Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Published on Saturday, April 18, 2009 by CommonDreams.org
The Shipping News
If you’re looking for signs of the Apocalypse – and who isn’t? – here’s a good one. There’s an uptick in ark building.
You heard me. According to The Wall Street Journal, that Bible of the Financially Bilious, Hong Kong’s billionaire Kwok brothers are in the final stages of constructing the world’s first full-size replica of Noah’s Ark – 450 feet long, 75 feet wide and 45 feet high. "Just the answer,” the Journal reports, “for the rising waters threatening the global economy."
Unlike Noah’s aquatic zoo, the Kwok version will remain land bound, and its 67 pairs of animals are made of fiberglass, thus eliminating potential headaches arising from husbandry, hygiene and other housekeeping issues at sea. It also comes equipped with a restaurant and posh, rooftop resort hotel – just the thing to please the discerning plutocrat, for whom a luxury suite is probably the closest they’ll ever get to The Rapture.
The Bible says Noah’s Ark was made of gopher wood, whatever that is (no one knows for certain, it seems); the Hong Kong replica is concrete reinforced with glass fiber, and is being built to actual size, the Journal says, "in part to distinguish itself from one in the Netherlands that actually floats and boasts real farm animals but is just one fifth the size of the biblical original."
The two vessels are "just the latest additions to a veritable ark armada built around the world by the devout and the merely driven."
The Dutch ark’s builder plans to sail his to London, the United States and Australia. Of course, as things currently stand, chances are the boat will be boarded by Somali pirates and held for ransom, so its chicks and ducks and geese better scurry now while the scurrying’s good.
Actually, the odds of such an attack happening reportedly are less than one percent per voyage. But the recent assaults on American shipping attempting to deliver food aid to Kenya -- some of which is destined for Somalia -- and the successful rescue of Captain Richard Phillips last Sunday (killing three pirates in the process) finally have focused this country’s attention on the problem. Bands of Somali pirates are holding at least 19 ships and more than 250 merchant mariners for millions of dollars in ransom.
"These pirates are criminals, they are armed gangs of the sea, and those plotting attacks must be stopped and those carrying them out must be brought to justice," Secretary of State Clinton told reporters Wednesday.
True enough, but it’s worth taking a moment to recognize the conditions from which this new breed of pirate arose and to realize that, as Madison University analyst J. Peter Pham told Reuters, "It will require more than just the application of force to uproot piracy from the soil of Somalia."
It’s not just because the sea is so great and our boats are so small, comparatively speaking. Some estimate up to a million square miles of ocean are vulnerable and even hundreds of patrolling warships probably wouldn’t be enough to do the job. (Right now, according to an official with the US Central Command, there is just a handful of US and non-US ships on pirate patrol in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean.) Nor is it simply because since 1991 Somalia has been in a state of total anarchy. There’s more to it.
The seeds of the current piracy were planted around the time of that collapse when a group of vigilante fishermen calling themselves the Volunteer Coast Guard of Somalia started heading out to sea in speedboats, intercepting and levying a "tax" on foreign, mostly Western, ships, some of which were smuggling goods in and out of the country, others of which were busily overfishing coastal waters, depriving nine million starving Somalians of food.
What’s more, Ahmediou Ould-Abdallah, the United Nations envoy to Somalia , told Jonathan Hari of the British newspaper The Independent that European ships, taking advantage of the onshore chaos, dumped barrels of nuclear waste offshore. "There is also lead," he claimed, "and heavy metals such as cadmium and mercury – you name it."
Hari reports that after the Christmas 2005 tsunami, hundreds of leaking barrels washed up on shore and more than 300 died from radiation sickness. "Much of it can be traced back to European hospitals and factories, who seem to be passing it on to the Italian mafia to 'dispose' of cheaply," he wrote back on January 5th. "When I asked Mr. Ould-Abdallah what European governments were doing about it, he said with a sigh, 'Nothing. There has been no clean-up, no compensation and no prevention.'"
In the April issue of Vanity Fair, journalist William Langewiesche has a fascinating account of last spring’s Somali hijacking of the French cruise ship Le Ponant, which finally ended with the crew’s safe return, the payment of a $2.15 million ransom and a French military assault that resulted in the arrest of six alleged pirates.
