Thursday, November 13, 2008

Perfecting idiocy, yet again!

Today Bush, finally and after 5 years, apologizes for the "Mission Accomplished" banner dislayed on the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln carrier on which he arrived to Iraq Mrch, 2003 upon the invasion. He declares, and by "declare" I mean opens his mouth only to utter and emmit more of the nonesense he has developed an addiction for, that the banner and the speech that revolved around the message of the banner in 2003 was a mistake. A mistake. A simple *toot mistake! "I regret saying some things I shouldn't have said,'' Bush blabs. Well, I regret he saying things at all! There is nothing this sad excuse for a Yale graduate and US President should have said in the first place. It's interesting hearing him admitting to a numorous ammount of mistakes in the war on Iraq and not actually the war itself. What he is actually saying is that I am sorry for the way that we invaded Iraq and destroyed and looted the country but the concept still stands as sound and humane. He is sorry that the world CAUGHT him stealing rather than for committing robbery (so to speak of course).
http://news.yahoo.com/s/bloomberg/20081112/pl_bloomberg/ahlrnlvfhsmc

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Political Reversed Psychology

So Today is the US presidential elections!!! Yoooohoooooo!!! (ironic). Although I'm really interested in the elections from a cultural and social point of view, since the results will show how Americans have come to cope with racial and socio-economic issues and quandaries when it counts most. It's time for them to put their money (ballots) where their mouth has been for so long, paying lip service to political correctness concerning social and racial equity. But what's really interesting, on the political level that is, is the very recent and intense zionist analysis of the elections advantaging and preferencing Obama over McCain. Which seems to be very counter-mainstream considering the viscious attacks Obama was delivered because he is thought to be pro-Arabs and anti-Israel (very mistaken opinion if you ask me). Here is a good example of such a surprising opinion, http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3616797,00.html (I found this on Angry Arab). So anyways, I was just thinking whether it's an honest opinion or a new strategy zionists have adopted in desperate time. After all, although the mainstream opinion has coupled McCain with Israel for so long, McCain's presidential chances have been retrograding rapidly. So maybe it is this connection that is hurting McCain's chances and the American people are finally disenchanted with Israel and it's zionist cause. If that's the case, rooting for Obama right now and giving him zionist support might just do the trick and damage Obama's (big) chances and bring McCain back into the picture. They must be really desperate to resort to such a cheap reversed psychology tactic at a time like this. I, for one, think that the zionist preference of Obama might turn out to be very true and be proven correct, nomatter how unwittingly it is made.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Universal Standards of Civilization

Universal Standards of Civilization: "Outrage as cleric weds girl, 12" : So who gets to decide what's the appropriate age for a "girl" to get married? who says it's 16, or 18, or whatever? not to mention that the rates and time of physiological and psychological growth and maturity varies according to geography, climate, social traditions, etc, is it that bad for a girl to chose to satisfy her sexual curiosity and needs within marriage lock instead of going off and getting pregnant without either a husband or anything to her name? At least we know that she isn't forced to marry (since it's against Islamic Shari'a), unlike what might happen if she reaches sexual maturity and turns to the wrong person which could result in rape or something as bad. ah PLEASE! just leave it alone and try thinking about solving ILLEGAL polygamy in the US. Why is it really Illegal and why is it practiced all the same?

Joe the Plumber has shown his "color"

Joe turns out to be a Zionist Republican: "'Joe the Plumber' Backs Claim That Obama Would Bring 'Death to Israel'". So what is so exciting about that? I don't really know except that it shows how engrained and prolifirated this political, economic, and identity attachment between the Us and Israel (Zionism) in the American society especially middle class. I think this attachement has been forged since 1948 and not about to dissalude any time soon or just because Obama has gotten this far or even gotten elected! it's naive to doom this relationship just because Obama won or even be shocked at Joe's stance since it's representative of most Americans' opinion about Israel as well. the US has been authoritarian for so long now that, even though it might be salvageable, Americans' sense of responsibility towards and solidarity with the Israeli and Zionist, against the Arab or the Muslim, has been soldified for so long and normalized.

