Panning for Gold in a Polluted River

… is the epitome of equal opportunity consumerism

Confessions of a lazy dumpster diver
Posted to Joe Bageant

Hi Joe,

I have only recently discovered your site and I wonder why it took two years of being connected to discover such wisdom and truth. I found you by linking to links that linked to links. I know that younger people call it surfing, but I think of it as panning for gold in a polluted river. Dip after dip into the Internet river, one finds the remains of a once towering mountain of freedom ground into pebbles and dirt under the relentless march of the glaciers of corpo-government. Mixed in with the debris of our freedom is a large amount of unidentified stuff that passes for political thought that has the suspicious odor of fish and frog shit. But the fishy smell of political lies is lost in the overpowering stink of societal and physical toxins that we are forced to bathe in and drink by our corporate masters. The flavor of the brew is getting so vile that it is difficult for even the most thoughtless to keep calling it Kool-Aid.

But back to my original bad analogy, imagine my surprise when I dipped into the river and found the gleaming gold nugget of your insight among the familiar clumps of waste. I yelled YES! — leading everyone nearby in the library to assume that I had finally received my stimulus check and could head to China-Mart to shop.

Not that I received a stimulus check. One key to participating in this placating scheme to pad the numbers of GDP so that the growing depression looks like recession just a bit longer and subsidize the corporations was to have a qualifying income. Even the working poor and retired poor on Social Security got to play the government’s we care so much about your blight — errr plight — that we are giving you real money and begging you to spend it game. Only the non-working poor and chronically unemployed living beneath bridges, camped along polluted creeks in abandoned industrial areas, and existing in rusted cars in the back lot of junk yards didn’t need to help the economy. But then those derelicts would have used it for food or god forbid bought an illegal gun and shot a Republican. Can’t give that much money to people with nothing to lose or some bad shit might ensue.

One other group that didn’t get to play the Spend It for America game this time were those living (I use the term very loosely) on SSI. Since they are paid out of the general fund of taxpayer money (read the working poor’s money) rather than the other general fund of Social Security taxes and because this group of cripples and retards are already reducing the money available for military expenditures and empire building (and few of them vote anyway) the economy doesn’t need to be further stimulated by them. Hell, we give them six-hundred whole dollars a month now and everyone knows that most of them are probably faking being limping dumb asses — unlike lawmakers who really are dumb asses. What do the mentally and physically defective fucks want us to do? Treat them like real people? If we could only kill them (faster than we do) like Hitler did.

Not that I receive SSI. My income for the past eight years has been nearly zero, but I know I am middle class. Frankly I have lived on other people’s waste — as in all that perfectly good stuff that the real middle class throws away to make room to buy more shit. The good news is that since I didn’t have a real job, a car, or desire to buy anything unnecessary, I could spend a lot of time in libraries pursuing my self-education and my carbon footprints looked like mouse tracks among those of elephants (pun intended).

The bad news is that some people don’t care for my idle lifestyle. My wife’s brother who has an IQ about seventy points lower than mine (and I might be kind on those IQ points) comes around occasionally to demand that I go to work and make some money — to give to his sister so he can borrow it, of course. I tell him that only the Fed makes money, the rest of us merely launder it and pass it back to them. It is just unpatriotic as hell to be a non-producing book reader in this society contributing nothing to growth — although all I see growing is ignorance, poverty, and despair.

I do more than just read. A couple of years ago I went to the local Habitat For Humanity to volunteer to help build houses for poor people. I assumed that I would be helping homeless folks get in out of the cold and rain. I also assumed that the organization would be bursting at the seams with liberals and other socialists and commies inspired to do their small part to alleviate the suffering of the poor. Imagine my surprise to find a crowd of right wing Christians pretending to help the poor while helping themselves.

I never made it to a house-build (with all the propaganda and hype shat by the local elite’s press about their god damn righteousness for actually doing something with their hands to help a poor motherfucker out). Of course no one brought attention to the fact that the local managers of the organization (the poverty Mafia) were paid well, gave all their relatives paying jobs, and embezzled and stole everything they could, giving a whole new twist to the Christian expression laying on of hands.

Because I had read a lot of technical books, I was sent to the local Habitat store to repair donated appliances to be sold to raise money to build houses for the poor. I soon learned that the poor in question couldn’t be too poor, dumb, or disabled to get or keep a real job or to qualify for a mortgage. And even though I was welcome to repair stuff and make them money, I was too poor to qualify for the program. So for a year I watched the relatives of the store manager who was the married girlfriend of the married Christian lay minister director load the good shit in the trunks of their cars while the Chinese-made crap went to the floor to be sold to the kind-hearted idiots who knew they were helping the children. For sure some children were helped. The manager qualified for a house — after donating pussy regularly to the director, so her children won’t be in the rain as long as mom keeps whoring for Jesus.

There was one paid employee in the store who was not related to the manager. Besides being the token non-relative, he was also the token non-bible-thumping left wing liberal in our midst, a bleeding heart that had voted for both Gore and Kerry. He talked a good line, but I knew that it was all bullshit one day when I was at the store later than usual and I found him on the back loading dock just before closing with a water-hose wetting the contents of the dumpster. I asked out of genuine curiosity why he was wasting precious fresh water to soak the trash. He replied that a lot of clothing that hadn’t sold had been cleared out of the store and thrown away that day and that if he didn’t wet everything some lazy god damn homeless bum would just steal the shit.

Jesus H. Christ and pass the mustard! We can’t have those homeless assholes fucking up our work to help poor people or slowing down the flow of trash to the landfill. When I confessed that I didn’t quite grasp the logic of intentionally fucking up clothes so really poor people would be discouraged from taking them, he explained that the boss (read born again Christian fascist asshole) feared that dumpster divers (in a tone that made “white trash” sound like a compliment) would turn our dumpster into a homeless bum’s pig trough which could lead to drug addicts and whores sleeping on the loading dock that had a roof of sorts. That would really fuck up the image of a place called Habitat for Humanity.

My left-wing and obviously very Good German friend revealed that the director who also provided spiritual counseling to the local jail population — when the director wasn’t fucking the manager or selling the good shit on eBay that her relatives ripped off from the donations — even had his police buddies come by the dumpster at night to discourage bums from stealing the trash. Only in the ignorant cesspool of America could someone think and act that way while actually believing they are the good and moral people. I terminated my volunteering to the Idiot Fucks For Inhumanity a few days later without bothering to explain that almost all homeless folks owned and understood solar powered clothes dryers.

Anyway, the purpose of this mail was to say that I have really enjoyed engorging myself on your essays these past few days. This was supposed to be a rant about the new debtors prisons in this country, but you know how unpredictable writing and rants can be. Perhaps if my give-a-shit Republican court appointed lawyer saves me from the just doing my duty fascist judge tomorrow morning and wins me a little more time to find a real job in this booming economy (yes, it’s a child support thang), I will return to tell the story. If not, while I pass the time in the pretty new privatized penal facility that someone has the temerity to call a Justice Center for my crime of being poor (read contemptuous), I will know that as long as you are out there contributing to the wakefulness of a few that the wolf in sheep’s clothing has not yet won.

With admiration,

Fred

PS: I took this computer out of Habitat’s dumpster two years ago without permission in order to see what this Internet thing was about. So, I obviously do have some criminal tendencies.

Source / Joe Bageant

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Volkswagen Fast Tracks "One-Liter" Bullet Car

Of course it costs $30-50,000, but thats a detail. Just think of all the money you’re going to save on gasoline.

Roger Baker / The Rag Blog / July 5, 2008

Laugh at high gas prices with a 235-MPG VW
(Of course, it’ll cost you a pretty penny.)
By Chuck Squatriglia / July 3, 2008

With gas prices going through the roof and regulators requiring cars to be ever more miserly, Volkswagen is bringing new meaning to the term “fuel efficiency” with a bullet-shaped microcar that gets a stunning 235 mpg.

Volkswagen’s had its super-thrifty One-Liter Car concept vehicle — so named because that’s how much fuel it needs to go 100 kilometers — stashed away for six years. The body’s made of carbon fiber to minimize weight (the entire car weighs just 660 pounds) and company execs didn’t expect the material to become cheap enough to produce the car until 2012.

But VW’s decided to build the car two years ahead of schedule.

According to Britain’s Car magazine, VW has approved a plan to build a limited number of One-Liters in 2010. They’ll probably be built in the company’s prototype shop, which has the capacity to build as many as 1,000 per year. That’s not a lot, but it’s enough to help VW get a lot of attention while showing how much light weight and an efficient engine can achieve.

VW unveiled the slick two-seater concept six years ago at a stockholder’s meeting in Hamburg. To prove it was a real car, Chairman Ferdinand Piech personally drove it from Wolfsburg to Hamburg. At the time, he said the car could see production when the cost of its carbon monocoque dropped from 35,000 Euros (about $55,000) to 5,000 Euros (about $8,000) — something he figured would happen in 2012. With carbon fiber being used in everything from airliners to laptops these days, VW’s apparently decided the cost is competitive enough to build at least a few hundred One-Liters.

VW’s engineers — who spent three years developing the car — made extensive use of magnesium, titanium and aluminum to bring it in at less than one-third the weight of a Toyota Echo. According to Canadian Driver, the front suspension assembly weighs just 18 pounds. The six-speed transmission features a magnesium case, titanium bolts and hollow gears; it weighs a tad more than 50 pounds. The 16-inch wheels are carbon fiber. The magnesium steering wheel weighs a little more than a pound. How much of the concept car’s exotic hardware makes it to the production model remains to be seen.

Low weight only gets you so far in the quest for ultimate fuel economy; aerodynamics plays a big role. The One-Liter is long and low, coming in at 11.4 feet long, 4.1 feet wide and 3.3 feet tall. It features an aircraft-like canopy, flat wheel covers and a belly pan to smooth the airflow under the car. The engine cooling vents open only when needed, and video cameras take the place of mirrors. The passenger sits behind the driver to keep the car narrow. The car has a coefficient of drag of 0.16; the average car comes in around 0.30 and the Honda Insight had a Cd of 0.25.

As for the engine, the concept had a one-cylinder diesel engine producing 8.5 horsepower and 13.5 foot-pounds of torque. Car says the production model will use a two-cylinder turbodiesel for a little more oomph. Doubling the number of cylinders is sure to cut fuel economy, so VW may install a diesel-hybrid drivetrain. The engine turns off at stop lights to save fuel, then automatically restarts when the driver depresses the accelerator pedal.

(Update: The car reportedly has anti-lock brakes, stability control and airbags. According to Canadian Driver, “Volkswagen says the One-Liter Car is as safe as a GT sports car registered for racing. With the aid of computer crash simulations, the car was designed with built-in crash tubes, pressure sensors for airbag control and front crumple zones.”)

What’s it gonna cost? Car quotes “one well-placed insider” who says the One-Liter could have a sticker price of anywhere from 20,000 to 30,000 Euros (about $31,750 to $47,622). That’s a lot of money. But then, the One-Liter, despite its diminutive size, is a lot of car.

