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From Common Courage Press

Recent Stories

July 23, 2003

Uri Avnery
Caesar's Favor

David Lindorff
Lynne Stewart's Big Win: Ashcroft Rebuked

Mano Singham
Iraq's Missing WMD Scientists

Steve Perry
Better Late Than Never: the Press, the Dems, and Bush's Lies

John Stanton
Avoiding Plato's Republic in America: Is Anarchy the Only Hope?

Patrick Bond
Bush and South Africa: a Petro-Military-Commerce Mission

Harry Browne
A Victory for a Disarming Irishwoman

Paul Beaulieu
When the WTO Comes to Montreal

Robert Fisk
The Sons are Dead, But the Resistance Will Grow

William Witherup
Georgie Porgie

Website of the Day
Lieberman & Falwell:
True Love at Last

July 22, 2003

Diane Christian
Bad Guy / Good Guy: War Forces; Peace Frees

Jeremy Brecher
Solidarity and Student Protests in Iran

Steve Kretzmann
and Jim Vallette
Plugging Iraq into Globalization

Sam Smith
Greening the Golden Triangle

James Plummer
Smile, You're on Federal Camera

Lucretia Stewart
This Day Shall Not Define My Life: January 18, 2003

Website of the Day
Iraq Coalition Casualties

 

July 21, 2003

Edward Said
Imperial Arrogance and the Vile Stereotyping of Arabs

Ron Jacobs
Shut Up and Shoot

Allan J. Lichtman
Why is George Bush President?

Elaine Cassel
How's the Occupation Going? Ask the People of Iraq

Christopher Brauchli
History Recapitulates: Guantanamo and the Japanese Internment Camps

Bruce Jackson
Third and Arizona, Santa Monica

Website of the Day
John Dean: Taking Apart Bush's State of the Union Speech, Claim by Claim

 

July 19 / 20, 2003

Arthur Mitzman
Will the Pax Americana be More Sustainable Than the Dot.com Bubble?

Julian Bond
We Shall be Heard

Cynthia McKinney
Bush's Racial Politics at Home and Abroad

Mel Goodman
What is to be Done with the CIA?

Jason Leopold
Tenet Blames Wolfowitz

Mickey Z.
History Forgave Churchill

Doug Giebel
Impeachment as the Message

Jon Brown
Whipping the Post

Mano Singham
Cheney's Oil Maps

Steven Sherman
Nickle, Dimed and Slimed at UNC

Robin Philpot
Liberia: History Doesn't Repeat Itself, It Stutters

Khaldoun Khelil
Capturing Friedman

Jeffrey St. Clair
You Must Leave Home, Again: Gilad Atzmon's A Guide to the Perplexed

Lenni Brenner
Sitting in with Mingus

Vanessa Jones
Three Dog Night

Adam Engel
Video Judas Video

Poets' Basement
Foley, Smith and Curtis

Website of the Weekend
Illegal Art

 

July 18, 2003

David Vest
Drowning in Deep Doo-Doo

Rahul Mahajan
Deceit Runs Deep

John Chuckman
Enron-style Management in a Dangerous World

Harold A. Gould
The Bush-Musharraf Conclave

Alvaro Angarita
In the Eye of the Storm: Colombia's War on Journalists

David Grenier
Sovereignty and Solidarity in Indian Country...Rhode Island

Dave Lindorff
Bush and Hitler: a Response to the Wall Street Journal

Website of the Day
Murder of a Whistleblower? Timeline in David Kelly Affair

 

July 17, 2003

Ron Jacobs
Sometimes Even the President of the United States Has to Stand Naked

Lisa Walsh Thomas
Bush Country: the Venom and Adulation of Ignorance

Martin Schwarz
Bush Pre-emptive Strike Doctrine is the Bane of Non-Proliferation Watchdogs

Heidi Lypps
Better Justice Through Chemistry? Forced Drugging and the Supreme Court

Norman Madarasz
Third Ways and Third Worlds: Lula at the Progressive Governance Conference

Pankaj Mehta
Criminalizing the Palestinian Solidarity Movement

Marjorie Cohn
Bush, War Lies & Impeachment: the Boy Who Cried Wolf

Hammond Guthrie
(Dis) Intelligence Revisited

Website of the Day
No Force, No Fraud: the Soul of Libertarianism

July 16, 2003

Jason Leopold
Wolfowitz Told White House to Hype Dubious Uranium Claims

William Cook
Defining Terrorism from the Top Down

Elaine Cassel
Judge Brinkema v. Ashcroft: She Whom Must Not Be Obeyed

Jason Leopold
How Can They Justify the War If WMDs Are Never Found?

