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	<title>The Third Estate &#187; Identity</title>
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		<title>On Cornel West</title>
		<link>http://thethirdestate.net/2009/10/on-cornel-west/</link>
		<comments>http://thethirdestate.net/2009/10/on-cornel-west/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Oct 2009 13:54:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Guest Post</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Cornel West]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Guest post by Carl Packman &#8220;You know, you already sent 21,000 troops. You might send 65,000 troops. That’s not a Peace Prize-acting activity.&#8221; That&#8217;s what the lifelong civil rights activist and cautious Obama supporter, Dr Cornel West, had to say about the president&#8217;s surprise reception of the Nobel Peace Prize whilst promoting his new memoir [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong>Guest post by <a href="http://raincoatoptimism.wordpress.com/">Carl Packman</a></strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-2543" title="3a" src="http://thethirdestate.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/3a-202x300.jpg" alt="3a" width="161" height="238" /><strong>&#8220;You know, you already sent 21,000 troops. You might send 65,000 troops. That’s not a Peace Prize-acting activity.&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>That&#8217;s what the lifelong civil rights activist and cautious Obama supporter, Dr Cornel West, had to say about the president&#8217;s surprise reception of the Nobel Peace Prize whilst promoting his new memoir this week.</p>
<p>Cornel Ronald West was born June 2nd 1953 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He was in his teenage years when his activism started to develop, caught up in the middle of civil rights demonstrations which he participated in and helped to organise. His Harvard years would see him being taught by the libertarian influenced Robert Nozick, most famous for his work on epistemology and his contribution to the brain-in-a-vat thought experiment. His militancy also started here, pushing for his political agendas to be met by the education hierarchies and creating a platform for his own “African, Christian and de-colonized outlooks.”</p>
<p>West’s academic life has been truly prolific since the completion of his doctoral thesis on Marxist ethics, which he earned from Princeton in 1980. He is currently the Class of 1943 Professor of Princeton University in the centre for African American Studies and the department of Religion. He holds 20 honorary degrees and is the author of 19 books that examine subjects as wide-ranging as racism, the Black Baptist Church, philosophy of religion and jazz. As well as writing books, he helped develop the philosophically charged storyline for the Wachowski brothers’ film The Matrix (1999) doubling up as the film’s official spokesperson and appearing in the final 2 films as Councillor West.</p>
<p>Unheard of for most intellectuals, when he is not working on anything academic or in film, West works on his musical career. He has recorded 3 music albums to date. His last album Never Forget: A Journey of Revelations featured some eminent names such as Prince, Outkast, Talib Kweli and KRS-ONE and took a stand against homophobic rap culture and lyrics that are considered derogatory to women.</p>
<p>Along with the recording of CD’s, advising Rev. Al Sharpton on his 2004 presidential campaign, and several lecture post cancellations, West drew some rather strident criticism from several other professors, who began questioning West’s intellectual rigour. One criticism in particular came from the Conservative professor of Comparative Literature, John McWhorter, who in April 2002 had written an impassioned article in the Wall Street Journal criticising West for replacing scholarly output with personal gain. McWhorter, who felt that it was inappropriate to keep West on as one of only 14 professors at Harvard, also speculated on West’s recent “decamp to Princeton” which began with a high-profile dispute with Lawrence H. Summers, the former president of Harvard.</p>
<p>The dispute started with Summers’ concern that West had started to neglect serious scholarly activity, and that West’s recent work had only consisted of edited volumes. Summers claims that West had cancelled three weeks worth of classes to endorse Bill Bradley’s presidential campaign, which led to West responding that he’d cancelled only one class to deliver an address at a “Harvard-sponsored conference on AIDS.” West felt that an academic should be specialised and faithful to her/his field but should not be limited to it, which encroached upon Summers’ very strict view of an academic&#8217;s duty and, according to West, is the totality of the disagreement.</p>
<p>But the disagreement went further still when West was taken ill with prostate cancer, he became disappointed that Summers had taken so long to send a get-well message (according to Pam Belluck and Jacques Steinberg for the New York Times in 2002) when by contrast new Princeton president, Shirley M. Tilghman “had called him almost weekly.” West ended up calling Summers the “Ariel Sharon of American Higher Education” and accepted an extended job offer made by Princeton, where he remains.</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2547" title="West" src="http://thethirdestate.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/CornelWestblackboard-300x206.jpg" alt="West" width="232" height="159" /></p>
<p>West’s public intellectual status began with the 1993 release of Race Matters, which has sold half a million copies to date. At the start of his book writing career, his political orientation was leaning more towards Marxism, with releases such as Prophecy Deliverance! (1982) and Prophetic Fragments (1988) that contended that class plays a far heavier significance than race in determining who is able to possess and who is lacking in societal power. But it was at the time of West’s release of The American Evasion of Philosophy (1989) where his intellectual attitudes began to modify, in which he took up more existential concerns.</p>
<p>For West, to be a left-winger today, one has to be concerned at the level of both the institutional and the existential. In an interview with Democracy Now, West claimed that the left today must target “the catastrophic … [so] often concealed in the deodorised and manicured discourses of the mainstream.”</p>
