Lola reads against the Empire

TalkClub Read 2026

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Lola reads against the Empire

1LolaWalser
Jan 5, 5:14 pm



Partisan women fighters from Dalmatia in my just-liberated hometown, Split (October 1944). I want their spirit near me and in me.

From past experience I know that I don't do well with strictly planning my reads but long persistent themes are typical for me. I got the idea for one listening to this video: Jeffrey Sachs Blasts US Power Grab Over Venezuela, Maduro Capture at Historic UN Meeting"

The US having attempted "seventy (70) regime changes in the period of 1946-1989 ALONE" made me think it would interesting to do a "global" reading based on the countries involved. To be exhaustive I would add the countries the US bombed, invaded and otherwise meddled with specifically in the name of preserving/spreading the capitalist world order it rules and symbolizes. At the moment I haven't settled on a definitive list, nor does it seem likely I will manage to cover more than a fraction of them in a year. Astonishingly, only THREE countries have so far escaped tasting US military wrath or sabotage -- Andorra, Bhutan and Liechtenstein (the last one was apparently due some air strikes, but the pilots mistakenly hit Germany instead).

I dedicate this thread to the Venezuelans and Cubans murdered by USians so that billionaires could profit more from burning oil.

2LolaWalser
Jan 5, 5:51 pm

VIETNAM

 

Le petit rêve (A little dream) by Tản Đà (pseudonym of Nguyễn Khắc Hiếu, 1889 - 1939), first published in 1917.

The slight novel relates the travels of a young Vietnamese man, first to France and then to the Americas, during which he grows homesick and proud of his, as he thinks, under-achieving but promising nation. There are echoes of Chinese and French influence, two cultural giants between whom the young of the "land of Annam" are seeking their own voices.

3baswood
Jan 5, 5:57 pm

Welcome Back Lola

4dchaikin
Jan 5, 9:32 pm

Welcome Lola. Love the picture in your 1st post. The info in your 3rd paragraph is pretty depressing.

5LolaWalser
Jan 6, 12:06 am

>3 baswood:, >4 dchaikin:

Thank you. :)

6Dilara86
Jan 6, 12:10 am

Really looking forward to your thread! I'd never heard of Le petit rêve, but now I really want to read it. It looks like my best bet is to order it directly from the publisher. That led me down a rabbit hole of Korean and Vietnamese literature on their website (https://decrescenzo-editeurs.com). So, thank you (my wallet isn't thanking you though!)

7LolaWalser
Jan 6, 12:26 am

>6 Dilara86:

I'd be happy to send you my copy (I already marked it "gone" as I seriously lack space for keeping more books! I didn't elaborate on everything as it's difficult for me to judge these early modern classics from non-Euro contexts. There's one bit where he praises France, not exactly the anti-colonial sentiment one might expect, but is it sincere or mere lip service (probably there was censorship?), is it limited to culture not politics etc. I couldn't tell. (The translator's short introduction sheds no light on this.)

So, yeah, just hit me with a snail mail address if you'd like the book! (btw, since we're talking Canada Post, it most likely would be delivered at snail-speed).

8Dilara86
Jan 6, 12:42 am

>7 LolaWalser: This is so kind of you, but too late: I've already ordered it (and a couple more) from the publisher's website :-D
How did you come across this title, by the way?

9LolaWalser
Jan 6, 1:30 am

>8 Dilara86:

Oh dear. Now I'll fret and hope you enjoy them! X3

How did you come across this title, by the way?

I wish I could say I sought them out specially, but the sad truth is that right before Christmas the library ditched a whole lot of pristine, apparently never-opened books of fiction from "small" languages translated into French... as library withdrawals the lady charged me about a dollar for three! (It's terrible, and also why I can't leave Canada... no such windfalls in Europe.)

10FlorenceArt
Jan 6, 2:11 am

Happy New Year Lola! Glad to see you back.

11thorold
Jan 6, 3:30 am

Happy día de los Reyes :-)
Good to see you still on the attack. Great photo in >1 LolaWalser:

12SassyLassy
Jan 6, 10:20 am

What a great theme for the year. I'm sure I'll find lots of inspiration here, for reading and rebelling.

13rocketjk
Jan 6, 10:52 am

Happy New Year. I'll look forward to learning about the books that your depressing but extremely worthy theme brings you to.

14AlisonY
Jan 6, 2:59 pm

Good to see you back in CR, Lola. Sounds like a really interesting start to your 2026 reading.