Source. / Wired.com

I think it’s good they only plan to sell 1000 a year worldwide. That’s probably about all they will be able to move, especially at that high price. And don’t they know people are sociable creatures who like to sit at least two in a row? Back to the drawing board!

Jon Ford / The Rag Blog

Hmmm, turbocharged 2 cylinder diesel. Companies like VW and Honda are really good at coming up with tiny engines that roar. I still think that in the future there will be city cars and road cars. No road cars in the cities except on freeways. City cars will be tiny like this one, and likely electric too, no wasted space like empty back seats. Carbon fiber is the material used in most all race cars, stout and light but expensive. 600 pounds is super light. Maybe putting a weight limit on cars would be the best way to insure efficiency…

Gerry Storm / The Rag Blog

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McCain Man Charlie Black Advised Jesse Helms on Racist Campaign Tactics

Senator Jesse Helms, campaigning in Lenoir, North Carolina for the first time as a politician, spoke inside an old storefront for ten minutes before leaving town in his motor home. Photo: “Jesse” (1991) by Spencer B. Ainsley.

The connection is Charlie
By Harry Siegel / July 4, 2008

From the right, Reagan biographer Craig Shirley remembers (Jesse) Helms as the man who made the Reagan revolution possible:

If Helms accomplished nothing else in his life, he is the man most responsible for the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980. Had Helms not engineered Reagan’s stunning upset win in the North Carolina primary in 1976, Reagan would have dropped out and faded into oblivion. Reagan staged a furious comeback as a result, losing the nomination to Gerald Ford by only a handful of delegate votes. As a result, Reagan became the front-runner for the 1980 nomination. None of this would have been possible without Helms. One man simply decided to change history.

And from the other side of the aisle, here’s a nice bit of quickly Nexised oppo from the proverbial sources-who-have-requested-to-remain-nameless recalling McCain chief strategist Charlie Black’s work for Helms, and tying him to some of the former senator’s more racially charged, to put it nicely, campaign tactics. Here’s the full memo, which was sent our way with the remark, “The connection is Charlie.”

1984: Black Advised Helms on Senate Re-Election Bid and Bragged About Victory.

The Washington Post reported, “‘It’s a tremendous victory for conservatives,’ Helms’ strategist Charles Black said. ‘It enhances his clout and influence in the Senate in the eyes of the press and his colleagues. He’ll be even more effective than he has been.’” [Washington Post, 11/8/84, emphasis added]

Black and Helms Used “Racist Appeals” to Win. Politics reporter Bill Peterson wrote in The Washington Post, “Lesson: A vicious new electronic form of negative politics has evolved and matured. And it is frightening. It is a politics of distortion, half truths and character assassination. Ends are used to justify means. Truth often takes a back seat. … Helms and the National Congressional Club, a political action committee run by his allies, had used negative advertising long before the Senate race began. … Racial epithets and standing in school doors is no longer fashionable, but 1984 proved that the ugly politics of race are alive and well. Helms is their master. A case in point was the pivotal event of the campaign: Helms’ filibuster against a bill making the birthday of the late Martin Luther King Jr. a national holiday. … Helms campaign literature sounded a drumbeat of warnings about black voter-registration drives. His campaign newspaper featured photographs of Hunt [his opponent] with Jesse L. Jackson and headlines like ‘Black Voter Registration Rises Sharply’ and ‘Hunt Urges More Minority Registration.’ Helms shamelessly mined the race issue.” [Peterson, Washington Post, 11/18/84, emphasis added]

1990: Black Advised Jesse Helms.

As He Ran Controversial “Hands” Ad Against Black Candidate. Newsday reported that Helms, “through a series of blistering advertisements unleashed just days before, had beckoned the long-simmering issue of race to the surface of this senatorial contest. In doing so, Helms had hurled the campaign into its most bitter and acrimonious phase to date, namely by labeling his opponent, falsely, an advocate of racial job quotas and accusing him of conducting a ‘secret campaign’ in the black community. … On the television commercial, the camera zones in on a white man’s hands, crumpling what apparently is a job rejection letter. The announcer then intones: ‘You needed that job and you were the best qualified. But they had to give it to a minority because of a racial quota. Is that really fair? Harvey Gantt says it is,’ the message continues. ‘Gantt supports Ted Kennedy’s racial quota law that makes the color of your skin more important than your qualifications.’” Black, an adviser to the campaign and a consultant for the Congressional Club — Helms’s political machine — insisted the race would come down to turnout: “‘What it’s going to come down to is turnout,’ said Charles Black, chairman of the Republican National Committee and a Helms adviser. ‘It’s, no question, the biggest challenge at this point.’” [Newsday, 11/4/90]

Black Defended “Hands Ad.”

Black defended Helms’s “Hands” television ad, which featured white hands crumpling a job rejection letter and linking Helms’s black opponent to racial job quotas. Asked about the ad on the MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour, Black said, “Well there is nothing racial about the campaign.” When asked if there was anything improper about the ad, Black said, “Of course not.” Another guest on the show, DNC Chairman Ron Brown, pressed Black again, saying, “You are a principal adviser of Jesse Helms. Would you advise him to run that kind of ad, Charlie? Do you approve of that ad, Charlie?” Black responded, “I advised Jesse Helms to do what he’s always done.” [MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour, 11/5/90]

Source. / Ben Smith’s Blog / Politico

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Witold Rybczynski :
Architecture-Bucky Fuller Revisited

Buckminster Fuller stamps
Inventor, tireless proselytizer, inspirational
cult figure, something of a flimflammer.

By Witold Rybczynski | July 2, 2008

The Buckminster Fuller exhibition that has just opened at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York has already received a lot of press coverage, with long stories in The New Yorker and the New York Times. The latter ran a sensational report suggesting that Fuller’s depression and near suicide at age 32—which he famously described as spurring him to embark on his lifelong creative quest—were more or less invented, and that if he had a midlife crisis, it occurred later, as a result of a failed extramarital affair.

The Times story is titillating, but it pales beside the revelation made 35 years ago by Lloyd Kahn, an early geodesic dome devotee. The geodesic dome, a spherical structure constructed out of small elements that make it lightweight and extremely strong, was long associated with Fuller. Kahn revealed that the world’s first geodesic dome was a planetarium designed for the Carl Zeiss optical works in Jena, Germany, by Dr. Walter Bauersfeld in 1922—30 years before Fuller filed his patent for the device.

Neither the Jena dome nor the extramarital affair figure in the Whitney show, which is content merely to celebrate its subject (and repeats the old chestnut that Fuller “developed” the geodesic dome). That’s a shame since Fuller was a complex individual, and one not to be taken at face value. He is sometimes described as a global man, yet he was a quintessentially early-20th-century American type: the inventor who bootstraps himself out of obscurity, the self-promoter who turns into an inspirational cult figure, the tireless proselytizer who is also something of a flimflam man.

Fuller did not invent the geodesic dome, but he certainly popularized it, and in the 1950s domes were used by various American government departments as temporary shelters for traveling exhibitions and by the military, notably for building so-called radomes, housing radar installations in the Canadian Arctic. The geodesic dome became such a widely recognized icon of American know-how that it was used with great success as the U.S. pavilion at Expo 67, the Montreal world’s fair.

Fuller’s Dymaxion.

Most of Fuller’s inventions found less success. His most durable creation may have been his brand name, “Dymaxion,” a combination of dynamic, maximum, and ion, which conveyed his intention to radically rethink the design of everyday objects. The first Dymaxion House, octagonal in plan and suspended from a central mast, existed only in model form. The Dymaxion Bathroom, a prefabricated two-piece module that used a finely atomized spray instead of a conventional shower, made it to the prototype stage. Only three Dymaxion Cars were built, and the sole surviving prototype is on display in the Whitney. It’s worth the price of admission. The car looks like an airplane without wings, a three-wheeled lozenge that can turn in its own length. The elegant form owes a lot to W. Starling Burgess, a pioneering aeronautical engineer and renowned naval architect who designed several America’s Cup defenders. To obtain Burgess’ services, Fuller commissioned him to build a Bermuda-class sailing yacht, which he christened Little Dipper.

Burgess, who invented and flew the first Delta-wing airplane, is a reminder that Fuller’s period was replete with self-taught inventors. Many turned their attention to the problem of shelter. Wallace Merle Byam, an attorney, advertising executive, and publisher, invented and manufactured the Airstream trailer using airplane-building technology similar to the Dymaxion Car. The now-forgotten Corwin Willson built a two-story trailer house prototype using thin-shell-veneered plywood. Konrad Waschmann, a German immigrant, teamed up with Walter Gropius to design an ingenious prefabricated housing system using interlocking wood panels.

Waschmann and Gropius’ General Panel Corp. ultimately failed, and the closest that anyone ever came to realizing the age-old dream of a factory-produced home was probably Fuller’s Dymaxion Dwelling Machine. The all-aluminum house, which resembled an 18-foot-diameter flying saucer, incorporated dozens of innovations such as Plexiglas windows, a huge rotating ventilator that exhausted air from the interior, and revolving storage shelves. The whole thing weighed 6,000 pounds, could be transported in a compact cylinder, and sold for today’s equivalent of $50,000. The Dwelling Machine garnered immense publicity—including more than 37,000 unsolicited orders. Fortune magazine predicted that the dwelling machine would have a greater social impact than the automobile. Curiously, part of the reason for the project’s ultimate failure was Fuller himself: He cautiously delayed putting the house on the market for so long that in 1946 his company—the publicly traded Fuller Houses—finally collapsed.

photo of dyxmalion dwelling machines

A model of R. Buckminster Fuller’s “Dymaxion Dwelling Machines” community, about 1946. An exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art will offer a review of some of his grandest designs. / NYT

Many of the rooms in the Whitney exhibition contain flat-screen televisions playing films of Fuller. Martin Pawley, who wrote a biography of Fuller, described him as “perhaps one of the most prolific public speakers ever to remain outside politics,” and Fuller’s wide influence, especially later in his life (he died in 1983 at the age of 87), derived in no small part from his oratory. I heard him lecture several times in the 1970s, both in large and small groups. He had a flat, humorless, somewhat monotonous voice and spoke in a kind of verbal shorthand that was sometimes difficult to follow. Occasionally he appeared breathless, not out of any infirmity, but because—one had the impression—his brain was transmitting ideas faster than he was able to speak. The unlikely effect was captivating nonetheless.

Although the Whitney show describes Fuller as “one of the great American visionaries of the 20th century,” his influence today is hard to gauge. He had a short-lived influence on the counterculture of the 1960s, inspiring the Whole Earth Catalog and countless do-it-yourself domes. He also had an important influence on architects such as Richard Rogers, Renzo Piano, and Norman Foster (it’s hard to see the Hearst Tower, across town from the Whitney, as anything except Foster’s hommage to Fuller). It is tempting to see Fuller, with his emphasis on maximizing resources and reducing waste, as a harbinger of green architecture, but he was less interested in environmentalism than in efficiency. I once heard him answer a question about recycling a waste material: “No, no, you should never use something just because it’s available; you should always find the best solution to a problem.” The Whitney exhibition catalog makes an unconvincing case that Fuller was a kind of artist and tries to find links to his work in the art world. Anyone interested in Fuller would do better to find a copy of The Dymaxion World of Buckminster Fuller, by Fuller and Robert Marks, now out of print. This book contains a pithy description of Fuller’s philosophy, which, in our present condition of diminishing resources and environmental challenges, remains as pertinent as ever: “rational action in a rational world demands the most efficient overall performance per unit of input.” Vintage Bucky.

