Showing posts with label empower network. Show all posts
Showing posts with label empower network. Show all posts

Monday, July 1, 2013

Egypt Update




NOW: Hundreds of thousands gather in front of the Presidential Palace in Cairo, as the armed forces give Morsi's government a 48-hour ultimatum to "meet the demands of the people". Egyptian TV stations are now showing the countdown on their broadcasts. Army helicopters flew over Cairo earlier carrying Egyptian and army flags. We may be witnessing the early stirrings of a military coup (albeit one with fairly widespread popular support).
LIVESTREAM: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbL_q1i7-Pk

For more background, visit ROAR: 'Millions take to the streets in Egypt’s biggest protest ever'.

http://roarmag.org/2013/07/egypt-tahrir-revolution-biggest-protest-ever/

We Are Egypt .. And We Are Angry ..




Mohamed Raouf Ghoneim
Dear friends - chers amis - liebe Freunde - cari amici - queridos amigos. To everyone around the world - from EGYPT:

We Egyptians are hitting the streets today SIMPLY because we have decided that we will not let Egypt become another Iran or Afghanistan, or even Saudi Arabia or any other country. Egypt is Egypt, and we decided that it will always stay Egypt. We will stay peaceful cheerful humble loving human beings. We will stay Moslems and Christians, living side by side in peace and harmony. And our country will remain a place where human beings are FREE to wear as they wish, FREE to act as they wish, FREE to pray as they wish, FREE to play as they wish. We Egyptians believe that God created us FREE, and that we must fight till the day we die, to remain FREE. 

That's why we Egyptians have decided TODAY - June 30th 2013 - that we will not be ruled anymore by the religious fascist regime of Mohamed Morsi and his Moslem Brotherhood. 
And just so you know who and what we are up against, we are fighting against a regime that wants a radicalized society and seeks a fanatic religious orientation for our country as a first step towards their goal which they openly call world domination. 
We are fighting against a regime that uses poverty and ignorance to mislead poor Egyptians to believe their lie that they are the representatives of Islam in the global war to defend it against the bad infidel Western Christian world. 
We are fighting against a regime that believes in political assassinations as a way of reaching goals, and which has killed many politicians and public figures and writers and thinkers because they tried to liberate minds and steer Egyptians away from extremism and ignorance.
We are fighting against a regime that has its fingers even in your own home country and has spread its influence to reach your politicians and your presidents, so that they ignore everything they know about them and consider them legitimate, thus handing us over to them, and putting you also in direct danger of their terrorist acts, right at your back door. 
We are fighting against a regime that has been involved in terrorist acts and bombings and mass slaughter and killings from Barcelona to London to New York to Madrid to Berlin as well as right here at home in Sharm El Sheikh and Cairo and Luxor - each time murdering and massacring innocent defenseless civilians for their filthy cause. 

We don't expect this to be easy at all, but we will take this fight till the bitter end. And no matter what pictures the media show you, be sure that our EGYPTIAN revolution started peaceful, and will stay peaceful all the way, and no matter what those terrorists in power are planning to do to fight us, we will stand still with no arms in hand but our bare fists, and no weapons in our bags but our belief in freedom, and our determination to reach our aim only through PEACEFUL RESISTANCE. 

So dear friends, now that you know what's happening in my country, please please spread the word about us, and PRAY FOR US, that is all we ask of you. Thank you and GOD BLESS ALL.

A proud EGYPTIAN

Monday, June 24, 2013

God’s Cake



"When God doesn't do what we want it's not easy; it never has been and it never will be. Faith is the conviction that God knows more than us ... and he'll get us through. Disappointment is caused by unmet expectations ... and it's cured by revamped expectations. Don't panic ... don't give up ... be patient ... God is in control."-Max Lucado

 We've all experienced disappointment in our lives and inevitably will experience disappointments in the future ...  But in those disappointments are lessons to be learned, wisdom to be unlocked, and believe-it-or-not ... opportunities in disguise. Disappointments can help us to grow if we allow God to reveal His purpose and if we trust that He will reveal His plan to us in perfect time ... It's important that we don't let ourselves get stuck in our disappointment by allowing bitterness and resentment to replace our hope and trust in GOD. How we respond to disappointments greatly determines the ultimate outcome ...
Sometimes we wonder ..,
 'What did I do to deserve this?' or 'Why did God have to do this to me?'
Here is an explanation! 

