Classic beltway

Monday, October 1st, 2007

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A Facebook “education-workshop” is scheduled to be held in D.C. next week for politicians interested to learn about, what else, social networking. The Facebook Political Summit page describes the event for crack campaign staffers as a “lively seminar about how Facebook and social media can be an integral part of your campaign and constituent strategy. Find out what you should start doing today to boost your campaigning and fundraising efforts, while connecting with your supporters on a deeper and more personal level.”

This dog-and-pony show is designed to milk cash from the same presidential candidates who shied away from YouTube as if it were run by Tavis Smiley!

Seriously, what do they “teach” these staffers? How to use a laptop?

Theravada buddhist monks!

Monday, October 1st, 2007

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Reading about the events unfolding in Burma in the newspapers is enormously frustrating. It seems the billion professional news people reporting the story have all at once mastered the art of writing endlessly about “the monks” in a way that tells us nothing important about the monks. The story has been wrapped in an enormous Moab-colored robe that’s just so exotically mesmerizing editors go dizzy. “Look it’s a monk! Look it’s ten thousand monks! Soooo beautiful!”

A week later we have discovered the monks are spiritual, that they’re revered in Burmese society and that there are a lot of them. That’s not enough. Who are the monks and why exactly did they start turning out in droves just now? We need more context, some social and spiritual history.

That’s what I was searching for when the bull-headed Myanmar Milosevics went and pulled the plug on the internet. Frrzzzpp: no more digital communications from Burma. Sorry, ha-ha, you’re stuck with the New York Times!

Judith Simmer-Brown is a senior dharma teacher and twenty-seven-year faculty member in the Religious Studies department at Naropa University. She has deep ties with the region and has thankfully much to share on recent events. We spoke very briefly over the weekend.

JT: So I feel like we’re getting nothing really about the monks. We see the photos in the papers but the photos beg questions that go unanswered in the articles. They’re Buddhist. That much I know. They’re Theravada? Is that the, um, sect?

Judith Simmer-Brown: Theravada, yes, but sect is the wrong word. It’s a major form of Buddhism, more a school of thought, akin to Protestantism. It’s predominant throughout South-East Asia— in Sri Lanka, Thailand….

I agree there’s nothing good about this in the mainstream media. The thing to know, which has been partly touched upon, is that, in Theravada, the monastic tradition is precious; the monks are the precious treasure of the society. To support the monks is the best thing in life you can do as a layperson. The monastic tradition is just so central to the way of life, just something everyone experiences on some level. The people and the monks are bound together. In Thailand every young man takes temporary vows, for three months to a year…

We think Buddhism, though, in our popculture mind, and we think meditative not activist. The shorthand image is of people focused on otherworldly concerns… Politics and oil prices, of all things, it seems so hopelessly worldly.

That’s a misconception. Buddhists are not withdrawn from the world. On the contrary. That the monks have been relatively nonpolitical in the recent past is in fact a revealing anomaly in Burma. It speaks to the brutality of the regime. The monks have been given the message: “stay out of politics and you’ll be able to continue undisturbed.” It’s a pervasive and really oppressive message, especially given that in other Therevada countries there’s a great deal of civic engagement, a long tradition of engagement.

I can’t think— other than the iconic immolations during Vietnam— I can’t think of anything I’ve read about protests and so forth… what kind of engagement?

Just off the top of my head, well there are so many examples… In Thailand, for instance, monks have opposed deforestation very publicly, going out into the forests and ordaining trees… In Sri Lanka monks organize grassroots efforts in villages to alleviate the effects of poverty… There are many many examples of monastic engagement. Withdrawn is exactly wrong I would say.

You know in Burma, the monastics have also been coerced directly, threatened. The kidnap and murder of monks has been ratcheted up in recent months. That’s key to understanding things. The protests from that perspective, and the monks’ role in the protests, is no surprise. The people are so protective of the monks— their spiritual well being is wrapped up in care for the monks. People grab the monks on the street to shield them, place their bodies between the monks and the soldiers and police, shuttle them off in cabs.

The government will never enjoy the respect of the monastics. It’s unspeakable to abuse the monks, to have them tortured and murdered. The monks are the rival source of power. Soldiers have been infiltrating the monasteries, trying to shut it down from within. There are incredible stories… none of which are in the newspapers….

So how do you know what’s happening?

Oh email lists… I have relationships with people from research trips, longtime friends and so forth. The emails are full of terrible reports…

It is a nonviolent tradition of course but the government has sent infiltrators into the monasteries, young soldiers with shaved heads in robes, who then behave within the ranks in ways to incite, to provide a pretext for the authorities to crack down. It’s been eighteen years of crackdown, ever since Aung San Suu Kyi won the prime-ministerial election.

It’s unbelievable what happened, by the way. It was so political, such an open endorsement, call for change, when the monks walked past Aung San Suu Kyi’s home, where she’s of course been under house arrest. That was exactly what the junta didn’t want to happen. That wasn’t about oil prices. You know, it couldn’t be explained away, the monks’ open endorsement of a rival political figure— the rival political figure. Just unbelievable. The monks knowing the power and open politics of that action.

