141 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2022
    1. At the same time, Gen Z protests were also unmoored from traditionalcultural icons and symbols. Even the main protest site in Yangon, theHledan business and shopping district with its banks, restaurants andbrand-name fashion shops, communicated a different set of associationsfrom those of earlier anti-colonial and anti-military protests.

      counterargument againt legacy continutation

    Annotators

  2. Apr 2022
    1. Beginning in late October 1973, at the behest of popularcalls, the measure was used to investigate and seize the assets of Thanom,Narong, and Praphat, at least partially with the idea of using the funds torepair the damage done by state forces when they repressed activists duringthe protests surrounding 14 October 1973.

      Interesting... "violating" human rights [legally via Article 17] for good rather than for willy nilly killing

    2. Thanphuying Vichitra Thanarat, suedthe government and pushed the Constitutional Court to evaluate thelegality of Article 17.

      interesting...

    3. By the end of Sarit’s regime, it was apparent that human rights andauthoritarianism could not coexist without one or the other sustaining frac-tures.

      fractures seen in upholding human rights from the UDHR

    4. whetherthey take place inside or outside the kingdom.

      jurisdiction?

    5. These orders and statements representan anti-ideal of the violation of human rights

      no justice; impunity

    6. The semipublic nature of this knowledge about state violence and its per-petrators is what makes impunity pedagogical.

      learned, passed on from power to power, actor to actor

    7. Official investigation wasimpossible, for the crimes were committed by the police themselves.”

      violation of due process

    Annotators

    1. senators who are the servants of dictatorship can bedone by parliament.

      placing a lot of faith on the parliament....

    2. Wherever there is a noble, look and in truthyou will find a serf.

      Nobles are servants to the king, no matter their position; or rather, we are all serfs at the core, we start at the same place, no one is special/different

    3. Whenever they arrest youth or harm yourchildren and grandchildren, I ask you to exchangeyour life for those students and the safety of all theyounger people.

      Interesting...

    4. 1

      required: pgs 1-38

    Annotators

    1. In any event, regime critics and their democratization movement have al-ready made an indelible mark on Vietnam’s history. While doing so, theyencountered diverse reactions of party-state authorities

      for each action, there is an equal and opposite reaction...

    2. Vietnam cannot develop economically, educationally,culturally, or politically to catch up to other Asian countries.

      without democracy

    Annotators

  3. Mar 2022
    1. chiquero.

      pigsty

    2. hinchina,

      Vietnam

    3. e puerca, ;ve

      dirty people, bad people

    4. e cueste,

      at all costs

    5. ofia. Si no te c

      hogwash, garbage, trash

    6. mierdas? ;Pien

      shit eaters

    7. me digas. Pue

      no me digas - "you don't say" or "don't tell me..." In the Heights song

    8. yo quiero

      kind of like hey guy; pipo meaning guy or buddy

    9. Apodaca. C

      Street in La Habana, Cuba

    10. ctor Mendieta le ha mandado mucho reposo. Cuca-(A Lalo.) Qué falta de tacto, de educacién y de todo. BrBa~(A los personajes imaginarios.) Es un ataque inesperado. Cuca—(A Lalo, que se rie con cierto disimulo.) Esto no tiene perdén de Dios. :

      Reference to interim president of Cuba Carlos Mendieta? A lot of unrest under him and he eventually resigned (that's why Cuca says he is out of touch because Mendieta did not provide any/much rest, but rather unrest)

    11. carajo.

      dick, bastard, jerk, etc.

    12. lgunas hojitas de antén que me regale y un trocito de palo- santo.

      cultual significance with plantains and rosewood- both grow/are found in warmer climates and tropical forests like Cuba or other Central/South American countries and then shipped to Cuba for whatever reasons

    13. ho un carcamal. (En otr

      decrepit, perjorative

    14. .

      chivo: billy goat

    15. Bobita, qué bobota eres. (Se s

      idiot

    Annotators

    1. (Clara closes her eyes as if trying to make herself into a spirit.)

