MySpace
myspace music


Jesse Irwin



Last Updated: 12/15/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Status: Single
City: St. Louis
State: Missouri
Country: US
Signup Date: 7/13/2005

Blog Archive
[Older      Newer]
 /  / 
Friday, July 06, 2007 
If you have a minute, check this out. I've been saying the same thing ever since I leaned about the Federal Reserve. Ron Paul is the one guy in congress brave enough to say this stuff.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ji_G0MqAqq8
Sunday, April 09, 2006 

Since I got rid of my television I have realized that it is MY responsibility to seek out world news. I have been looking at a lot of newspaper websites, but the pickings can be slim and repetitious. Two days ago I decided to start reading French newspapers online and I stumbled across

http://www.lemonde.com/

which is probably the best source of world news that has ever existed. You can click on a section of the world and read newspapers from different countries - all translated into English.

I  found this article in the Khaleej Times, a newspaper out of the United Arab Emirates. It is true. 

End of empire?
BY RAMZY BAROUD

8 April 2006


THE miscalculated policies of the US administration in the Middle East are quickly depleting the countrys ability to sustain its once unchallenged global position. Winds of change are blowing everywhere, and there is little that Washingtons ideologues can do to stop it.

The above claim is increasingly finding its way into the realm of mainstream thinking, despite all attempts to mute or relegate its import. A recent speech by US Republican congressman and chairman of the House of international relations committee, Henry Hyde was the focal point of analysis by Martin Jacques in The Guardian. "Our power has the grave liability of rendering our theories about the world immune from failure. But by becoming deaf to easily discerned warning signs, we may ignore long-term costs that result from our actions and dismiss reverses that should lead to a re-examination of our goals and means," Hyde said.

In his poignant analysis  decoding Hydes deliberately implicit thoughts  Jacques argued, "The Bush administration stands guilty of an extraordinary act of imperial overreach which has left the US more internationally isolated than ever before, seriously stretched financially, and guilty of neglect in east Asia and elsewhere."

Ironically, the invasion of Iraq with its "thousands of tactical" mistakes  as recently admitted by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice  was meant to solidify and ensure the US post Cold-War global dominance. According to Jacques, as inferred from Hydes notable speech, "It may well prove to be a harbinger of its decline." It can also be argued that the US adventurism in Iraq has provided the coveted opportunity to other countries to further their national and regional interests without the constant fear of US reprisals. 

In a recent interview, MIT professor Noam Chomsky, known for his sharp criticism of US foreign policy particularity in Indochina, Central and Latin America, delineated a new global political reality that is being forged as the US stubbornly insists on fighting a lost battle in Iraq. "Whats happening is something completely new in the history of the hemisphere. Since the Spanish conquest, the countries of Latin America have been pretty much separated from one another and oriented towards the imperial power. For the first time, they are beginning to integrate and in quite a few different ways."

That integration is evident, according to Chomsky, not only by examining the rise of the Left in these countries and the almost immediate alliances  economic cooperation, for example  that these popular governments have achieved. There is a simultaneous rise of the political relevance of the indigenous Indian population in Bolivia, and the opportunities it represents to the Indian population of Ecuador and Peru. Moreover, there is a noteworthy South-South integration that is already breaking regional boundaries and significantly undermining the overpowering grip of the IMF, which has played the infamous role of the unfair middleman between the rich and hapless poor. 

China and India, on the other hand, continue to achieve astounding economic growth with Chinas economic might and relevance to soon surpass that of the US. In fact, there is an intense diplomatic clash underway between the US and China, since the latter has dared to violate the understanding of the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, which gave the US alone the right to manage its Latin American domains. For the first time, says a BBC analysis, a foreign country has challenged American influence in the region, and successfully so. Indeed, China is upgrading its economic relations with Brazil  both increasingly formidable economic powers  in ways that will eventually help Brazil break away from a domineering US hold.

These are all part of the "warning signs" to which Hyde was refereeing in his speech. While there are indications that Washington is finally waking up to this grim reality, which it has helped create, there are no signs whatsoever that a fundamental change of course in US foreign policy in the Middle East is taking place: the destructive war in Iraq rages on; the self-inflicting damage of unconditionally backing Israel in its endless colonial ambitions perpetuates; and the same detrimental policy line used with Iraq is employed, almost identically with Iran. US policy planners are as ever insistent on following the same destructive course that has compromised their nations global standing.

Instead of paying attention to these woes, the Bush administration is trying to recover some of its Southeast Asia losses by signing a nuclear treaty with India, an action that reeks of double standards and miscalculations. The administration has also lifted the ban on sales of lethal arms to Indonesia in recognition of its "unique strategic role in Southeast Asia," despite protests from human rights groups.

Despite Bushs recent historic trip to India and other top officials hasty attempts to reassert Americas global dominance, there should be no illusions that the US chief foreign policy debacle starts and ends with the Middle East  especially its special relationship with Israel. While the latter has served the role of the client state since its establishment on ethnically cleansed Palestinian territories, this relationship was significantly altered in recent years, with the pro-Israeli lobby taking centre stage, not simply by influencing US foreign policy toward Israel, but eventually by directing it altogether in the region.

The rise of the neoconservatives helped create the false impression that the US and Israeli policies are one and the same, including their mutual interests in maintaining Israels military "edge" over its neighbours, which eventually led to the invasion of Iraq. While the neocons are washing their hands of any responsibility in the Middle East impasse, the Bush administrations arrogance is stopping it from immediately withdrawing its troops from Iraq and reassessing its relationship with Israel.

