Welcome to Swans Commentary   http://www.swans.com/   October 18, 2010

*** Fundraising Drive: It may be too early to raise our level of anxiety 
but we  haven't received one donation in the past two weeks, since the 
beginning of this  $2,500 fundraising drive and in spite of the Special 
Issue on Immigration 
(http://www.swans.com/library/past_issues/2010/101004.html), which scope 
and  quality we hoped would make readers and friends open their minds, 
their hearts,  and their wallets. It has not happened...yet. As a 
reader-supported publication we  are totally dependent on your support 
and generosity. Please help Swans, which is  deeply and intrinsically 
rooted in the rich terroir of solidarity, remain an ad-free rational 
island in an ocean of commercial make-believe. 
http://www.swans.com/about/donate.html ***

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Note from the Editors:  In September 2010, Gilles d'Aymery began his 
cogent series  on *Why The Economy Is Not Coming Back*; since then, the 
indicators continue to  look bleak -- read today's Part II for further 
explanation as to why the system is  in a bind. In the meantime, yet 
another economic scandal began to reveal itself,  with the major banks 
halting foreclosures to look into the practice of robo-signing people 
out of their homes. Finally, a halt to foreclosures -- something  our 
resident economist recommended in January 2008 as part of a real 
stimulus  package! And yet...the same people who keep repeating that we 
can't raise taxes in  a recession because it will hurt job growth would 
have us believe that the  foreclosure moratorium will hurt...the housing 
market! We clearly haven't been  successful mall shoppers if we're now 
expected to forfeit our very homes to  stimulate the economy... Speaking 
of propaganda, Michael Barker reviews Jeffery  Klaehn's edited 
collection, *The Political Economy of Media and Power,*  challenging 
capitalist hegemony and the mainstream media's role in fueling it, 
while Michael Doliner posits that we've been driven to the present 
situation  through the creation of the American "new man," an ambitious, 
uneducated product  of unreason. Economic disparity is taken to new 
levels in Ghana, as Femi Akomolafe  reports, where politicians and 
police rule the roads with siren-blaring motorcades  and brazenly flaunt 
their ill-gotten wealth.

After all that, it's high time for a cultural escape, starting with 
Charles  Marowitz's pleasant surprise that George Bernard Shaw is indeed 
still relevant as  demonstrated by the South Coast Rep's production of 
his play *Misalliance.*  Demonstrating a return to relevance in Italian 
culture (possibly given its current  economy) is the American author 
John Fante, whose writing is free from the typical  stiff formality and 
covers topics that would be avoided in that country. And for  an 
introduction to some very talented female autobiographical comic book 
artists,  turn the page to Paul Buhle and follow the links to the 
creativity of Sophie Crumb, Lauren Weinstein, and Vanessa Davis.

Next we journey to Carmel, California, which Charles Marowitz considers 
the  closest thing to Montmartre in America -- unspoiled, artistic, and 
calming to the  soul (with a hefty price tag, we might add), and Peter 
Byrne takes us on a happy  train trip through the eyes (or imagination?) 
of a child. Claudine Giovannoni &  Guido Monte's multilingual verses 
take us to Africa, and Maxwell Clark creates a  poetic tribute to 
revolutionary poet Charles Bernstein. We close with your letters  on our 
special edition on immigration, and ask that you do a small part to help 
  keep the Swans economy afloat.

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All the articles and the Letters to the Editor can be freely accessed 
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subject at:

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please visit http://www.swans.com/about/donate.html

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Gilles d'Aymery

  -- Swans

"Hungry man, reach for the book: It is a weapon."  B. Brecht




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