Bill Totten's Weblog

Sunday, September 30, 2007

The Dream, Downscaled

The Jena 6: A Bad, Easy Cause

by Ted Rall

tedrall.com (September 25 2007)


White policemen patrol black neighborhoods, less as guardians of public safety than troops subduing occupied territory. They hassle young black men, subjecting them to "random" searches. Sometimes - too often - they shoot them. All-white juries acquit them, validating tall tales of squirt guns and wallets and shadows that look like guns.

Our prisons look like America - the part of America that's downtown and predominantly African-American. Being born black means you'll probably attend substandard, poorly funded schools, that you'll earn less than if you'd been born another race. You'll get sick more often and die sooner. Why aren't these life-shattering, soul-crushing injustices, rather than the overzealous prosecution of the schoolyard thugs known as the "Jena 6", attracting thousands of marchers?

I used to live on a street next to a strip of park created to separate my neighborhood - which was white - from Harlem. On my side of the park the New York ritual called "alternate side of the street parking" required motorists to move their cars daily. This cleared the way for street sweepers and garbage pickup. It was clean and safe. My morning walk down the park's stairs to the subway illustrated the nature of systemic racism.

Each step was crumblier, more trash-strewn. On the east side of the park, where every face was brown, the garbagemen came once a week. Bags of refuse broke open, their contents whipped around in those little wind vortexes that spring up in urban spaces. When the light in a lamppost blew out on the Harlem side, it stayed out for months. Many of the buildings had been abandoned.

African-Americans live lives whose despair is amplified by petty nonsense. At our post office, the clerk always demanded that my black roommate show an ID to pick up his packages. She never asked me. (Racism is complicated. She was black.) Boutiques on Madison Avenue buzzed me in wearing ripped jeans and a Dead Kennedys T-shirt; they ignored him in a suit and tie. I'm not surprised that blacks are pissed off. The shock is that they haven't burned down the whole country.

The Jena 6 hype is bizarre, while countless innocent African-American men rot in prison - some on death row - unjustly convicted because they couldn't afford decent lawyers.

According to a website set up for their legal defense fund, "The Jena Six are a group of black students who are being charged with attempted murder for beating up a white student who was taunting them with racial slurs, and continued to support other white students who hung three nooses from the high school's 'white tree' which sits in the front yard". (The charges have since been reduced to aggravated assault.) The implication is obvious: "hate speech" justifies physical assault.

Justin Barker, 17, was beaten unconscious and then kicked repeatedly. A sturdy sort, he spent three hours in the emergency room before attending the school's Ring Ceremony later the same day. The accused, members of the school football team, claim that Barker had made fun of one of them for having himself been beaten up by a group of white students at an earlier event, one of a string of racially-charged incidents in the small town. Barker denies it.

"Young white males involved in the racial incidents received slaps on the wrist, at most, while young blacks received school expulsions or criminal charges", wrote Clarence Page in The Chicago Tribune. One of the Jena 6 remains in jail despite having had his conviction overturned. That's wrong. But, said Justice Department attorney Donald Washington, "There was no connection between the September noose incident and December attack [on Barker]". Furthermore, reports the Associated Press, "the three youths accused of hanging the nooses were not suspended for just three days - they were isolated at an alternative school for about a month, and then given an in-school suspension for two weeks".

"They haven't always been fair in the courthouse with us. If you're black, they go overboard sometimes", says Jena High School janitor Braxton Hatcher, 62, who is black. That's easy to believe. Then he repeats the standard talking point: "I think this was just a fight between boys. I don't think it was attempted murder."

Six against one isn't a schoolyard fight. I've been in more than my fair share of schoolyard fights, so I know. Fights are one on one. Six on one is attempted murder. Kicking someone after they've passed out is attempted murder. Nothing Barker said, no matter how foul, can justify such a vicious assault by bullying jocks. This is the stuff of Columbine.

Symbolic hate speech, even as vile as nooses in the context of the recent history of the Deep South, pales next to actual physical violence. The real problem is that there's a perception that attempted murder charges wouldn't have been filed had the races of the students involved in the Barker beatdown been reversed.

Indeed, the Urban League finds that the average black man convicted of aggravated assault - the charge pending against five of the Jena 6 - faces 48 months in prison if convicted, a term about one-third longer than if he'd been white. And the Justice Department says black men who get arrested are three times more likely than whites to end up in prison.

What white apologists call the legacy of racism - does a continuing phenomenon leave a legacy? - wrecks the lives of millions of Americans. Consider the following:

"Statistically", reports The Los Angeles Times, "black males in America are at increased risk for just about every health problem known. African Americans have a shorter life expectancy than any other racial group in America except Native Americans, and black men fare even worse than black women ... It is possible, [researchers now] believe, that the ill health and premature deaths can be laid - at least in part - at the feet of continuous assaults of discrimination, real or perceived ... The reaction contributes to a chain of biological events known as the stress response, which can put people at higher risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes and infectious disease, says Namdi Barnes, a [UCLA] researcher...for many African Americans, these responses may occur so frequently that they eventually result in a breakdown of the physiological system."

In short, racism kills.

As one wag observed, the Jena 6 are no Rosa Parks. In the face of the intractable challenge of a nation so racist that it literally makes people ill, however, what passes for a civil rights movement finds that it's easier to set its sights low.

_____

Ted Rall is the author of the new book Silk Road to Ruin: Is Central Asia the New Middle East? (Nantier Beall Minoustchine Publishing, 2006), an in-depth prose and graphic novel analysis of America's next big foreign policy challenge.

Copyright 2007 Ted Rall

http://www.uexpress.com/tedrall/


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Can Anyone Stop It?

by Bill McKibben

The New York Review of Books (October 11 2007)


Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming
by Bjorn Lomborg
Knopf, 253 pages, $21.00

Break Through: From the Death of Environmentalism to the Politics of Possibility
by Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger
Houghton Mifflin, 344 pages, $25.00

What We Know About Climate Change
by Kerry Emanuel
MIT Press, 85 pages, $14.95

Climate Change: What It Means for Us, Our Children, and Our Grandchildren
edited by Joseph F C DiMento and Pamela Doughman
MIT Press, 217 pages, $19.95 paper


Note: Bill McKibben will be answering questions from readers about his article "Can Anyone Stop It?" and the possibilities for action to stop global warming. Send your question by September 28, 2007 to web@nybooks.com, with the subject line "Question for Bill McKibben". Please be brief. Mr McKibben will reply to selected questions here in early October.


During the last year, momentum has finally begun to build for taking action against global warming by putting limits on carbon emissions and then reducing them. Driven by ever-more-dire scientific reports, Congress has, for the first time, begun debating ambitious targets for carbon reduction. Al Gore, in his recent Live Earth concerts, announced that he will work to see an international treaty signed by the end of 2009. Even President Bush has recently reversed his previous opposition and summoned the leaders of all the top carbon-emitting countries to a series of conferences designed to yield some form of limits on carbon dioxide.

The authors of the first two books under review have some doubts about a strategy that emphasizes limits on carbon emissions, Lomborg for economic reasons and Nordhaus and Shellenberger for political ones. Since any transition away from fossil fuel is likely to be the dominant global project of the first half of the twenty-first century, it's worth taking those qualms seriously.


In his earlier book, The Skeptical Environmentalist, Bjorn Lomborg, a Danish statistician, attacked the scientific establishment on a number of topics, including global warming, and concluded that things were generally improving here on earth. The book was warmly received on the editorial pages of The Wall Street Journal, but most scientists were unimpressed. Scientific American published scathing rebuttals from leading researchers, and its editor concluded in a note to readers that "in its purpose of describing the real state of the world, the book is a failure". A review in Nature compared it to "bad term papers", and called it heavily reliant on secondary sources and "at times ... fictional". E O Wilson, who has over the years been attacked by the left (for sociobiology) and the right (for his work on nature conservation), and usually responded only with a bemused detachment, sent Lomborg a public note that called his book a "sordid mess". Lomborg replied to all of this vigorously and at great length {1}, and then went on, with the help of The Economist magazine, to convene a "dream team" of eight economists including three Nobel laureates and ask them to consider the costs and benefits of dealing with various world problems. According to his panel, dealing with malaria ranked higher than controlling carbon emissions, though again some observers felt the panel had been stacked and one of the economists who took part told reporters that "climate change was set up to fail". Lomborg later conducted a similar exercise with "youth leaders" and with ambassadors to the United Nations, including the former US emissary John Bolton, with similar results.

In his new book, Cool It, Lomborg begins by saying that the consensus scientific position on climate change - that we face a rise in temperature of about five degrees Fahrenheit by century's end - is correct, but that it's not that big a deal. "Many other issues are much more important than global warming". In fact, he argues, it would be a great mistake either to impose stiff caps on carbon or to spend large sums of money - he mentions $25 billion worldwide annually on R&D as an upper bound - trying to dramatically reduce emissions because global warming won't be all that bad. The effort to cut emissions won't work very well, and we could better spend the money on other projects like giving out bed nets to prevent malaria.

Lomborg casts himself as the voice of reason in this debate, contending with well-meaning but wooly-headed scientists, bureaucrats, environmentalists, politicians, and reporters. I got a preview of some of these arguments in May when we engaged in a dialogue at Middlebury College in Vermont {2}; they struck me then, and strike me now in written form, as tendentious and partisan in particularly narrow ways. Lomborg has appeared regularly on right-wing radio and TV programs, and been summoned to offer helpful testimony by, for instance, Oklahoma Senator James Inhofe, famous for his claim that global warming is a hoax. That Lomborg disagrees with him and finds much of the scientific analysis of global warming accurate doesn't matter to Inhofe; for his purposes, it is sufficient that Lomborg opposes doing much of anything about it.

But Lomborg's actual arguments turn out to be weak, a farrago of straw men and carefully selected, shopworn data that holds up poorly in light of the most recent research, both scientific and economic. He calculates at great length, for instance, his claim that the decline in the number of people dying from cold weather will outweigh the increase in the number of people dying from the heat, leading him to the genial conclusion that a main effect of global warming may be that "we just notice people wearing slightly fewer layers of winter clothes on a winter's evening". But in April 2007, Working Group II of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the panel of experts whose scientific data he prefers to cite, released a report showing, among many other things, that fewer deaths from cold exposure "will be outweighed by the negative health effects of rising temperatures world-wide, especially in developing countries".


I
n fact, the IPCC poses a serious problem for Lomborg. He accepts this international conclave of scientists and other experts early on in his book as the arbiter of fact on questions of global warming {3}. Unfortunately for Lomborg, just as he was wrapping up this book the IPCC published, quite apart from the report of its April panel, its most recent five-year update on the economics and engineering of climate change solutions, which undercuts his main argument.

Consider Lomborg's central idea that we can't do much about global warming, and that anything we do attempt will be outrageously expensive. Lomborg bases his analyses on studies of the Kyoto Protocol, negotiated a decade ago. He argues that that protocol would make only the slightest dent during this century in how much the planet warms. This is a debater's point to begin with - the Kyoto Protocol was only supposed to last through 2012; everyone knew it was at best a first step, and this first step was further weakened after attacks from conservative economists claiming that it would bankrupt the earth (attacks that kept the US from ever signing on).

As it turns out, they were almost certainly wrong. Working Group III of the IPCC, which reported at the beginning of May, said at great length that in fact it was technically feasible to reduce emissions to the point where temperature rise could be held below 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, or two degrees Celsius - the point where many climate scientists now believe global warming may turn from a miserable problem into a catastrophe. As the IPCC said:

"Both bottom-up and top-down studies indicate that there is substantial economic potential for the mitigation of global greenhouse gas emissions over the coming decades, that could offset the projected growth of global emissions or reduce emissions below current levels".

The technologies cited as examples are numerous and varied, and reflect the immense amount of research into alternatives that has been conducted in the decade since Lomborg's estimates based on Kyoto data. They include hybrid cars, combined heat and power plants, better lighting, improved crop-plowing techniques, better forestry, higher-efficiency aircraft, and tidal energy, among others. These reflect precisely the kinds of human ingenuity that Lomborg says he wants to encourage, and they undermine the idea that we can't possibly get emissions under control. By contrast, the report shows that following the Lomborg path - which essentially calls for some more funding for research and no governmental action - will see carbon emissions rise as much as ninety percent worldwide by 2030. The IPCC conclusions, it should be said, were compiled by 168 lead authors, 84 contributing authors, and 485 expert peer reviewers, spanning a huge variety of relevant disciplines. This seems to me more convincing than Lomborg's "dream team" of eight economists gathered for a few days in Copenhagen.

Moreover, the IPCC team made it clear in their May report that it was not only feasible to make these changes but economically possible as well. They calculated that if we made this energy transition, the economy would grow very slightly more slowly than before - about 0.12 percent more slowly annually, or three percent total by 2030. In other words, our children would have to wait until Thanksgiving 2030 to be as rich as they would otherwise have been on New Year's Day of that year.

This seems to me very good news - I've long worried that the cost would be substantially higher. But it also makes a good deal of sense. Remember how, say, the auto industry warned that first seatbelts and then airbags would cripple them economically? As soon as the government mandated their use, manufacturers figured out how to make them more cheaply and easily than we would have guessed. We've seen the same results with other pollutants.

The IPCC report, to put it bluntly, eviscerates Lomborg's argument; maybe that's why he devotes but a single paragraph to it in the book, scoffing at "several commentators" who called the estimated reduction of three percent by 2030 "negligible". But though Lomborg will doubtless eventually produce a long disquisition on why he knows better than the 737 experts collaborating on the IPCC project, his bluff has been called. Consider the reaction of his old colleagues at The Economist, which only a few short years ago was underwriting his Copenhagen Consensus work. "Just as mankind caused the problem", the editors said, "so mankind can stop it - and at a reasonable cost". The 0.12 percent a year drag on GDP? "The world would barely notice such figures", said the magazine, hardly noted for its casual attitude about economic growth.

Doubtless scientists and economists will spend many hours working their way through Cool It, flagging the distortions and half-truths as they did with Lomborg's earlier book. In fact, though, its real political intent soon becomes clear, which is to try to paint those who wish to control carbon emissions as well-meaning fools who will inadvertently block improvements in the life of the poor. Just ask yourself this question: Why has Lomborg decided to compare the efficacy of (largely theoretical) funding to stop global warming with his other priorities, like fighting malaria or ensuring clean water? If fighting malaria was his real goal, he could as easily have asked the question: Why don't we divert to it some of the (large and nontheoretical) sums spent on, say, the military? The answer he gave when I asked this question at our dialogue was that he thought military spending was bad and that therefore it made more sense to compare global warming dollars with other "good" spending. But of course this makes less sense. If he thought that money spent for the military was doing damage, then he could kill two birds with one stone by diverting some of it to his other projects. Proposing that, though, would lose him much of the right-wing support that made his earlier book a best seller - he'd no longer be able to count on even The Wall Street Journal editorial page. {4}


In its editorial celebrating the IPCC report, The Economist adds a caveat. Though the new data make clear that "the technology and the economics of this problem are easily soluble", the politics of the situation are much harder. "The problem, of course, is that the numbers work only if they are applied globally ... All the world's big emitters need to do it", and each of them will be tempted to take a pass.

It's in this light that the new book by Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger is of interest, for they address the question of how to persuade Americans to take action on climate change. In October 2004, they collaborated on a provocative essay called "The Death of Environmentalism". Naming names (and quoting Martin Heidegger, Zen koans, and Abraham Lincoln), they accused the environmental movement of failing to deliver progress on global warming for a variety of reasons both structural and philosophical. The authors distributed their views at the annual meeting of the philanthropists who underwrite many of the groups they were attacking. The nastiness that followed was predictable - a certain notoriety for the authors and a great deal of defensive reaction from leaders of environmental organizations.

Now they've produced a book that develops the same argument in much greater depth. It is unremittingly interesting, sharp, and wide-ranging, and it provides a great deal of thoughtful comment for anyone trying to figure out how to rally public support behind action on climate change, or indeed behind any progressive change. It goes much deeper than George Lakoff's widely touted book on reframing issues, Don't Think of an Elephant {5}. It also has certain important limitations that stem in part, I think, from the authors' background as survey researchers.

They work as managing directors of something called American Environics, an offshoot of a Canadian firm that conducts in-depth interviews with North Americans about their attitudes. Much of the research is used by businesses looking for market strategies, but Shellenberger and Nordhaus have put it to use for nonprofit groups as well. Their surveys study attitudes on topics like work, violence, gender, and class, and also on a wide variety of particular issues. They find, for example, that between 1992 and 2004, the percentage of Americans who agreed with the statement "The father of the family must be the master in his own house" went from 42 to 52 percent. But at the same time, the percentage who agreed that "taking care of the home and kids is as much a man's work as women's work" rose from 86 percent in 1992 to 89 percent in 2004. Their synthesis of this huge pile of data leads them to believe that Americans see themselves (as objectively they should) as materially affluent, so that efforts to persuade people to understand themselves (or others) as victims will fail. Americans have simultaneously become more insecure about health care, employment, and retirement, however, as wage growth has stagnated - resulting in an "insecure affluence" that they argue has usually led to more individualism, not to more community solidarity.

In this kind of atmosphere, they argue, progressives must break away from the scripts of the New Deal and the 1960s:

"The time is ripe for the Democratic Party to embrace a new story about America, one focused more on aspiration than complaint, on assets than deficits, and on possibility than limits".

This would not be easy for the liberal wing of the party to accept, and both in their essay and in this book the authors spend plenty of time lampooning the efforts of those they view as anachronistic.


Nordhaus and Shellenberger mount a spirited attack, for instance, on Robert F Kennedy Jr, a leading environmentalist - but also a leading opponent of developing wind turbines in Nantucket Sound. It's not just that he's a rich man who doesn't want to look at windmills off the deck of his summer home, they insist; for them, he's a telling reminder of the problems that arise

"... when one imagines that there is a thing called nature or the environment that is separate from and superior to humans, and that this 'thing' is best represented by those who live nearest to it".

Environmentalists become, in this telling, champions of the static. Opponents of windmills such as Kennedy

"... end up functionally championing the continued dependence of Cape Cod and other Massachusetts communities on a nineteenth-century fuel source to heat their homes and generate electricity".

In the same way, other groups worried about views or noise or density

"... end up blocking the transformation of American communities into vibrant, creative, and high-density cities like New York that are far more sustainable and livable than endless megalopolises like Los Angeles".

Scornful of well-heeled environmentalists, they also attack advocates of "environmental justice" who have complained that their communities are the victims of disproportionate pollution. They contest the data, and argue that smoking and eating bad food are much bigger problems for minority communities. In dealing with asthma, for example, the authors, instead of concentrating on emissions from diesel buses, recommend working to improve "housing, health care, daycare, parenting classes, and violence prevention", which may actually do more to reduce the problem. Such reforms would deal more directly with the goals that residents of the inner city cited when questioned in the surveys of Nordhaus and Shellenberger: "jobs, crime, health care, housing". Over and over again, in a wide variety of settings, they make the same point: environmentalists have to take a much wider view of the world. If you don't want the rainforest in Brazil cut down, you need to be working in the favelas of Sa~o Paulo to prevent the conditions that cause people to migrate toward the Amazon in search of a better life.

This is an important point, marred by overstatement. Kennedy, for instance, is a strong supporter of environmental causes who made a bad call on the windmills near his house - and as Nordhaus and Shellenberger note, many environmentalists in the region have effectively organized to support the turbines, which seem likely to be built. Environmental organizers in urban neighborhoods have in fact already emerged as champions of precisely the kind of campaigns the authors encourage. Not ten miles from where they live, Van Jones, the former head of Oakland's Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, has launched the most tenacious drive yet for precisely the kind of Green Jobs campaign the authors envision. Their caricature of the environmental movement is increasingly out of date, and it will grow more so because of the simple fact that carbon dioxide, the main gas involved in global warming, is so different from older forms of pollution. Carbon monoxide - carbon with one oxygen atom - killed you when you breathed it in. If you put a filter on the back of your car, it disappears from the exhaust stream. There's no filter for carbon dioxide; it's the inevitable result of the combustion of fossil fuel. To deal with it, you need to deal with the dependence on fossil fuel, which means dealing with the economy as a whole, which means dealing with how we live.

The question becomes how best to do that. Citing their research that shows Americans are "aspirational", they advise against anything that smacks of limits. It's when economic growth is really booming, they insist, that we become confident enough to do things like control pollution. They summarize at some length Benjamin Friedman's powerful recent argument for economic expansion, The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth {6}, with its conclusion that good times bring out empathy and generosity in Americans, and that in fact environmental progress has traditionally been a product of surplus - when we felt rich, we'd spend money on cleaning the air.

Unfortunately, at the moment growth means burning more fossil fuel. As Friedman acknowledged (though Nordhaus and Shellenberger don't include this crucial quote in their retelling), carbon dioxide is "the one major environmental contaminant for which no study has ever found any indication of improvement as living standards rise". How can that fact be faced? How to have growth that Americans want, but without limits that they instinctively oppose, and still reduce carbon emissions? Their answer is: investments in new technology. Acknowledge that America "is great at imagining, experimenting, and inventing the future", and then start spending. They cite examples ranging from the nuclear weapons program to the invention of the Internet to show what government money can do, and argue that too many clean-energy advocates focus on caps instead:

"Neither Democratic leaders in Congress nor Democratic presidential candidates can convincingly speak to American greatness as long as they refuse to put their money where their mouths are".


The need for new technology is obviously urgent - it's precisely what the IPCC economists are counting on in the data cited above. The question is how best to mobilize that investment. Some of it can and should come from government spending, but there's probably as much or more to be realized by setting the private sector to work. That is precisely what the series of caps on carbon now under consideration are supposed to do. If we say that next year American industry will only be able to produce 98 percent of the carbon it produced this year, and the year after that the number will be 95 percent and the year after that 91 percent, and if we let industries trade among themselves the carbon allotments they buy at auction - buying it, in effect, from we the people who each own some share of the atmosphere - then we should see the logic of the market start to wring those carbon reductions out of the economy relatively quickly. As The Economist makes clear, this system will work much better once it is international - once, that is, some expanded form of Kyoto is adopted by treaty, something that can't happen until the greatest carbon culprit, the US, leads by taking serious action here at home. Government can and should invest, especially to make sure that the energy transition produces the kind of jobs that many Americans really need, but its larger role is to set in place the caps that will speed the whole process. And speed is of the essence because, pace Lomborg, each new round of scientific analysis makes clear just how fast global warming is coming at us.

The antipathy of Shellenberger and Nordhaus to placing limits on carbon emissions, an antipathy based on their fervent belief in what they hear in their surveys, locks them into accepting slower progress than is necessary and possible. No one thinks we can stop global warming, but the IPCC data makes it clear that it is still possible - if we begin immediately and take dramatic steps to limit carbon emissions - to hold it below the thresholds that signal catastrophe. The authors concede too much to the enemies of regulation, a concession they're willing to make partly because they've convinced themselves that clinging to the static biological world we were born into is impossibly conservative. Global warming, they write,

"... will force human societies to adapt in all sorts of ways, not the least of which could be bioengineering ourselves and our environments to survive and thrive on an increasingly hot and potentially less hospitable planet".

This is improbable; indeed it sounds flaky.

But in the reams of analysis provided by Nordhaus and Shellenberger, there are also many kernels of hope for even faster progress than technology alone can provide. From their surveys, they find that Americans not only desire more choice and autonomy and individualism, but also want some kind of functioning community and support system (their analysis of the rise of evangelical churches is particularly strong).

The first group of attitudes, favoring individual choice, may make the acceptance of limits more difficult; but the second group holds out some real possibilities - and it jibes with much new research from economists, psychologists, and sociologists about the dissatisfaction evident among increasingly alienated and disconnected Americans. Consider the fact that the average Western European uses half as much energy as the average American (and hence produces half as much carbon dioxide). Half is a big proportion, especially when you consider that it comes not from any new technology but instead from somewhat different social arrangements. Europeans have decided to, say, invest in building cities that draw people in instead of flinging them out to sprawling suburbs, and invest in mass transit that people then actually take. This kind of investment may produce quicker returns than high-tech R&D; at the very least, it's urgently important that these kinds of societies (where reported rates of human satisfaction are sharply higher than in the US) be held up to China, India, and the rest of the developing world, in place of our careening model. In addition, given that we will certainly be facing a disrupted planet, tighter human communities are probably a better bet for "surviving and thriving" than bioengineering to achieve different kinds of bodies.


After grappling with these weighty treatises, it's a relief to read two short books that cover less ground. Kerry Emanuel is the foremost hurricane scientist in the US; his original research has helped us understand and demonstrate the link between global warming and storminess. In an epic feat of concision, he manages in eighty-five very small pages to explain the state of the science of climate change, concluding on the optimistic note that

"... the extremists [who deprecate the threat of climate change] are being exposed and relegated to the sidelines, and when the media stop amplifying their views, their political counterparts will have nothing left to stand on".


In the best essay from the collection edited by Joseph DiMento and Pamela Doughman, the New York Times climate reporter Andrew Revkin makes it clear that finally (and no small part thanks to his own reports) the press and television are starting to do exactly that. One of the most important jobs of journalists at the moment, he writes, is

"... to drive home that once a core body of understanding has accumulated over decades on an issue - as is the case with human-forced climate change - society can use it as a foundation for policies and choices".

Indeed.


Notes

{1} His replies can be found at www.lomborg.com.

{2} Readers wishing to view that encounter on line may visit maozi.middlebury.edu.

{3} He needs to do this because otherwise he would have to contend with the recent work of the NASA climatologist James Hansen, indicating that the ice sheets of Greenland and the West Antarctic may be sliding into the sea much faster than previously imagined and raising the possibility of a horrific rise in sea level during this century. The IPCC, which considers the peer-reviewed research of the previous five years, remains agnostic on Hansen's new work and presumably won't offer its opinion for another half-decade, which allows Lomborg in turn to ridicule Al Gore as a hysteric for publicizing it. See James Hansen, "The Threat to the Planet", The New York Review, July 13, 2006.

{4} Interestingly, the new owner of The Wall Street Journal, Rupert Murdoch, rattled by an epochal drought in his native Australia, has announced that his entire empire will soon be carbon-neutral.

{5} Chelsea Green, 2004.

{6} Knopf, 2005.


Copyright (c) 1963-2007 NYREV, Inc. All rights reserved. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced without the permission of the publisher. Illustrations copyright (c) David Levine unless otherwise noted; unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. Please contact web@nybooks.com with any questions about this site. The cover date of the next issue of The New York Review of Books will be October 25 2007.

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/20676


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Why Climate Change Can't Be Stopped

Environmental advocates have finally managed to put the issue of global warming at the top of the world's agenda. But the scientific, economic, and political realities may mean that their efforts are too little, too late.

by Paul J Saunders and Vaughan Turekian

Foreign Policy (September 2007)


As the world's leaders gather in New York this week to discuss climate change, you're going to hear a lot of well-intentioned talk about how to stop global warming. From the United Nations, Bill Clinton, and even the Bush administration, you'll hear about how certain mechanisms - cap-and-trade systems for greenhouse gas emissions, carbon taxes, and research and development plans for new energy technologies - can fit into some sort of global emissions reduction agreement to stop climate change. Many of these ideas will be innovative and necessary; some of them will be poorly thought out. But one thing binds them together: They all come much too late.

For understandable reasons, environmental advocates don't like to concede this point. Eager to force deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, many of them hype the consequences of climate change - in some cases, well beyond what is supported by the facts - to build political support. Their expensive policy preferences are attractive if they are able to convince voters that if they make economic sacrifices for the environment, they have a reasonable chance of halting, or at least considerably slowing, climate change. But this case is becoming harder, if not impossible, to make.

To be sure, scientific studies and news reports make it clear that climate change is already happening, with greenhouse gas emissions as a significant driver of this change. Arctic ice has now melted sufficiently to open up the fabled Northwest Passage, provoking public jockeying between Russian and Canadian officials over potential oil and gas deposits. At the same time, the US Department of Interior is considering placing polar bears on the endangered species list as a result of global warming. Extreme weather events have become more common, such as flooding in Africa and forest fires in the western United States.

New emissions limits in the United States and other major emitters such as Europe's key economies and Japan may slow the processes driving these events. But the mounting scientific evidence, coupled along with economic and political realities, increasingly suggests that humanity's opportunity to prevent, stop, or reverse the long-term impacts of climate change has slipped away. In fact, while greenhouse gas intensity (emissions per unit of gross domestic product) of both developed and developing economies has decreased significantly over the past decade as a result of greater efficiency measures, overall greenhouse gas emissions have nevertheless continued to rise. That's because as economies grow, they consume more energy and produce more carbon dioxide. And, obviously, each country wants its own economy to grow.

While some might argue that great reductions can be made in greenhouse gas emissions using current technologies (particularly by increasing efficiency), this is still debated within the scientific community. This argument assumes, among other things, that companies replace their current capital stock with the most efficient available today - something that is not likely to occur in the near future even in developed countries due to its considerable cost. For this reason, even if the Bush administration has been slow to publicly admit that human-induced climate change is real, it has been fundamentally right to focus on developing new technologies that might sever the relationship between energy consumption and emissions.

Unfortunately, given the scale and complexity of modern economies and the time required for new technologies to displace older ones, only a stunning technological breakthrough will allow for reductions in emissions that are sufficiently deep to stop climate change. According to Britain's Stern report, stabilizing greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at 550 parts per million - twice pre-industrial levels, a level at which most believe there is already a higher probability of major climate disruptions - would require stopping the global growth in emissions by 2020 and reducing emissions by 2.5 percent per year after that. The longer it takes to stop the growth in emissions, the deeper the eventual cuts need to be.

And while the United States leads the world in investment in new energy technologies, spending nearly $3 billion in 2007, it would be irresponsible for us to count on an energy technology miracle to save the day. Excitement over increasingly "green" business practices is likewise misplaced; companies will do what they need to do to increase their profits and - when the cost is modest - to improve their images. This has reduced emissions and will continue to do so. But without meaningful international agreements that create both unrealistically tight limits and market mechanisms, the cuts will ultimately be marginal rather than decisive.

Without a technological or economic miracle, it would take a political miracle to reach an international agreement that would mandate the necessary emissions cuts to reverse the momentum behind our evolving global climate system. But once again, realities get in the way. The US Congress is too divided to pass legislation sufficiently tough to make a major difference. And although some hope that regional or state-level cap-and trade systems could sharply reduce US emissions in the absence of federal action, this is also unlikely because states face many of the same problems that challenge national governments. First and foremost, any state that imposes emissions limits that are too tight in comparison with its neighbors' are likely to simply export their emissions without it resulting in a major overall reduction.

The international political environment also makes truly significant emissions cuts very unlikely. In 2010, according to the US Energy Information Administration, developing countries will emit nearly twenty percent more carbon dioxide than developed countries. Indeed, only in China (and perhaps India) would emissions limits or cuts make more of a difference than in the United States.

By one estimate, China has already surpassed America in emissions to become the world's leader and, with sustained high growth rates, will open the gap even further. In fact, if China grows at eight percent for the next nine years, its economy will double in size - and its greenhouse gas emissions can be expected roughly to double as well. Moreover, as China's economy expands, it is turning increasingly to carbon-laden coal for electricity. And although China's energy intensity (energy consumed per unit of economic output) has decreased by nearly five percent per year for the last two decades as a result of greater efficiency, it is still nearly seven times that of the United States, according to the World Bank. At this rate, China's growth trajectory could add the equivalent pollution of another present-day United States to the climate system in a little more than a decade.

Dollar for dollar, the most efficient way to cut global greenhouse gas emissions would be, in theory, to invest hundreds of billions of dollars to improve China's energy efficiency. But Congress would never support such an approach. After all, which members of Congress would vote to undercut the competitiveness of US companies, especially in the face of a weak domestic economy, public anger over outsourcing, China's currency value, and the US trade deficit with China? More broadly, how long will voters in Europe and Japan, which have done the most to limit emissions, be prepared to make sacrifices for the global climate if they believe they are alone in doing so?

A realistic look at climate change suggests that it is time to change the debate. In 2005, a paper published by the UN Environment Program put average global economic losses due to "great weather disasters" at $100 billion per year, and projected that it was increasing at about six percent per year - enough to double every twelve years, and to total $2 trillion for the period from 2007 to 2020. Policy makers in the United States and elsewhere must start hedging their bets and prepare us to live in this new world. This emphatically does not mean giving up on efforts to slow climate change, which could still measurably reduce the costs of protecting the people and infrastructure most vulnerable to higher temperatures and new weather patterns. Nor should it suggest that the task of adaptation will be easy or cheap. World leaders will face many of the same dilemmas that complicate the current debate: Developed countries, which have produced most of the human-origin carbon dioxide in the air, will be in the best position to cope with climate change and developing countries will want them to bear a disproportionate financial burden for its consequences.

Still, we do have some of the tools we will need already. International lenders like the World Bank have only begun to invest in projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions; they need to give greater emphasis to projects that limit developing countries' vulnerabilities to climate change. The scientific community will need to do a much better job of predicting climate impacts at a regional and local scale. Governments will need to support this process, to collect and assess the information that results, and develop their own plans. Riding out the consequences of a warming world will be difficult, and we need to prepare now.

_____

Paul J Saunders is executive director of the Nixon Center and associate publisher of The National Interest.

Vaughan Turekian is chief international officer at the American Association for the Advancement of Science and has a PhD in atmospheric geochemistry. They served together as aides to the under secretary of state for global affairs during the Bush administration from 2003 to 2005.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3980


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Overextension:

Our American way of life is not sustainable

by Chris Clugston

Culture Change (September 2007)

For a full graphical version of this article, please see http://culturechange.org/cms/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=124&Itemid=2#cont

Editor's Note: Chris Clugston is the kind of independent researcher and commentator who has the corporate and academic background to put numbers together. Fortunately, it is for the big picture. Few environmentalists are willing to tackle overpopulation, but Clugston actually quantifies it.
-- Jan Lundberg


Through our relentless pursuit of the American Dream and our blind adherence to our American way of life, we have become overextended - we have exceeded America's capacity to sustainably support our existing population at our current standard of living. That is, the natural resources and economic resources required to support our ever-increasing consumption levels by our ever-expanding population are simply not available; nor is the capacity of our habitat sufficient to assimilate the ever-increasing amounts of waste disgorged by our ever-expanding population.

To compound our predicament, we have become "irreversibly" overextended - we are past the point of "painless" return. We have so consistently and drastically overshot our sustainable consumption and population levels that returning to sustainable levels will necessarily involve significant lifestyle disruptions - living standard degradation, population level reduction, and the possible loss of sovereignty; there can be no "soft landing".

Note: We are temporarily able to maintain prosperity and growth, despite our overextended condition, because the adverse effects associated with our continuously accumulating ecological and economic indiscretions - which enable our current prosperity and growth - have yet to be felt. We are essentially living on borrowed time.


Quantifying American Overextension

In order to fully appreciate the extent to which America is overextended and to understand why our American way of life is not sustainable, it is necessary to quantify American overextension; that is, to compute the difference between our current consumption and population levels, and the consumption and population levels at which America could subsist sustainably and self-sufficiently going forward into the future.

One method by which these metrics can be determined is through the use of "ecological footprint" data.


Ecological Footprint

The Global Footprint Network [GFN] defines ecological footprint as "a resource management tool that measures how much land and water area a human population requires to produce the resources it consumes and to absorb its wastes under prevailing technology". Thus, a country's ecological footprint equals the earth's surface area required to produce the resources consumed by its population and to assimilate the waste generated by its population, over the course of a year.

For example, by 2003 GFN calculations, Iraq had a per capita ecological footprint of 2.5 acres, China 4.0 acres, India 1.7 acres, UK 13.8 acres, world average 5.4 acres - and America 24.0 acres.

This means that, on average, approximately 24 acres of planet earth's surface area are required to produce the resources consumed and to assimilate the waste generated by every American each year. Interestingly, America's "biocapacity", the domestic US surface area available to produce resources for consumption and to assimilate resulting waste, is only 11.6 acres per capita - leaving an "ecological deficit" of 12.4 acres per capita.

This means that over half of America's current subsistence - production of the resources that we consume and assimilation of the waste that we generate - is enabled through excessive consumption; that is, by "importing biocapacity, liquidating existing stocks of ecological capital, or allowing wastes to accumulate and ecosystems to degrade" [quote from GFN website].

In fact, America has been running increasingly large annual ecological deficits since the 1960s.


US Ecological Footprint

The ecological footprint analysis conducted by Redefining Progress [RP], an organization that defines ecological footprint in somewhat broader terms, is even more alarming. RP calculated America's 2001 per capita ecological footprint to be 267 acres and our per capita biocapacity to be 50 acres, leaving a per capita ecological deficit of 217 acres.

This indicates that over eighty percent of America's current subsistence is enabled by excessive consumption!


Sustainable US Consumption and Population Levels

How does ecological footprint data translate into sustainable US consumption levels and population levels? America's 2006 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was approximately $13.2 trillion - which can be considered a financial proxy for our "current consumption level". At the end of 2006, America's population stood at approximately 300 million, which can be considered our "current population level".


Using GFN Data

According to the GFN ecological footprint analysis, America's biocapacity, our domestic surface area available to produce resources for consumption and to assimilate resulting waste, currently provides for only 48% of our actual annual subsistence; 52% of our annual subsistence is enabled by importing biocapacity, drawing down resource reserves, and degrading our habitat.

Therefore, in order to live sustainably and self-sufficiently within the constraints imposed by our domestic US biocapacity, while maintaining an average living standard roughly comparable to that which we enjoy today, we would have to reduce our aggregate annual consumption level and total population level by approximately 52%.

The result would be an American population of approximately 144 million people consuming at an aggregate annual rate of approximately $6.3 trillion. Alternatively, if we chose to maintain a US population of 300 million people, given a total GDP of $6.3 trillion, our average material standard of living (consumption level), as defined by annual per capita GDP, would decline from its current $44,000 to approximately $21,000.


Using RP Data

According to the RP ecological footprint analysis, America's domestic biocapacity currently provides for only nineteen percent of our actual annual subsistence. In order to live sustainably and self-sufficiently in the RP case, while maintaining an average living standard comparable to that which we enjoy today, we would have to reduce our aggregate annual consumption level and total population level by approximately 81%.

The result in this case would be an American population of approximately 57 million people consuming at an aggregate annual rate of approximately $2.5 trillion. If we chose instead to maintain a US population of 300 million, given a total GDP of $2.5 trillion, our average standard of living (consumption level), as defined by annual per capita GDP, would decline from $44,000 to approximately $8,300.


The Real "Inconvenient Truth": America is Irreversibly Overextended

By either account, America is severely - irreversibly - overextended. As a point of reference, the biocapacity that would be required to enable the entire world's population to consume resources and to generate waste on the same level as America's population is equivalent to six earths! [Data Source: Redefining Progress]

Yet we remain steadfast in our refusal to acknowledge our overextended condition, its unsustainable nature, and its inevitable result - a contraction, most probably apocalyptic, characterized by catastrophic living standard degradation and population level reduction.


We are the Problem

As more Americans come to realize that there is something terribly wrong with the American status quo, we tend to project rather than accept blame for our predicament. We attempt to blame "the government" or "big business" for the unfortunate but inevitable consequences associated with our relentless pursuit of the American Dream.

This convenient but erroneous line of reasoning creates the mistaken impression that we, the American public, are the innocent victims of dysfunctional policies and initiatives perpetrated on us by external forces beyond our control - it's "them", not "us". Unfortunately, this misguided perspective serves only to obscure the real cause associated with our current dilemma, and to totally undermine effective solutions.

We must understand that our governments and corporations are not responsible for the fact that we have adopted an unsustainable lifestyle paradigm, our American way of life, as our means to pursue the illusory Amerikan Dream. Politicians and business executives are merely our elected representatives - we elect politicians with our votes and business executives with our dollars.