      death is an escape

    2. you. P’'ll open the doors and see if the coast is clear. When I get to the laundry room, Pll signal you. You can hide behind the old furniture. The helicopters can hide behind the lamps and the light bulbs. I'll find a place for myself. When I tell you to march on, you follow me. When we find the staircase, we'll climb up to the second floor. The third room, that’s where she’s at. PU run to the door. You stay outside and keep guard. If anybody comes you shoot. Did you hear me? Shoot. (olds an imaginary ‘rifle and shoots) Pooooooommmmmmmm .

      very masculine

    3. have to be dead too. But not gone away. Just dead. (Lies on the floor) Just dead to be with each other. Mateo... Mateo...

      romeo and juliet esque

    4. my blood I can paint my hearts. (With her right elbow she draws the shape of a heart in midair.) With my saliva and the dust from the floor I can draw hearts. (She dabs saliva on her fingers and. draws another heart. Sh

      corporal means of drawing hearts, representing physical, full body love

    5. st night I let a firefly get inside my mosquito net. You know what I thought when I saw it flying my way? That some- one is coming for me.

      Foreshadowing... either her American mother is coming to get her, or the soldiers are coming...

    6. uld you invite me to your star? Would you invite me to dinner? ciara: Yes. What do-you want me to cook for you? MATEO: What dead people eat. Flowers. CLARA: You want carnations? MaTEO: No. CLARA: You want jasmine? MATEO: No. . ciara: I can cook you a bowl of chrysanthemum ... A dish of petu- nias with morning glory. How about tulips? MaTEO: I had tulips last night. ciara: How about lilies, gardenias, orchids? That’s all I have in my kitchen. MATEO: I want to eat violets. . ciara: I don’t have violets. How about dahlias, geraniums, water lilies, hibiscus. How about hibiscus, Mateo... Hibiscus... You like hibiscus? Mateo?

      beautiful, innocent flowers as a foil to death

    7. ur body is clean, mine is dirty. I wish I didn’t have a body, like the dead people in the cemetery. If only I could take a bucket of water and wash away all that is bad, then Sister Nora will see me clean. She’s mad at me, because I’m dirty. They put us in this room because they don’t like us here. If we were back home, we would all be together, Mateo you and I. You would like it there.

      She never believed she was dirty until religion [Sister Nora] and society told her she was

    8. r pillowcase and sheets.

      intimate, private locations

    9. itary stopped us on the way here, just as we were entering the village. They were exhibiting the clothes of the guerillas who had died.

      death is evident everywhere

    10. ’m not dirty. But someone touched my body.

      She is not dirty because she loves him (Mateo)

    11. hey are dirty because they were touched by a man. A sol- dier. A soldier touched them and bit them, like if they were food. Like if he was going to eat them. He made them dirty. My mouth is dirty because he kissed me, my neck, my shoulders.

      puta vs virgin! Dirty but not by her own doing, only because society says that, even though she was raped.

    12. on one side of the bed and Sister Nora on the other side. How would you like to see bloody sheets, bullet holes on people’s skin. Burnt skin. You know why I prefer to work here? I'll show you. (She opens the armoire which is full of white communion garments.) Communion dresses. See the veils. Just like wedding veils.

      church vs. infirmary

    13. The altar cloths are washed on Mondays. The candles are also changed on that day. I like to change them on Mondays, because Mondays are dull and somber. New candles brighten up the church and bring clarity. When you clean the saints use soap and water. Not too much soap or you'll get too much foam. Then it will take you forever to rinse them. Make sure you dry them well with the cloth I set aside for them. Talita will show you. You know, that’s one thing I always liked doing, washing the saints and angels. I like to bathe them as if they were my children. Clean their ears and elbows real good, as I would do a baby. And talk to them. They like it when you talk to them. They like to listen.

      purity, both physically and spiritually, of church. Juxtaposed to the dirty, immoral violence

    14. throw buckets of water on the floor, flooding the mission up to our ankles, so the tiles could retain the cool moisture and soothe the heat. Our walls were painted and there were no leeks on our roofs. Then things changed. No missionaries wanted to come here to work. And others left frightened of danger. Afraid of getting killed or lost in our jungles, to end up mangled or mutilated by guerillas or soldiers. ‘So now if the alms box needs to be painted, we take a brush and paint it. All you children have to help us. If there’s no one to mend the altar cloths, we take a need

