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Poverty, Global Trade Justice, and the Roots of Terrorism
To combat terrorism, we should address the root causes of poverty, says former "economic hit man"
The following is adapted from Hoodwinked: An Economic Hitman Reveals Why the World Financial Markets Imploded—and What We Need to Do to Remake Them. Random House, 2009:
Navy Seal snipers rescued an American cargo ship captain unharmed and killed three Somali pirates in a daring operation in the Indian Ocean on Sunday, ending a five-day standoff between United States naval forces and a small band of brigands in a covered orange lifeboat off the Horn of Africa.
The New York Times published that article in April 2009. The very words "pirates," "daring operation," "standoff," and "brigands" were typical of the U.S. media; they made it sound as though white-hated cowboys had ridden to the rescue of a town besieged by Billy the Kid and his gang. Having lived in that part of the world as an economic hit man, I knew there was another side to what had happened. I wondered why no one was asking about the causes of piracy.
I recalled my visits with the Bugi people when I was sent to the Indonesian island of Sulawesi in the early 1970s. The Bugi had been infamous pirates since the time of the East India companies in the 1600s and 1700s. Their ferocity inspired returning European sailors to discipline their disobedient children with threats that "the bugiman will get you." In the 1970s, we feared that they would attack our oil tankers as they passed through the vital Strait of Malacca.
I sat with one of their elders on the Sulawesi shore one afternoon. We watched his people build a sailing galleon, known as a prahu, much as they had for centuries. Like a gigantic beached whale, it was high and dry, propped upright by rows of gnarled stakes that resembled roots sprouting from its hull. Dozens of men hustled about it, working with adzes, hatchets, and hand drills. I expressed the concerns of my government to him, intimating that we would retaliate if the oil lanes were threatened.
The "terrorists" I have found in Andean caves and desert villages are people whose families were forced off their farms by oil companies, hydroelectric dams, or "free trade" agreements, whose children are starving, and who want nothing more than to return to their families with food, seeds, and deeds to lands they can cultivate.The old man glared at me. "We were not pirates in the old days," he said, his bushy white hair bobbing indignantly. "We only fought to defend our lands against Europeans who came to steal our spices. If we attack your ships today, it is because they take the trade away from us; your ‘stink ships' foul our waters with oil, destroying our fish and starving our children." Then he shrugged. "Now, we're at a loss." His smile was disarming. "How can a handful of people in wooden sailing ships fight off America's submarines, airplanes, bombs, and missiles?"
A few days after the rescue, the Times ran an editorial entitled "Fighting Piracy in Somalia" that concluded:
Yet left to its own devices, Somalia can only become more noxious, spreading violence to its East African neighbors, breeding more extremism and making shipping through the Gulf of Aden ever more dangerous and costly. Various approaches are being discussed, such as working through Somalia's powerful clans to reconstitute first local and then regional and national institutions. These must be urgently explored.
Nowhere did the Times-or any of the other media outlets that I read, heard, or saw-attempt to analyze the roots of the problem in Somalia. Debates abounded about whether to arm ships' crews and send more Navy vessels to the region. There was that vague reference to reconstituting regional and national institutions, but what exactly did the author mean by that? Institutions that would truly help, like free hospitals, schools, and soup kitchens? Or local militias, prisons, and Gestapo-style police forces?
The pirates were fishermen whose livelihoods had been destroyed. They were fathers whose children were hungry. Ending piracy would require helping them live sustainable, dignified lives. Could journalists not understand this? Had none of them visited the slums of Mogadishu?
Finally, NPR's Morning Edition on May 6 aired a report from Gwen Thompkins; she interviewed a pirate who went by the name Abshir Abdullahi Abdi. "We understand what we're doing is wrong," Abdi explained. "But hunger is more important than any other thing."
Thompkins commented, "Fishing villages in the area have been devastated by illegal trawlers and waste dumping from industrialized nations. Coral reefs are reportedly dead. Lobster and tuna have vanished. Malnutrition is high."
You might think we would have learned from Vietnam, Iraq, the "Black Hawk down" incident in Somalia back in 1993, and other such forays, that military responses seldom discourage insurgencies. In fact, they often do the opposite; foreign intervention is likely to infuriate local populations, motivate them to support the rebels, and result in an escalation of resistance activities. That was the way it happened during the American Revolution, Latin America's wars for independence from Spain, and in colonial Africa, Indochina, Soviet-occupied Afghanistan, and so many other places.
Blaming pirates and other desperate people for our problems is a distraction we cannot afford if we truly want to find a solution to the crises confronting us. These incidents are symptoms of our failed economic model. They are to our society the equivalent of a heart attack to an individual. We send in Navy Seals to rescue the hostages, as we would hire doctors to perform a coronary artery bypass. But it is essential to admit that both are reactions to an underlying problem. The patient needs to address the reasons his or her heart failed in the first place, such as smoking, diet, and lack of exercise. The same is true for piracy and all forms of terrorism.
Our children's futures are interlocked with the futures of children born in the fishing villages of Somalia, the mountains of Burma (Myanmar), and the jungles of Colombia. When we forget that fact, when we see those children as remote, as somehow disconnected from our lives, as merely the offspring of pirates, guerrillas, or drug runners, we point the gun at our own progeny as well as at the desperate fathers and mothers in lands that seem so far away but in reality are our next door neighbors.