"One of the ironies at play is that the maritime industry being victimized is itself a standard-bearer for the advantages that exist in a world beyond law and regulation," he writes, referring to a global shipping trade that has dodged the rules through the raw manipulation of flags of convenience and the law of the sea. They are, Langewiesche says, "... The very same people who for years have made a mockery of the nation-state idea. They know that whatever pirate tolls they pay will always pale in comparison with the taxes that would be imposed if global law and order ever actually prevailed."
No wonder media commentators speak -- without irony -- of the pirates’ "business model." Icelandic fishermen turned to banking and high finance and we know how well that turned out. Somali fisherman turned to piracy. This global economic calamity has everyone hammering together arks, and despite this week’s rescue at sea, so far, it seems, the pirates -- Somali or otherwise -- are the ones still afloat.
You heard me. According to The Wall Street Journal, that Bible of the Financially Bilious, Hong Kong’s billionaire Kwok brothers are in the final stages of constructing the world’s first full-size replica of Noah’s Ark – 450 feet long, 75 feet wide and 45 feet high. "Just the answer,” the Journal reports, “for the rising waters threatening the global economy."
Unlike Noah’s aquatic zoo, the Kwok version will remain land bound, and its 67 pairs of animals are made of fiberglass, thus eliminating potential headaches arising from husbandry, hygiene and other housekeeping issues at sea. It also comes equipped with a restaurant and posh, rooftop resort hotel – just the thing to please the discerning plutocrat, for whom a luxury suite is probably the closest they’ll ever get to The Rapture.
The Bible says Noah’s Ark was made of gopher wood, whatever that is (no one knows for certain, it seems); the Hong Kong replica is concrete reinforced with glass fiber, and is being built to actual size, the Journal says, "in part to distinguish itself from one in the Netherlands that actually floats and boasts real farm animals but is just one fifth the size of the biblical original."
The two vessels are "just the latest additions to a veritable ark armada built around the world by the devout and the merely driven."
The Dutch ark’s builder plans to sail his to London, the United States and Australia. Of course, as things currently stand, chances are the boat will be boarded by Somali pirates and held for ransom, so its chicks and ducks and geese better scurry now while the scurrying’s good.
Actually, the odds of such an attack happening reportedly are less than one percent per voyage. But the recent assaults on American shipping attempting to deliver food aid to Kenya -- some of which is destined for Somalia -- and the successful rescue of Captain Richard Phillips last Sunday (killing three pirates in the process) finally have focused this country’s attention on the problem. Bands of Somali pirates are holding at least 19 ships and more than 250 merchant mariners for millions of dollars in ransom.
"These pirates are criminals, they are armed gangs of the sea, and those plotting attacks must be stopped and those carrying them out must be brought to justice," Secretary of State Clinton told reporters Wednesday.
True enough, but it’s worth taking a moment to recognize the conditions from which this new breed of pirate arose and to realize that, as Madison University analyst J. Peter Pham told Reuters, "It will require more than just the application of force to uproot piracy from the soil of Somalia."
It’s not just because the sea is so great and our boats are so small, comparatively speaking. Some estimate up to a million square miles of ocean are vulnerable and even hundreds of patrolling warships probably wouldn’t be enough to do the job. (Right now, according to an official with the US Central Command, there is just a handful of US and non-US ships on pirate patrol in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean.) Nor is it simply because since 1991 Somalia has been in a state of total anarchy. There’s more to it.
The seeds of the current piracy were planted around the time of that collapse when a group of vigilante fishermen calling themselves the Volunteer Coast Guard of Somalia started heading out to sea in speedboats, intercepting and levying a "tax" on foreign, mostly Western, ships, some of which were smuggling goods in and out of the country, others of which were busily overfishing coastal waters, depriving nine million starving Somalians of food.
What’s more, Ahmediou Ould-Abdallah, the United Nations envoy to Somalia , told Jonathan Hari of the British newspaper The Independent that European ships, taking advantage of the onshore chaos, dumped barrels of nuclear waste offshore. "There is also lead," he claimed, "and heavy metals such as cadmium and mercury – you name it."
Hari reports that after the Christmas 2005 tsunami, hundreds of leaking barrels washed up on shore and more than 300 died from radiation sickness. "Much of it can be traced back to European hospitals and factories, who seem to be passing it on to the Italian mafia to 'dispose' of cheaply," he wrote back on January 5th. "When I asked Mr. Ould-Abdallah what European governments were doing about it, he said with a sigh, 'Nothing. There has been no clean-up, no compensation and no prevention.'"
