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Priscilla and Elvis at wedding in front of wedding cake

Sofia Coppola's "Priscilla" is the biopic inspired by Priscilla's 1985 memoir, 'Elvis and Me,' focusing on Priscilla's perspective of her relationship with Elvis, which is sometimes suffocating. Coppola's film is the opposite of what Baz Luhrmann aimed to portray in "Elvis" (2022).

Coppola likely relates to her own experiences living in the shadows of a powerful and successful man—her father, Francis Ford Coppola—drawing parallels to Priscilla's journey toward independence.

Priscilla Beaulieu is an innocent teenager when she meets the heartthrob Elvis Presley in Germany, far from his rock-and-roll kingdom. What begins as a starstruck crush, fueled by shared homesickness, evolves into a complicated love affair, revealing the unseen vulnerabilities of a cultural icon. Their relationship progresses from the initial fairytale excitement to a whirlwind marriage, and the film poignantly depicts their life together.

Columbus Dispatch building

If anyone—that is, the relatively few Columbus residents who pay attention—had any doubts, the election results and the self-celebration of the re-elected seal the anti-democratic, anti-publics deal.

Consider these facts:

The “mayor” in name only—who accepts his unearned, increased salary for not doing his job, not knowing the city, and accepting no responsibility for anything—ridiculously proclaims:

“The Columbus Century” and “the sun is always rising in Columbus.”

As a historian, I should be stunned. But I know better than that. Despite his private developers and private interest group funded campaign war-chest of more than $1.5 million dollars (likely closer to $2 million) and City Hall staff working for his  campaign including appearances in ads, Ginther ignorantly borrows on political economic rhetoric of the late 19th and early 20th century of “the American—and many other--‘centuries.’” This echoes the World’s Columbian Exhibition in Chicago in the 1890s. It is not the metropolitan rhetoric of the 21st century.

Woman in Gaza street with devastation all around

Friday, November 3, 2023, 12:00 PM
Join AFSC staff every Friday at to hear updates from Gaza. Then, take action with us as we contact our elected officials and call for an immediate cease-fire and humanitarian access to Gaza. Our elected officials need to keep hearing from us. Register here

Woman in Gaza street with devastation all around

Friday, November 3, 2023, 12:00 PM
Join AFSC staff every Friday at to hear updates from Gaza. Then, take action with us as we contact our elected officials and call for an immediate cease-fire and humanitarian access to Gaza. Our elected officials need to keep hearing from us. Register here

Thomas Mann (1875 - 1955): "War is a cowardly escape from the problems of
peace."

Today Israeli occupation forces attacked more hospitals in Gaza including
the Indonesian Hospital. Medicines are not allowed yet including most
cancer medicines (one month now) and no fuel for hospitals in the North. 18
Palestinians were killed today in the West Bank and over a 150 in Gaza. The
US is still trying to do tokenism by saying they can agree to a 4 hour
pause daily. That is four hours for the Israeli military trorefule and
resume the genocide for the next 20 hours daily.  Humane Gaza Doctors
respond to inhuman Israeli doctors who called for more hospital bombings
https://consortiumnews.com/2023/11/08/doctors-in-gaza-respond/

Questions:
If all Gaza hospitals (eye hospital, cancer hospital, pediatric hospital

Details about event

November 9, 2023, 5:00 PM
The 2023 Free Press Annual Awards Dinner is free - all are welcome.  

Featuring peace activist David Swanson on "War Abolition and the Ukraine Problem."  

Honoring local community activists:  
2023 Free Press "Libby" Award for lifetime achievement in Community Activism - Cynthia Brown of the Ohio Coalition to End Qualified Immunity
2023 Free Press Activist Artist Award - Alicia Jean Vanderelli of the Vanderelli Room.

RSVP: colfreepress@gmail.com.  

Facebook Event  

Details about event

November 9, 2023, 5:00 PM
The 2023 Free Press Annual Awards Dinner is free - all are welcome.  

Featuring peace activist David Swanson on "War Abolition and the Ukraine Problem."  

Honoring local community activists:  
2023 Free Press "Libby" Award for lifetime achievement in Community Activism - Cynthia Brown of the Ohio Coalition to End Qualified Immunity
2023 Free Press Activist Artist Award - Alicia Jean Vanderelli of the Vanderelli Room.

RSVP: colfreepress@gmail.com.  

Facebook Event.  

On October 20, Secretary-General of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, stood on the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing, between Egypt and besieged Gaza. 

 Guterres was not the only international figure to travel to the Gaza border, hoping to mobilize the international community in the face of an ongoing genocide, in an already impoverished and besieged Strip. 

 “Behind these walls, we have two million people that is suffering (sic) enormously,” Guterres said.

 These efforts, however, paid little dividends. 

 The spokesperson for the Ministry of Health in Gaza, Ashraf al-Qudra, said in a statement on October 24, that the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza is “too slow (for it to) change the reality” on the ground.

Sitting safely at my desk, looking at photos of bombed buildings and knowing that missing children are buried under the rubble, imagining (unavoidably) what this must feel like . . . oh my God, empathy gives way to horror. Move on, I tell myself. Write about something else. All wars are like this.

But the big question won’t go away: Why?

Beyond all the reasons and excuses for the continuing carnage of Gaza, beyond the U.S. justifications for its complicity: Why?

Every war foments this question, but only if you care about the victims. If you don’t — if you embrace one side’s justification — the dehumanization process kicks in and, if you’re sitting at home reading about it on the Internet or watching it on TV, it starts morphing into a video game. Crash, boom, hooray! This is war and we’ve got no choice but to win, no matter the cost . . .and no matter that a victory carved out of corpses in the rubble only means that further war and further hell (for everyone) are inevitable.

Why?

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