Tribes of Amazon Find an Ally Out of ‘Avatar’

NY Times: In the 15 years since he wrote the script for “Avatar,” his epic tale of greed versus nature, Mr. Cameron said, he had become an avid environmentalist. But he said that until his trip to the Brazilian Amazon last month, his advocacy was mostly limited to the environmentally responsible way he tried to live his life: solar and wind energy power helped him to know more about solar electricity storage and his Santa Barbara home, he said, and he and his wife drive hybrid vehicles and do their own organic gardening. “Avatar” — and its nearly $2.7 billion in global tickets sales — has changed all that, flooding Mr. Cameron with kudos for helping to “emotionalize” environmental issues and pleas to get more involved. Now, Mr. Cameron said, he has been spurred to action, to speak out against the looming environmental destruction endangering indigenous groups around the world — a cause that is fueling his inner rage and inspiring his work on an “Avatar” sequel. “Any direct experience that I have with indigenous peoples and their plights may feed into the nature of the story I choose to tell,” he said. “In fact, it almost certainly will.” Referring to his Amazon trip, he added, “It just makes me madder.”

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Trailer: “The Expendables”

There doesn’t seem to be much in terms of storyline but considering the cast, it is most definitely an ode to the 80s action stars. Consider the line up:

Sylvester Stallone
Jason Statham
Jet Li
Dolph Lundgren
Randy Couture
Terry Crews
Mickey Rourke
Eric Roberts
Steve Austin
Bruce Willis
Arnold Schwarzenegger

Needless to say, mindless action with the above is most enticing. It hits threatres on August 13. See the trailer here.

Posted in Film, Trailers | 4 Comments

“The Persian Version” of Jersey Shore

I don’t think the producers know what they’re getting themselves into. They are going to get flooded by hundreds of thousands of chest-shaving, eye-brow plucking, momma’s-boy Iranians who will fulfill every stereotype and then more. This is going to be hilariously embarrassing! “The producers who made Jersey Shore are now working on literally-named spin-off The Persian Version. This is in addition to the Asian version in L.A. and the Russian version in Brighton Beach. Reality television: 21C minstrel shows? ‘Hollywood nightlife and own Beverly Hills. ‘Its time to show the world that being Persian-American is a celebration of the American dream’ says Doron Ofir Executive Casting Director. So if you are at least 21 years old, appear younger than thirty and are outrageous, outspoken and a proud Persian-American, then Doron Ofir Casting and 495 Productions, the team who brought you Jersey Shore, are looking for you!”

Posted in Entertainment, Iranian Identity | 1 Comment

Hichkas – Ye Rooze Khoob Miad (and the origins of rap)

This is by far one of the best Persian rap songs I’ve heard (thanx Milad).  I should tell you that I am one of those who thinks that mainstream rap is dead, DEAD. Most commercial rappers today rap about nothing. Actually, they wrap about something worse than nothing – promoting all sorts of distractions that take attention away from real issues plaguing our country and world today – a betrayal of the origins of rap. Rap used to be revolutionary, but now it’s part of the problem. Unfortunately, a lot of Persian rappers today have emulated not the pioneers of rap but the fools destroying the art today. Hichkas, however, in his new song “Ye Rooze Khoob Miad” reminds us that some still stay true to the foundations of rap – foundations whereby people use an innovative art form to bring attention to society’s ills and larger issues as a whole. And yes, the last part of the song is a clip from a Shariati speech, which should also serve as a reminder that although he died in 1977, Dr. Shariati continues to be relevant, thankfully.

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Double Standards: Comparing US Rhetoric Towards Iran and Egypt

[To my Iranian brothers and sisters who think that America supports the pro-democracy movement in Iran because of its principles: Here we have Egyptian authorities beating down pro-democracy activists and the journalists covering their demonstration in Cairo. You will not hear a peep from Congress, the White House, or DC for that matter. The reasoning is simple: if you’re a dictatorship, even a ruthless dictatorship, but in tune with US foreign policy and good for American business interests, then we won’t interfere in your dictatorship, i.e. the Egyptian regime. But if you’re a government that opposes our meddling in your region and closes off your markets to our business interests, then we’ll oppose you using any and all methods at our disposal – all under the cover of democracy.]