Just because we can’t figure out what God’s doing right now, doesn’t mean it won’t make sense later .. This story explains this ..

A daughter is telling her Mother how everything is going wrong, she’s failing algebra, her boyfriend broke up with her and her best friend is moving away. Meanwhile, her Mother is baking a cake and asks her daughter if she would like a snack, and the Daughter says, ‘Absolutely Mom, I love your cake.’
‘Here, have some cooking oil,’ her Mother offers.
‘How about a couple raw eggs?’  ’Gross, Mom!’Yuck’ says her daughter.
‘Would you like some flour then? Or maybe baking soda?’
‘Mom, those are all yucky!’
To which the mother replies :
‘Yes, all those things seem bad all by themselves.But when they are put together in the right way, they make a wonderfully delicious cake!’ 
God works the same way. Many times we wonder why He would let us go through such bad and difficult times. But God knows that when He puts these things all in His order, they always work for good! We just have to trust Him and, eventually, they will all make something wonderful!
God loves us .. He sends us flowers every spring and a sunrise every morning …Whenever we want to talk, He’ll listen .. He can live anywhere in the universe, and He chose your heart .. Life may not be the party we hoped for, but while we are here we might as well dance …

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Tips For Blogging

Blogging Tips For The New Blogger

What Is A Blog

Blogging is simply put sharing your thoughts, ideas or experiences. If you have a business opportunity to share or a product you are sharing, blogging is a great way to get your message out there.

How to Blog

There are several steps you need to take when blogging.
Step 1:
You need to buy a domain name
Step 2:
Find a Hosting Site
Step 3:
Get Word Press
Step 4:
Set up capture pages or squeeze pages
Step 5:
Have an autoresponder email system like Aweber.
I know this seems a bit complicated, costly and time consuming. You may be saying, gee I have no idea how to do all that. So what is the answer?

You Need An Already Made Blog Maker

If you had a blogging system already set up with all the steps done that were mentioned above and a blogging system that was ranked on Alexa and recognized with Google, you are on your way to blogging and sharing your thoughts, ideas, business or products. I mean what is the point of a blog if no one sees it or reads it.

Real Blogging Tips

First I would say blogging information that is toward your niche market is a smart way to blogging. If you want to catch the attention of your niche market, blogging about that subject would attract those who are interesting in what you have to offer.

SEO and Blogging Tips

If you want your blog to rank on some of the top search engines, search engine optimization will help you get there. First your title should have some of the keywords that people would search the information you want to share. So if you are blogging to make money you definitely want your blog to get ranked to get noticed. You will also want to use your keywords that you want to get ranked for in your blogging. Another SEO tip is using header tags in your blog with your keywords. What is a header tag you ask? Search Engines will look at your header tags as important information. There are several header tags to use: H1, H2, H3 are examples of header tags. Also, search engines love content, content content. So when you are blogging have your blog rich with content and rich with your keywords.
This may all seem overwhelming to start your own blog. If you truly want to start blogging and don’t want to have to go through all the steps of setting up your own blog maker, then I have the perfect blogging system for you. A blog completely set up and ready to go and recognized as an authority on Google and ranked high on Alexa. A blogging system that has everything you need to know how to make money blogging.
I hope my blogging tips have brought new insight to how to make money blogging. Start your own blog today, share your thoughts, ideas and offers now. Click on the link below to start blogging now!

If you’re going to make stuff up, at least make it cool :)




The fact is, we're all a little crazy .. :)

We make stuff up that isn't there.

We distort stuff that is there ...

We assign meaning to events that don't have any meaning ...

And the reality is:

EVERY memory we have is a complete distortion of what actually happened.  The farther in the past the memory is, and the more times we've thought about it...

...the more we've changed what actually has happened.

I heard someone once say ... :

"It's NEVER too late to have a good childhood"

And it's right ...

However, we can also make stuff up that isn't very useful to us.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Dumb Ways To Die





Only a week after it was quietly uploaded onto YouTube last December, the advertisement became one of the most shared videos globally, topping the charts on the user generated community Reddit.

Featuring a variety of cute characters killing themselves in increasingly idiotic ways the video is designed to demonstrate the danger and stupidity of messing around on platforms, tracks and level crossings.

“Dumb Ways to Die”  is performed by Melbourne artist Tangerine Kitty, the song was produced by Cat Empire keyboards player Ollie McGill.

