the difference between sanders and warren. she can’t even manage to say the word ‘muslim.’ #bernie2020

the difference between sanders and warren. she can’t even manage to say the word ‘muslim.’ #bernie2020

with the incredibly talented Heather Layton at Starry Nites Cafe this afternoon – we talked about teaching, art and activism, grants and future projects, saudi society and how it’s changing, US presidential elections, as well as our personal lives. so happy to catch up dear heather, and see u in long island 🙂

George Monbiot: Every night, millions of children and adults sleep on mattresses treated with a class of chemicals that was long ago banned from sheepdips and pesticides. Every day, we sit on furniture containing the same toxic compounds, absorbing them through our lungs and skin. According to parliament’s environmental audit committee (EAC), mothers in the UK and the US have the world’s highest recorded concentrations of a toxic class of flame retardants in their breastmilk. Banned fire retardants have recently been discovered in umbilical cord blood. We have no clear idea of how they might affect the development and future health of foetuses. But we know that they are persistent, accumulative and associated with cancer and disruption of the hormonal and reproductive systems. More here.
in india: mobs attacking muslims, looting their businesses and desecrating their houses of worship.
“Stop what you’re doing, watch this video & read about what’s happening in India. As Trump and Modi parade across the country, mobs are openly attacking Muslims, looting their businesses & desecrating houses of worship just like you see in this video.
Aaron Mate: For more than three years, US audiences have been flooded with fearmongering about a supposed “sweeping and systematic” Russian interference campaign, and even more intense speculation—since shown by Robert Mueller to be baseless—that the Trump camp conspired with it. A core goal has been to help US elites, particularly in the Democratic Party, avoid challenging the corrupt system that gave rise to Trump’s presidency. Such a challenge would threaten their own status and power inside that system. For national security state officials, it doubled as a means to undermine Trump’s calls for better cooperation with Russia and stigmatize the appeal of his campaign-trail promises, however insincere they were, of ending regime change wars abroad.
The Russiagate playbook has been a mirror image of what its adherents ascribe to Russia: to “sow chaos” and “undermine confidence in American election systems” by spreading disinformation and hyberbolic warnings. The Russians, via their “dark arts,” are all-powerful, able not to just install a president in the White House, but to hack into voting systems, cut off heat during frigid temperatures, and help “convince blacks not to vote in Michigan.”
Embedded in this playbook is an elitist condescension toward the public targeted by it. Critical issues that affect regular people’s lives are relegated to the margins, replaced by breathless panic that presupposes them to be malleable enough to be duped by Russian memes and bots. It also has no relationship to the reality of what this supposed Russian operation actually amounted to: juvenile posts on social media that few people actually saw and that seldom mentioned the 2016 election. Contrary to claims that the campaign was “Russian intelligence-backed,” the Russian social media ads were the product of a private firm with no established ties to the Russian government, as Mueller’s prosecutors have conceded in court. If Russian intelligence indeed stole Democratic Party e-mails (and I do not think that has been proven to date), then that would mean it is guilty of a cyber-crime that exposed accurate information about Democratic National Committee corruption—not fabricated propaganda.
The fact that this cynical playbook is now being used against Sanders and his presidential campaign should be no surprise. Sanders’s policy agenda is a threat to the same forces behind Russiagate. In fact, he is a far more dangerous threat than Trump ever was.
A politics rooted in real issues and real people is far more powerful than the cynical methods that brought us Russiagate. More here.
jokes aside, this is what’s going on in delhi. it’s terrifying. how indian msm are twisting the narrative is also deeply unsettling/orwellian. feels like the violence of the partition all over again. more here.
such a lovely lunch with firdaus apa, nadia and roohi baji. thank u for this wonderful treat roohi baji. will miss u.

fabulous vegetarian dinner cooked for us by liz and jesse who live in a big farmhouse filled with stunning art and rare treasures, along with a rambunctious dog. such a beautiful evening! #spencerport #newyork

yesterday was such an emotional/powerful day. some lovely pakistani american friends threw a lavish tea party and i got to say goodbye to so many astonishing women i love. i am so lucky. thank u shahida, anjum, ayesha, darakhshan, farah a, farah m, and najia! and thank u to all the ladies who took the time to visit. love u all. (more pictures soon)



said it before, here it is again. it’s not just the ‘bros’. once i’m settled in long island, and before i dive into editing my film, i look forward to volunteering for bernie’s campaign.
read article here.
such a beautiful dinner last night with such beautiful friends. thank u so much shagufta for a magnificent feast and for ur warmth and generosity <3

at the greenhouse cafe with some seriously powerful women – Cat Ashworth, Nancy G. Ghertner and Loret Steinberg. thank u for empowering other women, creating brilliant art and working hard to change the world. love u all!

meeting with the incredible Erica Jae where we transferred some files, looked at her gorgeous photography, and concluded our work together on The Injured Body: A Film about Racism in America – what a beautiful collab this was, dear erica. will miss u and have every intention of staying connected inshallah.

the problem with all this talk about ‘bernie bros’ is that we, women of color, muslim women, black and brown women, immigrant women, get erased so easily. some of the most prominent (and viciously attacked) woc in leadership positions, people like ilhan omar, rashida tlaib, AOC, and linda sarsour, who exist at the intersection of countless marginalized identities (black, refugee, african, arab, latina, palestinian, muslim, working class, woman) are supporting bernie sanders very publicly, yet it’s the ‘bernie bros’ who persistently define the narrative about his support. i understand that it’s deliberate, that the media are crafting a story, but it’s interesting how familiar the MO is – delete these inconvenient people who never mattered anyway. it’s infuriating. and yes, i know politicians are not a panacea and that the struggle will continue. just sick of this normalized form of erasure.
read article here.
with the beautiful Tania Day-Magallon whom i felt i knew already – brown cultures are so similar across continents: histories of colonialism, unjust structures and infuriating systems, yet resistance, warmth, generosity, and a strong sense of community. already looking forward to experiencing art together in nyc inshallah <3