The world is changing, yet the US government refuses to abandon its old ways: militaristic, self-defeating and overbearing. Indeed, the US must remould, not only its policies in the Middle East, but also its hegemonic policies throughout the world. For once, the US administration needs to tap into its sense of reason, and discern the "warning signs", that should lead to "the re-examination of [its] goals and means." A first step is to bring the troops home, and with them the entire doctrine that unrestrained violence and perpetual wars can further the cause of an already distrusted superpower.

Veteran Arab American journalist Ramzy Baroud teaches mass communication at Australias Curtin University of Technology, Malaysia Campus. His most recent book, Writings on the Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a Peoples Struggle has been published by Pluto Press, London

 

Looking for news seems like it would take a lot of time, but it doesn't. Evening news shows go on for an hour. During this time they air at least 20 minutes of commercials. I now get my daily news in this amount of time.  It also happens to be the best type of news I can imagine. If I could read in 20 languages and had papers from all over the world delivered to me daily, I couldn't be this efficient. I really encourage everyone to use this FREE thing that has so enriched my life.

We are living at a critical time in human history and our current leaders (and I'm not just talking about the Bush administration) seem to be lacking the vision and unity to pursue  positive and mutally benficial outcomes. It is our responsibility to lead them and that begins with being informed.

 

Monday, April 03, 2006 

I mailed my last two CDs to Pennsylvania this morning. Pennsylvania!

Thanks to all of you who bought one or accepted one I gave away.

If you have a CD please feel free to make multiple copies - I've gotten lots of free music so it's time I share some of mine.

-Jesse

Thursday, December 15, 2005 
You know you have become a real musician when you take the battery out of your smoke detector to use in your guitar tuner.
Friday, December 09, 2005 

Well, it looks like I shall become a bass player. My band is sounding great, vocally. I am going to learn to lay down some phat riffs and take a backseat to superior guitar players.

Last night we went through a case of stag and made some wonderful harmony. I can't explain how happy it made me.

In three months we are going to rock this town apart.

Monday, December 05, 2005 

Some people have been asking me why my myspace page is updated more often than my actual website. Well, it's because someone else (the wonderful Adnan Ademovic) designed and built the site for me and I have to bother him every time I need a change and then I feel bad. Last night I figured out how to edit things without screwing up the website, so things should be cool from now on. I finally got all of the lyrics for my CD up there. My history page is now slightly more accurate...

Rock on.

-Jesse

Tuesday, November 29, 2005 

Current mood:  tired

I had to pull an all-nighter tonight. The research report is done. I am supposed to be reading more stuff right now but my brain is rebelling. These classes are almost done and soon I will be able to get back to my normal activities as soon as I remember what they were.

I finished my two tracks for the compilation CD I'm putting together on Sunday with Jacob Detering (Red Pill Studios). I can't get them to load properly on the myspace page. I'm a little deçu. Wish I had some rasperry zingers right now.

I've been one bummed out dude for the past few weeks but I think things are starting to turn around. I met this guy named Matt and I think he may be the one to help me start my band, which is good. Now I need a drummer that can sing. I'd like to find a girl that could sing really well for the vocal mix, too. That would be really cool. Now I will sleep.

Friday, August 26, 2005 

Current mood:  depressed

I am moving into a place with no shower, no sink or toilet, no flooring in two rooms and no refrigerator or stove. I am trying to work and my college classes have started. There is just not enough time. Fuck this.

Sunday, August 21, 2005 

Jeff's attitude is really starting to bother me. At first I had some things for him to do and he was a real help. After a while he started talking too much, not listening to my instructions and oddly, trying to give me guilt trips when I asked him to do things. Every time I see him he says "when are you guys gonna give me some more work" instead of hello. This wouldn't bother me by itself, but  whenever I am in Carondelet I run into him at least once. He's everywhere - either walking around in his white tennis shoes and tall yellow-striped socks or riding a mountain bike with plastic bags full of tallboy beers hanging from the handles. Jeff is about six feet tall with long, curly blonde hair tied back in a pony tail with a rubber band. He is almost always shirtless and his chest, upper arms and back are covered in dark-colored tatoos. They were probably crude to begin with but the sun has since rendered them unidentifiable. His voice has become unbearable to me. It's loud, rough, cracks constantly and just sounds uncouth no matter what he's saying. He will be my neighbor soon and I'll get all kinds of stories from the experience, I'm certain.

Up the street there are a ton of young, attractive white trash girls. They are the ones who look good (in that rough sort of way) for around fourteen months when they are young. Smoking, drugs, bad eating habits and general hard-living make them really ugly in no time. They sure are something to look at in their tube tops and short shorts, though...

South city is not a boring place to live, that's for sure.

Sunday, August 21, 2005 

Today as I was applying some really nasty paint stripper to the kitchen baseboards in my new place, I realized something: I am immune to all fumes. I have nearly no sense of smell to begin with and I suppose that I've just worked around enough nasty smelling fumes that I just don't notice anymore. I painted all the trim in a room the other day with the oil-based variety of KILZ primer. I didn't even notice anything was wrong until my friend Lisa came in and insisted that I at least open a window to keep my brain from shriveling. It's like my receptors are just chillin' in the basement that is my nose, smokin' pot and being too lazy to sense smells for me.

My new place keeps looking cooler. I busted my ass working on it today and I'll probably be moving in on Sunday if I can keep this up.

Oh - I was going through one of the cabinets I took down today and I found a box of the little ziplock bags one uses to hold crack or meth. Nice. The woman who left them had  kid, too. Bummer for that kid. The good thing is I'll be in that building doing my best to be a good citizen and I hope the other units will eventually be filled with other responsible young folks who are generally on top of their shit and not theives/litterers. I look forward to taking yet another block of St. Louis back for good people who WANT to live here.