Dumb Ways to Die's catchy chorus is the most arresting hook since PSY's Gangnam Style ..

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

I Am .... Who Are You?



I AM Is A Name Of GOD .. it is known as the Last Word ..
The Words I AM have never really been lost, but it's true meaning has been .. the power that goes with understanding what I AM is & does, has been lost ..
This is part of the best that I've heard about the amazing impact of those 2 words :
I AM is power .. It will free us when we know what it is & how to use it ..
I AM is who you are .. I Am is your center .. you are attached to it by what you believe & experience .. so we must be very careful what we attach to our I AM ..

It has the power to limit you or to free you ..

I AM Love .. I AM Wealth .. I AM Health .. I AM Spirit .. I AM Power .. I AM Abundance .. I Am Plenty .. I AM Divine Substance .. I AM Strength .. I AM Source Energy .. I Am Genius .. I AM Beauty .. I AM Life .. I AM Color .. I AM Thankful .. I AM Happy .. I AM Fun .. I AM Law .. I AM Open minded .. I AM Young .. I AM Strong .. I AM Wise .. I AM Wonderful .. I AM Positive .. I AM Determined .. I AM Motivated .. I AM Persistent ..
I Am Upbeat .. I Am confident .. I Am Thoughtful .. I Am Tolerant .. I AM Integrity .. I Am Success .. I Am Intelligent .. I Am the Truth .. I Am Good ..
I AM That I AM .. I AM Joy .. I AM One With God .. I AM Perfect .. I AM Peace .. I AM Whole .. I AM Grateful .. I AM Secure .. I Am Free .. I Am Awareness .. I AM Insight .. I AM Revelation .. I AM Illumination ..  I AM Enlightenment .. I AM Heaven .. I AM Unlimited .. I AM Harmony .. I AM A magnet .. I AM Gifted .. I AM Responsible .. I AM Vitality .. I AM Light ..
I AM Alive .. I AM Calm .. I AM Relaxed .. I AM divinely guided .. I AM Pure .. I AM noble .. I AM Awake .. I AM Creative .. I AM Blessed .. I AM Worthy .. I AM Blissful .. I AM Grace .. I AM Focused .. I AM Kindness .. I AM Imagination .. I AM Inspired .. I AM Master Of My Destiny .. I AM What I desire To be ..
I AM .. What is I AM .. ??
It is our true being .. it is our real nature .. our real self & nobody else .. because no one else can say I AM for you .. only you can say I AM .. that is your real IDENTITY .. And what ever you attach to your I AM is your conviction .. that who YOU are ..
I AM is the fact of existence & to know that gives you power ..
By the things we attach to our I AM we form our destiny & our fate .. for that is what we really believe about ourselves ..
Every time we refuse to be bullied by fear & put our trust in GOD & ourselves .. is the way to change our world .. what ever we attach to I AM, we become .. we will resurrect those qualities in ourselves & wonders will happen in our life ..
Keep repeating your I AM .. and your whole world will become it ..

In Memoriam: Turkey’s Democracy





I have a very simple message for our Turkish brothers and sisters: don’t let any European leader fool you into thinking that they are on your side in this struggle for real democracy. Your only real allies in Germany and Europe are those who take to the streets to fight for the same causes that you are fighting for: genuine freedom, social justice, and real democracy ..

Read why- http://roarmag.org/2013/06/merkel-condemns-turkey-violence-hypocrisy/

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Who Are These Chapullers ?


Who are these Chapullers? These vandals and rioters? These violent elements of Turkish society squatting in a public park?? A short movie by Deniz Tarsus gives the answer.
“Apart from rescuing it, these youths can even find a whole new country”
“We are all responsible individuals. But until this struggle reaches its desired end, our main responsibility will be to resist. Otherwise, what does it mean to be a human being?”
We ask for your solidarity and support. Please spread this text. We need your insight and your solidarity in this matter.
We are a group of people who have come together to write this text as a result of the oppression in Turkey.
We have been taking a stand against police assaults for days now. We and countless other citizens.
The protests which were triggered after the ruling to demolish Gezi Park provided with a ground to a initiate a far belated struggle.
Numerous events brought us to this point in the struggle, including the devastating incidents at Reyhanlı and Roboski where many people were killed due to – if we are being politically correct – lack of foresight on part of the government; laws and the proposed legislations that violate our liberties such as abortion and alcohol; the negligent attitude of mainstream media; and many other legislations, events and public statements.
Some insist our struggle is an ideological one. Although we do respect them, we are not members of any political party or ideological group. This is a common struggle of the people; we are united in our cause. The Turkey-wide struggle cannot be attributed to anyone else but the people.