Source. / Slate

Also see Dymaxion Man / The New Yorker

And The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller / The New York Times

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Social Change in America : Learning from History

Populist handbills.

A flyer informing workers of a meeting that was to end in the Haymarket Riotof 1886. Police were called in when fighting broke out between striking workers and strikebreakers at the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company in Haymarket, Illinois. Two union men were shot by police, and an explosion killed seven policemen.

Creating a New Progressive Era
by Jack A. Smith / July 3, 2008

Jack A. Smith is editor of the Activist Newsletter and a former editor of the radical newsweekly The Guardian.

How can poverty and grave economic inequality be significantly reduced in the United States? Under what conditions might it be possible to bring about a period of significant progressive reform that would address our country’s major social problems?

As the income and living standards of the poor, the working class and a significant sector of the middle class in America have declined, a quite small portion of the population known as the upper class has become wealthier and more powerful than ever. One would have to revisit the Gilded Age of the late 1800s or the Roaring Twenties just before the 1929 Great Depression to locate comparable contradictions between the rich and the rest of the American people.

There are many distressing statistics that demonstrate the extent of economic inequality in the United States. The following is a telling illustration:

The top 20% of wealthy families in the U.S. now possess 84.7% of all assets and wealth. The top 5% alone control 58.9%, and the richest 1% command 34.3%. The “bottom” 80% possess of 15.3% of the nation’s wealth. The bottom 40% within this total have accumulated 0.2%. That’s two-tenths of one percent owned by 120 million Americans, while 34.3% is possessed by 3 million.

According to progressive economist William K. Tabb, writing in Monthly Review (July-August 2006), the Bush Administration’s economic policies “carry echoes which have been heard down through our nation’s history and have taken on resonance analogous to the Gilded Age and the Roaring Twenties, other periods when conservative ideology and politics held sway and rapid increases in inequalities were produced by deregulation and variants of laissez faire policy and Social Darwinist thinking. But in all periods, we have had a government of the rich that has acted in the interests of the rich.”

Columnist and Princeton economist Paul Krugman, writing in the N.Y. Times on April 27, 2007, argued that “Income inequality… is now fully back to Gilded Age levels… Last year… a hedge fund manager took home $1.7 billion, more than 38,000 times the average income. Two other hedge fund managers also made more than $1 billion, and the top 25 combined made $14 billion… The hedge fund billionaires are simply extreme examples of a much bigger phenomenon: every available measure of income concentration shows that we’ve gone back to levels of inequality not seen since the 1920s.”

There is a clear cause and effect when the “upper” classes get richer and the “lower” classes get poorer. It often derives from the ability of those with power and wealth to manipulate government policy regarding taxes, regulations, and programs to further benefit themselves at the expense of those lacking power and wealth.

This is hardly unique in American history, but more prevalent at certain periods, such as the present moment when economic inequality and poverty are at high levels. We will focus upon three comparable periods in the past that generated a progressive response ultimately resulting in major social and economic reforms.

The United States advertises itself as the world’s outstanding example of democracy. But how can a democracy function properly and fully in conditions of gross economic disequilibrium, especially when class inequality is compounded by racial and gender inequities as well?

President Franklin D. Roosevelt recognized this contradiction when he declared in 1944 that “true individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence.”

Economist Lester Thurow, in his 1999 book about the income gap titled Shifting Fortunes asked: “How does one put together a democracy based on the concept of equality while running an economy with ever greater degrees of economic inequality.”

American progressives of an earlier era understood this as well. Historian Richard C. Wade, writing about the reform struggle of the early 1900s, noted: “Progressives agreed that the central question of their times was how to control the power of concentrated wealth in a democracy.”

No wonder increasing comparisons are made between America in the early 2000s and the Gilded Age — a period of enormous wealth and opulence for the few and exploitation and oppression for the many.

An important difference between this earlier period and now is that in the late 1800s/early 1900s, there was a substantial fight back against the machinations of wealth and power, while in comparison today’s response has largely been confined to the wringing of hands.

Progressive movements arose in opposition in several past situations of extreme inequality and flaunted wealth. There were people’s organizations out in the streets; unions were marching; there were sizable left groups organizing and leading struggles. At times, popular pressure obliged the ruling parties to put some restraints on the corporations, investors, financiers, and their hangers-on, and even to pass legislation favorable to working people.

But now, after a quarter-century of stagnating wages, with a recession looming over the country as prices are rising and incomes are falling, as workers are losing their jobs and homes, Washington is spending trillions on aggressive wars and a relative pittance on new programs to help the masses of people.

There’s a class war going on, initiated and led by wealth and power. Various administrations in Washington in recent decades offer a perfect example of our government’s penchant for coddling the rich and ignoring the needs of working families. But aside from small left organizations and reform groups, some unions and a few politicians, what forces in our society are truly fighting for the poor, the working class and lower middle class majority of the American people? It is certainly not the two ruling parties.

There’s an election going and neither Democrat Barack Obama nor Republican John McCain has put forward a worthwhile immediate program to counter high prices for food and fuel, increasing unemployment, and depressed incomes. Neither offers a strategic program to greatly reduce poverty and inequality in America, to create good new jobs and affordable housing. Neither will contemplate big cuts in the military budget nor sharply increasing taxes for the rich to pay for these programs.

For over 200 years in America, virtually every decisively important government program or law that benefited the masses of people was the product of persistent, hard-fought struggle led by progressive and left social or political or labor movements, or all in combination. This was true at various points in history in the attainment of an eight-hour day, vacations, and a minimum wage; the right of women to vote and to work in jobs previously held by men only; the granting of Social Security pensions, Medicare and Medicaid; the end to lynch laws, the poll tax and formal racial segregation — and just about every other advance that has taken place in our society.

None of it was a gift. All of it was a struggle. And it’s the only way poverty and inequality — and all comparable abuses — can be reduced significantly.

The last period of relatively progressive governance in America lasted a few years and ended four decades ago when President Lyndon B. Johnson left office. LBJ is accurately remembered as the president who led the U.S. into the quagmire of the imperialist Vietnam War. But his extensive and fruitful “Great Society” domestic program was the final attempt to continue New Deal-type reforms initiated by President Roosevelt during the Great Depression when masses of people were demanding relief and reform.

The great obstacle to progressive social change in America today is that we have been living in conservative political times for decades. The nation is just emerging from eight years of George W. Bush’s hard core ribald neoconservatism and preemptive wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; preceded by eight years of Bill Clinton’s centrist compromise with the rightists, killer sanctions against Iraq and the unjust war in Yugoslavia; four years of George H. W. Bush’s conservatism and the first war against Iraq; and eight years of Ronald Reagan’s reactionary Cold War policies, subversion throughout Central America, and right wing economic programs.

The 2008 election offers the U.S. people a choice between centrism and neoconservatism — all in the name of an ambiguous mantra of undefined “change.” This means that the right and center — the political tendencies least willing and able to end gross economic inequality and banish poverty in the U.S. — will dictate national policy through the next four years as they have in the past.

It doesn’t have to be this way. There were periods in American history when conservative times did transform into progressive times. When this happened it was almost invariably a consequence of popular mass struggle for affirmative political reform.

Today, the U.S. left — from left-liberalism and progressivism to social democracy, socialism and communism — is weak and without meaningful influence. And our critically important union movement is weak as well, with a leadership that remains wedded to the “lesser evil” centrism of the Democratic Party in return for token political compensation.

When the American left revives, as it certainly will, and popular mass struggle resumes, the conditions will exist to bring about a new period of substantive social, economic, and political reform.

Lately there have been some reports of an incipient progressive upsurge within the Democratic Party that might seriously address matters of poverty and economic inequality, among others.

Undoubtedly there are many left-liberal and progressive Democrats who are justly disappointed by the cautious performance of their party’s majority in Congress and by the refusal of the leadership to venture even a trifle to the left of center. Groups such as Democrats.com and MoveOn.org, among others, are cited as evidence of a progressive resurgence and even a possible harbinger of an effort to seize party leadership “from the bottom up.”

Our country would benefit if the center/center-right Democratic Party moved to the center-left in the next few years on the basis of agitation within its ranks. But it is far-fetched to think it will do so after the party leadership’s diligent and successful efforts over the decades to bury liberalism and completely reject the hint of social democracy implicit in the first few years of FDR’s New Deal.

At some point there will be another period of progressive advance, such as several earlier times in America’s history. When that happens it probably will be generated from outside the Democratic Party and consist of mass movements with progressive and left leadership around such key issues as economic reform, peace, inequality, poverty, jobs, housing, militarism, imperialism, union rights, and so on.

Such circumstances might influence the Democrats to take some action. Or it could lead to another Progressive Party, as it has done thrice before on the national level (1912, 1924, and 1948) and four times on the state level, not to mention many other left third parties.

Humorist and social critic Mark Twain, himself an outspoken populist and anti-capitalist, wrote and performed during the Gilded Age.

Let’s briefly look back to some earlier periods of progressive reform in our history. While there were active reform movements in the years before the Civil War (abolition and women’s rights), a broad major reform struggle began in the 1870s and lasted with varying levels of intensity about 40 years. It took place during two historic periods: the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era.

The name Gilded Age was taken from a 1873 book of that title penned by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner. Their use of “gilded” derived from Shakespeare’s King John: “To gild refined gold, to paint the lily… is wasteful and ridiculous excess.”

The Gilded Age officially began with the end of Reconstruction in 1877. It was weakened by the decimating depression of 1893-97 and declined at century’s end, though many of its conditions continued into the Progressive Era, which lasted between 1900 and World War I.

During the later 1800s America changed from a rural agrarian society into a mixture with urban industrial development that greatly accelerated the Industrial Revolution and created fabulous fortunes for the wealthy, and extreme exploitation for working class men, women and children. Long hours, low pay, and miserable living conditions painfully afflicted multimillions of American workers as unrestrained capitalism ran amuck.

Simultaneously, as the U.S. was adjusting to a post-Civil War, post-Reconstruction period of booms and busts (there were three depressions in the Gilded Age), the great majority of former slaves were forced into a new type of oppression under Jim Crow segregation laws (the model for pre-liberation South Africa’s apartheid system.) It took 90 years, the civil rights movement, and the 1960s reform period to end formal racial segregation, though racist inequality still exists in America.

The Gilded Age, according to author Steve Fraser in an article for TomDispatch.com April 28, was characterized by “crony capitalism, inequality, extravagance, Social Darwinian self-justification, blame-the-victim callousness, [and] free-market hypocrisy.”

In response, he wrote, “Irate farmers mobilized in cooperative alliances and in the Populist Party. Farmer-labor parties in states and cities from coast to coast challenged the dominion of the two-party system. Rolling waves of strikes, captained by warriors from the Knights of Labor, enveloped whole communities as new allegiances extended across previously unbridgeable barriers of craft, ethnicity, even race and gender.”

