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Hello,

Blogs are a familiar feature on the internet - where users post content in an accumulating manner, with comments, and search options, etc. They facilitate expression and exploration, and via attached comments, also debate and synthesis.


Reading and
Navigating Blogs

Our blogs are quite powerful. Each writer can post, as is typically the case. Sustainers who have the option can also post, however. All Blogs appear in the blog system, and sometimes also in content boxes the top page of ZNet - and always via the left menu of the top page - and can be found via searches, etc.

Commenting on blogs follows the blogs, attached at the bottom, and blog comments, like all others, are also visible in many places that show comments including in the forum system. In addition, the entire blog system gathers content for everyone - but one can look at the accumulating content in many ways.

  • For example one can look at one writer's efforts - so one is seeing what is effectively a blog system for that one writer, or Sustainer.
  • One can also look at the content by topic, seeing blogs that are tagged as being about a certain topic - or place, as well. Thus, when doing that, it is a blog system about a topic, or a place, with many contributors.
  • One can look at only writer blogs, or only sustainer blogs, as well.
  • One can look at blogs for particular Groups, too.

All this is easily done using the left menu. Searches allow even more variables and refinements.


Creating Blog Posts

If you are a Sustainer with permission, and are logged in, you will see a link in the left menu for you to post a blog - and you can use that to post one, and then tag it various ways (such as with a topic or place, or a group tag), and once you do, it is in the system with you as the author.

You can also use the console button to the left to post a blog - anytime and from anywhere in the site, as long as you are logged in.

Meanwhile, enjoy the blogs - and, by the way, if you are a Free Member or a Sustainer with a ZSpace page, of course you can put one or more content boxes on it, pulling blog links of any sort you may want to filter for, for example, by you or by your friends or by others - and by topic, about places, for groups, etc.

Blogs

Occupy_iowa_city_rally

Paul Street's Blog

Web Address: http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/paulstreet
Bio:         Paul Street is an independent radical-democratic policy researcher, journalist, historian, and speaker based in Iowa City, Iowa, and Chicago, Illinois.&nbs... (More)