Every time I read about the actions we take to protect ourselves from so-called terrorists, I have to wonder at the narrow-mindedness of our strategy. Although I have met such people in Bolivia, Ecuador, Egypt, Guatemala, Indonesia, Iran, and Nicaragua, I have never met one who wanted to take up a gun. I know there are crazed men and women who kill because they cannot stop themselves, serial killers, and mass-murderers. I am certain that members of Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and other such groups are driven by fanaticism, but such extremists are able to recruit sizable numbers of followers only from populations that feel oppressed or destitute. The "terrorists" I have found in Andean caves and desert villages are people whose families were forced off their farms by oil companies, hydroelectric dams, or "free trade" agreements, whose children are starving, and who want nothing more than to return to their families with food, seeds, and deeds to lands they can cultivate.
In Mexico, many of the guerrillas and narcotraffickers once owned farms where they grew corn. They lost their livelihoods when the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) gave subsidized U.S. producers an unfair price advantage. Here is how the Organic Consumers Organization, a nonprofit that represents more than 850,000 members, subscribers, and volunteers, describes it:
Since NAFTA came into effect on January 1, 1994, U.S. corn exports to Mexico have almost doubled to some 6 million metric tons in 2002. NAFTA eliminated quotas limiting corn imports . . . but allowed U.S. subsidy programs to remain in place-promoting dumping of corn into Mexico by U.S. agribusiness at below the cost of production. . . . The price paid to farmers in Mexico for corn fell by over 70 percent. . .
The passage above exposes the dark side of "free trade" policies. U.S. presidents and our Congress have implemented regulations that prohibited other countries from imposing tariffs on U.S. goods or subsidizing locally grown produce that might compete with our agribusinesses while permitting us to maintain our own import barriers and subsidies, thus giving U.S. corporations an unfair advantage. "Free trade" is a euphemism; it prohibits others from enjoying the benefits offered to the multinationals. It does not, however, regulate against the pollution that is melting glaciers, the land grabs, and the sweatshops.
Father Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, a Nicaraguan priest who ministered to Sandinista guerrillas and is now president of the U.N. General Assembly, has a firsthand appreciation for such euphemisms and the power of words used to sway public perceptions. "Terrorism is not really an ‘ism,' " he told me. "There's no connection between the Sandinistas who fought the Contras and Al Qaeda, or between Colombia's FARC and fishermen turned pirates in Africa and Asia. Yet they are all called ‘terrorists.' That's just a convenient way for your government to convince the world that there is another enemy ‘ism' out there, like communism used to be. It diverts attention from the very real problems."
Our narrow-minded attitudes and the policies that result from them foment violence, rebellions, and wars. In the long run, almost no one benefits from attacking the people we label as "terrorists." With one glaring exception: the corporatocracy.
Those who own and run the companies that build ships, missiles, and armored vehicles; make guns, uniforms, and bulletproof vests; distribute food, soft drinks, and ammunition; provide insurance, medicines, and toilet paper; construct ports, airstrips, and housing; and reconstruct devastated villages, factories, schools, and hospitals-they, and only they, are the big winners.
The rest of us are hoodwinked by that one, loaded word: terrorist.
The current economic collapse has awakened us to the importance of regulating and reigning in the people who control the businesses that benefit from the misuse of words like terrorism and who perpetrate other scams. We recognize today that white-collared executives are not a special, incorruptible breed. Like the rest of us, they require rules. Yet it is not enough for us to reestablish regulations that separate investment banks from commercial banks and insurance companies, reinstate anti-usury laws, and impose guidelines to ensure that consumers are not burdened by credit they cannot afford. We cannot simply return to solutions that worked before. Only by adopting new strategies that promote global environmental and social responsibility will we safeguard the future.
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49 Comments so far
Show AllWe are the terrorists. The United States of America is a terrorist nation. Our government is robbing, killing and abusing people all over the world and harming the planet on which we live in order for our corporations to increase their profits.
And what are you going to do about this sad fact? Change the channel on that noxious box in the room and have another beer? Don't ignore this fact. You and your family are in danger.
I guess the actions and behavior of the USA say it louder ....but the depictions are more and more correct:
"THE USA IS REALLY A PROTECTIONIST *NATION* PRETENDING TO BE *FREE-MARKET*" -- HENRY CK LIU, ASIATIMESONLINE WRITER
it can be related to:
THE USA is really a terrorist entity pretending to be a Nation.
THE USA is really a Fascist state pretending to be a Democracy.
but it all points back to what general Smedley Butler, US marines, 1933 defined:
:"WE ARE A NATION OF RACKETEERS and GANGSTERS For OUR BIG BOSS. our Supernationalistic Capitalism".
None of that and nothing in John Perkins' article describes fascism. What your post and his article describe is what he's previously stated in explicit terms I believe in an interview with Dem. Now! CORPORATOCRACY. The U.S. is a corporatocracy, hence, corporatist; instead of fascist.