The strikes were militant and massive, and included the Great Railroad Strike of 1877; the 1886 railroad strike; the 1892 Homestead Strike; the Great Uprising of 1886 composed of nationwide strikes and demonstrations for an eight-hour work day, which led to the legal lynching of four anarchists on trumped up changes after the Haymarket Riots; and the 1894 Pullman Strike conducted by the American Railroad Union and led by socialist Eugene Debs.

The new labor movements were the only protection most American workers had against unbridled capitalist greed. The Knights of Labor, one of America’s first great unions, was formed in 1869 and played an important role in the working class fight back during the Gilded Age. It faded in the late 1880s. The more restrained American Federation of Labor was formed in 1889. The militant Western Federation of Miners was organized in 1893, and the revolutionary International Workers of the World, the Wobblies, came about in 1905.

The Populist (Peoples) Party was founded in 1890 to put forward demands ignored by the two ruling parties. It received over a million votes in the 1892 presidential elections on a platform calling for direct election of U.S. Senators, a secret ballot, referendums, recall of elected officials, direct primary balloting and opposition to the gold standard. A number of its candidates became governors and members of Congress.

By the next presidential election in 1896, the Democratic Party had adopted a number of the populist demands which it had earlier opposed. The Populist Party then supported Democratic candidate William Jennings Bryan, who lost to Republican William McKinley. That was the beginning of the end for the populists. Their party quickly declined and dissolved in 1908.

The excesses of capitalism were mainly addressed by reforms during the Progressive Era, but some took place in the 1890s, such as the Sherman Antitrust Act (1890), which outlawed business monopolies; The Interstate Commerce Act (1887), which protected small shippers against powerful railroads; and the Civil Service Act (1883), aimed at ending corruption, which substituted the merit system for the spoils system in filling government jobs.

The Progressive Era was a period of great reform in response to the extreme exploitation of working families that accompanied swift industrialization and the growth of cities at a time when millions of poor immigrants were pouring into our country. The working people benefited from these reforms, but so did capitalism, of course, the regulation of which was essential to rationalize and strengthen the system, not replace it.

According to a superb college textbook on American history, Who Built America? (vol. 2): “Scholars [of the Progressive Era] have been unable to agree on exactly what Progressivism was. In fact, Progressivism encompassed many distinct, overlapping and sometimes contradictory movements: it was working people battling for better pay and control over their working lives; it was women campaigning for more equality and the right to vote at the same time as African Americans were being disfranchised in the South. It was corporations and their allies pushing to make city governments more businesslike; it was middle class reformers closing saloons and prohibiting the sale of alcohol; it was politicians and presidents extending the power of government to ‘bust trusts’ and regulate corporate activity.

“Sometimes these various reform forces worked together, sometimes they fought each other. Each responded in some way to the profound economic and social changes of the Gilded Age, but they differed in their interpretation of problems and solutions. As coalitions shifted, these diverse campaigns laid the foundation for modern American politics.”

The progressive movement had a number of concerns: the terrible conditions of working class life, from child labor to poor housing and ill health; the abuses of robber barons and business owners; the lack of government regulation of the marketplace; women’s suffrage; prohibition; race oppression; direct elections (to the Senate); electoral reform; and anti-monopoly reform.

There was another concern as well, according to the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers: “Fear of the expansion of socialism and Marxism provoked many in the upper class to support more moderate reform efforts as a means to ease the growing tensions between rich and poor and head off more extreme threats to their privileged role in society.”

President Theodore Roosevelt, who as vice president entered the White House in 1901 after President McKinley was assassinated, was the foremost reform politician during the Progressive Era. Although a man of wealth, an open imperialist, and staunch advocate of capitalism, he opposed the excesses of the Gilded Age as counter-productive to the interests of the United States and to his own vision of America as a burgeoning world power. TR, as he was known, believed that “the man of great wealth owes a peculiar obligation to the state because he derives special advantages from the mere existence of government.”

Republican Roosevelt left office in 1908 after presiding over the passage of a number of reforms demanded by the progressive movement and the expansion of federal authority. He was succeeded by his own vice president, William H. Taft. Out of office but still riding the progressive wave in 1910, TR outraged his own class be declaring: “I believe in a graduated income tax on big fortunes, and… a graduated inheritance tax on big fortunes.”

Convinced that Taft and the Republican Party had turned against progressivism, Roosevelt unsuccessfully sought to obtain the party’s nomination in the 1912 presidential election. He then bolted the Republican Party and, with support from the progressive movement, formed the Progressive Party (known also as the Bull Moose Party) with an extensive reform agenda, the purpose being “to dissolve the unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics.” With the GOP split, the Democratic Party’s Woodrow Wilson won the election. Roosevelt was second and Taft last. Union leader Debs, running at the candidate of the Socialist Party, came in fourth with 6% of the vote. The Progressive Party collapsed in 1916.

Among the federal reforms of the Progressive Era were the following:

The Newlands Reclamation Act (1902) a conservationist measure; the Elkins Act, the Pure Food and Drug Act (1906 and 1911), making sure that companies label ingredients; the Meat Inspection Act (thanks to writer Upton Sinclair’s exposé in his novel The Jungle); the Federal Reserve Act; the Clayton Antitrust Act, opposing monopolies and ruling that labor unions did not fall under antitrust laws; and the Federal Trade Act that established the Federal Trade Commission that is supposed to investigate “unfair business practices.”

In addition, laws were passed regulating the drug industry, establishing federal controls over the banking industry, and improving working conditions. Further, two progressive constitutional amendments — the power to tax income and the direct election of Senators were approved in 1913. Another progressive cause, women’s suffrage, was passed in 1919.

The Roaring Twenties were hardly progressive. It was a period of extreme Republican laissez faire economics, until the stock market crashed in 1929, plunging America and the world into the Great Depression.

There were radical moments in the 1920s, however, including the resurrection of the Progressive Party, which fielded Wisconsin progressive Republican Sen. Robert M. LaFollette Sr. as its 1924 presidential nominee against conservative candidates from both the Democratic and Republican Parties. LaFollette, whose program included nationalization of large industries including railroads, higher taxes for the rich and lower taxes for working people, and collective bargaining for workers, was supported by labor, socialists and liberals. With nearly five million votes — 16.6% — La Follette came in third. The Progressive Party dissolved in 1946, long after it ceased activity on the national level. During these years in its Wisconsin stronghold the party elected a governor and six members of the House of Representatives.

By the second half of the conservative 1920s the rich-poor gap was reaching Gilded Age proportions. Herbert Hoover, who defeated liberal Democrat Al Smith in the 1928 election, was the third Republican elected to the presidency during the decade. In accepting nomination, Hoover declared: “We in America today are nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land. We shall soon… be in sight of the day when poverty will be banished from this nation.”

Hoover assumed office in March 1929. The Great Depression began seven months later, catapulting most of the working class and middle class into exceptionally hard times. Consistent with his conservative ideology of waiting for the “market” to cure itself, Hoover did practically nothing as the economy crumbled in the three years until the 1932 election, which gave rise to the greatest period of progressive reform in U.S. history.

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

The Democrats nominated New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt, a fifth cousin to Theodore Roosevelt. He declared in his acceptance speech, “I pledge myself to a new deal for the American people,” and his program became known as the New Deal. FDR, as he was universally known, captured 57.4% of the vote against 39.7 for Hoover, and remained in office to four terms. He delivered the famous line, “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself,” in his first inaugural address in 1933.

Roosevelt was under extreme pressure when he entered the White House. Unemployment reached its peak that year — 25.2% — meaning one in four workers was jobless and many others were working for reduced pay and waiting for their jobs to disappear. Millions of families were suffering great distress and relief from Washington barely existed.

From the day he entered the White House, Roosevelt understood that his principal task was to preserve capitalism in America at a time when private enterprise systems around the world were experiencing economic disasters. There were two threats. One was that the downward economic spiral in the U.S. might lead to a total collapse. The other was the fear that the working class might seek to replace capitalism with socialist or revolutionary communist alternatives. At the time, these were quite rational speculations.

The political left had been organizing since the day the stock market crashed. For instance, according to Who Built America?, just weeks after the market crash “the Communist Party organized the first of what was soon a nationwide network of ‘Unemployed Councils.’ These Communist-led neighborhood groups worked to aid the unemployed with immediate problems of rent and food, to apply pressure for improved relief programs, and finally to recruit new members to join the party. On March 6, 1930, the communists held a series of rallies on what it dubbed International Unemployment Day,’ demanding government action. In city after city, the turnout far exceeded expectations.”

The Communist Party was active throughout the 1930s, in all the major cities, in the unions, in the South among poor black sharecroppers, in Harlem stopping evictions and fighting for unemployed workers. Near the end of the 1930s CP membership rose to its highest number ever, 100,000. Many other progressive and left groups, including populist farmers, were organizing as well, but the communists were the most energetic.

Unions were active but did not come into their own until late 1935 with the formation of the CIO (Congress of Industrial Organizations). In little more than a year union membership in the U.S. rose from four million to seven million. Confrontations between labor and management sharply increased as companies resisted collective bargaining, often engaging in redbaiting in the process. Many in the wealthy class and their minions in corporate management viewed unionization as a red plot.

Company brutality, exercised through local police and private security thugs, increased as labor became stronger. Police shot and killed 10 striking workers outside a Chicago steel factory in May 1937. In the same month, a Ford company guard viciously beat leaders of the CIO’s United Automobile Workers union.

The less activist American Federation of Labor (AFL) was founded 46 years earlier as a craft union, organizing each craft — such as plumbers, sheet metal workers or carpenters — into separate unions. The CIO organized workers around entire industries — auto, steel, coal, and so on, conveying to each member a sense of mass and solidarity.

The CIO was known for its militancy and spectacular sit-down strikes. Many leftists including communists were CIO organizers and union militants at the time — often the most dedicated and hardest fighters for the union — even as a number of union leaders expressed anticommunist views in response to criticism from the owners. (The CIO purged most of its left militants in the late 1940s when it took a right turn in response to the Washington’s anticommunist campaign accompanying the start of the Cold War against the Soviet Union. It subsequently merged with the AFL and has generally supported some of the worst aspects of U.S. foreign policy ever since.)

The new president understood that the desperation afflicting American workers and their families, combined with the determination of the political, social, and union organizations demanding that Washington alleviate their plight, obligated him to proceed swiftly, decisively, and in tune with the progressive assumptions of the day.

Read the rest of this article here. / DissidentVoice

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Another Species Is Biting the Dust


Orangutan Populations Declining Sharply
By Michael Casey / July 5, 2008

BANGKOK, Thailand – – Orangutan numbers have declined sharply on the only two islands where they still live in the wild and they could become the first great ape species to go extinct if urgent action isn’t taken, a new study says.

The declines in Indonesia and Malaysia since 2004 are mostly because of illegal logging and the expansion of palm oil plantations, Serge Wich, a scientist at the Great Ape Trust in Iowa, said on Saturday.