If truth, our representatives are doing exactly what we have elected them to do; they are attempting to maintain at any cost our American way of life - our distorted "reality" within which we can continue to live beyond our means and perpetuate our inflated lifestyles. And, they will do whatever they can on our behalf, as we do individually, to achieve this goal.

We are not the innocent victims of deranged politicians and corporate executives and their arbitrarily imposed policies and initiatives; we are the beneficiaries of their ecological and economic indiscretions on our behalf. And we have chosen these people to represent us precisely because they will continue to commit such indiscretions on our behalf.

What we have here is a symbiotic relationship between a self-absorbed, self-entitled American public and our political and economic representatives, to whom we have ascribed the privileged status of "leaders". We have willingly abdicated total responsibility for our very existence at the societal level to our leaders, in exchange for "perpetual entitlement" to our American way of life at the individual level.


The Solution is "Unacceptable"

If we are to avert catastrophic disaster, we must fundamentally alter our existing orientation and dysfunctional behavior - from thoughtlessly exploiting our natural and economic resources, to judiciously consuming these resources in a manner that will ensure our long-term survival.

We must all reject our American way of life, living unsustainably beyond our means - ecologically and economically, individually and societally - for a lifestyle in which we choose to live sustainably within our means. That is, we must drastically reduce our consumption level and modify our consumption mix, through a combination of population and material living standard reduction - to an aggregate consumption level and mix that are consistent with US biocapacity. At that point, our generation and future generations will be able to subsist indefinitely on renewable, domestically-available, natural and economic resources.

Not likely ...

"The American way of life is not negotiable".
-- President George H W Bush, Earth Summit, Rio de Janeiro, 1992

... a statement that is unthinkingly endorsed - implicitly, if not explicitly - by nearly all Americans.

We all claim to be willing to "do our share" - as long as it doesn't negatively impact our material standard of living - our inflated American lifestyles - our American way of life. But it must - significantly.


The Consequences Are Inescapable

As long as we adhere blindly to our American way of life and choose to live unsustainably beyond our means, we cannot possibly take meaningful action to terminate our dysfunctional behavior - to cease the ecological and economic indiscretions that have caused us to become irreversibly overextended.

Barring an almost inconceivable series of serendipitous events - unforeseen technological breakthroughs, major efficiency improvements, miraculous discoveries, and just plain luck - we will reach an ecological or economic limit that will trigger a debilitating contraction in the not-too-distant future - possibly within five years, probably within fifteen years, and almost certainly within 25 years.

"The 'developed' nations have been widely regarded as previews of the future condition of the 'underdeveloped' countries. It would have been more accurate to reverse the picture"
-- William Catton Jr, Overshoot (University of Illinois Press, 1982), page 175


References:

Global Footprint Network footprintnetwork.org

Redefining Progress rprogress.org

_____

The body of Chris Clugston's work is at wakeupamerika.com. Prior to founding Wake Up Amerika! Chris spent over thirty years working with information technology sector companies in marketing, sales, finance, M&A, and general management - the last twenty as a corporate chief executive and management consultant. He received an AB/Political Science, Magna Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Penn State University, and an MBA/Finance with High Distinction from Temple University in Philadelphia. The Oil Drum and Energy Bulletin recently posted his paper "Global Peak Energy - Implications for Future Populations".

http://culturechange.org/cms/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=124&Itemid=2#cont


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Friday, September 28, 2007

Green papers, white lies, hot air

Britain's policy on global warming remains mired in confusion, with too much debate and too little action. But there is a solution ...

by Mark Lynas

New Statesman (September 20 2007)


When the most powerful woman on the planet speaks, it's a good idea to listen. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, who recently knocked Condoleezza Rice off Forbes's top spot for powerful women, suggested an innovative solution to climate change late last month. Speaking in the Japanese city of Kyoto, where the 1997 protocol was signed, the German chancellor proposed an equal-rights framework for carbon emissions, where each country would get emissions entitlements assigned on the basis of its population.

The UK's Environment Secretary, Hilary Benn, shows no sign of having heard Merkel's words.

The idea that a global deal to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions must involve a convergence to equal per-capita allocations is not new: it is textbook "contraction and convergence" (C&C) - a climate policy framework first advanced by Aubrey Meyer of the Global Commons Institute more than a decade ago, and subsequently supported by numerous influential people, from the Indian prime minister to the Archbishop of Canterbury. As Merkel pointed out, only C&C offers a fair basis for bringing developing countries such as India and China into a future post-Kyoto emissions framework. Yvo de Boer, the UN's top climate-change official, believes the plan to be the "only equitable, ultimate solution".

We have only eight years to go before the UN's target date when greenhouse gases must start to decline if we are to have a realistic chance of limiting eventual global warming to two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels (as the EU, among many others, demands). Yet Britain's climate policy remains mired in confusion.

Gordon Brown and Hilary Benn have inherited Blair's old target of a sixty per cent reduction by 2050, but the truth is that, under an equitable framework such as C&C, Britain would need an 85 per cent cut because of our relatively small population and high emissions. This is a simple piece of mathematics that government ministers show no sign of having considered.

At this year's Labour party conference, with policy proposals flying around for every issue under the sun, this is perhaps the most important. If Brown's government were to join Germany, India and most African countries in proposing a C&C framework to supersede Kyoto when its first phase expires in 2012, the world would have taken its biggest step forward since the Climate Change Convention was first agreed at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, way back in 1992.

Brown talks of equity as one of his guiding moral principles, and global warming provides a chance like no other. Equity is not just desirable, but essential if climatic equilibrium is to be maintained.

To their credit, the Liberal Democrats have already recognised this. Their Zero Carbon Britain policy document, released to media indifference last month, explicitly puts C&C at the heart of government policy - recognising that without setting a global framework for calculating Britain's fair share of a worldwide emissions budget, any UK target is meaningless.

Even without a clear long-term target, some very big decisions are looming that will have consequences for decades - and, indeed, centuries - to come. First, Gordon Brown needs to make it clear to the electricity industry that the era of coal as a fuel source for power generation is over. It is insane that, while we lecture others at international gatherings about their need to go low-carbon, a single British power station (Drax in Yorkshire) is allowed to continue emitting more carbon dioxide from a single chimney than at least 100 countries.

Worse, the government seems poised to agree to a new round of coal-fired power generation: RWE npower is proposing to spend GBP 1 billion on building a coal-burning plant at Tilbury in Essex, while E.ON UK (which owns Powergen) wants to replace its ageing Kingsnorth plant in Kent with two new 800-megawatt coal-burning units. Other power companies are watching closely, ready to advance plans for yet more new coal plants. Never mind the bitter row over nuclear power: the government's decision on whether to allow this new coal rush is far more significant in terms of Britain's impact on climate change.


Blue-sky thinking

With dirty power plants on the horizon, the clean energy revolution looks stalled. Onshore windfarms are held up by Land Rover-driving nimbies worried about their postcard views; offshore wind investment is languishing because of a lack of government incentives. The Renewables Obligation scheme is complex and gives little long-term certainty and most experts now agree it should be replaced by a feed-in tariff system as used in Germany and Spain.

Tellingly, both these countries have surged ahead with renewable power in recent years. For small generators, government policy has been little short of disastrous: the poorly funded Low Carbon Buildings Programme (LCBP) has succeeded so far only in putting off prospective householders and driving solar companies into bankruptcy. Here, too, a feed-in law could help, by guaranteeing a high long-term return on investment for anyone who decides to make the leap of investing in rooftop solar arrays or other microgeneration technologies.

Every mile of M1 widening soaks up the same amount of government money as the entire LCBP, as I have written before. Yet this hosing of public funds at hugely polluting motorways may be about to get worse: the government is considering awarding a GBP 3 billion contract - the largest ever - for widening the M6 between Birmingham and Manchester. This appalling waste of money can still be stopped, and we should look to this decision for a true indication of whether Labour intends to get serious about global warming.

The long-awaited Climate Bill is supposed to straighten out these contradictions by setting a national budget for carbon emissions and then forcing the government to make us all stick to it. Whether this is done by ramping up carbon taxes or by bringing in personal carbon allowances, the government is going to have to take measures at some stage to discourage excessive carbon consumption at the individual level.

The Climate Bill as proposed also contains a loophole - one big enough to fly a jet airliner through. By exempting aviation from our national carbon budget, the government will allow millions more tonnes of carbon to leak into the atmosphere, negating efforts in other sectors of the economy.

International negotiations will be key to closing this loophole but, in the meantime, Brown could send a clear sign of the changing times by putting the brakes on airport expansion. This is where true climate policy is made - in tarmac and hard cash, not green papers and white lies.

http://www.newstatesman.com/200709200027


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

War is Bad for Logic

and Other Living Things

by Ted Rall


www.tedrall.com (September 18 2007)


"What non-violent antiwar activists are unable to realize", writes Peter Gelderloos, "is that the most important resistance, probably the only significant resistance, to the occupation of Iraq is the resistance being waged by the Iraqi people themselves". This comes from a relatively tangential passage in a thought-provoking book, How Non-Violence Protects the State (South End Press, 2005), that will get a more detailed look in a future column.

Although its appearance in The Nation guaranteed it would receive scant notice, a July 30 essay by Alexander Cockburn was one of the first to seriously address the most troubling internal contradiction of the anti-Iraq War left. War, everyone knows, is a zero-sum game. For one side to win, the other has to lose. If you "support our troops" you hope, at minimum, for their safe return. But each day a US soldier survives at the front means another day he will occupy Iraq and another day he can kill Iraqi resistance forces. Supporting the troops, as right-wingers say, requires supporting their mission. Which means opposing the guys who are trying to kill them.

Cockburn quoted antiwar activist Lawrence McGuire: "The grand taboo of the antiwar movement is to show the slightest empathy for the resistance fighters in Iraq. They are never mentioned as people for whom we should show concern, much less admiration. But of course, if you are going to sympathize with the US soldiers, who are fighting a war of aggression, then surely you should also [my emphasis] sympathize with the soldiers who are fighting for their homeland." (An intellectually honest person would substitute "instead" for "also".)

It kills me to say this, but neocon madman William Kristol was correct when he wrote in The Weekly Standard: "What mattered to the left was that it was dangerous politically not to 'support the troops'. Of course the antiwar left hated what the troops were doing ... So 'supporting the troops' meant feeling sorry for them, or pretending to."

The 2004 discussion over US soldiers who bought their own body plates, and resorted to "hillbilly armor" to protect their Humvees from roadside bombs, was a case in point. Antiwar pundits, including me, tried to drive a wedge between the Bush Administration and the military by pointing out that the Pentagon was pinching pennies at the expense of soldiers' lives. But what if you're an Iraqi? You risk your own life every time you place an IED along the "Highway of Death" between Baghdad and the airport. The more Americans you blow up, the closer you come to achieving your goal of liberating Iraq. The last thing you need is "antiwar" Americans agitating for stronger armor plates!

A parallel to World War II, "the good war" depicted in countless movies, is useful. You're a German citizen living in Berlin, and you hate the Nazis. You're against the war. Do you pray for the SS? Or the French Resistance? You can't do both. (Well, you could - but you'd be an idiot.)

The moral quandary forced upon the left is epitomized by Phyllis Bennis, an in-the-box wonk for the Institute for Policy Studies. "Certainly", she allows, "the Iraqi people have the right to resist an illegal occupation, including military resistance". Which is, as they said in the 1970s, mighty white of her. "But as a whole", she continues, "what is understood to be 'the Iraqi resistance' against the US occupation is a disaggregated and diverse set of largely unconnected factions, in which the various often-antagonistic armed movements (including some who attack Iraqi civilians as much as they do occupation troops) hold pride of place. There is no unified leadership that can speak for 'the resistance', there is no NLF or ANC or FMLN that can claim real leadership and is accountable to the Iraqi population as a whole."

For most of World War II, the same was true of the French Resistance (history grants them the upper-case "R") too. Communists, socialists and even monarchists fought the Germans - and each other - until Charles de Gaulle's center-right faction prodded, bullied and ultimately muscled out his (more popular and more progressive) rivals. There were, as in Iraq today, French criminal gangs who fought solely for money. If this was 1943 and Bennis and other mainstream liberals were anti-Nazi Germans, would they "support what is called 'the French resistance'"?

As their Iraqi counterparts do today, the Free French carried out what the press of the period called "terrorist attacks". Kidnappings, assassinations and bombings were usually directed at government officials, German troops, and French collaborators - but civilians were also killed. So why does the antiwar left find the Iraqis distasteful?

Gelderloos argues that the post-Vietnam American left is hard-wired with reflexive pacifism, denying that violent militancy can ever be a valid tactic, even when faced with horrific oppression. Liberals frequently express disapproval of protestors who smashed windows at the 1999 World Trade Organization meeting in Seattle, and the Earth Liberation Front's (ELF) torching of SUVs at auto dealerships - even though no one got hurt.

Knee-jerk non-violence partly explains the left's reluctance to embrace the Iraqi resistance. Nationalism/patriotism is another factor. Who wants to see more funerals of American soldiers? And who wants to be smeared as the next "Hanoi Jane"?

When "asked who I think will then take power [after US forces leave Iraq]", Bennis writes, "the only thing I can anticipate with any confidence is that first, I probably won't like them very much because they're likely to have a far more religious orientation than I like but that second, it's not up to me to choose who governs Iraq".

The Islamist and/or totalitarian ideology of many of Iraq's anti-US factions is a turn-off to the secular American left. The Guardian's Jonathan Freedland worried aloud in late 2003, when the war against the occupation of Iraq heated up: "Not all of Iraq's resistance will fit [a] romantic, maquis image. Some will be Baathist holdouts, Saddamites who once served as henchmen to a murderous dictator. No progressive should want to see these villains land a blow on British or American forces." This year, in the socialist New Politics, Stephen Shalom noted that "to give our automatic support to any opponent of US imperialism means we should have supported the Taliban in 2001 or Saddam Hussein in 2003".

Since war is a zero-sum game, it's our guys or theirs. "Support the troops by bringing them home" is an empty slogan that belies reality. With both political parties supporting the war, US troops are not going to come home any time soon. As Gelderloos writes: "The approach of the US antiwar movement in relation to the Iraqi resistance does not merely qualify as bad strategy; it reveals a total lack of strategy, and it is something we need to fix". It also exposes an ugly truth about antiwar lefties. They don't believe in national self-determination any more than George W Bush and Dick Cheney.

_____

Ted Rall is the author of the book America Gone Wild (Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2006), which includes a detailed behind-the-scenes look at the most controversial political cartoons of the post-9/11 era.

Copyright 2007 Ted Rall

http://www.uexpress.com/tedrall/


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Free Trade, Open Immigration Dogmas Must Be Rethought

by Paul Craig Roberts {1}

vdare.com (August 16 2007)


At a time when even the Wall Street Journal {2} has disappeared into the maw of a huge media conglomerate, the New York Times remains an independent newspaper. But it doesn't show any independence in reporting or in thought.

The Times issued a mea culpa for letting its reporter, Judith Miller {3}, misinform readers about Iraq {4}, thus helping the neoconservatives {5} set the stage for their invasion. Now the Times' reporting on Iran seems to be repeating the mistake. After the US commits another senseless act of naked aggression by bombing Iran, will the Times publish another mea culpa?

The Times editorials also serve as conduits for propaganda. On August 13, a Times editorial jumped on China for "irresponsible threats" {6} that threaten free trade. The Times' editorialists do not understand that the offshoring of American jobs, which the Times mistakenly thinks is free trade, is a far greater threat to America than a reminder from the Chinese, who are tired of US bullying, that China {7} is America's banker {8}.

Let's briefly review the "China threat" and then turn to the real problem.

Members of the US government believe, as do many Americans, that the Chinese currency is undervalued relative to the US dollar and that this is the reason for America's large trade deficit with China. Pressure continues to be applied to China to revalue its currency in order to reduce its trade advantage over goods made in the US.

The pressure put on China is misdirected. The exchange rate is not the main cause of the US trade deficit with China. The costs of labor, regulation and harassment are far lower in China, and US corporations have offshored their production {9} to China in order to benefit from these lower costs. When a company shifts its production from the US to a foreign country, it transforms US GDP into imports. Every time a US company offshores goods and services, it adds to the US trade deficit.

Clearly, it is a mistake for the US government and economists to think of the imbalance as if it were produced by Chinese companies underselling goods produced by US companies in America. The imbalance is the result of US companies producing their goods in China {10} and selling them in America.

Many believe the solution is to force China to revalue its currency, thereby driving up the prices of seventy percent of the goods on Wal-Mart shelves. Mysteriously, members of the US government believe that it would help the US consumer, who is as dependent on imported manufactured goods as he is on imported energy, to be charged higher prices.

China believes that the exchange rate is not the cause of US offshoring and opposes any rapid change in its currency's value. In a message issued in order to tell the US to ease off the public bullying, China reminded Washington that the US doesn't hold all the cards.

The NYT editorial expresses the concern that China's "threat" will cause protectionist US lawmakers to stick on tariffs and start a trade war. "Free trade, free market" economists rush to tell us how bad this would be for US consumers: A tariff would raise the price of consumer goods.

The free market economists don't tell us that dollar depreciation would have the same effect. Goods made in China would go up thirty percent in price if a thirty percent tariff was placed on them, and the goods would go up thirty percent in price if the value of the Chinese currency rises thirty percent against the dollar.

So, why all the fuss about tariffs?

The fuss about tariffs makes even less sense once one realizes that the purpose of tariffs is to protect domestically produced goods from cheaper imports. However, US tariffs today would be imposed on the offshored production of US firms. In the era of offshoring, corporations are not a constituency for tariffs.

Tariffs would benefit American labor, something that the US Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, and the Republican Party would strongly oppose. A wage equalization tariff would wipe out much of the advantage of offshoring. Profits would come down, and with lower profits would come lower CEO compensation and shareholder returns.

Obviously, the corporate interests and Wall Street do not want any tariffs.

The NYT and "free trade" economists haven't caught on, because they mistakenly think that offshoring is trade. In fact, offshoring is labor arbitrage. US labor is simply removed from production functions that produce goods and services for US markets and replaced with foreign labor. No trade is involved. Instead of being produced in America, US brand names sold in America are produced in China.

It is not China's fault that American corporations have so little regard for their employees and fellow citizens that they destroy their economic opportunities and give them to foreigners instead.

It is paradoxical that everyone is blaming China for the behavior of American firms. What is China supposed to do, close its borders to foreign capital?

When free market economists align, as they have done, with foreigners against American citizens, they destroy their credibility and the future of economic freedom. Recently, the Independent Institute, with which I am associated, stressed that free market associations "have defended completely open immigration and free markets in labor" {11}, emphasizing that 500 economists signed the Independent Institute's Open Letter on Immigration in behalf of open immigration.

Such a policy is satisfying to some in its ideological purity. But what it means in practice is that the Americans, who are displaced in their professional and manufacturing jobs by offshoring and work visas for foreigners, also cannot find work in the unskilled and semi-skilled jobs taken over by illegal immigrants. A free market policy that gives the bird to American labor is not going to win acceptance by the population. Such a policy serves only the owners of capital and its senior managers.

Free market economists will dispute this conclusion. They claim that offshoring and unrestricted immigration provide consumers with cheaper prices in the market place. What the free market economists do not say is that offshoring and unrestricted immigration also provide US citizens with lower incomes, fewer job opportunities, and less satisfying jobs. There is no evidence that consumer prices fall by more than incomes so that US citizens can be said to benefit materially. The psychological experience of a citizen losing his career to a foreigner is alienating.

The free market economists ignore that a country that offshores its production also offshores its jobs. It becomes dependent on goods and services made in foreign countries, but lacks sufficient export earnings with which to pay for them. A country whose workforce is being reallocated, under pressure of offshoring, to domestic services has nothing to trade for its imports. That is why the US trade deficit has exploded to over $800 billion annually.

Among all the countries of the world, only the US can get away with exploding trade deficits. The reason is that the US inherited from Great Britain, exhausted by two world wars, the reserve currency role. To be the reserve currency country means that your currency is the accepted means of payment to settle international accounts. Countries pay their oil import bills in dollars and settle the deficits in their trade accounts in dollars.

The enormous and continuing US deficits are wearing out the US dollar as reserve currency. A time will come when the US cannot pay for the imports, on which it has become ever more dependent, by flooding the world with ever more dollars.

Offshoring and free market ideology are turning the US into a Third World country. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, one-quarter of all new US jobs created between June 2006 and June 2007 were for waitresses and bartenders. Almost all of the net new US jobs in the 21st century have been in domestic services.

Free market economists simply ignore the facts and proceed with their ideological justifications of open borders, a policy that is rapidly destroying the ladders of upward mobility for the US population.

_____

Copyright (c) Creators Syndicate, Inc. {13}

Paul Craig Roberts - paulcraigroberts@yahoo.com - was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration. He is the author of Supply-Side Revolution: An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington {14}; Alienation and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy {15}, and is the co-author with Lawrence M Stratton of The Tyranny of Good Intentions: How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name of Justice {16}. Click {17} for Peter Brimelow's Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.

The articles on VDARE.com are brought to you by the VDARE Foundation. We are supported by generous donations from our readers. Contributions are tax deductible and appreciated. Contribute {18}.


Links

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{3} http://www.vdare.com/roberts/050727_iraq.htm

{4} http://www.slate.com/id/2083736/

{5} http://search.atomz.com/search/?sp_a=sp0a298a00&sp_f=iso-8859-1&sp_q=neoconservatism

{6} http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/13/opinion/13mon3-1.html?ex=1344657600&en=c24873e178937993&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss

{7} http://www.vdare.com/roberts/050704_dollar.htm

{8} http://www.vdare.com/roberts/070808_china.htm

{9} http://www.vdare.com/roberts/economy_offshore.htm

{10} http://money.cnn.com/2007/08/14/news/companies/china_recalls/index.htm

{11} http://www.independent.org/publications/the_lighthouse/detail.asp?id=194#914

{12} http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1727

{13} http://www.creators.com/

{14} http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/067485621X/103-9747828-0329461

{15} http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0945999631/002-8915021-8428856?n=283155

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http://vdare.com/roberts/070816_china.htm

Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Maggie's gift to Gordon

David Cameron tried to break with the Tory past by modelling himself on Tony Blair. But with Margaret Thatcher back at No 10, his new clothes are looking sadly dated.

by John Gray

New Statesman (September 20 2007)


History imposed on David Cameron the task of persuading the electorate that Conservatives are at home in 21st-century Britain. William Hague, Michael Howard and Iain Duncan Smith were at one in supposing that, overlooked or derided by metropolitan opinion, there was a conservative British majority that viewed the society emerging around them with alarm and indignation. In fact, most voters felt at home in liberal Britain, and the Conservatives went on to three successive defeats. Breaking with his predecessors, Cameron decided that unless the Conservatives identified themselves with the nation that Britain has become they were finished as a party of government. By aligning himself with contemporary British values, he posed a challenge to Labour to which Gordon Brown must now respond.

The next general election will take place against the background of a period of profound social change that goes back to the crises of the Seventies. To a considerable extent, 21st-century Britain is an unintended consequence of Margaret Thatcher. It was Thatcher who, accentuating the impact of global forces that no one controls, dismantled the postwar settlement and created the market-driven society we live in today. She believed that by rejuvenating British capitalism she could revive the stolidly bourgeois Britain she had known in the Fifties; but that country was a product of Labour rule, and the upshot of reshaping public institutions on a market model was to create a society of a kind she had never imagined.

In an essay that had a powerful influence on the intellectual fringes of early Thatcherism, Friedrich Hayek distinguished between two rival versions of individualism - a "true", Burkean variety, rooted in tradition, that accepted the constraints of conventional morality and a "false", Romantic version in which personal choice and self-realisation trumped all other values. Hayek believed that a revitalised free market would bring with it a return to "true" individualism.

Instead, it was a version of Romantic individualism that triumphed. As the imperatives of market choice have spread into every area of social life, personal fulfilment and the satisfaction of desire have become the ruling values. Relationships of all kinds have become looser and social structures have become more negotiable and provisional. In many ways this has been a benign process. As a result we are more tolerant of the varieties of family and sexual life, and less pervasively racist, and although we are perceptibly more unequal we are less obsessed with class than in the past. But the country created by freeing up the market is in many respects the antithesis of the one Hayek and Thatcher aimed to restore. If ever there was such a thing as a conservative philosophy, its central values were social cohesion and cultural continuity in a settled form of common life. Yet when it is released from restraint the market works to unsettle established ways of living. So, far from reviving an older Britain, Thatcher wiped away its last traces.


Endemic discontent

However, if the freewheeling society we have today is Thatcher's creation, her latter-day followers refuse to recognise the fact. The diehards who make up much of the Conservatives' core support despise and reject the nation she unwittingly created. They believe that by ditching Thatcher's inheritance, Cameron has abandoned anything resembling conservatism; but it was Thatcher who destroyed the old social structures - and with them the possibility of a viable conservative project. Nowhere is this clearer than in the Conservative Party itself. The loosening up of hierarchies that occurred in society at large has been reflected in a parallel dissolution of the Tory culture of loyalty. Before Thatcher, Tory leaders could rely on an ethos that elevated loyalty above ideology. After Thatcher, disloyalty and infighting became defining Tory traits, and every party leader was placed permanently on probation. Mistrusted by his party, Cameron is seen as a traitor to conservative values. But the Thatcherites themselves - with their endemic discontent and doctrinal mentality - demonstrate how unreal these values have become. Early this month, the former deputy leader Michael Ancram urged Cameron to "unveil the party's soul" rather than "trashing" its Thatcherite past. If Cameron follows such advice, the Conservatives will be left stranded on the margins of power in a country they have ceased to comprehend.

Whatever his critics may say, Cameron had no alternative but to remodel his party. His strategy of repositioning his party on the liberal centre ground enabled it to become, once again, a contender for power. The trouble is that the model of modernisation he adopted was already obsolete. By the time Cameron adopted Blairite new Labour as his template, Blair had become a buffoonish figure - a would-be global messiah who engineered the worst British foreign policy disaster since Suez. A more experienced politician might have asked himself whether it was wise to pose as Blair's successor. Cameron might have unseated Blair in a general election run-off; but once Blair vanished from the scene, the Tory leader was left looking dated and redundant.

In the Commons, Cameron goaded Blair with the taunt, "You were the future once". Yet, by modelling himself on Blair, Cameron tied himself to the past. Unprepared for the national sigh of relief that greeted Blair's departure, he seems ill-prepared for the very different style of politics that has arrived with Gordon Brown.

Only a new breed of Conservatives, for whom Thatcher was a chapter in the history books rather than a living presence, could have consigned her to the memory hole with such brisk finality. In this, Cameron's limited political experience has been a source of strength, but passing most of his short political life in Blair's shadow has narrowed Cameron's vision. Blair's decade in power was a by-product of unrepeatable historical conditions. He was able to return Labour to power by accepting many of Thatcher's policies because she embodied the interests and values of a crucial part of the electorate that was ready to transfer its allegiance to him.

By the time Blair left office he represented no one, and the same is true of Cameron today. Like Blair, Cameron moves in a smart, moneyed set with tenuous links to the wider society. Aside from the fox-hunting fraternity - promised a free vote on repealing the ban - it is hard to think of any social group whose concerns Cameron has consistently championed. Even his commitment to green issues, which at one point seemed to be voicing widely felt anxieties, sounds contrived and unconvincing. There is no section of today's Britain where his voice resonates with any particular force.

Cameron's patrician background plainly had a role in his most serious error to date. His insouciant dismissal of an institution that was for generations a hugely important part of British education showed how slender is his acquaintance with the choices most people have to face. Unlike most Tory voters, Cameron has always been able to take for granted the option of educating his children privately. Like a junior colonial officer in the declining years of empire, he seems hardly to comprehend the lives of those he has set out to govern. His stumble over grammar schools was more than a minor slip. It disclosed an amateurish quality in his entire operation, and exposed the vulnerability of a political project that lacks any solid base of social support.


Provincial majority

There is a great opportunity here for Gordon Brown. Linked by overlapping social ties and a common proximity to the London media, Blair and Cameron are alike in their detachment from Britain's provincial majority. This is not the disaffected, reactionary rump invoked by latter-day Thatcherites. It is broadly liberal in outlook, but it demands from government some of the qualities that used to be claimed by Conservatives, such as common sense, competence and a cool head in times of crisis. It has no time for Blairite rants about incessant change, nor for the unending stream of ephemeral initiatives that embodied the Blair regime in practice. By distancing himself so sharply from this style of government, Brown has wounded Cameron at his weakest point.

The shift in the public philosophy of the Conservatives that Cameron initiated seems to have started as a psephological gambit, which recognised that the party could not return to power on the back of its core supporters alone and aimed to capture Liberal Democrat votes in about a hundred key seats. As an electoral strategy it has had mixed results, with Lib Dem voters switching to Labour as well as to Cameron's Conservatives. At the same time, large issues have been left unresolved. At present there are at least two tendencies vying for control among the Conservatives. There are neoliberals such as John Redwood, who urge further large-scale market deregulation and hugely reduced government - a programme whose effect would be to impose another revolutionary shake-up on society, and which for that reason has no prospect of being implemented by any government in the foreseeable future.

In contrast there are the neoconservatives, who accept that governments are bound to continue to play a significant role in social welfare and regulating the economy. What these tendencies have in common is that neither can claim to be distinctively conservative - the neoliberals owe more to Hayek (who always denied being a conservative) than they do to Burke, while neoconservatism originated on the American far left. Both are progressive ideologies, which differ from those that prevail on the centre left chiefly by being less realistic and more dogmatic.

The practical problem for Cameron is that neither of these tendencies allows the Conservatives to make the vital break with the past. If the neoliberal tendency represents a reversion to Thatcherism at its most rigidly doctrinal, the neoconservative wing of the party - to which, in most respects, Cameron himself belongs - offers little more than a continuation of Blairism. These difficulties have been compounded by his most recent turn in which - while talking of the need to repair Britain's " broken society" - he has increasingly reverted to stock right-wing themes such as crime and immigration.

Many commentators have accused Cameron of inconsistency, but his larger error is that of moving back to the reactionary territory that lost his predecessors the past three elections. However dressed up in fashionable jargon, talk of the broken society cannot help harking back to a nation whose passing the majority of Britons do not regret. No doubt concern with crime is widespread, as are doubts about current levels of immigration. But these worries do not add up to anything like a wide sense of social collapse, and most of Britain's voters like the country in which they live. By putting a rejection of that country at the heart of his campaign, Cameron has fallen into the trap that has snared every Conservative leader since Thatcher. He has failed to reconcile his party to the society she created, while alienating the voters he needs to attract by implicitly condemning the way many of them have chosen to live.

At present, both the parliamentary party and the party organisation are racked by internecine conflicts, and Cameron himself is looking ever more like an opportunist with no settled beliefs. By itself, intellectual incoherence has rarely been a serious obstacle to securing power. When combined with an ill-conceived political strategy, the result can be disastrous. Only months ago Cameron seemed poised to overtake Labour. There is still a chance he could deny it an overall majority in the general election, but with the Tory leader's switch to the self-defeating politics of reaction and Gordon Brown's assured performance as Prime Minister, the initiative has moved back to Labour. Brown's "steady as she goes" brand of government is an ambiguous phenomenon, for though it involves a sharp break with Blair's style, it is premised on continuing with much of the policy framework that was in place when Blair was in power - which itself continued much of Thatcher's. In an irony neatly captured by the tea at No 10, Cameron has been left struggling to manage the party Thatcher nearly destroyed, while Brown is using the Thatcher inheritance to entrench Labour as the party of government. If Brown can convince voters that he has viable new policies - particularly in the areas of energy and the environment - there is every chance Cameron will follow Blair into history's memory hole.

Much now depends on events. Enough has transpired to plant a large question mark over Cameron's project. He aimed to fashion a new centre-right party, but the result has been a continuation of drift and division. A setback in the next general election could turn these divisions into a civil war not unlike the one that engulfed the party when Thatcher was toppled. The difference is that, after Cameron's attempt to impose a Blair-style makeover on the party, it could end up like a failed state - a rabble of rival factions, each claiming to embody true conservatism at a time when such a thing is no longer imaginable.

The stakes could hardly be higher. The upshot of the next general election could be meltdown in the Conservative Party and a long period of unchallenged power for Gordon Brown.

_____

John Gray's latest book is Black Mass: Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia (Allen Lane, the Penguin Press, GBP 18.99)

http://www.newstatesman.com/200709200029


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Shock and Awe

Clusterfuck Nation

by Jim Kunstler

Comment on current events by the author of
The Long Emergency
(Atlantic Monthly Press, 2005)


www.kunstler.com (September 24 2007)


With gasoline prices still skulking in the neighborhood of $3 a gallon, despite oil priced above $80 a barrel, political and economic leaders can pretend a little while longer that things are okay on the real life American scene. But between the dollar tanking in response to the Federal Reserve's "Easy Money for Big Players" policy, and the start of the home-heating season, you can be sure we are headed up to the $4-a-gallon range for happy motoring fuel before New Years.

There is still broad disagreement among commentators as to whether we are headed into a wild inflation or a grim deflation, but the emerging pattern looks to me like a big ocean wave that gathers itself into a high cresting peak and then collapses under its own weight - that is, a technical wild inflation resolving into the low slop of people unable to buy anything. However you cut it, and from whatever angle you look at it, the bottom line will be a steeply lower standard of living for most Americans.

Of course, the US government's official inflation index is worthless, since it doesn't factor in the two vital commodities that normal people can't live without: food and gasoline. But measured against meaningful indexes, there's no question that the dollar is rapidly hemorrhaging value. Last week, the dollar reached new lows against the Euro ($1.40+ to one), oil ventured past $82 a barrel, and gold topped $740 a troy ounce. Food commodity prices have also been soaring, with the price per bushel of wheat topping $8 - meaning more expensive Hot Pockets for American microwave food junkies in the season ahead.

It appears that Fed Chairman Bernanke's interest rate cut was designed mostly to help bail out the big banks, which are in desperate need of cheap loan money to cover the losses that they are suffering from not being able to unload tons of worthless mortgage-backed securities. Secondarily, the Fed governors might hope that their lowered rates would soften the blow of re-sets on millions of adjustable-rate mortgages - but mortgage rates have de-coupled from Fed rates, so that may just be whistling past the graveyard. The next two months will see a much bigger wave of re-sets than months previous, and the re-setters themselves have to figure in some idea of real inflation if they don't intend to lose money on those contracts - and whoever these parties are at the re-set end, after years of slicing, dicing, re-bundling and re-selling, they are not liable to be in a charity business of buying houses for people at a loss to themselves in interest rate differentials. So, bottom line again, those poor shlubs who signed "creative" mortgages are going to get re-set upward pretty steeply whatever the Federal Reserve does. The political fallout from folks getting tossed out of repossessed houses is sure to get worse.

There's also no guarantee that the Fed rate cuts will rescue any big banks, investment houses, or hedge funds. Sooner or later, to either meet redemptions or admit losses, they'll all have to roll out those mortgage-backed securities, CLOs, and other fraudulent items currently hiding in their books, and ask the world what they're worth paying for. The world will answer by wrinkling its collective noses at the odor emanating from these bundles of financial offal, and that will determine whether some of these outfits stay in business or sink into the mire of financial history.

For some of these outfits, like Bear Stearns, their fate looks already sealed. It was one thing for Bear Stearns to sponsor two loser hedge funds. The reason hedge funds are unregulated, by the way, is because in theory they are only patronized by extremely wealthy clients who are presumed to know what they are doing and whose choices are thought to not require regulation. But when Bear Stearns turned around a week after their funds tanked and blew a raspberry at these investors by saying "we registered these operations in the Cayman Islands where your lawyers can't touch us, so fuck you" - when Bear Stearns did that, it took the short-end benefit of blowing off some legal fees over the long-term prospect that no one in their right mind would ever invest in a Bear Stearns fund ever again.

Meanwhile, on the inflation side of the question is the hard-to-refute idea that a lot of non-American persons and organizations will probably not sit on a lot of saved dollars and dollar-denominated debt paper with said dollar losing value every day. At first, these dollars would come back into the US chasing assets for sale, meaning that foreigners could buy up a whole lot more American companies, giving them ownership in something tangible rather than a boatload of depreciating bonds. The Kingdom of Dubai tried this last week in making an offer to buy twenty percent of the Nasdaq. God knows what else might go up for sale out there. Maybe the Chinese will take the New York Yankees off ailing George Steinbrenner's hands. Maybe the Metropolitan Museum of Art will sell its whole collection to Japan - they seem to like that stuff. But the net effect would be a flood of dollars coming back into the US chasing assets. Meanwhile, the price of a gasoline fill-up and a jar of jam would go ever higher for ordinary Americans.

On the deflation side is what happens after this wave collapses, and that would be a national fire-sale of plain "stuff", as desperate families from Maine to Honolulu try to liquidate all the toys they purchased over the last twenty years in order to keep a roof over their heads and some food on the table - cars, boats, snowmobiles, flat-screen TVs, leaf-blowers, iPods, you name it. A lot of that stuff will be either unsellable - because there will be be way more sellers for these things than buyers - or they will be sold at extreme bargain-basement discounts. The net result is what they call a deflationary depression. Too few scraps of money seeking too many things for sale. Nobody doing any business. Jobs and incomes dissolving in the process.

All these things will be occurring against the background of an increasingly desperate energy predicament that will probably introduce many as-yet-unfactored problems into the equation - such as, what happens as the oil export crisis gathers force and we begin to get supply- and allocation- disturbances ... ? Or what happens when the US military starts competing with agri-business and commuters for oil? Or what happens geo-politically when the contest for dwindling oil supplies from the exporting nations begins to affect relations between the major importers, namely, China, the US, Japan, and Europe? Or what happens politically on the domestic scene as times get hard and the public looks for targets to direct their righteous wrath against?

What all this comes down to is the sense of a nation absolutely fooling itself that it can carry on in the way it is used to. I'm hardly an advocate of the US giving up and committing suicide. What I advocate is a broad recognition that reality is compelling us to change our behavior. Reality is trying to tell us that we can't run an economy based on nothing more than investment schemes without directing investment into activities that produce things of value. Reality is telling us to be very worried about living arrangements that can only function with copious imports of oil from people who are disgusted with us. Reality is telling us that we can't divert our food crops into making motor fuels without people becoming unable to afford either fuel or food. Reality is telling us to redirect our culture more toward things we do with other people and less toward things we do with new things. Reality is telling us to shift from avoidance behavior and denial to engaging with reality in order to lead lives that are consistent with reality.

The next several weeks are liable to be a time of great stress as these realities become increasingly undeniable. I imagine the public chatter will become increasingly delusional as the wave crests. When it it finally comes, the shock of recognition that we are a bankrupt nation will present itself at first as a great silence. The public's collective jaw will fall open, but no sound will come out. That will be the true moment of shock and awe.

http://jameshowardkunstler.typepad.com/clusterfuck_nation/2007/09/shock-and-awe.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Ping and Pong

You Are The Ball

by Stan Goff


http://www.insurgentamerican.net (September 15 2007)


Confession: I watch TV.

I've been watching MSNBC for some time now, just to say I have kept track of the corporate televised news. Every night I get the chance. Tucker Carlson, Chris Matthews, and Keith Olbermann. Fox is like watching bad slapstick, only more offensive, and CNN alternates between being the Pentagon's Public Affairs Office and and featuring that fascist puke-maggot, Lou Dobbs.

Actually, I had to give up on Tucker after a fashion, too. All I can think of is slapping him when I hear him talk; and I'm trying to leave that part of me behind. He's one of those pampered racist boarding school dickheads who was told by fawning parents that because he made good scores on standardized tests he is bright ... and believes it with all his heart, even though he couldn't find his ass with a ground surveillance radar. When he compared Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez with Kim Il Sung, I was done ... so now I watch Rachael Ray do Thirty-Minute Meals on the Food Channel. The food looks good; and she is smarter than Tucker by orders of magnitude.