And, I'll add, this is not an in-depth article by John Perkins, but it's excellent for its length. He says enough and if it still doesn't help selfish, self-righteous, ... Americans or westerners to wake up, then providing a lot more detail for them surely wouldn't do any good, either. After all, they'd be among the obstinately ignorant, living in denial.
in fact - based on John Perkin's other comments elsewhere, in his interviews, etc...
one can also say:
There is a continuity between what Perkins also described at other times:
that America is not JUST an Empire - but successully so , thus far, for PRETENDING to be NOT an empire...i think saying as much as : that america manages to do this by avoiding actual direct rule but doing it through proxies and through what he and others call: "our Empire of BASES"..to oversee and "protect" its interests which are THAT of AN empire but making its proxies do the kitchen work in their domestic localities.
and that is a continuity with america's HOME situation in which it IS a FASCIST state but PRETENDING to be a democracy ...making its "law and order" and "justice" , and "elections" APPEAR as democratic processes when in fact they are ALL designed to enhance and protect the Mastery of the Right Wing Fascism which simply manages to BLUR the distinction between what it TRULY is and "democracy"....so that there is NO need for the OVERT "boots on the ground marching platoons" kind of Fascism...
which - one might add - is what the American Rulers LERANED how to AVOID showing their hand openly - from the previous Fascist regimes.
in other words - more "subtle"...but it's EVERYWHERE around you..most especially in the Patriotism of "all american"
"justice, democracy, freedom, responsibility and above all *responsibility*".
but making americans behave JUST LIKE A FASCIST state would like them to behave without having to make a massive show of force to have it obeyed.
of this, i am convinced, is the state of america now, even more so, than it was , even if it was already moving in that direction LONG AGO.
you might say that america today is the
"UPDATED" version - complete with modernity and technics of mass control - media, corporatist culture, banking, finance, law and order, "justice system", race and culture wars to keep people distracted and "involved" and of course entertainment including commodifying war itself - of ALL the =previous fascist and imperial states that arrived before..using practically every technique each of them had honed for whatever purpose is necessary to achieve at any given moment in the "reality" it requires at any moment.
but the bottom line:
it is a Corporatist culture - and that is FASCIST -
it is an EMPIRE pretending to be not so..
it is a protectionist of US Corporatism pretending to be "free market"...
it is a Fascism pretending to be Democracy.
sayig that the usa is a "corporatist" state is no different really from saying it is ALREADY a fascist state...simply that it is more palatable to say "corporatist" as some kind of "choice of economic system" or culture.
it is also the same as avoiding the E word EMPIRE for something that IS what it is - an EMPIRE.
because of the bad connotations.
Corporatist is the more commonly appropriate term because of the appearances.
you do not YET quite see platoons of "corporate" goons actually swarming the streets..and they have no need to - all that has been is that the "law and order" institutions are ALREADY in place to do what corporatism and THUS Fascism puts in place.
as Benito Mussolini said - as he was credited with using that definition, which some say he also just got from someone else:
"FASCISM is really MORE PROPERLY to be called CORPORATISM...for it is the marriage between Corporations and the institutions of the STATE..to advance the Agenda of the Far Right".
hence. while one may argue "distinctions" between corporatist and fascist..they are , in reality
ONE and the SAME thing.
all you have to do - is enter the work place : see where "democracy" ends. at the doorstep.
and you are in the world of 'corporatism'...policing everything for the sake of profit - which of course the ENTIRE "law and order" and "justice system" is designed to support and protect as "private enterprise" , which of course is the expression of the Far Right Agenda..and once it has reached the level of what you just described as "corporatIST"
what ELSE is that BUT fascism in practice , pretending to be "democratic"? or pretending to be functioning as a "choice" in society when in fact IT IS the society?
and when that IS the society - corporatism..we simply go right back to Mussolini's "classic" definition of it.
FASCISM "should MORE PROPERLY be defined as CORPORATISM..advancing the agenda of the Far Right".
EXACTLY as the United States IS.
Well Perkins takes us to the heart of the matter. And here's the heart of the solution:
.
http://www.gpln.com/godandudhr.htm
.
It's really not all that complicated.
The N.Y. Times prints all the news that fits the MIC. John Perkins knows the truth and speaks the truth. The American people have been hoodwinked for years by the words of the whore MSM, who are cheerleaders for the corportocracy i.e. the red menace; the threat of communism; the cold war; the threat of our Japanese citizens who could be spies; the threat of ruthless dictators, like Chavez in Venezuela; fighting piracy; radical extremists; Muslim terrorists; the violent protestors; ad naseum!
There's a lot more than the MIC.
What the article omits is that the "war on terrorism" is a pretext. The US military-industrial complex needs enemies. Now we don't have the Soviet Union to fight, we need another boogie man. Using "terrorism" is truly inspired, because it's a concept not a nation.
The root of the problem isn't poverty, its the excessive wealth of countries like the US that can only maintain their advantage by exploiting and killing others.
Booga booga booga, the boogie man is after you, but he is not in any foreign country. Be afraid, be very afraid, of what your government has become, a fascist corportocracy of the rich; by the rich; and for the rich 1%.Oderint dum mutant.
The GWoT is not only for the U.S. MIC, and John Perkins remains very right; just that he doesn't address the topics of 9-11 and the GWoT. That has nothing to do with the [problem] of the poverty in the countries he refers to. He made it clear that the cause of the extreme poverty, hardship, and poisoning of the environment, is due to U.S. corporatocracy, the root of the problem.