The survey found the orangutan population on Indonesia’s Sumatra island dropped almost 14 percent since 2004, Wich said. It also concluded that the populations on Borneo island, which is shared by Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia, have fallen by 10 percent. Researchers only surveyed areas of Borneo that are in Indonesia and Malaysia.

In their study, Wich and his 15 colleagues said the declines in Borneo were occurring at an “alarming rate” but that they were most concerned about Sumatra, where the numbers show the population is in “rapid decline.”

“Unless extraordinary efforts are made soon, it could become the first great ape species to go extinct,” researchers wrote.

The number of orangutans on Sumatra has fallen from 7,500 to 6,600 while the number on Borneo has fallen from 54,000 to around 49,600, according to the survey on the endangered apes, which appears in this month’s science journal Oryx.

“It’s disappointing that there are still declines even though there have been quite a lot of conservation efforts over the past 30 years,” Wich said.

Indonesia and Malaysia, the world’s top two palm oil producers, have aggressively pushed to expand plantations amid a rising demand for biofuels which are considered cleaner burning and cheaper than petrol.

Wich and his colleagues said there was room for “cautious optimism” that the orangutan could be saved, noting recent initiatives by Indonesian leaders.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced a major initiative to save the nation’s orangutans at a U.N. climate conference last year, and the Aceh governor declared a moratorium on logging.

Coupled with that are expectations that Indonesia will protect millions of acres of forest as part of any U.N. climate pact that will go into effect in 2012. The deal is expected to include measures that will reward tropical countries like Indonesia that halt deforestation.

“There are promising signs that there is a lot of political will, especially in Aceh, to protect the forest,” Wich said, adding however that much more needs to be done.

Michelle Desilets, founding director of Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation UK, praised the study for offering the first comprehensive look at the species population.

“What matters is that the rate of decline is increasing, and unless something is done, the wild orangutan is on a quick spiral towards extinction, whether in two years, five years or 10 years,” Desilets said in an e-mail.

In their paper, the researchers recommended that law enforcement be boosted to help reduce the hunting of orangutans for food and trade. Environmental awareness at the local level must also be increased.

“It is essential that funding for environmental services reaches the local level and that there is strong law enforcement,” the study says. “Developing a mechanism to ensure these occur is the challenge for the conservation of the orangutans.”

The study is the latest in a long line of research that has predicted the orangutans demise.

In May, the Center for Orangutan Protection said just 20,000 of the endangered primates remain in the tropical jungle of Central Kalimantan on Borneo island, down from 31,300 in 2004. Based on that estimate, it concluded orangutans there could be extinct by 2011.

Source / America On Line

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Cathy Garger :
A Small Environmental Victory for Washington State

photo of depleted uranium

US and UK forces continue to use depleted uranium bullets, shells, and defensive armor plating in Iraq

Depleted Uranium Activism Saves Washington!

By Cathy Garger | July 3, 2008

In the June 30 issue of Tacoma’s The News Tribune, readers from Washington got to read the attack on Governor Gregoire in “Gregoire’s inaction cost jobs, say Tri-Cities leaders”. In this piece that describes the rationale behind the Governor’s refusal to court the supreme federal God, Uranium, we get a glimpse of just how easily a state official can be lambasted for refusing to get into bed with the nuclear industry.

Another story exists within the story, however, which demonstrates how education around the dangers of what is deceptively labeled “Depleted Uranium” has saved both the day – and the very lives – of countless current and future generations of Washingtonians. Apparently, good news to those who appreciate a clean and healthy environment, some anti-nuclear activists got through to Governor Chris Gregoire of Washington, as it was reported, “The hang-up for Gregoire was the proposed plant’s waste stream of depleted uranium, a dangerous chemical with low levels of radioactivity.”

What exactly happened that influenced the life-preserving move for Washington? Apparently, the Governor had been concerned about a backlash by environmentalists that impacted her decision not to push to play host state to a proposed Uranium enrichment plant.

It is reported that the lack of energetic courtship on the part of Governor Gregoire influenced the decision made by French nuclear giant, Areva, to choose Idaho over Washington for its newest $2 Billion Uranium enrichment plant. In a May 7 Axis of Logic article, this writer had predicted this decision at that time, reporting, “The federal government is entering into what is quite literally dangerous territory with its plans to fully support yet another uranium enrichment plant certain to harm the good people of Idaho.”

Idaho’s somber news is certainly better news for Washingtonians – and residents of Ohio, Texas, and New Mexico, states that were also passed over in the decision. But for Washington, this is special reason for anti-nuclear activists to celebrate, as the state already has its hands full of massive hazardous waste at its 120 square mile Hanford Site, with its underground plume of Tritium, Chromium, Strontium-90 and Uranium, 18 square kilometers – nearly 7 square miles in size.

Hanford Nuclear Facility, Washington

With contamination of twenty (20) percent of its Columbia River shoreline, Hanford is, hands down, the most contaminated nuclear site in the country, with a more than $50 Billion price tag for clean up projected to continue through the end of 2019.

A hazardous legacy with 50 years of plutonium production to be passed down to future generations of Washingtonians, one study showed those living downwind of the Hanford facility experienced high incidences of cancers of all types. With the prospect of being stuck with another nuclear wasteland, one can understand why Washington activists took none too kindly to the construction of a Uranium enrichment plant certain to add to their state’s current radiological holocaust.

Yet while Washingtonians are off the hook from having to accommodate Areva’s Uranium poison factory, one can’t help but feel sorry for the poor residents of Idaho, whose state has been awarded the contract. Whatever did Idahoans do that was sufficiently bad to merit radioactive particulates blowing in their winds, poisoning their air, water and soil? Haven’t the good people of Idaho suffered enough cancer already from radioactive atomic bomb fallout exploded in Nevada?

I guess we could simply say, that’s Idaho’s business, right? In actuality, it is our business, too. Radiation emitted from any nuclear power plant, Uranium enrichment plant, or from munitions used in either combat or in “testing” at proving grounds and military bases does not stop magically at the state line. Invisible radionuclides – atoms of ionizing radiation – travel in the atmosphere for great distances through the winds.

Whether speaking about the nuclear gasses of Chernobyl that contaminate Europe, Russia, and eventually the Arctic Ocean, the US atomic bomb blasts that spread radiation from Nevada clear up to New York and Maine, or the radioactive Uranium oxide spread through Europe to the UK within a week of the “Shock and Awe” bombing of Baghdad, radionuclides are carried thousands of miles through the winds and can also leach underground into groundwater, affecting drinking water.

What about our food supply, which is contaminated wherever radionuclides land on the soils in which crops are grown? In Idaho, the airborne dispersal hits “home” for many of us who enjoy Idaho baked potatoes but are less than thrilled at the prospect of glow-in-the-dark spuds. It is important that potato lovers ‘round the country realize their favorite starch is grown in the same state which already houses another DOE public health disaster – the Idaho National Laboratory with its tens of millions of cubic feet of radioactively contaminated soil and the Snake River Aquifer.

The Idaho National Laboratory is one of 9,900 nuclear production facility contaminated sites “under assessment” by the DOE. Roughly translated, this means experts are scratching their heads, asking one another what in blazes they are going to do with this mighty nuked, bombed-out, country.

In a 7 year, $2.9 Billion clean-up project affecting the drinking water of 300,000 eastern Idaho residents, Plutonium – to the tune of one metric ton – is but one of the eighteen (18) contaminants of concern at the Idaho Laboratory.

With the Laboratory’s stated mission to “support our government’s role in leading the revitalization of the nation’s nuclear power industry and re-establishing U.S. world leadership in nuclear science and technology,” expansion of nuclear power and weapons technology continues to be the driving force of not just the Idaho Laboratory, but the DOE itself, without regard of cost to human health or environment.

An example of the impact of Uranium used for weapons by the Idaho National Laboratory involves risk calculations which indicate individuals living adjacent to the hazardous landfill even 1,000 years from now will have a greatly increased chance of contracting cancer from plutonium exposure due to inhalation of contaminated air and ingested foods grown nearby. Uranium materials left from nuclear processing at the site will continue to emit radiation, contaminating the earth and groundwater for far longer.

Some Effects of Depleted Uranium Poisoning

All of these serious and lingering nuclear disasters aside, Idaho’s Governor “Butch” Otter is still mighty proud his state’s been chosen as the winning site for even further radiological contamination. Witness the beaming pride of a Governor who had cast his net and pulled in the grand prize – a future hazardous National Superfund Site – in this May 14, 2008 quote made by Governor Otter after AREVA announced its decision: “Along with that kind of infrastructure and expertise, government regulations, market forces and most of all the watchful eyes of 1.4 million Idahoans all will ensure that the AREVA plant will be safe, clean and an enormous economic benefit to our state. AREVA’s decision is a testament to the hard work and progressive mindset of Idaho’s people, and the growing diversity and dynamism of our economy. There is a long way to go before AREVA’s promise becomes reality, but we already have proved that nothing is beyond our capability.

It is certainly curious to see that a Governor knows nothing at all about how Uranium enrichment plants work, evidenced by the fact he calls them “safe” and “clean.” Were there perhaps no Idaho activists to instruct their Governor any better than that? Moreover, in true Orwellian politico-speak, words and their meanings are often deceptively reversed. For the day the word “progressive mindset” is equated with polluting the environment with radioactive gasses is the very day environmental activists must start calling ourselves “conservatives.” We are, after all, on a mission to conserve – as in save – the planet and our very lives, are we not?

In stark contrast, the fact that Washington’s Governor Gregoire realized that Depleted Uranium would endanger her constituency – and the environment – is most likely due to the work of on–target environmentalists who would not allow her to forget Hanford… not in a Manhattan Project minute!

No doubt these anti-nuclear activists had done their homework on the voluminous research that exists which links chemically toxic and radioactive Uranium with health effects such as cancer, diabetes, neuro-muscular degenerative disease, birth defects, cardiac problems, thyroid disease, and auto-immune system diseases. Before we, therefore, drink another Uranium-contaminated glass of water, eat tonight’s Idaho baked potato, or inhale our very next breath of air? It would be more than wise to take a few minutes of our time to discover which radioactive sites are located in our area.

We must work hard to shut down nuclear power plants and facilities used to produce nuclear materials and weapons and clean up the ones already shut down. For a genuine “nuclear renaissance” is now upon us – whereby the Nuclear Regulatory Commission expects to receive (and, in all probability, will approve) applications for the construction of 34 new nuclear reactors.

All new nuclear reactors – for the sake of our kids and their kids… must be fought tooth and nail. Failure to do so will, quite literally, make radionuclides like Strontium-90, only one of over 100 harmful chemicals emitted from nuclear reactors that enter the body, become a permanent part of teeth and bones.

Washington is a prime example of how anti-radiation activists fighting nuclear contamination in their state can have a critical impact on decisions made in the current nuclear revivalist onslaught in America. We must both educate others about the hazards of life-destroying radioactivity released into our environment and also confront our legislators and other government officials, opposing nuclear contamination in all its lethal forms.