Linda Heard
Bondage or Freedom?

Raymond Barrett
From Detroit to Basra

Jeffrey St. Clair
Back to the Future in Guatemala: The Return of Gen. Ríos Montt

 

July 15, 2003

Kathleen and Bill Christison
Why We Resigned from VIPS

Elaine Cassel
Ashcroft's War on Legal Whistleblowers: the Ordeal of Jesselyn Radack

Chris Floyd
Barge Poles: Oil Wars and New Europe's Mercenaries

Jason Leopold
CIA Warned White House Last October that Niger Docs were Forgeries

Gaius Publius
Considering the Obvious: Fool Us Once, Fool Us Twise...Please

John Troyer
The Niger Syndrome

Becky Gillette
No Conspiracy at Coffeen Nature Preserve: a Response to David Orrr

Uri Avnery
The Bi-National State: The Wolf Shall Dwell with the Lamb

Website of the Day
Cost of Iraq War

 

July 14, 2003

Lisa Taraki
Hot Days in Ramallah

Walter Brasch
Bush: the Pretend Captain

SOA Watch
Training Colombia's Killers in the US

Dan Bacher
Yurok Tribe Denounces Klamath River Salmon Killers

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
Intelligence Unglued

Website of the Day
Coalition for Democratic Rights and Civil Liberties


July 12 / 13, 2003

Arthur Mitzman
The Double Wall Before the Future

Standard Schaefer
The Coming Financial Reality: an Interview with Michael Hudson

John Feffer
A Fearful Symmetry: Washington and Pyongyang

Ron Jacobs
Shades of Gray in Iran

Elaine Cassel
Judicial Terrorism Against the Bill of Rights

Tom Stephens
Civil Liberties After 9/11

David Lindorff
New White House Slogan: "Case Closed. Just Move On"

Jason Leopold
The Mini-War Against Iraq Prior to 9/11

Lee Sustar
What's Behind the Crisis in Liberia?

Mickey Z.
AIDS Dissent and Africa

Sam Hamod
Semitic is a Language Group, Not a Race or Ethnic Group

Ramzy Baroud
Awaiting Justice on an Old Blanket

Jeffrey St. Clair
Savage Incongruities: the Photographic Life of Lee Miller

Adam Engel
Parable of the Lobbyist

Robert Sanders
A Review of Ralph Lopez's American Dream

Poets' Basement
Albert, Witherup, Guthrie

 

July 11, 2003

Conn Hallinan
The Coin of Empire

Tim Wise
God Responds to Bush

Mokhiber / Weissman
The Two Faces of Bush in Africa

Edward S. Herman
Whitewashing Sandra Day O'Connor

David Orr
Coffeen-gate: What's Going on at the Sierra Club Foundation?

David Lindorff
An Iraq War & Occupation Glossary

Website of the Day
Dead Malls

 

July 10, 2003

Ron Jacobs
Dealing with the Devil: the Bloody Profits of General Dynamics

Sean Donahue
Bush and the Paramillitaries: Coddling Terrorists in Colombia

Yemi Toure
Who Outted Bush in Afrika?

Robert Jensen
Politics and Sustainability: an Interview with Wes Jackson

Ali Abunimah
US Leaves Injured Iraqis Untreated

Joanne Mariner
Federal Courts, Not Military Commissions

Website of the Day
Electronic Iraq

 

July 9, 2003

David Lindorff
Is the Media Finally Turning on Bush?