The pirates and the extremely poor and dispossessed, and poisoned, peoples he refers to are NOT related to the GWoT, at all. Perkins didn't talk about the GWoT; only you did. His article is on the basis of the Somali pirates and three having been murdered by the USMC.
and you are right in pointing out what Perkins really was alluding to :
THE US CORPORATISM that is at the root of the problem.
in other words - his analyses and exposition is really a modern version of what General Smedely Butler, US Marines, in 1933, after 33 years of "service to our BIG BOSS: our supernationalistic capitalism"...ALREADY described long ago:
"OUR FOREIGN POLICY HAS ALWAYS BEEN GEARED TOWARDS GATHERING AS MUCH OF THE WORLD'S RESOURCES UNTO OURSELVES.....BUT AT THE EXPENSE OF OTHERS...THE TRUE PURPOSE OF OUR ARMED FORCES IS NOT FOR DEMOCRACY...BUT TO MAKE THE WORLD SAFE FOR OUR BIG BOSS: OUR SUPERNATIONALISTIC CAPITALISM ...OUR BIG BRAINS , OUR BIG CORPORATIONS, OUR BIG BANKS, OUR BIG FINANCE, OUR MONEY AND WAR RACKET ...AND FOR OUR CULTURAL AND ECONOMIC ASSAULT....WE ARE A NATION OF RACKETEERS AND GANGSTERS FOR CAPITALISM".
and when one thinks about "corporatism as the root" of poverty ELSEWHERE - it is indeed true - because as the worlds' most powerful country it USED its power PRECISELy to do what both Smedley and now, Perkins, have already described:
"our foreign policy is designed to render weaker nations PERMANENTLY SUBJUGATED to our will and that of our corporations and our chamber of commerce" (john perkins, interviews) .
THAT IS EXACTLY what this "povertyin other nations" rooted IN US corporatism spanning the globe is all about INCLUDING , what up to now , has been its MONEY RACKET , its DOLLAR HEGEMONY and MANIPULATION of the financial system to advance the USA's interest AGAINST other nations - in a PRETENSE of "free trade" when IN FACT - as general Smedley butler long ago ALREADY described , it is this:
"the TROUBLE WITH US americans is: if our dollar can not buy more than 6 % of its value at home ...we get UNEASY and we go abroad so it can buy 100% MORE...and where the DOLLAR goes, our Flag Follows, where the FLAG goes, our ARMY follows".
and WEHRE does the USA GO? in "markets" abroad to advance its "strong dollar" hegemony so that ITS "goods" can be more EXPENSIVE in comparison to those of others from THEIR own lands - whiel FORCING THEM To have to "earn dollars" for foreign exchange BY CHEAPENING their own labor and resources (Henry CK Liu - on Dollar Hegemony as Imperialism).
teddy,
If you are not writing a book...
You should be.
Thanks for your tireless efforts here.
thank you webwalk. you are very kind.
here is another great article that connects two statements :
that of John Perkins himself from many interviews and from an italian gentleman I had been privileged to hear from of his 103 years of life:
JOHN PERKINS:
"Our Foreign Policy has always been designed to render weaker nations PERMANENTLY subject to our will and that of our corporations and Chamber of Commerce...we are an empire and we have gotten away with building this Empire of ours through manipulation, torture, assassinations, destabilizing uncooperative countries and then blaming them for mismanagement..and plain theft...what americans do not really understand is that we are living OUR lifestyles ONLY because it is part of a VERY, VERY VICIOUS system of exploitation that Dehumanizes and Enslaves People EVERYWHERE"......
103-year old Italian :
"I have lived and seen two world wars...i was a teenager playing in the town plazas with my brother when we saw how Fascism came to be in Italy ...that is now what is happening in the USA..it has become today's IMPERIAL ROME. I have traveled as a nautical engineer and studied history all my life..I know this because I am ROMAN and I know what Empires do...the trouble with US in the WEST is that we went to other lands to take their resources and enslave their people and leave them NOTHING...we took their lands and their treasures and left them nothing instead of helping them become prosperous so they can stay in their beloved homelands..and then we are horrified that they come to our shores seeking a means of living or attacking our interests....but that is because of what we have done to enrich ourselves at their expense..this is something we in the West can not be proud of".
The last quote evokes a very special character in the masterpiece "Catch-22": another old Italian man who makes a sort of cameo appearance. Yet he's not in any way a "minor" character.
· Yr Obd't Servant
Yes, wasn't he a marvelous character? In my mind he was the pivotal character of the book.
"To combat terrorism, we should address the root causes of poverty, says former "economic hit man"
Conservatives are the root causes of poverty:
"If government is necessary, bad government, at least for conservatives, is inevitable, and conservatives have been exceptionally good at showing just how bad it can be. Hence the truth revealed by the Bush years: Bad government--indeed, bloated, inefficient, corrupt, and unfair government--is the only kind of conservative government there is. Conservatives cannot govern well for the same reason that vegetarians cannot prepare a world-class boeuf bourguignon: If you believe that what you are called upon to do is wrong, you are not likely to do it very well."
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2006/0607.wolfe.html
Americans really make lousy usage of the word "conservative"; it can be about either good or bad, or even benign. Neoliberals also need and promote bad government, and they're conservatively liars, etcetera. To be a Conservative in the U.S. and Canada, f.e., has a specific meaning. In the U.S., it refers to Repubs. In Ca, the Cons. Party. Both are lousy and corrupt, but also are the other main parties.