In the April issue of Vanity Fair, journalist William Langewiesche has a fascinating account of last spring’s Somali hijacking of the French cruise ship Le Ponant, which finally ended with the crew’s safe return, the payment of a $2.15 million ransom and a French military assault that resulted in the arrest of six alleged pirates.
"One of the ironies at play is that the maritime industry being victimized is itself a standard-bearer for the advantages that exist in a world beyond law and regulation," he writes, referring to a global shipping trade that has dodged the rules through the raw manipulation of flags of convenience and the law of the sea. They are, Langewiesche says, "... The very same people who for years have made a mockery of the nation-state idea. They know that whatever pirate tolls they pay will always pale in comparison with the taxes that would be imposed if global law and order ever actually prevailed."
No wonder media commentators speak -- without irony -- of the pirates’ "business model." Icelandic fishermen turned to banking and high finance and we know how well that turned out. Somali fisherman turned to piracy. This global economic calamity has everyone hammering together arks, and despite this week’s rescue at sea, so far, it seems, the pirates -- Somali or otherwise -- are the ones still afloat.
- Posted in
Comments are closed


7 Comments so far
Show AllPart of the conditions from which the Vigilantes arose is the usual USA imperialist destablization of nations through attacks and invasions.
Around the time of Black Hawk Down the USA went in and slaughtered a Large gathering of peaceful elders in an attempt to kill one Militia Commander.
More recently the USA overthrew a law abiding stable Islamic government through the USA's dogs of war proxy Ethiopia.
The excuse al Qaeda were somewhere in Somalia. Even though the USA is harboring POSADA who blew up a n Venzuelen Airbus a couple of decades ago killing almost 100 passengers, mostly the Olympic Gold Medal Cuban Fencing team.
All this MSM Pirate Fluff is masking the real issues such as an esculating Afghanistan, deteriorating Iraq, Bankster theives and Bush War Criminals.
Now if only the ships of the People's Navy of the United States would appear off Manhattan, and SEALS and Special Forces would parachute in to arrest the REAL Pirates of the Whole Earth, the Wall Street Bankster-Buccaneers and the Bloody Captains of Free-Booting, Stateless-Trans-National, Corporate Pirate Vessels, and confiscate all of their ill-gotten booty, just as they do with the booty of drug lords (and money is a drug.) If they give the orders, just because they don't pull the trigger doesn't mean the blood is not on their hands.
The sad state of a Libertarian Paradise like anarchic Somalia (what the REAL condition would be like of the minimal government nation the Rabid Right wants for the United States, and is furiously working to provide for us all) is a warning to the world. Desperate people do desperate things. And when they are quiet and good, their plight is utterly ignored. And when they threaten the private property of the kings, they are utterly killed. Even when the actions of the kings are detrimental to their very lives.
But I guess the oligarchs know they can always pay one half of the poor to kill the other half, and pit them agaist each other for the lowest price to do so. And the oligarchs know it really won't cost them anything anyway, as they will charge the government for it, including of course a handsome profit, to provide a magician's misdirection and hero-mythical cover for the hidden, devious, twisted Dark Evil that people cannot directly comprehend. As opposed to simply a guy with a mask and a gun.
I find myself rooting for the Somali pirates.
The difference between Wall Street pirates and Somali pirates is that the Somali pirates lack the tools to take a really decent payoff. If you're not stealing $50 billion any more you just aren't even trying.
Enron took California for $70 billion and almost everybody who profited from that ripoff walked away scott free. The people who destroyed America's financial markets are still getting ransom payments from the government. The health insurance industry in the US is pure piracy and the government works to enforce their crooked contracts.
The Somali's are just stepping on the toes of the real pirates.
Sioux Rose
PANGOLIN/FV HORN: Excellent incisive points.
If occupying/stealing land from rightful owners in return for political cash is a form of piracy then nearly every Israeli government has been run and is now run by pirates. They should be arrested and tried in our country because they harm our national interest by angering oil-rich countries.
Ok, let's return Calif., New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, Arizona , Utah...to their "RIGHTFUL OWNERS". Why be hypocrites? Land all land has and will always held by those strong enough to maintain their ownership ( right or wrong doesn't seem to have much to do with it). Israel will someday disappear and become some other entity as will the U.S. and Russia. The problem with the "who owns what argument" is nobody but GOD in fact has permanent title to the Earth. Of course to people like u at the center of all wrongs now or then is Israel/JEWS. It's called anti-semitism dude and your obviously one.