David Krieger and Angela McCracken
10 Myths About Nuclear Weapons

Mickey Z.
Why Speak Out?

Lee Sustar
The Great Medicare Fraud

John Chuckman
The Worst Kind of Lie

Gary Leupp
"Pacifist" Japan and the Occupation of Iraq

Website of the Day
Hail to the Thief:
Songs for the Bush Years

 

July 8, 2003

Elaine Cassel
Bully on the Bench: the Pathological Dissents of Scalia

Alan Maass
Nights of Fire and Rage in Benton Harbor

Chris Floyd
Troubled Sleep: Getting Used to the American Gulag

Linda S. Heard
America's Kangaroo Justice

Brian Cloughley
They Tell Lies to Nodders

Charles Sullivan
Bush the Christian?

Saul Landau
The Intelligence Culture in the National Security Age

Website of the Day
Occupation Watch

 

July 7, 2003

William Blum
The Anti-Empire Report

Harvey Wasserman
The Nuke with a Hole in Its Head

Ramzy Baroud
Peace for All the Wrong Reasons

Simon Jones
What Progressives Should Think About Iran

Lesley McCulloch
Fear, Pain and Shame in Aceh

Uri Avnery
The Draw

Steve Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 7/3

 

July 4 / 6, 2003

Patrick Cockburn
Dead on the Fourth of July

Frederick Douglass
What is Freedom to a Slave?

Martha Honey
Bush and Africa: Racism, Exploitation and Neglect

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Rat in the Grain: Amstutz and the Looting of Iraqi Agriculture

Standard Schaefer
Rule by Fed: Anyone But Greenspan in 2004

Lenni Brenner
Jefferson is for Today

Elaine Cassel
Fucking Furious on the Fourth

Ben Tripp
How Free Are We?

Wayne Madsen
A Sad Independence Day

John Stanton
Happy Birthday, America! 227 Years of War

Jim Lobe
Bush's Surreal AIDS Appointment

John Blair
Return to Marble Hill: Indiana's Rusting Nuke

Lisa Walsh Thomas
Heavy Reckoning at Qaim

David Vest
Wake Up and Smell the Dynamite

Adam Engel
Queer as Grass

Poets' Basement
Christian, Witherup, Albert & St. Clair

Website of the Weekend
The Lipstick Librarian

 

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Uzma Aslam Khan
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July 24, 2003

"I Came in From the East with the Sun in My Eyes"

Dylan in Bend

By DAVID VEST

After two straight nights in Idaho, Bob Dylan and his band rolled into Bend, Oregon on July 23 to find near-100-degree heat, a major fire raging to the southeast within sight of the stage, and an audience that had been waiting for hours in a crowded, shadeless open air venue, sitting on the ground under a naked sun that wouldn't set until moments before Dylan finished his show.

You expect people to endure conditions like these at Texas racetracks, Megapalooza package tours and papal appearances, maybe, but not at a Dylan show.

Perhaps not since Bob Hope played Pendleton, and had every bug in Eastern Oregon fly into his mouth when they killed the arena lights and put the spot on him as he sang "Thanks for the Memories," had an artist faced a steeper uphill battle.

The show had a 6:30 start. To get a decent spot for your sand chair or blanket you had to have been in line well before 5:00 p.m. By way of consolation you got to hear the band, sans Dylan, running through "Lonesome Day Blues" and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" during the sound check.

As soon as the gate swung open the usual gaggle of camp followers sprinted for the choice spots near the stage, accompanied in my mind by the melting strains of Dylan's song, "Have you seen Dignity?"

As though to suggest that the infernally hot event was being promoted by demons from the lower levels of Hell, anyone who brought so much as a half-empty bottle of water in purse or backpack had to surrender it to security at the turnstile (otherwise, the terrorists would win, I guess).

What was Dylan even doing in Bend? one might wonder. For one thing, the town has been growing rapidly and can now support acts that wouldn't have stopped there for gas in years past. Also, it's one of a group of dates he picked up to replace a European tour cancelled after the U.S. invaded Iraq. Other venues included the Park and Ride Lot in Ketchum, Idaho, I kid you not. That Zimmy would be carrying his music to some unlikely venues was obvious. That he would be singing to people in danger of spontaneous combustion was not perhaps as predictable.