I will conserve my inalienable right to think critically objectivelly and independently, therefore. I won't liberally dispense with this right that is essential to live by; it will be conservatively guarded.
It's not the 'conservatives' who are the problem, but the capitalists who rule. The conservatives are just fools who will let the corporate class pick their pockets. They have been convinced that, if it weren't for this or that, they would be right up there with their patriotic 'moral majority', counting the cash. America has always been a land of con men and greedy little people who want to get rich quick--ever since the European invasion at least.
But now we have a somewhat different situation. The majority of Americans voted for a man who promised change. That this change is still forthcoming should not surprise anyone, but it does show how powerful the con men are. It should be scaring the pants off those who think America is still (or was ever) a land of freedom. Give him a chance, say those who still cling to the hope of an Obama who will effect real change. Let him take his little steps. He has such a powerful opposition. What they fail to realize is that WE DON'T HAVE TIME! We don't have time for 'conservatives' and their tea parties. We don't have time to listen to the rant of greedy con men on their radio and TV shows. All of this crap was thoroughly discarded by popular vote. Why are we still listening or paying attention to those who were voted out of the picture? Why are we still playing THIER game?
By the way, Obama had a wonderful opportunity to effect change as soon as he entered the White House. It was handed to him on a silver platter by the capitalist class represented by George Bush and associates. They offered him a failed economy, the biggest burst bubble ever. What did Obama do? Why, he threw trillions of tax dollars at these men, and said go ahead, do as you like with it. Go ahead, blow us an even bigger bubble. He acted exactly as George Bush and company would have. How astounding! We voted for an intelligent man and instead we got someone who is mesmerized by shiny bubbles. God help us all!
begins with c and ends in ism
Perkins knows
Chalmers Johnson knows
Robert Fisk knows
Chris Hedges knows
Noam Chomsky knows
Howard Zinn knows
Ray McGovern knows
Tariq Ali knows
Ali Abunimah knows
Interesting how if you know too much, you are censored from the corporate media and omitted from the general narrative.
How true. And when was the last time we had a real socialist commentator in the MSM? Say someone like David Harvey?
I should have included David Harvey; great reference!
He is even less well known than the authors I mentioned earlier. Robert Cox and Webster Tarpley can be mentioned as well, but very few will recognize these either.
Although they wrote a century and a half ago, Marx and Engels are surprisingly relevant to this day.
Harvey's lectures (13 of them) on volume I of "Capital" are available on his website: davidharvey.org
Thanks for the link, it has been a while since I heard these. Everyone interested in politics, economics and history ought to listen to these lectures. He makes "Capital" understandable and accessible to today's audience. When I was an undergrad, most of my econ professors dismissed Marx as irrelevant (no surprise coming from Chicago School Friedmanite types). After dismissing them as irrelevant, none of them could actually articulate what exactly Marx wrote in Capital. Harvey can teach them all a lesson.
they dismissed Marx because - with the mistaken focus of the failed "communist" states (such as Russia under stalin focused on GEOPOLITICAL expansion. that ended up becoming a totalitarian fascist state capitalism interested only in maintaining what had become a STUNTED evolution towards communism) - partly also as a paranoid defense of SUCH a totalitarian state from ANOTHER equally vicious one - the CAPITALIST global "state" that was ALREADY in full stride surrounding nascent communist 'revolutions' - )
they could point to THESE as "economically failed" in comparison with capitalism's "free trade, laissez-faire" =
without having to confront MARX's original arguments as to why the CAPITALIST SYSTEM itself IS a failure only waiting to MATURE while in the meantime enjoying the APPEARANCE of being the "victorious" economic/political system over communism or socialism.
but as we know - today - it is CLEAR that it si CAPITALISM that has failed the world
MONUMENTALLY - and with far greater destruction than the worst nightmares about "the communist" which had and has NOT YET really fully arrived but was in fact largely PROTRACTED or OBSTRUCTED BY capitalism from showing the world
that communism or socialism are indeed the HIGHER phase of civilized advance after Capitalism first DESTROYS itself - and showing how DESTRUCTIVE IT REALLY IS behind its facade of "prosperity" that somehow extracts the greatest price of suffering upon the greatest number of people for the FEWEST number of individuals living like Pharoahs and gods among human beings.
these ":chicago" boys dismissed Marx no differently from
the "CReATIONISTS" dismissing science as a "theory"
because they do NOT WISH to have to be SUBJECTED to SCRUTINY and GIVE THEIR EVIDENCE of a "god" .
You neglected to mention John Pilger and surely some other notable people, but what is Fisk doing in the list? I don't recall him speaking out about the corporatocracy that rules the government of the USA. And what is it that you claim that they all know? After all, they speak and write about plenty of different things.
Pilger is another good one, feel free to come up with a comprehensive list and add it to the bibliography. Fisk has indeed commented on such issues, I have heard him lecture, heard interviews as well as read him regularly.
Feel free to come up with your own bibliography, I only meant it as a suggestion
I can understand pundits on TV with an arrogant smirk on their faces and their coats unbuttoned to reveal their huge bellies saying "The USA is an Empire and it is time we started acting like one".
In other words, because we can ride rough shod over the rest of the world we have a duty to do so. Playground bullies, greedy brokers and bankers, and those who take pride in being imperialists are all alike.