      Childhood does not look like childhood in this environment; war/violence forces kids to grow up very quickly

    15. re used to be a time when the needs of this place were fulfilled, and children like you spent the whole day in class- rooms, learning how to read and write. Now there’s not enough of us and this place is falling apart. Everything smells of mold. As when things become moldy and moth eaten. There used to be a time when this building was airy and sani- tary, because we had time to scrub our walls and floors. We had time to maintain our gardens, to cut down the branches from our trees and let in the fresh air. And in the summertime we used’ to

      reflecting on the pre-war past

    16. n I look at them, I remember the smell of back home. _ Walking on the moist grass. The moon shining on my shoes. My grandma’s face.

      sensual nostalgia

    17. I don’t have a mother. I used to have two mothers. I used to. Not anymore. One lives in America and one disappeared from home.%-= = My papi says she was Kidnapped by soldiers. Do you know what kidnap means?

      los desaparecidos

    18. . His hand is infected.

      he did say he was going to die if they weren't together, perhaps foreshadowing?

    19. seduction and places the pair of pants by the dress. The pants repre- sent him lying close to her. Clara walks around the sheet with her eyes fixed on Mateo. He follows her. Suddenly, she pulls the sheet and

      representing their loss of innocence/childhood after they run away from home??

    20. m afraid. In the city there are soldiers. They'll take us away.

      Militarization aspects; a sense of more (although not a lot) of security in the countryside, but less in the city where most violence takes place

    21. go play with the dead people.

      Juvenile, innocent approach to death

    22. he can fly and take the message, then he can go to die where he belongs.

      Bolina?

    23. e and

      kite is symbolic for being free and flying away

    24. don’t know how to write that word either.

      Lack of education, perhaps as a result of economic struggles

    25. rough all my mother’s prayers, my father’s, my sister’s, my grandmother's and my grandfather’s prayers, Tremain untamed. They say I’m a sheep who’s gone astray. Should I stay here awake all night and pray for my sins? MaTEO: I know God. I know. Pve been told. They were only evil thoughts. I didn’t kill. (Raises his hand) And this is what I got for my evil thoughts. That pig bit me because of my evil thoughts. Please forgive me. I promise to be good.

      religion as a staple in LA

    26. My sister taught me this. It’s to keep your balance. (Demonstrates the walk} Women have to let their hips move ahead of them, when they walk. Let the hips lead the walk, like if the hips know where they’re going. See, they know where they want to go. The hips go, pim, pom, pim, pom, pim, pom... The arms go, bim, baum, bim, baum . . . The shoulders go terracata, terracata, terracata ... Pim, pom, bim, baum, terracata, terra- cata... Pim, pom, bim, baum, terracata, terracata . . . Then comes your behind. The behind goes, boom, boom, boom, boom . That’s the most important part of the walk. You got to move your behind. Look at the cows how they move their tails.

      Latent sexualization of the female body, expectations about how a woman should act/walk

    27. nd we'll clean the dishes and wash clothes together. And we'll iron together. And we'll play with my dolls, and dance together.

      typical gender norms during this time

    28. we don’t kill it, theyll turn me into a girl. They'll put me in a dress, and ’ll be a girl just like you. Would you love me if I become a girl? ciara: Of course I will. Pll love you even more, ‘cause we'll always be together. And you'll let your hair grow. And when it gets long, Pll comb it and braid it.

      gender discussions

    29. n-hu. That’s what he said. He’s got to give something. And Aunt Ursula, she’s got nothing to give so she’s going to give her hips away for the stew...

      multigenerational family home, importance of family structure in LA

    30. ne took her

      tropical aspects

    31. ré you going to give the pig to eat? What are you going to give the poor animal, huh?” She says he’s going to die if we don’t give him something. He’s got nothing to eat and we need to make him fat. It’s all dry out there. We don’t even have food for ourselves. But she stood right there, telling us we have to give him something. Like the time we didn’t have food for the goats . . . She went around the room asking the whole family for something to make a stew for those stupid animals. Grandma-gave her pillow away . .. Grandpa gave a pair of shoes . . . I gave those goats my favorite toy. My blue car. I closed my eyes and I threw it right in the pot. Mama stirred the stew and I never saw it again. That was it. It was gone. And you know something? . . . I always knew I was going to get it back, ’cause later Mama killed all the goats and we ate them.

