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December 21, 2010 Tomgram: Rebecca Solnit, A Shadow Government of Kindness
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: As
this year ends with a remarkable spate of contributions and show of
support for this website, I offer one last deep bow of appreciation to
all of you around the country and the world who have offered a helping
hand and so assured us of a good 2011. As of the 24th of December, the
offer of signed books from Andrew Bacevich and Adam Hochschild will end
(and only my book, The American Way of War,
will still be available
in return for a contribution of $75 or more). And speaking of helping
hands, the TomDispatch crew -- Joe Duax, Nick Turse, Andy Kroll, Timothy
MacBain, and intern Jennifer O’Mahony -- get a special bow from me. I
couldn’t begin to do it without you! Finally, I want to offer thanks to
Christopher Holmes, volunteer extraordinaire and eagle-eyed copyeditor,
who helps keep TD remarkably error free. He’s a superb example of the
phenomenon that Rebecca Solnit discusses in her piece today. Thank you,
Chris! See all of you again in January and here’s wishing you a fine
holiday season.]
I have a friend who sends a note every year in December, pleading with me to pen one upbeat, hopeful piece before the next year rolls around. Mind you, I consider myself an upbeat guy in a downbeat world and, for me, when it comes to pure upbeatness, you couldn’t have beaten this week if you tried. This was when my Oscar came in -- or the equivalent on the political Internet anyway. On December 7th, the State Department announced its brave decision to host UNESCO’s World Press Freedom Day in 2011. (“[W]e are concerned about the determination of some governments to censor and silence individuals, and to restrict the free flow of information…”) Less than two weeks later, I learned that if you try to go to TomDispatch.com from a State Department computer, you can’t get there. The following message appears instead: “Access Denied for Security Risk (policy_wikileaks) “Your requested URL has been blocked to prevent classified information from being downloaded to OpenNet.” OpenNet is what the State Department calls its unclassified Web system. Maybe it should now consider changing that name as it prepares for World Press Freedom Day. (Small tip to State Department officials: remember that TomDispatch is just as good a read at home as at work!) I’m sure this is all part of the Obama administration’s fabulous sunshine policy, that “new standard of openness” the president embraced on his first day in the Oval Office. It’s certainly part of the U.S. government’s ridiculous attempt to bar its officials, contractors, and anyone else it can reach from the once-secret State Department documents that WikiLeaks is slowly releasing and that everyone else on Earth has access to. As for me in this holiday season, I couldn’t be happier. Among those sites banned by the State Department, I’m sure in good company and, of course, you’re not likely to be banned if no one’s reading you in the first place. And here’s the holiday miracle: somehow TomDispatch made it onto The List without revealing a single secret document or even hosting one at the site, evidently on the basis of having commented in passing on the WikiLeaks affair. So that’s the news here at TD when it comes to upbeat. As for hope, hey, I’ve learned from the Bush years. As they privatized war, I’ve privatized hope, farming it out to Rebecca Solnit, who from her first appearance at TomDispatch has filled the endowed Hope Chair brilliantly. It’s now nothing short of a tradition at this site that she have the last word of the year. So, as the eighth year of TomDispatch.com ends, it’s up the chimney with me. Enjoy the Solnitsian present I’ve left under the tree -- and to all a goodnight (until January 4th when TomDispatch returns). Tom Iceberg Economies and Shadow Selves |
