you can watch two youtube videos where he takes credit for and also defends his actions for the Compton cookout:
http://www.youtube.com/user/jigga2jones#p/a/u/1/iGfFSZ2kcRg
You can see the display behind him freeze part way through his second speech:
http://www.youtube.com/user/jigga2jones#p/a/u/0/y95G-LH885Y Read more
2 commentsThe Depression of Politics
With California in financial ruin, and the health care reform bill slowly transforming into the health care status quo bill, it’s hard to not become a pessimist. Matt Taibibi is not helping. The link below a video because it apparently auto plays and I didn’t want that when people loaded the main page: Read more
No commentsAftermath of the UC Regents 32% Fee Increase
Last week the UC board of Regents increased student fees by 32%. At UCSC there was an initial protest on Wednesday, and an Occupation of the Kresge town hall building which moved to Kerr hall (an administrative building) on Friday. The Occupation at Kerr hall was broken up on Sunday. The reason that there are protests is in part due to the lack of change through “proper” channels. I’d like to take the time to highlight the authority structure of the UC system. After this, I will solve the future 2010/11 budget crisis. First, the about page of the Academic Senate:
The UCSC Academic Senate operates as a legislative body and as a system of committees run by and for the faculty. The University of California has a dual-track system of authority and responsibility which presumes that faculty are best qualified to chart the University’s educational course, while the administrators are most competent to direct its finances and organization. In practice, these domains overlap and are interdependent. To function successfully, faculty and administrators depend on a high level of consultation, trust, mutual respect and a tradition of collegial collaboration.
So right from the get go there is a problem. If you want to get something done through proper and official channels, which of this dual-track authority and responsibility tree do you navigate to get to a solution. Do you attempt to take up your cause and petition the Academic Senate, or do you go to the Administration? Obviously the Senate is the preferred authority track for a student. It contains professors who see the effects of budget cuts in their day to day work and are more connected to the decisions being made. However the description above suggest that if your problem is budget related, those decisions fall mostly under “finances” and would thus be an administrative decision. To look at how this system works in practice, and not in theory, it is helpful to look at the minutes from the Academic Senate.
From time to time, budget decisions come up in Academic senate meetings (these meetings are held in Kerr hall which is the building that was occupied). Below is a quote from the minutes between a member of the Senate and the EVC, EVC stands for Executive Vice Chancellor and is a member of the Administrative arm of the dual track authority system:
From the February Minutes:
Professor Kevin Karplus, Biomolecular Engineering, asked why, given the budget situation, is the campus paying for a security guard in an inactive parking lot. The EVC responded that he assumed Professor Karplus is talking about the future site of the biomedical building and the former site of the tree sit and the EVC does not want the fence torn down or any more destruction at the site. Professor Karplus asked if replacing a fence would cost less than security guards. The EVC said he will take that into consideration.
This request, made in February, seems reasonable. Why pay for a more expensive guard if repairing a fence is cheaper. Karplus, seeing wasted funds, tells those in charge of finances to quit wasting money. I’ve seen the guard in question (actually I’ve seen 2 guards, possibly during a change in shift). I know that there was a private security guard at the construction site last month (I’ll check again next time I go by the site). At a minimum there have been private security guards, protecting a fenced in parking lot from February till at least last month, if not to this day. What the EVC meant when he said he would take Kevin Karplus’ comments into consideration is that he hoped that nobody would look into it when he promptly ignored this concern. This is a minor budget issue. More serious budget concerns were brought up in May. Please note that Chancellors fall under the administrative arm: Read more
3 commentsThe UC system Explained
This is a great video to understand the problems facing the University of California system (must have javascript enabled):
2 commentsMore UCSC Rumblings of Occupation
So I had written up about 90% of a post about the rumblings happening on various blogs about another potential occupation. The main evidence for this is the posting of a new manifesto entitled “this is our emergency“. I had to scrap a majority of my original post because the rumblings of a new occupation are no longer rumblings, they are a reality. Recently the UC regents approved a massive student fee increase. There were large protests blocking traffic to the University yesterday. After a day of protests, a portion of the protesters decided to occupy the Kresge town hall.