So much for Human Rights in Jordan!!!!

so today  i thought some talking about transportation to and fro the Hashemite University in Jordan is due. i am a student at the Hashemite University and i think the whole situation just sucks big time. Whether it's the educational situation or the communing one. i don't think the educational system is reparable, at least not on the hort-run that is. so i chose not to even go there. (many) professors are ineffecient, need some academic assistance.need psychiatric counceling at that too! but anyways, i shall return to the bus situation hanging over all of the students heads over here. the problem begins actually far before arriving at Raghadan or leaving the University but i'll start at Raghadan. whereas in most (under)developed and developing countries people stand in a line to get on the bus, we don't! we just stand there and wait for a bus to be (mis)directed in our direction so we can hunt it and get in. a lot (of guys) end up climbing into the bus through the windows rather than the traditional way, the DOOR. some end up trying to pull themselves from underneath the bus's wheels just in time for them to get crunched against the rail inside of which we are supposed to have stood in line in the first place. as we struggle and, literally, beat each other to get into teh freaking bus, the conductor (or the "control" as we call him in Arabish), counts us just like cattle until we are 60 heads in the bus and closes the door of the bus regardless of the limbs and heads sticking in or out of the door. we spend the 40 minutes it takes the speedy, smoking, flirtatious, cheasy, repulsive driver to get us to our destination checking our bodies for bruises and cuts and torn shirts, and of course trying to hold on to something and not end up plastered against the wind sheild while doing that. it's a daily journey of survival and humiliation. some girls even break down while trying to get into the bus among the waves of human bodies and start yelling and crying. not to menion that this (dis)order, observed and even preserved by the police officers usually on duty in Raghadan, is a violation and infringement of the basic human rights in more ways than i care to count and most of all of the "dignity" of humans, coupled with the tyranical and authoritarian educational system and practices at the school itself, this situation start chipping at the students' sense of dignity and humanity and empathy since freshman year. Hashemite University seniors graduate with ZERO sense of humanity and intellect which seems a little bit paradoxical to me considering that the purpose of the education is to produce better generations of  citizens. I'm just SOOOOO mad at the situation and the official disregard of it. it shows the official contempt of our generation and intellect. uuuuffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Drop it: So today I decided that I've given enough chance for one of my professor to start actually explaining the material Which more than half of the class can't even start to understand. It's some kind of a science class that was, apparently mistakenly, enlisted on the General Requirements list for graduation. Given that it is a General Requirement for all students, whether they are PE majors or medicine, the professor has an automatic obligation to explain what the hell are amino acids and how ther are different from lipids and why should we care. She doesn't seem interested in addressing students other than the nursing majors. THEY can explain the material to her if you ask me. So anyways, today I decided that I've just had it and I'm really fed up with her condescention and lack of integrity. So I go, innocently, to file a complaint againt her. I go to the registratr's office and somebody tells me that the best action I could do, without even hearing my complaint or why I'm so freaking upset about the class, is dropping the class. As if I just happened upon the 90 JDs I paid for the course and that I am the idiot who can't understand her explaining. So it's automatically my fault that I can't disinguish the different kinds of Lipase our organs produce because I'm not a freakin' nursing major. Well it's too late! I'm a senior English major and I well damn LIKE IT!

PS. Those events and many more of my daily life's happened and continue to do so in the Hashemite University of Jordan in Zarqa, just 20 minutes away from the Jordanian-Syrian borders. I don't know how to explain it (scientifically) since, you know, I'm such a failure at scientifc reasoning, but my guess is it's just the heat getting to our heads!

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Tyra (walla 3omrha ma taret): Tyra Show just started on 'One tv. I just HATE her! I can't even look at her. i really think she (or her producer or whoever is responsible for coming up with ideas and topics for her show) tries really hard and generates mediocre discussions that speak to certain social stratas. middle class teenagers especially, or those who have the same mentality. But she is just an Oprah wanna-be. not that i like Oprah either. that egotestic, elitist, patronizing, xenophobic show presenter. but at least she is original. she is relatively more intellectual and rounder than Tyra. she is a typical bourgeois and thinks that because she struggeled with weight and other issues all of her life that gives her the right to give advice on reconstructing women's lives all over the world. i'm not trying to underestimate the difficulties and crisis she encountered all through her life. i respect her for surving and strongly fighting these hardships. but i'm sorry, surviving a crises doesn't mean that you've become an expert on women's psychology. she manipulates women and exploit her popularity to patronize and tell them what's best for them. at least we know Tyra is NO-WHERE near accomplishing that. she might wanna host Dr. Oz on her show sometime. air-headed women all over the world seem to enjoy passively listening to his bla bla bla at Oprah's. if this dude is a real doctor then i'm Queen Elizabeth and he's definitely banned from entering England while i'm alive. ha. doctor my a**.