15rhian_of_oz
Jan 7, 12:46 am

What an amazing theme, I'm looking forward to seeing where it takes you.

16edwinbcn
Jan 7, 3:07 am

>2 LolaWalser:
Lovely review of Le petit rêve. I know I should come to your thread to find new, and interesting finds outside the world of English-speaking letters.

17qebo
Jan 10, 3:58 pm

>1 LolaWalser: The US having attempted "seventy (70) regime changes in the period of 1946-1989 ALONE" made me think it would interesting to do a "global" reading based on the countries involved.
Well this should be interesting.

18kjuliff
Jan 14, 11:18 am

>17 qebo: what a great idea! I’m in for it.

19rasdhar
Jan 18, 6:59 am

>1 LolaWalser: Happy New Year! It's an interesting theme to work around, I am looking forward to following your thread. I had also never heard of Le Petit Reve - I am going to hunt for an English translation.

20kjuliff
Jan 19, 10:59 am

A belated happy new year Lola. Dropping a star and looking forward to following your thread..

21LolaWalser
Mar 6, 6:31 pm

Apologies to the visitors and well-wishers I had missed in January. I'm having a hard time sticking to my entirely symbolic gesture of defiance when in the "real world" our USian overlords continue their eternal imperialist attacks on anyone not entirely subservient and willing to be exploited and innocent people are suffering and dying in droves.

Venezuela's oil is getting stolen, Iran is being attacked on behalf of apartheid Israel, Cuba is being strangled (still and again, only even harder) and all this in service of USian megalomaniacal vision of itself as the final boss of the entire planet. Everyone else is just "resources" to grab whenever whichever-way USian capitalism demands.

The vast majority of USians doesn't care. Trumpists openly see themselves as beneficiaries of USian imperialism, whereas most of the supposed opposition covertly simply doesn't mind profiting from global USian domination ("blue MAGA", and smug comfy people in general). The Democrats aren't and haven't been for decades any kind of real opposition, or the US would not have reached this point at all. All too many supposedly well-meaning "liberals" don't give a damn about USian foreign policy, when it's that that affects a hundred times more people.

Only radical opposition counts today but the leftist radicals in the US have been systematically decimated since, well, forever, in one after another wave of suppression and over a century long relentless anti-Communist propaganda.

I'm saying this in order to explain that I find myself in a strange and uncomfortable situation on this USian site. If (or rather when) the US attacks Canada next, I don't believe there will be one person in a hundred here to feel truly badly about it. We have already had a preview of that situation with the talk of annexation etc.

With this in mind, it's difficult to solve the problem of participation and I expect I shall continue to waver before I am finally driven away or expunged.

22LolaWalser
Edited: Mar 6, 6:33 pm

CHILE, VENEZUELA

Corporate Coup: Venezuela and the End of US Empire, by Anya Parampil, OPD 2024
Hugo Chavez: The Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela, by Richard Gott, OPD 2005
Chile: El Otro 11 de Septiembre : Una antologia acerca del golpe de estado en 1973 by Ariel Dorfman, OPD 2003

I have watched the restored documentary La batalla de Chile (The battle of Chile: the combat of a people without weapons) and another on Venezuela's 2004 referendum on whether or not to recall Chávez, Venezuela crece (Venezuela rising).

Of all the things one could discuss, I will mention two: one, the presence in the documentaries of the poor people, those overwhelming masses absolutely banned from USian media when they endorse, as they did in Chile and Venezuela, leftist politics. When you see them and hear them you understand why leftism was (and is) THE popular politics of the impoverished, monstrously unequal Latin America. It's also plain that the upper class doesn't ever intend to "share" and sees any attempt at ameliorating the situation of the working class as a direct diminishment of their own upper class comfort (a woman saying that Chávez only cares about the poor and "what about us?")

Two, it is extremely striking that both in Chile in the 1970s and Venezuela twenty years later, the US used the same methods; basically, that there ARE standard methods US imperialism was and is using wherever it encounters mass-supported leftism in poor countries, and I don't mean some vague, ideological tools (of course those are employed as well), but precisely fattening the capitalist opposition, broad-front sabotage and full-on meddling, inciting strikes and protests, blocking legal measures, undermining progress every which way.

This is achieved, among other things, through media domination (a recurrent 20th and now 21st century theme) and sanctions that bleed resources of these typically fragile redistributive systems.

