Welcome to Swans Commentary  http://www.swans.com/  November 1, 2010

*** FUNDRAISING DRIVE: Thanks to the helping hand of Louis Proyect (see 
his message below) and the generosity of 13 donors we've raised almost 
$600 in the last two weeks. This is good news! But it also means that we 
need to raise another $1,900 before the end of the year. You do remember 
what Swans is about, right? "In a time of revisionism, faux-semblant, 
spinning news, and skewed information, Swans is about thinking, 
questioning, observing, and providing ideas that are lacking in the 
mainstream media." (It's also about Arts & Culture.) We've been doing it 
for almost 15 years with authors from many countries who appreciate and 
agree with our quiet radicalism, our Web exclusivity, and dedication to 
proper editing. Please help us carry on our tradition of providing you 
with only original work, not multi- posted stuff you find in most Web 
publications... Donate now! http://www.swans.com/about/donate.html

Many thanks to Louis Proyect, Alex Munro, Cecilio Morales, Samuel 
Bennett, Michael Yates, William O'Connor, Richard Brand, Nick Harlow, 
John Halle, Raymond Alford, Claudia Resch, Isidor Saslav, and Michael 
Fahey for their generous contributions. ***

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Note from the Editors:   You may have noticed that Swans has remained 
stubbornly silent about the insane US mid-term elections, considering 
that in the words of Jon Stewart "we live in hard times, not end times" 
and the situation will remain as bad as it is once this sideshow is over 
and the circus folds its tent until it reopens for the 2012 presidential 
elections. So, this latest edition will take you instead on a 
geographical tour.

Let's begin this tour in America where, after a pitch for Swans by Louis 
Proyect, Michael Barker provides the first part of his study on the 
links between the philanthropic elites on one hand and the Student 
Nonviolent Organizing Committee and the civil rights movement on the 
other. From that exploration to another one: the blatant hypocrisy of 
the military system and those who claim to support the troops, which Jan 
Baughman illustrates through her review of "The Tillman Story." No 
wonder, Michael Doliner offers a bleak look at the end of constitutional 
government in the United States!

Let's leave this country and journey to Nigeria, the country of Femi 
Akomolafe's birth where, as Femi explains, the mess of the electoral 
process goes far beyond that of the U.S. Then hop on a quick ride to 
India for a travelogue that leads Peter Byrne from Pondicherry to 
Auroville where he interacts with Pierre, a Francophile character, 
which, *mais c'est bien sûr,* brings France into this little tour. 
There, Graham Lea takes a look at literature in general, with special 
attention to Jean Giono, whom Marcel Pagnol called the (then) greatest 
contemporary French writer. For her part Marie Rennard writes a short 
story on colors, inspired by Rimbaud's Voyelles. Time now for a short 
visit to Italy, or more exactly Palermo, Sicily, where Guido Monte 
teaches and writes about horizons, mirrors, and ponts suspendus in the 
company of Viviana Fiorentino. Finally, one last trip before your 
letters, this time in the ether where Maxwell Clark imagines a protocol 
for his eulogy, an epic 11,200-word poem over a year in the making.

(Regrettably, Gilles d'Aymery got mired in his research on bleak 
environmental information regarding fossil fuels (petroleum, natural 
gas, and coal), carbon dioxide emissions, acidification of the oceans, 
the decline in phytoplankton (40% since 1950), the fauna and flora 
extinctions, the end of fish, the melting of glaciers, and much more. He 
was unable to finish the piece before deadline. It will be published in 
a fortnight.)

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All the articles and the Letters to the Editor can be freely accessed 
from Swans front page. Please go to:

http://www.swans.com/

You can also access our past issues at:

http://www.swans.com/library/past_issues/past_issues.html

And you have access to over 14 years of archives by date, author, and 
subject at:

http://www.swans.com/library/archives.html

Remember, what's free to you is not to us! To help our work financially 
please visit http://www.swans.com/about/donate.html

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Swans (aka Swans Commentary), ISSN: 1554-4915, is a bi-weekly non- 
commercial ad-free Web-only magazine which provides original content to 
its readers. We encourage pulp publications to republish Swans Work in 
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Cordially,

Gilles d'Aymery

-- Swans

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

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