Saint Patrick’s Day Reads

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Top o’ the mornin’ to ya!

Like many places, New Orleans has been having St. Patrick’s Day parades and will have the traditional Irish Club Parade tonight!  There’s a big difference in many places this year.  Sponsors and politicians are pulling out in parades that will not open participation to gay groups.  Parades in Boston and New York are losing sponsors like Guiness, Samuel Adams and Heineken Beer.

Irish brewer Guinness said on Sunday that it would not participate in New York City’s St. Patrick’s Day parade this year because gay and lesbian groups had been excluded, costing organizers a key sponsor of the annual event.

The move came on the same day that Boston’s Irish-American mayor skipped that city’s St. Patrick’s Day parade after failing to hammer out a deal with organizers to allow a group of gay and lesbian activists to march openly.

“Guinness has a strong history of supporting diversity and being an advocate for equality for all. We were hopeful that the policy of exclusion would be reversed for this year’s parade,” the brewer said in a written statement issued by a spokesman for its parent company, Diageo.
“As this has not come to pass, Guinness has withdrawn its participation. We will continue to work with community leaders to ensure that future parades have an inclusionary policy,” Guinness said.

Last week New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said he would not march in the parade because gay and lesbian activists had been again precluded from taking part.

The loss of Guinness, one of the world’s top beer brands originating in Dublin, Ireland, appeared to ratchet up the pressure on organizers even further.

As noted, Boston’s Mayor also declined to participate in one of the city’s signature events that usually attracts the state and city’s major images (21)political leaders.

After weeks of discussions that failed to convince organizers of South Boston’s annual St. Patrick’s Day parade to let gays march openly in the parade, Mayor Martin J. Walsh said today he would not take part in the event.

Walsh said he was “disappointed” and felt a “little bit of frustration.”

“I think for the most part everyone was on the same page. We had an agreement. Everything was all set. It came down to what letters were on a banner, which was very unfortunate,” said Walsh, referring to a proposed banner bearing the letters “LGBTQ” on it.

For two decades, gay men and lesbians have been excluded from openly marching. Walsh worked until the last minute to bring the statewide gay rights organization MassEquality and parade organizers from the Allied War Veterans Council to an agreement that would have changed that.

The talks broke down over a matter of language: Parade organizers would not permit any signs or clothing bearing the word “gay” or any other declaration of sexual orientation. MassEquality would not march without those words, comparing the restriction to a return to the “closet” of concealing one’s identity.

Walsh said today that the issue “came down to five letters” on the LGBTQ [standing for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer] banner.

In a statement this morning praising Walsh for his efforts and for choosing not to march, Kara Coredini, executive director of MassEquality, said such a restriction was unfair.

“No other group is asked to march without a banner and their standard – not the police, firefighters, or the Irish,” Coredini said. “A double standard is the status quo and does not represent progress.”

Early Irish immigrants had to fight for their humanity and for respect.  It seems odd that a persecuted group would embrace such obviousShamrockOranges bigotry.  How did the politics of Tip O’Neill’s Irish Americans move to the politics of Sean Hannity and Bill O’Reilly?

As late as the 19th century, Anglo elites in New York perceived the drunken and disorderly Irish newcomers as an unhealthful influence on the city’s industrious and long-settled black population.

But Irish-Americans rapidly absorbed the lesson that the way to succeed in their new country was to reject the politics of class and shared economic interests and embrace the politics of race. One disgraceful result was the New York draft riots of 1863, the low point of Irish-black relations in American history, when Irish immigrants by the thousands turned on their black neighbors in a thinly disguised race riot. Irish-Americans were under no delusions that the ruling class of Anglo Protestants liked or trusted them, and anti-Irish and/or anti-Catholic bigotry endured in diluted form well into the 20th century. But by allying themselves with a system of white supremacy, the Irish in America were granted a share of power and privilege — most notably in urban machine politics, and the police and fire departments of every major city.

As Joan’s book and many other sources have discussed, over the course of the last century the bulk of the Irish-American population drifted rightward through the Democratic Party and then out the other side into Archie Bunker-land. A key constituency of the New Deal coalition became, 40 years later, a key constituency of the Reagan revolution. But throughout that period there was always a countervailing social-justice tendency in Irish-American life, the tendency of the antiwar activist brothers Daniel and Philip Berrigan (quite likely the only Jesuit priests ever to make the FBI’s most-wanted list), or of 1952 left-wing presidential candidate Vincent Hallinan and his firebrand San Francisco family. This was the tradition of the radical Vatican II priests, nuns and theologians, who kept many of us from abandoning the Church altogether, and of the 1968 reawakening of Robert F. Kennedy and the subsequent career of his brother Teddy.