{Incidentally, did you know, as I didn't until recently, that North Korea was the richer region before the US imposed its anti-Communist jihad on Koreans?}

As we sit watching the US openly treating South America as its fiefdom to do with as the US pleases, we can nod knowledgeably at every new move: we have seen them all before.

23LolaWalser
Mar 6, 7:23 pm

PALESTINE

This documentary about Palestinians from 1977 has been uploaded by the director's son. It features Vanessa Redgrave as the interviewer and voice-over. I'm linking it at a time-point where there occurs a scene I wish to highlight because it demonstrates something I never encounter in the US media: Palestinian revolution as a secular, SOCIALIST revolution, Palestinians as secular people and not, as the US media relentlessly propagandise, as primarily religious, and fanatically religious people at that.

The scene is of a folk dance with men and women dancing together:

The Palestinian, dir. Roy Battersby (1977)

Reminder that the US and Israel grew Hamas as "their" Islamists to use against other Islamists and Arafat's secular PLO. As ever: the US has no problem with religious extremism and uses it against any kind of leftist movement.

Iraq, Libya and Syria were destroyed because they represented, however imperfectly, Arab societies where principles of egalitarianism and secularism were put before capitalist profiteering and religion.

The US doesn't give a shit that today in Iraq men legally fuck nine-year old girls, that Libya is a murderous basketcase and Syria both. Arab socialism is no more.

24LolaWalser
Mar 6, 11:08 pm

ALGERIA, LIBYA, EGYPT

   

Three very different Arabic-language novels. Algerian Kacimi's L'amour au tournant (Love at the wheel), OPD 2018, involves only two characters, both very old men, in long peripatetic conversations about love and desire.

Chewing Gum by Mansour Bushnaf, OPD 2007, is probably the best of this lot, and as it belongs to the scarce Libyan literature, deserves recommendation. Short, but packed with sometimes confusing allusions and ideas, not least with a central metaphor that seems to be transforming as we read -- the "chewing gum" as a Western import, addiction, vice, brainless routine, capitulation... and/or subversion, emancipation (female maybe?) It seems to me Bushnaf was a tad overly ambitious for such a short text, although I suppose Libyan readers are quicker on the uptake of connections between his rapid-fire vignettes. There is a weird love story of sorts which I found hard to take on face value (Moukhtar wants above all to kiss Fatma; Fatma escapes when she realises how much he's invested in some abandoned Italian sculpture of a naked woman, a remnant from the time of Italian occupation; Moukhtar spends the next ten years frozen in the park where Fatma left him; Fatma gives herself over to the chewing-gum trade...) but whose surrealism I couldn't really resolve either.

Le livre des cercles: quand l'Histoire fait des siennes dans la cité martienne (The book of circles: when history acts up in the city of Mars) by Youssef Rakha, OPD 2014 is the longest and densest of the three but despite that was the only one I found amusing (among other things). And yet its hero, Moustafa, frequently annoyed me, what with being an "unreliable narrator" (not a fan of this device...), a self-centred dude on the brink of abandoning his wife (for being too Egyptian or too Anglicised, possibly both) and, in the end, just another religious maniac and nationalist -- but an Ottoman nationalist, as, apparently, the last time Egypt was great was under the Turks. So much for Lawrence of Arabia!

Nevertheless, Moustafa's meanderings through Cairo and tying them to his growing conviction that he's in contact with the last sultan, fascinated me and kept my attention to the end.

25LolaWalser
Edited: Mar 6, 11:39 pm

YUGOSLAVIA (Serbia)

 

Pada Avala by Biljana Jovanović, OPD 1978

I had never heard of Biljana Jovanović (1953-1996) before a departing colleague gave me this book, which makes me sad and further shows, if I needed more evidence, that I will never make up for my ignorance of the past. And yet Biljana Jovanović (a name as unremarkable as "Jane Smith") was a playwright, poet, activist and feminist and, an article declares, a cult figure in Serbia by the time her second novel appeared in 1980. Such was the fate of women.

Pada Avala (Avala is falling) was her first novel. Avala is a hill near Belgrade, a popular excursion and climbing site. The novel doesn't mention it and I'm guessing, from the general exuberance and playfulness of the style, the frequent wordplay, that it's the alliteration that matters here more than the Avala as such.