They can't, or won't remember what was going on in Rome around the year 800. Rome was impoverished. Money was being spent to maintain the fringes of the empire while the citizens starved.
Sacking Rome became the "in" thing to do. It was easy, and every barbarian chieftain now considered it HIS duty to rub once mighty Rome's nose in the dirt one more time.
We are hastening the day when China will impose upon us the most harsh trading practices possible just because they can.
"History is a remorseless creditor. Eventually it demands that all accounts be settled in full, sometimes in a currency harder than anyone could have imagined."
So just(ly) when will our DEMO(bamanible)CRACY begin to hold accountable the Bushist terrist-mongers and scammers for their criminal acts?
socialist November 15th, 2009 3:11 pm
Perkins knows
Chalmers Johnson knows
Robert Fisk knows
Chris Hedges knows
Noam Chomsky knows
Howard Zinn knows
Ray McGovern knows
Tariq Ali knows
Ali Abunimah knows
NAOMI KLEIN
ARANDOTI ROY
VONDONA SHEVA
CODE PINK
Since the list only included men I added a few woman.
Interesting how if you know too much, you are censored from the corporate media and omitted from the general narrative.
Yes it is most interesting and depressing all at once. We are living in a society akin to Soviet Russia where there was one newspaper and one tv station. I don't watch television for it is maddeningly one dimensional. Thanks for showing us this list of names.
That would be Arundhati Roy and Vandana Shiva. Since you're going to include a few women in your list, it would help to spell their names correctly.
great article by John Perkins. I think he manages to explain very clearly the relationship between u.s.and the rest of the world.
It's nice to see Perkins using his powers for good instead of evil.
It's amazing how good hearted people trying to live their lives have to go through all this shit created by greedy men (and women) who have structured the economic world according to their desires. Yes, only revolution can get rid of these deranged, power and money mad creatures. And we had better hurry. The earth doesn't have much time left. That's one thing Marx didn't foresee, the absolute blind greed of the bourgeoisie and the limitations of the resources that they could transform into wealth for themselves. I'm suspicious of Communism, which I consider a failed form of socialism (way too totalitarian), but we had better figure it out soon, or we as a species are goners.
actually -0 marx DEFINED his Das Kapital in large part as a critique OF the Bourgouisie. it was clear that he considered it as merely the "next unjust" class supplanting what was before it the nobility to BECOME the new "nobility" or upper class above the proletariat.
so - in a sense - his ultimate "capitalism" - where LABOR is properly valued and not "Monetized" as capitalism has done - IS communism as the last phase AFTER socialism, which comes AFTER capitalism destroys itself.
he was quite specific in this, i think, especially in saying that Capitalism plants the seeds of ITS own destruction and that it is through this that Socialism supplants it, just as capitalism supplanted "feudalism"..and then socialism arrives , if the "revolution of the proletariat" is to continue -
towards communism. I recall a writer explaining that Marx had mentioned that it was not so much being against "capital" for he after all saw that LABOR IS capital..
but that he detested the way SOME people enriched themselves upon the backs of the many - which is LABOR and the proletariat.
which is of course the system we know as "capitalism".
so - if you think about it, whenver ANY of us are complaining about the "economic disparities" and injustices
we ARE instinctively already VOICING what Karl Marx EXPLAINED IN DETAIL as the process of the social order.
we are , in a sense, if we do that, from any angle or extent of dissatisfaction about the injustices - being COMMUNISTS ..whether we actually acknowledge it or not or even understand that we are actually echoing his fundamental premise on which he expanded his concepts and observations.
in a sense - whenever we argue or complain against injustices that we KNOW ARE clearly injustices and we do so genuinely - we are actually intoning the communist ideals EVEN as we struggle to live WITHIN a capitalist society and even accept many of its norms as "natural" or "logical".
the only thing remaining, in many ways, and of course arriving at different rates of motion for each person or country or class below the "capitalist" class - is that we actually DECLARE that we ARE what we are already thinking about the injustices:
COMMUNISTS deep down.
we just don't recognize it as such and therefore - as societies FAIL to realize it in FACT.
and THAT is , imo, partly how capitalst classes manage to OUTWIT everyone into giving up their rights as human beings to a decent existence .
One of the great things about Perkins is that he came to his understanding through direct experience. If you haven't read his "Confessions" you should.
He is not any sort of standard political intellectual. He is actually a sort of new-age spiritual thinker, but he is forced to face the reality of the political economic structures of the world through his own direct experience.
It is to his great credit that he allows himself to remain face-to-face with his knowledge.
Yes, Perkins has written some interesting and insightful books. The downside is that he also advocated for Obama and as far as I know has not issues a retraction.
article below from Asiatimesonline - by Pepe Escobar who knows more about the repercussions of the USA"s "global war on terror" nonsense especially in asia - in the form of a sarcastic "letter from 4,000 yr old China to Obama"
is not just on point on just about everything -- concerning obama's visit to china - but FUNNY!!
read on
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Greater China
Nov 17, 2009
Page 1 of 2
THE ROVING EYE
Welcome, comrade Maobama
By Pepe Escobar
BEIJING - Dear comrade Maobama,
It's such an honor to receive you here in the northern capital of the Middle Kingdom as you pay tribute to the hub of the already developing 21st-century multipolar world.
