Terrorist attack in Paris. 127 confirmed dead

Unknown Poster

I had to do it to em.
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SOHH Class of 2006

Good post.

Its only gonna get ugly from here on in. That dude was speaking the truth.

I am 100% happy i just continue to use the internet for my news instead of watching msm here. No lies were told this is just gonna be another smash grab exploit where the region will be destabilized in order to create a permanet military occupation in syria.




And guess what Syria has?
OlL
 

Unknown Poster

I had to do it to em.
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Just asking a question. One Congolese parent, one Belgian parent... I wasn't insulting her. Maybe your father is the Congolese one? I'm just asking how did you come to be? Belgian Soldier/Congolese villager? Congolese Student in Belgium? Pardon me, but with the history of those regions, it is interesting as to whether or not it was a forced arrangement. Were you ever taught what the Belgians did in the Congo?
Does it bother you that they still CELEBRATE that shyt? Their horrific crimes?

Whatever Happened to Baby Jane
How to Save Books in the Digital Era: A Booksniffer’s Appeal →
Chocolates as Cultural Blind Spots: Responding to “Civilization”
Posted on February 21, 2013 by Caroline Dean


On February 5th, the Kaplan Institute had the pleasure of welcoming distinguished art history scholars Todd Porterfield (Université de Montréal) and Deborah Silverman (UCLA) to participate in its annual DIALOGUE series. This year, the topic was “Civilization,” and the discussion focused on the ways in which imperialism influenced art and objects produced in France and Belgium at the time of their African conquests. Both professors presented excerpts from longer projects, which you can read more about here. To grossly summarize their discussion, Professor Porterfield looked at the ways in which the Luxor Obelisk at the Place de la Concorde, “given” to the French by Egypt less than 30 years after Napoleon’s campaign in Egypt, functioned as a political statement legitimating Louis-Philippe’s July Monarchy and future French imperialism. Professor Silverman examined the extent to which Belgian art nouveau reflected and knowingly concealed colonial violence in the Congo Free State.

Today I’d like to look at Professor Silverman’s concept of “cultural blind spots” –the idea that vestiges of colonial violence in Belgian objects and artwork went almost entirely unnoticed by the public- and similar structures in American society today. One of her most vivid examples involved chocolate hands, a regional specialty of Antwerp. Called Antwerpse handjes in Dutch, these sweets are associated primarily with the myth of the founding of the city, in which the hero Brabo slew the tyrannical giant Antigoon, cut off one of his hands, and threw it in the river. However, Professor Silverman contends, Antwerpse handjes also reflect the atrocities committed by Belgian colonial forces in the Congo. Between 1885-1908, Belgium controlled a sizeable chunk of Central Africa known as the Congo Free State, where it made an enormous profit using forced Congolese labor to harvest rubber and ivory. Agents of the Belgian-controlled state charged with enforcing rubber quotas were best known for their policy of collecting the severed hands of Congolese who failed to make these quotas. Heaped in baskets and presented to European higher-ups, these gruesome, iconic testaments to the brutality of Belgian imperialism were kept as proof that the soldiers’ bullets were not being wasted.

Knowing this history, it is almost impossible to look at pictures of Antwerpse handjes without cringing, let alone consume them. Yet, Professor Silverman explained, never once during her time researching in Belgium did she speak to someone who drew the connection between the severed hands of the Congo Free State and the hand-shaped chocolates enjoyed by thousands in Antwerp.
The pervasiveness of this particular cultural blind spot might seem difficult for us to imagine, but it’s important to recognize that it’s easier to be shocked by foreign insensitivity than to identify similar instances in our own culture.


At a follow-up luncheon with Professors Porterfield and Silverman, my table discussed potential American cultural blind spots. The example that jumped most readily to mind were the names, mascots, and logos of sports teams like the Washington Redskins, the Cleveland Indians, and –a little closer to home- the Chicago Blackhawks. These and many other teams, despite having been the focus of protests and controversies, continue to use images that not only perpetuate ethnic stereotypes, but also mask the persecution and decimation of the Native American population. The continuing problem of racism in advertisements was also discussed (from the 1920’s to the 40’s to today), although it seems that recently, thanks to the many critical eyes of the Internet, many offensive advertisements –like the Intel one in the last link- are pulled before they reach consumers.

The issue with this kind of speculation, of course, is that cultural blind spots are called blind spots for a reason: they’re tropes that the vast majority of a society accepts until the passage of time allows us to contextualize them. We were only able to think of examples of cultural phenomena that have already been widely critiqued as problematic, not true blind spots like Antwerpse handjes. With that in mind, we’d love to hear your thoughts on the subject. What, if anything, will come to be seen as American Antwerpse handjes? What other cultural blind spots exist in America today?
That shyt is foul.
 

Somewhere For Me

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Uncensored theater picture


CWQkRzh.jpg

That place is going to be all kinds of haunted now...

Twenty years from now, we will be hearing about ghost stories from the place.

Crazy.
 

BigMan

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Just asking a question. One Congolese parent, one Belgian parent... I wasn't insulting her. Maybe your father is the Congolese one? I'm just asking how did you come to be? Belgian Soldier/Congolese villager? Congolese Student in Belgium? Pardon me, but with the history of those regions, it is interesting as to whether or not it was a forced arrangement. Were you ever taught what the Belgians did in the Congo?
Does it bother you that they still CELEBRATE that shyt? Their horrific crimes?
y?
you've stated you don't like Belgians or French but don't you think what you are doing is extremely rude?
do you go to light skinned people and rant about how their ancestors were probably raped?
 

ALonelyDad

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You can't deport a born raised citizen. France shoved these folks in the 50-11th arrondissements and said fucc 'em.
Then I say keep em in jail, jail is where they are meeting the other terrorists and getting radicalized..at that point once they get out, they are going to do it. It's the same story with most of these guys, they were either jailed or FBI knew something was fishy with them.
 

ALonelyDad

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This is just gonna turn into a war against muslims, immigrants, and ethnic minorities eventually instead of a war against isis or boko haram or whoever. That was the plan obviously. EU wants to get rid of them and its very obvious.
And this is what those groups want to, because in the end ISIS will be the only group to turn to for them when they are shut out from these areas.
 

Mowgli

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Looks like this is gonna get very very messy on an international scale.

Yeah...I dont know. This has the propensity to be a really ugly international military situation.

Man...this world is fukked up at this point in time. This feels like it's turning into a shyt hitting the fan situation.
How is the world going to go upside down fighting a small group of people. This isn't like super power Vs superpower. Just another exercise to show how easily they can squash organizations
 
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