<p>West’s insistence on political existentialism emanates from his views on race. For him the birth of American racism and what he identified in Race Matters as black “existential angst” – which he believes still persists – originated in 1619, when America received shiploads of slaves. At this point, says West, America had both white and black slaves, and slavery itself was not yet “racialised”, but come 1621, white slaves had been named, whereas black slaves were identified simply by reference to their skin colour. West attributes this event as advancing the “black problematic of namelessness.” The black struggle that began with the abolitionist movement, all the way through to the civil rights movement, and to the present day is an expression of the fight against this “namelessness.” And it is an issue that West has always felt himself inextricably linked to.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft" title="Obama" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e9/Official_portrait_of_Barack_Obama.jpg/225px-Official_portrait_of_Barack_Obama.jpg" alt="" width="156" height="210" />So what symbolic event could ever take place to start averting Cornel West’s notion that the US is an institutionally racist nation? Surely the event of Barack Obama. West was supportive of Obama over the period of time in 2007 and early 2008 that he joined his campaign trail, albeit cautiously. West’s socialist tendencies meant that he took a step back in promoting Obama for his economic policies due to his <a href="http://www.examiner.com/x-17851-Monroe-County-Top-News-Examiner~y2009m8d4-Barack-Obama-the-ultimate-baitandswitch">propinquity to Robert Rubin</a>, the attorney turned economic advisor to Bill Clinton responsible for brutal deregulation measures, and named the 8th most unethical person in business by <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-10-most-unethical-people-in-business?siteid=rss">Marketwatch</a> earlier this year. But West considers the presidency to be symbolic on the psyche of black people and their struggles against what he considers to be America’s hitherto “white supremacy”.</p>
<p>Another public issue that West has recently immersed himself in is the debate over the term “post-racial America”. For West, the term’s recent importance designates a change in attitude that the white voter has regarding black candidates, what West calls “crossing the colour line”. Which, in his opinion, is obviously no bad thing, but it needn’t cross the line into “colour-blindness”. He goes on to say that the “black body” should be associated with “black humanity” and that the term “post-racial” is just an expression of “less racism”.</p>
<p>For justification, West notes that black voters have been voting on white candidates for years and, for them, it was not an expression of the post-racial, but looking for the best policies in a candidate, or, as West himself put it, apropos of the vote for a white mayor over the black candidate in Gary, Indiana, a vote based on “qualification as opposed to pigmentation”. And here, of course, he does have a major point; why should the issue of post-racial America emerge only now that there is a black president when black voters have always been looking beyond racial issues in their candidacy choice?</p>
<p>Whatever the outcome on the post-racial debate, West has told his supporters, and supporters of Obama in general, that the most important thing they can do is make their voices heard during his presidency years, and revitalise American democracy from its slumber. West has said that he aims to put pressure on Obama himself. In the interview with Democracy Now he stated clearly that he hoped Obama will be a “progressive Lincoln” so that West can be the “Frederick Douglass [abolitionist who held talks with Lincoln in 1863 on the treatment of black soldiers] to put pressure on him.”</p>
<p>It seems of great importance to listen to Cornel West’s highly enthused, energetic and celebrated voice, and I suspect it will be heard many more times to come in this new American era.</p></div>
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		<title>The Price of Freedom</title>
		<link>http://thethirdestate.net/2009/03/the-price-of-freedom/</link>
		<comments>http://thethirdestate.net/2009/03/the-price-of-freedom/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2009 01:05:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jacob</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Welfare State]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[biometric]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fraud]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Identity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[passports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tax]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thethirdestate.net/?p=278</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I had a bit of a scare last night. I was at a concert, and realised during the interval that I didn&#8217;t have my passport with me (I usually carry it with me everywhere in case I end up in another country), and of course this worried me. It wasn&#8217;t the fact that I&#8217;d lost [...]]]></description>
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<p>I had a bit of a scare last night. I was at a concert, and realised during the interval that I didn&#8217;t have my passport with me (I usually carry it with me everywhere in case I end up in another country), and of course this worried me. It wasn&#8217;t the fact that I&#8217;d lost an important document that was worrying, but rather the cost of replacing it. In 1995 a British passport cost £18, today it costs £72. It is a sad fact of life that to be free to travel one needs to hold one of these documents, and of course a British one is more useful than many passports from around the world. It will get you into most places. But how can the government justify a 300% price increase in 12 years? When the government seems to believe that £45 is enough to live on each week, how do they justify charging over one and a half times that for a document that simply gives us the right to identify ourselves as British citizens?</p>
<p>A quick bit of searching on the internet shows that the price of a passport vary massively, and aren&#8217;t linked simply to usual measures of wealth such as GDP. Just looking in the euro-zone, you can get a passport for the following price (for 10 years): €70 in Austria, €22 in Czech Republic, €10 in Estonia, €60 in France, €85 in Italy, €97 in Netherlands and €17 in Spain. This looks to me like the sort of thing the government could move on. Now, the last price increase here in the UK was a couple of years back and it was, according to the government, on the basis of increased costs in consular work. I&#8217;m not being funny, but do these costs vary so much between different countries? There remains no subsidies for buying a passport, so pensioners and people on benefits still have to pay the full amount. One of the few areas of government provisions where this is still the case, despite the fact that a massive majority of the population (approx. 45m people) have passports, suggesting this isn&#8217;t really a matter of choice.</p>
<p>Part of the expense seems to be a result of the introduction of &#8220;biometric&#8221; passports, and of course the cost has been landed on the public. Whilst many members of the public do not really care whether their passports now include a chip with some data on it, they still have to pay the cost, and it seems like an extremely expensive one for reducing a bit of identity fraud. Within a few years we&#8217;re going to have the new national identity cards introduced, and British citizens will find themselves having to shell out even more cash. Travel shouldn&#8217;t be seen as some luxury that we keep for those who can afford it; we should be pressuring the government to keep the price of passports as cheap as possible and should be arguing for subsidies for those who cannot afford the extortionate price in the first instance. There is no way the cost of Brits being abroad has quadrupled in less than 15 years, and the expense to the citizen is far greater than the expense to the state of having low-level identity theft being committed. As for me, it turned out I was just being daft and had left my passport on my desk.</p>
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