Nasrin Alavi in Open Democracy writes: "Iranian society is no longer what it was 30 years ago. Those who once believed no longer do; those who still claim to believe have no credibility; those who never believed have no reason to."
Yet such things are trivial compared to what the internet is doing to our confidence. The internet has created a global psyche. The web has mentally joined us at the hip, so we can no longer put our heads in the sand. If that sounds painfully contorted, it is because it is. Just as no country can decouple itself from the ailing global economy, none of us as individuals can decouple ourselves from the ailing global psyche.
The monument was a response by Slyvia Pankhurst and the sculptor Eric Benfield and is now in danger of being moved due to new building proposals.:: About the monument, the sculptor and Slyvia Pankhurst Open Democracy and Patrick Wright.
Anti-racist British Greens who understand and fight contemporary antisemitism
The politics of ME ME ME, and Daniel Gavron on Israeli-Palestinian coexistence, cooperation, partnership
Web Debate as Self-Obsessed Point-Scoring
Internet | The problem with much Internet debate: “What is striking is that few of the comments really engage with the piece they are supposedly commenting on. Instead, most commentators just engage with each other, often with a viciousness that takes your breath away.” It’s narrow, insular point-scoring rather than a reflective exchange of ideas that might inform a wider audience, an essay says. [Open Democracy]
Russia says it has started pulling back from Georgian soil, but there are few if any signs that it means business. Therefore, the war is not over yet. Despite this, Neal Ascherson and Ivan Krastev have on openDemocracy already started taking stock of the possible results of the war. I will join them in these attempts - though all of us should understand that while Russia continues trying to change the situation on the ground through military means, any such assessments can only be rather tentative.
Tatyana Kosinova, the branch’s founder, wrote on OpenDemocracy.com that she didn’t know what had prompted the raid, but that four of the disks they took contained an archive meant to provide the basis for a “Virtual Gulag Museum”.
Feeling I hadn’t been convincing, I turned it back to him. Don’t you think so, I asked? “Mozhet byt,” he said. Perhaps. And that was as far as we could go.
The political tensions of the Caucasus are reflected on the ground in a range of obstacles - from roadblocks and closed markets to polarized attitudes, Thomas de Waal writes for openDemocracy.
Qatar: Building the nation
Posted on 12 January 2009
From Opendemocracy.net: Qatar propped up by a sovereign wealth fund in excess of $50bn worth of assets, a predominant gas-exporting over oil-exporting industry, and forecasts that show the break-even oil price per barrel that will balance its budget at $38, looks reasonably likely to weather the storm and sustain its inflow of working migrants.
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Make your placards now.
OK - I've borrowed my title from Mike Butcher's article on Techcrunch. He is proposing a public rally against web censorship and snooping. I plan to be there. I've also booked my place at The Convention on Modern Liberty. The site says it plainly...