As water-hauling firefighter planes disappeared into the pillar of smoke to the southeast, a flock of Canadian geese rose out of the Deschutes River and flew directly across the front rows, just as Dylan took his place at the far end of the stage behind a keyboard and launched into "Maggie's Farm," the same song he had opened his most recent Oregon concert with, last fall in Eugene. He spent most of the number trying to get the sound crew to give him what he wanted in his monitors.

Exhausted as they were by the heat and the waiting, the crowd had received an unadvertised opening act good-naturedly enough, then rose to its feet at the sight of Dylan and remained standing for the entire performance.

Dylan played piano and harmonica. He never picked up a guitar. His Oscar for "Things Have Changed" sat an on amplifier behind him. (Yes, he song that one.) From time to time he left the keyboard and wandered across the stage to "lead the band" during guitar solos. At times, being Dylan, he looked more like a man trying to remember where he had parked his car.

This was not to be one of Dylan's greatest shows, but it was a great effort by a real trouper. He managed to put some energy back into a crowd that had had it broiled out of them long before his arrival. He appeared to call a lot of audibles; often his band changed instruments only to change them back again after a quick word from Bob to Tony Garnier, his bass player.

Highlights of the set list included "Drifter's Escape," "Desolation Row," "Positively 4th Street" and "Watching the River Flow," in rapid sequence. The show also featured the kind of grand, shambling catastrophe only Dylan can give you, with a version of "Bye and Bye" in which both Dylan and the band appeared to get lost, and on different highways. About five minutes into the thing Dylan started mumbling the opening lines again.

"Summer Days," a sure-fire rockabilly hellraiser, closed the set, just as another enormous flock of geese, this time outlined against a stunning sunset, made a grand flyover. The energy, and crowd response, generated by the band during this song was almost incredible, given the situation. After a prolonged ovation came the usual encores ("Like a Rolling Stone" and "All Along the Watchtower"). It may have been the longest I have ever seen a performer make an audience wait before coming back out.

It was one of those nights when Dylan the poet had to give way to Dylan the arena performer, a night of broad gestures and flat-out wide open rolling and rocking. There were no ballads, no obscure covers, no bluegrass gospel songs. He barely got away with doing "Desolation Row." That's one of the two or three greatest songs of the twentieth century, and people around me talked and laughed all through it.

On the other hand, they went through hell to see Bob Dylan, he sang it anyway, whether they knew what it was or not, and they were still there at the end, hoping for yet another encore even after the star's bus had rolled out from behind the stage and headed for another joint.

David Vest writes the Rebel Angel column for CounterPunch. He and his band, The Willing Victims, just released a scorching new CD, Way Down Here.

He can be reached at: davidvest@springmail.com

Visit his website at http://www.rebelangel.com

Weekend Edition Features for July 19 / 20, 2003

Arthur Mitzman
Will the Pax Americana be More Sustainable Than the Dot.com Bubble?

Julian Bond
We Shall be Heard

Cynthia McKinney
Bush's Racial Politics at Home and Abroad

Mel Goodman
What is to be Done with the CIA?

Jason Leopold
Tenet Blames Wolfowitz

Mickey Z.
History Forgave Churchill

Doug Giebel
Impeachment as the Message

Jon Brown
Whipping the Post

Mano Singham
Cheney's Oil Maps

Steven Sherman
Nickle, Dimed and Slimed at UNC

Robin Philpot
Liberia: History Doesn't Repeat Itself, It Stutters

Khaldoun Khelil
Capturing Friedman

Jeffrey St. Clair
You Must Leave Home, Again: Gilad Atzmon's A Guide to the Perplexed

Lenni Brenner
Sitting in with Mingus

Vanessa Jones
Three Dog Night

Adam Engel
Video Judas Video

Poets' Basement
Foley, Smith and Curtis

Website of the Weekend
Illegal Art

 

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