Author Archives: DP

Hall of Mirrors

Within the cacophony of ill-informed, partisan and self-serving punditry relating to events in Afghanistan, we urge careful consideration of several lucid posts by Sarah Chayes, distinguished author of Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security and On Corruption In America — And What Is at Stake.

An excerpt from the most recent post below; image is by artist Kabir Mokamel, whose blast wall art (dating from 2015) scrutinized widespread corruption among both Afghan officials and foreign “contractors”.

 

 

 

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Listen To the Trees

We have recently returned from a Maine island sanctuary & reading retreat where we devoured books and local food in more or less equal abundance. Among the books, we highly recommend To Speak For the Trees by the brave and brilliant Diana Beresford-Kroeger.

We relay the introduction from the publisher’s website below, with a single image added by DP.

 

 

 

Tree Radio

 

 

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Destroyer of Worlds

This week, we interrupt our stream of dispatches from inside the climate emergency to commemorate those killed in the entirely unnecessary bombings of Hiroshima (August 6, 1945) and Nagasaki (August 9, 1945).

 

ATOMIC BOMB DOME IN 2021

 

A-bomb blast center
no human shadows at all
the winter full moon


                                                —Shigemoto Yasuhiko     

 

CLICK ON IMAGE

 

“My God, what have we done?”
—Enola Gay co-pilot, Robert Lewis

 

FIRESTORM PAINTING BY SURVIVOR

 

“This is the greatest thing in history.”
                                 — U.S. President Harry Truman

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Like A Grieving Mother

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Nothing Untouched

Now comes entomologist Diana Six, speaking her truth from the front lines of climate emergency:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Blood Of This Earth

Five years after water protector Berta Cácere’s brutal murder, Honduran courts have finally brought a degree of justice in convicting the alleged “mastermind” behind the plot, Roberto David Castillo Mejía, military intelligence officer and former general manager and president of the Desarrollos Energéticos (DESA) hydroelectric company.

This historic ruling takes on even greater importance because it highlights the value of the defence of nature and the rights of indigenous peoples and rural communities. It is a landmark ruling that exposes through the courts the responsibility of companies, not only of their devastating role in the destruction of vital resources, but also in the persecution and elimination of people and organisations that oppose their destructive greed. The ruling highlights the strength of unity and struggle in the demand for truth and justice; a struggle that had as great protagonists the courage and dignity of her family, of COPINH, of all the people who gave themselves to this cause of humanity. I join in the joy that Berta vindicated, the joy of victories. This is a victory with the taste of a feat, because achieving truth and justice in the courts that have historically favoured the crimes of power is a feat. This victory is transcendental, but it does not mean the end of the road in the fight against impunity for the assassination of our comrade Berta“, said Reynaldo Villalba, Vice President of the International Federation for Human Rights.

In memory of Berta’s fearless Lenca spirit, we relay links and writings from an earlier DP:

 

BERTA CÁCERES, SHAKER OF THE HUMAN CONSCIENCE

 

From her speech in acceptance of the Goldman Prize, the year before she was murdered:

 

 

And finally, a video of the entire speech: Berta Cáceres, presente!

 

 

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Lost Fragments of Soul

In an editorial opening the recent “animals” issue of The Ecological Citizen, Eileen Crist underscores the heavy price we pay when we obscure our animal selves, and abuse our animal kin. We cannot address climate emergency without confronting the dominant ethos of human supremacism, and its dense understory of “petty mind-games.” Excerpts below, with images added by DP.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Our Clumsy Signatures

The exceptional (thereby unheeded) chronicler of climate emergency Dahr Jamail, by way of a positive NYT review, brought Nathaniel Rich’s recently published Second Nature to our attention.

An excerpt below, with images by Ana Mendieta.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Let us offer Diane Ackerman, writing in The Human Age, the closing words:

 

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Wishful Images

Now comes Christof Mauch, director of the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, with excerpts from an essay that sketches the outline of his 2019 booklet, Slow Hope: Rethinking Ecologies of Crisis and Fear.

Images are from a related exhibition by artist Mandy Martin.

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All Light, Everywhere

Now comes documentary filmmaker Theo Antony via an interview regarding his most recent film, wherein he explores the micropolitics of police body cameras among other power dynamics within the dominant surveillance ethos, as well as the inherently slippery nature of all documentary evidence.

Excerpts from the interview below, with the second image linking to the “official” (whatever that means) trailer.

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