The dirty “business” of Uranium looms ominously in America’s future, spelling disaster for our nation’s environmental and public health. Yet, even still, there is hope that this trend will be slowed and eventually stopped – as is evidenced by environmentalists who made an undeniable impact on the decision of Governor Gregoire from Washington – one which will undoubtedly save countless lives.

One is tempted to wonder what an intensive opposition waged by a large and dedicated coalition of anti-nuclear activists might have accomplished in Idaho… had they only been able to “get through” to the Governor. Unfortunately – and most tragically – for both Idahoans alive today and for many generations to come, that question will never be answered.

Resources

An explanation of the Uranium production process appears on the Nuclear Information Referral (NIRS) website.

In addition, an entire website filled with scientific research devoted to the topic of the harm of radioactivity to humans is available for viewing at the Radiation and Public Health Project website. Another good resource on the health costs of low-level ionizing radiation is available here.

Cathy Garger is a regular guest contributor to Axis of Logic. She is a freelance writer, public speaker, activist, and a certified personal coach who specializes in Uranium weapons. Living in the shadow of the national District of Crime, Cathy is constantly nauseated by the stench emanating from the nation’s capital during the Washington, DC, federal work week. Cathy may be contacted at savorsuccesslady3@yahoo.com.

© Copyright 2008 by AxisofLogic.com

Source / Axis of Logic

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Drawn and Quartered

Peter Bromhead / Dominion-Post Wellington and Sunday-Star Times / Auckland, New Zealand.

The Rag Blog / Posted July 5, 2008

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Biofuels – Still Very Problematic

A handful of corn before it is processed. Photograph: Charlie Neibergall/AP

Secret report: biofuel caused food crisis
By Aditya Chakrabortty / July 4, 2008

Internal World Bank study delivers blow to plant energy drive

Biofuels have forced global food prices up by 75% – far more than previously estimated – according to a confidential World Bank report obtained by the Guardian.

The damning unpublished assessment is based on the most detailed analysis of the crisis so far, carried out by an internationally-respected economist at global financial body.

The figure emphatically contradicts the US government’s claims that plant-derived fuels contribute less than 3% to food-price rises. It will add to pressure on governments in Washington and across Europe, which have turned to plant-derived fuels to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and reduce their dependence on imported oil.

Senior development sources believe the report, completed in April, has not been published to avoid embarrassing President George Bush.

“It would put the World Bank in a political hot-spot with the White House,” said one yesterday.

The news comes at a critical point in the world’s negotiations on biofuels policy. Leaders of the G8 industrialised countries meet next week in Hokkaido, Japan, where they will discuss the food crisis and come under intense lobbying from campaigners calling for a moratorium on the use of plant-derived fuels.

It will also put pressure on the British government, which is due to release its own report on the impact of biofuels, the Gallagher Report. The Guardian has previously reported that the British study will state that plant fuels have played a “significant” part in pushing up food prices to record levels. Although it was expected last week, the report has still not been released.

“Political leaders seem intent on suppressing and ignoring the strong evidence that biofuels are a major factor in recent food price rises,” said Robert Bailey, policy adviser at Oxfam. “It is imperative that we have the full picture. While politicians concentrate on keeping industry lobbies happy, people in poor countries cannot afford enough to eat.”

Rising food prices have pushed 100m people worldwide below the poverty line, estimates the World Bank, and have sparked riots from Bangladesh to Egypt. Government ministers here have described higher food and fuel prices as “the first real economic crisis of globalisation”.

President Bush has linked higher food prices to higher demand from India and China, but the leaked World Bank study disputes that: “Rapid income growth in developing countries has not led to large increases in global grain consumption and was not a major factor responsible for the large price increases.”

Even successive droughts in Australia, calculates the report, have had a marginal impact. Instead, it argues that the EU and US drive for biofuels has had by far the biggest impact on food supply and prices.

Since April, all petrol and diesel in Britain has had to include 2.5% from biofuels. The EU has been considering raising that target to 10% by 2020, but is faced with mounting evidence that that will only push food prices higher.

“Without the increase in biofuels, global wheat and maize stocks would not have declined appreciably and price increases due to other factors would have been moderate,” says the report. The basket of food prices examined in the study rose by 140% between 2002 and this February. The report estimates that higher energy and fertiliser prices accounted for an increase of only 15%, while biofuels have been responsible for a 75% jump over that period.

It argues that production of biofuels has distorted food markets in three main ways. First, it has diverted grain away from food for fuel, with over a third of US corn now used to produce ethanol and about half of vegetable oils in the EU going towards the production of biodiesel. Second, farmers have been encouraged to set land aside for biofuel production. Third, it has sparked financial speculation in grains, driving prices up higher.

Other reviews of the food crisis looked at it over a much longer period, or have not linked these three factors, and so arrived at smaller estimates of the impact from biofuels. But the report author, Don Mitchell, is a senior economist at the Bank and has done a detailed, month-by-month analysis of the surge in food prices, which allows much closer examination of the link between biofuels and food supply.

The report points out biofuels derived from sugarcane, which Brazil specializes in, have not had such a dramatic impact.

Supporters of biofuels argue that they are a greener alternative to relying on oil and other fossil fuels, but even that claim has been disputed by some experts, who argue that it does not apply to US production of ethanol from plants.

“It is clear that some biofuels have huge impacts on food prices,” said Dr David King, the government’s former chief scientific adviser, last night. “All we are doing by supporting these is subsidising higher food prices, while doing nothing to tackle climate change.”

Source / The Guardian

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Fiddler Carmen Hilbert Brings Austin to Beijing


Carmen jams with a Texas touch

BEIJING — From Wednesday to Sunday, Carmen Hilbert joins a collection of lone-star imports at her uncle’s restaurant, Tim’s Texas Roadhouse.

Hilbert brings the music. With fiddle in hand and a guitarist for accompaniment, she rocks the bar that is heavily represented by Texan patrons.

“I wanted to bring Texas-style music here,” Tim Hilbert says. “Carmen had the skills and passion to do it.”

Two days off the plane, Hilbert wrapped up an afternoon practice session to an unexpected request. Her uncle asked her to play that evening. It was after 5 pm, and the band was to start at 7:30. But the recent high school graduate wasn’t fazed.

“Everybody’s enthusiastic,” she says. “Plus they’re drunk, so who’s keeping track anyway?”

Although young, Hilbert is no rookie to the music scene.

She has played violin since 6 but strayed from classical music when her teacher, who had played in honky tonk bars for years, introduced her to the retro country sound. Soon she was playing gigs at local bars in Austin, Texas.

In eighth grade, Hilbert put her fiddle playing on hold to pursue dance but had no problem returning to the instrument several years later.

When not performing, she learns Chinese and braves the public transportation system in search of quality eateries.

Homework is also on the agenda. She has to read Homer’s epic, The Iliad, for a class at Reed College in Oregon, where she will major in linguistics.

Meanwhile, Hilbert is mulling over her musical future. She is considering pursuing music recreationally. “I’m thrilled to pick violin up again,” she says.

Source. / China Daily

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Interview with an Outlaw Woman


Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz: Roots of Resistance
By Andrej Grubacic

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz grew up in rural Oklahoma, daughter of a landless farmer and half-Indian mother. During the first two decades of the 20th century, her paternal grandfather, a veterinarian from a Scots-Irish agrarian background, had been a member of the Socialist Party in Missouri and Oklahoma and joined the Industrial Workers of the World when it was founded. Her grandfather’s stories inspired her to lifelong social justice activism.

Married at 18, she left with her husband for San Francisco where she has lived most of the years since, even after the marriage ended. Her account of life up to leaving Oklahoma is recorded in Red Dirt: Growing Up Okie. From 1967 to 1972, she was a full-time activist living in various parts of the United States, traveling to Europe, Canada, Mexico, and Cuba. She was one of the founders of the militant Women’s Liberation Movement. This time of her life and the aftermath, 1960-1975, is the story told in Outlaw Woman: Memoir of the War Years.

Dunbar-Ortiz took a position teaching in a newly established Native American Studies program at California State University at Hayward, near San Francisco, and helped develop the Department of Ethnic Studies, as well as Women’s Studies. In 1974 she became active in the American Indian Movement (AIM) and the International Indian Treaty Council, beginning a lifelong commitment to international human rights.

Her first book, The Great Sioux Nation: An Oral History of the Sioux Nation and its Struggle for Sovereignty, was published in 1977 and was presented as the fundamental document at the first international conference on Indians of the Americas, held at United Nations’ headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. That book was followed by four others, including Roots of Resistance: A History of Land Tenure in New Mexico and Indians of the Americas: Human Rights and Self-Determination.

In 1981 she was asked to visit Sandinista Nicaragua to appraise the land tenure situation of the Miskito Indians in the northeastern region of the country. Her two trips there that year coincided with the beginning of United States government’s sponsorship of a proxy war to overthrow the Sandinistas. In over 100 trips to Nicaragua and Honduras from 1981 to 1989, she monitored the Contra Wars. In addition to her 1985 Caught in the Crossfire: The Miskito Indians of Nicaragua, her book, Blood on the Border: A Memoir of the Contra War was published in 2005.

She is presently at work on a history of the United States from the Native American perspective, which will be published by Beacon Press.


GRUBACIC: Talk about Roots of Resistance as well as your U.S. history from the Native American perspective?

DUNBAR-ORTIZ: Roots of Resistance: A History of Land Tenure in New Mexico had been my history doctoral dissertation at UCLA in 1974, then was co-published by the UCLA Chicano and Native American research centers in 1980. In 2007 it was issued in a revised edition by the University of Oklahoma Press. It may sound like a narrow topic, but it’s actually a universal story of European colonialism and the imposition of capitalism on democratic, self-managed communities, autonomous but linked to one another. I set out to apply Marxist theory to a particular region and ended up comprehending that theory at a deeper level. In particular, the appropriation of land as the first stage of capitalist development, turning independent or communal producers into beggars who had nothing to sell but their labor, transforming them into commodities. There is a vibrant struggle in New Mexico still to regain lost communal holdings and this kind of movement is going on all over the colonized world.

The book I’m working on now, an indigenous history of the United States, is one volume in the series Beacon Press is publishing over the next several years. Taking off on Howard Zinn’s concept of “people’s history,” the series will have volumes on the history of the United States from the perspectives of Native Americans, African Americans, Chicanos, Latinos, Asian Americans, workers, women, and gay/lesbian.

As my own work is related to the study of inter-racial self-governance and self-activity, I cannot resist the temptation of asking if you have encountered any instances of such practices in your research?

I had been a history graduate student studying the effects of colonization and imperialism on Latin America when I first read Franz Fanon in 1967, which changed my thinking entirely in this regard. For the first time, I saw the human potential rather than simply victimization in the wake of the wreckage from colonization and continued U.S. imperialism.