All Street Blogs

Ghettoizing Iraq

By Paul Street at May 22, 2006


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According to the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and other agents of imperial United States "democracy promotion," the development of a strong middle-class is a leading social-historical condition for "modern" (bourgeois) representative government and proper (corporate-dominated and business friendly) societal formation in "developing nations." The "failed states" and "broken societies" of the world, U.S. ideologists claim, owe their futility and fractures largely to the absence within their boundaries of firmly rooted and growing middle-classes. Inside the supposedly successful and non-fractured U.S., it is often claimed, flight of the same socioeconomic "anchor" (middle) class from the inner city is a defining aspect of the contemporary post-Civil Rights ghetto, with its "pathological" and "self-sabotaging" "underclass." How interesting, then, to learn on the front page of last Friday's New York Times (see below for the full article, pasted in) that Washington's criminal occupation of Iraq has initiated a process of social, economic, civil, and political disintegration so severe that a large number of the invaded nation's bourgeois and professional families are beginning an "exodus" from Mesopotamia. It's time, these families say, to "get out." They've "seen enough" of the glorious consequences of "Operation Iraqi Freedom." U.S. policy in the Middle East has always been all about oil and has therefore been even less about "modernizing" middle-class formation and "democracy" advancement than in other parts of the world. But the longstanding U.S. project of ghettoizing Iraq is apparently moving into a new stage as record numbers of the nation's middle-class people are concluding that the time has come to take their skills, capital, personal belongings and families to a safer national neighborhood. Another great victory for freedom and democracy projection, courtesy of the "the beacon to the world of the way life should be" ---- as U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson [R-Texas] once modestly described the U.S. For some indication of why I say "supposedly," see my following articles: "The Economy is Doing Fine, It's Just the People Who Aren't: Toward a Social Democratic Alternative to the Leading Indexes of Economic and Cultural Indicators," Z Magazine; "The Repair of Broken Societies Begins at Home" (and here) and "Mirror, Mirror". See also the last chapter of Noam Chomsky's latest book Failed Societies. BTW "democracy promotion" should be translated to mean "POLYARCHY promotion." See W.T Robinson, Promoting Polyarchy: Globalization, US Intervention, and Hegemony. --- Here's the Times article in question: May 19, 2006 As Death Stalks Iraq, Middle-Class Exodus Begins By SABRINA TAVERNISE BAGHDAD, Iraq, May 18 — Deaths run like water through the life of the Bahjat family. Four neighbors. A barber. Three grocers. Two men who ran a currency exchange shop. But when six armed men stormed into their sons' primary school this month, shot a guard dead, and left fliers ordering it to close, Assad Bahjat knew it was time to leave. "The main thing now is to just get out of Iraq," said Mr. Bahjat, standing in a room heaped with suitcases and bedroom furniture in eastern Baghdad. In the latest indication of the crushing hardships weighing on the lives of Iraqis, increasing portions of the middle class seem to be doing everything they can to leave the country. In the last 10 months, the state has issued new passports to 1.85 million Iraqis, 7 percent of the population and a quarter of the country's estimated middle class. The school system offers another clue: Since 2004, the Ministry of Education has issued 39,554 letters permitting parents to take their children's academic records abroad. The number of such letters issued in 2005 was double that in 2004, according to the director of the ministry's examination department. Iraqi officials and international organizations put the number of Iraqis in Jordan at close to a million. Syrian cities also have growing Iraqi populations. Since the bombing of a shrine in Samarra in February touched off a sectarian rampage, crime and killing have spread further through Iraqi society, paralyzing neighborhoods and smashing families. Now, on the brink of a new, permanent government, Iraqis are expressing the darkest view of their future in three years. "We're like sheep at a slaughter farm," said a businessman, who is arranging a move to Jordan. "We are just waiting for our time." The Samarra bombing produced a new kind of sectarian violence. Gangs of Shiites in Baghdad pulled Sunni Arabs out of houses and mosques and killed them in a spree that prompted retaliatory attacks and displaced 14,500 families in three months, according to the Ministry for Migration. Most frightening, many middle-class Iraqis say, was how little the government did to stop the violence. That failure boded ominously for the future, leaving them feeling that the government was incapable of protecting them and more darkly, that perhaps it helped in the killing. Shiite-dominated government forces have been accused of carrying out sectarian killings. "Now I am isolated," said Monkath Abdul Razzaq, a middle-class Sunni Arab, who decided to leave after the bombing. "I have no government. I have no protection from the government. Anyone can come to my house, take me, kill me and throw me in the trash." Traces of the leaving are sprinkled throughout daily life. Mr. Abdul Razzaq, who will move his family to Syria next month, where he has already rented an apartment, said a fistfight broke out while he waited for five hours in a packed passport office to fill out applications for his two young sons. In Salheyah, a commercial district in central Baghdad, bus companies that specialize in Syria and Jordan say ticket sales have surged. Karim al-Ani, the owner of one of the firms, Tiger Company, said a busy day last year used to be three buses, but in recent months it comes close to 10. "Before it was more tourists," he said. "Now we are taking everything, even furniture." The impact can be seen in neighborhoods here. While much of the city bustles during daytime hours, the more war-torn areas, like in the south and in Ameriya, Ghazaliya, and Khadra in the west, are eerily empty at midday. On Mr. Bahjat's block in Dawra, only about 5 houses out of 40 remain occupied. Empty houses in the area are scrawled with the words "Omar Brigade," a Sunni group that kills Shiites. Residents have been known to protest, at least on paper. In an act of helpless fury this winter, a large banner hung across a house in Dawra that read, "Do God and Islam agree that I should leave my house to live in a camp with my five children and wife?" "Shadows," said Eileen Bahjat, Mr. Bahjat's wife, standing with her two sons and describing what is left in the neighborhood. "Shadows and killing." In Dawra, one of the worst areas in all of Baghdad, public life has ground to a halt. Four teachers have been killed in the past 10 days in Mr. Bahjat's area alone, and the Ahmed al-Waily primary school where the Bahjat boys, ages 12 and 8, studied, may not be able to hold final exams because of the killings. And three teachers from the Batoul secondary school were shot in late April. Trash is collected only sporadically. On April 3, insurgents shot seven garbage collectors to death near their truck, and their bodies lay in the area for eight hours before the authorities could collect them, said Naeem al-Kaabi, deputy mayor for municipal affairs in Baghdad. In all, 312 trash workers have been killed in Baghdad in the past six months. "Sunnis, Shiites, Christians," said Mr. Bahjat, a Christian who this month moved his family to New Baghdad, an eastern suburb, to live with a relative, before leaving for Syria. "They just want to empty this place of all people." "We must start from zero," he said. "Maybe under zero. But there is no other choice. Even with more time, the security will not improve." It is more than just the killing that has sapped hope for the future. Iraqis have waited for five months for a permanent government, after voting in a national election in December, and though political leaders are on the brink of announcing it, some Iraqis say the amount of haggling it took to form it makes them skeptical that it will be able to solve bigger problems. Abd al-Kareem al-Mahamedawy, a tribal sheik from Amara in southern Iraq who fought for years against Saddam Hussein, compared the process to "giving birth to a deformed child." As if to underscore the point, a scene of sorrow unfolded just outside Mr. Mahamedawy's gate, where an extended family gathered, full of nervous movement, and absorbed the news of the strangling death of their 13-year-old boy by kidnappers. A woman brought her hands to her head in the timeworn motion of mourning. Even with the resolve to leave, many departing Iraqis said they consider the move only temporary and hope to return if Iraq's fractious groups are united and stem the tide of the killings. Cars and furniture are sold, but those who can afford it, like the Abdul Razzaq family, hang on to their properties. In Khadra in western Baghdad, Nesma Abdul Razzaq, Mr. Abdul Razzaq's wife, has spent the past months carefully wrapping their photographs, vases and furniture in cloth and packing them in boxes. She spoke of the sadness of the empty rooms and the pain of having to build a new life in a strange place. "I have a rage inside myself," Mrs. Abdul Razzaq said by telephone, as her area, since last autumn, has become unsafe for a Western reporter to visit. "I feel desperate." "I don't want to leave Iraq. But I have to for the kids. They have seen enough." In a quiet block in Mansour, a wealthy neighborhood in central Baghdad, where stately, gated homes are lined with pruned hedges, the Kubba family spends most of its time indoors. They have hung onto their lifestyle: three of their children study violin, flute, and ballet in an arts school outside the neighborhood despite encroaching violence. Last fall, a foul smell led neighbors to the bodies of seven family members in a house several doors down from the Kubbas. They had been robbed. Fehed Kubba, 15, went to buy bread last year and saw a crowd near the bakery that he assumed was watching a backgammon game. When he pushed in to look, he saw a man who had just been shot to death. But it was the increasingly sectarian nature of the violence, deeply painful to Iraqis who are proud of their intermarried heritage, that tipped the scales as Falah Kubba and his wife, Samira, considered leaving with Fehed, Roula, 13, and Heya, 12. "The past few months convinced us," said Mr. Kubba, a businessman whose wife is Sunni. "Now they are killing by ID's. The killing around Americans was something different, but the ID's, you can't move around on the streets." "At the beginning we said, 'Let's wait, maybe it will be better tomorrow,' " Mr. Kubba said. "Now I know it is time to go." Mona Mahmoud, Sahar Nageeb and Qais Mizher contributed reporting for this article.
Person