The main entrance to campus (with this and the west entrance blocked, no traffic can enter or leave campus)
A meeting at the Kresge town hall after the initial protests
Before addressing the new manifesto and the New occupation, I would like to point out briefly some other recent events. At UCSC there was a semi occupation of the Science Library that started on Friday the 13th. I’m not 100% sure when it ended, but I didn’t see much if any of it still there on Monday. I call it a semi occupation because there are apparently library staff participating and University officials retained control of the doors. Postings regarding this action can be found here:
http://thenewuc.wordpress.com/
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/11/14/18628646.php
Being unsure of the specifics of the Science library occupation I cannot comment with any detail beyond what is posted by others. I do, however, want to pour over the latest manifesto by the occupiers entitled “occupation: a do-it-yourself guide“. This is a blueprint as well as a philosophical justification for occupying buildings Read more
2 commentsPolitics and The English Language
Today I read “Politics and the English Language” by George Orwell, and felt the need to share. The essay acts as a guide for writers to be more effective and avoid poor style, with the political consequences half inferred. Hopefully it will help my writing, but one of the examples that Orwell uses caught my eye: It is an excerpt from a communist pamphlet:
All the “best people” from the gentlemen’s clubs, and all the frantic fascist captains, united in common hatred of Socialism and bestial horror at the rising tide of the mass revolutionary movement, have turned to acts of provocation, to foul incendiarism, to medieval legends of poisoned wells, to legalize their own destruction of proletarian organizations, and rouse the agitated petty-bourgeoise to chauvinistic fervor on behalf of the fight against the revolutionary way out of the crisis.
After giving the example, Orwell explains the failings of such writing in terms of the English language, and from this failing in language its failings politically. Those of you who read my blog regularly will probably already have anticipated where this is going. The Occupiers at UCSC publish pamphlets, manifestos, communique, blog posts and other writings. The above example from Orwell could easily be an excerpt from something they wrote. Because of this, Orwell’s essay should be required reading for them. You can download the essay by Orwell for free online (here) or just search around if you prefer different formatting. Examples of some of the poor writing for it’s robotic collection of empty phrases:
http://wewanteverything.wordpress.com/2009/09/24/communique-from-an-absent-future/ (This one is particularly egregious)
http://likelostchildren.blogspot.com/2009/10/gilles-dauve-is-our-mothafuckin-homeboy.html
http://revcom.us/Manifesto/Manifesto.html
I have another post related to the last link. I will update the site soon. Also if you hadn’t guessed already, Orwell’s essay lays the foundation for newspeak in his later novel 1984.
1 commentTubes and Boobs
I think I am required to post this:
Also, Arnold Schwarzenegger is a boob: here.
As Goes Santa Cruz, so goes Vienna
One might think that the recent occupations at UCSC are an isolated incident. The method of students occupying buildings on campus is being tried in Vienna. I must say that the protest in Vienna is putting the UCSC protests to shame. I’ll talk more about that later.
To begin, I need to first talk about Bologna. Bologna is two things. First it is a delicious sausage that originated in a city with the same name in northern Italy. Second, and more applicable, Bologna is the city that holds the oldest University in the western world and is the location where sweeping EU wide University reforms have recently been proposed. The reforms, called the Bologna process, are a framework to standardize the educational system in the EU, making degrees and courses from differing Universities comparable, so a physics class in one University will teach the same thing as a similarly named class at another. It would also standardize degrees from various Universities as well, so different universities would give out similar degree types, like the bachelor/masters degrees given out in the US. For science and engineering courses, this would help people to transfer to other Universities since credit from one course would easily transfer to a new institution. For art institutions, this is a double edged sword. Creativity is not something that can be standardized, however requiring students to have a broad set of courses in order to get a degree could be beneficial.
Now that I’ve talked about both sausage and University reforms in the EU, it’s time to get to the protests. There are two protests/actions that happened in Vienna. Since most of the writing about it is in German, many of the bloggers and interpreters in the US conflate the two. The first one was at the Academy of fine arts, Vienna in Austria. If you click on the link for their homepage, you will notice the ]a[ logo that the University uses. This matches the photos from the demonstration that happened on Tuesday the 20th:
I can understand why an Art Academy would resist a program of standardization. It also makes sense why the website that describes the protests is called “paint by numbers” (malen nach zahlen), as a witty way of pointing out the difficulties inherent in standardizing art. The Academy of fine arts Vienna has a student body of about 900, according to wikipedia, making it about 1/16th the size of UCSC. Looking at the picture I would say that they had a phenomenal turnout. Unfortunately the second action has more images and press and I can’t tell what is still happening with the original Academy of fine Art occupation anymore.
