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Monday, June 15, 2015

Another View

Of the white woman, Rachel Dolezal, passing for black.

An excerpt from the Vox - (Bold is mine)

White people have been passing for black for centuries. A historian explains.



Dara Lind:On the other hand, that gets into another criticism — that in order to make white people care about black issues, it takes a white person pretending to be black.
Baz Dreisinger:Of course! That's the criticism that's leveled at John Howard Griffin (the white man who passed for black and is the author of Black Like Me) all the time. Frankly the same thing is true of so many experiences. We think about the success of Orange Is The New Black — no criticism of that book per se, but how many prison memoirs are there by nonwhite people who are incarcerated that didn't get that level of attention? This happens all the time, that it takes a white person to translate for a white mainstream audience. That's partly why John Howard Griffin, I think, fell out of favor. because it was like, "We don't need that translator anymore." So it's certainly a big problem.
It would have been a far more radical thing for her to just say, "Hi, I'm white, and I identify with these causes, with this culture, in whatever way that I do; yes, I teach Africana studies and I'm not of that descent, because it doesn't take being of that descent to care about these issues on an intellectual, cultural, or moral basis." That would be a far more radical thing to do, because it's saying you don't have to be it to care about it. I don't have to be female to care about women's rights issues. I don't have to be black to care about black rights issues. I don't have to be incarcerated in order to care about issues around incarceration. I bring that up because that's the primary work I do now, and my next book is about global mass incarceration. I've never been incarcerated, I don't have family members who are incarcerated. I have friends who are, but I think most people do in this day and age. But that doesn't mean that I can't care about it in a profound way.
http://www.vox.com/2015/6/15/8784327/passing-white-black

Happy Birthday Mom!

If she were alive, she'd be 96 today - June 15th.

The Man & The Dog

Sunday, June 14, 2015

A Step Too Far

No thanks.

Part of this runway is built on stilts.  Only 20 pilots are cleared to land here.



http://roadwarriorvoices.com/2015/06/13/this-runway-is-built-on-stilts-and-british-airways-only-has-20-pilots-cleared-to-land-there/

The Big Boys

This map may be hard to read, but it's worth checking out.  Find the whole story at The Huffington Post link below.



http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/10/biggest-companies-revenue_n_7552802.html?cps=gravity_2246_-3774485293071823420

Another Banksy






































http://smile.amazon.com/Destroy-Racism-Banksy-Reproduction-Poster/dp/B00AHTU6SA/ref=pd_sim_79_30?ie=UTF8&refRID=1DXP0RVTZN96AKKFNE59

Vincent & Jules

From "Pulp Fiction," with bananas instead of guns.

The artist is the mysterious and illusive Banksy.

It can be purchased on canvas from a "Touch of Modern."





https://www.touchofmodern.com/sales/banksy-b68f93e9-cbe3-44e2-be56-ccce2dd8c8fc/vincent-and-jules-with-bananas?share_invite_token=WLQ0XX2Y

Pretty Thirst Quencher

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Priceless Reactions to NAACP Head Claiming to be Black

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/12/rachel-dolezal-faking-bla_n_7571422.html

Mosquito Trap

A must for summer time.  This is especially useful for my Texas folks, where the mosquitoes are as big as birds.


History Repeating Itself

From Salon - 

White panic, white denial: The racial prehistory of the McKinney pool party that white America can’t let go 

Hey white people: If we can get over our twisted relationship with the past, the future might actually be better 