As historians, we are imbued with the idea of inevitability and progress. We are not supposed to ask “What if?” I began to see historical development differently, particularly as I became involved in indigenous social movements and experienced the resistance, solidarity, autonomy, and self-management you speak of. Many religions, if not most, acknowledge what the Calvinists (my own upbringing) call pre-destination. Secular idealists like Hegel saw the necessity of making right choices, defining freedom thusly. I see modern European colonialism—the plunder of the Americas, Africa, and much of Asia by European states (including the U.S.), the introduction of chattel slavery, the past 500 years—as a wrong direction of humanity. What I learned from indigenous resistance leaders and from the African liberation movements, particularly Amilcar Cabral, was that colonization halted the normal development of people, and part of the process of liberation was to pick up where history left off for the colonized, to construct new realities, rather than to, in Fanon’s words, “imitate Europe.”

In the processes of colonization, history did not actually stop, nor do I think Cabral meant that it did. Rather, the cultures for those who survived were cultures of resistance. Also, what I call “new peoples” were born of colonialism, mixed peoples, inter-racial communities. The descendants of the ancient Andean civilization speak of “rescuing the mestizo.” They have developed a kind of indigenous version of Bolivar’s and Jefferson’s ruling class dreams of one, borderless America—but with a difference, that being the recognition of the roots and heart of “our America,” the western hemisphere. I believe the “mestizo” or mixed peoples, what I call coyotes—which we all are—and all who are dispossessed, landless, without means or will to be rich and powerful, have a special role to play in the future. I see that role as a heavy responsibility.

What are your thoughts on the relationship between white privilege, class consciousness, and the women’s liberation movement?

I think it is difficult for anyone who has not grown up in the United States—with parents who go several generations or more back when they immigrated—to understand our preoccupation with race in the United States. White/European supremacy is the most defining element of the content of American identity, thereby obliterating to a great extent working class identity because of the British introduction and maintenance of slavery, with only Africans and their offspring being subject to enslavement and born into slavery. Nearly two centuries passed in the formation of the British North American colonies before the U.S. became an independent colonizing state. The culture and economy, not only in the southern states where the enslaved African population outnumbered the European, but also in the northern states and the new nation-state as a whole, were saturated with the institutions and social life of white supremacy.

Even members of the anti-slavery and abolitionist movements, all of whom thought slavery was immoral, did not want to mix socially or by intermarriage with Africans. Many favored deporting Africans to Africa at a time when there were no Africans living in the United States who had been born in Africa. To become an American, not in the legal sense, but for jobs, social acceptance, etc., in the 19th century, and even up to the present, meant striving to be identified as white.

Since the mid-20th century civil rights movement forced legislation for equal rights, affirmative action, and other measures, individuals of color can also “prove” their whiteness if they adhere to the “values” of Americanism, which includes acceptance of individual responsibility for their own situation, believing that the “playing field” is “level,” being spokespersons to blame their own communities for their conditions and that the U.S. government is the most perfect ever created with the right to rule the world, particularly the non-European parts. It’s within that reality that we must analyze class relations.

I recently reviewed an excellent and important new book, David Barber’s A Hard Rain Fell: SDS and Why it Failed. Barber attributes the failure of the 1960s New Left to its inability to act on its on rhetoric regarding race, gender, and empire. What’s missing throughout the book is the class composition and absence of class consciousness among New Leftists, including the Women’s Liberation Movement. Barber rightly observes that the young white women who went on to start the radical feminist movement first worked as volunteers in the civil rights movement in the South in the early 1960s and saw African-American women playing far different roles than was the case of white women within American society. But, in seeing this, these white women were seeing race as the defining factor rather than class.

As one who grew up rural and working class (part Indian, but in the white working class world) in Oklahoma, I embraced feminism in 1963 after reading de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, which actually led me to anti-capitalist, anti-racist, anti-imperialist activism. Within a year, I was a member of the first U.S. campus-based anti-apartheid group, at UCLA. It did not take long for me to find New Left men grossly male supremacist, becoming unbearable in the summer of 1967 in London while working with the ANC and the London anti-apartheid solidarity movement. I vowed to return to the U.S. and help start a women’s liberation movement to make men change, so that a revolution would be possible with the defeat of patriarchy. I acutely felt my own potential as an effective revolutionary stifled.

I moved to the center of radical activity, the northeastern corridor (living in Cambridge, but with much travel to New York and Washington) and connected with hundreds of what I thought were like-minded women.

However, soon I felt the same stifling from the New Left women that I had felt from New Left men. I realized that the absence of class consciousness was the fatal flaw of the New Left, and anti-racism actually was a vehicle of privilege. I found many of the women’s liberation activists downright racist. I also became aware that the experience these feminist women had gained in the southern civil rights movement was based on a class privilege that I could not even imagine. But, if one raised the question of class among New Left women, one was accused of being Marxist or “thinking like a man.”

Did you have a similar feeling reading Cathy Wilkerson’s memoir, Flying Close to the Sun? What is your assessment of the whole Weather Underground?

I liked Cathy’s memoir for her honesty and acceptance of responsibility for her actions. However, other than reciting the economic ups and downs of her ancestors and immediate family, she doesn’t reflect upon her own class background and how it may have affected her political consciousness and choices. On the other hand, she’s very detailed about her white privilege. I think this is true of all factions of the New Left, not just the Weathermen [sic]. A part of their class privilege was that they did not deem it necessary or relevant to consider it. But, in acknowledging white privilege, they didn’t have anything to lose. They had the arrogance to assume that white privilege defined not only themselves, but also whites in the working class, without knowing anything about the working class of any color.

This line of thinking has grown even more central since the collapse of the New Left. Presently, anti-racist “training” is a major activity for social-justice activists who are white and mostly from the professional or upper middle class. For the past few years they have adopted the intersectionality thesis of the interlocking oppressions of race, class, and gender, but this is an even greater fallacy, since class distinctions exist among blacks and other peoples of color, and especially among women. It also treats class “oppression” as something to struggle against; that working class people should be “respected,” as if workers were a people rather than a class created by capitalist exploitation of labor. The role of the working class is to do away with class by destroying capitalism.

Regarding the Weatherpeople, I do think it was an error for them to go underground, but not the catastrophe that even some of them proclaim, as having destroyed SDS by doing so. The only real victims of their actions were themselves. The group I was a part of in New Orleans also went underground for a year in order to work clandestinely with the oil workers. That was a mistake as well.

I always felt that the new generation of American activists should find inspiration less in the Weather Underground and more in the Industrial Workers of the World. One of the most interesting episodes from U.S. radical history is that the IWW created the first inter-racial union in the U.S. history.

The IWW has been my life-long inspiration and the reason I became anti-capitalist and aspired to become a revolutionary and the reason I decided to study history. My grandfather was a Wobbly in Oklahoma. My father was born in August 1907 and was named Moyer Haywood Scarberry Pettibone Dunbar, after the Wobbly leaders who were on trial in Boise, Idaho, that summer. My grandfather died before I was born, but my father, a great traditional storyteller, told me every detail of my grandfather’s actions and really what amounted to a radical history of Oklahoma that officially remains obliterated today, along with a few others. From first grade to college, I found none of what I learned from my father by the time I was 5-years-old. Of course, I wasn’t about to distrust my father’s stories, so I sought to find confirmation in the study of history.

In 1968 two young people in Chicago from trade unionist families, typesetters, Franklin and Penelope Rosemont, printed up thousands of the IWW red books and started promoting its revival. It has survived and spread, mainly among two generations of young anarchists. The IWW puts out a good newsletter. Many trade union members are also IWW members. Earth First! in its 1980s heyday in the Northern California woods, under the leadership of the late Judi Bari, herself from the working class, were organizing loggers into the IWW. But among liberals and New Leftists and their heirs, there is little interest in studying the IWW as a model for contemporary organizing.

The IWW spanned a decade and a half of an extremely repressive period—Jim Crow segregation of Blacks and Mexicans was firmly entrenched, Native Americans had to have passes to leave their reservations and were not allowed to join trade unions, women didn’t have the vote. Yet, the IWW was able to organize and inspire inter-racial struggles. It was also the period of the prolonged Mexican Revolution and cooperation between the IWW and the Mexican revolutionary workers was constant. In Oklahoma, black, white, and Indian tenant farmers, inspired by the Wobblies, rose up together in 1917 to oppose the draft for World War I and oppose the war as a “rich man’s war.” It was called the “Green Corn Rebellion.” And, of course, women were prominent in the IWW founding and leadership: Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Emma Goldman, Mother Jones, Lucy Parsons, and many local leaders.

I feel similarly about trying to restart SDS as I do about the IWW. I think we can take lessons from the earlier organizations, but not duplicate them. The times are so different. I was invited to speak by the new SDS at their summer training last year. It was held in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, a mostly Mennonite and Amish population. The SDSers who hosted it were from Mennonite families, pacifists in their religion. They are high school students from five different schools in the area. I was impressed with their organizational skills and dedication. There were around 50 participants from many different universities and schools, mostly from the East. I was encouraged that they were reinventing SDS to suit their own needs and aspirations. They were earnest in listening to me talk about the 1960s movements, taking notes, asking good questions. I talked a lot about class and the next day the working class young people among the participants formed a caucus to discuss class.

But the new SDS is different from the original. In the early 1960s, SDS began top down and organized chapters around the country off the momentum of the civil rights movement and soon grew with the escalation of the Vietnam War. The new SDS has no such wave to catch and ride, no group of skilled organizers to create a national network of chapters on hundreds of campuses. Yet, when a few activists started the new SDS, the word spread over the Internet and activist high school and college students started calling themselves SDS. Those who were attempting to organize from the top, a number of old SDS veterans and a few young organizers they had fostered, were baffled by the anarchic development.

As for what might spark a massive student movement like the one we saw in the 1960s in the U.S., and that exists in most countries continually, I doubt we’ll see that here again. That doesn’t mean that campuses lack radical activity. Every campus has radical activists working on single or multiple issues—sweatshop labor, the environment, women and gay/lesbian rights, the war. I do think there is a big deficit in understanding how to organize. In the 1950s, civil rights organizers experimented and hammered out organizing methods that student activists of the early 1960s inherited and reproduced. When the movement was weakened by repression, infiltration, use of drugs, media attention, and many other factors, liberal philanthropists filled the gap and “professionalized” organizing, creating non-profits and careers. They have not been interested in campus organizing. The new way is “training,” which is rather mechanical and too often staged for funders in order to get more funding. So I think the main thing the new SDS could do is study the organizing methods of the civil rights movement, the old SDS, and back to the IWW.

You are involved in organizing a conference on the “long 1968.” Can you talk about your personal experiences in those years? How did the movement in the United States go from insurgency to the politics of philanthropy?

I date the “long 1968” from 1960 to 1975, from the election of Kennedy to the end of the Vietnam War and Nixon’s resignation. Of course, the Vietnam intervention, the southern civil rights movement, and African liberation movements had been building for at least a decade before 1960 and are important to understanding the revolutionary surge of 1968. But I don’t think there’s any doubt that the 1968 surge had played out by 1975. I went back and completed my dissertation in 1974, which I had abandoned in 1968 to be a full-time revolutionary. I began university teaching that year and had the mission of developing Native American Studies and an Ethnic Studies Department. That was happening on many campuses, as well as the development of Women’s Studies. There was activity that was important, but it was mostly inward reform and not as much outward protest.