Which sort of leaves me with Matthews and Olberman ... gets pared down pretty quickly, eh?

At any rate, now I watch Chris Matthews, who I believe is being himself more than most TV personalities, even if that is cluelessly sexist and nationalist with a whiteboy tendency to talk all over the top of his guests. And Keith Olbermann, a former sportscaster who is essentially a Democratic satirist ... kind of an Air America for television. One reason I've stuck with these guys is that MSNBC tolerates them even as both are incessantly and openly critical of the Bush administration. This, I think, is significant. I mean, MSNBC is owned by Microsoft - a Bush campaign contributor - and NBC - the property of General Electric ... yes, the defense contractor. This is not exactly the Indymedia crowd, and commercial sponsors are more drug companies than anything else (someone, please do a Cialis-commercial spoof!). They fired Phil Donahue in 2003 for opposing the war. Why are these conservative ruling-class entities tolerating this kind of dissent?

Unless it's not. Dissent.

And it isn't.

Matthews and Olbermann have been featuring Democrat presidential hopeful Joe Biden so often, I'm surprised other candidates haven't sued for equal time. So what is Biden saying, and how does that fit with the way Matthews and Olbermann frame their subjects?

Matthews and Olberman are pretty much on record as anti-Bush. Matthews was a speechwriter for Jimmy Carter, and Olbermann has called for Bush and Cheney to resign. When they have Biden on, Biden is very good ... in a sly kind of way. He displays emotion, including grief and anger, about the American military occupation of Iraq (even though he endorsed it). He seems centered - like a good method actor - when he mirrors the frustration and impatience of many of us. He uses what in Washington is sharp language (we could give 'em lessons down here), saying that this comment was "disgraceful", that remark "tragically flawed", and this action was "unconscionable" ... and he is very circumspect about his candidacy, avoiding the redolence of narcissism that seems to cling to most presidential candidates like the odor of a wet fart.


But what is he saying? What are they saying?

First, they are saying that the war is a "failure".

Second, they are saying that "the American people" elected Democrats to "change course in Iraq".

Third, Biden is saying that his plan is the "third way".


First response: Would the war be okay if it weren't failing?

Second response: Wanting to get the US troops out of Iraq is far more specific than "changing course".

Third response: This talk of a "third way" is a way to foreclose that specific option of withdrawing US forces from Iraq ... right by God now.


Let's unpack this a bit further, starting with this "failure"-meme.

What does not get said when we say the war is bad because we are losing? Or not winning?

(1) What goes unsaid is that the United States of America is a nation that has reserved to itself the right to invade other countries.

(2) What goes unsaid is that the invasion of Iraq was a violation of international law; and the reason the Democrats endorsed it was that they had already violated the same laws when they endorsed Bill Clinton's military actions against Yugoslavia. My own Congressman unabashedly told me this in front of witnesses.

(3) What goes unsaid is that the war is immoral (Is this more important than "failure"?).

(4) What goes unsaid is that our troops are killing more civilians than combatants.

(5) What goes unsaid is that Iraqis have a right to attack foreign invaders, just as we would claim that same right for ourselves. (And I say that as someone who has had two sons deployed there.) The Iraqis believe this, too; a majority approves of attacks against American soldiers.

(6) And what goes unsaid is that the Democratic Party was in the front ranks when the nation was stampeded to war, supported by virtually every major media outlet in the country.


What gets left unsaid when we substitute "changing course" for "bring them home now"?

(1) What goes unsaid is that the Democratic Party doesn't want to bring the troops home. They want to continue a permanent troop presence in the region. This will be part of whatever new "course" they chart. They are beholden to war profiteers and so-called defense contractors. They are beholden to the big business interests that require access to fossil energy that is not theirs. They are fully in support of maintaining the imperial rule of the US, which includes the post-Cold War redispostion of the imperial military (or else that military would stay its ass at home) into strategic Southwest Asia.

(2) What goes unsaid is that the elected representatives of the Democratic Party - the many who are too ill-informed and stupid to comprehend this big picture, even as they serve it - will follow their dicks, as we say, and do anything to avoid being called the people who "backed down" in the face of "terrorists" (a male thang).

(3) What goes unsaid is that the Democratic Party is more interested in appealing to some mythical and static "center" to win elections than it is in preventing more mass death, disfigurement, and dislocation in Iraq. If there is a secular definition for "sin", this surely fits it. Ambition that literally walks over bodies ... human bodies, all ages, ethnicities, nationalities, and sexes. It is also the aforementioned narcissisim, symptoms listed here:

A. has a grandiose sense of self-importance

B. is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love

C. believes that he or she is "special" and unique and can only be understood by other special people

D. requires excessive admiration

E. strong sense of entitlement

F. takes advantage of others to achieve his or her own ends

G. lacks empathy

H. is often envious or believes others are envious of him or her

I. arrogant affect.


(4) What goes unsaid is that the Democratic Party operatives believe, or want us to believe, that the US military presence in Iraq is preventing even worse violence than already prevails there. (It is not. The US military presence there is the key catalyst for the violence. This is a tale that was trotted out for years about Vietnam, too, and it turned out to be wrong.)

(5) What goes unsaid is anything substantive about the "hydrocarbon law", which guarantees US companies access to Iraqi oil. They know what is in this law, and they intend to "stay the course" until they get it (it is a "benchmark"), but they never say it to us. Instead, they characterize this law as one that compels Iraqis to "revenue-share" among themselves. The latter is not the main sticking point for this law among the non-governing Iraqi government. The guarantee of access to US private firms is.

(6) And what goes unsaid is that a powerful foreign lobby from the State of Israel insists that the US treat Iran as an enemy, and therefore to prevent any increase in Iran's influence on the situation in Iraq. Iran is not a threat to the US, and has consistently sought better relations with the US. Iran is a more appropriate partner for any future Iraq or federal division thereof than the United States. They are neighbors. The demonized President Ahmadenijad is held up as a bogeyman, but he has no power to make foreign policy for Iran (This goes unsaid by Democrats, too). Iran is not being demonized for its theocracy. Israel calls itself a Jewish state; and it practices Apartheid against many of its inhabitants; and it has violated more international laws with impunity than any other country in the world today (hiding behind a US veto in the UN Security Council). Pakistan was founded in the same year as Israel, as "a Muslim state" (breaking away from India), and is run by a petty military dictator, yet it is an American ally in the region. Saudi Arabia is a more closed society by far than Iran, and more repressive, yet it is seen as an American ally. Iran's crime is insistence on political independence from the US; and it would stand down its nuclear program today, if Israel gave up its nuclear weapons.


What does the Democratic Party apparatus leave unsaid when they craft a phrase for repetition (Rove-style) like "third way"?

(1) What it leaves unsaid is that many if not most Americans did not elect Democrats out of a wish for a "third way", but the "second way" that the Democratic Party apparatus has ruled out: Bring them home now.

(2) What it leaves unsaid is that they can - contrary to what they would have us believe (with talk of veto-proof majorities) - cut the funding for the war and stop it.

(3) What it leaves unsaid is that they can impeach (and won't, even though there is ample and conrete evidence to do so).

(4) What it leaves unsaid is that they could force one Constitutional crisis after another, but when the Republicans themselves threaten to do this, the Democratic Party goes to ground like prairie dogs in a twister. The very basis of what this administration has gotten away with - aside from Democrat capitulation at every turn and the able assistance of the commercial media - is the consolidation of Executive power.

(5) What it leaves unsaid is the apparatus of the Democratic Party is trying to marginalize those within its own party who demand an immediate end to this imperial occupation.

(6) What it leaves unsaid is that the Democratic Party background story for this "third way" is dressed-up Islamophobia and Orientalism, two species of plain imperial racism that are based on the assumption that the "advanced development of the US" is meritocratic (no account for the theft of a continent or a slave economy or imperial expansion or global financial hegemony to build up and hold together this vast entropic entity); and the "failure" in Iraq is our failure to understand how backward and primitive and venal and violent those awful Arabs (and Persians) are ... so they can't possibly find their own way without our tutelage (and a Hydrocarbon Law {1} of course).


What do all of these things together leave unsaid?

The intentional bewilderment of the population and the mystification of reality that accomplishes that bewilderment are like a plant in a garden. Ten percent of the mystification resides in the seed, in what is things said directly. Ninety percent of the mystification resides in the composition of the soil, the analog being what remains unsaid.

What goes unsaid is that there are two parties of the dominators that play bad-cop / good-cop with all of us. One is the Ping Party, and the other is the Pong Party, and we are the ball, batted back and forth perennially. When the population just begins to become radicalized, as it is doing in the face of this criminal war that has exposed so much of the system itself, threatening to bounce off the table so to speak, the Pong Party will reach way out to the side to keep the ball in play. They will allow Matthews and Olbermann to say the things that got Donahue canned four years ago by the same network, MSNBC; and Joe Biden will come aboard as the fine Pong Party method actor he is, reflecting our frustration and our grief and our anger back to us, and make soothing noises that leave so much unsaid, and tap us back across the net.

Here are some other things that are not being said:

The average consumption lifestyle of the United States, which keeps politicians in office, is based on extortion, violence, and plunder in places we don't see {2}, and from activities the media seldom mentions. To maintain that lifestyle, which is an imperial political payoff for a quiescent home base, requires ever expanding inputs of finite resources - many from abroad - and the continued ability to back up financial extortion with military force where necessary. The pivotal resource that makes it possible to make all the other consumer goods, be they cars, clothes, computers, or whatever, is fossil energy. The United States, with five percent of the world's population, used 26% of the word's energy supplies. Our domestic production has been falling since 1973, even as our aggregate demand has continued to rise steeply. The United States has allowed car companies and developers to establish an economic infrastructure that depends absolutely on private automobiles. This massive fleet of around 250 million automobiles runs on oil. This oil cannot be replaced by biofuels {3}, contrary to the bullshit being propogated {4} to support a fresh new vote-buying and corporate-welfare scheme {5} for Cargill, Monsanto, and Archer-Daniels-Midland.

Follow the logic.

The US economy cannot continue to operate as it is without guaranteeing its access to fossil fuel that comes from abroad. The establishment wants this to be our dirty little secret, and that's why we twist ourselves in knots talking about it, including deluding ourselves that we can continue our energy profligacy and ignoring the wet work that gets done to maintain control over a region as strategically vital to this end as Southwest Asia. This, of course, means that when Republicrats use coded language about "vital American security interests in the Middle East", they are really talking about maintaining secondary political control over the human beings who live on top of those energy lakes. If you accept that maintaining the American way of life is the highest priority, then you have to accept that the US has to intervene with force when necessary to get the energy supplies, and even that this force be maintained through a constant threat, that is, a permanent US military presence in the region and support of unsavory regimes to act as our surrogates.

If you believe that people in that part of the world should have the right to decide when, where, and how to use their own resources, then you have to accept that this might result in a dramatic and painful change in the "American way of life".

It's that simple, that stark.

The powerful interests behind both the Republican and Democratic Parties know it; and the smarter members of the Congress know it, too. And they won't say it directly, because they know that raising the issue this way puts the public morally on the spot. If you want to go on this way, we have to be willing to invade countries, kill people, and support surrogates who beat down their own populations. If you are unwilling to support invasion, murder, and surrogate-despotism, then you have to accept that your way of life may be dramatically and painfully changed.

This bitter choice is concealed by shifting the premises to that old political stand-by, the external threat ... the Dark Other {6} from which we must protect ourselves.

Note, if you will, that neither Democrats nor Republicans will question the concept of a Global War on Terror, even though it is one of the most illogical and cynical constructions within living memory. Find the limits of discourse, and you will find the wall that conceals the determining unsaid.

The war in Iraq was not merely taken up for oil. This is a simplistic idea.

It was taken up to establish permanent bases in the region; and now in 2007, the President of the United States has acknowledged this. Many of us pointed this out in 2003. The disposition of the military after the collapse of the Warsaw Pact in 1990 was obsolete. The imperial armed forces had to be re-positioned, and the question has always (for Republicans and Democrats) been "How?" The "peace dividend" of standing down the imperial armed forces was never an option; and the Dark Other of the World Communist Conspiracy (TM) required a replacement.

Energy demand is rising worldwide and in the US, but worldwide per capita energy consumption has been falling for decades; and world production is at its final peak. Establishing control throughout Southwest then Central Asia, doesn't merely guarantee access for the US, it gives the US leverage in the new Great Game against other potential competitors (Europe, China, India).

This redispostion of the imperial armed forces also positions bases on the doorsteps of Russia and China.

This is strategic synergy ... at least, in theory. In the real world, real people live in these places, and they do not see their land and homes as pieces on someone else's chessboard.

This is the "oops principle" in operation. Someone doesn't get the script.

The attack on Iraq itself, originally seen as a "cakewalk" by the game-theory academics advising the Bush administration, was also valued for its "demonstration effect" {7}. This would be the Shock and Awe that would cow anyone else who dared to defy the imperial master. The Democratic Party establishment supported this, as well. Ask yourself why the Democratic response to the war the DP supported - now that the war has lost its original xenophobic popularity - has been crafted as "failure".

What failed? The bases are there. Saddam Hussein is dead. There was no threat to the US. Couldn't the Democrats just as easily say, "We were wrong, and this war is immoral".?

What failed is Shock and Awe. The imperial armed forces are bogged down in an unwinnable war amidst an ever more unpredictable milieu, giving up ground in Iraq while US allies Turkey and Pakistan are thrown into political crisis and Iran - anathema to the independence-averse US establishment - grows in influence at the heart of this strategic region, and talks with Chinese and Russian "multipolarity" {8} advocates.

Monetary hegemony {9} and military power are the twin pillars of US imperial power; and the latter has been called into question in Iraq.

The US domestic economy itself is thoroughly dependent on war spending and military "research and development". With the US running record trade deficits, the Department of Defense (a purely polemical title if ever there was one) serves as a surrogate export market {10} for US manufactured goods. And, of course, one can never underestimate the power of Pentagon pork in Congress {11}.

This is an additional Unsaid that Democrats conceal with their excusatory blather about "changing course" now that the Iraq Adventure has turned into Friday the 13th.

So what can we do?

On the political front, we have to see politics for what it is - power, not elections. Elections are just a piece of it.

When we relate to elections, we have to think out how we relate in ways that exercise the strengths we have against the weaknesses of the system. The disaffected left wing that has heretofore voted Democrat has now come up against an existential dilemma. We cannot not be responsible, and so we are faced with a choice.

Re-re-re-re-surrender that power to the Pong Party Democrats (and therefore the system), or actualize our latent power by calling the Democratic Party bluff. Withdraw support for Democrats (unless they have called for immediate withdrawal and pledge to de-fund the war now), then organize an extra-electoral fight against whomever gets elected in 2008. Democrat Johnson ran against war hawk Goldwater in 1964, won, then escalated the war. The Vietnam invasion and occupation was ended on a Republican's watch. Think about that.

The most basic element of that "relating" to elections is losing our fear of Republicans.

We can know what Republicans do, and what they will do, and that it will have bad consequences. But to fight the system, we need to accept these realities - decrying them where we must - without transsubstantiating them into perpetual fear. Evading the contingent evils of Republican power by perpetuating the power of the imperial forces they represent through self-containment is perpetuation of the systemic evils of imperial (and need I say, patriarchal) exterminism {12}.

I know this is a very "tactical" mindset. But the people that both those parties represent most consistently are consciously and aggressively at war against humanity. We didn't choose a war (against imperial exterminism); but we are in it. They made this war, not just in Iraq, but against the majority of the world and our very biosphere, and the stakes have never been higher. Our failure to recognize this is the first failure that then leads to the others ... like clinging to the pantlegs of the Democratic Party.

There are no "ways out" for humanity that are not through a lot of bad consequences. That's just the circumstance we have been born into. Evading them reflexively is a recipe for inaction; and this is a crime of omission against future generations.

If we want to exercise real popular power in the US, it doesn't get done by trying to build toy Parties, by organizing more mass actions at huge expense that can be dutifully ignored by media and exploited by a few slick Democrats, or by continuing the slow hemorrhage of the lesser evil in 2008. It happens by showing our teeth to those who are in range of those teeth: Democrats. Any Democrat who fails to (1) call for impeachment, (2) call for an immediate withdrawal of all forces from Iraq, and (3) refuse to vote for another dime in support of the war, has to be informed right now that we will show up at the polls in 2008, and we will leave their line on the ballot blank, and hold press conferences to that effect.

That is our choice. Exercise our power and be prepared to follow through extra-electorally (this means taking disruptive actions against the system when it is necessary, and even threatening general stability), or surrender that power once again to the Pong Party and leave our grandchildren to ask why our courage failed.


Links:

{1} http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-cesca/unsolved-mystery-the-ira_b_39280.html

{2} http://www.newstarget.com/021873.html

{3} http://www.feralscholar.org/blog/?p=12

{4} http://www.alternet.org/environment/54218/

{5} http://www.progress.org/tcs39.htm

{6} http://www.truthdig.com/dig/item/200601003_white_supremacism_sexism_militarism/

{7} http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=12692

{8} http://www.pinr.com/report.php?ac=view_report&report_id=246

{9} http://www.atimes.com/global-econ/DD11Dj01.html

{10} http://sandersresearch.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=538&Itemid=103

{11} http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/08/06/opinion/main3136550.shtml

{12} http://www.feralscholar.org/blog/?p=263


Posted by stan as Analysis-Synthesis at 9:14 AM PDT

http://www.insurgentamerican.net/category/analysis/


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

American Economy: Rest In Peace

by Paul Craig Roberts

Countercurrents.org (September 12 2007)


The US economy continues its slow death before our eyes, but economists, policymakers, and most of the public are blind to the tottering fabled land of opportunity.

In August jobs in goods-producing industries declined by 64,000. The US economy lost 4,000 jobs overall. The private sector created a mere 24,000 jobs, all of which could be attributed to the 24,100 new jobs for waitresses and bartenders. The government sector lost 28,000 jobs.

In the 21st century the US economy has ceased to create jobs in export industries and in industries that compete with imports. US job growth has been confined to domestic services, principally to food services and drinking places (waitresses and bartenders), private education and health services (ambulatory health care and hospital orderlies), and construction (which now has tanked). The lack of job growth in higher productivity, higher paid occupations associated with the American middle and upper middle classes will eventually kill the US consumer market.

The unemployment rate held steady, but that is because 340,000 Americans unable to find jobs dropped out of the labor force in August. The US measures unemployment only among the active work force, which includes those seeking jobs. Those who are discouraged and have given up are not counted as unemployed.

With goods producing industries in long term decline as more and more production of US firms is moved offshore, the engineering professions are in decline. Managerial jobs are primarily confined to retail trade and financial services.

Franchises and chains have curtailed opportunities for independent family businesses, and the US government's open borders policy denies unskilled jobs to the displaced members of the middle class.

When US companies offshore their production for US markets, the consequences for the US economy are highly detrimental. One consequence is that foreign labor is substituted for US labor, resulting in a shriveling of career opportunities and income growth in the US. Another is that US Gross Domestic Product is turned into imports. By turning US brand names into imports, offshoring has a double whammy on the US trade deficit. Simultaneously, imports rise by the amount of offshored production, and the supply of exportable manufactured goods declines by the same amount.
The US now has a trade deficit with every part of the world. In 2006 (the latest annual data), the US had a trade deficit totaling $838,271,000,000.

The US trade deficit with Europe was $142,538,000,000. With Canada the deficit was $75,085,000,000. With Latin America it was $112,579,000,000 (of which $67,303,000,000 was with Mexico). The deficit with Asia and Pacific was $409,765,000,000 (of which $233,087,000,000 was with China and $90,966,000,000 was with Japan). With the Middle East the deficit was $36,112,000,000, and with Africa the US trade deficit was $62,192,000,000.

Public worry for three decades about the US oil deficit has created a false impression among Americans that a self-sufficient America is impaired only by dependence on Middle East oil. The fact of the matter is that the total US deficit with OPEC, an organization that includes as many countries outside the Middle East as within it, is $106,260,000,000, or about one-eighth of the annual US trade deficit.

Moreover, the US gets most of its oil from outside the Middle East, and the US trade deficit reflects this fact. The US deficit with Nigeria, Mexico, and Venezuela is 3.3 times larger than the US trade deficit with the Middle East despite the fact that the US sells more to Venezuela and eighteen times more to Mexico than it does to Saudi Arabia.

What is striking about US dependency on imports is that it is practically across the board. Americans are dependent on imports of foreign foods, feeds, and beverages in the amount of $8,975,000,000.

Americans are dependent on imports of foreign industrial supplies and materials in the amount of $326,459,000,000 - more than three times US dependency on OPEC.

Americans can no longer provide their own transportation. They are dependent on imports of automotive vehicles, parts, and engines in the amount of $149,499,000,000, or 1.5 times greater than the US dependency on OPEC.

In addition to the automobile dependency, Americans are 3.4 times more dependent on imports of manufactured consumer durable and nondurable goods than they are on OPEC. Americans no longer can produce their own clothes, shoes, or household appliances and have a trade deficit in consumer manufactured goods in the amount of $336,118,000,000.

The US "superpower" even has a deficit in capital goods, including machinery, electric generating machinery, machine tools, computers, and telecommunications equipment.

What does it mean that the US has a $800 billion trade deficit?

It means that Americans are consuming $800 billion more than they are producing.

How do Americans pay for it?

They pay for it by giving up ownership of existing assets - stocks, bonds, companies, real estate, commodities. America used to be a creditor nation. Now America is a debtor nation. Foreigners own $2.5 trillion more of American assets than Americans own of foreign assets. When foreigners acquire ownership of US assets, they also acquire ownership of the future income streams that the assets produce. More income shifts away from Americans.

How long can Americans consume more than they can produce?

American over-consumption can continue for as long as Americans can find ways to go deeper in personal debt in order to finance their consumption and for as long as the US dollar can remain the world reserve currency.

The 21st century has brought Americans (with the exception of CEOs, hedge fund managers and investment bankers) no growth in real median household income. Americans have increased their consumption by dropping their saving rate to the depression level of 1933 when there was massive unemployment and by spending their home equity and running up credit card bills. The ability of a population, severely impacted by the loss of good jobs to foreigners as a result of offshoring and H-1B work visas and by the bursting of the housing bubble, to continue to accumulate more personal debt is limited to say the least.

Foreigners accept US dollars in exchange for their real goods and services, because dollars can be used to settle every country's international accounts. By running a trade deficit, the US insures the financing of its government budget deficit as the surplus dollars in foreign hands are invested in US Treasuries and other dollar-denominated assets.

The ability of the US dollar to retain its reserve currency status is eroding due to the continuous increases in US budget and trade deficits. Today the world is literally flooded with dollars. In attempts to reduce the rate at which they are accumulating dollars, foreign governments and investors are diversifying into other traded currencies. As a result, the dollar prices of the Euro, UK pound, Canadian dollar, Thai baht, and other currencies have been bid up. In the 21st century, the US dollar has declined about 33 percent against other currencies. The US dollar remains the reserve currency primarily due to habit and the lack of a clear alternative.

The data used in this article is freely available. It can be found at two official US government sites:

http://www.bea.gov/international/bp_web/simple.cfm?anon=71&table_id=20&area_id=3

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t14.htm

The jobs data and the absence of growth in real income for most of the population are inconsistent with reports of US GDP and productivity growth. Economists take for granted that the work force is paid in keeping with its productivity. A rise in productivity thus translates into a rise in real incomes of workers. Yet, we have had years of reported strong productivity growth but stagnant or declining household incomes. And somehow the GDP is rising, but not the incomes of the work force.

Something is wrong here. Either the data indicating productivity and GDP growth are wrong or Karl Marx was right that capitalism works to concentrate income in the hands of the few capitalists. A case can be made for both explanations.

Recently an economist, Susan Houseman, discovered that the reliability of some US economics statistics has been impaired by offshoring. Houseman found that cost reductions achieved by US firms shifting production offshore are being miscounted as GDP growth in the US and that productivity gains achieved by US firms when they move design, research, and development offshore are showing up as increases in US productivity. Obviously, production and productivity that occur abroad are not part of the US domestic economy.

Houseman's discovery rated a Business Week cover story last June 18, but her important discovery seems already to have gone down the memory hole. The economics profession has over-committed itself to the "benefits" of offshoring, globalism, and the non-existent "New Economy". Houseman's discovery is too much of a threat to economists' human capital, corporate research grants, and free market ideology.

The media have likewise let the story go, because in the 1990s the Clinton administration and Congress permitted a few mega-corporations to concentrate in their hands the ownership of the US media, which reports in keeping with corporate and government interests.

The case for Marx is that offshoring has boosted corporate earnings by lowering labor costs, thereby concentrating income growth in the hands of the owners and managers of capital. According to Forbes magazine, the top twenty earners among private equity and hedge fund managers are earning average yearly compensation of $657,500,000, with four actually earning more than $1 billion annually. The otherwise excessive $36,400,000 average annual pay of the twenty top earners among CEOs of publicly-held companies looks paltry by comparison. The careers and financial prospects of many Americans were destroyed to achieve these lofty earnings for the few.
Hubris prevents realization that Americans are losing their economic future along with their civil liberties and are on the verge of enserfment.

_____

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions (Prima Lifestyles, 2000). He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com

http://countercurrents.org/roberts120907.htm


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Broken Social Feedback

The Wealth Gap is an Experience Gap

by Jonathan Rowe

http://onthecommons.org (September 10 2007)


Money is a psychological phenomenon. It has no reality in and of itself. Take a dollar bill to the US Treasury and demand payment for the "debt" it represents. In effect they will hold a mirror to your face. You want payment from us? All that's in that piece of paper is you - your faith, your trust, your desire to have more of those dollars, yours and everyone else's. It is little wonder that money becomes a projection screen for so much that rattles around in our psyches; and nowhere more so than in politics.

Consider a picture that appeared in the Wall Street Journal last week. It shows Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, sitting together on an L-shaped couch. At their feet is a coffee table, leather top, strewn with snack plates, playing cards, a folded newspaper, and underneath, a laptop. (You can guess whose.) Persian rugs are on the floor, credenzas by the wall. The two are in shirtsleeves, Gates has one socked foot up on the table. Just two guys kicking back and enjoying the special kind of moment that only the world's two richest people could understand.

What's happening here? If you are of rightward inclinations you probably see two men enjoying the fruits of their hard-earned gains. Commerce is a moral arena, money an outward expression of inner worth. If your inclinations go more to the Left, you probably see suspect lucre, and ripe targets for taxation to redistribute much of it to those with less. On one side, money is authenticity; on the other, a lack of money is. (To their credit, Buffett and Gates themselves fall somewhere in between. Buffett in particular acknowledges the role of society in his fortune, and his consequent responsibility to give most of it back.)

The picture is an ad for NetJets executive jets. Both Gates and Buffett own fractional shares in the company's planes. Buffett bought his in 1995, the ad says, and then decided to buy the whole company three years later. (Wouldn't you like to do that with certain companies that have jerked you around, and then summon the CEO to your office for a little chat?) When people like this fly they do so in splendid isolation from the indignities and hassles that beset the rest of us.

This suggests another aspect of the money issue that doesn't get enough attention - namely the way it insulates the very wealthy from the world they create for the rest of us. When people don't have to worry about medical insurance and usurious charges on credit cards, they are not inclined to make a fuss about them. People with their own estates don't experience the condition of the local parks.

A friend who worked for a very wealthy family in New York City - the family was actually a kind of corporation - told me that the children of this family, including the many cousins, had never ridden on the New York City subways despite having lived there for many years. That is hard to comprehend for most people who have lived there. For myself, the scenes inside subway cars, and empty stations late at night, loom as large in memory as does the iconic skyline over Central Park.

But people of great means get to waft above the crowds; and this helps explain why it is harder to raise money for mass transit than it is for, say, the ballet. An environmental writer for Time magazine observed a few years ago that his editors became interested in pollution of the ocean when medical debris began to wash up on the beaches of their summer homes in the Hamptons.

To this extent at least the very rich really are like the rest of us. They tend to focus most on what rattles their own cages. Taxes rattle them a lot; usurious credit card rates do not. It should not be surprising which has gotten the more legislative attention in recent years.

The nation's much-publicized wealth gap has spawned something else - a life experience gap that is even more consequential. You have heard about gated communities. We are in the realm of gated lives. Last week the New York Observer (August 27 - September 3 issue) ran an article about a big developer there by the name of Stephen Ross, who built the Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle where he lives. The story begins with a description of a typical day:

"Every morning, Stephen M Ross takes an elevator from his apartment near the top of the Time Warner Center, which he built, about 35 floors down to the 19th floor, to the offices of the real estate company that he founded. He eats lunch in the restaurants that he brought there, on the third and fourth floors, and sometimes he eats dinner there too. If he does not use the gym in his own penthouse, he works out at a branch of the Equinox health club which he recently purchased, on the lower concourse. And sometimes, when he goes out at night, he doesn't have to go out at all, because he just goes to the fifth floor, to take in a performance at Jazz at Lincoln Center."


Such a life does not inspire envy, in myself at least. It seems cloistered and a little creepy. But that's Mr Ross's problem. The problem for the rest of us is how people like him are buffered from the problems that they uniquely have the clout to do something about. This doesn't make him a bad person, only an over-sheltered one, in a way that has larger consequences for the society at large than does the size of his fortune per se.

There needs to be more attention to this side of the wealth gap issue. Moralizing over lucre and lamenting wealth distribution tables appeal to a crude kind of class envy. But in themselves they do not make a compelling case for remedy. The broken social feedback loop takes the case to another level. Not to pick on Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, who as I said are among the better ones, Buffett in particular. But if everyone like them had to fly coach, service would improve tomorrow morning.
_____

Jonathan Rowe's blog is at http://onthecommons.org/blog/6 .

http://onthecommons.org/node/1208


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Monday, September 24, 2007

Debt Circus

The Coming Liquidation of the Commons Realm

by Jonathan Rowe

http://onthecommons.org (September 17 2007)


When a debt circus starts to fold there is a desperate resort to hard assets. The banker seizes the real estate; investors head to precious metals. America's biggest debtor is the federal government itself. As the hyper-leveraged economy contracts; and as China and other countries balk at financing the deficit that the Bush Administration deliberately has created; there will be demands to liquidate the common pool to keep the operation going. It won't be entirely an accident.

We'll be told we have to ease restrictions on poisons in the water and air, to get the "economy" going. We'll be told the public domain has to go as well. Offshore oil? National forests? Resort developments in the national parks? There will be a replay of the contractor honey pot that the occupation of Iraq became, only this time on the privatizing front. There have been previews around the country. Local governments, starved of tax revenue, have had to sell access to a captive audience of school children to corporate advertisers, just to raise money. We've tossed the kids into the liquidation fire. Why not trees?

I'm not saying that Grover Norquist and Karl Rove plotted out the whole scenario step by step. But I do think they are smart enough to know where their policies ultimately tend. Recall the admission of David Stockman, President Reagan's budget wizard, that "supply side" economics was a hoax from the start. The intent never was to increase revenue by cutting taxes, the way they said. (Though the well-meaning Jack Kemp probably believed it.)

Instead it was to starve the federal government of revenue, so that Tip O'Neill and his fellow liberals in Congress would have no choice but to slash programs and regulations. That has been the aim of the Bush people all along; and they hardly bothered to dress it in supply side apologetics. The government is bad, so just cut the hell out of the thing. This is why deficits are good: they tie the hands of Democrats even if they get back into power.

The corollary is to expand the military budget and lock in that expansion with commitments abroad. Reagan did this, and Bush/Cheney is doing it in spades. So long as the Pentagon gets the money the regulators and Weeping Winnies can't. That much of the defense money goes to contractors makes it win-win. This is not the only reason Bush et al were so eager to invade Iraq. But I do suspect it crossed their minds, in a pre-dispositional way at least. (As for the other reasons, isn't it strange it took Alan Greenspan to utter the "o" word last week, as opposed to a Democrat in Congress?)

As with Iraq, when the Bush team re-grew the deficit they fed a larger fire they didn't understand. The entire US economy - a euphemism if there ever was one - is built on debt. The so-called sub-prime mortgage crash is really just the scraping of the sub-bottom of a barrel that had to somehow yield more to keep the machinery going. The government deficit is just one part of a cultural proclivity to rob the future and leave our grandkids with the bag.

Debt is more than an instrument of policy in the US. It is leitmotif, the game itself and not just a way of playing it. It starts with money. Every dollar that enters the "economy" comes with a prior claim attached in the form of interest. That is the way the money system is constructed. Banks create money, under auspices of the Federal Reserve. This means the machinery of buying and selling must churn ever faster just to meet the obligations that are built into the medium that drives it. The claims of shareholders and Wall Street are on top of that.

The late Henry Ford is reputed to have said, "If the people knew the truth about money there would be a revolution before morning". I have not been able to track that down. But it sounds like him, given his view of bankers; and the way banks get to tack their vig onto every dollar is a major reason why. An economic machine that runs on this kind of fuel is unsustainable even before you add get to natural resources. The money fuel makes it inevitable that the machinery will get to the kind that's in the ground.

Life requires stability and rest; but the economic machine can never stop, unless it hits the wall. The particular pathologies of the US economy today are on top of this basic one, and in some ways are an outgrowth of it. Paul Craig Roberts, the former Reagan Treasury official, nailed them in a recent column {1}. The notion, widely believed in Washington and in the media, that you can export jobs and then borrow your way to prosperity is a crock, Roberts observes. The US now has a trade deficit of $800 billion a year. The continued hemorrhage of jobs, and the depression of wages, mean we are making less money from the production that remains.

"How long can Americans consume more than they produce?" Roberts asks. "American over-consumption can continue for as long as Americans can find ways to go deeper in personal debt in order to finance their consumption and for as long as the US dollar can remain the world reserve currency".

I don't pretend to understand all the implications of losing the reserve currency status. But I know they aren't good, for the US at least. Roberts points out that government statistics actually have been understating the problem. When corporations export jobs and thereby reduce their labor costs, for example, the government counts that as a boost to US productivity. Somehow that isn't surprising given the view of the current White House towards reality in general.

The Right used to admonish us to run the government like a household. Now that's happening and it's part of the problem. There is an even more basic one. It is something the conventional economic mind doesn't know even how to cognize let alone deal with. The assumption always is that more stuff and output mean more well-being. The only challenge then is to keep the financial hydraulics in balance and the "incentive" structure in place. Questions of distribution do arise; but the worth of that which is to be distributed is not questioned.

What happens when people get tapped out not just in their ability to buy, but in their role as "consumers" to begin with. What happens when "consumption" becomes evidence not of greater happiness but rather of breakdown and distress?

I'm not talking about the way the third Jacuzzi doesn't provide the same kick that the first two did, nor about frivolous expenditure generally. I'm talking about actual pathology that appears as "consumption" in the official reckonings of economic health. For example, the escalating medical costs that have become a central part of economic "growth": in the US these are prompted not by lack but increasingly by other growth, in the form of junk food, environmental toxins, too much driving and television, and the rest.

This phenomenon takes a multitude of forms. Barrage the kids with junk food ads and then treat them for obesity. Pour toxins into the water and then treat the cancers that result. Construct sprawling suburbs and then sell lots of gas. It is an iatrogenic spiral in which "growth" creates the very problems that more growth is supposed to solve. Nothing in the arsenal of economic policy can begin to handle it, because it suggests the end of economic reasoning itself, at least the dominant mode of the last two hundred and so years.

Tab that for future reference. It's a qualifier that needs to be added to any discussion of the economy but rarely is. The point here is that the debt game has run its string. These warnings have been coming for a number of years now; but that doesn't make them any less valid. You jump from a tall building with your eyes closed and you think you are flying. Then ... splatttt.

When that occurs, it will do for right wing fantasies of public divestment what 9-11 did for Neo-con fantasies of invading Iraq. Bondholders will be clamoring. The military will have to be paid. Does anyone really think that offshore oil leases, the national forests, development rights in the national parks, the ANWAR oil, won't suddenly be in play?

And not just those. The financial crisis that appears in prospect will present opportunities on many fronts, and not all of them benign. Yes, the Great Depression made possible the New Deal. But Germany got Hitler, after the staged Reichstag fire, as Mr Roberts points out.

It came out last week that General David H Petraeus, chief of the Iraq "surge", harbors presidential ambitions. This is as not far fetched as it might seem. When events seem to be spinning out of control there is an instinctive grasping at symbols of authority and order. It's happened before, is all I'm saying.


{1}  http://www.dailyscare.com/2065/american-economy-r-i-p

_____

Jonathan Rowe's blog is at http://onthecommons.org/blog/6 .

http://onthecommons.org/node/1210


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Solving Fermi's Paradox

by John Michael Greer

The Archdruid Report (September 19 2007)

Druid perspectives on nature, culture, and the future of industrial society


One of the besetting sins of today's intellectual climate is the habit of overspecialization. Too often, people involved in one field get wrapped up in that field's debates and miss the fact that the universe is not neatly divided into watertight compartments. With this excuse, if any is needed, I want to shift the ground of The Archdruid Report's discussion a bit and talk about Fermi's paradox.

First proposed by nuclear physicist Enrico Fermi in 1950, this points out that there's a serious mismatch between our faith in technological progress and the universe our telescopes and satellites reveal to us. Our galaxy is around thirteen billion years old, and contains something close to 400 billion stars. There's a lot of debate around how many of those stars have planets, how many of those planets are capable of supporting life, and what might or might not trigger the evolutionary process that leads to intelligent, tool-using life forms, but most estimates grant that there are probably thousands or millions of inhabited planets out there.

Fermi pointed out that an intelligent species that developed the sort of technology we have today, and kept on progressing, could be expected eventually to work out a way to travel from one star system to another; they would also leave traces that would be detectable from earth. Even if interstellar travel proved to be slow and difficult, a species that developed starflight technology could colonize the entire galaxy in a few tens of millions of years - in other words, in a tiny fraction of the time the galaxy has been around. Given 400 billion chances to evolve a species capable of inventing interstellar travel, and thirteen billion years to roll the dice, the chances are dizzyingly high that if it's possible at all, at least one species would have managed the trick long before we came around, and it's not much less probable that dozens or hundreds of species could have done it. If that's the case, Fermi pointed out, where are they? And why haven't we seen the least trace of their presence anywhere in the night sky?

Fermi's paradox has been the subject of lively debate for something like half a century now, and most books on the possibility of extraterrestrial life discuss it. There are at least two reasons for that interest. On the one hand, of course, the possibility that we might someday encounter intelligent beings from another world has been a perennial fascination since the beginning of the industrial age - a fascination that has done much to drive the emergence of the folk theologies masquerading as science in today's UFO movement.

On another level, though, Fermi's Paradox can be restated in another and far more threatening way. The logic of the paradox depends on the assumption that unlimited technological progress is possible, and it can be turned without too much difficulty into a logical refutation of the assumption. If unlimited technological progress is possible, then there should be clear evidence of technologically advanced species in the cosmos; there is no such evidence; therefore unlimited technological progress is impossible. Crashingly unpopular though this latter idea may be, I suggest that it is correct - and a close examination of the issues involved casts a useful light on the present crisis of industrial civilization.

Let's start with the obvious. Interstellar flight involves distances on a scale the human mind has never evolved the capacity to grasp. If the earth were the size of the letter "o" on this screen, for example, the moon would be a little over an inch and three quarters away from it, the sun about sixty feet away, and Neptune, the outermost planet of our solar system now that Pluto has been officially demoted to "dwarf planet" status, a bit more than a third of a mile off. On the same scale, though, Proxima Centauri - the closest star to our solar system - would be more than 3,000 miles away, roughly the distance from southern Florida to the Alaska panhandle. Epsilon Eridani, thought by many astronomers to be the closest star enough like our sun to have a good chance of inhabitable planets, would be more than 7,500 miles away, roughly the distance across the Pacific Ocean from the west coast of North America to the east coast of China.