White panic, white denial: The racial prehistory of the McKinney pool party that white America can't let goBertha Gilbert, 22, is led away by police after she tried to enter a segregated lunch counter in Nashville, Tenn., on May 6, 1964.  (Credit: AP)
There is a central trope of racial discourse within America’s white majority – or let’s say within a particular subset of that majority – that African-Americans are overly obsessed with the past. If you are white and claim you have never heard anyone in your extended family or your circle of acquaintances express this view, you have deliberately chosen not to pay attention. This is a fundamental premise of the Fox News worldview, often addressed directly by Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, which lies behind their insistence that Barack Obama is a stealth black nationalist and ‘60s radical who will one day reveal his true agenda. It undergirds coverage of every racially coded news event, from the “pool party” in McKinney, Texas, that transfixed the nation last week to the lengthening sequence of unarmed black men and boys killed by police or panicked white civilians.
Like so many aspects of American popular ideology, this contention contains and conceals a powerful element of truth — but not the truth its proponents perceive. When turned upside down and uncloaked, this anxious insistence that history has no long-term consequences and no connection to present-tense events reveals itself as a distorted mirror image of reality. It is whites far more than blacks who cannot break free of the poisonous attitudes of the past, and facing that truth can help us understand the peculiar state of American race relations in the 21st century, so painfully distilled in that video clip of a white police officer and a bikini-clad African-American teenager.
We shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that the confrontation between those people was a real event in a real place, which unmistakably evoked America’s history of racial violence and civil disobedience. I also saw it, almost literally, as a collision between the past and the future. Whether or not that young lady behaved with perfect decorum on the afternoon in question, she is unmistakably an American of the future – not a future in which cultural or racial identities don’t matter (we won’t see that in any living person’s lifetime), but a future of increased fluidity and intersection and overlap. Her crime, so to speak, lay in being a black girl who went to a pool party in a largely white suburban neighborhood and acted as if she belonged there, without assuming she was to be held to some special standard of good behavior. That police officer, on the other hand, seemed to have absorbed a contact high from the long and brutal history of police violence against people of color. Fortunately for all of us, his obvious zeal for the role was rendered ludicrous rather than tragic by its context. 
Yet it is African-Americans who are constantly accused of fixating on ancient history, a charge presented in various ways, many of them subtler than the white-centric paranoia delivered by Fox. Stated most directly and without hyperbole, this boils down to the idea that black people need to get over all that stuff that happened in the history books or in black-and-white video clips, like slavery and lynching and segregated lunch counters and generations of systematic economic and residential discrimination. It isn’t helpful; it’s only holding them back. Anyway, white people living today aren’t responsible for any of it and America simply isn’t racist anymore: Check out Obama and Jay-Z and LeBron. If anybody’s a racist, it’s all the black people calling everybody else racist.
OK, I said I would avoid hyperbole and I lied. Not everyone who expresses this view follows the chain of association all the way through that last sentence, or the one before it. (Although the “I’m not a racist, but …” mode is distressingly common.) But the important ideological thread, even in the most polite and neutral formulation, is the desire to decouple distressing individual events from the even more distressing current of history. The deaths of Trayvon Martin and Mike Brown and Eric Garner and all the rest are disconnected cases of perceived threat and police authority and possible wrongdoing, each to be weighed on its own merits. They do not belong to any larger historical pattern, and those who insist on perceiving such a pattern are dwelling in the past or playing the race card or nursing old grudges or otherwise denying and undermining the greatness of America.
Except of course for the confusing fact that many white observers do perceive a larger pattern linking the thorniest issues in the African-American community, which is the point where this ideological construction begins to reveal itself. Since it is urgently important to resist the obvious pattern — the one that would be discerned immediately by any outside observer — an alternative must be found. So the pattern we get instead of history is a murky and shapeless monstrosity spawned from the bad conscience of the social sciences: The “culture of dependency” or the “collapse of the black family” or, if we’re really reaching for the dog whistle, the “thug subculture” of baggy pants and Purple Drank and incomprehensible rap lyrics and, most damning of all, a disrespectful attitude towards authority. (Thank God young white folks have never expressed anything like that.)
Simply put, all of this represents a classic case of projection. Who is paralyzed by the past and unable to break free of toxic associations, outmoded stereotypes and ingrained fears and prejudices? Here’s a hint: It isn’t black folks. What we see at work in so many of these cases, and especially in the McKinney pool-party fracas, is a tangled web of half-conscious assumptions inherited from previous white generations, assumptions that were poisoned at the roots by fear and shame and have now become psychotically dissociated from social reality. (Please notice, my hypersensitive fellow European-Americans, that for the moment I am steering away from the term “racist,” which has become an impediment to communication amid all the nutsack-clutching about how it’s the cruelest thing you could ever say to any white person.)
Those assumptions are so familiar to Americans of all races and colors that I hardly need to spell them out. To their core believers, of course, they are not flawed assumptions but profound truths that must be spoken out loud in the face of P.C. liberalism and its pieties. Black people, as a category, are understood to be a uniquely dangerous and disruptive force that must be contained, and whose individual members are virtually interchangeable. African-American men (and boys, all too often) are such threatening figures in themselves that they can be considered armed and dangerous simply because they are black and male. Black people in suburbia, as we saw in McKinney, are instinctively understood by many white residents and police as invaders, bringing the imagined chaos and lawlessness of the “inner city” to the ordered land of weed-free bluegrass rectangles and endless identical cul-de-sacs.