In the early 1970s, universities purged both radical untenured faculty and radical student leaders, particularly under Governor Ronald Reagan in California (1966-1974). Others began behaving accordingly. Movements also went inward, trying to figure out how to restart the mass movement, taking stock, also doing some good organizing. The group I was with, Line of March, and other groups in the San Francisco area got radicals into key local positions, which has had a permanent effect on local politics. The Black Power movement was ravaged by violence, some of it internal, but most from the state, yet it continued to be influential locally.

On the surface, it seemed there were many victories. In California Jerry Brown was elected governor in 1974 and was re-elected in 1978. He appointed SDS founder Tom Hayden and other New Leftists to state government positions. He also appointed four liberal judges to the California Supreme Court, making the chief justice a woman, Rose Bird, who had also worked with the migrant farm workers, as had one of the other new justices. In San Francisco a leftist, George Moscone, was elected mayor, and Harvey Milk became the first openly gay activist, also leftist, to be elected to the Board of Supervisors. (Both Moscone and Milk were assassinated by a right winger in 1978.) In Oakland, the grassroots infrastructure built by the Black Panther Party brought radical African Americans into local office and helped to elect Ron Dellums, an African American and self-identified socialist, to U.S. Congress.

By 1972, I was burned out and abusing alcohol after my stint underground. I was rescued by the American Indian Movement when they led the seizure of Wounded Knee in the Lakota Nation in early 1973. For the next several years I worked at organizing with the International Indian Treaty Council to take Native American demands to the international level. It was also the reason I returned to complete my doctorate, to have more credibility in that work. This also meant a lot of grassroots work on rural reservations. I was so busy I hardly noticed that there was no longer a mass movement and that the philanthropists were calling the shots.

Speaking of “humanitarian” politics, what do you think about the recent middle class enthusiasm for various independence movements? Jean Bricmont’s book, Humanitarian Imperialism, captures this phenomenon.

Well, it was in the atmosphere I described that “humanitarian” intervention took hold. Because I was doing a lot of work at the United Nations for the recognition of indigenous peoples’ rights from 1977 onwards, I saw the development of this insidious mode of imperialism. It has to be seen in the context of the destruction by the U.S. and the Western powers of the hard-won institutions of the New International Economic Order (NIEO), a 1974 proposal won by the former colonies, which had become the majority of UN membership. It called for speedy economic development in what was called the “third world,” through transfer of technology and economic assistance with no strings attached. Soon after, the roadmap for the program was drawn up in the Brandt Report, North-South: A Program for Survival. The 1980 UN conference on development that was to approve the program was shattered by the Carter administration’s refusal to participate or accept the principles of the NIEO. The U.S. demanded that people of the “third world” choose which side they were on. If they were not enthusiastically in favor of Western policies, they were categorized as pro-Communist. This is when they invented the idea of two “superpowers,” with equal power and responsibility in the world, a fallacy of the first order.

I think we can date the official beginning of the use of humanitarianism to attain imperialist goals to the Helsinki Declaration of August 1975. This came out of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe and was signed by the European states, Canada, the United States, and the Soviet Union. The requirements under the agreement were virtually the same as the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, one of the International Human Rights Covenants that were passed by the UN General Assembly in 1966. The other Human Rights Covenant pertained to economic, social, and cultural rights, which the “third world” countries and the Socialist bloc states had insisted on and which the United States refused to ratify. That treaty characterized human rights as the right to food, guaranteed income, housing, health care, and free education. Both the Helsinki accord and the UN Convent on Civil and Political Rights were used by Carter and every succeeding U.S. administration to intervene in third world countries. The first military uses of humanitarian intervention came with training counter-insurgents to overthrow the leftist governments in Afghanistan and Nicaragua and all of Central America, and the direct military intervention in Grenada and Panama, then to the much larger scale Gulf War, then the Balkans.

As I watched human rights instruments and initiatives, so important to people living under oppressive governments—particularly U.S.-supported ones in Latin America, as well as indigenous peoples in North America—being diverted to supporting “dissidents” in the Soviet Union and other socialist states, I saw increasing numbers of human rights activists and NGOs follow the money so generously distributed by the U.S. State Department. By the 1990s interventions in Yugoslavia, humanitarian intervention was broadly accepted even on the left in the United States, and still is.

The incredible wave of indigenous resistance and social and political creation in Latin America gives much hope for a new, global movement, built from below.

Going back to pre-destination and right paths, I actually am quite optimistic. I think there is a more profound revolution taking place in the world now than we could even imagine in the 1960s. Because of capitalism/imperialism, as well as seductions with consumerism and greed, the oppressed and exploited people of the world have invented new means of resistance, with the secret being the community. Indigenous people have much to teach about that and it’s no surprise that the model emerging out of the Andes with Bolivia and Mesoamerica with the Zapatistas has been embraced everywhere. Rather than devolution from the center, we have autonomous formations from the grassroots. The indigenous and peasants and farmers worldwide are reclaiming land and water as the lifeline of survival.

[Andrej Grubacic is one of the founders and editors of Zbalkans, a Balkan edition of Z Magazine.]

Source. / ZMag / July 1, 2008

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Photographer Dismissed for Showing GI Remains

An Iraqi boy watched, wide-eyed, as American soldiers searched for weapons and militants in Mosul after bombings. Photo by Eduardo Munoz / Reuters.

IRAQ: Journalist Charges Censorship by U.S. Military in Fallujah
By Dahr Jamail / July 3, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO — U.S. journalist Zoriah Miller says he was censored by the U.S. military in the Iraqi city of Fallujah after photographing Marines who died in a suicide bombing.

On Jun. 26, a suicide bomber attacked a city council meeting in Fallujah, 69 kms west of Baghdad, between local tribal sheikhs and military officials.

Three Marines, Cpl. Marcus Preudhomme, Capt. Philip Dykeman, and Lt. Col. Max Galeai, were assigned to 2d Battalion, 3d Marines, 3rd Marine Division, Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii.

The explosion also killed two interpreters and 20 Iraqis, including the mayor of the nearby town of Karmah, two prominent sheikhs and their sons, and another sheikh and his brother. All were members of the local “awakening council,” one of the U.S.-backed militias that have taken up arms against al Qaeda in Iraq, according to U.S. and Iraqi authorities.

Miller was embedded with Marines on a patrol one block from the attack when it occurred. He had originally turned down the option of going to report on the city council meeting that was bombed.

Miller ran with the Marines he was with to the scene of the attack. “As I ran I saw human pieces…a skull cap with hair, bone shards,” he told IPS during a telephone interview from the so-called Green Zone in Baghdad. “When we arrived at the building it was chaotic. There were Iraqis, police and civilians running around screaming. Bodies were being pulled out of the building.”

“I went in and there were over 20 people’s remains all over the place,” Miller continued, “Of the Marines I jogged in with, someone started to vomit. Others were standing around, not knowing what to do. It was completely surreal.”

“At that moment I realised this was far beyond anything I’d experienced, and I realised I wanted to focus and make sure I could capture what it felt like, and the visual horror,” Miller explained.

“I thought, ‘Nobody in the U.S. has any idea what it means when they hear that 20 people died in a suicide bombing.’ I want people to be able to associate those numbers with the scene and the actual loss of human life. And to show why soldiers are suffering from PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder],” Miller told IPS.

Miller was taken out of the building by Marines, but then allowed back inside where he took one last photo of the carnage before they closed the scene to him.

“We spent most of the rest of the day as Marines picked up body parts and put them in buckets and bags,” he said.

In an Iraqi Police station in Karmah, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) was brought in to investigate the bombing. Millers’ photos were the only ones of the scene, so the NCIS team asked for them.

“I made them copies, but then one of the Marines came in and told me to delete my memory card after I give them the photos, and I refused,” Miller told IPS, “I told the NCIS that if they forced me to delete them, I would stop sharing them. So they stopped pressing that issue.”

Miller said that he was following the rules for embedded journalists. “That evening, during the debriefing, the guys [Marines] I was with told me that the higher-ups had said I was a stand-up guy and behaved well and to treat me well. The guys I was with were all very much on my side.”

Miller explained to IPS that he meticulously showed his photos to the Marines he was with to make sure he was not going to show any photos that would upset the family members of the deceased Marines. “They were all okay with them, so then about 96 hours after the bombing I published the photos on my blog.” [The original blog post is here. It is graphic. As Miller himself says, the pictures “show the actual loss of human life.” rdj]

Then things got interesting.

“Tuesday [Jul. 1] I awoke to a call in their combat operations centre, and the person on the phone told me they were a PAO (Public Affairs Officer) at Camp Fallujah, and he wanted me to take my blog down right away,” Miller told IPS. “I asked them why, and was told then called back after five minutes by a higher ranking PAO who claimed I had broken my contract by showing photos of dead Americans with U.S. uniforms and boots.”

Miller said the PAO claimed he was not allowed, by the embed contract, to show dead or wounded U.S. citizens or soldiers in the field. “I never signed any contract for that,” Miller said.

He was called back after another five minutes and told his embed was terminated and they would send him back to Baghdad on the next flight. He was then taken back to Camp Fallujah where he said, “Everyone was extremely angry and fired up at me.”

Nevertheless, the lower ranking Marines he had embedded with “were on my side, and they told me they thought that what was happening was wrong.”

Miller explained that he grew nervous when the flight was cancelled due to a sandstorm, and then a security guard was assigned to him.

“I started to feel uncomfortable with this,” Miller explained. “The next day, Gen. Kelly, [Major General John Kelly, who is the Commanding General of the I Marine Expeditionary Force] wanted to have some words with me. I was to meet with him at 3 pm, and we sat outside in the sun for two hours and he never showed.”

Miller was told he would be flown out that night, but he was deleted from the flight and told that General Kelly wanted to see him, so he waited again until Thursday, Jul. 3. Again the general did not appear, so Miller was given an official letter about the grounds for the termination of his embed, signed by Gen. Kelly, and flown to Baghdad.

“Now, as I think about it, I think they needed the extra time to figure out what they were going to say about my dismissal,” Miller said. “Their original reason ended up being bogus, so they had to figure something else out.”

The letter he was given stated reasons for his dismissal as “you photographed the remains of U.S. soldiers”, “you posted these images along with detailed commentary”, and “by posting the images and your commentary you violated 14 H and O of the news media agreement you signed”.

In addition, the letter, which Miller read to IPS, stated, “By providing detailed information of the effectiveness of the attack and the response of U.S. forces to it, you have put all U.S. forces in Iraq at greater risk for harm.”

Miller feels the reason for his dismissal is otherwise.

“The bottom line is that the thing they cited as the reason for my dismissal was ‘information the enemy could use against you’. They realised, probably from keeping track of my blog, that I was not showing identifiable features of a soldier…and they couldn’t find a reason to kick me out. Because it was a high ranking person who got killed, they were all fired up.”

Miller concluded, “Up to that point they said it was because I showed pictures of bodies with pieces of uniform and boots. The letter, though, doesn’t mention that at all. I checked the document I had about ground rules for media embeds, and I followed them.”

The Pentagon would not comment on the story when contacted by IPS, saying they had no information on Miller’s case beyond what Central Command had already posted.

Source. / IPS

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