Jelena, a red-haired student of flute, romps through the pages as through the streets of the city amassing more or less bizarre encounters, trilling and thrilling, cursing and swilling -- coffees, and "rakija" -- uncannily observant of various men's tics, ear and nose hairs, pimples, sweat... and yet desiring, comically yearning. When she doesn't drop them like dumb rocks, dumb rocks that they are.

It's a liberating text that must have been supremely delightful to many a startled young girl, and those sympathetic to the plight of young girls.

26LolaWalser
Mar 6, 11:48 pm

IRAN



Three drops of blood and other stories by Sadeq Hedayat, this selection OPD 2008

In Hedayat's stories all is hopeless gloom and despair, dogs are blinded and small girls raped with the approval of religion, there are no exits for anyone defenceless, nor is any better future imaginable.

27Dilara86
Mar 7, 3:38 am

Welcome back! I understand your misgivings about this site, but I'm glad you're here to share your thoughts - political and literary.

I've wishlisted Dogs and Others by Biljana Jovanović: "The first openly-lesbian character in modern Serbian literature", no less!

28baswood
Mar 7, 5:26 pm

The Dogs of war have been unleashed yet again from the other side of the pond. I am in despair.

29SassyLassy
Mar 7, 5:47 pm

So happy to see you back here, keeping up the resistance.

>21 LolaWalser: If (or rather when) the US attacks Canada next, I dread the day he comes looking for more oil, or decides the Keystone pipeline is a "national security threat" to be taken over. As for Cuba, it's unimaginable.

30LolaWalser
Mar 8, 4:06 pm

>27 Dilara86:

Thank you for understanding.

Wow, I'd love to find that book.

>28 baswood:

Me too, bas, without a smidgen of exaggeration. Simple despair.

>29 SassyLassy:

Oil, water, or just any old "security threat" lie will suffice.

I'm not sure it begins and ends with Trump, though. The Monroe doctrine, after all, a foundational piece of USian "über alles" political philosophy, hails from the early 19th century. The population has been steeped in self-worship and tales of "exceptionalism" for many generations. Their ignorance of, and disdain for, the world at large is unmatched in other developed countries. I just don't see them significantly changing attitude even if Trumpism is defeated. In many ways Trumpism is just USian doctrine laid out bare for all to see.

On that topic, this selection of Noam Chomsky's writings and talks is an excellent concise introduction:

What Uncle Sam really wants, OPD 1986-1992

You could disagree with Chomsky's politics entirely and still be appalled by what the references reveal about the USian political philosophy -- even (or especially) when it's enunciated by the likes of George Kennan, a supposed "dove" (in relation to the USSR).

If French is not a problem, there was a recent interview by the historian Johann Chaputot, Le retour de la tentation fasciste ? (The return of fascist temptation?)

In connection to the US I highlight his pointing out the historical (meaning long term) structural violence of its society, the legacy of (my translation, my bolding) "internal colonisation and extermination of local population, followed by importing slaves and then a segregation... (...) In this Western matrix of the second half of 19th century there is a synthesis of social darwinism, which justifies the internal capitalist order because there are those born to dominate and others born to obey, and racism, which justifies the external geopolitical order, that of colonisation. In reality the US hasn't emerged out of this, and we see this today in a striking fashion."

Everybody of course knows about the legacy of extermination and slavery; what is shocking (apparently) is that this foundational instrumentalisation of violence has been a constant of US history and shapes its fascist "might makes right" politics to this day. It can't be otherwise since the US chose capitalism, the system where maximum exploitation provides maximum profit.

31kidzdoc
Mar 9, 9:31 am

Thanks for posting these books, Lola. I've created a Google Docs file of the English language ones, for future reference.

32FlorenceArt
Mar 15, 7:17 am

>30 LolaWalser: I just listened to the interview with Johann Chapoutot, and it’s simply terrifying. He is describing the political situation of France right now, except it happened in Germany in 1933.

I need to read Les irresponsables now.

33LolaWalser
Mar 16, 8:13 pm

>31 kidzdoc:, >32 FlorenceArt:

Hello, thank you for visiting. Yes, there is no shortage of recent publications sounding alarm over what is happening. If we are (apocryphal) lemmings, at least we'll die a very well-informed bunch of (apocryphal) lemmings!

>27 Dilara86:

To add a small note about this author, I finally read up a little about her:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biljana_Jovanovi%C4%87

and I want to underline, for the record, her Yugoslav orientation (which doesn't negate her belonging as well to Serbian literature; but expands on it). IOW, she wasn't a nationalist.