BBC: Baton-wielding Egyptian police have broken up a pro-democracy demonstration in Cairo. Riot police beat and dragged protestors away from outside the upper house of Parliament, put them in trucks and took dozens away. Demonstrations are illegal under Egypt’s stern “emergency laws”, which have been in place for 30 years. The protesters were calling for a change to the constitution that they say would make elections more fair. The demonstration was called by the 6 April youth movement, which backs the presidential candidacy of Mohamed ElBaradei, the former head of the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog. “It’s an insulting image for Egypt,” opposition politician Ayman Nour told reporters. “Hundreds of soldiers are denying the right of a few dozen civilians trying to express their desire to amend the constitution.” Mr ElBaradei was not at the demonstration but he has said he would run in elections planned for next year if there were changes made to the constitution allowing fairer polls. Opposition parties are in effect banned by the government’s use of the tight restrictions on the political process in the Egyptian constitution. Journalists covering the protest were also beaten with police batons, and photographers’ cameras confiscated.

Posted in Iran, US Foreign Policy, US-Iran Relations | 5 Comments

Rapper LowKey Speaks…

I don’t know if this is freestyle, but whatever it is, it’s good. I think I’ve watch this clip a dozen times in the past few days. It was posted in August of ’07 back when the Bush Regime was still running amok domestically and internationally so the clip is a bit dated but still very good and relevant. Oh and my friend Milad recently sent me a Hichkas song that I hadn’t heard yet, and it’s amazing. I’ll post it here soon. Stay tuned for more frequent updates (I’m still euphoric about getting my blog restored!)

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Debate Over Israel Divestment Bill Continues

Berkeley’s ASUC president may have vetoed the senate’s divestment bill, but the struggle continues: “ASUC President Will Smelko vetoed a bill Wednesday-passed by a 16-4 vote in the senate a week before-that called for the ASUC and UC to divest from General Electric and United Technologies because the companies, according to the bill, provide Israel with the technology used to attack civilian populations in Lebanon, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. While some senators said they will seek to override the veto with a two-thirds majority vote, other senators are reconsidering their support for the bill. A possible senate vote to override the veto will likely not take place until on or after April 14. The bill had drawn national attention, spurring more than 2,000 e-mails to senators from proponents and opponents worldwide. Some senators said the additional input may lead them to vote against overriding the veto.”

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Up and Running Again

My blog is up and running again, thankfully. My father spearheaded the campaign to restore the site, so big thanx to him! When we got the site up without all the posts, I began to freak out. This site is sort of a database for me. I often post here things that I know may not interest you but I want them saved for future reference. So the thought of losing 3 years worth of data was fearful indeed. Anyway, to celebrate, here’s some humor: ‘160 Greatest Arnold Schwarzenegger Quotes.’ To quote the man, ‘stick around.’

Posted in Humor, iPouya | Comments Off on Up and Running Again

ASUC President Smelko Vetoes Divestment Bill

He will be voted out of office, I promise, and then they’ll vote for the bill again: ASUC President Will Smelko vetoed a bill Wednesday that called for the University of California to divest from companies that have provided war supplies to Israel.The bill states that United Technologies and General Electric are supplying Israel with the technology necessary to attack civilian populations in Lebanon, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. While the bill passed the ASUC Senate last week by a 16-4 vote that followed four hours of discussion and about 80 speakers, Smelko said in a veto statement that the bill did not adequately outline an effective divestment strategy or address possible effects on UC and ASUC finances and “the perception of the bill as a symbolic attack on a specific community of our fellow students.”

“While the ASUC as a body has stated convincingly that it does not want ASUC and UC dollars going to fund weapons, war crimes, or human rights violations, this veto has to do with the mechanism by which the ASUC achieves its mission of building peace and goodwill in a way that avoids the shortcomings of the bill (such as a) … selective, one-sided focus on a specific country that lacks important historical context and understanding,” Smelko said in the statement.