      Again, socioeconomic challenges & food scarcity/insecurity

    32. use . . . Cause I’m mad. You disappeared!

      separation anxiety, fear of being left (sign of the times, perhaps with so much death/killing & fleeing, permanence is fleeting)

    33. op of me. Pretend Pm your bed. CLARA: No. MATEO: Just to hold each other.

      Not sexual, childhood innocence, especially from two kids who are abused at home who only know physical touch as violent and negative

    34. w come your family has bread and mine doesn’t? CLARA: ’Cause my family prepared themselves for the drought. Papa filled the house with bread

      The drought and subsequent poverty/lack of resources highlights the socioeconomic disparities in Latin America at the time

    Annotators

    1. This seems todisplay a certain disinterest in the labour contract, as if it were an irrelevant piece of paper. Yet,when directly asked whether they considered contracts as an effective tool to protect their rights,22.3 percent of the workers responded affirmatively (keyi) and 49.2 percent was relativelyoptimistic (hai keyi), compared with only 7.3 percent who expressed disbelief (bu keyi), and 21.2percent who did not know how to answer.

      paradoxical findings

    Annotators

  4. Feb 2022
    1. One of the central problems in contemporary Thailand is the absence of a solid foundation for the democratic system

      Democracy usually builds off of social ties/a strong civil society as support, without that, Thailand's democracy has not been able to be strong/withstanding.

    Annotators

    1. he greater the momentum of Singapore’s cap i tal ist growth, the more income, wealth, and related social inequalities have opened up.

      growth bringing problems--> feedback units

    Annotators

    1. ollective appeals are more likely to be successful than are individual ones, inasmuch as collective appeals exert more pressure on the government.

      That's what I'm saying- the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; why would anyone act independently if there are others willing and able to work together?

    2. hen an appropriate sequence is chosen

      there is a "right" way to do reform in authoritarian state..

    Annotators

    1. the pedagogical process of disguised collective action fosters col-lective consciousness.

      educating the citizens, bringing to their attention what is really happening in their country

    2. even if atomized actions succeeded in securing compensation in the short term, they may lose efficacy over the long term as the state absorbs this form of contention through paying off or demobilizing individ-ual claimants

      exactly, that's why I don't see this being super effective, at least long term.

    3. the performance of threat is purposively public and loud to attract audience participation from journalists to bystanders and other aggrieved citizens.

      so they can become collective?

    4. This performativity distinguishes atomized actions from other forms of quiet resistance such as “weapons of the weak” (Scott, 1985). Atomized actions are meant to attract public attention, which is amplified by the possibility of media coverage.

      performativity like singing revolutions/movements in Thailand--> but those are collective and not individual

    5. While collective contention calls for immediate dispatch of the hard and relational repression (Deng & O’Brien, 2013), atomized actions are more contained threats, which usually elicit soft repression, such as buying off the individual protestors and harassing the organizations involved.

      Okay...

    6. Why do atomized actions elicit a response from the state? When an aggrieved citizen deploys the repertoire of atomized actions, she both makes a public dis-ruption of social order and lodges a symbolic appeal to the moral authority of local bureaucrats.

      But does one person's actions speak louder than a group? Isn't the state more likely to respond/notice a group rather than one single person that they can probably silence?

    7. The inadequacy of the rule of law—exemplified by the long wait for arbi-tration—necessitated the escalation of atomized actions

      So is it any more adequate as a result of disguised collective action? Or is it still inadequate but better for one person?

    8. The rule of law was not invoked.

      So avoiding rightful resistance and instead bargaining about the rights that are guaranteed and deserved by workers-citizens is this better than rightful resistance? Consider the difference in outcomes, who it affects, amount of effort each one takes.

    9. empathize with the government’s difficulties and impressed upon her that both the state and workers needed to make mutual allowances.

