Reden über Kurdistan
Analyse und Reportage aus Hasaka für Le Monde Diplomatique Oktober 2023
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There is no alternative, anthropocide ou capitalocide.
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Sunday morning in a whispering Paris
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06_05_ rome_ israel-palestine & immigration: 'le monde diplomatique' @ librairie stendhal
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‘War Made Easy ~ How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us To Death’ film within | Corporate Media has Colluded, Acting as Stenographers for the Pentagon
Startling, frightening, no Hollywood horror movie could be more chilling than this political documentary. A Brown University study reveals that the USA has engaged in conflicts with 100 countries. The corporate media has colluded in all the conflicts, acting as stenographers for the Pentagon, rather than questioning and investigating.
“20 Years After Iraq Invasion: “War Made Easy ~ How…
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Premier billet
Salut à tous, mon premier billet. Pas plus de mille caractères, c’est promis. Pourquoi mille? Parce que je suis lecteur abonné du bon vieux journal Le Monde et que quand on fait un commentaire c’est maximum mille caractères. Maximum trois commentaires, mais la plupart du temps, après un seul commentaire, mon quota de trois commentaires est atteint. Parfois même, mon quota de trois est atteint alors que mon commentaire n’est pas publié. Heureusement pour moi, je lis d’autres trucs en d’autres langues, mais je ne peux pas commenter parce qu’il faut payer l’abonnement pour commenter. Je pense que nous sommes tous d’accord que d’être abonné à un seul journal suffit amplement. La question qui tue, je la sens venir : “Emilio? Pourquoi perds tu du temps à commenter les articles?”. La réponse est simple, ça m’amuse et ça me fait du bien. Il y en a qui font des mots croisés, d’autres des sudoku, encore d’autres qui passent leur temps sur TikTok ou Instagram. Ben, moi, Emilio, je fais des commentaires à mille caractères sur Le Monde. Et pourquoi faire des commentaires sur Le Monde et ici? Ben, c’est simple. Ici, je suis sûr d’être publié ! Mais pas sûr d’être lu !
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Très bonne analyse de Frédéric Lordon qui dresse un diagnostic implacable sur la situation actuelle.
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A blogpost by Frank Jacobs calls ‘The West’ “the biggest gated community in the world”, highlighting how fences and walls are all connected worldwide to separate the rich countries from the poorer ones. In 2021, the population of this group of rich countries(Canada, US, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Israel, New Zealand, and Europe = EU + UK, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein) represented only 14% of the global population, but 56% of the global GDP income. At the same time, most of the world population, 86%, made do with less than half of the global GDP income, 44% (author’s calculation based on UN data).
Another map by Philippe Rekacewicz in Le Monde diplomatique places “Europe at the center of a walled world” emphasizing the deadliness of the European border regime, and the Mediterranean Sea in particular. Since 2014, 28,547 people have gone missing in the Mediterranean Sea – 2,797 in 2023 alone. However, these are only the official numbers and don’t consider the people who have gone missing on their way to the Mediterranean Sea while, for example, crossing the Sahara Desert, or the people who have gone missing after they arrived in Europe.
One way to make sense of the deadliness of border regimes is to place them within the current dominant socio-economic system of capitalism. Political scientist Fabian Georgi has coined the term “Fortress Capitalism” to connect the deadliness of the Fortress metaphor that we mostly know from discourses of ‘Fortress Europe’ with the dominant political-economic system of capitalism, and the structural violence against migrants and refugees.
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In a skyless world, the earth becomes a chasm. And the poem is one of consolation’s gifts, a quality of the winds, from both south and north. Do not describe your wounds as the camera sees them.
Mahmoud Darwish, Homage to Edward Said, Counterpoint, Le Monde diplomatique, January 2005, translated from the French version of the original by Julie Stoker
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