While the terminology and rhetoric have been massaged for contemporary usage, at their ideological core these seemingly deranged views go back a long way. All the pseudo-concern about African-American culture and the troubled state of the black family serves to conceal the deep historical roots of these ingrained attitudes – history is bunk, as we noted earlier, and there are no lessons in the past. Since early in the history of the slave trade, the people brought here in chains from Africa have been depicted as a special sub-caste of humanity, with certain gifts (playing music, and picking cotton in the sun) and certain deficits, such as a tendency to violence and an inability to handle personal liberty.
Whether those prejudices and many related modes of bigotry emerged organically among the white population as a way of justifying the existence of slavery in a nation that claimed to be based on principles of liberty and equality, or were the fruits of a concerted ruling-class strategy to divide exploited workers along the color line, is an exceedingly complicated historical question. I am tempted to suggest that the perception that blacks were dangerous was less destructive to the white psyche in the long run than the perception that blacks were pretty much all the same. (It was not inherently irrational for those who owned slaves or benefited from the slave economy to live in fear of slave rebellion.) But there’s really no separating the two, and those are the intertwined ideas that continue to bedevil and enslave white people, and that prevent so many of them from taking a full part in the vibrant cultural landscape of America.
I claim no special expertise in African-American culture, but I’ve lived in several different racially mixed contexts at different times of my life, and there’s one thing I can say with a high degree of confidence: The immense diversity and heterogeneity of black America, which always existed but was perhaps constrained by a perceived need for group solidarity, has become unmistakable to anyone paying even the slightest attention. Any possible stereotype about how black people behave or talk can be undermined with a million counter-examples. Here’s a news flash: Black people have been moving to suburbia for 50 years or so, and plenty of them can host their own damn pool parties. If we want to be invited, we’d better be polite.
African-American communities remain disproportionately affected by economic inequality, poverty and crime, but this is also a golden age of black self-definition, of black computer nerds, black stoners, black preppies, black hipsters, black intellectuals, black “Lord of the Rings” buffs and a vibrant African-American LGBT community. Chris Rock’s gag about how he hadn’t realized that black people could be snotty specifically referred to my neighborhood in Brooklyn. The African-American teenagers who live next door to me aren’t snotty; they’re skateboarders who listen to both rap and metal and play role-playing games. I don’t think it would occur to anyone they know to suggest that they are “acting white,” or to care.
But there are a great many white people who would vigorously resist the R-word I mentioned earlier but who can’t see or appreciate any of that, and don’t want to. Their self-image is apparently defined in opposition to the classic stereotype of African-Americans as a hostile and undifferentiated Other, an amoral criminal class driven by anger and resentment. There’s a strong element of projection going on there too, I’m afraid. I felt an infinitesimal twinge of compassion for Karen Fitzgibbons, the infamous elementary-school teacher in McKinney who used her Facebook page to express her belief that “the blacks are the ones causing the problems and this ‘racial tension,’” and then to suggest that segregation wasn’t such a bad idea: If you ship all the black people to the other side of town, she wrote, “they can hurt each other and leave the innocent people alone. Maybe the 50s and 60s were really on to something.” There’s no question Fitzgibbons had to be fired, if only because no one ignorant enough to conflate “the 50s and 60s” like that should be teaching children anything, including needlepoint or tetherball. (And because she actually used the hashtag #imnotracist.)
But Fitzgibbons’ real offense was to say, in an indelicate and overly public fashion, what millions of other white Americans say in code or in private. I’d rather we were honest about it than sweep it under the carpet. If she’s the comic-relief version of non-racist racism, then Michael Dunn, the man who shot and killed 17-year-old Jordan Davis at a Florida gas station after a dispute over loud music, is the tragic and hair-raising version. In the riveting new documentary about that case, “3 ½ Minutes, Ten Bullets,” we hear Dunn tell his fiancée “I’m not racist; they’re racist,” during a jailhouse telephone call. There’s no need to ask who “they” are; he launches into a rant about the dysfunctional “subculture” of baggy pants and gangsta rap and fatherless families, against which he has struck such a courageous blow.
As it happens, Jordan Davis grew up in a middle-class Christian household in the Jacksonville suburbs. He had a close and loving relationship with both his parents, although they were separated. He went to that gas station that night with a couple of friends to buy chewing gum. He could hardly have been a more clean-cut young American, except for the semiotics of his skin color and the music he liked, which were the only things about him that Dunn could perceive. Dunn had been drinking heavily, and was on his way home from the wedding of an adult son he hadn’t seen in many years. He had a loaded gun in the glove compartment and was itching to use it. Yet in Dunn’s understanding of the world, an understanding handed down from the deep past when racism required no apology, no denial and no disguise, he could not possibly be the one who belonged to a diseased and dysfunctional subculture.
A certain presidential candidate once promised us a “national conversation” on race, what seems like a lifetime ago, and the phrase sounded noble for five minutes before becoming a national joke. But it might be time for white people to talk to each other openly and without censorship about the dead weight of the past that we pretend does not exist or does not matter. Black people have their own problems to deal with, but they do not suffer from the crippling delusion that America’s past was so sacred and glorious we can never let it go. They aren’t the ones dragging around an inherited burden of hatred and fear and unhappiness that keeps on killing black and brown people and poisoning white minds and doing absolutely no good for anyone. It’s time, brothers and sisters, to set that burden down.