Posted in UC Berkeley | 1 Comment

Rapper LowKey

I recently discovered this underground rapper and I must say, I’m glad to have done so. Actually, I didn’t really discover him per se, but rather someone posted one of his music videos on my blog’s comments section, which reminded me of the value of the blog. Sometimes I’m entirely tired of having this blog and at other times, I learn and get introduced to things through it (and through you) that I would not have otherwise have exposure to. Anyway, I’m going to begin posting his music videos. Here’s his “Long Live Palestine” music video. Here’s another video of the same song. Read his wikipedia profile here. FYI, he’s half-Iraqi, half-British not that really matters.

Posted in Music, Palestine, Rap | Comments Off on Rapper LowKey

Fiance of slain Iran protestor meets Peres in Israel trip

Ha’aretz: The fiance of the Neda Soltan, a 27-year-old Iranian woman shot dead during protests in in Tehran, met with President Shimon Peres on Monday during a visit to Israel. “I came to Israel as an ambassador of the Iranian people, as a messenger from the camp of peace,” said Caspian Makin.

Posted in Iran, The Conflict | 3 Comments

UC Berkeley student senate votes in favor of divestment

[The divestment campaign was first launched at UC Berkeley when I was an undergraduate there. It took a long time, but the activists at Students for Justice in Palestine finally did it.]

Early yesterday morning, the University of California Berkeley Student Senate (ASUC) passed a bill to divest from companies that provide military support for the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Debate began the night before at 9:00pm and ended and six hours later when the vote was held at 3:00am. The session was attended by more than 150 students, educators and concerned community supporters, forcing the meeting to be relocated to a larger room. Never before has the senate chambers been so overcrowded, signifying the importance and interest in the issue of Israel-Palestine on the Berkeley campus. Ultimately, the bill passed with 16 senators in favor and 4 against.

During the debate, Rahul Patel, a Student Senator and supporter of the bill from the beginning, said that “In the 1980s the Berkeley Student Government was a central actor in demanding that the university divest from South African apartheid. Twenty-five years later, it is a key figure in shaping a nationwide movement against occupation and war crimes around the world.” He added that “Student Government can be a space to mobilize and make decisions that have a significant impact on the international community. We must utilize these spaces to engage each other about issues of justice worldwide.”

Emiliano Huet-Vaughn, a Ph.D. student in economics, co-author of the bill and a member of Berkeley’s Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), went to Gaza last July. He explained that the bill was informed by the devastation he witnessed as a result of Israel’s invasion of Gaza last winter, where civilian infrastructure was systematically targeted including schools, mosques, the education and justice ministries, Gaza’s main university, hundreds of factories, livestock, prisons, courts and police stations. Israel’s invasion resulted in the deaths of 1,440 Palestinians, including more than 400 children, and injuring another 5,380 Palestinians in Gaza.

The bill specifies two companies in particular, United Technologies and General Electric. It draws a direct connection between Berkeley’s investments in these companies and their products, used to indiscriminately attack civilians and infrastructure. Shoaib Kamil, a Ph.D. student in Computer Science explained that “We are not pushing for divestment from Israel. This bill is directed at US companies that enable attacks described as ‘war crimes’ in the Goldstone report.”

The Goldstone commission and report, led by respected South African judge Richard Goldstone, was authorized by the United Nations to investigate accusations of war crimes during Israel’s invasion of Gaza. The final report, submitted to the UN Human Rights Council last September, found that both Israel and Hamas committed war crimes and called for both to conduct investigations. However, the Goldstone report was particularly critical of Israel’s actions, especially the deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure by the Israeli military.

The ASUC has control over their $1.7 million budget and the bill calls for a committee to investigate the investments by the ASUC and the University of California Regents to ensure that no monies are invested in companies that are complicit in war crimes. Divestment will likely be implemented first by the ASUC. However, getting the Regents to recognize and implement the students’ call will be a more difficult task because students have little representation in the Regents’ decisions.

