Hitler sings reggae!

Der Bonker, by Walter Moers via Metafilter. Anybody gotta translation?

Arar report is in

Maher Ararand Metafilter‘s got it. And, of course, I’m so out of touch I only found out because somebody linked to my blog in a post on Metafilter and I had to go see.

Note to ECNPA members; if you find the photographers responsible, I’m perfectly happy to credit them if that’s what they wish, or reduce them to thumbnail size in accordance with Fair Use legislation. I got these from Google Image Search, FYI.

Warning: I changed all their links to open in a new window. Normally I would just do that and not say anything, but there are a bajillion links here because it’s Metafilter after all and I don’t want you blaming me if your monitor suddenly looks like a weird 21st-century mosaic.

Yesterday, the Arar Commission released their report on the handling of the Maher Arar case, previously mentioned here or here. The findings are widely reported; Canada is self-flagellating for being complicit in the United States’ abduction and Arartorture of a Canadian citizen. As President Bush goes to Congress to lobby for the legal authority to abduct and torture anyone without a trial, Arar should consider himself lucky: although Canada didn’t help him out for a year, the Canadian government and news media were aware of and interested in his confinement, which likely saved him from the worst tortures. As a famous legal scholar commented some 240 years ago, “To bereave a man of life, or by violence to confiscate his estate, without accusation or trial, would be so gross and notorious an act of despotism, as must at once convey the alarm of tyranny throughout the whole nation; but confinement of the person, by secretly hurrying him to jail, where his sufferings are unknown or forgotten, is a less public, a less striking, and therefore a more dangerous engine of arbitrary government.”
posted by jellicle at 8:18 AM PST – 93 comments

Photocredits: John Lehmann (Arar alone) and Bill Grimshaw (Arar and family) as far as I can tell from this posting on ECNPA. Updates and corrections welcomed in the Comments section.

blog o’ the day: New Yorker haiku

Ah, the literary life!Sort of like the Readers Digest version, but way more eruditer.

NYer Haiku via Gawker.

New Yorker Haiku

September 18, 2006

Annals of Economics: Mind Games
By John Cassidy

Economists want
To scan your brain, find why you
Aren’t more rational.

Reflections: In the Waiting Room
By David Sedaris

Forget learning French:
In Paris, “d’accord” means
Random fun (sans clothes)!

Profiles: The WandererThe New Yorker
By David Remnick

Now ex-Prez, Clinton
Working to save Africa
As Friend of Bill (Gates).

Fiction: Something That Needs Nothing
By Miranda July

Girl, not one she wants?
A wig and a peep-show gig
Might work for a spell.

On Television: Her Debut
By Tad Friend

Couric as anchor:
So much likability,
No time left for news.

A Critic At Large: War and Remembrance
By Ian Buruma

Grass’s great memoir:
Boy lost in heroic myths.
(Is the man as well?)

Books: Hugger-Mugger
By John Updike

Congo schemes, despair
From le Carre. No closure
In Ward Just’s dark tale.

The Current Cinema: Inescapable Pasts
By David Denby

“The Black Dahlia”
Is choked of life. “The Ground Truth”:
Feel Iraq vets’ shock.

The Vicious Circle

9/11 5.0

from the Archive

September eleventh feels weird. It won’t ever feel normal again, not for those of us old enough to flip channels or turn on the radio.

Safeway has turkeys on special, right there in glorious colour, 4X6 on the front page of their flyer, with a patriotic red-white-and-blue backdrop, which would be understandable if it were Thanksgiving or America, but it is neither. It is September eleventh, in Canada.

Of course, they could move the US Thanksgiving up to 9/11. The original settlers had lost many of their members by Thanksgiving, so it was a bittersweet time for them, too. In part, it was a chance to rejoice that they were still alive, that they had worked together and survived adversity and reached across borders with extended hands, making friends and acknowledging that we are all in this together. That seems appropriate for 9/11; rather than mourn a day of attack, celebrate the “Let’s roll” American spirit of bold action and the subsequent coalition-building that indicates the US has reached maturity and leads more from the power of earned respect than from the power of adolescent riches or force.

I wonder about the way I spent the first hours of 9/11 today. Shortly after midnight I went to one of my favorite sites, The Smoking Gun (www.thesmokinggun.com) to read their Document of the Day. This is usually an arrest report on some two-bit celebrity, but they’ve also featured “How we bought John Gotti’s Pants,” the dress code for P. Diddy‘s birthday party, and shots of a Survivor contestant participating in hardcore porn. Today it was different. Very different.

When I saw it I knew I had to be listening to Dead City Radio, the William S. Burroughs album which features both his Thanksgiving Day Prayer and readings from the Book of Revelations.

“Thanks for a nation where nobody’s allowed to mind his own business…

thanks for the American Dream, to  vugarize and falsify until the bare lies shine through…

thanks for a continent to dispoil and pillage…

thanks for a nation of finks…

thanks for the last and greatest betrayal of the last and greatest of human dreams.”

What was it that I saw there? Al-Qaeda’s terrorism manual in full, and in English. It took me an hour to download. Every now and then I stopped and asked myself if I was doing the right thing; I still don’t know for sure. “Know thine enemy” is a pretty big component of my mental life, but there’s also a fascination with the dark side; I just like to look at it, it’s interesting. So I wondered if this was voyeurism or historical interest. Certainly I believed that the site would be forced to take it down in 24 hours at most, so if I didn’t grab it now it would be gone.

Was this just another thing to put on the shelf beside Aleister Crowley and the Anarchist’s Cookbook, or was this in a separate category? Those other books caused pain and even death to innocents in their day, the difference is that this one caused so much, and so recently, and to allies. Sure, getting this info is in execrable taste, I acknowledge that, but besides an aesthetic distaste, is it wrong?

Certainly it could have had better timing; it could not have had worse.

Now I wonder about that. I have been thinking about the events of a year ago more because of this book than because of any single other reason. I have been thinking about the victims, about innocence and war and how in the name of God anyone could do this, believing it right. I have read part of the book; its tone is kind, respectful and encouraging. It also takes events of war and puts them into a theological context; not just what to expect and what to do, but what that means to God, and what God means to you. I don’t believe that any padre in the American military could do as good a job of making clear the importance of human action in a metaphysical context. They give meaning to actions; if the Americans, or indeed any secular force, could call on this power they could defeat these outcasts easily, but they cannot. They have to fight this war keeping Church and State separate, though war is the crucible that brings them together; are there athiests in foxholes?

Obviously I have more thinking to do, and no typing until I have done it.

V for Reznor

NINE INCH NAILS LYRICS

The Hand That Feeds


You’re keeping in step
In the line
Got your chin held high and you feel just fine
Because you do
What you’re told
But inside your heart it is black and it’s hollow and it’s cold

Just how deep do you believe?
Will you bite the hand that feeds?
Will you chew until it bleeds?
Can you get up off your knees?
Are you brave enough to see?
Do you want to change it?

What if this whole crusade’s
A charade
And behind it all there’s a price to be paid
For the blood
On which we dine
Justified in the name of the holy and the divine

Just how deep do you believe?
Will you bite the hand that feeds?
Will you chew until it bleeds?
Can you get up off your knees?
Are you brave enough to see?
Do you want to change it?

So naive
I keep holding on to what I want to believe
I can see
But I keep holding on and on and on and on

Will you bite the hand that feeds you?
Will you stay down on your knees?