Her True Colors

Sometimes "No Comment" is the best response.

From The Root -

Texas Teacher Fired After Racist Facebook Post About McKinney Pool Attack

Karen Fitzgibbons, a teacher at the Frenship Independent School District, was fired Thursday.

Posted: 
 
bikini12n1web
Karen Fitzgibbon
FACEBOOK

A Texas elementary school teacher has been fired after her racist Facebook post about the McKinney pool attack went viral, according to the New York Daily News.

The teacher, Karen Fitzgibbon, worked as a fourth grade teacher at Bennett Elementary School in the Frenship Independent School District in Wolfforth, Texas, and was fired Thurday, the report says.  Her dismissal came after she wrote a post on Wednesday ranting about the firing of ex-McKinney officer Eric Casebolt, a white officer who attacked black teens at a pool party last week.

“This makes me ANGRY!” Fitzgibbons wrote, according to KCBD. “This officer should not have to resign. I’m going to just go ahead and say it...the blacks are the ones causing the problems and this ‘racial tension.’ I guess that’s what happens when you flunk out of school and have no education.

“I’m almost to the point of wanting them all segregated on one side of town so they can hurt each other and leave the innocent people alone,” she continued. “Maybe the 50s and 60s were really on to something.”

After an uproar, Fitzgibbon deleted the post and apologized. The district issued a statement about the incident, according to Yahoo News.

“Frenship ISD is deeply disappointed in the thoughtlessness conveyed by this employee’s post,” the statement says. “We find these statements extremely offensive, insensitive, and disrespectful to our Frenship community and citizens everywhere. … The employee whose account is responsible for the post will be relieved of her teaching duties at Frenship ISD.”

They're Just Having Fun!

Soothing Sounds

Ideas for Father's Day Cards - Unsentimental Version

From The Huffington Post -

Father's Day is simple.

All you need to do is send a nice card ...

Like this one ...

Just something short and sweet ...

To let Dad know you appreciate him ...

And the stuff he's done for you.

Especially if you were a horrible kid ...

Or if you still are!

Because dads are great. Just like moms are great. Parents, you know? Great. Each in their own way.

Aww.

If we were seahorses, though, our dads would have carried us around and brought us into the world.

Isn't that weird?

Anyway, we can definitely all agree on the significance of the contribution fathers have made to the comedy world.

And that's certainly a reason to celebrate.

So give Dad a call. Take him to dinner. Talk about the weather, or his parenting skills ...

Because despite your lack of gushy sentiment, Father's Day is nice.

Even if it's just an excuse to buy another 80 million cards per year.
spadestationery

Gift Ideas

For the men in your world.

Click on the links below to find some really cool stuff.  Great prices, too.

From USA Today -

https://www.touchofmodern.com/sales

http://www.ifonly.com

Friday, June 12, 2015

I Agree. You?

Stop making excuses for Rachel Dolezal: The Spokane NAACP official’s fraud is unforgivable 