P.S. the word "tyra" sounds SO MUCH like an Arabic word that means "flying" (f). the "t" is just stronger in Arabic.
i was just looking for some scholarly articles about Beloved on the internet and found something truly interesting about the African myth, or tradition, concerning the reincarnation of dead children. the article is "An abiku-ogbanje Atlas: a pre-text for rereading Soyinka's Ake and Morrison's Beloved" by professor Ogunyemi. She actually references Chinua Achebe in her article, which reminds me of his novel Things Fall Apart. he mentions this myth on several ocassions and ties it to other cultural traditions and superstitions in Nigeria. i'm thinking it might be a great material for a paper. i mean shedding light on this whole myth and conducting a comparison between the two novels on this basis and recognize teh different ways Morrison still visits African traditions in her novels.
Beloved: I've read Beloved by Toni Morrison several times so far and I find it one of these books that every time you read it something new is revealed to you. as you read more and more into the book and over and over the plot, new interpretations and meanings seem to surface. it's really amazing and intellectually intriguing. So anyways, this time, i'm reading it in from a postcolonial standpoint. it's for my Researcg Writing class' first paper. i still have at least two left and i think i might go for the same novel actually but each paper will have different theory dominating its analysis. i'm thinking Marxism, Feminism, and Psychoanalytical theories. it should be fun to see how differnt theories would implicate different elements of the novels and help me read the same book in so many different and maybe contradicting ways. i'm really excited about this project since i've been meaning to do this for quiet a time but never got around to it. i think it's fascinating how literary critics come up with so many creative interpretations and implications of the same work that even the author hasn't thought about or had in mind when writing...

Friday, October 17, 2008

Cultural Globalization. I'll be damned!: there is this Saudi hip hop-per who just surfaced on mbc around two-three months ago called Qusai. so anyways, i for one have never heard of him in my life neither here nor in the US (he mostly sings in English), neither anybody that i know actually. but it's as if mbc has just fallen in love with him and they are giving him his own talent show to help "discover" more young men like him with hip hop ambitions. you know, so they could "infiltrate" US culture and get to the hearts and minds of the american people and help "polish" the arab image there. okay i mean i'm a cultural studies major and i respect and am aware of the noble "nationalist" outcomes and potentials such a cultural hybridity (whether intentional or not) could have. after all pidgin hip hop could be implemented the same way pidgin english was used by the greatest thinkers and authors the world ever know. Achebe makes a nice example. but i just have a feeling that this project is not about that:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Re3NepWHaO8
I love Outlandish though. i think they are really committed to "come back at" the West as it perceives those who don't always "fit in" and fail to be Westernly human:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3P12aqVeZkQ