      WHAT

    10. negotiated over the price of legally guaranteed rights.

      Uh...

    11. activists may then instruct claimants to deploy performance threats

      Although this is the "safer" option, is it only safer because it would only see one person be killed/punished rather than multiple?

    12. These actions are “atomized” in that they are deployed by lone citizens to induce local bureaucrats to respond to their demands.

      is one voice greater than many?

    13. One of the major changes has been the explosion of civil society organizations that are permitted to operate with a degree of limited autonomy from government and party insti-tutions

      i.e. labor unions

    14. they act as unconventional mobiliz-ing structures by coaching aggrieved citizens to make rights claims without engaging in potentially perilous protests.

      so collective in that its a group, coordinated effort to mobilize single individuals, but not a collective group mobilization as one unit

    Annotators

    1. Drawing on prior protests and civil society engagement, civil society actors in the 2016self-nomination movement strategically adopted a rights-based collective action frame tounderscore the legitimacy of their contention, and wielded social media as an instrumentto mobilize proponents for their claims.

      rightful resistance- they know their rights and they are going to use them against the Party

    Annotators

    1. Red Sunday’s pursuit of a live feel might be understood through Václav Havel’s notion of the “power of the powerless.”

      Czechoslovakian anti-communist leader; Charter 77

    Annotators

    1. e. To accept that we must do low quality theatre at the outset in order to be able to "elevate" the level of the people, is to

      not the right approach, this won't help anyone but plays into the system of being dominated

    2. ercia

      political propaganda

    Annotators

    1. several familiar approaches to law andsocial change all share a skepticism “about the value of law for empow-ering marginalized and even ordinary citizens.”

      after all, this is the same law that has kept them down in the first place...

    2. equally established principles support existing powerrelations and serve to delegitimize even well-grounded rightful resistance.Chinese villagers, for example, may speak of “democracy” and their rightto “reflect problems and expose bad cadres,” but cadres can often trumpthem by invoking “Party leadership” and the need to maintain “stabilityabove all”

      status quo > democracy

    3. While infractions of laws that stipulate election procedures, fee lim-its, land use, detention limits, and so on are generating rightful resistancein many locations, Chinese villagers also base their challenges on Partypolicies that have not been formalized in legislation

      No Party actions unless backed up by written legislation

    Annotators

    1. For the scavengers who collect the bagsof food scattered in the derailment, the accident is a blessing. For the trainowners, it is a criminal act of vandalism costing 5 million pesos.

      good/bad vs. right/wrong; the kids are RobinHood-esque for their poor community, but a pest for the wealthy, industrial leaders

    Annotators

    1. enrich itself and its friends at the expense of consumers, 1 good jobs, and development.

      predatory state

    Annotators

    1. Elite unity occurs when one singlegroup predominates.

      rare

    Annotators

    1. The Northern Expedition

      reunify fragmented China after 1911 revolution

    2. Sun’s compromises unraveled in part after the purge of communistsfrom the GMD during 1927 to 1928

      the compromises were usually with communist [soviet, CCP] aid, so I'm sure a purge of communist factions in GMD was not appreciated/well-received

    Annotators

  5. Jan 2022
    1. This strategic mimicry enabled the organization to establish partnerships with state agencies.

      emulate itself as a state agency so that eventual partnerships with the state would be more easily facilitated-less transition anxiety

    Annotators

    1. ctivists accused the local State Security Bureau of using divide- and- conquer strategies to fuel mistrust among labor leaders

      pit them against one another

    2. The expansion of labor organizations did not necessarily translate into the formation of strong advocacy networks among organizations.

      Different appearances/interactions in front of and behind the scenes

    3. what explains the rise of independ-ent grassroots labor organizations that serve migrant workers? Who were the leaders of such organizations and how did they mobilize in a repressive environment?

      central questions

    Annotators

    1. how particular modes of state attack encouragespecific patterns of political contention

      state repression--> civil response/contention/protest/reaction

    Annotators

    1. Political parties are defined here by their de jure existence. Hence, if theregime formally bans political parties, they are considered nonexistenteven if some may still operate underground

      by right/by law

    2. Bodin’s original point – that constraints can be empowering andnecessary for political survival – may not have been entirely lost onmonarchs.

      democratic principles in a nondemocratic system

    Annotators

  6. Nov 2021
    1. This transnational paradise, moreover, left little room for democracy.

      democratic deficit

    1. Confronted with such a disruption, tax-paying civic nationalism can quickly devolve into something much darker: a dehumanizing hatred that turns Jews into "vermin," Tutsis into "cockroaches," or Muslims into "terrorists."