Without exception, those people started from an understanding of their own cultural and national history. They began with Irish nationalist or republican politics, and moved from there to consider how Ireland’s story fit into a worldwide pattern that transcended the specific racial paranoia of the United States. Of course Irish history did not end in 1998, and the current situation in that country – a land of immigrants for the first time in its modern history – is exceptionally interesting. But Ireland is no longer a divisive and charismatic “issue,” capable of galvanizing people who live thousands of miles away. With Irish-American identity now split between an optional lifestyle accessory and a bunch of unappealing right-wing guys yelling at us, its social-justice component has evaporated as well.

Can you imagine what Tip O’Neill would say to the likes of Paul Ryan?

 Paul Ryan: When I said ‘inner city’ men are too lazy to work; that’s their ‘culture,’ I didn’t mean it racially.

It seems that now that poverty is spreading to white people, the topic has piqued the interest of a handful of Republican leaders. Notably, Republican bullshit artist par excellence, Paul Ryan, who has lately been trying to convince the public that he really cares and is earnestly searching his ample intellect for a solution — as long as it doesn’t require any government spending. Whoever is buying what he’s selling is dumber than a post.

So here is this deep thinker’s take on the cause of poverty: laziness. And not just any kind of laziness, the dreaded “culture” of “inner city” laziness. Or, in the House Budget Committee Chairman, ex-GOP veep candidate’s words:

“We have got this tailspin of culture, in our inner cities in particular, of men not working and just generations of men not even thinking about working or learning the value and the culture of work, and so there is a real culture problem here that has to be dealt with.”

You don’t have to be a genius at cracking codes to understand that he’s simply saying: Blacks are lazy. They prefer being poor to working. (As if working was a surefire way not to be poor.)

When called out on the thinly-veiled racism of his comments, Ryan said he had been “inarticulate” and had not intended to be racist at all. In fact, it never even occurred to him that they might be racist.

And if that isn’t the mark of a racist we don’t know what is. Surely, Ryan, with that big intellect of his, knows that the libertarian so-called-thinker he has lately been quoting, Charles Murray, who argues that Blacks and Latinos are genetically inferior, is also a self-described white Nationalist.

Note to Ryan: White Nationalist = racist!

To read more about how toxic Murray is and what a complete fraud Ryan is, click here: 

So, that’s my offerings this morning.  I may try to get a second post up later because I’ve been finding some interesting items up about what incredible things are going on in this country with the huge income gaps between the wealthy and every one else.

What’s on you reading and blogging list today?


36 Comments on “Saint Patrick’s Day Reads”

  1. Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

    Happy St. Paddy’s from your Irish Dancer.

  2. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    And a happy St. Pat’s Day to all!

    An iconic Irish beer company takes a stand for equality here in the US. Meanwhile, in Ireland women have just last year been legally allowed abortion if the pregnant woman’s life is in danger or she is suicidal. Abortion is still illegal in cases of rape, incest, and even birth defects that mean the fetus would not live if born. I can’t help but see this as women’s rights taking second place to gay rights yet again. I am glad that equality regardless of gender orientation is advancing.

    • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

      Not sure if I wrote that quite right… I suspect that gay rights have advanced, in part, because it’s about men as well as women. Whereas women’s control of their own bodies is about women.

      • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

        That’s what I’ve thought too plus most of the gay men that are really active in the movement are white so they can access white and male privilege

        • Mary Luke's avatar Mary Luke says:

          Yes, and Boston is still not a hospitable place for women. The Irish males aligned with the elite WASPS, and were granted a share of power and privilege in politics, and of course, many became powerful in the Church. Misogyny is alive, well, and thriving in Boston. It is bred into the systemic combination of Irish ethnic dominance, church, and politics. We have the widest gender pay gap in the nation.

  3. Delphyne49's avatar Delphyne49 says:

    Speaking of Paul Ryan, I’m not sure if this link has been posted already, and apologies if it has, but I thought that this column was a good one.

  4. RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

    Happy St Patrick’s Day!

    Speaking of women’s rights, apparently GOP women are too ‘busy’ for equal pay. Jeez.

    HuffPo: Head Of GOP Women’s PAC Flubs Equal Pay Question

    The head of RedState Women, a new Republican PAC in Texas aimed at rallying women voters for GOP gubernatorial candidate Greg Abbott, got a little tripped up on Sunday trying to explain the GOP’s alternatives to the equal pay laws they oppose.

    Cari Christman, executive director of the PAC, told WFAA that Republicans oppose the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act because “women want real-world solutions to this problem, not more rhetoric.” The law, signed by President Barack Obama in 2009, allows women to file a claim against pay discrimination when she discovers it, not a limited amount of time after the unequal pay began.

