James Baldwin and the Jewish State

Baldwin didn’t speak often of Israel, but he still managed to say plenty

For James Baldwin, nothing started or stopped at the borders of the United States.  His comments about Black-Jewish tension in the country of his birth took on worldly dimensions, offering unusual insight into domestic race relations, international affairs, and conflict in the Middle East. 

Baldwin wasn’t a policy wonk, but, befitting a person of his stature, he commented regularly on contemporary issues of global import.  Public figures don’t normally escape questions about Palestine and Israel; Baldwin was no exception.  The few times he spoke about the region reveal a thinker of significant prescience and a skilled rhetorician who doesn’t allow audiences the luxury of comfort. 

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BDS is a Picket Line

And crossing it makes you a scab

Last week, Shadi Hamid, a scholar affiliated with the Brookings Institute, announced on Twitter that he was visiting “Israel” and the “Palestinian territories” as part of a “study tour” sponsored by the Philos Project, a Christian Zionist outfit with warlike proclivities which “believe[s] that the Jewish nation is an indigenous nation of the Middle East with a right to live in its ancient homeland.”  The announcement didn’t go over well with members of the Palestine solidarity movement. 

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Left-Rights

Random thoughts on carting around schoolchildren

Driving is a poor way to learn a place.  Walking enables a person to discern the minutia of lawn design, roadside detritus, home disrepair, fraying utilities, and domesticated wildlife.  It adjusts perception of civilized habitats.  Bicyclists become familiar with grading, pavement conditions, wind patterns, shoulder clearances, and shortcuts inaccessible to cars.  Both modes of transport provide an intimacy with physical surroundings precluded by the speed and structure of a vehicle. 

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Decolonization : Survival :: Water: Life

Why does Palestine matter to Native Americans? How can Palestinians help liberate Native America?

During the summer of 2016, thousands of people representing dozens of nations converged on the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in the American state currently known as South Dakota.  They arrived to prevent the destruction of land and water by a foreign oil company.  Energy Transfer Partners of Dallas, a regular in the Fortune 500, was constructing an underground pipeline to deliver crude oil from near the Canadian border to southern Illinois, where it would hook up with extant transport infrastructure to the Gulf of Mexico.  The convergence at Standing Rock, a nation existentially threatened by the pipeline, earned the world’s attention and became an extraordinary site of multinational organizing.  The Palestinian black, red, and green could be seen in the spectrum of colors. 

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The Problem with Apology

When should anti-Zionists apologize to apologists for Israeli war crimes?

Two Saturdays ago, I was relaxing in my pajamas while my child watched cartoons and my wife tapped at her laptop when our calm morning was interrupted by a loud, menacing knock.  I opened the door to a smiling man holding a thick manila envelope in both hands. 

“Are you Steven Salaita?” he asked. 

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Palestine in the Revolutionary Imagination

Finding Palestine among the disinherited.

Beirut’s corniche is a terrific place to contemplate the immovable and the ephemeral.  The seaside walkway is one of the city’s few remaining public spaces and the only place where servitude doesn’t divide rich and poor.  Tourists mingle among locals, many of them Syrian and Palestinian, and on lucky days entertainment will include oddball breakdancers, daredevil divers, and somebody playing an oud plugged into an amplifier.  On a nice Sunday, which in the Eastern Mediterranean is usually a weekly occurrence, crowds are so thick (with pedestrians strolling in bike lanes and bikes weaving through pedestrians) that walking briskly is impossible. 

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Impractical Living

Reflections on moving through a society acclimated to violence.

In August, 2017, I moved back to the USA after two years of living in Beirut.  I quickly sensed the tension of Donald Trump’s America, but it wasn’t especially jarring:  Donald Trump’s America is just a more explicit version of what “America” has been my entire life.  I found more jarring the constant displays of patriotism, something I never liked and was happy to forget shortly after I left the country.  (Lebanese displays of patriotism are no more comforting, but they don’t resonate the same way to a Western expat.)  After a few months, my family settled into a townhouse in one of DC’s anodyne suburbs. 

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Find Me Someone Better

A rant about the stupidity of electoral discourse in the United States.

I’ve long deployed what I consider a simple viewpoint about US elections (congressional and presidential):  if leftists choose to participate, they should do it without making certain people disposable.  In other words, don’t commit to movements that require the downtrodden anywhere in the world to remain in states of hardship or dispossession.  US electoralism, by design, assiduously elides the needs and aspirations of communities whose freedom would disrupt imperial and colonial accumulation.  Few groups are more familiar with this culture of disposability than Palestinians. 

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Absence and Dissent

No amount of charm or persuasiveness will compel reactionaries to forfeit the advantages they derive from racism.

Not a week passes without a new petition appearing in my inbox or Facebook feed urging solidarity with a scholar facing employer recrimination or harassment from rightwing culture warriors.  (“Harassment” doesn’t get at the racist, sexist, and homophobic vitriol that victims of these campaigns endure.)  The uptick in rightwing bullying many suspected would accompany a Trump presidency has come to fruition. 

Certain patterns define these harassment campaigns.  Republican operatives prowl social media for provocative comments, with the help of professional snitches and everyday informants (even if your posts are private, they are vulnerable to public consumption—watch your friends list closely).  Those operatives then repurpose the quotes with the aim of inflaming white anxieties.  The controversies almost always originate in social media, though op-ed pieces and conference programs also come in for scrutiny. 

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The ABCs of US and Israeli Propaganda

The main function of US and Israeli propaganda is to affirm the disposability of colonized people. Dissent, then, isn’t merely a pastime, but the foundation of existential clarity and economic relief.

US and Israeli propaganda diverge according to circumstance, but they share basic characteristics (and modes of delivery).  It’s easy to get sucked into the fantasy that we can make reporting and commentary more even-handed, but the propaganda model precludes that possibility.  The model is dynamic; capitalism is the only ideology it absolutely preserves.  Everything else is contingent on the needs of power.  If at any point the economic and political elite need new narratives, corporate media will make the changes. 

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