Ibrahim Shikaki, a Visiting Scholar from Palestine, spoke in favor of the bill although he did not feel that it was written from the Palestinian perspective. Shikaki explained that “If this were a Palestinian bill it would have mentioned my grandfather’s land that was stolen from him, or my friend who was shot ten feet in front of me … or my aunt who for weeks was denied travel to Egypt for cancer treatment.”

Mahaliyah Ayla O, a gender and women’s studies major and Jewish member of SJP, voiced her surprise after the bill was passed. Ayla O said “It is not that complicated, we should not support corporations that manufacture weapons to oppress people.”

Last year, the ASUC passed a bill establishing a sisterhood relationship between UC Berkeley and the three universities in Gaza: Al-Aqsa University, Al-Azhar University and the Islamic University of Gaza. With the passage of this divestment bill, Berkeley students are taking a stand against Israel’s human rights violations and war crimes and continue Berkeley’s commitment to being on the vanguard of student activism. In 1986, UC Berkeley was one of the first universities to call for a comprehensive divestment from companies that traded with or had operations in apartheid South Africa.

Dina Omar is a UC Berkeley alumni and a member of Students for Justice in Palestine. She currently works as the Membership Coordinator for the Arab Resource and Organizing Center.

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Is The Bible More Violent Than The Quran?

NPR – Excerpt: “‘Much to my surprise, the Islamic scriptures in the Quran were actually far less bloody and less violent than those in the Bible,’ Jenkins says. Jenkins is a professor at Penn State University and author of two books dealing with the issue: the recently published Jesus Wars, and Dark Passages , which has not been published but is already drawing controversy. Violence in the Quran, he and others say, is largely a defense against attack. ‘By the standards of the time, which is the 7th century A.D., the laws of war that are laid down by the Quran are actually reasonably humane,’ he says. ‘Then we turn to the Bible, and we actually find something that is for many people a real surprise. There is a specific kind of warfare laid down in the Bible which we can only call genocide.’ It is called herem, and it means total annihilation. Consider the Book of 1 Samuel, when God instructs King Saul to attack the Amalekites: ‘And utterly destroy all that they have, and do not spare them,’ God says through the prophet Samuel. ‘But kill both man and woman, infant and nursing child, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.’ When Saul failed to do that, God took away his kingdom. ‘In other words,” Jenkins says, “Saul has committed a dreadful sin by failing to complete genocide. And that passage echoes through Christian history. It is often used, for example, in American stories of the confrontation with Indians — not just is it legitimate to kill Indians, but you are violating God’s law if you do not.’

Posted in Islam | 2 Comments

Rafsanjani Closes Ranks

Foreign Policy Magazine – Excerpt: “In exchange for Rafsanjani’s loyalty, the supreme leader appears to have given him power over a new bill that will establish a National Elections Commission to reform the electoral process. Not only is this issue at the heart of Iran’s political crisis, but the commission would also determine the eligibility of individuals to stand as candidates in elections. And the Expediency Council, which monitors legislation and is responsible for any conflicts that might result over Iranian laws, will also decide the members who serve on the National Elections Commission. This significant change in the elections process will greatly reduce the power of the Guardian Council, a body of six hard-line clerics and six jurists appointed by Khamenei. Historically, this Guardian Council has banned many reformist candidates from running in elections, thus ensuring conservative control even in the face of growing public discontent. The guardians were also charged with hearing complaints about election fraud and complaints from banned candidates contesting their exclusion. Now, the National Elections Commission will hold some of these responsibilities.”

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NIAC: House Passes Historic Norooz Resolution

NIAC – Excerpt: “The National Iranian American Council applauds the passage moments ago by the House of Representatives of H.Res.267, the Norooz Resolution, and commends Representative Mike Honda (D-CA) for championing this historic resolution.”

“The Norooz Resolution passed by a 384-2 vote, marking the first time in history that the House of Representatives officially recognizes the ‘cultural and historical significance’ of the Iranian New Year.  The resolution also expresses appreciation ‘for the contributions of Iranian-Americans to society in the United States’ and wishes Iranian-Americans, Iranians, and all who celebrate Norooz a happy andprosperous New Year.”

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