We face police attacks every day. Gas masks, vinegar, neutralizing solution have become vital materials we cannot leave home without. Plainclothes police and provocateurs run rampant among us; and because the mainstream media broadcasts mainly misinformation, we do our best to distinguish between truthful and misleading news on Facebook and twitter. While the struggle has spread throughout the country mainstream TV stations have been broadcasting documentaries and quiz shows.
We all help one another on the streets; when someone falls, people rush over to their side and help them up. We calm one another down, we protect one another. People who are unable to take to streets support us from their windows, open up their homes to us if needed. The pepper gas makes us sick, police brutalities result in various injuries.
From the government, we demand our fundamental rights and freedoms. We want the mainstream media to broadcast the truth, make our voice heard. We want the government to reconsider its policies, and withdraw the police forces. In short, we want to be acknowledged as human beings.
We are all responsible individuals. But until this struggle reaches its desired end, our main responsibility will be to resist. Otherwise, what does it mean to be a human being? 
SUPPORTGEZI.ORG

Turkey: The Triple Strike That Could Change Everything


By Jerome Roos On June 4, 2013
The confluence of a public sector strike, a manufacturing strike and an investor strike could combine to bring the Turkish government to its knees.
For days, Turkey has been rocked by massive street demonstrations and violent clashes between protesters and police. Ever since authorities brutally uprooted a peaceful sit-in in Istanbul’s Gezi Park, which the government intends to destroy as part of its urban ‘renovation’ projects, millions of Turks have taken to the streets in what amounts to nothing less than a spontaneous popular insurrection against the authoritarian neoliberalism of prime minister Erdogan’s Islamist government and a nationwide uprising for real democracy.
Now the obvious question on everyone’s lips is simple: what’s next? The honest answer is that it’s simply to early to tell. One development, however — largely overlooked by the mainstream media so far — might change everything. Historical “coincidence” has it that two major Turkish unions have independently announced two strikes for June: one by the confederation of public sector workers and one by the metal workers’ union. The former represents civil servants; the latter represents the workers of Turkey’s main manufacturing export engine.
As BBC Newsnight editor Paul Mason writes in his latest blog post, and as I argued in an earlier analysis of the ongoing protests, all eyes are now on the workers — for it is they who hold the key to the insurrectionary gateway that could turn this popular uprising into a full-blown revolutionary event. After all, Mubarak’s government in Egypt only fell after the young middle-class radicals who sparked the uprising managed to mobilize Egyptian workers — culminating into the February 8 Suez strike that threatened to cripple the Egyptian economy.
This is where the dual public sector and metal workers’ strikes may turn out to be crucial events in the development of the ongoing unrest. On Tuesday, June 4, the Public Workers Unions Confederation (KESK), representing 240,000 civil servants, will hold a 48-hour “warning strike” to protest “state terror” in the face of peaceful popular dissent. The strike had already been called last month but happens to coincide with the ongoing protests. If it is to be truly effective, however, this action needs to be turned into an indefinite general strike.
The Türk Metal Union has similarly been mulling a strike for June, although it is not yet known if and when it will take place. This strike could be the real game-changer. If the metal workers’ union manages to mobilize anything close to its 115,000 membership, the strike could paralyze the single most important export engine of Turkey’s manufacturing sector. Taken together, these two strikes could bring to a halt not only large parts of the the state apparatus but also the industrial base, putting major pressure on the government to back down.
Meanwhile, the stock market is collapsing, losing over 10 percent on Monday alone, hinting at investor fears that Turkey may no longer be the regional role model and capital safe haven it was once touted to be. Over the past decade, Turkey witnessed an investment boom of epic proportions, turning the country into Europe’s fastest-growing economy. Most of the recent inflows, however, are those of Arab Sheiks who fear that their investments are no longer safe in Europe due to both the eurozone crisis and a clampdown on ‘dictatorial’ bank accounts.
These Sheiks may now wish to deposit their money outside of Turkey, triggering a sudden evaporation of the financial base upon which the Turkish economic miracle of the past years ultimately rested. In other words, the ongoing popular uprising may trigger consequences far beyond those currently foreseen by most Western media commentators. The economy, as always, is the Achilles heel of the capitalist state, and by striking right at the heart of the process of capital accumulation the people can significantly weaken the government.
In the end, all of this comes down to a simple notion that I have expressed in a number of recent writings, including this conference paper. The capitalist state — regardless of whether it is developing or developed, democratic or dictatorial — is structurally dependent on capital. Without the constant circulation of investment in the economy, the state simply risks collapse. This is why a triple public sector strike, manufacturing sector strike and investor strike could be the unholy trinity that brings Erdogan’s authoritarian government to its knees.
Again, as I emphasized in my more extensive analysis of the protests and the prospects of revolutionary change in Turkey, all of this remains undetermined. The future is yet to be written. But the historical confluence of popular unrest in the streets, labor strikes in the public sector and manufacturing industry, and investor panic in the stock market may combine into a toxic potion that could take Turkey far beyond even the wildest dreams of those currently assembled in the streets. Again, all eyes are on the workers.

