Tag: youtube
Main To Khelungi Un Sang Hori
Note: For Nazli.
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Bert Haanstra – Glas (1958)
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Abida Parveen & Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, Chaap Tilak
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Aldous Huxley interview-1958
manitas de plata (1921 – 2014)
BRANCH LINE – 1 – Sir John Betjeman
Friday, November 14, 2014
Reza Aslan shatters GOP beliefs: Jesus from history was “the nightmare of Bill O’Reilly”
More here.
The American Justice Summit
“There is a growing consensus that America's criminal justice system is in urgent need of reform. Today, about 2.4 million people are incarcerated in the US — by far the most in any country worldwide. Another 7 million people are under probation and on parole, and 65 million have criminal records, which often make it difficult or impossible to do things like secure college loans, find housing, or vote.
The American Justice Summit.. [brought] together those who are championing innovative, cost-effective solutions to the problems plaguing the criminal justice system. A series of panels and conversations will explore the personal, social, and financial inequities of America's prison system — and the ways to remedy them.”
Video of the panels can be found here.
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Najla Said at the NYS Writers Institute
Najla Said is the author of the new memoir Looking for Palestine: Growing Up Confused in an Arab-American Family (2013). The daughter of major Palestinian-American intellectual and political activist Edward Said, Najla spent her formative years in the largely Jewish milieu of Manhattan’s Upper West Side. A witty exploration of post-modern, hyphenated American identity, the book opens with the playful statement, “I am a Palestinian-Lebanese-American Christian woman, but I grew up as a Jew in New York City.”
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Why John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight Is Better Than The Daily Show and Colbert
Matt Zoller Seitz in Slate:
Over the past few weeks he’s shown us, with evidence, that while our national legislature is unproductive and tedious, our local legislatures are incredibly prolific and often demented; that the rules governing drone strikes are so filled with slippery language as to be almost meaningless; that the death penalty and our preferred defense of the need for the death penalty are holdovers from medieval Europe’s golden age of religious-based torture; that the increasing income inequality in the United States is inextricably tied to its historical belief in optimism, a cover for money-grubbing that turns exploited people into enablers (“I can clearly see that this game is rigged,” Oliver proclaimed, in the voice of a typical American citizen, “which is gonna make it really sweet when I win this thing!”); that former U.S. troops are working harder to get translators to the states than our own government is; that “nutritional supplements” are the new snake oil; and that President Warren G. Harding was a smooth mofo who wrote “smutty fuck-notes” to his mistress. And his interviews, while tinged with agreeable but by-now-cliché Daily Show–style goofiness, are excellent: particularly his sit-downs with Stephen Hawking, Australian prime minister Tony Abbott, and General Keith Alexander, former head of the National Security Agency, where the motto was, to quote Oliver, “Collect everything … the motto of a hoarder, that’s the fundamental principle that ends up with somebody living alongside 1,500 copies of newspapers from the 1950s and ‘60s and six mummified cats.” (It helps tremendously that most of these interviews are conducted off-site, away from a studio audience that might encourage the guest to “perform” too much or the host to overdo the chumminess.)
More here.
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
“…yes”, by Sue Hubbard, accompanied by Lola Perrin on Piano
Sunday, November 9, 2014
Negro Prison Songs / “Black Woman-Murder’s Home-Jumpin’Judy”
Bon Iver – Skinny Love
I Was a Bustle Maker Once, Girls by Patrick Barrington
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Seven-minute onslaught of intense off-road road action
Friday, November 7, 2014
The Science of Fireworks
Thursday, November 6, 2014
The art of choosing – Sheena Iyengar
[Thanks to Namit Arora.]
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Time, Matter, and the Universe with Physicist Sean Carroll
Monday, November 3, 2014
Islam, Colonization, Imperialism and so on
by Omar Ali
At about 6 pm on Sunday evening, a young suicide bomber (said to be 18 years old) blew himself up in a crowd returning from the testosterone-heavy flag lowering ceremony held every evening at the India-Pakistan border at Wagah, near Lahore.
Presumably this young man (a true believer, since a fake believer would find it hard to explode in such circumstances) had wanted to target the ceremony itself (usually watched by up to 5000 people every day, most of them visitors from out of town) but the military had received prior intelligence that something like this may happen and there were 6 checkpoints and he was unable to get to the ceremony, so he waited around the shops about 500 yards away from the parade site and exploded when he felt he had enough bodies around him to make it worth his while.
About 60 innocent people died. Many of them women and children. Including 8 women from the same poor family from a village in central Punjab who were visiting relatives in Lahore and decided to go to the parade (whether as entertainment, or as patriotic theater, or both). The bombing was instantly claimed by more than one Jihadist organization but it is possible that Ehsanullah Ehsan’s claim will turn out to be true. He said it was a reaction against the military’s recent anti-terrorist operation (operation Zarb e Azb: “blow of the sword of the prophet”), that his group wants “an Islamic system of government” and that they would attack infidel regimes on both sides of the Indian-Pakistani border.