    When asked what her proposed solution to the gender pay gap might look like, she began repeating the point that women are “busy.” …

  5. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Tom Ricks has “had it with the moral posturing of Glenn Greenwald and Edward Snowden.”

    http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2014/03/17/ok_i_have_had_it_with_the_moral_posturing_of_glenn_greenwald_and_edward_snowden

  6. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    http://www.motherjones.com/mixed-media/2013/10/gravity-catherine-cady-coleman-interview-nasa-astronaut-sandra-bullock

    One passion Coleman gets to indulge, whether she’s on Earth or hovering far above it, is her love for music. (She’s played in a band with Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, who is famous for playing David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” in space.) When she isn’t jamming, she prefers listening to folk music, as well as hits from the ’80s and ’90s. Coleman is perhaps the only astronaut to play the Jethro Tull frontman’s flute in space. “I reached out to Ian Anderson, saying I’d like to bring a flute with me, and he said yes!” Coleman says. And in 2011, during a live NASA broadcast on Saint Patrick’s Day, she played a hundred-year-old flute that belonged to Matt Molloy of the Irish band the Chieftains. A recording of this performance is included in “The Chieftains in Orbit” on the 2012 album Voice of Ages. “It was thrilling to see my name on something that was on sale at Starbucks,” she says. Here’s a screenshot of the gig:

    • RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

      Speaking of Space, gravity waves!!!!!

    • RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

      Esquire: Copernicus, Galileo, Hubble, and Now…Guth

      First published in our 1999 Genius Issue, this is the story of Alan Guth, a physicist whose theory of inflation — which attempted to explain how the universe expanded so quickly after the Big Bang — was supported today by the discovery of waves in the fabric of space-time. Essentially, if inflation can be proven, it would reveal our tiny speck of dirt to be even tinier. This man came up with the idea 35 years ago.

      Sure looks like he was right. Universes just got infinitely larger.

      • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

        Sounds like a Nobel prize

        • RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

          It’s been, more or less, accepted as gospel for decades but proving it could ignite a fire in cosmology. I sure hope so anyway. Far too many questions and too few people even looking for answers now.

          • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

            Especially with the funding cuts to science over the past couple of administrations.

          • RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

            Classic example of short term thinking. Basic research like this is the source of virtually all later knowledge and progress. If we really want to expand our bounds, we can’t afford not to do it.

            I know I’m preaching to the choir 🙂

  7. minkoffminx's avatar JJ Lopez Minkoff says:

    Hey, Happy St. P Day!

    Have you all seen the latest:

    Change in Plane’s Path Was Entered via Computer – NYTimes.com

    The first turn to the west that diverted the missing Malaysia Airlines plane from its planned flight path from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing was carried out through a computer system that was most likely programmed by someone in the plane’s cockpit who was knowledgeable about airplane systems, according to senior American officials.

    Instead of manually operating the plane’s controls, whoever altered Flight 370’s path typed seven or eight keystrokes into a computer on a knee-high pedestal between the captain and the first officer, according to officials. The Flight Management System, as the computer is known, directs the plane from point to point specified in the flight plan submitted before each flight. It is not clear whether the plane’s path was reprogrammed before or after it took off.

    There was some strange speculation today too:

    CNN’s Don Lemon Wonders Whether Something ‘Supernatural’ Happened to Malaysian Plane | Mediaite

    Could Malaysia Air Flight 370 have been hacked?

    Cannonfire: Weird theories about that missing Malaysian airliner

    Here’s an angle I didn’t know about…

    On 11th March eight villagers from Marang lodged police reports claiming that they had heard a loud noise last Saturday coming from the direction of Pulau Kapas and believed it was linked to the disappearance of a Malaysia Airlines (MAS) flight on that day.

    All of them, from Kampung Pantai Seberang Marang, made the reports at the Marang district police headquarters at about 10.30am. One of them, Alias Salleh, 36, said he and seven fellow villagers were seated on a bench about 400 metres from the Marang beach at 1.20am when they heard the noise, which sounded like the fan of a jet engine.

    “The loud and frightening noise came from the north-east of Pulau Kapas and we ran in that direction to find out the cause. We looked around the Rhu Muda beach, but did not see anything unusual,” said the lorry driver.

    Replying to a question, Alias said they lodged the police report so that it would be of help to the authorities who were trying to locate the missing MAS aircraft.

    Another villager, Mohd Yusri Mohd Yusof, 34, said when he heard the strange noise, he thought a tsunami was about to strike.

    “My friends and I heard the ringing noise for about two minutes. I decided to lodge the police report after seeing the media reports on the lost flight,” he said. – Bernama

    Mainstream news pieces have backed up these “strange noises” reports: See here and here. I can’t prove that the mystery booms are connected to MH370, but a linkage certainly seems possible.

    Honestly this missing plane is terrifying. I wonder if we will ever find it, before it makes a spectacular appearance someplace else.

  8. RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

    Raw Story: The return of the son of the bride of ‘This is why we can’t have nice things’

    If you read nothing else TBogg has written, please read this one and pass it around!

  9. Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

    Good one, I am reminded of the year 1971……………and the 26th Amendment………and the old saying “old enough to fight, old enough to vote”. I suppose these carefree youth need a little purpose in their lives, maybe the draft will wake them the hell up.