It All Started With A Tree


loved the video ..
No one claims there has not been any destruction but it STARTED PEACEFULLY and police triggered everything with gas bombs and violence. Thousands of people, if not millions, are on the streets. It is of course not nice but also not surprising that there are vandals among the protesters. Very importantly though, even if only %5 of the protesters tended to be violent, the cities would have been in ruins by now. Vast majority of the people there are against violence.

This is like reliving Egypt all over again ..

The Symbolic War At The Heart Of The Gezi Park Protests



This is a fight about trees – or so it seemed at the end of last week. The protests first came to the attention of the world through this image. Before journalists had cobbled together their copy, or before their editors had decided that events warranted any, Reuters photographer Osman Orsal’s photo of policemen firing pepper spray at close range in the face of a young girl acted as a widely-shared placeholder for the torrent of analysis that was to follow.
Screen Shot 2013-06-04 at 15.24.22
The caption reads: “A Turkish riot policeman uses tear gas as people protest against the destruction of trees in a park brought about by a pedestrian project”
I found the lady in the red dress a problematic icon for the unfolding events in Gezi Park. Not because she was doing anything wrong. Nor was the scene unrepresentative. With the benefit of hindsight her unresisting pose, arms by her side against an ostensibly unprovoked attack by a policeman seems perfectly to have foretold the waves of violence visited on unarmed protestors on the streets of Turkey’s cities in the days since. What troubled me was not the photograph itself but the caption beneath it, which would have its readers believe this was a fight all about trees. This compelling image seemed to be having much success in disseminating the tree narrative. By the 29th May, the photo was everywhere. In the best tradition of Turkish churnalism, those few who reported the incident reprinted Reuters’ incidental analysis wholesale, even after the protests had plainly grown beyond the issue of the park’s redevelopment.

.           .           .

Reducing the crowd’s concerns to environmental ones seemed destined to portray these protestors as marginal and weaken their ability to reach a wider audience. Since the Prime Minister broke cover to address the fact of the protests, this has become an explicit tactic. Both times ErdoÄŸan has spoken on TV about the popular movement growing up in the city of which he was once a mayor, his insistence that this was a spat over a discreet number of trees in a park shows this rhetorical strategy at work: “Nobody has the right to protest against law and democracy, hurting others and increasing tensions for the sake of a few trees” he said on the 1st of June.
It is true that the protests centred around Gezi Park began 7 days ago when bulldozers moved in to rip up the park’s trees in preparation for the construction of a shopping mall. A group of people occupied the space with tents in order to prevent their reentry, and made heavily publicised attempts to replant the uprooted greenery the next day, even as the destruction continued around them.
BL0iGCwCYAAZ8c6.jpg-large
A man attempts to re-plant a bush at Gezi Park
However by the time the Reuters photo had spread, what was happening in Gezi Park had become about more than just Gezi Park itself. Those tweeting from within the square and those of us called on to explain the events from outside were keen to emphasise that this was not just an environmental protest. Not only had a wider spread of grievances coalesced around the initial issue, as the police brutality the Reuters picture also showed became the principal focus of anger, but even the very evident and committed tree-hugging in the square was misleading when taken out of context. In a city of nightmare urbanisation like Istanbul, determined attempts to replant the uprooted trees of Gezi Park constituted a stand, not just against the city’s 109th shopping mall, but against impunity and corruption and the privatisation of public space without consultation. ‘Trees’ didn’t cover it.