Considering the quantity

By Kissenger, Clark at May 30, 2006 10:07 AM

Considering the quantity and quality of a lot of the pre-April 2006 comment here and the linkages provided to interesting alternative sources of information and interpretation, I just find that a great pity.

Hi Kevin,

I agree some of the posters here give brilliant comments but I ain't sure the comments and linkage are lost ..are they lost?

Another question that would rise is : if the comments and linkage
aren't lost; will it be possible to fix it ?

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Person

Reply to Cyrano

By Kissenger, Clark at May 30, 2006 09:29 AM

(Posted by Kelvin Yearwood, just in case I remain 'Anonymous'.

Cyrano, the last thing I want to get into is a bitching contest with Justin Podur over znet software and effects here. It was just an innocent observation, that there have been login, login attribution, and radical reduction in comment problems for the last two months.

Considering the quantity and quality of a lot of the pre-April 2006 comment here and the linkages provided to interesting alternative sources of information and interpretation, I just find that a great pity. Clearly the politics of software is not the only consideration when going ahead and changing a website.

BTW I've been away from the computers for a while because I've been showing my young sister and neice the sites of Bristol here in the South West of England.

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Person

re: kelvin

By Kissenger, Clark at May 28, 2006 19:44 PM

Messieurs, desolé, I can't find kelvin email address.. Victor updating functionality to a web site while it is "live" is rarely a bad decision; there is many web sites being updated from crash that close for few days and end up having more bugs than the znet bugs " we users" have faced. My following comments may appear "kiss ass " to you, but tarek is a rather fearless and speedy programmer; just look at the new features of this blog.. I am very much sure that tarek send god to sleep in the morning before he start programming; victor, the decision to update while live was not bad itself. Where is Mr Yearwood?