The difference between going to the moon and going to the stars, in other words, isn't simply a difference in scale. It's a difference in kind. It takes literally unimaginable amounts of energy either to accelerate a spacecraft to the relativistic speeds needed to make an interstellar trip in less than a geological time scale, or to keep a manned (or alienned) spacecraft viable for the long trip through deep space. The Saturn V rocket that put Apollo Eleven on the moon, the most powerful spacecraft to date, doesn't even begin to approach the first baby steps toward interstellar travel. This deserves attention, because the most powerful and technologically advanced nation on Earth, riding the crest of one of the greatest economic booms in history and fueling that boom by burning through a half billion years' worth of fossil fuels at an absurdly extravagant pace, had to divert a noticeable fraction of its total resources to the task of getting a handful of spacecraft across what, in galactic terms, is a whisker-thin gap between neighboring worlds.

It's been an article of faith for years now, and not just among science fiction fans, that progress will take care of the difference. Progress, however, isn't simply a matter of ingenuity or science. It depends on energy sources, and that meant biomass, wind, water and muscle until technical breakthroughs opened the treasure chest of the Earth's carbon reserves in the eighteenth century. If the biosphere had found some less flammable way than coal to stash carbon in the late Paleozoic, the industrial revolution of the eighteenth and nineteenth century wouldn't have happened; if nature had turned the sea life of the Mesozoic into some inert compound rather than petroleum, the transportation revolution of the twentieth century would never have gotten off the ground. Throughout the history of our species, in fact, each technological revolution has depended on accessing a more concentrated form of energy than the ones previously available.

The modern faith in progress assumes that this process can continue indefinitely. Such an assertion, however, flies in the face of thermodynamic reality. A brief summary of that reality may not be out of place here. Energy can neither be created nor destroyed, and left to itself, it always flows from higher concentrations to lower; this latter rule is what's called entropy. A system that has energy flowing through it - physicists call this a dissipative system - can develop eddies in the flow that concentrate energy in various ways. Thermodynamically, living things are entropy eddies; we take energy from the flow of sunlight through the dissipative system of the earth in various ways, and use it to maintain concentrations of energy above ambient levels. The larger and more intensive the concentration of energy, on average, the less common it is - this is why mammals are less common than insects, and insects less common than bacteria.

It's also why big deposits of oil and coal are much less common than small ones, and why oil and coal are much less common than inert substances in earth's crust. Fossil fuels don't just happen at random; they exist in the earth because biological processes put them there. Petroleum is the most concentrated of the fossil fuels, and the biggest crude oil deposits - Ghawar in Saudi Arabia, Cantarell in Mexico, the West Texas fields, a handful of others - represented the largest concentrations of free energy on earth at the dawn of the industrial age. They are mostly gone now, along with a great many smaller concentrations, and decades of increasingly frantic searching has failed to turn up anything on the same scale. Nor is there another, even more concentrated energy resource waiting in the wings.

If progress depends on getting access to ever more concentrated energy resources, in other words, we have reached the end of our rope. The resources now being proposed as ways to power industrial civilization are all much more diffuse than fossil fuels. (Nuclear power advocates need to remember that uranium-235, which has a great deal of energy when refined and purified, exists in very low concentrations in nature and requires a hugely expensive infrastructure to turn it into usable energy, so the whole system yields very little more energy than goes into it; fusion, if it even proves workable at all, will require an infrastructure a couple of orders of magnitude more expensive than fission, and the same is true of breeder reactors.) More generally, it takes energy to concentrate energy. Once we no longer have the nearly free energy of fossil fuels concentrated for us by half a billion years of geology, concentrating energy beyond a certain fairly modest point will rapidly become a losing game in thermodynamic terms. At that point, insofar as progress is measured by the kind of technology that can cross deep space, progress will be over.

We can apply this same logic to Fermi's paradox and reach a conclusion that makes sense of the data. Since life creates localized concentrations of energy, each planet inhabited by life forms will develop concentrated energy resources. It's reasonable to assume that our planet is somewhere close to the average, so we can postulate that some worlds will have more stored energy than ours, and some will have less. A certain fraction of planets will evolve intelligent, tool-using species that figure out how to use their planet's energy reserves. Some will have more and some less, some will use their reserves quickly and some slowly, but all will reach the point we are at today - the point at which it becomes painfully clear that the biosphere of a planet can only store up a finite amount of concentrated energy, and when it's gone, it's gone.

Chances are that a certain number of the intelligent species in our galaxy have used these stored energy reserves to attempt short-distance spaceflight, as we have done. Some with a great deal of energy resources may be able to establish colonies on other worlds in their own systems, at least for a time. The difference between the tabletop and football-field distances needed to travel within a solar system, and the continental distances needed to cross from star to star, though, can't be ignored. Given the fantastic energies required, the chance that any intelligent species will have access to enough highly concentrated energy resources to keep an industrial society progressing long enough to evolve starflight technology, and then actually accomplish the feat, is so close to zero that the silence of the heavens makes perfect sense.

These considerations suggest that White's law, a widely accepted principle in human ecology, can be expanded in a useful way. White's law holds that the level of economic development in a society is measured by the energy per capita it produces and uses. Since the energy per capita of any society is determined by its access to concentrated energy resources - and this holds true whether we are talking about wild foods, agricultural products, fossil fuels, or anything else - it's worth postulating that the maximum level of economic development possible for a society is measured by the abundance and concentration of energy resources to which it has access.

It's also worth postulating, along the lines suggested by Richard Duncan's Olduvai theory, that a society's maximum level of economic development will be reached, on average, at the peak of a bell-shaped curve with a height determined by the relative renewability of the society's energy resources. A society wholly dependent on resources that renew themselves over the short term may trace a "bell-shaped curve" in which the difference between peak and trough is so small it approximates a straight line; a society dependent on resources renewable over a longer timescale may cycle up and down as its resource base depletes and recovers; a society dependent on nonrenewable resources can be expected to trace a ballistic curve in which the height of ascent is matched, or more than matched, by the depth of the following decline.

Finally, the suggestions made here raise the possibility that for more than a century and a half now, our own civilization has been pursuing a misguided image of what an advanced technology looks like. Since the late nineteenth century, when early science fiction writers such as Jules Verne began to popularize the concept, "advanced technology" and "extravagant use of energy" have been for all practical purposes synonyms, and today Star Trek fantasies tend to dominate any discussion of what a mature technological society might resemble. If access to concentrated energy sources inevitably peaks and declines in the course of a technological society's history, though, a truly mature technology may turn out to be something very different from our current expectations. We'll explore this further in next week's post.

_____

The Grand Archdruid of the Ancient Order of Druids in America (AODA), John Michael Greer has been active in the alternative spirituality movement for more than 25 years, and is the author of a dozen books, including The Druidry Handbook (Weiser, 2006). He lives in Ashland, Oregon.

http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2007/09/solving-fermis-paradox.html#links


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Sunday, September 23, 2007

US Banks Brace for Storm Surge ...

... as Dollar and Credit System Reel

by Mike Whitney

CounterPunch (September 18 2007)


By now, you've probably seen the photos of the angry customers queued up outside of Northern Rock Bank waiting to withdraw their money. This is the first big run on a British bank in over a century. It's lost an eighth of its deposits in three days. The pictures are headline news in the UK but have been stuck on the back pages of US newspapers. The reason for this is obvious. The same Force 5 economic hurricane that just touched ground in Great Britain is headed for America and gaining strength on the way.

On Monday night, desperately trying to stave off a wider panic, the British government issued an emergency pledge to Northern Rock savers that their money was safe. The government is trying to find a buyer for Northern Rock.

This is what a good old fashioned bank run looks like. And, as in 1929, the bank owners and the government are frantically trying to calm down their customers by reassuring them that their money is safe. But human nature being what it is, people are not so easily pacified when they think their savings are at risk. The bottom line is this: The people want their money, not excuses.

But Northern Rock doesn't have their money and, surprisingly, it is not because the bank was dabbling in risky subprime loans. Rather, NR had unwisely adopted the model of "borrowing short to go long" in financing their mortgages just like many of the major banks in the US. In other words, they depended on wholesale financing of their mortgages from eager investors in the market, instead of the traditional method of maintaining sufficient capital to back up the loans on their books.

It seemed like a nifty idea at the time and most of the big banks in the US were doing the same thing. It was a great way to avoid bothersome reserve requirements and the loan origination fees were profitable as well. Northern Rock's business soared. Now they carry a mortgage book totaling $200 billion dollars.

$200 billion! So why can't they pay out a paltry $4 or $5 billion to their customers without a government bailout?

It's because they don't have the reserves and because the bank's business model is hopelessly flawed and no longer viable. Their assets are illiquid and (presumably) "marked to model", which means they have no discernible market value. They might as well have been "marked to fantasy", it amounts to the same thing. Investors don't want them. So Northern Rock is stuck with a $200 billion albatross that's dragging them under.

A more powerful tsunami is about to descend on the United States where many of the banks have been engaged in the same practices and are using the same business model as Northern Rock. Investors are no longer buying CDOs, MBSs, or anything else related to real estate. No one wants them, whether they're subprime or not. That means that US banks will soon undergo the same type of economic gale that is battering the UK right now. The only difference is that the US economy is already listing from the downturn in housing and an increasingly jittery stock market. That's why Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson rushed off to England yesterday to see if he could figure out a way to keep the contagion from spreading.

Good luck, Hank.

It would interesting to know if Paulson still believes that "This is far and away the strongest global economy I've seen in my business lifetime", or if he has adjusted his thinking as troubles in subprime, commercial paper, private equity, and credit continue to mount?

For weeks we've been saying that the banks are in trouble and do not have the reserves to cover their losses. This notion was originally pooh-poohed by nearly everyone. But it's becoming more and more apparent that it is true. We expect to see many bank failures in the months to come. Prepare yourself. The banking system is mired in fraud and chicanery. Now the schemes and swindles are unwinding and the bodies will soon be floating to the surface.

"Structured finance" is touted as the "new architecture of financial markets". It is designed to distribute capital more efficiently by allowing other market participants to fill a role which used to be left exclusively to the banks. In practice, however, structured finance is a hoax; and undoubtedly the most expensive hoax of all time. The transformation of liabilities (dodgy mortgage loans) into assets (securities) through the magic of securitization is the biggest boondoggle of all time. It is the moral equivalent of mortgage laundering. The system relies on the variable support of investors to provide the funding for pools of mortgage loans that are chopped-up into tranches and duct-taped together as CDOs (collateralized debt obligations). It's madness; but no one seemed to realize how crazy it was until Bear Stearns blew up and they couldn't find bidders for their remaining CDOs. It's been downhill ever since.

The problems with structured finance are not simply the result of shabby lending and low interest rates. The model itself is defective.

John R Ing provides a great synopsis of structured finance in his article, "Gold: The Collapse of the Vanities":

"The origin of the debt crisis lies with the evolution of America's financial markets using financial engineering and leverage to finance the credit expansion ... Financial institutions created a Frankenstein with the change from simply lending money and taking fees to securitizing and selling trillions of loans in every market from Iowa to Germany. Credit risk was replaced by the "slicing and dicing" of risk, enabling the banks to act as principals, spreading that risk among various financial institutions ... Securitization allowed a vast array of long term liabilities once parked away with collateral to be resold along side more traditional forms of short term assets. Wall Street created an illusion that risk was somehow disseminated among the masses. Private equity too used piles of this debt to launch ever bigger buyouts. And, awash in liquidity and very sophisticated algorithms, investment bankers found willing hedge funds around the world seeking higher yielding assets. Risk was piled upon risk. We believe that the subprime crisis is not a one off event but the beginning of a significant sea change in the modern-day financial markets."

The investment sharks who conjured up "structured finance" knew exactly what they were doing. They were in bed with the ratings agencies - off-loading trillions of dollars of garbage-bonds to pension funds, hedge funds, insurance companies and foreign financial giants. It's a swindle of epic proportions and it never would have taken place in a sufficiently regulated market.

When crowds of angry people are huddled outside the banks to get their money, the system is in real peril. Credibility must be restored quickly. This is no time for Bush's "free market" nostrums or Paulson's soothing bromides (he thinks the problem is "contained") or Bernanke's feeble rate cuts. This requires real leadership.

The first thing to do is take charge, alert the public to what is going on and get Congress to work on substantive changes to the system. Concrete steps must be taken to build public confidence in the markets. And there must be a presidential announcement that all bank deposits will be fully covered by government insurance.

The lights should be blinking red at all the related government agencies including the Fed, the SEC, and the Treasury Dept. They need to get ahead of the curve and stop thinking they can minimize a potential catastrophe with their usual public relations mumbo jumbo.

Last week (September 14th), an article appeared in the Wall Street Journal, "Banks Flock to Discount Window". The article chronicled the sudden up-tick in borrowing by the struggling banks via the Fed's emergency bailout program, the "Discount Window":

"Discount borrowing under the Fed's primary credit program for banks surged to more than $7.1 billion outstanding as of Wednesday, up from $1 billion a week before".

Again we see the same pattern developing; the banks borrowing money from the Fed because they cannot meet their minimum reserve requirements.

Wall Street Journal: "The Fed in its weekly release said average daily borrowing through Wednesday rose to $2.93 billion".

$3 billion.

Traditionally, the "Discount Window" has only been used by banks in distress, but the Fed is trying to convince people that it's really not a sign of distress at all. It's "a sign of strength". Baloney. Banks don't borrow $3 billion unless they need it. They don't have the reserves. Period.

The real condition of the banks will be revealed sometime in the next few weeks when they report earnings and account for their massive losses in "down-graded" CDOs and MBSs. Market analyst Jon Markman offered these words of advice to the financial giants:

"Before they (the financial industry) take down the entire market this fall by shocking Wall Street with unexpected losses, I suggest that they brush aside their attorneys and media handlers and come clean. They need to tell the world about the reality of their home lending and loan securitization teams' failures of the past four years - and the truth about the toxic paper that they've flushed into the world economic system, or stuffed into Enron-like off-balance sheet entities - before the markets make them walk the plank ... Since government regulators and Congress have flinched from their responsibility to administer 'tough love' with rules forcing financial institutions to detail the creation, securitization and disposition of every ill-conceived subprime loan, off-balance sheet 'structured investment vehicle', secretive money-market 'conduit' and commercial-paper-financing vehicle, the market will do it with a vengeance."


Good advice. We'll have to wait and see if anyone is listening. The investment banks may be waiting until Tuesday hoping that Fed-chief Ken Bernanke announces a cut to the Fed's fund rate that could send the stock market roaring back into positive territory.

But interest rate cuts do not address the underlying problems of insolvency among homeowners, mortgage lenders, hedge funds and (potentially) banks. As market-analyst John R Ing said, "A cut in rates will not solve the problem. This crisis was caused by excess liquidity and a deterioration of credit standards ... A cut in the Fed Fund rate is simply heroin for credit junkies."

The cuts merely add more cheap credit to a market that that is already over-inflated from the ocean of liquidity produced by former-Fed chief Alan Greenspan. The housing bubble and the credit bubble are largely the result of Greenspan's misguided monetary policies. (For which he now blames Bush!) The Fed's job is to ensure price stability and the smooth operation of the markets, not to reflate equity bubbles and reward over-exposed market participants.

It's better to let cash-strapped borrowers default than slash interest rates and trigger a global run on the dollar. Financial analyst Richard Bove says that lower interest rates will do nothing to bring money back into the markets. Instead, lower interest rates will send the dollar into a tailspin and wreak havoc on the job market.

"There is no liquidity problem, but a serious crisis of confidence", Bove said:

"In a financial system where there is ample liquidity and a desire for higher rates to compensate for risk, the solution is not to create more liquidity and lower the rates that are available to compensate for risk ... (The Fed) cannot reduce fear by stimulating inflation ...

"It is illogical to assume that holders of cash will have a strong desire to lend money at low rates in a currency that is declining in value when they can take these same funds and lend them at high rates in a currency that is gaining in value. By lowering interest rates the Federal Reserve will not stimulate economic growth or create jobs. It will crash the currency, stimulate inflation, and weaken the economy and the job markets."


Bove is right. The people and businesses that cannot repay their debts should be allowed to fail. Further weakening the dollar only adds to our collective risk by feeding inflation and increasing the likelihood of capital flight from American markets. If that happens; we're toast.

Consider this: In 2000, when Bush took office, gold was $273 per ounce, oil was $22 per barrel and the euro was worth $.87 per dollar. Currently, gold is over $700 per ounce, oil is over $80 per barrel, and the euro is nearly $1.40 per dollar. If Bernanke cuts rates, we're likely to see oil at $125 per barrel by next spring.

Inflation is soaring. The government statistics are thoroughly bogus. Gold, oil and the euro don't lie. According to economist Martin Feldstein, "The falling dollar and rising food prices caused market-based consumer prices to rise by 4.6 per cent in the most recent quarter". (Wall Street Journal)

That's 18.4 per cent a year, and yet Bernanke is still considering cutting interest rates and further fueling inflation.

What about the American worker whose wages have stagnated for the last six years? Inflation is the same as a pay-cut for him. And how about the pensioner on a fixed income? Same thing. Inflation is just a hidden tax progressively eroding his standard of living.

Bernanke's rate cut may be boon to the "cheap credit" addicts on Wall Street, but it's the death-knell for the average worker who is already struggling just to make ends meet.

No bailouts. No rate cuts. Let the banks and hedge funds sink or swim like everyone else. The message to Bernanke is simple: "It's time to take away the punch bowl".

The inflation in the stock market is just as evident as it is in the price of gold, oil or real estate. Economist and author Henry Liu demonstrates this in his article "Liquidity Boom and the Looming Crisis":

"The conventional value paradigm is unable to explain why the market capitalization of all US stocks grew from $5.3 trillion at the end of 1994 to $17.7 trillion at the end of 1999 to $35 trillion at the end of 2006, generating a geometric increase in price earnings ratios and the like. Liquidity analysis provides a ready answer." (Asia Times)


Market capitalization zoomed from $5.3 trillion to $35 trillion in twelve years? Why? Was it due to growth in market-share, business expansion or productivity? No. It was because there were more dollars chasing the same number of securities; hence, inflation.

If that is the case, then we can expect the stock market to fall sharply before it reaches a sustainable level. As Liu says, "It is not possible to preserve the abnormal market prices of assets driven up by a liquidity boom if normal liquidity is to be restored". Eventually, stock prices will return to a normal range.

Bernanke should not even be contemplating a rate cut. The market needs more discipline not less. And workers need a stable dollar. Besides, another rate cut would further jeopardize the greenback's increasingly shaky position as the world's "reserve currency". That could destabilize the global economy by rapidly unwinding the US massive current account deficit.

The International Herald Tribune summed up the dollar's problems in a recent article, "Dollar's Retreat Raises Fear of Collapse":

"Finance ministers and central bankers have long fretted that at some point, the rest of the world would lose its willingness to finance the United States' proclivity to consume far more than it produces - and that a potentially disastrous free-fall in the dollar's value would result.

"The latest turmoil in mortgage markets has, in a single stroke, shaken faith in the resilience of American finance to a greater degree than even the bursting of the technology bubble in 2000 or the terror attacks of September 11 2001, analysts said. It has also raised prospect of a recession in the wider economy.

"This is all pointing to a greatly increased risk of a fast unwinding of the US current account deficit and a serious decline of the dollar."


Other experts and currency traders have expressed similar sentiments. The dollar is at historic lows in relation to the basket of currencies against which it is weighted. Bernanke can't take a chance that his effort to rescue the markets will cause a sudden sell-off of the dollar.

The Fed chief's hands are tied. Bernanke simply doesn't have the tools to fix the problems before him. Insolvency cannot be fixed with liquidity injections nor can the deeply-rooted "systemic" problems in "structured finance" be corrected by slashing interest rates. These require fiscal solutions, congressional involvement, and fundamental economic policy changes.

Rate cuts won't help to rekindle the spending spree in the housing market either. That charade is over. The banks have already tightened lending standards and inventory is larger than anytime since they began keeping records. The slowdown in housing is irreversible as is the steady decline in real estate prices. Trillions in market capitalization will be wiped out. Home equity is already shrinking as is consumer spending connected to home-equity withdrawals.

The bubble has popped regardless of what Bernanke does. The same is true in the clogged Commercial Paper market where hundreds of billions of dollars in short-term debt is due to expire in the next few weeks. The banks and corporate borrowers are expected to struggle to refinance their debts but, of course, much of the debt will not roll over. There will be substantial losses and, very likely, more defaults.

Bernanke can either be a statesman - and tell the country the truth about our dysfunctional financial system which is breaking down from years of corruption, deregulation and manipulation - or he can take the cowards' route and buy some time by flooding the system with liquidity, stimulating more destructive consumerism, and condemning the nation to an avoidable cycle of double-digit inflation.

We'll know his decision soon enough.

_____

Mike Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at: fergiewhitney@msn.com

http://www.counterpunch.org/whitney09182007.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Flies in Amber

by Lewis H Lapham

Harper's Magazine Notebook (September 2007)


I do not know what is true. I do not know the meaning of the universe. But in the midst of doubt, in the collapse of creeds, there is one thing I do not doubt ... that the faith is true and adorable which leads a soldier to throw away his life in obedience to a blindly accepted duty, in a cause which he little understands; in a plan of campaign of which he has little notion, under tactics of which he does not see the use. -- Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.


Addressing Harvard University's graduating class of 1895, Holmes spoke as a veteran of the Civil War who had ridden his horse "toward the blue line of fire at the dead angle of Spotsylvania", heard "the splat of the bullets upon the trees", felt his foot "slip upon a dead man's body" lying in the Virginia mud. The "incommunicable experience of war" he remembered as feeling "the passion of life to its top", and of the young men seated in the stands of the football stadium he asked, "Who of us could endure a world ... without the divine folly of honor, without the senseless passion for knowledge outreaching the flaming bounds of the possible, without ideals the essence of which is that they can never be achieved?"

In 1895 the question was in tune with the operas of Richard Wagner and the stories of Robert Louis Stevenson. Britain's handsome cavalry officers were carrying the flags of their imperial benevolence across the plains of India and Africa; in America as in Europe the leading voices in the orchestra of high-minded opinion (poets and churchmen together with the schoolmasters, the generals, and the politicians) regarded trials by combat as glorious undertakings certain to provide proofs of selfless virtue and noble character. How could it be otherwise? What else was the history of Western civilization (Achilles before the walls of Troy, Roland in the pass at Roncesvalles, Wellington on the field of Waterloo) if not the romance of war? Man's destiny was battle, war "the father of all things", to Georg Wilhelm Hegel the "terrible" but "necessary" purgative that "saves the state from social petrifaction and stagnation", to William Ernest Henley the "giver of kingship, the fame-smith, the song-master".

The Harvard oration so impressed Teddy Roosevelt that seven years later he appointed the orator to the Supreme Court, and if I quote Holmes at some length it's because he allows me to understand George W Bush's war on terror not as an act of criminal stupidity but as the work of a man imprisoned in a past tense. I see the president making speeches against a backdrop of flags at the Naval Academy or among high-ranking uniforms at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and I think of a ten-year-old boy reciting the poetry of Rudyard Kipling, or of the youngest deck officer aboard the US Navy flagship in a 1940s Hollywood movie made with the technical assistance of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. When I listen to the debates in Congress about what to do with our army in Iraq, I'm left with a similar impression - of flies preserved in amber, or of Pleistocene vertebrates trapped for 30,000 years in the La Brea Tar Pits on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles. Whether for or against the war (urging immediate withdrawal or proposing unconditional reinforcement), the tribunes of the people don't seem to have grasped the fact that war as the heavyweight instrument of foreign policy didn't survive, either as a technology or as an idea, its tour of duty in the graves of the twentieth century.


The disappearance of Holmes's "song of the sword" has been a matter of public record ever since the atom bombs dropped on Japan in the summer of 1945, but if the news hasn't yet arrived on Capitol Hill or come to the attention of the Wall Street Journal's editorial page, neither has it reached the makers of America's statecraft - a tape delay embarrassingly evident early this summer at a ritual unveiling of the geopolitical mysteries staged for a crowd of New York bankers by Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies. CSIS touts itself as the world's most "significant think tank", where "government comes to hear what it needs to hear, not what it wants to hear", and in a showing of its credentials as the modern-day equivalent of the ancient Greek oracle at Delphi, three of its significant trustees (Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and Brent Scowcroft) turned up at a fund-raising dinner on the evening of June 14 in the Rainbow Room at Rockefeller Center, the visitation attended by 200 invited guests and filmed for subsequent broadcast on The Charlie Rose Show.

After the waiters had cleared away the cold lobster and the rack of lamb, Rose seated the three once-upon-a-time national security advisers (to Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter, and George Bush the Elder) in a semicircle of small chairs facing the altar of a television camera. The arrangement suggested the placing of marble statues in a Greek shipowner's sculpture garden, and when Rose was satisfied with the effect, he informed his audiences that they were in the presence of men "who had spoken to Mao, signed the Panama Canal Treaty, brought an end to the Cold War, negotiated with Israel". Wonders of the age, Rose said, wise beyond the wisdom of owls, their collective knowledge encompassing "1,000 years of experience". His first question he directed to Kissinger, framing it as a request for guidance from the Lincoln Memorial.

"American foreign policy! Are we at a special moment ...? Are we creating a new world order?"

Kissinger responded in the slow and ponderous voice consistent with the sound of human speech drawn from a stone.

"The international system is in a period of change", he said. The situation is very complex.

The rest of the evening's discussion proceeded at more or less the same elevation of significance, Charlie shuffling his earnest questions around the arc of enlightenment, wondering whether America had lost the power to shape the world in its own image, wanting to know if America is weaker or stronger than it used to be, asking how do we disengage from the blunder in Iraq. The three statesmen replied in phrases befitting their personae as priests of Apollo. No, America hadn't lost the power to shape events, but people elsewhere in the world weren't taking us as seriously as they once did, which was bad news because everywhere on the horizon there were disturbing signs - restlessness, suicide bombers, "political awakenings", jihadists, turbulence in "the global Balkans" now to be understood as almost all of Eastern Europe and much of what was once the Ottoman Empire. Things were likely to go from bad to worse unless America regained its power to instill fear and inspire respect, but in order to do so, to once again become credible as the hope and strength of the world, Brzezinski, echoing Holmes, said that we must reduce the high cholesterol levels of our "hedonistic, materialistic society", demand "idealism" from ourselves, show some talent for "self-denial and sacrifice".

As to the problem in Iraq, all the oracles agreed that America was "bogged down" in what was beginning to look like the La Brea Tar Pits (clearly a bad place for heavily armored Pleistocene vertebrates), and the time had come "to unbog", Kissinger remembered that it was hard to unbog from Vietnam, and that always it was a "question of what does one mean by 'getting bogged down".' Brzezinski observed that if we don't unbog, "most of the world will not be with us" and "our global power will gradually be dissipated". Scowcroft seemed as genuinely baffled as the saber-toothed tiger preserved under glass in the museum on Wilshire Boulevard. "It's amazing", he said, this bogging down in a tiny, little country; America's military and economic power is in all respects far greater than was Imperial Rome's, but we can't do what the Romans could do.


We can't do what the Romans could do because, sad to say, much has changed over the course of the last 2,000 years, and war isn't what it used to be in the good old days when Caesar crossed the Rubicon, or when Polish cavalry regiments rode glamorously onward to their deaths in the blue lines of fire coming at them from the Wehrmacht's entrenched machine-gun positions. Scowcroft might find it helpful to consult one or more volumes of military history, among them John Keegan's A History of Warfare (Knopf, 1993), and John Mueller's Remnants of War (Cornell, 2004). Contrary to the notion that war is a continuation of policy by other means (that is, the notion advanced in 1832 by the Prussian army officer Carl von Clausewitz and still accepted as holy writ in the cubicles at CSIS), both Keegan and Mueller find that war is a cultural product rather than a phenomenon or law of nature and therefore subject, like other modes of human expression (the wearing of togas or powdered wigs, the keeping of slaves, the art of cave painting), to the fallings out of fashion. The two authors suggest that war is better understood as a form of play than as a place of business, that Clausewitzian theory collapses into absurdity in the presence of atomic weapons. No matter how one defines policy - capture of territory, defense of homeland, rape of the Sabine women, extensions of liberty - the objective disappears along with everything else within range of the thermonuclear fire. Nothing continues; victory is defeat.

As between the two books, Keegan's is the more philosophical. For many years a lecturer at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and the author of, among other books, The Face of Battle (Penguin, 1978), Six Armies in Normandy (Penguin, 1994), and The Price of Admiralty (Penguin, 1990), he acknowledges the fact that all societies trace their origins to a warrior culture antecedent to the inventions of politics. Time passes, and the primitive instinct, emotional and irrational, delighting in the acts of pillage and the arts of murder, submits to the forces of cultural transformation. Naked aggression puts on the costumes of ritual; men learn to limit the collateral damage, to find more intelligent and cost-effective ways of winning applause and acquiring real estate.

Keegan considers the idea and practice of war instituted by non-European peoples (the Chinese, the Mongols, the Zulus, and the Maoris) as well as the various formations assembled under the banners of Western civilization - the Greek phalanx, the Roman legion, the medieval knight-at-arms, the American aircraft carrier; equally interested in the Japanese samurai and in the Egyptian Mamluks (both of whom regarded the use of firearms as unsporting), he assumes that sooner or later even foolhardy lieutenants grow up and come to see, as did Major General Charles Gordon six weeks before making his glorious last stand at Khartoum, in 1885, that when and if "one analyses human glory, it is composed of nine-tenths twaddle, perhaps ninety-nine-hundredths twaddle". After having led his reader on the long march from the deserts of ancient Mesopotamia to the jungles of Vietnam, Keegan arrives at the observation that war serves only itself, itself and those of its devotees for whom it remains a passion and a source of income: "War, it seems to me, after a lifetime of reading about the subject, mingling with men of war, visiting the sights of war, and observing its effects, may well be ceasing to commend itself to human beings as a desirable or productive, let alone rational, means of reconciling their discontents".


Not as tentative in his conclusion as Keegan, Mueller, the Woody Hayes Chair of National Security Studies at The Ohio State University, unlimbers the premise of The Remnants of War on page four of the introduction: "The central burden of this book is that war is merely an idea. Unlike breathing, eating or sex, war is not something that is somehow required by the human condition or by the forces of history. Accordingly, war can shrivel up and disappear, and it seems to be in the process of doing so."

Mueller takes account of the tactical reasons (nuclear weapons, asymmetric terrain, the high number of civilian casualties, "the massive shattering of historical precedent" reflected in the fact that since 1945 the developed countries have refrained from waging large-scale, industrial-strength warfare), but the bulk of his argument he directs at the idea that war, although often dull and occasionally unpleasant, is, all things considered, a worthwhile undertaking. Prior to World War I the right-thinking majorities in the world's finest universities and most expensive drawing rooms subscribed to the view presented by Holmes, welcomed by the young Winston Churchill (life is "at its best and healthiest" on the field of battle as one "awaits the caprice of the bullet"), endorsed by the nineteenth-century German general Helmuth von Moltke, who believed that "perpetual peace is a dream", that "war is an integral part of God's ordering of the universe", without which "the world would become swamped in materialism".

The romance perished in the trenches of"the war to end all wars"; if in 1895 or 1913 the harboring of antiwar sentiments was to be found only at the margins of Western society, among the kind of people apt to wear sandals and read the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore, over the course of the twentieth century pacifism entered the flow of mainstream thought, not for reasons of ideological principle but as a matter of common sense. Despite the highest rates of military mobilization and mortality ever recorded in the history of man, the idea that war is ennobling and thrilling, sometimes even useful and progressive, has been replaced (in the minds of most of the world's peoples if not in the minds of their ministers of state) with the idea that war, in Mueller's phrase, is "repulsive, uncivilized, immoral, and futile". He likens the change in attitude to the revisionist thinking that discredited the once-upon-a-time "peculiar institution" of slavery. In 1776 slavery was generally accepted, by Thomas Jefferson and by King George III, as a standard operating procedure blessed with the authority of Moses, Pericles, and Mohammed; by 1876 the idea of slavery had become revolting. So too with the idea of war.

Which isn't to say that large numbers of people won't continue to kill one another in "civil wars" comparable to those that have arisen since 1945 in Congo, Algeria, Rwanda, and Kosovo, or in "policing wars" akin to those in Chechnya, Palestine, and Iraq. Both forms of residual warfare Mueller regards as essentially criminal enterprises, occurring in-country, deploying freelance thugs who come armed with rifles and RPGs instead of helicopter gunships, seek to plunder defenseless civilians, take little interest in ideology, follow the flags of barbarous self-interest that in no way embody or represent a clash of civilizations.


Both Mueller and Keegan associate the romance of war with the energies and enthusiasms of male adolescence, their thinking in line with Ralph Waldo Emerson's remark that "it is the ignorant and childish part of mankind that is the fighting part".

Which would explain why Othello's "big wars that make ambition virtue" now are to be found, sensibly and exclusively, in the movies and the video-game arcades. As unfortunately for America's military personnel as for the citizens of Iraq, the shift into the twenty-first-century theater of operations seems to have escaped the notice of the world's most significant think tank.

I was reminded of the oversight soon after the Rainbow Room briefing when I came across the Internet game World of Warcraft, said to be played by as many as 8.5 million combatants located at all points of the geopolitical compass who pay $15 a month to pursue their dreams of godlike power in the online world of Azeroth. My guest pass granted access to the kingdoms Mulgore and Durotar, brought with it directions to the battlefields in the Burning Crusade, explained how to spot the differences between a Troll, a Silithid insect, and an Ore, when to beware the Blood Elves in Azshara, where to gather magic spells with which to ring the Scarab Gong or maybe assemble the Scepter of the Shifting Sands. Lost for an hour in the Elwynn Forest among the Murloc Oracles of Crystal Lake, I began to hope for rescue by Kissinger or Brzezinski, operating as the online avatars Bismarck and Maximus, sending reinforcements (in the personae of dwarves and shadow priests) from their computers in Washington.

Here at last was the world in which they could do what the Romans could do, the one manufactured by Blizzard Entertainment drifting in the same orbit as the one imagined by Carl von Clausewitz, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr, and George W Bush. With the small difference, of course, that on earth some of the game players bleed, and it doesn't do them much good to know that Bismarck and Maximus think they're virtual-reality toys battling the warrior monks of Azeroth.

_____

Lewis H Lapham is the National Correspondent for Harper's Magazine and the editor of the forthcoming Lapham's Quarterly.

Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Saying the unsayable

The links between the Israel lobby and US foreign policy are a Washington taboo. But a controversial new study is opening up a long-stifled debate

by Andrew Stephen

New Statesman (September 17 2007)


The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy by John J Mearsheimer & Stephen M Walt (Allen Lane the Penguin Press, 484 pages)


You have to have lived in America a long time before you realise that political correctness - far from ridding the country of -isms such as racism, sexism and anti-Semitism - has merely driven them underground. Words that are completely unacceptable in public, for example, are used every minute of every day in living rooms and bars across the country. It took me quite a while, too, to realise that coded words and phrases have also insinuated themselves into the national vocabulary to replace the unacceptable: that "single-parent mothers on welfare" really means "blacks", or that when Republicans lash into Democrats for their supposed reliance on "Hollywood" for election funds, what they really mean is "Jews". Americans, though few outsiders comprehend this, instinctively understand these many hidden codes that disguise intolerance supposed not to exist.

I was thinking about this when I picked up John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt's important new book, while simultaneously watching the most crucial debate so far of Republican candidates for next year's presidential elections. The no-hoper who refuses to conform so much that he is fast becoming my hero - 72-year-old Representative Ron Paul, a trained obstetrician who has continued to deliver babies while being a far-right, libertarian congressman - suddenly broke away from the sanitised scripts of the others and launched into words I've never heard any politician of either party use in public: "Why leave the troops in the region?" he responded dramatically when pressed about Iraq. "It was the fact that we had troops in Saudi Arabia [that] was one of the three reasons given for the attack on 9/11". Amidst the resulting Republican booing, he went on: "The American people didn't go in. A few people advising this administration, called the neoconservatives, hijacked our foreign policy. They're responsible, not the American people."

This was pretty revolutionary stuff, but even when he was saying the unsayable - that US foreign policy was really to blame for 9/11 - he was still resorting to coded language. You can be sure that his constituents back in their homes and bars in Lake Jackson in Texas, though, knew exactly what he was saying: that US troops were being killed in the Middle East to protect Israel, and that this policy and the invasion of Iraq had been cooked up by Jews. That really was unsayable: Americans love to tut-tut that anti-Semitism is on the rise again in Europe, but very few want to acknowledge that it is also alive and well in the US, except that is has been driven underground.

We should, then, welcome the publication of this book in the hope that it will finally open a vital discourse that has been stifled for 35 years. Mearsheimer and Walt say that Israel became the centrepiece of US foreign policy after the Six Day War in 1967 - a more accurate date would be 1973, when major military assistance began - but what is indisputable is that the whole subject of what the authors call "the unmatched power of the Israel lobby" in the US, and its most prominent cheerleaders such as Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle and Douglas Feith, has been virtually taboo since then.

Did they hijack US foreign policy in order to synchronise it perfectly with the needs of Israel, culminating in the Iraq catastrophe? "Bush and Sharon Nearly Identical On Mideast Policy", a Washington Post headline proclaimed just a month before the invasion. This discussion might seem old hat elsewhere in the world, but in the US the issue has largely been driven underground until now; even to mention the existence of the Israel lobby is to risk being labelled anti-Semitic ("Andrew Stephen should be exterminated with extreme prejudice", an American reader wrote to the former New Statesman editor after I had made some mild observations about a strong Jewish presence in the Bush administration early in 2001).

It's a cliche' of present-day bigotry that only blacks can call themselves niggers or Jews make jokes about Jews, so I will leave it to a veteran Israeli commentator and a former member of the Bush administration to say the unsayable for me. Akiva Eldar, of Ha'aretz, says that the likes of Feith and Perle are "walking a fine line between their loyalty to American governments ... and Israeli interests"; while Colonel Larry Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Colin Powell, says he has put this book on his students' curriculum because it contains "a lot of blinding flashes of the obvious but, that said, blinding flashes of the obvious that people whispered in corners rather than said out loud at cocktail parties where someone could hear you".

It is a major symbolic step forward that, following the publication of Jimmy Carter's Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid (Simon & Schuster) last year, a mainstream American publisher in New York should dare to pay an advance of $750,000 to two academics - albeit distinguished ones from the University of Chicago and Harvard respectively - to write a book that represents such a huge political and commercial risk for them. It is almost impossible to convey the degree of sensitivities and touchiness that the subject evokes - among both Jews and gentiles - throughout the US.

The thesis put forward by Mearsheimer and Walt, briefly, is that Israel has become a "strategic liability" for the US and that ending the special relationship - the one the British delude themselves they, rather than Israel, have with Washington - would benefit not only the US, but the rest of the world, including Israel itself. They are proponents of the "offensive realism" school of foreign policy thinking, which (put simply) argues that the more powerful a major power becomes, the more aggressively it will act in what ultimately becomes a relentless quest for hegemony. Mearsheimer, a former military man, has argued in works such as The Tragedy of Great Power Politics (Norton, 2001) that the US should encourage countries such as Germany, India and the Ukraine to develop nuclear programmes to hinder the rise of hypernationalism elsewhere.