      Negative externalities created by social capital connections

    2. it is easily destabilized, particularly by the forces of globalization, which can make people who were once the archetypes of their culture feel irrelevant and bring them into contact with very different sorts of neighbors than their grandparents had.

      cultural backlash theory

    1. From Black Lives Matter, to the anger of non-college educated white males, and extending to the misogynistic online community of Incels, liberal democracy is perceived as functioning for some but not for whichever particular group believes it suffers from being structurally excluded.

      People who are left out of history; Applebaum

    2. , the norm of live-and-let live or bounded competition has deteriorated within liberal democratic societies as political contests are increasingly portrayed as battles over identity.

      enemy vs. adversary

    Annotators

    1. This analysis also reveals clear period effects, reflecting current economic conditions: the intergenerational difference persist, but in times of insecurity, all cohorts shift toward more Materialist views-- and with economic recovery, they shift back toward their long-term baseline, so that across this 38-year span, given cohorts remain at least as Post-materialist as they were at the start

      Mudde & Kaltwasser- this is why populists have to emphasize on moments of political/economic failures when peoples' priorities shift and make room for an anti-establishment outsider. Once the failure/crisis is over, people revert back to their old thinking which might not be as open to populist ideas

    2. This perspective emphasizes that populist support can be explained primarily as a social psychological phenomenon, reflecting a nostalgic reaction among older sectors of the electorate seeking a bulwark against long-term processes of value change, the ‘silent revolution’, which has transformed Western cultures during the late twentieth century.

      Restorative nostalgia from Applebaum

    3. Populist support should also be predicted by subjective feelings of economic insecurity, such as among those reporting difficulties in making ends meet.

      Author (Mounk? check.) argues that people feel economically threatened just by seeing neighborhoods down the street being financially devastated, not even personal loss. Similar to the people feeling the "threat" of immigration as the people with the least amount of actual contact with immigrants

  7. Oct 2021
  8. german311645591177.files.wordpress.com german311645591177.files.wordpress.com
    1. Pearl Bailey ‘Earth fantasy ind September Reasons and Fire Ms. Billie Hol

      Conexión intensa a los cantantes/la música.

    2. ow Iam part of my teachers’ tour

      Maestros= The Isley Brothers

    3. you-think-you-are-bitch attitude and the north-americans laughed at my corny vocabulary

      Crear la dinámica de "nosotros" contra "ellos"

    4. But then again kings and servants depend on each other* there can be no king without a servant and no servant without a king for silk comes out ofa worm gold out of rocks fire from a piece of wood but have you heard of a friendship of a king? as you have heard a gambler that is honest asnake that forgives a passionate woman who is calm an impotent man who is brave a drunk with discrimination but then again how can servants be well? itis said that the poor thesick the dreamers and the fools always go into exile

      ¿Porque menciona esta cita? ¿Es un comentario en las dinámicas entre anglohablantes nativos de los EEUU y los inmigrantes latinas, como la relacion entre los reyes y los criados? En las estructuras de poder, siempre seré los "haves" y "have nots."

    5. recordando al Che let’s remember Ernesto

      Ernesto Che Guevera; un revolucionario

    6. march against police brutality

      El tratamiento desigual de la policía a personas de piel no blanco; "racial profiling"; todavía es un problema en nuestra sociedad mas de veinte años después. Segun las noticias, un hombre Jose "Kiko" Garcia de la DR fue matado por un policía en el NYPD en 1992.

    7. bemba

      thick lips

    8. iapas

      freebie

    9. hips swing male or female we swing creating our tale male or female we swing

      La importancia del baile en el Caribe; el merengue.