The chapter president allegedly passed herself off as black for years 


Stop making excuses for Rachel Dolezal: The Spokane NAACP official's fraud is unforgivableRachel Dolezal in 2009, standing in front of a mural she painted at the Human Rights Education Institute's offices in Coeur d'Alene, idaho.  (Credit: AP/Nicholas K. Geranios)
It should already be abundantly clear that the still emerging story of Spokane NAACP leader Rachel Dolezal is not your typical tale of everyday cultural appropriation. Dolezal, who’s been chapter president since January of this year, is also a part-time professor in the Africana Studies Program at Eastern Washington University and chairwoman of the city’s Office of Police Ombudsman Commission. She’s come under intense scrutiny since Thursday, when her parents came forward to say that the 37 year-old had been deceptively posing as African American. But while her story is extraordinary, it’s not her behavior that’s going to be worth noting right now. It’s the amount of ridiculous, excusing commentary we’re going to be subjected to about it. So let me just say now, as a white woman who, like Dolezal rather conveniently says, can acknowledge “We’re all from the African continent” – that is some next-level white privilege BS there. Chet Haze, you have been wildly outdone. 
As the Seattle Times reports, Dolezal now says “I feel like I owe my executive committee a conversation” about what she says is a “multi-layered” issue. “That question is not as easy as it seems,” she says. “There’s a lot of complexities … and I don’t know that everyone would understand that.”
But in an interview that aired on KLXY Thursday, when asked directly, “Are you African American?” she replied, “I don’t understand the question,” and asserted that a Facebook photograph of an African American man “is my dad.” But when pressed, “Are your parents white?” she took off her microphone and walked away so quickly she left her purse and car keys behind.
Maybe if this story hadn’t blown up at such a unique moment in our cultural history — a moment when transgender rights are gaining unprecedented visibility while we still, tragically, have to say the words “Black lives matter” as if that should ever be up for discussion — Dolezal’s apparent ruse would not be sparking the conversation it has. But social media is already seizing on the debate over whether someone who “identifies as black” can be “transracial.” As a commenter on the Spokesman Review asked, “What’s wrong with identifying as a different race? Obviously she’s probably felt for years that she was black on the inside and denied it all through her childhood. I mean look at her education and profession. She’s obviously ‘transitioned’ and able to share it with the world. I would think since she’s transitioned and identifies herself as black, than we should just let her be and live her life in peace.” Let me help out here. No.
What you do with your hair is totally your business. And Dolezal still has supporters. Spokane NAACP’s Criminal Justice Committee chair Cedric Bradley told Inlander Thursday, “In my opinion, it wouldn’t make a difference to me. It’s not about black and white, it’s about what we can do for the community.”
But based on what is currently known about Dolezal, this is not a case of feeling more comfortable within a different culture. The Chicago Tribune reports that “Rachel Dolezal has said she has biracial parents, was abused by a step-father, and lived in South Africa as a child. Her parents say they are white. They also say she never had a step-father, and though the couple did live in South Africa, it was from 2002 to 2006, it was after Rachel had left the house and married.” And the Washington Post notes that her father told them that “When Rachel applied to Howard University to study art with a portfolio of ‘exclusively African American portraiture,’ the university ‘took her for a black woman’ and gave her a full scholarship.” The family also says that she has claimed that her now 21 year-old adopted brother, who is African American, is her son.
he city of Spokane, meanwhile, is looking into whether she misidentified her race on her Ombudsman Commission application. She also has a lengthy history, going back several years, of claiming she’s been targeted for hate crimes. Just this week, KXLY4′s Melissa Luck reported on Dolezal’s alleged problems, including one in which she told authorities “Someone had threatened her at work about her ethnicity.” She also claimed she’d received hate mail earlier this year. A police report indicates “the initial package Dolezal reported receiving did not bear a date stamp or bar code… it was either very unlikely or impossible that the package could have been processed through the post office, and that the only other alternative was that it had been put there by someone with a key.” 
So this isn’t about being an ally, or making the family of your choosing, or even how one feels on the inside. It’s about, apparently, flat out deception. It’s about how one person chose to obtain a college education and jobs and credibility in her community. It about allegedly pretending to speak from a racial experience you simply don’t have. You want to live your truth, that’s not how you go about it. And it’s an insult to anyone honestly trying to do just that to suggest anything otherwise, for even a moment.

Chris Rock’s Take on Blacks in Baseball: Real Sports (HBO)

Thursday, June 11, 2015

A Bird . . . Arrested?