Excuse us if we may diverge for a while from the outlines of established diplomatic finesse, but as we fully admire your integrity, honesty and magnificent intellectual accomplishments, allow us to address you with a measured degree of frankness.
First of all, we congratulate you for the auspicious sales of The Audacity of Hope in the Chinese market - 140,000 to date, and counting. But please excuse us as you won't be able to bask in
the glow of wide-eyed, "audacity of hope" crowds as in Berlin, Ghana, Cairo, London or Paris. Certainly Sasha and Malia would be thrilled if you had the chance to snap up a commemorative comrade Maobama T-shirt in Houhai for a few undervalued yuan. You'd definitely look handsome in an olive-green Cultural Revolution suit and cap.
We are otherwise very pleased that you have just described yourself as "America's first Pacific president" - even boasting a half-brother living in our gloriously booming special economic zone, Shenzhen.
We find a remarkable convergence between "Pacific" and our own doctrine of heping jueqi - "sudden peaceful emergence". We are all pacifists at heart; if you're familiar with our doctrine you will know how it fully spells out why China is not a "threat" to the US. After all, our military budget is less than 20% of your military budget, and much less than the combined military budgets of Japan, India and Russia.
About our pacifist strain, President Hu Jintao - with whom you will have very detailed discussions - made it all very clear already during the administration of your predecessor George W Bush, when he announced his "four Nos" (no to hegemony; no to the politics of force; no to the politics of blocks; no to an arms race) and his "four Yes's" (yes to building trust; yes to attenuating difficulties; yes to developing cooperation; yes to avoiding confrontation).
We noticed you have also chosen to define us as "an essential partner" as well as a "competitor". Yes, we are very competitive. It's kind of built into your DNA when you have been a major economic power in the world for 18 of the past 20 centuries. If the "strategic reassurance" doctrine devised by your think-tanks works in the sense of respecting our competitive spirit as well as our views and customs, we certainly have no problems with that.
By the way, we're extremely pleased that you chose Tokyo, Japan, this past Saturday to finally reassure us that "the United States does not seek to contain China". But we were just wondering whether your generals - avid practitioners of the full spectrum dominance doctrine - were listening.
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Dear comrade, there are some things that we must clarify at once. We definitely won't bow to US pressure on our currency policy. Please listen to Liu Mingkang, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission. He has just pressed the fact at a forum here in Beijing that the very weak US dollar and low US interest rates are creating "unavoidable risks for the recovery of the global economy, especially emerging economies", and this is "seriously impacting global asset prices and encouraging speculation in stock and property markets". We're afraid you're more part of the problem than the solution. If you had the chance to meet average Chinese in the streets of Beijing - oh, those pesky security arrangements - they would ask you why China should listen to US hectoring, when the US prints dollars like crazy and expects China to prop them up?
For our part of the world, we hope you have the opportunity to appreciate how sound are our economic fundamentals - with rising industrial production, retail sales and investments in fixed capital, and moderate deflation, as outlined by Sheng Laiyun, spokesman for the National Bureau of Statistics. Our economy will grow by 8% in 2009. Why? Because we have spent the past 11 months working 24-hours a day, investing productively in our economy, honing up our monetary policy and launching fiscal measures to support selected industrial sectors. We are forecasting a consumer boom lasting up to the next Chinese New Year on February 14, 2010. So our priority is to keep on growing; later we may think about devaluing the yuan.
Dear comrade, we're sure you'd marvel at the power of our three main industrial clusters. It's a pity you won't have time to visit the Pearl River Delta, the factory of the world, our hub of manufacturing and endless assembly lines. You might catch a glimpse of the Yang-Tze Delta - the hub of our capital-intensive industry and production of cars, semiconductors and computers. But if only you had enough time for a stroll in Zhongguancun, just outside of Beijing - our Silicon Valley.
A glimpse of just one of our immense info-tech malls, bursting with small businesses and eager, industrious, very well-educated youth, would imprint to you how technology has become China's new opium (without a war attached, as the British Empire imposed it on us in the 19th century). It makes us dream of a time when technological innovations originate in China and then swarm the world. Yes, we may have a cheap workforce - but most of all we have an extraordinarily motivated workforce, which is regimented under good health and education standards, has immense self-discipline and is fully mobilized for non-stop productive ends.
Dear comrade, now onwards to some more controversial matters. About that little war of yours in Afghanistan. You may have realized by now that it was China that actually won the "war on terror". And that explains in great measure why China is so much more influential now in East Asia - and around many parts of the world - than the US.
You may realize that as long as the Pentagon is fully deployed in West Asia we must be extremely careful. We closely follow the strategies deployed by your think-tanks. We are particularly amused by the strategy of our old friend Dr Henry Kissinger, who proposes to integrate China in a reformed world order still revolving around a US axis - after all, this still translates as US hegemony. There are far more worrying aspects inbuilt in the encircling of China by a system of military bases and a strategic military alliance controlled by the US - a new cold war in fact. We cannot abide by it, as it will only lead to the fragmentation of Asia and the global South.
Rest assured that we can deal with both North Korea and Iran on our own - not confrontationally but harmoniously. And coming back to Afghanistan, we believe the best solution should be worked out within the cadre of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) - of which ourselves and Russia are the key co-founders. This is an Asian problem - in terms of drug trafficking as much as religious fundamentalism - that should be debated and solved among Asian powers.