The genesis of this book is highly revealing in itself. The authors were first commissioned to write a long, scholarly article on the Israel lobby by Atlantic magazine in 2002, but editors sat on the manuscript for months before deciding not to publish it. The article ended up in the London Review of Books in March 2006, and the authors then wrote a longer, 42-page version (plus an additional forty pages of footnotes), which was posted on the website of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

Furious denouncements followed. Dr Eliot Cohen, a prominent neocon who was appointed by Condoleezza Rice as her adviser in the state department as recently as last March, accused Mearsheimer and Walt in a prominent comment piece in the Washington Post (headlined "Yes, It's Anti-Semitic") of having "obsessive and irrationally hostile beliefs about Jews" whom he said they accused of "disloyalty, subversion or treachery, of having occult powers and of participating in secret combinations that manipulate institutions and governments".

The ubiquitous academic showman Alan Dershowitz, meanwhile, law professor at Harvard and author of The Case for Israel (Wiley, 2003), likened Mearsheimer and Walt's writings to "contemporary variations on old themes such as those promulgated in the notorious czarist forgery, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, in the Nazi and America First literature of the 1930s and early 1940s, and in the propaganda pamphlets of the Soviet Union". Harvard soon caved in under such pressures, removing the Kennedy School's logo from the web pages carrying Mearsheimer and Walt's study; Walt stepped down as academic dean at the Kennedy School.

Reading any of the articles or the book itself - 484 pages with 127 of them footnotes and indexes - it is hard to understand what has inspired such extravagant venom. The authors go to some trouble to explain that they are writing about an "Israel" and not a "Jewish" lobby, and that a significant proportion of members consist of the so-called "Christian Right", or "Christian Zionists". They write, too, that the lobby is a "loose coalition of individuals and organisations"; it is "not a single, unified movement with a central leadership, and it is certainly not a cabal or conspiracy that 'controls' US foreign policy ... it is engaged in good old-fashioned interest-group politics, which is as American as apple-pie".

They point out, though, how the special relationship has worked. Israeli leaders have addressed Congress six times since 1976, far more than those of any other country and have also been, by far, the recipient of the most US foreign aid during that period.

Mearsheimer and Walt estimate that Israel currently receives $3 billion a year from the US, three-quarters of it for military purposes, or $4.3 billion if you accept the estimate of former congressman Lee Hamilton, the highly respected Democrat who was co-chairman of the 9/11 Commission. They add that Israel is unique in that it receives all its aid in one lump sum at the beginning of each fiscal year and, unlike other countries, does not have to account for how it spends it - details too complicated to go into here but which Hank Gaffney, former chief nuclear planner at the Pentagon, describes as "absolute bosh" and "bullshit". Mearsheimer and Walt then point out that the second and third largest recipients of US aid are now Egypt and Jordan, which is "at least partly intended to benefit Israel as well ... as a reward for good behaviour".

Phew. The j'accuse statistics run thick and fast, with the book emerging as a curious combination of academic scholarship and journalistic polemic, reading rather like a prosecutor reeling off an endless series of misdoings. I can dismiss the overheated rhetoric of Cohen and Dershowitz, but not the reaction of people like Gaffney - neither an Arabist nor a Zionist - when he describes the book as a "rant" and says "they haven't done their homework and [have got] an enormous amount wrong". Indeed, the authors concede that they are not Middle East experts, and it shows. They repeatedly single out for criticism Martin Indyk, for example, an Australian-turned-American who was Clinton's ambassador to Israel; he is actually a remarkably level-headed and moderate representative of the Israel lobby, about as far from being a neocon extremist as a member could be.

Yet anybody who has lived in Washington as long as I have knows that the Israel lobby can be extraordinarily ruthless and unpleasant, and I'm not just talking about the deranged letter-writers and threat-merchants. Take the example of my good friend Tim Tyler, who was the US Navy's Israel desk officer during the 1973 Yom Kippur War as a young naval officer, before he joined the Pentagon's secretive Defence Security Assistance Agency, where he performed various important roles including that of chief of the Middle East South Asia Division.

He then worked at Nato as a defence planner with special expertise in Pershing II and cruise-missile deployment, before returning to the Pentagon to be "deputy director plans", when he was directly involved in international sales of major weapons systems.

He has recently retired, and is thus free to speak to me for publication. He tells a chilling story, however. In the 1980s he recommended that the Pentagon stop funding the development of Israel's own multibillion dollar Lavi jet fighter, but offer them America's own F-16s instead. His recommendation, much to the fury of the Israelis, worked its way up the Pentagon hierarchy and was eventually accepted. I will let him recount the sequel in his own words:

"Through all of this I remained friends with Marvin Klemow [negotiator for the Israelis] and one holiday I was at his house for a party. It was a good party, and the only slight hiccup was the rather brusque manner of an Israeli colonel who was there - but I thought nothing of it. Then Marv pulled me aside. He said something along the lines of, 'You won't believe this, but I just got chewed out for inviting you to this party'. I asked him why, and he told me that he had just been informed that I was on the [Israeli] embassy's anti-Semite list because I didn't support the Lavi programme. We were both flabbergasted. But, sadly, I was never invited back to Marv's house."

The story of another friend is no less chilling. Former Senator Chuck Percy is now nearly 88 and far from well, but until 1985 was a vigorous and moderate Republican senator who was chairman of the all-powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He started to ruin his career, though, when he refused to sign a letter sponsored by AIPAC - the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the best-known and most powerful individual lobby - which had been drawn up to protest against President Ford's proposed "reassessment" of Middle East policy. Then he said publicly that Yasser Arafat was more moderate than some other Palestinian leaders and - despite having a generally pro-Israeli record - began to be perceived by AIPAC from then on as an enemy.

The final blow, in fact, came when he supported the sale of Awacs aircraft to Saudi Arabia. Huge sums of money duly poured in from AIPAC supporters all over the country to support Percy's Democratic opponent in the 1984 elections, and despite huge popularity in his native Illinois, Percy narrowly lost - and never returned to politics. Mearsheimer and Walt quote Tom Dine, then executive director of AIPAC, saying after Percy's defeat: "All the Jews in America, from coast to coast, gathered to oust Percy. And the American politicians - those who hold public positions now, and those who aspire - got the message."

They certainly did, and some of the handful of politicians who have dared to defy AIPAC have got the Percy treatment, too. Mearsheimer and Walt say, of next year's presidential elections, "on one subject, we can be ... confident that the candidates will speak with one voice". Indeed so, after reading this book; both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama attended this year's AIPAC conference in DC, giving media briefings in rooms 25 yards apart afterwards, while Benjamin Netanyahu was also briefing frantically away behind closed doors a few steps from them.

Perhaps it is hard, for those of us who are not Jewish, to understand the passion and intensity with which America's Israel lobby pursue their goals. It would have been helpful if Mearsheimer and Walt had tried, dispassionately, to explore why they are so often driven, sometimes to the excesses I have described. But the authors are too busy with their prosecutorial charge-sheet to pause and wonder. We read all too much about AIPAC, but next to nothing about the Project for the New American Century - a genuinely sinister group that included the now-discredited neocons but also, more crucially, non-Jewish fanatics such as Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and John Bolton. In my opinion it, far more than the likes of AIPAC, was responsible for the foreign-policy calamities - culminating in the Iraq tragedy - that have occurred under George W Bush.

We should be grateful to Mearsheimer and Walt, nonetheless, for embarking on their near-impossible task and bringing out into the open a rancorous issue that desperately needs to be addressed by all concerned. The passions and anger - and, indeed, anti-Semitism - are such that writing a detached and lucid book on this subject is probably impossible. Heaven knows what Mearsheimer and Walt have been through, but we should all now hope that it has been worth it and that their book marks the beginning of a new and more open era when it comes to this most painful of subjects.
_____

Andrew Stephen was appointed US Editor of the New Statesman in 2001, having been its Washington correspondent and weekly columnist since 1998. He is a regular contributor to BBC news programs and to The Sunday Times Magazine. He has also written for a variety of US newspapers including The New York Times Op-Ed pages. He came to the US in 1989 to be Washington Bureau Chief of The Observer and in 1992 was made Foreign Correspondent of the Year by the American Overseas Press Club for his coverage.

http://www.newstatesman.com/200709130044


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Ugly Americans

Mattel sorry for 'design flaws'

BBC NEWS (September 21 2007)


Mattel has admitted that most of the toys recalled in recent safety scares had "design flaws" and that Chinese manufacturers were not to blame.

During talks in Beijing, a senior Mattel executive apologised for the damage that the incidents had done to the reputation of Chinese-made goods.

The recall of more than twenty million toys led some in the US to call for limits on the number of Chinese imports.

This followed other product scares over Chinese food, toothpaste and tyres.


'Full responsibility'

Until now, Chinese sub-contractors have borne the brunt of criticism over the recall of Mattel products over concerns about their excessive levels of lead paint.

The boss of one Mattel supplier was reported as having killed himself last month after toys his firm made for the US company's Fisher-Price subsidiary were among those recalled.

Chinese media reported that Zhang Shuhong, co-owner of the Lee Der Toy Company, had been found hanged in one of his factories.

Several firms have been fired, and Mattel has introduced mandatory audits on products coming out of Asia as well as tougher testing procedures.

__________

"The vast majority of these products that we recalled were the result of a flaw in Mattel's design". -- Thomas Debrowski, Mattel
__________


But Thomas Debrowski, Mattel's executive vice president for worldwide operations, said on Friday that the firm should shoulder the burden of responsibility for the safety breaches.

"Mattel takes full responsibility for these recalls and apologises personally to you, the Chinese people and all of our customers who received the toys", he told Li Changjiang, head of China's product quality watchdog.

"It is important for everyone to understand that the vast majority of these products that we recalled were the result of a flaw in Mattel's design, not through a manufacturing flaw in Chinese manufacturers".

He added that Mattel now believed it had recalled more products than was justified and that items which may have met US safety standards had been taken off the shelves.

Mr Li said this admission was "unacceptable", adding that "you cannot recall 10,000 products just because one is sub-standard".


Co-operation

However, he pledged to work with Mattel, which generates much of its profit in China, to ensure similar problems did not happen again.

"This shows that our co-operation is in the interests of Mattel", he said. "I really hope that Mattel can learn lessons and gain experience from these incidents".

Mattel has apologised to its customers on several occasions for the lapses, but also denied that it was slow to reveal safety concerns.

US legislators criticised Mattel earlier this month for the safety scares, with one Senator saying the problem "should not be happening in the US".


(c) BBC MMVII

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7006599.stm

Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Friday, September 21, 2007

The US Will Lose War Regardless What it Does

Gabriel Kolko interview

by John Goetz

Speigel Online (September 10 2007)


In an interview with SPIEGEL ONLINE, American military historian Gabriel Kolko argues that the situation in Iraq is worse than ever and that the artificial nation, created after World War I, is breaking up. The "surge", he says, is also failing.


SPIEGEL: The long awaited results of the "surge" are now in. Has the surge succeeded? Is there reason for optimism in Iraq?

KOLKO: Both United States General David H Petraeus and US Ambassador Ryan C Crocker will deliver "progress" reports to Congress on Monday, but the skeptics far outnumber those who believe Bush's strategy in Iraq is succeeding. They will say that Shiite attacks on Sunnis in Baghdad have fallen but they will not add that Baghdad has been largely purged in many areas of Sunni inhabitants and their flight much earlier - and not the increase in Americans - is the reason "success" can be reported to Congress. Indeed, most of the administration's statistics have been met with a wave a skepticism.

The Iraq military but especially the political 'benchmarks' that this administration thought so crucial - and used to justify its 'surge' of 28,500 additional troops - have, in the opinion of Congress' Government Accountability Office (GAO) report issued at the end of August, not been attained (there are now 168,000 American troops in Iraq, plus roughly half as many civilians). In its unexpurgated, original form, the GAO claimed that only three of the eighteen Congressionally mandated "benchmarks" had been reached: violence was as high as ever; reconstruction was plagued by corruption on both the Iraqi and American sides; the Shiites and Sunnis were as disunited as ever, murdering each other; crucial laws, especially on oil, have not been enacted yet; and probably many political changes will never occur, and the like. Of its nine security goals, only two had been met. White House and Pentagon efforts to soften GAO criticisms failed.


SPIEGEL: Who has benefited from the mess?

KOLKO: The situation is worse than ever and the artificial nation - created after World War I in a capricious manner - is breaking up. The surge, as one Iraqi is quoted, "is isolating areas from each other ... and putting up permanent checkpoints. That is what I call a failure." The civilian death toll last August was higher than in February. Geopolitically, as Bush senior feared after the first Gulf war in 1990-91, Iran is emerging more powerful than ever, increasingly dominant in the region. The many official Israeli warnings before the war that this would be the outcome of war against Iraq and the removal of Saddam Hussein from power have come true.


SPIEGEL: How would you describe the situation of the Bush White House today? What options does it have?

KOLKO: The Bush Administration suffers from a fatal dilemma. Its Iraq adventure is getting steadily worse, the American people very likely will vote the Republicans out of office because of it, and the war is extremely expensive at a time that the economy is beginning to present it with a major problem. The president's poll ratings are now the worst since 2001. Only 33 percent of the American public approve of his leadership and 58 percent want to decrease the number of American troops immediately or quickly. Fifty-five percent want legislation to set a withdrawal deadline. In Afghanistan, as well, the war against the Taliban is going badly, and the Bush Administration's dismal effort to use massive American military power to remake the world in a vague, inconsistent way is failing. The US has managed to increasingly alienate its former friends, who now fear its confusion and unpredictability. Above all, the American public is less ready than ever to tolerate Bush's idiosyncrasies.


SPIEGEL: What went wrong? Was the war doomed from the very beginning? How can the US military and the US government which is spending $3 billion per week in Iraq be losing the war?

KOLKO: The US is losing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan for the very same reasons it lost all of its earlier conflicts. It has the manpower and firepower advantage, as always, but these are ultimately irrelevant in the medium- and long-run. They were irrelevant in many contexts in which the US was not involved, and they explain the outcome of many armed struggles over the past century regardless of who was in them, for they are usually decided by the socio-economic and political strength of the various sides - China after 1947 and Vietnam after 1972 are two examples but scarcely the only ones.

Wars are more determined by socio-economic and political factors than any other, and this was true long before the US attempted to regulate the world's affairs. Political conflicts are not solved by military interventions, and that they are often incapable of being resolved by political or peaceful means does not alter the fact that force is dysfunctional. This is truer today than ever with the spread of weapons technology. Washington refuses to heed this lesson of modern history.


SPIEGEL: What is the position of the US military? Are its forces united behind the war?

KOLKO: Some of the most acute criticisms made of the gross simplisms which have guided interventionist policies were produced within the American military, especially after the Vietnam experience traumatized it. My history of the Vietnam War was purchased by many base libraries, and the military journals treated it in detail and very respectfully. The statement at the end of July by the new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Michael G Mullen, that "no amount of troops in no amount of time will make much of a difference" if Iraqi politics fails to change drastically reflects a current of realism that has existed among military thinkers for some decades (whether he acts on this assumption is another matter and depends greatly on considerations outside of his control). But the senior military remains extremely disunited on this war, and many officers regard General Petraeus - the top military commander in Iraq - as a political opportunist who ultimately will do as Bush commands.

Admiral William J Fallon, who commands American forces in the region and is Petraeus' superior, is publicly skeptical of his endorsement of the president's policies in Iraq. The Army, especially, does not have the manpower for a protracted war and if the US maintains its troop levels after spring 2008, it will face a crisis. It will have to break its pledge not to leave soldiers in Iraq longer than fifteen months, accelerate the use of National Guard units, and the like - and it will lose the war regardless of what it does.


SPIEGEL: But if there are critical voices in the military, why are they ignored?

KOLKO: Like the CIA, the military has some acute strategic thinkers who have learned from bitter experiences. The analyses of the US Army's Strategic Studies Institute - to name one of many - are often very insightful and critical.

The problem, of course, is that few (if any) at the decisive levels pay any attention to the critical ruminations that the military and CIA consistently produce. There is no shortage of insight among US official analysts - the problem that policy is rarely formulated with objective knowledge is a constraint on it. Ambitious people, who exist in ample quantity, say what their superiors wish to hear and rarely, if ever, contradict them. Former CIA head George Tenet is the supreme example of that, and what the CIA emphasized for the president or Donald Rumsfeld was essentially what they wanted to hear. While he admits the CIA knew far less regarding Iraq than it should have, Tenet's recent memoir is a good example of desire leading reporting objectively. The men and women who rise to the top are finely tuned to the relationship between ambition and readiness to contradict their superiors with facts. The entire mess is Iraq, to cite just one example, was predicted. If reason and clarity prevailed, America's role in the world would be utterly different.


SPIEGEL: But what about the Iraqi security forces? Are they able to take over from the Americans?

KOLKO: The Iraqi army and police that are to replace the Americans is heavily infiltrated by Shiites loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr and others - estimates vary, but at least a quarter is wholly unreliable. When Paul Bremer was sent as proconsul to Iraq in May 2003, he decided unilaterally to purge the military completely of Saddam's officers and loyalists - Bush still wanted, vaguely, to keep the existing army intact - but the task of reconstructing it proved far too difficult for his successors. The American administration is now using the very Sunni tribes that Saddam had worked with, mainly by purchasing their loyalty. It is very significant that Bush during his visit to Iraq a few days ago went to Anbar province rather than Baghdad, reflecting the realization that Nouri al-Maliki's government is no longer the chosen vehicle for attaining America's goals.


SPIEGEL: How does Washington plan to go about the business of ending the war?

KOLKO: There is utter confusion in Washington about how to end this morass. Goals are similar but the means to attain them are increasingly changing, confused, and as victory becomes more elusive so too does this administration look pathetic. The 'surge' in the opinion of a majority of quite conservative Establishment foreign policy experts (eighty percent of whom had once served in government) was failing; the administration's handling of the war, in their view, was dismal. In fact, it is disastrous.

_____

Gabriel Kolko, a prominent military historian, is the author of The Age of War: The United States Confronts the World (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2006) and The Anatomy of War (The New Press, 1994).

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,504865,00.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Death at a Distance: The US Air War

by Conn Hallinan

Foreign Policy In Focus (August 30 2007)

www.fpif.org


According to the residents of Datta Khel, a town in Pakistan's North Waziristan, three missiles streaked out of Afghanistan's Pakitka Province and slammed into a Madrassa, or Islamic school, this past June. When the smoke cleared, the Asia Times reported, thirty people were dead.

The killers were robots, General Atomics MQ-1 Predators. The AGM-114 Hellfire missiles they used in the attack were directed from a base deep in the southern Nevada desert.

It was not the first time Predators had struck. The previous year a CIA Predator took a shot at al-Qaeda's number two man, Ayman al-Zawahiri, but missed. The missile, however, killed eighteen people. According to the Asia Times piece, at least one other suspected al-Qaeda member was assassinated by a Predator in Pakistan's northern frontier area, and in 2002 a Predator killed six "suspected al-Qaeda" members in Yemen.

These assaults are part of what may be the best kept secret of the Iraq-Afghanistan conflicts: an enormous intensification of US bombardments in these and other countries in the region, the increasing number of civilian casualties such a strategy entails, and the growing role of pilot-less killers in the conflict.

According to Associated Press, there has been a five-fold increase in the number of bombs dropped on Iraq during the first six months of 2007 over the same period in 2006. More than thirty tons of those have been cluster weapons, which take an especially heavy toll on civilians.

The US Navy has added an aircraft carrier to its Persian Gulf force, and the Air Force has moved F-16s into Balad air base north of Baghdad.

Balad, which currently conducts 10,000 air operations a week, is strengthening runways to handle the increase in air activity. Colonel David Reynolds told the AP, "We would like to get to be a field like Langley, if you will". The Langley field in Virginia is one of the Air Force's biggest and most sophisticated airfields.

The Air Force certainly appears to be settling in for a long war. "Until we can determine that the Iraqis have got their air force to significant capability", says Lieutenant General Gary North, the regional air commander, "I think the coalition will be here to support that effort".

The Iraqi air force is virtually non-existent. It has no combat aircraft and only a handful of transports.

Improving the runways has allowed the Air Force to move B1-B bombers from Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean to Balad, where the big aircraft have been carrying out daily strikes. A B1-B can carry up to 24 tons of bombs.

The step-up in air attacks is partly a reflection of how beaten up and overextended US ground troops are. While Army units put in fifteen-month tours, Air Force deployments are only four months, with some only half that. And Iraqi and Afghani insurgents have virtually no ability to inflict casualties on aircraft flying at 20,000 feet and using laser and satellite-guided weapons, in contrast to the serious damage they are doing to US ground troops.

Besides increasing the number of F-16s, B1-Bs, and A-10 attack planes, Predator flight hours over both countries have doubled from 2005. "The Predator is coming into its own as a no-kidding weapon verses a reconnaissance-only platform", brags Major Jon Dagley, commander of the 46th Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron.

The Air Force is also deploying a bigger, faster and more muscular version of the Predator, the MQ-9 "Reaper" - as in grim - a robot capable of carrying four Hellfire missiles, plus two 500 pound bombs.

The Predators and the Reapers have several advantages, the most obvious being they don't need pilots. "With more Reapers I could send manned airplanes home", says North.

At $8.5 million an aircraft - the smaller Predator comes in at $4.5 million apiece - they are also considerably cheaper than the F-16 ($19 million) the B1-B ($200+ million) and even the A-10 ($9.8 million).

The Air Force plans to deploy 170 Predators and seventy Reapers over the next three years. "It is possible that in our lifetime we will be able to run a war without ever leaving the US", Lieutenant Colonel David Branham told the New York Times.

The result of the stepped up air war, according to the London-based organization Iraq Body Count, is an increase in civilian casualties. A Lancet study of "excess deaths" caused by the Iraq war found that air attacks were responsible for thirteen percent of the deaths - 76,000 as of June 2006 - and that fifty percent of the deaths of children under fifteen were caused by air strikes.

The number of civilian deaths in Afghanistan from air strikes has created a rift between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the United States.

"A senior British commander", according to the New York Times, has pressed US Special Forces (SF) to leave southern Afghanistan because their use of air power was alienating the local people. SFs work in small teams and are dependent on air power for support.

SFs called in an air strike last November near Kandahar that killed 31 nomads. This past April, a similar air strike in Western Afghanistan killed 57 villagers, half of them women and children. Coalition forces are now killing more Afghan civilians than the Taliban are. The escalating death toll has thrown the government of Hamid Karzai into a crisis and the NATO governments into turmoil. "We need to understand that preventing civilian casualties is crucially important in sustaining the support of the population", British Defense Minister Des Browne told the Financial Times.

It has also opened up the allies to the charge of war crimes. In a recent air attack in southern Afghanistan that killed 25 civilians, NATO spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Mike Smith said the Taliban were responsible because they were hiding among the civilian population.

But Article 48 of the Geneva Conventions clearly states: "The Parties to the conflict shall at all times distinguish between the civilian population and combatants". Article 50 dictates that "The presence within the civilian population of individuals who do not come within the definition of civilian does not deprive the population of its civilian character".

The stepped-up air war in both countries has less to do with a strategic military decision than the reality that the occupations are coming apart at the seams.

For all intents and purposes, the US Army in Iraq is broken, the victim of multiple tours, inadequate forces, and the kind of war Iraq has become: a conflict of shadows, low-tech but highly effective roadside bombs, and a population which is either hostile to the occupation or at least sympathetic to the resistance.

It is much the same in Afghanistan. Lord Inge, the former British chief of staff, recently said, "The situation in Afghanistan is much worse than many people recognize ... it is much more serious than people want to recognize". A well-placed military source told the Observer, "If you talk privately to the generals, they are very worried". Faced with defeat or bloody stalemate on the ground, the allies have turned to air power, much as the US did in Vietnam. But, as in Vietnam, the terrible toll bombing inflicts on civilians all but guarantees long-term failure.

"Far from bringing about the intended softening up of the opposition", Phillip Gordon, a Brookings Institute Fellow, told the Asia Times, "bombing tends to rally people behind their leaders and cause them to dig in against outsiders who, whatever the justification, are destroying their homeland".

_____

Conn Hallinan is a Foreign Policy In Focus columnist.

Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org ). Copyright (c) 2007, Institute for Policy Studies.

http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/4511


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Thursday, September 20, 2007

IBM to Offer Office Software Free in Challenge to Microsoft's Line

by Steve Lohr

New York Times (September 18 2007)


IBM plans to mount its most ambitious challenge in years to Microsoft's dominance of personal computer software, by offering free programs for word processing, spreadsheets and presentations.

The company is announcing the desktop software, called IBM Lotus Symphony, at an event today in New York. The programs will be available as free downloads from the IBM Web site.

IBM's Lotus-branded proprietary programs already compete with Microsoft products for e-mail, messaging and work group collaboration. But the Symphony software is a free alternative to Microsoft's mainstay Office programs - Word, Excel and PowerPoint. The Office business is huge and lucrative for Microsoft, second only to its Windows operating system as a profit maker.

In the 1990s, IBM failed in an effort to compete head-on with Microsoft in personal computer software with its OS/2 operating system and its SmartSuite office productivity programs.

But IBM is taking a different approach this time. Its offerings are versions of open-source software developed in a consortium called OpenOffice.org. The original code traces its origins to a German company, Star Division, which Sun Microsystems bought in 1999. Sun later made the desktop software, now called StarOffice, an open-source project, in which work and code are freely shared.

IBM's engineers have been working with OpenOffice technology for some time. But last week, IBM declared that it was formally joining the open-source group, had dedicated 35 full-time programmers to the project and would contribute code to the initiative.

Free office productivity software has long been available from OpenOffice.org, and the open-source alternative has not yet made much progress against Microsoft's Office.

But IBM, analysts note, has such reach and stature with corporate customers that its endorsement could be significant.

"IBM is jumping in with products that are backed by IBM, with the IBM brand and IBM service", said Melissa Webster, an analyst for IDC, a research firm. "This is a major boost for open source on the desktop".

IBM executives compare this move with the push it gave Linux, the open-source operating system, into corporate data centers. In 2000, IBM declared that it would forcefully back Linux with its engineers, its marketing and its dollars. The support from IBM helped make Linux a mainstream technology in corporations, where it competes with Microsoft's Windows server software.

IBM is also joining forces with Google, which offers the open-source desktop productivity programs as part of its Google Pack of software. Google supports the same document formats in its online word processor and spreadsheet service.

IBM views its Symphony desktop offerings as part of a broader technology trend that will open the door to faster, more automated movement of information within and between organizations.

A crucial technical ingredient, they say, is the document format used in the open-source desktop software, called the OpenDocument Format. It makes digital information independent of the program, like a word processor or spreadsheet, that is used to create and edit a document. OpenDocument Format is based on an Internet-era protocol called XML, short for Extensible Markup Language, which enables automated machine-to-machine communication.

For example, an individual investor might create a spreadsheet with automated links to market information, and prices at which he or she wants to buy or sell shares in particular stocks. The person would get an alert by e-mail or cellphone message of price swings, and could create the document for a buy or sell order with a keystroke.

Or, in a doctor's office, patient records could be linked to hospital, clinic and other databases and updated automatically.

Microsoft has the same vision of software automation, but it champions its own document format, called Office Open XML. Earlier this month, Microsoft failed in its initial effort to have Office Open XML ratified as a global technical standard by the International Organization for Standardization in Geneva. The OpenDocument Format, backed by IBM, Google, Sun and others, was approved by the standards organization last year.

IBM clearly regards its open-source desktop offerings as a strategic move in the document format battle. "There is nothing that advances a standard like a product that uses it", said Steven A. Mills, senior vice president of IBM's software group.

The Lotus Symphony products will support the Microsoft Office formats as well as the OpenDocument Format. But analysts note that technical translators are not entirely foolproof; Symphony software may easily translate the words from a Microsoft Word document, but some of the fonts and formatting may be lost. For many users, that may not matter, they say, but for others it might.

Betsy Frost, a general manager in Microsoft's Office business, said users valued "full compatibility" with previous versions of their Office documents as well as the ease of use and familiarity of Microsoft products. And she noted that there are 500 million Office users worldwide.

Any inroads IBM and its allies make against Microsoft, analysts say, will not come easily. "Three major players - IBM, Google and Sun - are now solidly behind a potential competing standard to Office", said Rob Koplowitz, an analyst at Forrester Research. "But it's a tough road. Office is very entrenched".

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/18/technology/18blue.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

The Innovation Fallacy

by John Michael Greer

The Archdruid Report (September 12 2007)

Druid perspectives on nature, culture, and the future of industrial society


The core concept that has to be grasped to make sense of the future looming up before us, it seems to me, is the concept of limits. Central to ecology, and indeed all the sciences, this concept has failed so far to find any wider place in the mindscape of industrial society. The recent real estate bubble is simply another example of our culture's cult of limitlessness at work, as real estate investors insisted that housing prices were destined to keep on rising forever. Of course those claims proved to be dead wrong, as they always are, but the fact that they keep on being made - it's been only a few years, after all, since the same rhetoric was disproven just as dramatically in the tech stock bubble of the late 1990s - shows just how allergic most modern people are to the idea that there's an upper limit to anything.

It's this same sort of thinking that drives the common belief that limits on industrial society's access to energy can be overcome by technological innovations. This claim looks plausible at first glance, since the soaring curve of energy use that defines recent human history can be credited to technological innovations that allowed human societies to get at the huge reserves of fossil fuels stored inside the planet. The seemingly logical corollary is that we can just repeat the process, coming up with innovations that will give us ever increasing supplies of energy forever.

Most current notions about the future are based on some version of this belief. The problem, and it's not a small one, is that the belief itself is based on a logical fallacy.

One way to see how this works - or, more precisely, doesn't work - is to trace the same process in a setting less loaded with emotions and mythic narratives than the future of industrial society. Imagine for a moment, then, that we're discussing an experiment involving microbes in a petri dish. The culture medium in the dish contains five percent of a simple sugar that the microbes can eat, and 95% of a more complex sugar they don't have the right enzymes to metabolize. We put a drop of fluid containing microbes into the dish, close the lid, and watch. Over the next few days, a colony of microbes spreads through the culture medium, feeding on the simple sugar.

Then a mutation happens, and one microbe starts producing an enzyme that lets it feed on the more abundant complex sugar. Drawing on this new food supply, the mutant microbe and its progeny spread rapidly, outcompeting the original strain, until finally the culture medium is full of mutant microbes. At this point, though, the growth of the microbes is within hailing distance of the limits of the supply of complex sugar. As we watch the microbes through our microscopes, we might begin to wonder whether they can produce a second mutation that will let them continue to thrive. Yet this obvious question misleads, because there is no third sugar in the culture medium for another mutation to exploit.

The point that has to be grasped here is as crucial as it is easy to miss. The mutation gave the microbes access to an existing supply of highly concentrated food; it didn't create the food out of thin air. If the complex sugar hadn't existed, the mutation would have yielded no benefit at all. As the complex sugar runs out, further mutations are possible - some microbes might end up living on microbial waste products; others might kill and eat other microbes; still others might develop some form of photosynthesis and start creating sugars from sunlight - but all these possibilities draw on resources much less concentrated and abundant than the complex sugar that made the first mutation succeed so spectacularly. Nothing available to the microbes will allow them to continue to flourish as they did in the heyday of the first mutation.

Does this same logic apply to human beings? A cogent example from 20th century history argues that it does. When the Second World War broke out in 1939, Germany arguably had the most innovative technology on the planet. All through the war, German technology stayed far ahead of the opposition, fielding jet aircraft, cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, guided bombs, and many other advances years before anybody else. Their great vulnerability was a severe shortage of petroleum reserves, and even this area saw dramatic technological advances: Germany developed effective methods of CTL (coal to liquids) fuel production, and put them to work as soon as it became clear that the oil fields of southern Russia were permanently out of reach.

The results are instructive. Despite every effort to replace petroleum with CTL and other energy resources, the German war machine ran out of gas. By 1944 the Wehrmacht was struggling to find fuel even for essential operations. The outcome of the Battle of the Bulge in the winter of 1944-5 is credited by many military historians to the raw fact that the German forces didn't have enough fuel to follow up the initial success of their Ardennes offensive. The most innovative technology on the planet, backed up with substantial coal reserves and an almost limitless supply of slave labor, proved unable to find a replacement for cheap abundant petroleum.

It's worthwhile to note that more than sixty years later, no one has done any better. Compare the current situation with the last two energetic transitions - the transition from wind and water power to coal in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, and the transition from coal to petroleum at the beginning of the 20th - and a key distinction emerges. In both the earlier cases, the new energy resource took a dominant place in the industrial world's economies while the older ones were still very much in use. The world wasn't in any great danger of running out of wind and water in 1750, when coal became the mainspring of the industrial revolution, and peak coal was still far in the future in 1900 when oil seized King Coal's throne.

The new fuels took over because they were more concentrated and abundant than the competition, and those factors made them more economical than older resources. In both cases a tide of technological advance followed the expansion of energy resources, and was arguably an effect of that expansion rather than its cause. In the 1950s and 1960s many people expected nuclear power to repeat the process - those of my readers who were around then will recall the glowing images of atomic-powered cities in the future that filled the popular media in those days. Nothing of the kind happened, because nuclear power proved to be much less economical than fossil fuels. Only massive government subsidies, alongside the hidden "energy subsidy" it received from an economy powered by cheap fossil fuels, made nuclear power look viable at all.

Mind you, uranium contains a very high concentration of energy, though the complex systems needed to mine, process, use, and clean up after it probably use more energy than the uranium itself contains. Most other resources touted as solutions to peak oil either contain much lower concentrations of energy per unit than petroleum, or occur in much lower abundance. This isn't accidental; the laws of thermodynamics mandate that on average, the more concentrated an energy source is, the less abundant it will be, and vice versa. They also mandate that all energy transfers move from higher to lower concentrations, and this means that you can't concentrate energy without using energy to do it. Really large amounts of concentrated energy occur on earth only as side effects of energy cycles in the biosphere that unfold over geological time - that's where coal, oil, and natural gas come from - and then only in specific forms and locations. It took 500 million years to create our planet's stockpile of fossil fuels. Once they're gone, what's left is mostly diffuse sources such as sunlight and wind, and trying to concentrate these so they can power industrial society is like trying to make a river flow uphill.

Thus the role of technological innovation in the rise of industrial economies is both smaller and more nuanced than it's often claimed to be. Certain gateway technologies serve the same function as the mutations in the biological model used earlier in this post; they make it possible to draw on already existing resources that weren't accessible to other technological suites. At the same time, it's the concentration and abundance of the resource in question that determines how much a society will be able to accomplish with it. Improvements to the gateway technology can affect this to a limited extent, but such improvements suffer from a law of diminishing returns backed up, again, by the laws of thermodynamics.

Innovation is a necessary condition for the growth and survival of industrial society, in other words, but not a sufficient condition. If energy resources aren't available in sufficient quality and quantity, innovation can make a successful society but it won't make or maintain an industrial one. It's worth suggesting that the maximum possible level of economic development in a society is defined by the abundance and concentration of energy resources available to that society. It's equally possible, though this is rather more speculative, that the maximum possible technological level of an intelligent species anywhere in the universe is defined by the abundance and concentration of energy resources on the planet where that species evolves. (We'll be talking more about this in next week's post.)

What we're discussing here is an application of one of the central principles of ecology. Liebig's law - named after the 19th century German agronomist Justus von Liebig, who first proposed it - holds that the maximum growth of a community of organisms is limited by whatever necessary factor in the environment is in shortest supply. A simpler way of stating this law is that necessary resources aren't interchangeable. If your garden bed needs phosphorus, adding nitrogen to it won't help, and if it's not getting enough sunlight, all the fertilizer in the world won't boost growth beyond a certain point.

For most of human history, the resource that has been in shortest supply has arguably been energy. For the last three hundred years, and especially for the last three-fourths of a century, that's been less true than ever before. Today, however, the highly concentrated and abundant energy resources stockpiled by the biosphere over the last half billion years or so are running low, and there are no other resources on or around Earth at the same level of concentration and abundance. Innovation is vital if we're to deal with the consequences of that reality, but it can't make the laws of thermodynamics run backwards and give us an endless supply of concentrated energy just because we happen to want one.

http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2007/09/innovation-fallacy.html#links


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Who Needs Hackers?

The biggest threat to increasingly complex systems may be the systems themselves.

by John Schwartz

New York Times (September 12 2007)


Nothing was moving. International travelers flying into Los Angeles International Airport - more than 17,000 of them - were stuck on planes for hours one day in mid-August after computers for the United States Customs and Border Protection agency went down and stayed down for nine hours.

Hackers? Nope. Though it was the kind of chaos that malevolent computer intruders always seem to be creating in the movies, the problem was traced to a malfunctioning network card on a desktop computer. The flawed card slowed the network and set off a domino effect as failures rippled through the customs network at the airport, officials said.

Everybody knows hackers are the biggest threat to computer networks, except that it ain't necessarily so.

Yes, hackers are still out there, and not just teenagers: malicious insiders, political activists, mobsters and even government agents all routinely test public and private computer networks and occasionally disrupt services. But experts say that some of the most serious, even potentially devastating, problems with networks arise from sources with no malevolent component.

Whether it's the Los Angeles customs fiasco or the unpredictable network cascade that brought the global Skype telephone service down for two days in August, problems arising from flawed systems, increasingly complex networks and even technology headaches from corporate mergers can make computer systems less reliable. Meanwhile, society as a whole is growing ever more dependent on computers and computer networks, as automated controls become the norm for air traffic, pipelines, dams, the electrical grid and more.

"We don't need hackers to break the systems because they're falling apart by themselves", said Peter G Neumann, an expert in computing risks and principal scientist at SRI International, a research institute in Menlo Park, California.

Steven M Bellovin, a professor of computer science at Columbia University, said: "Most of the problems we have day to day have nothing to do with malice. Things break. Complex systems break in complex ways."

When the electrical grid went out in the summer of 2003 throughout the Eastern United States and Canada, "it wasn't any one thing, it was a cascading set of things", Mr Bellovin noted.

That is why Andreas M Antonopoulos, a founding partner at Nemertes Research, a technology research company in Mokena, Illinois, says, "The threat is complexity itself".

Change is the fuel of business, but it also introduces complexity, Mr Antonopoulos said, whether by bringing together incompatible computer networks or simply by growing beyond the network's ability to keep up.

"We have gone from fairly simple computing architectures to massively distributed, massively interconnected and interdependent networks", he said, adding that as a result, flaws have become increasingly hard to predict or spot. Simpler systems could be understood and their behavior characterized, he said, but greater complexity brings unintended consequences.

"On the scale we do it, it's more like forecasting weather", he said.

Kenneth M Ritchhart, the chief information officer for the customs and border agency, agreed that complexity was at the heart of the problem at the Los Angeles airport. "As we move from stovepipes to interdependent systems", he said, "it becomes increasingly difficult to identify and correct problems".

At first, the agency thought the source of the trouble was routers, not the network cards. "Many times the problems you see that you try to correct are not the root causes of the problem", he said.

And even though his department takes the threat of hacking and malicious cyberintruders seriously, he said, "I've got a list of sixteen things that I try to address in terms of outages - only one of them is cyber- or malicious attacks". Others include national power failures, data corruption and physical attacks on facilities.

In the case of Skype, the company - which says it has more than 220 million users, with millions online at any time - was deluged on August 16 with login attempts by computers that had restarted after downloading a security update for Microsoft's Windows operating system. A company employee, Villu Arak, posted a note online that blamed a "massive restart of our users' computers across the globe within a very short time frame" for the 48-hour failure, saying it had overtaxed the network. Though the company has software to "self-heal" in such situations, "this event revealed a previously unseen software bug" in the program that allocates computing resources.

As computer networks are cobbled together, said Matt Moynahan, the chief executive of Veracode, a security company, "the Law of the Weakest Link always seems to prevail". Whatever flaw or weakness allows a problem to occur compromises the entire system, just as one weak section of a levee can inundate an entire community, he said.

This is not a new problem, of course. The first flight of the space shuttle in 1981 was delayed minutes before launching because of a previously undetected software problem.