From The National - News from my neck of the woods 

‘Spy pigeon’ arrest harks back to an era of 

low rent India-Pakistan espionage

NEW DELHI // India’s recent arrest of a pigeon, on charges of spying for Pakistan, is the latest instalment in a long and often quirky history of espionage between the two countries, with each side eager to gain the upper hand in their 68-year-rivalry.
The pigeon, which landed in an Indian village in Punjab, was seen to have a message in Urdu stamped on its tail feathers. The message was mostly illegible but included a Pakistani phone number. The pigeon was then taken into custody by police and X-rayed, with the Times of India reporting that the bird was listed in police records as a “suspected spy”.
Since they gained independence from Great Britain in 1947, India and Pakistan have fought three wars – in 1965, 1971 and 1999. The friction between the two countries has revolved around the region of Kashmir, claimed by both India and Pakistan, and the venue for numerous skirmishes and standoffs. 
A fence now lies along most of the common border – which stretches for roughly 3,300 kilometres on India’s north-west frontier – except for in sections of the arid and thinly populated Rann of Kutch, in the Indian state of Gujarat. 
But over the decades, as the fence was gradually being constructed by Indian and Pakistani border security forces, both countries would deploy locals as low-level operatives, to accidentally “wander” across the border, Sushant Singh, a retired Indian Army lieutenant colonel, said. 
“These aren’t high-flying spies,” Mr Singh told The National. “You’d pay a young man something like 2,000 or 4,000 rupees (Dh115 or Dh230) to cross over on foot and cross-check to see if say a bridge had been built or how good a road was.”
“This was the era before satellite imagery,” he said. “And these guys would be maybe local petty criminals or men who wanted to make some quick money. If they were caught, the countries would be able to deny that they were operatives, because they were such small fry.”
But the stories of these ad hoc spies on their walkabouts did not always end that smoothly. 
The tale of Vinod Sawhney is an illustrative one. In 1977, when Mr Sawhney was a 24-year-old taxi driver in Jammu, a passenger asked him how much he earned. When Mr Sawhney said that he made roughly 300 rupees a month, the passenger replied that he could make much more by doing a little light spying.
The very next day, Mr Sawhney, given the code name “Vinod 22,” was sent across the border into Pakistan, as part of a small detachment led by a minder. The team rotated through a few Pakistani towns, but Mr Sawhney then got arrested. After a nine-month trial, he spent ten years in a prison in Multan, before being repatriated to India in 1988. 
Mr Sawhney has established a body called the Jammu Ex-Sleuths’ Association, to represent the welfare of hundreds of other casual operatives like himself. 
“We want compensation for the time we were in prison,” Mr Sawhney said in 2013, when he was conducting a small protest in Delhi. “We have many secrets to hide, and we do that even now out of love for our country. But the government has failed us.”
These low-level infiltration practices followed by both governments has generated deep suspicion of wandering men on the wrong side of their border. If such men are caught, prison sentences are inevitable. 
Most famously, an Indian national named Sarabjit Singh, who claimed that he had mistakenly crossed the border in Punjab in a drunken haze, was arrested in Pakistan in August 1990. In a trial, he was convicted of organising bomb blasts in Lahore three months earlier and sentenced to death.
Mr Singh languished in a prison in Lahore until May 2013, when he died of injuries inflicted upon him by other prisoners. 
So much attention is paid to the border that, for a few years in the late 1990s, India recruited Puggees, a tribe in Gujarat known for its ability to read footprints, to work the border in the unfenced Rann of Kutch, a massive salt marsh.
Studying the soil and the impression of a footprint, a Puggee could determine the weight of a person or a camel that had passed by, as well as how long ago and in which direction the trespasser came through. 
The Puggees “are our anchormen on the Pakistan border in the Rann,” AK Singh, a police superintendent in Kutch, told the India Today magazine in 1999, shortly after the police, with Puggee help, arrested five Pakistani intruders armed with explosives and firearms. 
Srinath Raghavan, a New Delhi-based military historian, told The National that espionage between India and Pakistan ran hot and convoluted, although he also said that none of the tales came close to, for example, the Central Intelligence Agency’s outlandish plots to kill Fidel Castro, the Cuban dictator.
“My favourite story has to do with the hijacking of an Indian Airlines plane in January 1971, by people who were suspected to be Kashmiri militants,” Mr Raghavan said. 
The plane landed in Lahore, where the hijackers were welcomed by Pakistani officials. The passengers were released, and the plane was set on fire. 
“But there is a version of the story that says that the hijackers were actually agents of the Research & Analysis Wing [R&AW, India’s intelligence agency],” Mr Raghavan said. 
India was able to react to this supposed hijacking by imposing a no-fly zone between West and East Pakistan, a development that contributed to the eventual break-up of Pakistan later that year, during which East Pakistan became Bangladesh. 
“India has never really confirmed or denied this story of the hijacking,” Mr Raghavan said. “The hijackers stayed on in Pakistan after the incident.”
The story, contained in a book titled Mission R&AW by a former operative RK Yadav, published last year, has been denied by one of the hijackers, Hashim Qureshi. Last November, Mr Qureshi promised to sue Mr Yadav for defamation, calling the version a “baseless allegation.”