Thursday, October 16, 2008

jackson the optimist: baba (my dad) just told me about Jesse Jackson's last controversial comment concerning obama.
"Jackson: “Zionists” will lose influence under Obama"the ironic reaction of both the commentators on this story as reported by Fox News and obama's campaign spokeswoman is puzzling, funny, and disappointing. so jackson says believes that obama's victory would put an end to "decades of putting Israel’s interests first.” obama's spokesperson rejects the statement and asserts obama's "commitment to a strong U.S.-Israel relationship" as if the two notions are mutually exclusive. the funny part is that Fox commentators, both good intentionally and naivly, attack jackson for being so "bitter and jealous of Obama." i think these people are the same ones tha got those "obsession" films with their Sunday papers last week. i told you not to watch those! it's like The Ring!
i (apparently just like jackson) thought that obama wanted strong ties with the middle east too. i don't either see or envision him putting the palestinian or middle eastern interests first! it indeed would be foolish of him anyways! just like it would be foolish to go after iran to ensure israeli security without considering US security. maybe, just maybe, the two are liable to diverge at some point.
Obsession: my american tutee just told me about this film "obsession." i looked it up and was and still am disgusted. the really flabbergasting and disgusting thing is that the "non-profit" (except for Zionists) organization that sponsors this piece of trashy propoganda describes itself as "non-profit, non-partisan organization whose mission is to educate Americans about issues of national security." see? it's definitely well meaning. i almost cried. their "primary focus is on the most urgent threat of radical Islam. By utilizing the following three mediums, Clarion Fund is helping Americans understand that the mainstream media is not adequately conveying the reality of radical Islam." i pity the americans who'll chose you to be their educators and mentors in this area. "Clarion Fund, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) organization. We are independent and do not accept funding from the U.S. Government, political institutions, or foreign organizations." okay. so who is funding them? they don't mention the organizations that they do accept contributions from. as if it's not obvious. but then, to the poor people who are ignorant and mentally numb enough to buy their stories and fabrications abou Islam, it doesn't really matter who sponsors them. as long as its neither arab or muslim. even satan would be perfectly fine.
it sounds to me they ar etrying to protect national security alright. that of israel and zionism mind you.
who i'm really mad at and disgusted by right now is the arab and muslim americans who are setting on their butts doing nothing and pretending that all is alright! YOU should find sponsors to publish DVDs and films explaining what it means to be a muslim or/and arab!
but i salute those who are doing something of course.
mercy: "اليوم العالمي للفقر احتفال يومي للمحرومين في الأردن"
it took the world that long and this amount of destruction to finally realize the utter failure and inequity of the neo-liberal mentality? well at least now that the crises has reached the US and the long-ago-developed world, the global governance organizations are certain to take action and rethink its rusty policies (my favorite book on that is Unholy Trinity). but will it deliver the poor of the "developing world" as well as the unfortuante "developed"? well i guess as long as the gulf states have oil they are relatively safe, in the next stage. but will the poor of jordan and syria, etc, enter into the World Bank, WTO, and IMF's calculations for the future?
american Islamo/arabophobia: i truly don't know who is the bigger fool or phobe here. the addresser or the addressee? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0YIq5Q15L1o . i don't think anybody wants somebody like that to wear his/her t-shirt. it shows how some people immaturely and ignorantly are willing to support mccain just to be able to throw an opposition vote agaiont obama the arab. she, and so many people like her, probably don't know anything about politics, economy, or any other topic that could form a motive or even an incentive to vote. all she cares about that no arab/muslim/minority/non-anglo american should ever be a president. this is the type of people that could hurt a solid campaign, much less one in the condition of mccain's.
Reaching out/down to the working class: I can't wait to find, as I'm sure obama and mccain do as well, who is going to earn "Joe the Plumber's" precious vote.
Lebanese polititian's chronic schizophrania: "Jumblatt Jumps from Calm to Assault in a Few Hours! ": honestly this guy has to be diagnosed or and locked up. for his benefit as well as for the Lebanese people's. he is a common sense and public mental health hazard!
BBC and anglo-centrism: Britons' beach sex stories seem to take precedence over sex-free material such as: "WBank: Palestinian Martyred by Israeli Occupation Army ," "New IAF System Will Pinpoint Iranian Missile Targets ,"North Korea threatens to freeze ties with South."
Dubai decency policy: please read "A guide to acceptable behaviour in Dubai," if you don't want to end up in jail for having had sex on the beach. lol! what about just NOT having sex on the beach? would it have been okay having sex on the beach in England?
experience: indeed the US needs an experienced president, at war. while obama seems short on such an invaluable expertise, mccain has plenty of it. his side-kick however, palin, seems short too, but not for a beauty queen of course. i say she would have made so much more money and earned the republicans so much more votes having stayed a beaty padgeant contestant and became an entertainment celebirety instead. she does seem to entertain the whole world these days. at least that way she would have had enough time to work on her "grace" and acting talent. certainly as a vp her acting is so obvious and conspicious. the question is, when she is soon president, considering the advanced age and precarious health of mccain, whether her Alaskan beauty would make up for her lack of experience? i mean she might have a face to stop traffic (according to some out of this world standards) but stop wars and economic depression? i think not.
hegemony: It's funny how even "facebook" is blocked on my school's server! all music and art websites are also blocked. every oppositional site. every intellectual one. and we are supposed to be expanding our horizons and "learning" indeed! no wonder it is unheard of for a student to actually diagree with a lecturer and be able to support his "unorthodox" argument. some students still manage to do just that once in a blue moon. they resemble a species threatened by extinction.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Panopticon: today in my "military sciences" class, in which we video conference with another classroom, the lecturer zoomed in on some students that were cell phone-texting away their boredom. after having a good laugh at those unaware students expense, he made sure to inform us that "they" can even figure out the words we doodle in our notebooks when we are supposed to be listening to him. Foucault would have been proud!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

reading Achebe's No Longer at Ease. very intellectually stimulating piece of literature. I'm doing a presentation on it tomorrow. a wonderful example of Postcolonialism.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Beginning

I hereby announce this blog started.
First, I feel obligated to acknowledge the person and the blog that inspired me first to start my own humble blog. I admire the constancy with which Riverbend documented her impressions of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 over the period of a few years in her blog "Baghdad Burning." Although I did my own share of critiquing her blog -- which was published later on in the form of two books by the Feminist Press -- she did add another political and academic dimension to weblogging.
Mine is not a political blog per se. It will be more of a mix of social, political, economic, cultural, and personal entries: news updates that are important to the typical Arab. I mean no essentialization here. I'm conscious of the fact that different Arabs from all over the Arab World belong to relatively different cultures that lack monolithity. However, Arabs have always shared a certain background and all that that distinguish them from other nations and influences their general interests and life similarily.

Also, please note that understatements are going to be a frequent occurence in my entries. I'd leave it to you to decide when and why.