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Person

Re : Kelvin

By Kissenger, Clark at May 28, 2006 19:15 PM

I think I may have kelvin email somewhere..I am going to verify whom is who, this sure does not look like a post he would had done..

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Person

Reply to Victor

By Kissenger, Clark at May 28, 2006 15:38 PM

Victor: Sorry that I don't know you. But the following sentence from your recent post hits the nail on its head about as squarely as one can ("Kelvin (Anonymous x n)"):

Whoever made the decision to use a live site as a test stage made the wrong decision....

Imagine what it shows us about the people who undertook this decision.  In the real world, that is.  Not in the public-relations version of it.

 

 

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Person

hyperlink

By Kissenger, Clark at May 28, 2006 01:52 AM

Hi, Paul You may take a look here . Hope this helps. You can aslo click on "source code", "page source" or something like that under "view"(depending on your browser)on the tool bar to see the encoding of the document you're reading. So you can just copy the format to make your links. For example, you can figure out how cyrano made his stylish links by looking at the sources of his post.

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Person

re-edit..

By Kissenger, Clark at May 27, 2006 19:20 PM

In theory bloggers should not have more than 3 minutes to re-edit posts containing faulty grammar.. if a poster decide to change the nature of a post, it could become difficult to "know whatever was originally said in the post.. should I make a request for a time limit for the sake of protecting the truthfulness of the posts?

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Person

ok paul..

By Kissenger, Clark at May 27, 2006 19:05 PM

paul are you using windows or a mac ? - click enable rich-text below the type input field - type the desired post into the field - select a part of text with your curser - click the chain link button - input the desired link or url, in the new field - choose link open new window from the class pull-down menu and choose class links from pull-down menus like this " This is Paul Street reporting on the earthquake of indonesia

news: palestinians are now called gazans , may be as an attempt to minimizes the number of crimes against palestinians..

and Hamas people do not appear to be elected palestinians they are
reduced at beingmillitants or targets

Voilà monsieur, vous voyez bien? c'est vraiment façile.. note when making links and choosing what class of link, if you choose something else like sticky you get a different highlight for your link

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Person

HTML for Paul

By Kissenger, Clark at May 27, 2006 16:54 PM

Paul, you can try this... http://tinyurl.com/ax7sc (let's see if this works: Link for Paul...) Hope it helps. I have no trouble doing hyperlinks and other html at other comment boards, never had problems on the old Z blogs, but I simply can't figure them out here. But that link is pretty simply stated how to do it under normal conditions.

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Person

hyperlink

By Kissenger, Clark at May 27, 2006 15:33 PM

Say can anyone out there pass on some basic information (either direct or a link) on how to do hyperlinks? I mean something that explains it to me like I was a 9 year old (real basic); I have next to no idea what Tarek said above and am being told to do hyperlinks.

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Person

re: kelvin

By Kissenger, Clark at May 27, 2006 09:28 AM

Victor this site has improved, I had difficulty to log my user name in the beginning, I remedied by requesting another one.. I wonder how many user did not come back because unable to log-in.. who is missing ?

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Person

Kelvin (Anonymous x n)

By Kissenger, Clark at May 27, 2006 03:50 AM

Good to hear from another Anonymous again. May I suggest that you use your marvelous powers of activism and get this site straightened out and useable again? And Tarek, I don't see anything in your postings about the performance of this site over the last few moinths that would even suggest anything is amiss. If there were such a thing as reality pills, I wouild suggest you take one or two. And cyrano. I ALWAYS enjoy immensely your posts, but to imply that there are more important things to comment on than this site's flaws is perhaps a little over the top? A site's performance can very quickly attract or detract folks from participating. I think it is apparent that over the last few months while this site was being delivered "untested" into our hands (the "coalition of unwilling testers") participation has dropped dramatically. Whoever made the decision to use a live site as a test stage made the wrong decision, in my opinion. Many of those who participated may never return. So no, with all due respect to you, I DO think that we have reason to complain.

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Person

ghettoing Iraq

By Kissenger, Clark at May 25, 2006 22:21 PM

Paul , ghettoing seem to be the plan..

propaganda

I am inclined to tell this guy to desert... should I ?

 

more unbelievable propaganda

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Person

this could cause nausea..

By Kissenger, Clark at May 25, 2006 22:02 PM

Bush and Blair went for a photo op... about 150 pictures nausea in great measures

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Person

kelvin yearwood.