    10. Last saturday my teachers sang in Soul train Now, I don’t care how my mouth look Tlike what I'm saying

      La cultura/historia de la Republica Dominicana tiene influencias del comercio de esclavos africanos, grupos indígenas y los conquistadores españoles. Explica la conexión entre algunos personas latinas y la cultura africano (o afroamericano si esta en los EEUU), como Soul train.

    11. Los hermanos Isley ‘The Isley Brothers

      Otro ejemplo de la cultura estadounidense con el grupo de música soul, funk, R&B y rock.

    12. yomesé girl loves you me ‘Tarzan you Jane youmemine loveyoudo

      Una conexión a la cultura estadounidense. Es un ejemplo interesante porque Jane es una extranjera en el mundo de Tarzan y los gorilas, que imagino es como inmigrantes se siente cuando llegan a los EEUU. Tambien hay el aspecto del lenguaje en que Tarzan no sabe el ingles de Jane, la misma situación de las personas "ESL" en los EEUU.

    13. lalista crece Ia lista crecié presente pasado _-simple futuro compuesto crece creciéd creciendo creciendo

      Otro ejemplo de la lengua, los tiempos de verbos/conjugaciones

    14. repeat after me repeat after them repeat after them repeat after me Dominicanish 2345 67 8 92 187 ye 78 102 2 Er Ir as Ais in love - Mas in apple You peroiu you repeat afterme iu you " me da verguenza poner la boca asi

      Elementos de ambos lenguas: español y ingles. Es como una lección de hablar. Comenta en la bilingüismo de personas multiculturales.

    15. the piece within the piece, the highlighted text, will also be different. Other readings are created, maintaining a freshness,

      Un tipo de interactividad. Hace que la obra sea siempre cambiante y personal

    1. More clashes between Budapest and EU institutions,

      us vs them EU--> elite

    2. pursue his nationalistic vision and fight more battles with Brussels.

      agenda-setting success, policy impact success

    3. won a landslide victory

      electoral success

    1. effective pathways between social movements and government is vastly ambitious

      lack of access to policy change/law making

    2. try to guess what Merkel or the IMF want him to do before they tell him, so that his decisions look more like his own brilliance, and not the imposed will of dominant supranational institutions.

      Growing distrust of politicians, the system not representing the people, representing others with more power/connections

    3. In contrast to the political parties, the indignados (the "outraged")

      us vs them

    4. ballot spoiling

      Anti-democratic technique

    Annotators

    1. Any attempt to revive thethoroughly dead American Dream

      Lack of trust/faith in representatives, liberal democracy government

    2. Among the principalmeans will be the attempt to align and define the Occupy Wall Street movement by identifying it with theDemocratic party and the Obama Administration.

      OWS never identified with one of the major parties, like Tea Party did with GOP, maybe explains their lack of breakthrough/organization

    3. beholden to fantastically rich and powerful corporations controlled by less than 1% of thepopulation

      elitest

    4. Put another way, the realhuman beings that make up the citizenry will have to destroy the fake Citizenship of the non-persons that controlRepublican and Democrat, Obama and Boehner alike.

      morality real human beings vs. fake non-persons

    5. our land, our sea, our air, ourcountry and even our DNA-just got Occupied.

      control of OUR x, y, z Not democratic or listening to the people, OUR voices

    6. Teapartyers, Democrat-leaning progressives and most of the media ignored, ridiculed and thenfought the nascent movement

      Claimed elites Outsider status of the movement because it was ignored and dismissed

    Annotators

    1. gainst the state and party bureaucracy, conservative military generals, and the new econom

      So unelected positions largely??

    2. which brought together most of the political parti

      Further weakening the opposition

    Annotators

    1. without growth, we must seriously entertain the possibility that hun-dreds of millions—perhaps billions—of people will never achieve the con-sumer lifestyle enjoyed by people in the world’s industrialized nations.

      Yeah... but do they need to? They're level of "consumerism" should improve, but nationals of industrialized states could survive a decrease... create balance and sustainablilty

    2. evealing of the overarching political and economic transformations that neoliberalism and globalization have enacted.

      Closed off under Franco, but increasingly open to globalization and outsiders after his death and eventually to become a member of the EU

    Annotators