The "bug heard round the world", as a former NASA software engineer, John B Garman, put it in a technical paper, came down to a failure that would emerge only if a certain sequence of events occurred - and even then only once in 64 times. He wrote: "It is complexity of design and process that got us (and Murphy's Law!). Complexity in the sense that we, the 'software industry', are still naive and forge into large systems such as this with too little computer, budget, schedule and definition of the software code."

In another example, the precursor to the Internet known as the Arpanet collapsed for four hours in 1980 after years of smooth functioning. According to Dr Neumann of SRI, the collapse "resulted from an unforeseen interaction among three different causes" that included what he called "an overly lazy garbage collection algorithm" that allowed the errors to accumulate and overwhelm the fledgling network.

Where are the weaknesses most likely to have grave consequences? Every expert has a suggestion.

Aviel D Rubin, a professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins University, said that glitches could be an enormous problem in high-tech voting machines. "Maybe we have focused too much on hackers and not on the possibility of something going wrong", he said. "Sometimes the worst problems happen by accident".

Dr Rubin, who is director of the Center for Correct, Usable, Reliable, Auditable and Transparent Elections, a group financed by the National Science Foundation to study voting issues, noted that glitches had already shown up in many elections using the new generation of voting machines sold to states in the wake of the Florida election crisis in 2000, when the fate of the national election came down to issues like hanging chads on punch-card ballots.

Dr Bellovin at Columbia said he also worried about what might happen with the massively complex antimissile systems that the government is developing. "It's a system you can't really test until the real thing happens", he said.

There are better ways.

Making systems strong enough to recover quickly from the inevitable glitches and problems can keep disruption to a minimum. The customs service came under some of the most heated criticism for not having a backup plan that could quickly compensate for the network flameout; eventually, airport officials had to provide fuel to the planes so that the airlines could run the air-conditioning, and provided food, beverages and diapers to the trapped passengers.

Mr Ritchhart said it was unfair to characterize his department as having no backup plan. In fact, there were two - but neither addressed the problem. The main backup plan envisions a shutdown of the national customs network, and allows local networks to function independently. Since it was the local network that was in trouble at Los Angeles, he said, that backup plan did not work.

The other fallback involves setting up customs agents with laptops that are equipped to scan the millions of names on the watchlists and to perform other functions. That system was put in place, he said, but the laptops operate at one-third the speed of the computer network, and the delays persisted. The agency is reviewing its policies to improve its response, he said, and if a similar slowdown occurs, is considering having agents call colleagues in other cities to perform searches on functioning parts of the network.

The best answer, Dr Neumann says, is to build computers that are secure and stable from the start. A system with fewer flaws also deters hackers, he said. "If you design the thing right in the first place, you can make it reliable, secure, fault tolerant and human safe", he said. "The technology is there to do this right if anybody wanted to take the effort".

He was part of an effort that began in the 1960s to develop a rock-solid network-operating system known as Multics, but those efforts gave way to more commercially successful systems. Multics' creators were so farsighted, Dr Neumann recalled, that its designers even anticipated and prevented the "Year 2000" problem that had to be corrected in other computers. That flaw, known as Y2K, caused some machines to malfunction if they detected dates after January 1 2000. Billions of dollars were spent to prevent problems.

Dr Neumann, who has been preaching network stability since the 1960s, said, "The message never got through". Pressures to ship software and hardware quickly and to keep costs at a minimum, he said, have worked against more secure and robust systems.

"We throw this together, shrink wrap it and throw it out there", he said. "There's no incentive to do it right, and that's pitiful".

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/12/technology/techspecial/12threat.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

The Unfriendly Skies

by James Surowiecki

The New Yorker (September 03 2007)


In the summer of 1999, after a series of highly publicized customer-service debacles, the nation's major airlines collectively promised Congress that they would revamp their operations, offering a "service commitment" that they dubbed "Customers First". Eight years later, airline passengers are waiting in vain for any sign of that promise's being kept. They're also waiting in vain, period. This summer, nearly a third of all flights have been arriving late, more flights have been cancelled, many planes are overbooked, and, in June, reports of baggage problems were up twenty-five per cent from last year. A service commitment like this should probably be called "Customers Last".

The airlines' explanation for the sheer misery of flying is that the important problems - bad weather and an antiquated air-traffic-control system, resulting in overcrowded runways - are out of their hands. But those unavoidable difficulties have been exacerbated by the airlines' strategic choices, most notably their decision to cut the number of workers they employ and the number of big planes they fly. Over the past six years, airlines have laid off more than a hundred thousand workers, around a sixth of their workforce, and six major carriers have shrunk their fleets - planes are expensive not only to acquire but to maintain - by twenty per cent. From an economic point of view, this was sensible. Making money in the airline business has always been tough - Warren Buffett has said that if capitalists had been present at the Wright brothers' first flight they would have been well advised to shoot the plane down - but the years following 9/11, in which the industry lost more than thirty billion dollars and several airlines filed for bankruptcy, were especially brutal. So airlines moved aggressively to cut the fat out of their business, trying to insure that each of their planes flew as many flights, while carrying as many passengers, as possible. The strategy was so successful that, even as business has recovered, the airlines have chosen to stay slim. As a result, planes today are more crowded than before - last year, the airlines filled seventy-nine per cent of their seats, compared with sixty-five per cent in the mid-nineties - and forecasts suggest that the industry as a whole may clear four billion dollars in profits this year.

The lean-and-mean approach may have saved the airlines, but for passengers it's made an already bad situation worse. If something goes wrong with a plane, servicing it will likely take longer than it used to, and there's less chance that another jet will be available to get passengers where they need to go. And since the planes the airlines do own are flying more flights, the ripple effects of delays have been magnified: a third of all flight delays are due simply to the fact that the plane was late arriving from its previous flight, and often the effects of a mid-morning flight's late arrival can still be felt that evening. According to the Department of Transportation, more than a quarter of all delays in June were due to "air carrier" problems.

Oddly, none of this seems to have hurt the airlines - more people than ever are flying, and ticket prices remain relatively stable. In part, this is because, for many trips, there's no meaningful alternative to flying, which limits the power that fliers have as customers. They can make certain choices - they consistently go for the cheapest flights, making it hard for an airline to raise prices - but anyone who vows never to fly with a particular airline again will likely have an equally bad experience on a rival carrier soon afterward. Like consumers of regional utilities or like drivers who tolerate bad traffic day after day, fliers have accommodated themselves to misery. It's little wonder, then, that the air-travel market rarely punishes an individual airline for failing to get people to their destination on time: consumers assume, with good reason, that the options are interchangeably awful.

The airlines could improve the current system by investing more money in planes and staff, reducing the number of segments each plane flies in a given day, and increasing the number of direct flights. So you might expect that free-market competition would have thrown up at least one major airline promising reliable on-time arrivals in exchange for higher ticket prices - like a toll road in the air. The trouble is that although things like bad weather and air-traffic-control problems are easy excuses for the airlines' failures, they're also real problems, and any airline dedicated to keeping its on-time arrivals high could easily find its efforts, in the short run, stymied by storms or by high volume. And the punishment for an airline that explicitly promised excellent performance and failed would probably be much harsher than if it had promised nothing at all. (When JetBlue experienced huge delays this winter because of bad planning, it was savaged in the press, precisely because it had always insisted that it was different from other airlines.) Furthermore, in the short run more competition could actually make things worse for customers: it would mean more flights, a greater burden for the air-traffic-control system, and possibly more delays.

In other words, we're stuck with the current system, because it isn't really in any airline's interest to try to change it. As long as no airline makes a dedicated effort to distinguish itself from the pack, all the airlines can stay lean, even at the expense of quality. In that sense, the most honest thing about the airlines may be their advertising, which tends to emphasize the flying experience - lulling us with talk of leg room and fully reclining seats. You may end up waiting on the runway for a couple of hours, the message seems to be, but at least you'll do it in a comfortable chair.

http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2007/09/03/070903ta_talk_surowiecki


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Shocked, shocked!

Clusterfuck Nation

by Jim Kunstler

Comment on current events by the author of
The Long Emergency
(Atlantic Monthly Press, 2005)


www.kunstler.com (September 17 2007)


Alan Greenspan's memoirs are being flogged across the airwaves, bandwidths and printing presses, and the cohort of those who comment on public affairs in these media are shocked by the Maestro's confessions - first, that a housing bubble emerged out of his leadership in the banking sector, and second that the Iraq war is about oil. As usual, they're getting it all wrong - about as wrong as Al himself got it. But that is the way of things in this age of cultural dissipation and gross cognitive dissonance.

Greenspan claims he had no idea that his cutting of interest rates to near zero would produce any irregularities in the US economy. Apparently he hadn't noticed that the Big Fund Boyz called him "Easy Al" for a reason. Or that when you introduce nearly free "money" (as in "available for lending") into a system of financial trade, the recognition of moral hazard tends to evaporate. As the nation's chief bank regulator, Greenspan also apparently failed to notice the upsurge in dodgy lending practices previously only seen among mafia loan sharks, drug dealers, or twelve-year-olds playing Monopoly.

But the really funny part of all this is that the media columnists are acting as though the American public got hoodwinked by Al. Which raises the question: just what the fuck was the public thinking when they bought half-million dollar houses on salaries under 60-K, taking out no-money-down, interest-optional balloon mortgages and other tricked-up contracts? The answer is: they walked into these arrangements with their eyes open because they thought they could get something for nothing. They thought the trend of steeply rising house prices would continue indefinitely and enable them to wiggle free of any hazard by flipping their houses to an endless supply of greater fools who would be there waiting to turn the very same trick. And the smoothies downstream in the mortgage and banking rackets were no less guided by avarice when they cooked up their formulas for bundling half-baked mortgages into tranches of tradeable securities. Easy Al may have failed to notice what was going on here, but then so did everybody else from The Wall Street Journal to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

This, of course, represents an insidious psychology. It could only happen in a culture that has come off the rails mentally, so to speak, as ours has in the sense that nobody has any sense of consequence, neither the leaders nor those who affect to follow the leaders. The leading religion in America is not evangelical Christianity, it is the worship of unearned riches, and its golden rule is the belief that is is possible to get something for nothing. Its holy shrines are Las Vegas and Wall Street. (And, by the way, has anybody heard the evangelical Christians complain about Las Vegas? They complain about a lot of things, but are themselves among the greatest believers in unearned riches - given their preference for prayer over earnest effort in the service of solving life's problems.)

No, the American public, including the cheerleaders in the media, have only themselves to blame for the bitter harvest now underway in the asset and credit markets. And thus it would be salutary thing for Baby Jeezus, or the forces of nature, or whatever powers guide the universe, to now kick the shit out of them, so to speak, financially, because that is exactly what the American public is full of, from top to bottom, from George W Bush at his lonely desk on Pennsylvania Avenue to the pitiful, bankrupt householders of Orange County and Boca Raton.

Now, as to the shock of Al's revelation that the Iraq war is about oil - the media and the public has got this all wrong, too. The logic here seems to be that because the Iraq war is about oil it is therefore unnecessary, optional, a mistake, an indulgence, something we should not dirty our hands in. In fact, the Iraq war is not about oil, per se, so much as it is about America's behavior here at home, about the choices we make for how we live on this continent. None of those who complain most loudly about our military presence in Iraq have advanced any proposals for reforming how we live here - and hence for our enslavement to oil, much of the world's remaining supply of which happens to be in the neighborhood of Iraq. When these complainers start complaining about the ubiquitous acceptance of suburban sprawl and abject car-dependency - and this includes the environmental boy scouts out there who want to get merit badges for buying hybrid cars - then they will deserve to be taken seriously. Until then, the American people have got exactly the grinding war that they deserve. Let them whine about it all the way to the Nascar tracks, and let them console themselves with giant plastic bottles of Pepsi Cola and buckets of chicken raised on corn grown with oil byproducts.

On CBS's 60-Minutes show last night, Greenspan, in his new role as a private sector economic consultant made predictions for the coming months in the US economy. He declared that the financial sector would get over the current credit squeeze as if it were a mild case of indigestion brought on by one too many fried won-tons at the all-you-can-eat buffet, a mere burp, allowing the public to move on to the crab Rangoon and a helping of General Tsao's chicken. This gets back to the previous point about the Iraq war and oil in particular. Al doesn't get it. CBS's sycophant reporters don't get it. Nobody gets it. We are entering the zone of the long emergency in which the primary resource needed to run the industrial economies will become scarce, expensive, and profoundly destabilizing to markets and to normal life, such as it is known in this country. And the current problem in the markets is a reflection of the resource bankruptcy we are facing. Our problems are not about credit, they are about permanent insolvency.

In his old age, Alan Greenspan's face - once darkly handsome in his youthful years as a jazz musician - has taken on the strange appearance of a circus clown. Something about the way his lips have settled into a kind of thick fatuous smile, even when he is apparently not amused by anything. Is it one of God's clever little tricks to leave him looking like a clown in his valedictory years, or has his face just resolved into the perfect embodiment of leadership for a clown nation?

http://jameshowardkunstler.typepad.com/clusterfuck_nation/2007/09/shocked-shocked.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Monday, September 17, 2007

The War Party

Democrats Lie to Prolong Iraq ...

... Reporters Go Along

by Ted Rall

www.tedrall.com (September 11 2007)


Americans don't know how their government works. Democrats, in control of Congress, are taking advantage of our ignorance to continue the Iraq War. Which brings up two questions: Why won't the "antiwar" Democrats act to stop the carnage? And why aren't reporters calling them on it?

"Democrats", writes Charles Babington in an Associated Press item that appeared in hundreds of newspapers, "control both chambers [of Congress] but lack the numbers to override President Bush's vetoes of bids to mandate troop withdrawals from Iraq". It's a half-truth at best: the Democrats' narrow majority is less than the two-thirds majority they'd need to override a presidential veto. Here's the full truth: it doesn't matter.

In June Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting's Extra! Magazine wrote: "If the Democrat-controlled Congress wanted to force the Bush administration to accept a bill with a withdrawal timeline, it didn't have to pass the bill over Bush's veto - it just had to make clear that no Iraq War spending bill without a timeline would be forthcoming".

Democratic leaders know that. And here's how I know they know: days after taking control of Congress, on January 30, they invited five constitutional law experts to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee to ask them how they could end the war. Four out of five of the experts swore that the Democrats could stop the Iraq War just ... like ... that.

"Today we've heard convincing testimony and analysis that Congress has the power to stop the war if it wants to", said Senator Russ Feingold (Democrat, Wisconsin). Yet eight months later, there's still no end in sight.

The Dems won the 2006 elections with promises to end the war. Weeks after taking over Congress, however, Republicans spooked them with one of the most ludicrous talking points of all time. Cutting off the money, they said, would abandon US soldiers at the front, their ammo dwindling as Al Qaeda insurgents swarmed over them. (Actually - the fact that I have to write this speaks to the American right's intellectual dishonesty - the troops would go to the airport. They would board airplanes. They would fly home.)

Democrats worry that they'll be portrayed as weak on defense if they act unilaterally to pull out of Iraq. Irony of ironies, they're wussing out to avoid looking wimpy. Forcing Republicans to vote with them to end the war, they calculate, would give them political cover. Extra! continued: "Democrats may not have wanted to pay the supposed political costs of [cutting off funding], but news coverage should have made clear that this was a choice, not something forced on them by the lack of a veto-proof majority".

Rather than set the record straight, the media continues to spread the "Democrats can't stop the Republican war" meme this week:

Michael Duffy, Time magazine: "If Democrats had more votes - particularly in the House - they might be able to force Bush to change course. But Bush will fight any resolution fencing him in with a veto that, as things stand now, the Democrats cannot override. But the President's critics will continue to try, hoping to attract moderate Republicans who are fearful of losing their seats next year." Occasionally Time invites me to its Christmas party. If I score an invite this year, my present for their fact-checkers will be a copy of the Constitution.

Marcella Bombardieri, The Boston Globe: "In the Senate, Democrats have only a 51 to 49 majority, far from the sixty votes needed to prevent a filibuster and the 67 needed to override a presidential veto. All efforts to force a troop withdrawal have failed, and the party will have to count on substantial Republican defections to make any further progress this fall." I'll be checking the Globe for a retraction.

Brian Knowlton, The New York Times: Knowlton dutifully quoted Democratic Senator Joe Biden's claim that there were "political limits on his party, even with the Congressional majority it has held since the November midterm elections. 'This is the president's war', [Biden] said. 'Unless we get 67 votes to override his veto, there's nothing we can do to stop this war ...'" Not only did the Times fail to call Biden on his brazen lie, it gave him the last word.

You'd think the Democrats would want to end the Iraq War before their likely retaking of the White House, but that's because you're a human being, not a politician. Politicians are happy to dispatch hundreds of young American men and women to certain death (along with thousands of Iraqis), if the bloodshed squeezes out an extra half percentage point at the polls. Reid and Pelosi prefer to run against a disastrous ongoing Republican war than point to a fragile Democratic-brokered peace.

Why are so many respected journalists parroting the Democratic party line? I suspect that corporate media culture, rather than Judith Miller-style malfeasance, is largely to blame. Ink-stained newsrooms have been replaced by bullpen offices indistinguishable from those of banks or insurance companies. Reporters used to come from the working classes. They distrusted politicians and businessmen, and politicians and businessmen loathed them. Today's journalists are products of cookie-cutter journalism schools. Because graduate schools rarely offer scholarships, few come from the lower or middle classes. They look like businessmen. When they meet a politician, they see a possible friend. They wear suits and ties. And when a US senator like Joe Biden feeds them a line of crap, they gobble it up.

_____

Ted Rall is the author of the book America Gone Wild (Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2006), which includes a detailed "behind the scenes" look at the most controversial political cartoons of the post-9/11 era.

Copyright 2007 Ted Rall

http://www.uexpress.com/tedrall/


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

The Anti-Empire Report

Read this or George W Bush will be president the rest of your life

by William Blum

www.killinghope.org (September 11 2007)


The world is very weary of all this and wants to laugh again

Okay, Bush ain't gonna get out of Iraq no matter what anyone says or does short of a) impeachment, b) a lobotomy, or c) one of his daughters setting herself afire in the Oval Office as a war protest. A few days ago, upon arriving in Australia, "in a chipper mood", he was asked by the Deputy Prime Minister about his stopover in Iraq. "We're kicking ass", replied the idiot king. {1} Another epigram for his tombstone.

And the Democrats ain't gonna end the war. Ninety-nine percent of the American people protesting on the same day ain't gonna do it either, in this democracy. (No, I'm sorry to say that I don't think the Vietnam protesters ended the war. There were nine years of protest - 1964 to 1973 - before the US military left Vietnam. It's a stretch to ascribe a cause and effect to that. The United States, after all, had to leave sometime.)

Only those fighting the war can end it. By laying down their arms and refusing to kill anymore, including themselves. Some American soldiers in Iraq have already refused to go on very dangerous combat missions. Iraq Veterans Against the War, last month at their annual meeting, in St Louis, voted to launch a campaign encouraging American troops to refuse to fight. "Iraq Veterans Against the War decided to make support of war resisters a major part of what we do", said Garrett Rappenhagen, a former US Army sniper who served in Iraq from February 2004 to February 2005.

The veterans group has begun organizing among active duty soldiers on military bases. Veterans have toured the country in busses holding barbeques outside the base gates. They also plan to step up efforts to undermine military recruiting efforts.

Of course it's a very long shot to get large numbers of soldiers into an angry, protesting frame of mind. But consider the period following the end of World War Two. Late 1945 and early 1946 saw what is likely the greatest troop revolt that has ever occurred in a victorious army. Hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of American soldiers protested all over the world because they were not being sent home even though the war was over. The GIs didn't realize it at first, but many soon came to understand that the reason they were being transferred from Europe and elsewhere to various places in the Pacific area, instead of being sent back home, was that the United States was concerned about uprisings against colonialism, which, in the minds of Washington foreign-policy officials, was equated with communism and other nasty un-American things. The uprisings were occurring in British colonies, in Dutch colonies, in French colonies, as well as in the American colony of the Philippines. Yes, hard to believe, but the United States was acting like an imperialist power.

In the Philippines there were repeated mass demonstrations by GIs who were not eager to be used against the left-wing Huk guerrillas. The New York Times reported in January 1946 about one of these demonstrations: "'The Philippines are capable of handling their own internal problems', was the slogan voiced by several speakers. Many extended the same point of view to China." {2}

American marines were sent to China to support the Nationalist government of Chang Kai-shek against the Communists of Mao Tse-tung and Chou En-lai. They were sent to the Netherlands Indies (Indonesia) to be of service to the Dutch in their suppression of native nationalists. And American troop ships were used to transport the French military to France's former colony in Vietnam. These and other actions of Washington led to numerous large GI protests in Japan, Guam, Saipan, Korea, India, Germany, England, France, and Andrews Field, Maryland, all concerned with the major slowdown in demobilization and the uses for which the soldiers were being employed. There were hunger strikes and mass mailings to Congress from the soldiers and their huge body of support in the States. In January 1946, Senator Edwin Johnson of Colorado declared "It is distressing and humiliating to all Americans to read in every newspaper in the land accounts of near mutiny in the Army". {3}

On January 13 1946, 500 GIs in Paris adopted a set of demands called "The Enlisted Man's Magna Charta", calling for radical reforms of the master-slave relationship between officers and enlisted men; also demanding the removal of Secretary of War Robert Patterson. In the Philippines, soldier sentiment against the reduced demobilization crystalized in a meeting of GIs that voted unanimously to ask Secretary Patterson and certain Senators: "What is the Army's position in the Philippines, especially in relation to the reestablishment of the Eighty-sixth Infantry Division on a combat basis?" {4}

By the summer of 1946 there had been a huge demobilization of the armed forces, although there's no way of knowing with any exactness how much of that was due to the GIs' protests. {5}

If this is how American soldiers could be inspired and organized in the wake of "The Good War", imagine what can be done today in the midst of "The God-awful War".

Iraq Veterans Against the War could use your help. Go to: http://www.ivaw.org/


A pullet surprise for "Legacy of Ashes" by Tim Weiner

In 1971 the New York Times published its edition of the Pentagon Papers, based on the government documents concerning Vietnam policy which had been borrowed by Daniel Ellsberg. In its preface to the book, the Times commented about certain omissions and distortions in the government's view of political and historical realities as reflected in the papers: "Clandestine warfare against North Vietnam, for example, is not seen ... as violating the Geneva Accords of 1954, which ended the French Indochina War, or as conflicting with the public policy pronouncements of the various administrations. Clandestine warfare, because it is covert, does not exist as far as treaties and public posture are concerned. Further, secret commitments to other nations are not sensed as infringing on the treaty-making powers of the Senate, because they are not publicly acknowledged." {6}

In his new book, Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA (Doubleday, 2007), New York Times reporter Tim Weiner also relies heavily on government documents in deciding what events to include and what not to, and the result is often equally questionable. "This book", Weiner writes, "is on the record - no anonymous sources, no blind quotations, no hearsay. It is the first history of the CIA compiled entirely from firsthand reporting and primary documents." (page xvii)

Thus, if US government officials did not put something in writing or if someone did not report their firsthand experience concerning a particular event, to Tim Weiner the event doesn't exist, or at least is not worth recounting. British journalist Stewart Steven has written: "If we believe that contemporary history must be told on the basis of documentary evidence before it becomes credible, then we must also accept that everything will either be written with the government's seal of approval or not be written at all".

As to firsthand reporting, for Weiner it apparently has to be from someone "reputable". Former CIA officer Philip Agee wrote a 1974 book, Inside the Company: CIA Diary (Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1975), that provides more detail about CIA covert operations in Latin America than any book ever written. And it was certainly firsthand. But Agee and his revelations are not mentioned at all in Weiner's book. Could it be because Agee, in the process of becoming the Agency's leading dissident, also became a socialist radical and close ally of Cuba?

Former CIA officer John Stockwell also penned a memoir, In Search of Enemies (Norton, 1978), revealing lots of CIA dirty laundry in Africa. He later also became a serious Agency dissident, and the Weiner book ignores him as well.

Also ignored: Joseph Burkholder Smith, another Agency officer, not quite a left-wing dissident like Agee or Stockwell but a heavy critic nonetheless, entitled his memoir Portrait of a Cold Warrior (Putnam, 1976), in which he revealed numerous instances of CIA illegality and immorality in the Philippines, Indonesia and elsewhere in Asia.

There's also Cambodian leader Prince Sihanouk, who provided his firsthand account in My War With The CIA (Pantheon, 1973). Sihanouk is also a non-person in the pages of Legacy of Ashes.

Even worse, Weiner ignores a veritable mountain of impressive "circumstantial" and other evidence of CIA misdeeds which doesn't meet his stated criteria, which any thorough researcher/writer on the Agency should give serious attention to, certainly at least mention for the record. Among the many CIA transgressions and crimes left out of Legacy of Ashes, or very significantly played down, are:

* The extensive CIA role in the 1950s provocation and sabotage activities in East Berlin / East Germany which contributed considerably to the communists' decision to build the Berlin Wall is not mentioned, although the wall is discussed.

* The US role in instigating and supporting the coup that overthrew Sihanouk in 1970, which led directly to the rising up of the Khmer Rouge, Pol Pot, and the infamous Cambodian "killing fields". Weiner, without providing any source, writes: "The coup shocked the CIA and the rest of the American government"(page 304). {7} Neither does the book make any mention of the deliberate Washington policy to support Pol Pot in his subsequent war with Vietnam. Pol Pot's name does not appear in the book.

* The criminal actions carried out by Operation Gladio, created by the CIA, NATO, and several European intelligence services beginning in 1949. The operation was responsible for numerous acts of terrorism in Europe, foremost of which was the bombing of the Bologna railway station in 1980, claiming 86 lives. The purpose of the terrorism was to place the blame for these atrocities on the left and thus heighten public concern about a Soviet invasion and keep the left from electoral victory in Italy, France and elsewhere. In Weiner's book this is all down the Orwellian memory hole.

* A discussion of the alleged 1993 assassination attempt against former president George H W Bush in Kuwait presents laughable evidence, yet states: "But the CIA eventually concluded that Saddam Hussein had tried to kill President Bush" (page 444). Weiner repeats this, apparently, solely because it appears in a CIA memorandum. That qualifies it as a "primary document". But what does this have to do with, y'know, the actual facts?

* Moreover, the book scarcely scratches the surface concerning the dozens of foreign elections the CIA has seriously interfered in; the large number of assassination attempts, successful or unsuccessful, against foreign political leaders; the widespread planting of phoney stories in the international media, stories that were at times picked up in the American press as a result; manipulation and corruption of foreign labor movements; extensive book and magazine publishing fronts; drug trafficking; and a virtual world atlas of overthrown governments, or attempts at same.

A Legacy of Ashes is generally a good read even for someone familiar with the world of the CIA, but it's actually often rather superficial, albeit 700 pages long. Why has so much of importance and interest been omitted from a book which has the subtitle: "The History of the CIA"; not, it must be noted, "A History of the CIA"?

Whatever jaundiced eye Weiner focuses on the CIA, he still implicitly accepts the two basic beliefs of the Cold War: (1) There existed out there something called The International Communist Conspiracy, fueled by implacable Soviet expansionism; (2) United States foreign policy meant well. It may have frequently been bumbling and ineffective, but its intentions were noble. And still are.


Some sundry shooting from the lip

Football star Michael Vick has been condemned for allegedly helping to execute dogs.

But is killing a dog morally worse than killing a chicken, cow, pig, lamb, or fish which is done every hour of every day to enable non-vegans to enjoy the kind of diet they've become accustomed to? The fact that a dog is much more likely to be someone's pet doesn't answer the question; it only explains why that someone is upset over canineicide but cares much less about the liquidation of the other animals.

Home run king Barry Bonds is vilified for reputedly using steroids to build up his strength. He may have an asterisk put next to his record because this, presumably, gave him an unfair advantage over other baseball players who are "clean". But of all the things that athletes put into their bodies to improve their health, fitness and performance, why are steroids singled out? Doesn't taking vitamin and mineral supplements give an athlete an unfair advantage over athletes who don't take them? Should these supplements be banned from sport competition? Vitamin and mineral supplements are not necessarily any more "natural" than steroids, which in fact are very important in our body chemistry; among the steroids are the male and female sex hormones. Why not punish those who follow a "healthy diet" because of the advantage this may give them?

"Do you think homosexuality is a choice, or is it biological?" was the question posed to presidential candidate Bill Richardson by singer Melissa Etheridge. "It's a choice", replied the New Mexico governor at the August 9 forum for Democratic candidates. Etheridge then said to Richardson, "Maybe you didn't understand the question", and she rephrased it. Richardson again said he thought it was a choice. {8}

The next time you hear someone say that homosexuality is a choice, ask them how old they were when they chose to be heterosexual. When they admit that they never made such a conscious choice, thus implying that people don't choose to be heterosexual, the next question to the person should be: "So only homosexuals choose to be homosexual? But what comes first, being homosexual so you can make the choice, or making the choice and thus becoming homosexual?"


Why is the Bush administration so unenthusiastic about preventing global warming? Perhaps this news report provides a clue.

"The Arctic sea ice will retreat hundreds of miles farther from the coast of Alaska in the summer, the scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration concluded. That will open up vast waters for fishermen and give easier access to new areas for oil and gas exploration." {9}


We can say that the United States runs the world like the Taliban ran Afghanistan before the US ousted them from power in 2001. Destabilizing actions are taken against Venezuela like punishing a woman caught outside not wearing her burkha. Harsh sanctions are imposed on Iran in the manner of banning music, dancing, and kite-flying in Kabul. Cuba is subverted and hurt in dozens of ways like the religious police whipping a man whose beard is not the right length.


Notes

{1} Sydney Morning Herald (September 6 2007)

{2} New York Times (January 8 1946), page 3

{3} New York Times (January 11 1946), page 1

{4} Ibid, page 4

{5} For more information about the soldiers' protests, see: Mary-Alice Waters, "GI's and the Fight Against War" (New York, 1967), a pamphlet published by Young Socialist magazine.

{6} The Pentagon Papers (NY Times Edition), pages xii-xiii

{7} See William Blum, Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II, pages 137-8

{8} santafenewmexican.com/news/66424.html

{9} Washington Post, September 7 2007, page 6

_____

William Blum is the author of:-

Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War Two (Common Courage Press, 1995)

Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower (Zed Books, 2002)

West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir (Soft Skull Press, 2002)

Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire (Common Courage Press, 2004)


Portions of the books can be read, and copies purchased, at http://www.killinghope.org and previous Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website.

To add yourself to this mailing list simply send an email to bblum6@aol.com with "add" in the subject line. I'd like your name and city in the message, but that's optional. I ask for your city only in case I'll be speaking in your area.

Or put "remove" in the subject line to do the opposite.

Any part of this report may be disseminated without permission. I'd appreciate it if the website were mentioned.

http://members.aol.com/bblum6/aer49.htm


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Blood for Oil? Part 5

by Doug Stokes

ZNet Commentary (September 04 2007)

This is the fifth article of the series Blood for oil? Global capital, counter-insurgency and the dual logic of American energy security.


Whose blood for our oil?

In the last article of this series we saw that there is a very clear marriage between the promotion of capitalism in the global South, primarily through the entrenchment of market orientated reforms, and the stabilisation and insulation of transnationally orientated states through US military aid and training. The American state continues to act both for reasons of national and transnational interest with US intervention serving to 'plug' political economies into global capitalism as both productive and relatively stable circuits. Of course, the form of stability that this entails does not necessarily equate into a majoritarian stability, and similarly to the Cold War period, continues to have egregious effects upon human rights, state development and social justice.

Aside from the oil riches of the various states now in receipt of US military aid and training, another common factor is the fact that each recipient military is credibly charged with gross human rights violations with US military aid and training in counter-insurgency warfare intimately bound up with human rights abuses. For example, as we saw above the Colombian military is now in receipt of billions of dollars of US military aid. However, the Colombian military is closely aligned with paramilitary forces who continue to carry out a dirty war against Colombian civil society. For example, in 2000, over 8000 political assassinations were committed in Colombia, with eighty percent of these murders committed by paramilitary groups allied to the Colombian military {1}. This trend shows no sign of abating and in one of the most extensive recent reports on human rights in Colombia the UN notes that its 'office ... [has] continued to receive complaints about human rights violations implying the direct responsibility ... of the security forces ... Many of the violations, due to their serious, massive or systematic nature, constitute crimes against humanity and are susceptible to trial by the International Criminal Court' {2}.

The principal recipient region for the US's $98 million 'pipeline protection money' has been Arauca in north-eastern Colombia. According to Colombia's far-right President Alvaro Uribe, Arauca is a 'laboratory of war' and provides the security model envisaged for the rest of the nation. A 2004 UN High Commissioners report continued to document the high level collusion between the Colombian military and paramilitary forces {3}, with many of the most serious violations in Arauca taking place within a few minutes walk from the bases where US military training is occurring. For example, in August 2004, Colombia's Attorney General's office noted that soldiers based outside the city of Saravena, Arauca, executed three union leaders whilst senior officials on the base are alleged to have participated in a cover-up. US Special Forces counter-insurgency trainers are housed on the same base. {4}

According to the UN the latest tactic of the Colombian military involves dressing murdered civilians in guerrilla clothing so as to justify their deaths {5}. Crucially however, paramilitarism has long formed an integral part of the overall US-backed counter-insurgency strategy. Moreover, this reliance on paramilitary forces was not confined to the Cold War era. For example, in 1991 both the US Department of Defence and the CIA reorganized Colombian military intelligence networks which saw the further covert incorporation of paramilitary networks within the Colombian military itself. The secret reorganisation focussed solely on combating what was called "escalating terrorism by armed subversion" through the creation of what Human Rights Watch characterised as a 'secret network that relied on paramilitaries not only for intelligence, but to carry out murder' {6}.

Similar to the Colombian military, both Georgian and Uzbek security forces have horrendous human rights records. For example, Uzbek security forces regularly commit horrific human rights abuses with the US Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor concluding that throughout the period of US military assistance the Uzbek state's 'human rights record remained very poor, and it continued to commit numerous serious abuses. Torture is endemic, prison conditions are extremely harsh, and independent journalists, opposition politicians and human rights activists are subject to harassment.' {7}

Similarly, the US State Department in it's 2004 annual report on human rights in Nigeria argued that there were 'politically motivated killings by the Government or its agents' with 'police, army, and security forces committed extrajudicial killings' and using 'excessive force' to disperse protestors during the year' as well as using 'lethal force against suspected criminals and suspected vandals near oil pipelines in the Niger Delta Region'. In a worrying signal for even any semblance of accountability the report continues that '[m]ultinational oil companies and domestic oil producing companies often hired private security forces and subsidized living expenses for police and soldiers from area units assigned to protect oil facilities in the volatile Niger Delta region'. {8} In sum, the new policy of diversification of oil and the stabilisation of political economies conducive for global capitalism carries high human costs, especially in those specific zones where oil extraction takes place. US sponsored counter-insurgency warfare now forms the central strategic modality of US military engagement with the use of paramilitary forces and private military contractors developing as part of the prevailing strategic architecture under the so-called 'war on terror' {9}.

We see then that US planners are increasingly seeking to diversify energy supplies away from the Middle East to new oil rich regions located principally in South America, Central Asia and West Africa with US military power being used to underwrite forms of political and economic order conducive for global capitalism as a whole. Similar to the Cold War period, the American state seeks to make these regions safe for global capitalism through stabilising states with fragile social bases and containing (and rolling back) inimical social forces be they Islamist, nationalist, indigenous or explicitly anti-capitalist. So far, this form of intervention continues to be subject to the dual logic that I outlined earlier on in this paper in so far as US intervention both serves US national interests through underwriting US hegemony and securing crucial oil supplies and transnational interests in terms of underwriting an open international market within which all other core states can participate. For example, Colombia has received more US military aid than all of the other states examined in this paper combined and whilst the US is Colombia's largest trading partner, European investors are a close second: in 2004 Colombia conducted just over thirty six percent of its annual trade with the US and almost nineteen percent with the EU.

The next largest trading partner was Venezuela with just over five percent {10}. China is today one of the largest investors in Latin America with the majority of that investment in natural resource extraction, including oil. Roger F Noriega, Assistant Secretary for Western Hemisphere Affairs argued that whilst Chinese investment in Latin America 'includes a political dimension' it's 'growing presence in the region reflects its growing engagement throughout the world' which 'does not necessarily constitute a threat to US interests' {11}. This point is underscored when we consider the fact that although the US enjoys strategic primacy within the global oil regime, the majority ends up in the Asia Pacific region (including China and Japan) which consumes 23,446,000 barrels a day whilst the US consumes 20,517,000 {12}.

Will this current benign global oil regime continue or will the US use this strategic primacy to act in a more protectionist way so as to safeguard US oil interests through, for example, seeking to close markets off to other core states? This is of course the six million dollar question and there are definite tensions within the current oil regime such as the fact that oil is a non-fungible resource with all of the advanced industrialised economies becoming more reliant on oil coupled with the chronic instability in oil-rich regions and the ever diminishing supplies. On the flip-side the EU, Japan (and increasingly China) could seek to lessen their reliance on US power and develop their own bilateral or multilateral trade relationships outside of US control (for example, an increased lean towards Russian oil and gas by EU powers) {13}.

The scramble for energy by China could also have an impact upon the current global oil regime, especially if the Chinese seek to parlay their bilateral arrangements with oil-rich states into forms of political influence that US planners consider to be inimical to US interests. What can be said for certainty is that at the present moment any move towards a more protectionist regime is unlikely given that the fact that in many ways the US is in a bind. Should it revert to resource protectionism there is a very strong likelihood that other core powers will seek to balance against US power which would in turn impact upon US strategic, political and economic interests in profound ways and would undoubtedly hasten the struggle for energy autonomy.

Moreover, in so doing the US would fracture the liberal international order from which the US derives enormous benefits {14}. Of course, this does not discount the very real potential for ideology to 'overdetermine' US policy, and there are a number of debates, arguments and disagreements amongst US foreign policy planners as to the precise strategies that the American state should pursue to maintain US hegemony as we move into the 21st Century. We should not also discount the often chaotic nature of social, political and economic processes and the ways in which various policies can often have contradictory and highly contingent effects. All we can say in relation to these very contemporary developments is 'watch this space' and it is still too early to see whether the dual logics will continue to compliment each other as a key plank of US primacy or whether an increased US unilateralism will translate into an increased push for autonomy in relation to energy security by other core powers {15}. What can we conclude from this account?


Conclusion

This paper has argued that the overly instrumentalist accounts of US intervention in oil rich regions fail to fully capture either the political logic of American statecraft and more importantly the structural role that the American state has played in the making of global capitalism in the post-War period. US intervention in oil rich regions seeks first and foremost to produce and stabilise transnationally responsive political economies with US strategic intervention seeking to insulate local states and ruling classes conducive for this transnationalisation process. In the post-Cold War era and especially after 9/11, the US has been pursuing an increasingly aggressive policy of energy diversification so as to ensure some degree of energy security for the global economy should the Middle East become even more insecure. The regions subject to these new interventions are South America, West Africa and Central Asia, and given the on-going failure of the US project in Iraq it is logical to conclude that these regions will become more important to US energy security so as to give global energy supplies some 'elbow room'. I have argued that this new strategy is having a profound impact in terms of consolidating often highly authoritarian regimes which in turn has an impact upon human rights, social justice and state development {16}.

Of course, many of these regimes now in receipt of US military assistance were highly abusive prior to the onset of US aid, and US planners could simply state 'we have to work with what is there!'. This is of course correct and it is important that analysts of US intervention must always bear in mind the ways in which US policy must interact and work with local states which in themselves have their own histories, interests and agendas. However, the central question is whether US security assistance leads to less human rights abuses, greater accountability and the strengthening of genuine democracy or whether US military aid serves to consolidate authoritarian regimes. That is, there is a very clear line between working with what you find and seeking to move towards ending human rights abuses and consolidating what you find so as to guarantee concrete economic and political interests. Sadly, as I have shown above, the US continues to put its economic and political interests above that of human rights and the development of genuinely democratic governments as part of its ongoing 'war on terror'. This is all being done within the logic whereby the ends justify the means. In the words of US Vice President Richard Cheney, the US is increasingly working on the 'dark side' whereby the US needs to 'have on the payroll some very unsavoury characters' so as to win the 'war on terrorism' {17}.