34Dilara86
Mar 17, 7:52 am

>32 FlorenceArt: >33 LolaWalser: Johann Chapoutot is fast turning into the Left's favourite "intellectuel engagé". He's always worth a listen (or a read).

I liked what I read about Biljana Jovanović. I still have to read something by her, though!

35LolaWalser
Jun 22, 4:36 pm

As hardly needs pointing out, I haven't been in the mood for hanging out here. A good part of the reason are things like this:



That's just one of a string of destructive projects our utter pig of a provincial premier has executed/is executing with abandon in Toronto, a city he obviously hates and which hates him back, but alas with no bite. I can't be bothered to enumerate all the epically scandalous, gobsmacking details of his corrupt dealings, let's just say that no Sicilian/Balkan/Russian mafia would have been more brazen or could have been more devastatingly successful in ruining things than this trumpoidal abomination has been.

I can't count anymore the number of protests, meetings, consultations I've been to, petitions I've signed, emails I've sent. Every week brings a new crop. But every day brings more news showing this pig's rampage is unstoppable.

I'm furious and exhausted and that's even before I give thought to other stuff, like the perennial USian dreck etc.

Ontario Place in the photo above is in my neighbourhood, I used to go for walks there often. Older Torontonians remember with fondness the fun that was had when it was fully functional, the first IMAX theatre in the world, the rides etc. Even without those it was a beautiful park, a lively habitat to hundreds and thousands of species. Over 850 trees were destroyed overnight. A shady, bankrupt Austrian company is supposed to build a spa here, at the same time as Ford is pushing for the expansion of the airport on the lake (currently supporting about 20 turboprop flights a day) to 10 million passengers, or a (jet) flight EVERY TWO MINUTES. The pig has bought himself a private jet, you see, and he needs a private airport to get him here faster for the twelve minutes or so yearly in Toronto.

I've seen autocrats do whatever they bloody well like but I didn't expect to see it in Canada.

36Dilara86
Jun 22, 11:32 pm

That picture is heartbreaking.

37kidzdoc
Jun 23, 9:59 am

>35 LolaWalser: That is beyond maddening.

38rocketjk
Edited: Jun 23, 10:54 am

I'm really sorry this sort of needless, wanton, greed-induced pain is being visited on Toronto (or anywhere, but Toronto is a city I like a lot based on my two relatively quick visits).

39LolaWalser
Edited: Jun 23, 4:20 pm

Ayy, my poor visitors, greetings, didn't really expect anyone or I'd have tried to rein in the cussing :)

I best not start because THERE IS SO MUCH AWFUL going on. I just got off the phone with some people about the next protest we're going to, next Monday evening. The prime minister could end at least one of these idiotic, destructive projects, the airport expansion, with a single tweet... but he won't, the conservative sellout.

The city is apparently helpless, we have a good progressive mayor in Olivia Chow, but the Fraud has simply shut down municipal power (the mechanics of this pertains to some evil Anglo "preserve the oligarchy" buttressing I don't, in my simplistic one person=one vote conviction, fully understand)

So, anyway. Where that beautiful park stood and now you see this desolate moonscape, shady (and public) money is to build a private spa for the superrich, necessitating a 5-storey parking lot -- UNDERGROUND, they say, except that, as you may note, THERE IS WATER ALL AROUND -- so in all likelihood the parking lot will end up above ground, another eyesore.

This, incidentally, is to be paid by taxpayers (currently priced at 200 million--just the parking), at the same time as Fraud is cutting (again) school services and education and social programmes have been hit repeatedly (closing down of safe injection sites, just for one example).

Argh, I said I wouldn't start!

40FlorenceArt
Jun 24, 1:30 am

>35 LolaWalser: This is so infuriating and discouraging!

41Nickelini
Edited: Jun 24, 9:19 pm

>21 LolaWalser: I haven't been very active on LT lately either, so I'm just catching up on your March 6 rant. I agree 1000%.

If (or rather when) the US attacks Canada next, I don't believe there will be one person in a hundred here to feel truly badly about it. We have already had a preview of that situation with the talk of annexation etc.


I've noticed something ugly on social media since the world cup began. I've seen dozens of versions of this in just the past two weeks:

1. USian - boldly proud of knowing nothing, makes an ignorant comment
2. European, Australian, Canadian, etc corrects him (because most are male) or adds factual information
3. USian - "I never think of you! You never cross my mind! So I don't hear you"
4. USian - "And everything in 'Murica is best! And you suck! And we are going to crush you to a pulp!"