You know, I mentioned the young soldiers… that’s part of the story too, that in many ways this is a youth movement. If you look at the photos, the monks are young. Young men from the hinterlands become monks to get an education and to enter a way of life that is respected, that the society reveres. There’s a youth energy to what’s happening now…

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John Tomasic is managing editor at Pop and Politics.Here’s Prof Simmer-Brown on consumer culture.

Get out and walk out

Monday, October 1st, 2007

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Mos and company have called a Jena Six walkout on campuses at noon central time across the country today. That’s now!

Read more about it… outside!

Reverb: the knife

Monday, October 1st, 2007

the knife

A long time ago (in the nineties), I discovered a Swedish band called Honey is Cool. They practiced a form of pop that most people probably lumped in with other Swedish bands like Acid House Kings and Starlet. But if you listened closely, Honey is Cool had a sound and an aesthetic that was just a little darker and perhaps a little stranger than many of their contemporaries. After a couple of full length releases (1997’s Crazy Love and Early Morning Are you Working? from 1999), singer Karin Dreijer decided to take some time to focus on a new project with her brother, Olof. The project became a priority (as they often do) and the siblings released their first album, Deep Cuts, in 2001 and introduced the world to The Knife.

The world didn’t pay a whole lot of attention at first. Deep Cuts didn’t get much distribution in the U.S. and even less airplay. Karin’s sweet, almost Billie Holiday-esque vocals were hard to understand and set against sinister sounding synths that didn’t make for instant accessibility. The Knife’s sound was also a far cry from the guitar-based rock of Honey is Cool. I played tracks from the new record frequently on my radio show because I thought the record was outstanding, but I rarely got any inquiries as to who was responsible for these great songs. Which was probably a good thing, because I couldn’t find much information on the internet about them at the time! Then, one night, I was DJ’ing a dance club in downtown L.A. and I decided to drop something from the The Knife. Almost instantly, this tall, lanky fellow came running up to me very excitedly. He had a heavy European accent and his eyebrows bounced around a lot as he demanded, “Is this The Knife? Are you playing The Knife? Nobody knows about The Knife, how do you know The Knife?” We chatted for a bit despite the language barrier, then he ran off to go dance to The Knife.

Based on just that one conversation, I wasn’t surprised when Silent Shout, the band’s second record, became one of the biggest electronic hits of 2006. Clearly things had been cooking in Europe for the Dreijers and it was just a matter of time before enthusiasm for their unique sound spread to the States. Deep Cuts was re-released domestically due to the success of its follow-up, and I couldn’t help but wonder where all the deaf ears had gone. The song “Heartbeats” was even featured on a recent episode of HBO’s “Entourage.” That blew my mind a little.

In 2003 The Knife composed a terrific soundtrack to a Swedish film called Hannah Med H, which I just recently found out about (hey, they didn’t hire me to review movies). I have yet to track down a copy of the film, but I’m eager to just based on the quality of the songs alone. And I’m looking forward to whatever the Dreijers put out next (they have a record tentatively scheduled for release in 2008), and I’m just glad that more ears are finally listening.

Go the original post to sample the mp3s!

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If you enjoy these tunes, tune into my radio show on kxlu 88.9fm 10a-2p every monday. we’re also streaming live at www.kxlu.com.

reverb: music from los angeles & beyond

Monday, October 1st, 2007

i heart animal collective and guns

The year is 2037. A young woman with impeccable taste in music says to a friend, “Dude, have you heard that old band, Liars? They’re amazing.”

“Oh yeah,” her friend concurs, “They’re genius.”

Although they enjoy a fair amount of success and critical acclaim at this point in history, Liars are one of those bands that will be looked at in the future as being truly brilliant and ahead of their time. In the same way that bands like The Velvet Underground, Suicide and CAN had to wait for many years to pass before they got their props, Liars will undoubtedly be revered a little further down the road.

They released an eponymous album in late August, their fourth full-length to date, and it is nothing short of their best album thus far. Some of their records can be challenging (avant-garde, if you prefer), but Liars is just terrific from the very first listen. What makes this record truly exceptional is that it gets better with each visit. I love albums like that. Albums that really stick to your ribs like a good meal and stand the test of time. More bands should try it, instead of just attempting to be “interesting.” There’s got to be actual songs backing up the “interesting,” otherwise you have what I like to call “bullshit.” Which brings me to Animal Collective.

I feel like the only person in the vast world of blog who isn’t singing the praises of the new Animal Collective album, Strawberry Jam. As a matter of fact, I feel a bit like Charleton Heston maniacally screaming that Soylent Green is made out of you-know-what. I hate this record. Normally, I would be ambivalent about it. But everyone parrotting Pitchfork that it’s sooo wonderful is making me actively hate it. The last Animal Collective record, Feels wasn’t bad. And Panda Bear’s Person Pitch from earlier this year was actually quite good. But Strawberry Jam is just a bad record. Where are these great melodies everyone’s on about? It’s pretentious, it’s weird in an amateurish weird-for-the-sake-of being-weird way, and it certainly doesn’t merit all the good reviews it’s received. Bring on the hate mail.

A lot of people who like Liars probably also like Animal Collective. I’m just not one of them. But in the interest of letting people decide for themselves, I’ve included tracks from both bands.

…And yes, people still say “dude” in 2037.

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If you enjoy these tunes, tune into my radio show on kxlu 88.9fm 10a-2p every monday. we’re also streaming live at www.kxlu.com.