On a broader note, a question which emerges from this series of articles, and it is one that it is simply too early to answer just yet, is whether US intervention will continue to be subject to the dual logics that I have outlined in this paper. The US state enjoys a degree of relative autonomy both because it must structurally ensure the necessary conditions for the long term functioning of global capitalism and because of its primacy within the world system. To date, US planners seem to be acutely conscious of the dual role that US intervention is playing. As we move further into the 21st Century, it remains to be seen whether this will continue in the face of increased resource competition for energy sources amongst industrialized economies {18}.


Notes

1 Human Rights Watch, Colombia, undated http://www.hrw.org/americas/colombia.php.

2 United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, The Human Rights Situation in Colombia, 17th February 2004, page 21.

3 United Nations, Informe del Alto Comisionado de las Naciones Unidas para los Derechos Humanos sobre la situacio'n de los derechos humanos en Colombia, E/CN.4/2004/13, 17 de febrero de 2004, Anexo II, paragraphs 2 and 3. Accessed at Center for International Policy, Blueprint for a New Colombia Policy, March 2005. http://www.ciponline.org/colombia/0503blueprint.pdf

4 Center for International Policy, Blueprint for a New Colombia Policy, March 2005. http://www.ciponline.org/colombia/0503blueprint.pdf

5 Maria Cristina Caballero, 'In Colombia: Military Crimes Point To A Growing Problem', The Providence Journal, June 25 2006.

6 Human Rights Watch / Americas Human Rights Watch Arms Project, Colombia's Killer Networks: the Military-Paramilitary Partnership and the United States (Human Rights Watch, 1996), pages 28-29. In the same report Human Rights Watch have provided the original documents of the order in both Spanish and English. See pages 105-150.

7 US Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, Supporting Human Rights and Democracy: The US Record 2003-2004, 2004. http://www.usembassy.uz/home/index.aspx?&=&mid=387&lid=1 ; The US has been asked to leave the Karshi-Khanabad airfield in Uzbekistan by the regime of President Islam Karimov. The US criticised him after world media attention was focussed on Karimov following the shooting of hundreds of civilians during an anti-government demonstration. See http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/07/31/news/uzbek.php for more on this. For more on Georgia see http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/02/24/georgi7650.htm#P58_5798

8US Department of State, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Nigeria 2004, February 28 2004. http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2004/41620.htm

9 For more on private military contractors see Peter Singer, Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry (Cornell University Press, 2003).

10 European Commission, EU-Colombia trade. Undated.
http://trade-info.cec.eu.int/doclib/html/113367.htm

11 Roger F Noriega, Statement Before the House Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Washington, DC. April 06 2005. http://www.state.gov/p/wha/rls/rm/2005/q2/44375.htm

12 British Petroleum, British Petroleum Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2006. http://www.bp.com/liveassets/bp_internet/globalbp/globalbp_uk_english/publications/energy_reviews_2005/STAGING/local_assets/downloads/pdf/statistical_review_of_world_energy_full_report_2005.pdf p. 12.

13 European Commission, EU/Russia Energy Partnership, October 30 2000. http://europa.eu.int/scadplus/leg/en/lvb/l27055.htm; see also Peter Gowan, US Hegemony Today, 2003, Monthly Review, 55:3, July/August 2003, pages 30-50.

14 For a liberal critique of the Bush Administration see G John Ikenberry, 'America's Imperial Ambition', Foreign Affairs, September - October, 2002. http://sobek.colorado.edu/~brahm/courses/PSCI2223Fall2002/ImperialAmbition.pdf

15 This paper is based on preliminary research for my new book Transnational Conflict and US Primacy (John Hopkins University Press, 2009)

16 For more on Iraq, the role of counter-insurgency and state formation see Eric Herring and Glen Rangwala, Iraq In Fragments: The Occupation and its Legacy (Cornell University Press, 2006).

17 Richard Cheney, The Vice President appears on Meet the Press with Tim Russert, September 16 2001. http://www.whitehouse.gov/vicepresident/news-speeches/speeches/vp20010916.html

18 There are ongoing debates as to whether the US economy is in decline in relation to other core powers. For a selection see Giovanni Arrighi, The Long Twentieth Century. Money, Power, and the Origins of Our Times (Verso, 1994); David Harvey, The New Imperialism (Oxford University Press, 2003); Peter Gowan, 'Peter Gowan and the Capitalist World Empire', Journal of World-Systems Research, 10:2, 2004, pages 471-539; Leo Panitch and Sam Gindin, Global Capitalism and American Empire (Merlin Press, 2003); Giovanni Arrighi, 'Hegemony Unravelling', New Left Review, 32, March/April 2005. http://www.newleftreview.net/Issue32.asp?Article=02


http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-08/24stokes.cfm


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Number One?

America by the numbers

by Michael Ventura

www.citypages.com (February 23 2005)


No concept lies more firmly embedded in our national character than the notion that the USA is "Number One", "the greatest". Our broadcast media are, in essence, continuous advertisements for the brand name "America Is Number One". Any office seeker saying otherwise would be committing political suicide. In fact, anyone saying otherwise will be labeled "un-American". We're an "empire", ain't we? Sure we are. An empire without a manufacturing base. An empire that must borrow $2 billion a day from its competitors in order to function. Yet the delusion is ineradicable. We're Number One. Well ... this is the country you really live in:

* The United States is 49th in the world in literacy (the New York Times, December 12 2004).

* The United States ranked 28th out of 40 countries in mathematical literacy (New York Times, December 12 2004).

* Twenty percent of Americans think the sun orbits the earth. Seventeen percent believe the earth revolves around the sun once a day (The Week, January 7 2005).

* "The International Adult Literacy Survey ... found that Americans with less than nine years of education 'score worse than virtually all of the other countries'" (Jeremy Rifkin's superbly documented book The European Dream: How Europe's Vision of the Future Is Quietly Eclipsing the American Dream, page 78).

* Our workers are so ignorant and lack so many basic skills that American businesses spend $30 billion a year on remedial training (New York Times, December 12 2004). No wonder they relocate elsewhere!

* "The European Union leads the US in ... the number of science and engineering graduates; public research and development (R&D) expenditures; and new capital raised" (The European Dream, page 70).

* "Europe surpassed the United States in the mid-1990s as the largest producer of scientific literature" (The European Dream, page 70).

* Nevertheless, Congress cut funds to the National Science Foundation. The agency will issue 1,000 fewer research grants this year (New York Times, December 21 2004).

* Foreign applications to US grad schools declined 28 percent last year. Foreign student enrollment on all levels fell for the first time in three decades, but increased greatly in Europe and China. Last year Chinese grad-school graduates in the US dropped 56 percent, Indians 51 percent, South Koreans 28 percent (New York Times, December 21 2004). We're not the place to be anymore.

* The World Health Organization "ranked the countries of the world in terms of overall health performance, and the US [was] ... 37th". In the fairness of health care, we're 54th. "The irony is that the United States spends more per capita for health care than any other nation in the world" (The European Dream, pages 79-80). Pay more, get lots, lots less.

* "The US and South Africa are the only two developed countries in the world that do not provide health care for all their citizens" (The European Dream, page 80). Excuse me, but since when is South Africa a "developed" country? Anyway, that's the company we're keeping.

* Lack of health insurance coverage causes 18,000 unnecessary American deaths a year. [That's six times the number of people killed on 9/11.] (New York Times, January 12 2005.)

* "US childhood poverty now ranks 22nd, or second to last, among the developed nations. Only Mexico scores lower" (The European Dream, page 81). Been to Mexico lately? Does it look "developed" to you? Yet it's the only "developed" country to score lower in childhood poverty.

* Twelve million American families - more than ten percent of all US households - "continue to struggle, and not always successfully, to feed themselves". Families that "had members who actually went hungry at some point last year" numbered 3.9 million (New York Times, November 22 2004).

* The United States is 41st in the world in infant mortality. Cuba scores higher (New York Times, January 12 2005).

* Women are seventy percent more likely to die in childbirth in America than in Europe (New York Times, January 12 2005).

* The leading cause of death of pregnant women in this country is murder (CNN, December 14 2004).

* "Of the twenty most developed countries in the world, the US was dead last in the growth rate of total compensation to its workforce in the 1980s ... In the 1990s, the US average compensation growth rate grew only slightly, at an annual rate of about 0.1 percent" (The European Dream, page 39). Yet Americans work longer hours per year than any other industrialized country, and get less vacation time.

* "Sixty-one of the 140 biggest companies on the Global Fortune 500 rankings are European, while only fifty are US companies" (The European Dream, page 66). "In a recent survey of the world's fifty best companies, conducted by Global Finance, all but one were European" (The European Dream, page 69).

* "Fourteen of the twenty largest commercial banks in the world today are European ... In the chemical industry, the European company BASF is the world's leader, and three of the top six players are European. In engineering and construction, three of the top five companies are European ... The two others are Japanese. Not a single American engineering and construction company is included among the world's top nine competitors. In food and consumer products, Nestle and Unilever, two European giants, rank first and second, respectively, in the world. In the food and drugstore retail trade, two European companies ... are first and second, and European companies make up five of the top ten. Only four US companies are on the list" (The European Dream, page 68).

* The United States has lost 1.3 million jobs to China in the last decade (CNN, January 12 2005).

* US employers eliminated one million jobs in 2004 (The Week, January 14 2005).

* Three million six hundred thousand Americans ran out of unemployment insurance last year; 1.8 million - one in five - unemployed workers are jobless for more than six months (New York Times, January 9 2005).

* Japan, China, Taiwan, and South Korea hold forty percent of our government debt. (That's why we talk nice to them.) "By helping keep mortgage rates from rising, China has come to play an enormous and little-noticed role in sustaining the American housing boom" (New York Times, December 4 2004). Read that twice. We owe our housing boom to China, because they want us to keep buying all that stuff they manufacture.

* Sometime in the next ten years Brazil will probably pass the US as the world's largest agricultural producer. Brazil is now the world's largest exporter of chickens, orange juice, sugar, coffee, and tobacco. Last year, Brazil passed the US as the world's largest beef producer. (Hear that, you poor deluded cowboys?) As a result, while we bear record trade deficits, Brazil boasts a $30 billion trade surplus (New York Times, December 12 2004).

* As of last June, the US imported more food than it exported (New York Times, December 12 2004).

* Bush: 62,027,582 votes. Kerry: 59,026,003 votes. Number of eligible voters who didn't show up: 79,279,000 (New York Times, December 26 2004). That's more than a third. Way more. If more than a third of Iraqis don't show for their election, no country in the world will think that election legitimate.

* One-third of all US children are born out of wedlock. One-half of all US children will live in a one-parent house (CNN, December 10 2004).

* "Americans are now spending more money on gambling than on movies, videos, DVDs, music, and books combined" (The European Dream, page 28).

* "Nearly one out of four Americans [believe] that using violence to get what they want is acceptable" (The European Dream, page 32).

* Forty-three percent of Americans think torture is sometimes justified, according to a PEW Poll (Associated Press, August 19 2004).

* "Nearly 900,000 children were abused or neglected in 2002, the last year for which such data are available" (USA Today, December 21 2004).

* "The International Association of Chiefs of Police said that cuts by the [Bush] administration in federal aid to local police agencies have left the nation more vulnerable than ever" (USA Today, November 17 2004).


Number One? In most important categories we're not even in the Top Ten anymore. Not even close.

The USA is "Number One" in nothing but weaponry, consumer spending, debt, and delusion.

_____

Reprinted from the Austin Chronicle.

www.citypages.com/databank/26/1264/article12985.asp

City Pages is the Online News and Arts Weekly of the Twin Cities


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Saturday, September 15, 2007

The Dis-information Society

Clusterfuck Nation

by Jim Kunstler

Comment on current events by the author of
The Long Emergency (Atlantic Monthly Press, 2005)

www.kunstler.com (September 10 2007)


One question that readers ask me often is why the mainstream media is doing such a poor job of reporting the nexus of the global energy emergency and the turmoil in global finance. I maintain my "allergy" to conspiracy theories. There isn't any clique of top-hatted Wall Street biggies with monocles joining with with gray-suited CIA-types to intimidate editors with tongs and electrodes. American culture has become self-dis-informing.

As my friend Peter Golden, blogger at Boardside {1}, puts it so well: "When people lie, they know they are doing something wrong. But when they just make things up, there's no consciousness of right or wrong at work. It seems morally okay to live in a fantasy world - and this is much more pernicious to the public discourse than lying."

My friends, who are mostly ex-hippie, yuppie progressives, have been locked in prayer to exorcise the evil spirit of George W Bush for six years, but they fail to recognize a more comprehensive failure of leadership in every sector of American life, and especially in the ones where a lot ex-hippies now-yuppies run things. Our political leadership may be deplorable, but so is our leadership in business, education, the arts, and especially the media.

The poster child for this is The New York Times. In their reporting on the world oil situation, they have consistently and uncritically swallowed the public relations handouts of Daniel Yergin's Cambridge Energy Research Group (CERA), a wholly-owned PR shop serving the oil industry. Laziness doesn't even explain this. It's bad editorial leadership. It's a failure to ask the important questions.

On Friday, the oil futures markets closed a dollar-and-change away from the all-time record high price (the same day the Dow Jones Industrial Index fell 250 points.) Today's (Monday's) lead headline in the NY Times Business Section is "Disney to Test Character Toys for Lead Paint". Well, I hope we get that situation straightened out so that civilization can continue with a full supply of Disney action figures under the Christmas trees - and forget for a minute whether Grandma will be able to drive to the WalMart in December, or whether WalMart will be able to keep the diesel tanks filled for their "warehouse on wheels", or whether both Grandma and the Assistant Manager of her local WalMart are three months in arrears on their re-set mortgage payments, and maxed out on their Discover cards ...

To me, there seems to be an obvious correlation between the current failures in the financial markets - in particular the credit sector - and the gross failure of leadership across the board in American life. Ultimately, credit depends on legitimacy, and so does authority. They are tied together. For years, both have been immersed in fantasy rather than reality.

How does one otherwise account for the remarkable disappearance of standards in lending among the human beings who lead banking institutions? All the banking executives didn't wake up one morning missing sixty IQ points. And yet neither can one say that they all woke up one morning with evil intentions to work wickedness in the world. They simply became subsumed in a fantasy that there was no material difference between borrowers with a proven ability to pay back loans and borrowers with no record of credit-worthiness. And they got rid of the problems that might have ensued by selling off wholesale bundles of good-and-bad loans to willing buyers (other banking executives) further down the line, who in turn sold certificates representing these bundles to willing executives in pension groups and money markets. It became normal. It was justified at the tip-top of American leadership by the Explainer-in-Chief saying that it was a good thing for as many Americans as possible to own their own house.

Did the American media report on this chain of dangerous fantasy? Not in the least. They were simply mesmerized by the amazing, supernatural rise of nominal house prices, and the fantastic flow of paychecks from the production home-builder's payroll offices, and the fabulous cash-out re-fi's that sent streams of revenue to the Crate-and-Barrel furniture outlets, and the Williams-Sonoma catalog headquarters, and the plastic surgery parlors.

All this occurred against the background of what has come to be called Peak Oil, the turnaround point in global oil production, and indeed the all-time high-point of world oil consumption, which can be dated precisely now (in the rearview mirror) as having topped absolutely in July of 2006 - the exact moment, incidentally, that a gigantic pin first pierced the outermost molecules of the soapy film that held the housing bubble together.

Oil production (all liquids, including natural gas byproducts, tar sands, what-have-you) are down now by more than a million barrels a day. We've only experienced it so far in the juddering rise of oil futures prices. Over this brief period of time since the absolute peak, the losses of supply have been yielded in the world's poorest societies, who simply drop out of bidding for oil supplies.

What the mainstream media is missing now is the prospect of a really swift worsening of the problem as exports from the major oil producing nations fall off at a sharper rate than their production declines. This idea has been articulated best by Dallas geologist Jeffrey Brown over at The Oil Drum.com {2}, and for one particular discussion of it go to this blog {3} at Jeff Vail's Energy Intelligence site.

The mainstream media is also failing to get the connection between the supreme commodity that allows the world's industrial economies to operate, and the credibility of a financial sector whose chief mission is to finance the operations of industrial economies. In the absence of any real prospect for growth in America's industrial economy, the financial sector dreamed up a system in which we could invest in the manufacture of investment instruments instead of productive activity per se. And so all the expertise and time of those working in the financial sector has gone into the production of tradable debt vehicles based on abstruse formulas that almost nobody could understand (especially the people buying and selling them).

All this dangerous fantasy gained legitimacy because for a while it seemed to pay off. Ordinary citizens could acquire houses much bigger and better-equipped than their incomes justified. And mortgage originators and bankers made whopping fees in enabling the action. And higher-up bankers in the chain derived unheard-of bonuses from leveraging the securitized debt from all that, and politicians basked in the glow of a seeming hyper-prosperity, and professor Bob Bruegmann at the University of Illinois declared suburban sprawl a good thing, and even The New York Times, while staggering in news-gathering effectiveness against the Internet, was able to rake in enough advertising to build an unnecessary new headquarters skyscraper in Manhattan.

The dream is over now. Reality-based moral hazard is returning (literally) with a vengeance. Right and wrong are going to matter again and a lot of people who put these things aside for a while are going to suffer.


Notes:

{1} http://www.petergolden.com/Boardside.htm

{2} http://www.theoildrum.com/

{3} http://www.jeffvail.net/labels/Geopolitics.html


http://jameshowardkunstler.typepad.com/clusterfuck_nation/2007/09/the-dis-informa.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

"We Ran It in a Different Way"

Chapter 12 (pages 116-121) of

Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA (Doubleday, 2007)

by Tim Weiner


One weapon the CIA used with surpassing skill was cold cash. The agency excelled at buying the services of foreign politicians. The first place where it picked the future leader of a world power was Japan.

Two of the most influential agents the United States ever recruited helped carry out the CIA's mission to control the government. They had been cell mates, charged as war criminals, and imprisoned for three years in Tokyo after the end of World War II under the American occupation. They walked free at the end of 1948, the day before many of their fellow inmates were taken to the prison gallows.

With the CIA's help, Nobusuke Kishi became Japan's prime minister and the chief of its ruling party. Yoshio Kodama secured his freedom and his position as the nation's number-one gangster by helping American intelligence. Together they shaped the politics of postwar Japan. In the war against fascism, they had represented everything America hated. In the war against communism, they were just what America needed.

In the 1930s, Kodama had led a right-wing youth group that attempted to assassinate the prime minister. He was sentenced to prison, but Japan's government put him to use as a procurer of spies and strategic metals for the coming battle. After five years spent running one of the war's biggest black markets in occupied China, Kodama held the rank of rear admiral and possessed a personal fortune worth roughly $175 million. Upon his release from prison, Kodama began to pour part of his fortune into the careers of Japan's most conservative politicians, and he became a key member of a CIA operation that helped bring them to power. He worked with American businessmen, OSS veterans, and ex-diplomats to pull off an audacious covert operation, bankrolled by the CIA, during the Korean War.

The American military needed tungsten, a scarce strategic metal used for hardening missiles. Kodama's network smuggled tons of it out of Japanese military caches into the United States. The Pentagon paid $10 million for it. The CIA provided $2.8 million in financing to underwrite the operation. The tungsten-smuggling network reaped more than $2 million. But the operation left Kodama in bad odor with the CIA's Toyko station. "He is a professional liar, gangster, charlatan, and outright thief", the station reported on September 10 1953. "Kodama is completely incapable of intelligence operations, and has no interest in anything but the profits". The relationship was severed, and the CIA turned its attention to the care and feeding of up-and-coming Japanese politicians - including Kishi - who won seats in the Diet, Japan's parliament, in the first elections after the end of the American occupation.


"We're All Democrats Now"

Kishi became the leader of the rising conservative movement in Japan. Within a year of his election to the Diet, using Kodama's money and his own considerable political skills, he controlled the largest faction among Japan's elected representives. Once in office, he built the ruling party that led the nation for nearly half a century.

He had signed the declaration of war against the United States in 1941 and led Japan's munitions ministry during World War II. Even while imprisoned after the war, Kishi had well-placed allies in the United States, among them Joseph Grew, the American ambassador in Tokyo when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Grew was under detention in Tokyo in 1942 when Kishi, as a member of the war cabinet, offered to let him out to play a round of golf. They became friends. Days after Kishi was freed from prison. Grew became the first chairman of the National Committee for a Free Europe, the CIA front created to support Radio Free Europe and other political-warfare programs.

Upon his release, Kishi went directly to the residence of the prime minister, where his brother, Eisaku Sato, the chief secretary of the cabinet under the occupation, handed him a business suit to replace his prisoner's uniform.

"Strange, isn't it?" Kishi said to his brother. "We're all democrats now".

Seven years of patient planning transformed Kishi from prisoner to prime minister. He took English lessons from Newsweek's Tokyo bureau chief and gained introductions to American politicians from Newsweek's foreign affairs editor, Harry Kern, a close friend to Allen Dulles and later in life a CIA conduit to Japan. Kishi cultivated American embassy officials like rare orchids. He moved cautiously at first. He was still a notorious man, routinely followed by the police.

In May 1954, he staged a political coming-out at the Kabuki Theater in Tokyo. He invited Bill Hutchinson, an OSS veteran who worked with the CIA in Japan as an information and propaganda officer at the American embassy, to attend the theater with him. He paraded Hutchinson around the ornate foyers of the Kabuki-za at intermission, showing him off to his friends among the Japanese elite. It was a highly unusual gesture at the time, but it was pure political theater, Kishi's way of announcing in public that he was back in the international arena - and in the good graces of the United States.

For a year, Kishi met in secret with CIA and State Department officials in Hutchinson's living room. "It was clear that he wanted at least the tacit backing of the United States government", Hutchinson remembered. The talks laid the groundwork for the next forty years of Japan's relations with the United States.

Kishi told the Americans that his strategy was to wreck the ruling Liberal Party, rename it, rebuild it, and run it. The new Liberal Democratic Party under his command would be neither liberal nor democratic, but a right-wing club of feudal leaders rising from the ashes of imperial Japan. He would first work behind the scenes while more senior statesmen preceded him as prime minister, and then take charge. He pledged to change the foreign policies of Japan to fit American desires. The United States could keep its military bases in Japan and store nuclear weapons there, a matter of some sensitivity in Japan. All he asked in return was secret political support from America.

Foster Dulles met with Kishi in August 1955, and the American secretary of state told him face-to-face that he could expect that support - if Japan's conservatives unified to help the United States fight communism.

Everyone understood what that American support would be.

Kishi told Sam Berger, the senior political officer at the American embassy, that it would be best for him to deal directly with a younger and lower-ranking man, unknown in Japan, as his primary contact with the United States. The assignment went to the CIA's Clyde McAvoy, a marine veteran who had survived the storming of Okinawa and joined the agency after a stint as a newspaper reporter. Shortly after McAvoy arrived in Japan, Sam Berger introduced him to Kishi, and one of the stronger relationships the CIA ever cultivated with a foreign political leader was born.


"A Great Coup"

The most crucial interaction between the CIA and the Liberal Democratic Party was the exchange of information for money. It was used to support the party and to recruit informers within it. The Americans established paid relationships with promising young men who became, a generation later, members of parliament, ministers, and elder statesmen. Together they promoted the LDP and subverted Japan's Socialist Party and labor unions. When it came to bankrolling foreign politicians, the agency had grown more sophisticated than it had been seven years earlier in Italy. Instead of passing suitcases filled, with cash in four-star hotels, the CIA used trusted American businessmen as go-betweens to deliver money to benefit its allies. Among these were executives from Lockheed, the aircraft company then building the U-2 and negotiating to sell warplanes to the new Japanese defense forces Kishi aimed to build.

In November 1955, Kishi unified Japan's conservatives under the banner of the Liberal Democratic Party. As the party's leader, he allowed the CIA to recruit and run his political followers on a seat-by-seat basis in the Japanese parliament. As he maneuvered his way to the top, he pledged to work with the agency in reshaping a new security treaty between the United States and Japan. As Kishi's case officer, the CIA's C1yde McAvoy was able to report on - and influence - the emerging foreign policy of postwar Japan.

In February 1957, on the day Kishi was to be installed as prime minister, a crucial procedural vote on the security treaty was scheduled in the Diet, where the LDP held the biggest block of votes. "He and I pulled off a great coup that day", McAvoy remembered. "The United States and Japan were moving toward this agreement. The Japan Communist Party found it especially threatening. On the day of this vote, the communists planned an uprising in the Diet. I found out about this through a left-wing Socialist member of the secretariat who was my agent. Kishi was to meet the Emperor that day. I called for an urgent meeting. He made it - he showed up at the door of our safe house in top hat, striped pants and a cutaway coat - and though I had no approval to do so, I told him of the communists' plans for a riot in the Diet. Now, the custom was for members to take a break and go to the eating and drinking stalls around the Diet at 10:30 or 11 am. Kishi told his own party: don't take a break. And after everyone but the LDP peeled off they ran to the Diet and passed the bill."

In June 1957, barely eight years after shedding his prison uniform, Kishi traveled to the United States for a triumphal visit. He went to Yankee Stadium and threw out the ceremonial first ball. He played a round of golf at an all-white country club with the president of the United States. Vice President Nixon introduced him to the Senate as a great and loyal friend of the American people. Kishi told the new American ambassador to Japan, Douglas MacArthur II, the general's nephew, that the new security treaty would be passed and a rising left-wing tide could be stemmed if America helped him consolidate his power. Kishi wanted a permanent source of financial support from the CIA rather than a series of surreptitious payments. He convinced the American envoy that "if Japan went Communist it was difficult to see how the rest of Asia would not follow suit", Ambassador MacArthur remembered. Poster Dulles agreed. He argued that the United States had to place a big bet on Japan, and that Kishi was the best bet the United States had.

President Eisenhower himself decided that Japanese political support for the security treaty and American financial support for Kishi were one and the same. He authorized a continuing series of CIA payoffs to key members of the LDP. Politicians unwitting of the CIA's role were told that the money came from the titans of corporate America. The money flowed for at least fifteen years, under four American presidents, and it helped consolidate one-party rule in Japan for the rest of the cold war.

Others followed in Kishi's path. Okinori Kaya had been the finance minister in Japan's wartime cabinet. Convicted as a war criminal, he was sentenced to life in prison. Paroled in 1955 and pardoned in 1957, he became one of Kishi's closest advisers and a key member of the LDP's internal security committee.

Kaya became a recruited agent of the CIA either immediately before or immediately after he was elected to the Diet in 1958. After his recruitment, he wanted to travel to the United States and meet Allen Dulles in person. The CIA, skittish about the appearance of a convicted war criminal meeting with the director of central intelligence, kept the meeting secret for nearly fifty years. But on February 6 1959, Kaya came to visit Dulles at CIA headquarters and asked the director to enter into a formal agreement to share intelligence with his internal security committee. "Everyone agreed that cooperation between CIA and the Japanese regarding countersubversion was most desirable and that the subject was one of major interest to CIA", say the minutes of their talk. Dulles regarded Kaya as his agent, and six months later he wrote him to say: "I am most interested in learning your views both in international affairs affecting relations between our countries and on the situation within Japan".

Kaya's on-and-off relationship with the CIA reached a peak in 1968, when he was the leading political adviser to Prime Minister Eisaku Sato. The biggest domestic political issue in Japan that year was the enormous American military base on Okinawa, a crucial staging ground for the bombing of Vietnam and a storehouse of American nuclear weapons. Okinawa was under American control, but regional elections were set for November 10, and opposition politicians threatened to force the United States off the island. Kaya played a key role in the CIA's covert actions aimed to swing the elections for the LDP, which narrowly failed. Okinawa itself returned to Japanese administration in 1972, but the American military remains there to this day.

The Japanese came to describe the political system created with the ClA's support as kozo oshoku - "structural corruption". The CIA's payoffs went on into the 1970s. The structural corruption of the political life of Japan continued long thereafter.

"We ran Japan during the occupation, and we ran it in a different way m these years after the occupation", said the CIA's Horace Feldman, who served as station chief in Tokyo. "General MacArthur had his ways. We had ours."


Notes:

The relationship between the CIA and the leaders of Japan in the 1950s was detailed in the author's interviews with Al Ulmer, CIA's Far East division chief from 1955 to 1958; Clyde McAvoy, Kishi's CIA case officer in the mid-1950s; Horace Feldman, a former CIA station chief in Tokyo; Roger Hilsman and U Alexis Johnson, senior State Department officials under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson; Jim Lilley and Don Gregg, formerly CIA station chiefs and US ambassadors in Beijing and Seoul, respectively; and Douglas MacArthur II, the US ambassador in Tokyo under Eisenhower.

The relationship was first limned in the author's New York Times article, "CIA Supported Japanese Right in '50s and '60s (October 09 1994). That article had its origins in a struggle then ongoing between the CIA and the State Department over the release of a volume of The Foreign Relations of the United States covering Japan in the 1960s. Twelve years later, in July 2006, the State Department belatedly acknowledged that "the US Government approved four covert programs to try to influence the direction of Japanese political life". The statement described three of the four programs. It said that the Eisenhower administration authorized the CIA before the May 1958 elections for the Japanese House of Representatives to provide "a few key pro-American and conservative politicians" with money. It said the Eisenhower administration also authorized the CIA "to institute a covert program to try to split off the moderate wing of the leftist opposition in the hope that a more pro-American and 'responsible' opposition party would emerge". In addition, "a broader covert program, divided almost equally between propaganda and social action", sought to encourage the Japanese people to embrace the ruling party and reject the influence of the left. The deep relationship with the rising politician and future prime minister Kishi was not acknowledged. FRUS 1964-1968, Vol. XXIX, Part 2.

After Japan fell, the American occupation led by General MacArthur purged and imprisoned right-wing militarists such as Kishi and his allies. But things changed after George Kennan was sent to Japan in 1948 by Secretary of State Marshall to try to persuade MacArthur to change his views. An example of MacArthur's policies could be seen on the docks of Osaka, where dismantled machinery from Japanese industries was being greased, crated, and shipped at great expense to China as part of a war reparations program. Americans were paying to take Japan apart and support China at the moment it was being overrun by the communists. Kennan argued that the United States should move as fast as possible from the reformation of Japan toward its economic recovery. This about-face required an end to MacArthur's purges. It meant that accused war criminals such as Kishi and Kodama would be released. It led to their recruitment by the CIA and the eventual restoration of powerful leaders, business cartels, internal security forces, and political parties.

"The US should do what it can to encourage effective conservative leadership in Japan", said the Operations Coordinating Board, in a report to the White House dated October 28 1954, and declassified fifty years later. If the conservatives were united, they could work together to control Japan's political life, the board said, and "to take legal measures against Communists, and to combat the neutralist, anti-American tendencies of many of the individuals in Japan's educated groups". This is precisely what the CIA did from 1954 onward.


Page 117 The CIA provided $2.8 million in financing: Japanese conservatives needed money. The American military needed tungsten. "Somebody had the idea: Let's kill two birds with one stone", said John Howley, a New York lawyer and OSS veteran who helped arrange the transaction. The Kodama-CIA operation smuggled tons of tungsten out from Japanese military caches into the United States and sold it to the Pentagon for $10 million. The smugglers included Kay Sugahara, a Japanese American recruited by the OSS from an internment camp in California during World War II. His files, researched by Howard Schonberger, a University of Maine professor writing a book nearly completed at his death in 1991, described the operation in detail. The proceeds were pumped into the campaigns of conservatives during Japan's first post-occupation elections in 1953. Howley said: "We had learned in OSS, to accomplish a purpose, you had to put the right money in the right hands".

Page 117 "He is a professional liar": "Background on JIS and Japanese Military Personalities", September 10 1953, National Archives, Record Group 263, CIA Name File, box 7, folder: Kodama, Yoshio.

Page 118 "Strange, isn't it?": Dan Kurzman, Kishi and Japan: The Search for the Sun (Obolensky, 1960), page 256.

Page 118 "It was clear that he wanted at least the tacit backing of the United States government": Hutchinson oral history, Foreign Affairs Oral History.

Page 120 "He and I pulled off a great coup that day": McAvoy interview with author.

Page 120 "if Japan went Communist": MacArthur interview with author.

Page 121 Kaya became a recruited agent: The records of Kaya's relationship with the CIA are in the National Archives, Record Group 263, CIA Name File, box 6, folder: Kaya, Okinori.

Page 121 "we ran it in a different way": Feldman interview with author.


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Friday, September 14, 2007

Aerial Bombardment in the Racist Contemporary

by Vijay Prashad

zmag.org (November 2001)


Everything is predictable. The aerial sorties, the helicopter operations, the Special Forces raids, the encouragement of a local ally (here the Northern Alliance). What was also predictable was the inevitable "errant cluster bomb" and the "collateral damage".

Reports came in almost immediately from sources that the US tends to consider "unconfirmed" (such as Iranian television) that "errant bombs" landed in civilian areas and took civilian lives. We heard of the bombs on a UN mine-removal office in Kabul, we heard of the two strikes on Herat, and we heard about the bombing of the CNN (Communist News Networks, according to some Republicans!) offices in Kandahar as well as the Al-Jazeera network office. The New York Times reported (John F Burns, "Errant Cluster Bomb Leaves Danger Behind, UN Says", 25 October 2001) "the Pentagon has said errors were unavoidable in a bombing campaign of the intensity of that being conducted in Afghanistan". The United Nations, whose credibility is stretched to the limit once again, reports that "residential areas and some villages" have become targets of "errant cluster bombs" because "Taliban troops have moved into those areas". There is little concern that however smart we think the bombs can be, "errors" in the world of aerial bombardment are inevitable.

To say that the civilian deaths from aerial bombardment are unintentional is sophistry, because if there is a probability that the bombs will hit civilian targets, then ipso facto the civilian deaths are not unintentional. This is tantamount to saying that a drunk driver who did not intend to kill someone in an "accident" should be set free for good motives; US law prosecutes drunk drivers regardless of whether they have been in an accident, because it recognizes that drunk driving is an inevitable accident. The same must be said of aerial bombardment. It always already intends to kill civilians, despite the best intentions of the military planners.

Early laws on warfare recognized the question of "intention" as sophistry, but even here there was a desire to accommodate flagrant acts of military violence. It began well in 1899 and then went downhill by 1907. Hague II (Laws and Customs of War on Land, 29 July 1899; and ratified by the US Senate on 14 March 1902) was farsighted in its insistence (article XXIII) that military combat should prohibit "arms, projectiles, or material of a nature to cause superfluous injury". By Hague IV (18 October 1907, and ratified by the US Senate the next year) the last phrase was amended to read, "to cause unnecessary suffering". Necessary suffering, I suspect, was permissible.

But all this was before the present history of bombing, as recounted so wonderfully by Sven Lindquist in his new book (New Press, 2001). For the first act of aerial bombardment only took place on 26 October 1911 when the Italian air force bombed Tripoli in their war against Turkish North Africa. As a reaction to the violent turn of air warfare and the fear that it would be turned against each other, the powers committed to end aerial bombardment, but the treaty they penned did not come into effect. That rather farsighted treaty (Draft Rules on Aerial Warfare, February 1923) pointedly noted (in article XXII) that "aerial bombardment for the purpose of terrorizing the civilian population, of destroying or damaging private property not of military character, or of injuring non-combatants is prohibited", and furthermore (according to article XXIV) any belligerent state that did bomb civilian targets had to compensate them.

The very next year Squadron Leader Arthur "Bomber" Harris of the Royal Air Force ruthlessly bombed the Kurds and Iraqis. In March of 1924, Harris reported the following to his superiors (the text of which was added to the RAF's August 1924 "Notes on the Method of Employment of Air Arm in Iraq", a report to Parliament, thereafter expunged from the record): "Where the Arab and Kurd had just begun to realise that if they could stand a little noise they could stand bombing, they now know what real bombing means, in casualties and damage; they now know that within forty-five minutes a full-sized village (vide attached photos of Kushan-Al-Ajaza) can be practically wiped out and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured by four or five machines which offer them no real target, no opportunity for glory as warriors, no effective means of escape".

By the time the next major convention against aerial bombing was drafted, all the major powers joined in the immorality of bombardment. The Spanish in Morocco, over the city of Chechaouen; the French in Syria (the bombardment of Damascus' neighborhoods on 18 October 1925); the United States in Central America (the bombardment of revolutionary Nicaraguan farmers in the 1920s); and finally, those who started it, the Italians in Ethiopia in 1935-36. But race is at the heart of "international" revulsion at aerial bombing. As Lindquist puts it, "the truth about Chechaouen required no cover-up. Bombing natives was considered quite natural. The Italians did it in Libya, the French did it in Morocco, and the British did it throughout the Middle East, in India, and East Africa, while the South Africans did it in Southwest Africa. Will any ambassador ever ask for forgiveness for that? Of all these bombed cities and villages, only Guernica [in Spain, bombed by the Fascists in 1937] went down in history. Because Guernica lies in Europe. In Guernica, we were the ones who died."

On the eve of World War II, on 30 September 1938, the League of Nations produced a unanimous resolution entitled "Protection of Civilian Populations Against Bombing from the Air in Case of War". The League declared, "intentional bombing of civilian populations is illegal" mainly because "on numerous occasions public opinion has expressed through the most authoritative channels its horror of the bombing of civilian populations". The key word here is "intentional" and the League did not go over the philosophical conundrums posed by the word, as they perhaps should have to prevent the sophistry of "collateral damage" and "errant cluster bombs". On the first day of World War II (1 September 1939), US President Franklin D Roosevelt wrote a note to the governments of France, Germany, Italy, Poland and the United Kingdom, begging them to desist from aerial bombardment. The note bears quotation in full: "The ruthless bombing from the air of civilians in unfortified centers of population during the course of the hostilities which have raged in various quarters of the earth during the past few years, which has resulted in the maiming and in the death of thousands of defenseless men, women, and children, has sickened the hearts of every civilized man and woman, and has profoundly shocked the conscience of humanity. If resort is had to this form of inhuman barbarism during the period of the tragic conflagration with which the world is now confronted, hundreds of thousands of innocent human beings who have no responsibility for, and who are not even remotely participating in, the hostilities which have now broken out, will lose their lives. I am therefore addressing this urgent appeal to every government which may be engaged in hostilities publicly to affirm its determination that its armed forces shall in no event, and under no circumstances, undertake the bombardment from the air of civilian populations or of unfortified cities, upon the understanding that these same rules of warfare will be scrupulously observed by all of their opponents. I request an immediate reply."

The immediate reply was on 20 June 1940 when the Royal Air Force began the bombardment of Germany (and declared that industrial centers and the workers' homes beside them are legitimate targets), and when the Nazi regime began the Blitz against the British on 6 September. Munich, Coventry, London, Hamburg, and then finally Dresden - this was the barbarism of aerial bombardment within Europe. On 27 July 1943, the RAF killed 50,000 people in Hamburg. Reflecting on this barbarity, nuclear physicist Freeman Dyson who was then a clerk for Arthur "Bomber" Harris wrote that the Nazis "had sat in their offices, writing memoranda and calculating how to murder people efficiently, just like me. The main difference was that they were sent to jail or hanged as war criminals, while I went free." Eighty percent of all the bombs in World War II fell in the last ten months of the war during which the British, for instance, decided to bomb residential areas with the argument that this would foreshorten the war. The US borrowed this logic at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but only after the USAF firebombed Tokyo on 8 May (General Curtis LeMay who directed the operations, said "we knew we were going to kill a lot of women and kids when we burned that town. Had to be done"). On 13 February 1945, the RAF killed 100,000 in Dresden; on 6 August 1945, the USAF killed 100,000 instantly in Hiroshima (another 100,000 died over the course of the next year). Two days later, the Soviets, the British, the French and the US signed the Nuremberg principles - an act of utter hypocrisy. A "war crime" (article VI) is specifically defined by these principles as the "wanton destruction of cities, towns or villages, or devastation not justified by military necessity". No action was taken against the signatories, now the guardians of the new world order.