.           .           .

There was undeniably a seed of truth to the tree narrative. More trees were harmed in the aborted razing of the park than in the reporting of the incident: most of Turkey’s print media chose not to address the topic at all, as can be seen from the cover of the next day’s Sabah, a formerly oppositional paper now controlled by the PM’s son-in-law, which is currently the subject of a boycott on behalf of the protestors.
BLpvO_sCMAA5nab
Sabah had made no mention of the protests in their headlines, even by the 1st June
But it is arguable that trees were not even the initial spark for the protests – or at least not the only one. If this protest needed a trigger, those tired of sublimating their frustrations with the government had several to choose from. The 29th May was the day, not only that the bulldozer re-entered Gezi Park, but that a demonstration was held against restrictions aimed at both the advertising and the sale of alcohol. The protestors’ reaction was also directed in part at this encroachment by the conservative government on what many see not as a public health issue but as a matter of personal choice.
It was also on the 29th that the PM inaugurated the construction of the third bridge over the Bosphorus. Archival newsprint from the late 90s shows mayor ErdoÄŸan calling this much delayed, controversial project tantamount to the murder of the city. We are back, unavoidably, to trees again, but merely the bridge’s infrastructural network requires cutting down 2.5 million of them; something that will irreparably damage both the climate and the water supply of the Istanbul area. 1 More species of flora are native to the threatened green areas around Istanbul than to the whole of the British Isles.
BLbuYYeCcAE_ps-.jpg-large
“No to the Third Bridge”
As write on the 7th day since the arrival of the bulldozers, reports show that protests have spread to more than 60 towns and cities, and it is ever easier to make the argument that the issue of flora has become peripheral. Police violence has generated so much indignation of its own. In the meantime however, I have changed my mind. I have decided to embrace the Prime Minister’s rhetoric. I do now believe this is protest is about trees. And not just the 2.5 million that the bridge will destroy, or the ’5-6′ the Prime Minister has numbered, but one measly tree.
Allow me to qualify my apostasy. The tree I see as emblematic of the protest is the tree which the Turkish news saw fit to print: a tree that was symbolically planted at a ceremony officiated by President Gül and Berdimuhamedov on his visit to Turkmenistan the day immediately following the inauguration of the bridge construction.
That Prime Minister’s diggers were uprooting trees in Istanbul’s civic centre while the President was planting saplings to much fanfare abroad was not just a grotesque irony, but the perfect articulation of what Istanbullus are angry about. This overly promoted tree is the perfect metonym for Istanbul’s distended, plastic urbanisation. What this government has imposed on the city over the last ten years is not so much a religious agenda but a savage neoliberalism, hell-bent on appropriating everything messy and particular to the city and offering up a sanitised and often privatised parody in its stead.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=RoA52Ms9Kyc
Like the foliage Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan is now promising will garnish the evolving shopping mall/mosque/hotel redevelopment, often these projects pay only lip-service to whatever went before. This is true in the centre of the city: the protestors point out that with Gezi Park gone Istanbul’s most famous ‘park’ will now be Istinye Park, the fanciest of the city’s many shopping malls, just as everywhere on the outskirts of the city developers are buying up tracts of untouched land and turning them into luxury housing, later boasting in TV advertisements of the ‘high’ – but pitiful – percentage of green space inside them – green space which now sits behind a very high security wall.
taksim-cafe
Projections of the remodelled barracks in Gezi Park
And this is true of Gezi Park itself. A public space, whose decrepitude is only evidence of how very ‘public’ it is, is to be replaced by a private development which retains an ornamental garnish of trees. The Prime Minister’s  protestations that the shopping centre will, after all, sit inside a new replica of historical barracks which existed in the square before a previous round of urbanisation in the 1940s only goes to prove the point. This urbanisation’s principal technique is appropriation; appropriation gilded by nostalgia. Consultation certainly has no place in it, as the PM’s redoubled insistence on the necessity of this unwanted project in the last few days attests. In the Disneyland Istanbul this government has been gradually foisting on its citizens, cultural heritage is only to be preserved if it can be instrumentalised and turned to profit.
What I fear is that the government is trying to use Istanbul’s most iconic space to legitimate this urban strategy as it strays beyond the replication and into the actual colonisation of public and historical spaces. This is already happening nearby, with the recent news that the new seven star Shangri La hotel on the coast of BeÅŸiktaÅŸ has been allowed to expropriate the ornate public ferry station in front of it. Closed now to boat traffic, and to the road traffic that used to go between the hotel and the station, the extra ten minutes added to the shared-taxi route which went that way affords every commuter ample time to wonder why a private company was abetted in such a feat. This is happening all over the city. A fire in the grand building of the waterfront HaydarpaÅŸa train station last year was accompanied by fears that it would soon go the same way – arson is often the prelude to a sell-off – and indeed subsequently a massive development project aimed at cruise-ship tourism has been announced.
Turkey Train Station Fire
Opened in 1908, HaydarpaÅŸa railway station was the Istanbul terminus of the Berlin to Baghdad Railway.
These are particular incidents amongst countless others, but the emergent pattern of the destruction of Istanbul through its re-articulation in a fake, commercialised form can itself be seen in this frame. After all the most egregious target of this technique is not a particular location within the city, but the actual city itself. The Prime Minister has plans to replicate the Bosphorus, the iconic central artery of Istanbul, wholesale, in a canal project with which he intends to inaugurate a ‘second Istanbul’: ‘safer’, ‘cleaner‘ and under firmer control than the original.
A symbolic tree designed to improve the government’s currency abroad, while the same government is decimating that sapling’s more mature counterparts in this most public of public spaces is therefore bountifully appropriate as a emblem of the protests, and protestors can only be grateful that their Prime Minister wishes to draw such attention to it. When it comes to the Prime Minister’s loosening grip on the semiotics of the protest, it is worth noting that the 29th was also the date, 560 years ago, of Mehmet the Conqueror’s conquest of Istanbul. This is no coincidence: Turkish commentators were unanimous in receiving the timing of the the bridge inauguration ceremony as an orchestrated attempt to link the birth of Istanbul as the Ottomans’ imperial city with ErdoÄŸan’s own attempt to regenerate the city in era he sees as his own. But this time the city refused to be conquered. At Gezi Park, it decided to fight back.