In other words, "I'm proud to be an arrogant, no-nothing bully." I hope most of these are trolls, but I'm not convinced.

>39 LolaWalser: Ayy, my poor visitors, greetings, didn't really expect anyone or I'd have tried to rein in the cussing :)
Oh, please don't rein in . . . it's cathartic

When the overnight theft of Ontario Place happened, I was infuriated. Haven't heard much about it out here in Vancouver recently. As evil as Ford is, he seems to be not-quite-as-bad as Danielle Smith, who dominates my internet world with her constant nepharious deeds. Too many bad actors.

Sigh. Be strong my friend.

42baswood
Jun 26, 4:12 am

>35 LolaWalser: Where do these awful people come from? and who votes for them? Sorry to hear your distress.

43cindydavid4
Jun 28, 6:15 pm

>41 Nickelini: is this a trump twin ?believe me i know the feeling there seems to be no end

44rasdhar
Jun 29, 12:25 am

>35 LolaWalser: This is an incredibly depressing image.

45LolaWalser
Jun 29, 8:47 pm

>42 baswood:

Where do these awful people come from? and who votes for them?

The Fraud is a typical Conservative catering to capitalism-loving chuds, although possibly extraordinarily corrupt even for their notion of the average. Toronto proper is against him, but the 1998 amalgamation into a "megacity" saddled the progressive urban centre with six gigantic sub/ex-urbs with the "temporarily embarrassed millionaire" mindset. Rural Ontario, I'm told, loves him too, although I'm not sure that is entirely true. For one thing, he has such a maniacal focus on ruining Toronto, it's like he doesn't know anybody else exists. And maybe I'm a simpleton, but to me the rise of fascism and white supremacy in the farmland doesn't speak of satisfied, well-fed country life.

But who cares about that when there are private pockets (of pals and partners) to line with public money. The Fraud is pushing privatization every which way, depleting healthcare, education, social programmes, and selling off public lands (the spa is given a lease of 99 years!!) He not only razed Ontario Place, he closed down Ontario Science Centre (a beloved institution to generations of Torontonians), and the site will be opened to development. He attacked the Green Belt. He wants more highways. He did away with traffic cameras -- even near schools! -- not only depriving the city of a sizeable source of income but endangering lives. Same thing with bike lanes, he removed them from as many streets as possible. Everything to make the CARS comfier (most of the car traffic comes into the city from the suburbs--Torontonians use and would use even more public transport, another perennial target of underdevelopment and political sabotage).

He lied about getting rid of a private jet. He is pushing the expansion of the island airport, the airport which should be closed down as a ridiculous encumbrance and source of pollution as it is, and not made a hundred times worse. About thirty years or so ago sane people regretted the erstwhile treatment of the waterfront and started to improve it. Industrial remnants were removed, housing and parks were being developed. The area became a touristy highlight, with the new decks and amenities everywhere. In east portlands a whole new large park opened just a couple months ago. There are plans there for filling in more land and putting more housing on it. EXCEPT THAT THE AIRPORT EXPANSION MEANS JETS WOULD FLY STRAIGHT INTO OR SLIGHTLY ABOVE PLANNED BUILDINGS. And that's just one nonsensical feature.

In short, the city and the premier's plans are in total conflict and he's currently bulldozing over us.

I stole the following photo from an unknown, sorry (annotations are mine):



Red arrow: my building
Blue triangle: destroyed Ontario place (partial view)
Black lines: denoting direction of the island airport expansion

The rich people of the yacht club are not amused either but I guess their portfolios make for some ambiguity on the subject of selling out to USian banks (the main beneficiary of the airport scam is Jp Morgan, owner of airport terminal since Fraud came into power and Fraud's puppetmaster).

46LolaWalser
Jun 29, 8:54 pm

I'll be back with responses to others and even (I hope) some book talk. I fear I picked up the stomach bug that's been making the rounds so I looked into the protest only briefly on the way from work and hurried home.

47Dilara86
Jul 1, 5:10 am

>46 LolaWalser: I hope you feel better soon! Something is making the rounds where I live too: there's an uptick of people wearing face masks in public...

48lisapeet
Jul 4, 8:33 pm

>35 LolaWalser: That's heartbreaking and enraging and absolutely warrants cussing.

I hope your stomach feels better soon, at least.