Not even against the French army in Madagascar, where the French massacred by bombardment 89,000 to 100,000 people in 1948 in the anti-colonial wars. Nor was there to be any action against the US air force for its acts in Korea (1950-53): A senior officer in General MacArthur's command hoped that a harsh US attack would "give these yellow bastards what is coming to them". The racist hatred of the Asians took the form of ruthless destruction, such as aerial raids on the northern part of the peninsula to destroy irrigation dams that provided water for three-quarters of the north's food production. "The subsequent flash flood waters wiped out [supply routes, etc]", the US air force noted in an official report. "The Westerner can little conceive the awesome meaning which the loss of [rice] has for the Asian - starvation and slow death". From Korea to Vietnam, to the carpet bombardment of Cambodia (the list is endless from here on, and Lindquist covers some of the ground for us). The US dropped four times the amount of firepower on Vietnam than was used in the entire Second World War, a tonnage equivalent to six hundred and forty Hiroshimas - some of this includes the 373,000 tons of napalm that seared the Vietnamese landscape and made the construction of socialism in that land so much harder.

In 1964, US President Lyndon Johnson built on the fabricated Tonkin Gulf incident to demand that the military be allowed to employ "all necessary measures" in the war. Since then we have moved to depleted uranium, to talk of tactical nuclear missiles, and the routine use of napalm and cruise missiles. On 19 December 1968, the UN's "Resolution on Human Rights" affirmed the International Red Cross's 1965 Vienna statement that combatants cannot adopt "unlimited" means to injure the enemy, that "it is prohibited to launch attacks against the civilian populations" and (here we are on weak territory that dilutes the problem of the "intentional") "that the distinction must be made at all times between persons taking part in the hostilities and members of the civilian population to the effect that the latter be spared as much as possible". As much as possible - not entirely, not totally. There will be casualties - this is the realism, the pragmatism of the racist contemporary - where we accept as given that a few of the dehumanized other will succumb to the pedagogy of the bomb despite our best, most civilized intentions.

In 1996 the International Court of Justice, bombarded with three million signatures on an anti-nuclear petition, among other incentives, voted "unanimously, that threat or use of nuclear weapons is illegal" when it violates various UN statutes, but three justices (from Sierra Leone, Guyana and Sri Lanka) wanted to go further and ban nuclear weapons under any circumstances. They knew that bombs such as these are used basically against those of color, those who are already subhuman to Europe and the United States, seen to require the rod for discipline, seen to be a civilization apart. Lindquist documents the genocidal fantasies of Europe and the United States against the colored Other, from Charles Dilke's 1869 Greater Britain (which calls for the "gradual extinction of the inferior races" as a "blessing of mankind" and does so as airplanes drop "a rain of awful death to every breathing thing [in China], a rain that exterminates the hopeless race") to Jack London's 1910 The Unparalled Invasion (which calls for an aerial bombardment of the Chinese by fragile glass tubes that carry every possible biological weapon - and those that flee are felled by the powers at their borders, the land is disinfected and then whites move into a cleansed China). "The dream of solving all the problems of the world through mass destruction from the air was already in place", Lindquist writes, "before the first bomb was dropped".

There is talk of tactical nuclear devices, and the US has probably already used depleted uranium shells. The Pakistani government sealed its borders and refugees are being sent back to desolation. The UN High Commissioner on Refugees, Mary Robinson, calls for an end to the bombardment so that food can be sent into Afghanistan, real food not the measly food drops orchestrated for propaganda by the US State Department. None of this is to be heeded, as the campaign continues, as bombs fall, as "errant cluster bombs" land on civilian targets who are now "collateral damage". The Taliban bomb without concern for human life, Hikmatyar (a great CIA asset) once killed 25,000 people by indiscriminate rocket fire into Kabul, and now the US bombs "with precision" from the air to shift rubble from one valley to the next, to devastate the productive capacity of Afghanistan and leave it as easy pickings for the next marauder who wants a strategic post on the Great Silk Road. There are those who die "unintentionally" and then there will be those who will starve because we have decapitated the capacity of the country. Where is the Geneva Convention when we need it? Our grief is not a cry for war.

_____

Vijay Prashad Associate Professor and Director, International Studies Program 214 McCook, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut 06106. 860-297-2518.

http://www.zmag.org/aerialprashad.htm


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Genocide from 30,000 feet

by Vijay Prashad

ZNet Commentary (August 15 2007)


Hamid Karzai is finally angry. The US government and its NATO front have been unable to consolidate control across Afghanistan, and into the tribal borderlands between Afghanistan and Pakistan. In lieu of effective on the ground strength, the NATO forces have taken refuge in their means of first and last resort: aerial bombardment. In one week in late June, NATO forces killed ninety Afghan civilians. The actual count of total civilian deaths is not available. This is itself scandalous. The United Nations' press officer in Kabul said (on June 2 2007), "The number of [civilian] deaths attributed to pro-government forces [that is, NATO] marginally exceeds that caused by anti-government forces". Without a public tabulation of figures, this is simply verbiage. I still have the clipping from the Guardian which shows that as a consequence of the invasion of 2001 between 20,000 and 49,600 people died (May 20 2002). By that measure, it is impossible for the Taliban and its associated allies to have wrought as much death as the US forces and NATO. It is this context that led Karzai, normally very pliant, to complain in the strongest words, "Innocent people are becoming victims of reckless operations". To those who defend US-NATO tactics, Karzai had this to say, "You don't fight a terrorist by firing a field gun 37 kilometers [24 miles] away into a target. That's definitely, surely bound to cause civilian casualties."

In response, NATO's Jaap de Hoop Scheffer quietly blandly pointed out, "Each innocent civilian victim is one too many. Unfortunately it happens." He knows a thing or two about aerial bombardment: in the 1970s, he used to be in the Royal Netherlands Air Force. De Hoop Scheffer is one of those Old European establishment people who eagerly climbed on to the Iraq invasion (he is a member of the conservative Christian Democratic Appeal party). The phrase "unfortunately it happens" is an assault on reason and the imagination. If you know that your actions will carry "unfortunate" results (such as the deaths of vast numbers of civilians), is the action worth it? What price is worth paying for such an act and who will pay the price? This callousness is reminiscent of US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright's response to Lesley Stahl on the half million children dead as a result of US led sanctions against Iraq, "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price we think the price is worth it".

In the NYT Book Review (July 29 2007), liberal establishment scholar Samantha Power made a more sophisticated, but substantially similar defense of aerial bombardment. Power, who teaches at Harvard University, quoted Columbia University anthropologist Talal Asad's claim that there is "no moral difference between the horror inflicted by state armies (especially if those armies belong to powerful states that are unaccountable to international law) and the horror inflicted by insurgents". Then Power responded, "There is a moral difference between setting out to destroy as many civilians as possible and killing civilians unintentionally and reluctantly in pursuit of a military objective". Power, whose book on the genocide in Rwanda is a forceful attempt to defend the concept of "humanitarian interventionism", perhaps relies for her claim on the word "intent" in the 1951 Genocide Convention. It defines genocide as "acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group". How does one establish "intent", given the lack of a smoking gun in most such cases? Neither Hoop Scheffer nor Albright say that they intend to wipe out the Afghan or Iraqi people, but both recognize that vast numbers of people are killed because of their policies. If they knew that their policy would result in death of this scale, then did they not "intend" to kill so many people, regardless of their motivations? They are not motivated to kill, but they surely intended to kill the thousands or hundreds of thousands?

We don't have a fly on the wall of the Clinton White House when the "humanitarian interventionists" discussed the sanctions on Iraq or the war on Kosovo. Nor do we have a fly on the wall of NATO headquarters, to hear Hoop Scheffer talking to his team of advisors. But we do have the tapes from the Nixon-Kissinger conversation and the paper trail of Kissinger's phone call to General Alexander Haig (Kissinger's military assistant, Vice Chief of Staff of the Army). When the US war in Vietnam continued to falter, Nixon and Kissinger cooked up Operation Menu to blast Cambodia. Nixon wanted to unleash the beast, to use the full power of the US to "crack the hell out of them", to use aerial bombardment "to hit everything". Kissinger told Haig, "He wants a massive bombing campaign in Cambodia. It's an order. It's to be done. Anything that flies on anything that moves." There is an established pattern for this kind of racist disregard. A senior officer in General Douglas MacArthur's command hoped that the US bombing of the northern Korean peninsula would "give these yellow bastards what is coming to them". Assaults by air destroyed irrigation dams that provided three quarters of North Korea's food. A US air force document took the time to tally up the consequences, "The subsequent flash flood waters wiped out [supply routes]. The Westerner can little conceive the awesome meaning which the loss of [rice] has for the Asian - starvation and slow death." Note: I document some of the long history of the consequences and intentions of aerial bombardment in ZNET column from November 2001: http://www.zmag.org/aerialprashad.htm .


Power's defense of aerial bombardment is obscene given the context within which it occurs. We're not talking about an abstract or theoretical campaign, but of campaigns that are ongoing and genocidal in consequence. Afghanistan is ruined, as much as Lebanon was ruined by the Israeli assault (total cost will be up there between $4 billion and $15 billion). We have new concepts for this: if not genocide, then sociocide or politicide, whose consequences are no less shattering. The destruction of the ability of a people to create a society or to craft a polity is a slow death sentence. The 1951 document does not include the intent to destroy a people who are united by a politics (so that the US backed and Indonesian-run massacre of a million Communists and sympathizers in 1965 does not count as a genocide). We need to revisit and clarify the concept "genocide" which has been muddied by the powerful and their complicit liberals (namely, in the case of the ongoing troubles in Darfur). Power hides behind the motivations of the powerful, which we are always to assume is benevolent. This is what is most shocking, that a liberal intellectual would once more peddle the dangerous view that we, the public, should put our trust in the good faith of those who have the reins of power. Karzai has to be accountable to his population, which seethes with anger at the ongoing assault on their lives and society. He too has turned to outrage. Samantha Power is protected from such accountability. When will she see through the eyes of the victims, many of whom already know that the architecture of US-NATO military assaults inevitably result in the deaths of many, too many civilians?

http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-08/15prashad.cfm


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

An Idiot's Referendum

People of all political colours are clamouring to answer a meaningless question.

by George Monbiot

Published in the Guardian (September 11 2007)


Is the new European treaty a good or a bad thing? Should you be allowed to vote for it, or should the decision be left to the politicians? The answer is no. What I mean by this is that no meaningful question has been asked.

The coalition demanding a referendum now stretches all the way from the rightwing headbangers of the UK Independence Party to Britain's fiercest trade union, the RMT. It has been joined by several progressive Labour MPs and, yesterday, by the Guardian's columnist Jackie Ashley {1}. All maintain that we should be allowed to say whether or not we like the new treaty. At first sight this call for a national referendum looks like a radical one. In truth it reflects not only the poverty of our political choices but also the poverty of our political demands. Whether or not we are allowed to vote, we are still treated like idiots.

The new document is currently an incomprehensible mess of insertions and amendments, but as far as I can tell it proposes or refers to 448 articles, each of which contains several clauses {2}. Many of them are contradictory. To draw out one of the few threads in this dreadful tangle that I can follow, the treaty speaks of "preserving, protecting and improving the quality of the environment" {3}. It also calls for new trans-European road networks and a continuation of the common fisheries policy. So if you vote yes to it, does this mean that you want the environment protected or that you want it destroyed? It means you want both. It seems, to my inexpert eye, that there are similar contradictions on employment, economic policy, culture and defence.

A referendum containing a single question is as disempowering as leaving the decision to other people. If the treaty contains 448 articles, we should be permitted to answer a set of questions which reflects this breadth: not 448 perhaps, but at least a few dozen. Otherwise we have no means of expressing what we want: Europe good or bad is meaningless if we are not permitted to define what Europe represents. You might think that voting on a long list of questions sounds crazy. If so, it shows how far short of true democracy your demands now fall. If we are not competent to make these decisions, we are not competent to determine whether our representatives are making the right decisions on our behalf.

At present, the whole political system works like this. We elect a government on the basis of a manifesto containing hundreds of proposals. Probability suggests that a few thousand open-minded people might agree or disagree with all of them. Everyone else will favour some policies and reject others. But the new government interprets its victory as public support for every item in the manifesto, except those that it decides to drop. The moment we seek to refine our choice, by protesting against one of the proposals we are deemed to have supported, we are told that we are being undemocratic: the people have spoken - who are we to disagree? In the meantime, corporate lobbyists glide through government offices, reshaping policies to suit their commercial needs.

Unlike Tony Blair, Gordon Brown appears to understand some of this. He has rightly perceived that the credibility of government is profoundly threatened by an absence of participation - at the ballot box, on party membership lists, in formulating policy. Representative politics today looks like a dried-out crab shell. The political exoskeleton is intact, but the flesh inside has shrivelled up. So he talks of participatory democracy, of citizens' juries, of wider and deeper consultations.

Look more closely at what Brown is proposing and you perceive that he is offering us what he cannot deliver, while withholding what he can. A prime minister cannot create grassroots politics. The initiative has to come from us. It is true that we have mostly failed, and part of me applauds Brown's effort to fill the gap. But the danger is that he creates what public relations agencies call an astroturf campaign: a fake grassroots movement.

His proposals for a new participatory democracy carry grave democratic dangers. Citizens' juries are an excellent tool for direct decision-making: when a small group of people needs to make a decision which affects only that group. If everyone joined one and the results were collated on a national scale, they could also be an excellent tool for democratising national decision-making. But this is not what Brown proposes. He speaks of a "Citizens Summit, composed of a representative sample of the British people", which will be asked to formulate a British statement of values, and "a nationwide set of Citizens Juries" in which "representatives assembled from every constituency" will help to shape policies on crime, immigration, education, health, transport and public services {4}. In what sense will these samples be representative? Will we be allowed to vote for these people? It looks like an opaque amalgam of representative and participatory processes, selecting the most dangerous aspects of both.

I have followed the politics of development planning for long enough to recognise that public consultation is even easier to manipulate than parliamentary politics. In several cases I have seen how fake consultations have been used to manufacture consent among unwilling populations, giving a semblance of democracy to decisions which have already been made by property developers and venal councillors {5}. This is by no means an argument against consultation or participation, just a warning that it is not a magic formula for democratic renewal. Every process can be corrupted: all forms of democracy require perpetual vigilance.

While Brown cannot create a grassroots mobilisation, he could give us a re-democratisation of the representative system. But his speech last week was more remarkable for what it left out than for what it contained. How could he talk of "a new type of politics which embraces everyone in the nation" without mentioning proportional representation? If he really wants us to make direct decisions about important issues, why can we not be permitted to vote in a series of referenda, each of which would contain a list of questions? Why, despite the fact that it was billed for inclusion, did he say nothing of corporate power and its corrosive effect on both political decision-making and public trust?

As he opens one door, he slams others shut. Two months ago, he quietly scrapped England's regional assemblies and handed their powers to the business people running the regional development agencies {6}. Is this what he means by "a vibrant reformed local democracy"? Now he is trying to do the same thing to democracy within the Labour party, shifting powers currently held by the conference to the national policy forum {7}. How does that correspond to his call for political parties to "broaden their appeal to articulate the views of more than the few"?

Though Brown's intentions might be good, the new politics looks like a new con, another means of creating an impression that the political crab still lives, while the corporate maggots jostle beneath the carapace. The danger is not just that his proposals will fail to revitalise the current political model. The greater danger is that they will legitimise it.

www.monbiot.com

References:

1. Jackie Ashley, 10th September 2007. Come on, Gordon - give us a referendum on the EU. The Guardian.

2. Conference of the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States, 23 July 2007. Draft Treaty Amending the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty Establishing the European Community. http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cmsupload/cg00001.en07.pdf

3. Article 233 of the original treaty is, as far as I can tell, unamended by the new draft, but appears to have been renumbered. Who knows? You can read it here: European Union, 2005. Treaty Establishing a New Constitution for Europe. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/bsp/hi/pdfs/09_01_05_constitution.pdf

4. Gordon Brown, 3rd September 2007. Speech to the National Council of Voluntary Organisations. http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page13008.asp

5. See for example George Monbiot, 2000. Captive State: the corporate takeover of Britain. Macmillan.

6. HM Treasury, July 2007. Review of sub-national economic development and
regeneration. http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/media/9/5/subnational_econ_review170707.pdf

7. See for example Seumas Milne, 6th September 2007. This will only feed the sense that politics is an elite racket. The Guardian.


Copyright (c) 2006 Monbiot.com

http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2007/09/11/an-idiots-referendum/


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Searching for Scapegoats

by John Michael Greer

The Archdruid Report (September 05 2007)

Druid perspectives on nature, culture, and the future of industrial society


One of the things I find most interesting about economic crises is the way that the same rhetoric gets recycled in each one, as though official and unofficial media alike ran out of new ideas long ago and just repeat the same stories over again with the names changed and the old serial numbers filed off. When the mortgage bubble now deflating around us was still filling with air, media blared that a new economic model had arrived, that this particular asset class would keep appreciating forever, and that it really was different this time: all the same mantras heard back during the tech stock bubble of the late 1990s, or for that matter in every other speculative frenzy since the Dutch tulip mania of the 17th century.

Equally, once the mortgage bubble started leaking air and taking mortgage companies and hedge funds down with it, some US official or other tempted fate in a big way by proclaiming that "the fundamentals are sound". The financial authorities said exactly the same thing in the aftermath of the 1929 stock market crash, and if there's any phrase in economic history that translates better as "run for your lives", I don't know it. You'd think we would have learned from the tech stock boom and bust that it's never different this time, and when an economy is propped up by the wishful thinking that drives all speculative frenzies, the fundamentals are never sound, and yet each bubble conjures up the same thinking and the same phrases all over again.

One song on this broken record, though, deserves special attention here. In The Great Crash 1929 (Houghton Mifflin, 1955), one of the best (and certainly most readable) works of economic history ever written, John Kenneth Galbraith talked about "the notion that somewhere on Wall Street ... there was a deus ex machina who somehow engineered the boom and bust". His comment is apposite: "No one was responsible for the great Wall Street crash. No one engineered the speculation that preceded it. Both were the product of the free choice and decision of hundreds of thousands of individuals. The latter were not led to the slaughter. They were impelled to it by the seminal lunacy which has always seized people who are seized in turn with the notion that they can become very rich."

Still, it's not part of the standard rhetoric of economic crisis to encourage people to contemplate their own folly, and so we've already started to see claims that the great mortgage bubble and bust was deliberately engineered. There's a twist, though, because the usual rhetoric of the past - the notion that the motive behind all this deviousness is pure greed - has been shouldered aside by the claim that the boom and bust were engineered to turn Americans into the debt slaves of a totalitarian state under the polymorphous banner of the New World Order.

That's a claim worth noticing, not least because every significant crisis of the last dozen years or so has been interpreted by many of the same people in exactly the same way. It's worth noticing as well because, like so much of what now passes for left-wing thought, this claim was pioneered by the John Birch Society, for many decades the cutting edge of the American extreme right. The phrase "new world order" itself was coined by the Society's founder Robert Welch in 1972, as part of a florid system of conspiracy theory that blamed US corporations and the Trilateral Commission for everything Welch thought was wrong with the world. The ease with which these ideas of the far right were imported lock, stock and barrel by the other end of the political spectrum after the implosion of the New Left at the end of the 1960s is one of the richer ironies of recent cultural history.

Yet there's another point worth noticing here, and that's the extent to which the rhetoric of conspiracy has become a convenient way to evade any suggestion of personal responsibility for the consequences of one's actions. Galbraith's comments are relevant here. People plunged into real estate speculation because they thought they could get lots of money for nothing, and other people bought houses they couldn't afford because they thought that, by the magic of repeated refinancing, they would never have to pay for them. Of course they were helped to embrace one or both of these delusions by the army of scam artists who always cluster around speculative bubbles, but the old maxim still holds: nobody can con you unless you first con yourself.

This habit of invoking conspiracy to dodge responsibility troubles me, not least because, as I've suggested in a previous post, the expansion of the industrial system over the last three hundred years or so - the Age of Exuberance, to use William Catton's evocative phrase - resembles nothing so much as a speculative bubble on a titanic scale. We've seen how countless people in recent years have fondly credited their own financial brilliance for paper profits that turned out to be the product of a Ponzi scheme writ large. In the same way, the pundits and publicists of industrial society have insisted all along that our technological cleverness and creativity are responsible for a boom that, in the cold light of a deindustrial morning, will more likely be seen as the fantastically irresponsible exploitation of 500 million years' worth of irreplaceable fossil fuels in an eyeblink of geological time.

The parallels run deep. Just as a speculative bubble lasts only so long as a steady stream of new speculators pour their money into the game and keep expanding the total amount of funds in play, the fossil fuel bubble of the last 300 years has depended on a steady stream of new energy reserves that keep expanding the total amount of cheap abundant energy available to the world's industrial societies. Just as a speculative bubble routinely leads to extravagant misallocations of resources - the immense square footage of new home construction in the last five years or so might as well be the poster child for that just now - the fossil fuel bubble has resulted in resource allocations that our descendants will likely find at least as profoundly misguided.

Just as a speculative bubble ends in a sharp economic contraction unless some new financial gimmick can be found to reinflate the economy, finally, the most likely aftermath of the fossil fuel boom is a long and difficult contraction that will shake our societies to the core, since the likelihood that another energy source will be found in time to reinflate the fossil fuel bubble doesn't look high just now. There's even a parallel in the way one bubble feeds into another: just as the 1925 Florida land boom gave way to the 1927-9 stock market boom, and then to bust, and the tech stock boom of the late 1990s turned into the real estate boom now unraveling around us, the coal boom of 1725-1900 yielded to the petroleum boom of 1900-2005. If the parallel completes itself, the bust that follows will likely be on an epic scale - and it seems all too likely that this may work out in an equally massive hunt for scapegoats to blame for it all.

There's already a substantial corner of the peak oil scene for whom discussing the end of the age of cheap abundant energy is inseparable from denouncing the current US government for an assortment of crimes, real or imagined. I'm no fan of the Bush administration - longtime readers of this blog know that I consider its energy and environmental policies disastrously misguided - but it seems to me that the effort to paint the leftover Reagan-era bureaucrats and politically naive right-wing intellectuals who run that administration as the modern liberal equivalent of Satan incarnate has less to do with their behavior than with the irruption of a frankly paranoid style of thinking into the American cultural mainstream.

Now to some extent this simply tracks the rise of a rhetoric of hatred in American politics, a process to which both parties have contributed mightily since 1970 or so. The vitriol heaped on the Bush administration by Democrats since 2001 matches with fair exactness the denunciations of the Clinton administration by Republicans in the eight years before then. Today's claims that Bush is about to establish a dictatorship have an equally exact parallel in claims, circulated feverishly in far right circles after the 1992 election, that Clinton was about to do the same thing. Since neither party offers anything like a constructive approach to the problems besetting American society just now, it's probably inevitable that they would both try to redirect the conversation to the supposed villainies of the other side.

Still, I've come to think that there's more involved here than an escalation of partisan bickering. Like the conspiracy rhetoric beginning to circulate about the end of the housing bubble, it's an evasion of responsibility - very few Americans, after all, had to be dragged kicking and screaming into eager participation in the fossil fuel powered orgy of consumption that peaked in the decade just past - and it's also a way of not dealing with the hard work that has to be done if we're to move into the end of the age of cheap abundant energy with anything worth saving still intact. On the list of work that has to be done as our society starts skidding down the far side of Hubbert's peak, arguing over who's most to blame may not deserve a very important place, but it's also a good deal easier than some of the things that belong much higher up.

Finally, it may be worth thinking about where today's search for scapegoats could lead. Imagine for a moment that the rhetoric we're discussing succeeds in pinning the blame for peak oil on the Bush administration and American business leaders. It's unpleasantly easy to imagine Republican politicians hanged en masse for crimes against humanity, oil executives and their families dragged from their homes and torn to pieces by screaming mobs, and the like. Such things have happened far too often in recent history to be dismissed as abstractions; they could all too readily shred what little is left of the basic civility any society needs to function at all, but they would not bring us one step closer to a meaningful response to the predicament of industrial society. I can only hope that enough people are willing to step back from today's rhetoric of partisan hatred to make such things a little less likely, in a future that will be difficult enough without them.

http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2007/09/searching-for-scapegoats.html


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

The super-revolutionaries

Reflections of President Fidel Castro

Granma International English Edition (September 04 2007)

Translated by ESTI



EVERY day I carefully read the opinions about Cuba in the traditional press agency releases, including those from the peoples which were part of the USSR, those from the People's Republic of China and others. News reaches me from the Latin America press, from Spain and the rest of Europe.

The picture is increasingly uncertain as we face the fear of a prolonged recession like that of the 1930s. On July 22 1944, the United States government received the privileges granted in Bretton Woods to the most powerful military power, that of minting the dollar as the international exchange currency. After the war, in 1945, with its economy intact, that country had at its disposal almost seventy percent of the world's gold reserves. On August 15 1971, Nixon unilaterally decided to suspend the gold backing for each dollar minted. With this he financed the slaughter in Vietnam, in a war that cost more than twenty times the real value of its remaining gold reserves. Since then, the United States economy is sustained by natural resources and the savings of the rest of the world.

The theory of continuous growth from investment and consumption, applied by the most developed to the countries where the vast majority is poor, surrounded by luxuries and the wastefulness of a tiny minority of wealthy individuals, is not only humiliating but destructive, too. That pillage, and its disastrous consequences, is the cause of people's growing rebelliousness, even though very few are aware of the history behind the events.

The most gifted and cultivated intellects are included on the list of natural resources and they have their price tags on the world market of goods and services.

What is happening with the super-revolutionaries of the so-called far left? Some simply lack realism while others enjoy the pleasure of dreaming sweet dreams. Others still are far from being dreamers and are experts in the subject; they know what they are saying and why they are saying it. It is a well conceived trap that should be avoided. They recognize our breakthroughs as if it were a favor to us. Are they really short of information? That is not how it is. I can assure you that they are absolutely well informed. In certain cases, the alleged friendship with Cuba allows them to attend numerous international meetings and chat with as many people from abroad or from the country as they want, without any objection from our imperial neighbor just ninety miles away from the Cuban shores.

What is their advice to the Revolution? It's pure poison; the most typical of the neoliberal formulae.

The blockade does not exist; it would appear to be a Cuban invention.

They underestimate the Revolution's most colossal achievement, its work in education, the massive cultivation of people's talents. They sustain that some must live doing simple and rough work. They underestimate the results and exaggerate the costs of scientific investments. Even worse: they overlook the value of the healthcare services that Cuba provides to the world; actually, with modest resources the Revolution is stripping bare the system imposed by imperialism which is lacking the human personnel to carry it out. They advise investments which are ruinous, and the services they provide, such as rent, are practically free. If foreign investments in housing had not been stopped in time, they would have constructed tens of thousands without any more resources than the prior sales of that same housing to foreign residents in Cuba or abroad. Furthermore, they were joint enterprises governed by a legislation intended for productive companies. There were no limits for the authority of the buyers as owners. The country would supply services to those residents or clients, without the need of being knowledgeable in science or computers. Many of the dwellings could be acquired by the enemy intelligence agencies or their allies.

We need some of the joint enterprises since they control very necessary markets. But you can hardly flood the country with money and not sell our sovereignty.

The super-revolutionaries who prescribe such medication deliberately ignore other resources which are truly decisive for the economy, such as the growing production of gas which, when purified, becomes an invaluable source of electricity without affecting the environment and brings with it hundreds of millions of dollars each year. About the Energy Revolution promoted by Cuba, of vital and decisive importance for the world, not one word is spoken. They go even further: they see an energy advantage for the island in the production of sugarcane - a crop that was grown in Cuba with semi-slave labor - to counter the high cost of diesel being guzzled by the automobiles of the United States, Western Europe and other developed countries. The egotistical instinct is being fostered in human beings while the price of food is doubling and tripling. Nobody has been more critical of our own revolutionary work than I have, but they shall never see me hoping for favors or apologies from the worst of the empires.

Fidel Castro Ruz (September 03 2007)


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http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2007/septiembre/mar4/36reflexiones.html

Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

The ghost of Pinochet haunts the campaign against Chavez

In an article for the Guardian, John Pilger describes how he sought the help of Chile's former political prisoners, tortured by Pinochet, in the making of his film, The War on Democracy, and how they bear witness to the historical meaning of the current campaign of propaganda and lies aimed at Venezuela and Hugo Chavez.

by John Pilger

johnpilger.com (August 17 2007)


I walked with Roberto Navarrete into the national stadium in Santiago, Chile. With the southern winter's wind skating down from the Andes, it was empty and ghostly. Little had changed, he said: the chicken wire, the broken seats, the tunnel to the changing rooms from which the screams echoed. We stopped at a large number 28. "This is where I was, facing the scoreboard. This is where I was called to be tortured."

Thousands of "the detained and the disappeared" were imprisoned in the stadium following the Washington-backed coup by General Pinochet against the democracy of Salvador Allende on September 11 1973. For the majority people of Latin America, the abandonados, the infamy and historical lesson of the first "9/11" have never been forgotten. "In the Allende years, we had a hope the human spirit would triumph", said Roberto.

"But in Latin America those believing they are born to rule behave with such brutality to defend their rights, their property, their hold over society that they approach true fascism. People who are well dressed, whose houses are full of food, bang pots in the streets in protest as though they don't have anything. This is what we had in Chile 36 years ago. This is what we see in Venezuela today. It is as if Chavez is Allende. It is so evocative for me."

In making my film, The War on Democracy, I sought the help of Chileans like Roberto and his family, and Sara de Witt who courageously returned with me to the torture chambers at Villa Grimaldi, which she somehow survived. Together with other Latin Americans who knew the tyrannies, they bear witness to the pattern and meaning of the propaganda and lies now aimed at undermining another epic bid to renew both democracy and freedom on the continent. Ironically, in Chile, said to be Washington's "model democracy", freedom waits. The constitution, the system of electoral control and the designer inequality are all Pinocher's gifts from the grave.

The disinformation that helped destroy Allende and give rise to Pinochet's horrors worked the same in Nicaragua, where the Sandinistas had the temerity to implement modest, popular reforms based largely on the English co-operative movement. In both countries, the CIA funded the leading opposition media, although they need not have bothered. In Nicaragua, the fake martyrdom of the "opposition" newspaper La Prensa became a cause for North America's leading liberal journalists, who seriously debated whether a poverty-stricken country of three million peasants posed a "threat" to the United States.

Ronald Reagan agreed and declared a state of emergency to combat the monster at the gates. In Britain, whose Thatcher government "absolutely endorsed" US policy, the standard censorship by omission applied. In examining 500 articles that dealt with Nicaragua in the early 1980s, the historian Mark Curtis found an almost universal suppression of the achievements of the Sandinista government - "remarkable by any standards" - in favour of the falsehood of "the threat of a communist takeover".

The similarities in the campaign against the phenomenal rise of popular democratic movements today are striking. Aimed principally at Venezuela, especially Hugo Chavez, the virulence of the attacks suggests that something exciting is taking place; and it is. Thousands of poor Venezuelans are seeing a doctor for the first time in their lives, their children immunised and drinking clean water.

On July 26 Chavez announced the construction of fifteen new hospitals; more than sixty public hospitals are currently being modernised and re-equipped. New universities have opened their doors to the poor, breaking the privilege of competitive institutions effectively controlled by a "middle class" in a country where there is no middle. In Barrio La Linea, Beatrice Balazo told me her children were the first generation of the poor to attend a full day's school and to be given a hot meal and to learn music, art and dansce. "I have seen their confidence blossom like flowers", she said. One night in barrio La Vega, in a bare room beneath a single light bulb, I watched Mavis Mendez, aged 94, learn to write her own name for the first time.

More than 25,000 communal councils have been set up in parallel to the old, corrupt local bureaucracies. Many are spectacles of raw grass-roots democracy. Spokespeople are elected, yet all decisions, ideas and spending have to be approved by a community assembly. In towns long controlled by oligarchs and their servile media, this explosion of popular power has begun to change lives in the way Beatrice described. It is this new confidence of Venezuela's "invisible people" that has so enflamed those who live in suburbs called Country Club. Behind their walls and dogs, they remind me of white South Africans.

Venezuela's wild west media is mostly theirs; eighty per cent of broadcasting and almost all the 118 newspaper companies are privately owned. Until recently one television shock jock liked to call Chavez, who is mixed race, a "monkey". Front pages depict the president as Hitler, or as Stalin (the connection being that both like babies). Among broadcasters crying censorship loudest are those bankrolled by the National Endowment for Democracy, the CIA in spirit if not name. "We had a deadly weapon, the media", said an admiral who was one of the coup plotters in 2002. The television station, RCTV, never prosecuted for its part in the attempt to overthrow the elected government, lost only its terrestrial licence and is still broadcasting on satellite and cable.

Yet, as in Nicaragua, the "treatment" of RCTV has been a cause celebre for those in Britain and the US affronted by the sheer audacity and popularity of Chavez, whom they smear as "power crazed" and a "tyrant". That he is the authentic product of a popular awakening is suppressed. Even the description of him as a "radical socialist", usually in the pejorative, wilfully ignores that he is actually a nationalist and a social democrat, a label many in the British Labour Party were once proud to wear.

In Washington, the old Iran-Contra death squad gang, back in power under Bush, fear the economic bridges Chavez is building in the region, such as the use of Venezuela's oil revenue to end IMF slavery. That he maintains a neo-liberal economy with a growth rate of over ten per cent, allowing the rich to grow richer, and described by the American Banker magazine as "the envy of the banking world" is seldom raised as valid criticism of his limited reforms.

These days, of course, any true reforms are exotic. And as liberal elites under Blair and Bush fail to defend their own democracies and basic liberties, they watch the very concept of democracy as a top-down liberal preserve challenged on a continent about which Richard Nixon once said "people don't give a shit". However much they play the man, Chavez, their arrogance cannot accept that the seed of Rousseau's idea of direct popular sovereignty may have been planted among the poorest, yet again, and "the hope of the human spirit", of which Roberto spoke in the stadium, has returned.

http://www.johnpilger.com/page.asp?partid=450


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Class is still the issue

by John Pilger

In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger describes the parallel worlds of the great 'unmentionable', class, in modern Britain: in the streets and in the media.

johnpilger.com (September 06 2006)


A state of parallel worlds determines almost everything we do and how we do it, everything we know and how we know it. The word that once described it, class, is unmentionable, just as imperialism used to be. Thanks to George W Bush, the latter is back in the lexicon in Britain, if not at the BBC.

Class is different. It runs too deep; it allows us to connect the present with the past and to understand the malignancies of a modern economic system based on inequity and fear. So it is seldom spoken about publicly, lest a Goldman Sachs chief executive on multimillions in pay or bonuses, or whatever they call their legalised heists, be asked how it feels to walk past office cleaners struggling on the minimum wage.

Just as elite power seeks to order other countries according to the demands of its privilege, so class remains at the root of our own society's mutations and sorrows. In recent weeks, the killing of an eleven-year-old Liverpool boy and other tragedies involving children have been thoroughly tabloided. Interviewing Keith Vaz, chairman of the House of Commons home affairs select committee, one journalist wondered if "we" should go out and deal personally with our vile, mugging, stabbing, shooting youth. To this, the nodding Vaz replied that the problem was "values".

The main "value" is ruthless exclusion, such as the exile of millions of young people on vast human landfills (rubbish dumps) called housing estates, where they are forearmed with the knowledge that they are different and schools are not for them. A rigid curriculum, a system devoted to testing children beyond all reason, ensures their alienation. "From the age of seven", says Shirley Franklin of the Institute of Education, "twenty per cent of the nation's children are seen, and see themselves, as failures ... Violence is an expression of hatred towards oneself and others". With the all-digital world of promise and rewards denied them, let alone a sense of belonging and esteem, they move logically to the streets and crime.

And yet, since 1995, actual crime in England and Wales has fallen by 42 per cent and violent crime by 41 per cent. No matter. The "violence of youth" is the accredited hysteria. A government led for a decade by a man whose lawless deceit helped cause the violent deaths of perhaps a million people in Iraq invented an acronym - Asbo - for a campaign against British youth, whose prospects and energy and hope were replaced by the "values" expressed by Keith Vaz and exemplified by Goldman Sachs and the current imperial adventures in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Take Afghanistan, where the irony is searing. In less than seven years, the Anglo-American slaughter of countless "Taliban" (people) has succeeded in spectacularly reviving an almost extinct poppy trade, so that it now supplies the demand for heroin on Britain's poorest streets, where enlightened drug rehabilitation is not considered a government "value".

Parallel worlds require other elite forms of exclusion. At the Edinburgh Television Festival on 24 August, the famous BBC presenter Jeremy Paxman made a much-hyped speech "attacking" television for "betray[ing] the people we ought to be serving". What was revealing about the speech was the attitude towards ordinary viewers it betrayed. According to Paxman, "while the media and politicians feel free to criticise each other, neither has the guts to criticise the public, who are presumed never to be wrong".

In fact, ordinary people are treated in much of the media as invisible or with contempt, or they are patronised. Two honourable exceptions were the GMTV presenters cited and mocked by Paxman for their humanity in standing up for an ex-soldier denied proper treatment by the National Health Service. Paxman called for a more "sophisticated" and "honest" approach that accepted the public's approval of low taxes - taxes that are not rationed when it comes to propping up hugely profitable private finance initiatives in the Health Service or squandered on waging war, regardless of the public's objections.

Not once in his speech did Paxman refer to Iraq, nor did he tell us why Blair was never seriously challenged on that bloodbath in a broadcast interview. That the BBC had played a critical role in amplifying and echoing Blair's and Bush's lies was apparently unmentionable. The coming attack on Iran, led again by propaganda filtered through broadcasting, is from the same parallel world, also unmentionable.

http://www.johnpilger.com/page.asp?partid=454


Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/index.html

Monday, September 10, 2007

Kill the Poor

Phony Poverty Study Fools Lazy Journalists

by Ted Rall

tedrall.com (September 04 2007)


They're baaack! Once again the Heritage Foundation is mangling statistics to whitewash the ugly facts of life in Republican-run America.

Last time, in 2005, they attacked the image of US soldiers as cannon fodder being exploited for Halliburton. Au contraire, claimed the conservative propaganda mill. American troops, they said were actually "wealthier, more educated and more rural than the average" citizen. Of course, this wasn't true. "Military personnel are poorer and less educated" than the average Joe, I found when I took a closer look. Heritage's soldier study used junk logic and apples-to-oranges statistics to promote the GOP's wars against Iraq and Afghanistan. And it worked.

The lazy men who run the big newspapers and TV networks, deluded into believing there are two sides to every story, dutifully repeated Heritage's lies. They never questioned a word. More soldiers died. The Heritage story made us feel less guilty about it.

Now Heritage is telling us that there are no poor people - very few, anyway, and then only for short periods of time - in the United States. The truth is that capitalism is failing millions of Americans. The less we think about the problem, the less we think it is a problem, the worse it will become.

The pseudoacademic demagogues of the right want us to distrust our own eyes. Panhandlers? "Homeless by choice" urban campers, Ronald Reagan, patron saint of modern Republicanism, called them. Single mothers? He said they were "welfare queens". Americans who live in the sprawling slums of the inner cities, the washed-up Walmarted Main Streets of