.           .           .

Evidently ErdoÄŸan’s command of his own imagery is not always watertight. Indeed, the Prime Minister’s  decision to labour the issue of trees may not even have succeeded on his own terms. Rather than marginalising protestors, forcing trees to assume a place at the rhetorical as well as the physical heart of these events has allowed them to become a technique in the arsenal of protestors; protestors who are still making determined steps to encourage each other to resist provocation and stay peaceful, but whose symbolic weaponry is becoming more sophisticated by the day. “Knock down Tayyip, not the trees”became the chant of those assembled today around an old man who had come to speak against the destruction of Gezi Park. If they compare the Prime Minister to a tree whose time is up, they hold each other up to be more like the sturdy trunks they are defending: the early twentieth century leftist poet Nazim Hikmet has a line “To live! Like a tree, alone and free/ To live! Like a forest in unity” which can now be seen adorning walls and placards all over the city.
Trees are therefore an inescapable part of these protests’ symbolism, but trees have other qualities beyond the merely symbolic. They can be used, not only as a ploy in a broadcast but to broadcast things themselves. The remaining trees in Gezi Park are now adorned with the names of unaccounted dead from recent bombings in the Kurdish South East: Uludere (Roboski in Kurdish), and Reyhanli on the Syrian border. These trees announce not just the names of the dead, but a sign that something is changing. The paucity of domestic coverage may, thus far, have saved the Gezi Park protestors from the echo chamber of reflections on their own actions, but it has given them ample cause for reflection on something else. What is slowly being realised is that a metropolitan city of 16 million, most of whom will never visit the South East, were getting their news about a 30 year war in the region from the very same media who are refusing now to the show the events they photograph, tweet about, and see with their own eyes.
treeduble


UPDATE: The reign of the red girl continueshttps://twitter.com/snmakin/status/341994316832571393/photo/1
 Notes:
  1. It was an overdetermined and provocative act that ErdoÄŸan announced that the bridge would be named after Sultan Selim, the Sultan responsible for the conquest of the Arab world (throwing a bone to critics of neo-Ottoman imperialism) and also responsible for the massacre of many Alevis, a large minority liberal Muslim persuasion in Turkey who are discriminated against by the state which, though secular, prioritises the needs of the Sunni majority. In English, appropriately, Sultan Selim is ‘Selim the Grim’.