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China
Nov 17, 2009
Page 2 of 2
THE ROVING EYE
Welcome, comrade Maobama
By Pepe Escobar
Dear comrade, you may have noticed that the Washington Consensus is for all purposes dead. What has emerged is what we might call the Beijing Consensus. China has shown the global South that "there is an alternative" - a "third way" of independent economic development and integration to the global order. We have shown that unlike the Washington Consensus "one-size-fits-all" package, economic development has to be "local" in every case. Our beloved Little Helmsman Deng Xiaoping would have called it "development with local characteristics".
We have shown that developing states in the global South must unite, not to hail US unilateralism but to organize a new world order based on economic independence and at the same time respectful of cultural and political differences. We have embarked on a yellow BRIC road - and it's not only us, Brazil, Russia, India
and China, who are on to it; everybody else in the global South is. Yet we are also aware that the rich North will always be trying to co-opt certain countries in the South to prevent that hierarchical change the world can believe in - which, as you may already know, is incarnated by China.
You may also have realized why China has consistently beaten hands down the elitist economic and financial institutions controlled by the North. After all, we offer countries all over the global South much better deals to access their natural resources. We have been engaged in vast, complex infrastructure projects that invariably end up costing less than half the price charged by countries in the North. Our loans are more carefully targeted; they are impervious to political misunderstandings; and they don't come with exorbitant consultant fees attached.
You may have realized that key oil-producing countries have re-routed their excess capacity towards the South. Oil-wealthy countries from West Asia have started to heavily invest in East and South Asia some of the surplus that they normally would have directed to the US and Europe.
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You may have noticed, comrade, that the monetarist counter-revolution is dead. So the question now is not whether Asia, and the global South as a whole, will continue to use the US dollar as their exchange currency - that, of course, will go on for years. The key long-term question is whether they will continue to place their excess current account balances at the mercy of institutions controlled by the North, or if they will instead work towards the emancipation of the South. Your egalitarian instincts may agree with the latter, but we are certain the US ruling class will fight it tooth and nail.
Forgive us what may be perceived as impertinence, comrade. Of course - taking a leaf from the great master Lao Tzu - we are also aware of our shortcomings. We well know that it would be suicidal for even one quarter of our population of 1.3 billion to adopt the mode of production and consumption known as the American way of life. We know that we must do more to protect the environment. Our 2006-2010 Five-Year Plan, for example, has made it a target to reduce energy consumption by 20%, and our industrial policy has shut down nearly 400 industrial sub-sectors and restricted a further 190. We well know what's at stake if, up to 2025, no less than 300 million peasants transfer themselves to our cities, where cars, including your American Buicks, already dwarf the number of bicycles.
We even acknowledge know many distortions may be implicit in our blind reproduction of the Western development model. To give you an example, when our foreign visitors go The Place megamall in the central business district in Beijing and watch the largest suspended screen saver on Earth - featuring computer-generated images - they complain what a waste of energy this is. It's an addiction for which we still have no cure. We just can't get enough of malls - and SUVs, and Hummers and Ferrari dealerships on Jinbao Dajie ...
We are well aware of hundreds of strikes and widespread social turmoil happening here every single month, involving especially the new Chinese working class - young internal migrants - that are the backbone of our enviable export industry. You may not believe it in the US, but of course there is a worker's movement in China - not one, but many, spontaneous and relatively unarticulated, all extremely active in virtually every city in the country.
We pay attention, and we are doing our best to attend to their grievances. Chairman Mao always alerted about luan - chaos - and nothing worries us more than social revolt in urban and rural areas. That's why we changed our policies, trying to correct development inequalities and passing new legislation offering more rights to workers.
At the same time, we always remember how comrade Deng Xiaoping's reforms first and foremost had to deal with the agricultural sector. That's why President Hu today is so concentrated on the development of education, health protection and social aid in the countryside. That's how we see the development of a "harmonious society".
To sum it all up, comrade Maobama. We really hope you appreciate the fabulous Peking duck in the company of comrade Hun Jintao, and that you conduct a frank exchange of views. And by the way, if you need a crash course on Chinese politics, don't bother to listen to your think-tanks; send a diplomat to a DVD shop to buy you a (pirate) copy of Zhang Yimou's Curse of the Golden Flower, with Chow Yun-fat and our gorgeous Gong Li. It's all there; the cult of secrecy and dissimulation; the logic and cruelty of competing clans; the sense of political tragedy; and how, in China, the raison d'etat trumps everything. Yes, we may be a violent society after all, but our violence is internalized. Chairman Mao's luan is our deepest fear; we fear most what ill we can inflict on ourselves. If we master our self-control, then we can be a true Middle Kingdom - between heaven and Earth. "Global superpower" is just an afterthought.
Anyway, as comrade Deng said, to get rich is glorious - the more so when you become the banker of the current global superpower. We will always be here for you when you need it - just please refrain from asking us to devalue the yuan. May you be blessed to conduct an auspicious and prosperous administration, and may you and your family live a long and fruitful life.
Respectfully yours,
The People's Republic of China
Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan: How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble Books, 2007) and Red Zone Blues: a snapshot of Baghdad during the surge. His new book, just out, is Obama does Globalistan (Nimble Books, 2009).
He may be reached at pepeasia@yahoo.com.
(Copyright 2009 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)
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