Not wanting to be outdone by the Art Academy, students at the University of Vienna decided to stage their own protest on the 22nd. This protest started in ways that reminded me of the UCSC Occupation. Just a little bit of info about the University of Vienna: The student population at the University of Vienna is about 74,000, making it more than 82 times bigger than the Academy of fine Arts Vienna and more than 4 times bigger than UCSC. The reason I say it reminded me of the UCSC occupation is because of the series of events surrounding the Occupation of the University of Vienna. First there were marches and rallies which ended with the Occupation of a lecture hall. Various participants were encouraged to speak at the podium. After the speakers, participants broke up into groups so that a document could be formed outlining what exactly they were protesting. Since the Bologna process is less of a rallying cry for a University with a prestigious science program that has generated many Nobel laureates, the demands made were very general and overarching. The result of this process was the following list of demands: Read more
3 commentsBut it was a PEACEFUL occupation
Executive Vice Chancellor Kliger sent out a comment on the new occupation. You can see his comment along with two photos of a building tagged and a door being barricaded here. His post is titled Vandalism at Humanities building.
In response to this, one of the occupiers wrote a blog post. It is a must read:
http://occupyca.wordpress.com/2009/10/16/letter-to/
There are two things about the post that I want to highlight. First is the assertion that the intent of the protest was peaceful: “Most American school children with even a cursory knowledge of the history of nonviolent protests from Gandhi to Dr. King, would not fail to recognize the true nature of last night’s events.”
This is an awesome and comically false assertion. Take a look at the photos on Kliger’s post. There is a picture of the building tagged with the words “RIOT: coming soon.”
Also read the words of previous posts in order to gain support for the occupation here:
“We only catch sight of the fires of the insurrection to come on the morning after the unrest of the night before.”
fires of insurrection sure sounds peaceful to me.
“Peaceful marches, rallies and symbolic protests, attracting spectacular media attention, will never increase our ranks because this very process of mediation reduces us to passive observers of what is supposed to be our own activity. Organization for action has become an end in itself cut off from the reality of capitalism in decline.”
I mean seriously occupy CA, do you even read your own posts? This quote is hands down a rejection of peaceful protests.
The second point that occupyca makes that I want to comment on is this:
“as to EVC Kliger’s assertion that students were provoking police officers, this is simply untrue. He was not there, and has relied upon the accounts of the police officers who were. Perhaps he would be interested in hearing what others saw, but I doubt it. There are dozens of eyewitnesses who saw, as well as video footage showing, what actually happened”
Watch the video and see if you hear the words “fuck the police”. There is yelling and obvious provocation. If occupyCA is reading this, please watch and listen to this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JNxCaXi28OQ&feature=player_embedded
3 commentsOccupiers Gain New Target…The Dean of Social Sciences
Update: I have a picture, below, and a video, at the end.
Photo from indybay.
The Occupiers have moved from occupying the Graduate Student Commons to Occupying the Dean of Social Sciences. There are two statements for the occupation that I found, one on indybay and one on occupyca. There is also a facebook group despite facebook being a company that plans to make money using the personal information of its users to sell to advertisers, but I’ll try to stay more positive since the occupiers appear to have moved up the food chain, closer to those more responsible for budget and salary decisions at UCSC.
This building is actually owned by the University and not by graduate students so there is a much greater urgency for the University to respond. The University will also have lawyers ready to prosecute the occupiers, so there is a greater chance that the administration will send police in with orders to make arrests. After the first occupation, the police will be on high alert, giving them a faster response time to a second occupation. As I write and research this I found that it is already over, and the police already responded! The second occupation didn’t last 1 day. That is what happens when you occupy a building the university cares about.
Here is a video (poor quality probably due to it being dark outside and the camera used was probably on someone’s phone, but you can still hear the action):
3 comments