By Kissenger, Clark at May 25, 2006 16:32 PM

This can not be kelvin yearwood, kelvin yearwood would have better thing to do than complaining about a temporary declinein posts..Let's be serious..cyrano

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Person

Znet blog comment decline

By Kissenger, Clark at May 25, 2006 08:21 AM

Thanks Paul for getting back to me re. my comment 'The Civil Society Lie'.

My blog comment title is my name - Kelvin Yearwood - so I don't know whether it was because I forgot to log in properly, or I've just been incorporated under the title of 'anonymous'... Either way, I will get onto znet and tell them about this specifically and, generally, about how disappointed I am by the decline of vibrant blogging and comment here in the last 2 months.

 

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Person

Actually, the program appears to work as advertised

By Kissenger, Clark at May 25, 2006 01:18 AM

Hey all! TinyMCE does not today support KHTML (Konqueror) at all, and only supports Safari 2.0 and above (and at that not great yet). However it does support Firefox and IE very well. In this case, the program works as it was intended, interpreting what you type as text. The majority of people today do not know HTML or HTML codes such as <a href="whatnot">appear</a>. The purpose of using a 'rich text editor' such as TinyMCE is so that people can do "WYSIWYG" editing. If you wish to make a link, I propose one of the two following methods: 1. The WYSIWYG way: Highlight the text you want to make into a link and click the Chain icon ("Insert/Edit link"). You can then fill in the information as desired. 2. The Old-School way: click on 'disable rich-text' beneath the textbox, and hand-code away! If you have any issues, please feel free to report bugs (just hit 'submit new') or submit feature requests. The ultimate goal is to make the site robust and usable by all, so you would be helping all those who come next : ) tarek : )

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Person

link bug

By Kissenger, Clark at May 24, 2006 22:31 PM

Anonymous, there is no bug.. Its just that safari is not supported ..regardless, mozilla and firefox work like marvels.. see compatibility chart

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Person

Link bug

By Kissenger, Clark at May 24, 2006 11:02 AM

I can't propose a proper programming solution, but if hyperlinks don't work (they don't for me), consider using tinyurl.com for long links. Cleans up the text and reduces the chances of broken links.

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Person

test

By Kissenger, Clark at May 24, 2006 10:38 AM

Me notice rich text bug

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Person

strange..

By Kissenger, Clark at May 23, 2006 23:21 PM

oops.. Achar

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Person

same link above :

By Kissenger, Clark at May 23, 2006 22:57 PM

 Paul  same link you specified: Achar ------ this come as news for me, I am aware iraqis are dying but I was unaware Iraqis were leaving the country

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Person

Source I meant to cite: Achcar's Clash of Barbarisms

By Kissenger, Clark at May 23, 2006 12:46 PM

Anonymous, absolutely right in my opinion. An excellent source on how particularly disinterested U.S. policy is in the development of civil society (with middle class formation and all the rest) when the region in question is oil-rich is Gilbert Achcar, The Clash of Barbarisms: September 11 and the Making of the New World Disorder (New York, NY: Monthly Review, 2002). There's a section or to dedicated to an elegant Marxian analysis of this very topic, quite well done. Achcar: The Clash of Barbarisms: September 11 and the Making of the New World Disorder

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Person

The Civil Society Lie

By Kissenger, Clark at May 23, 2006 08:58 AM

The UK Channel 4 dispatches program, presented by an Iraqi doctor, gave UK viewers a living example of middle class exodus from Iraq. The Iraqi doctor, following a destructive invasion of his domestic space by US forces, and experiences in a country and health system both in terminal disintegration, felt his family needed to be safe and away from Iraq. And of course it is the middle-classes who can afford this flight best.

Clearly the US and UK administrations know this; are familiar with this factor in embattled countries.

So, then we have to re-think Bush/Blairite opportunistic statements concerning the development of civil society in non-Western countries with valuable resources. Stalin was well aware, within the Soviet Union, of the dangers of the educated, professional classes, the challenges they might pose, their expert cultural capital might pose, in regard to power and independence. Domestically this is difficult, though not entirely impractical for the US and UK administrations, but I think we have to accept that in a colonised oil-rich country such as Iraq, the US and UK talk of development of civil society - with its potential threats to Iraq's status as a protectorate of the US for the benefit of Anglo-American oil corporations - is merely part of the empty rhetoric of bringing democracy and freedom to the rest of the world.

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