Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
More Than Ten Good Things to Celebrate in a Bad Year
This year was marked by turmoil at home and abroad, including a deepening financial crisis that continues to leave millions jobless and homeless, as well as ongoing and expanding wars. But despite the setbacks and disappointments, here is a list of victories to be thankful for, starting with three inspirational women.
- On November 13, Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi was released from house arrest. In 1990 her party, the National League for Democracy, won the elections but the military junta refused to let them take power. Instead, Suu Kyi was kept under house arrest for almost 15 of the last 21 years. Her release brings great joy and hope to millions of people in Burma and supporters of democracy worldwide.
- Dilma Rousseff was elected president of Brazil and takes power on January 1. Dubbed by the media "the most powerful woman in the world," Rousseff was tortured and jailed for three years for opposing Brazil's military dictatorship. She later became Chief of Staff for the popular outgoing president and former metalworker, Lula da Silva, whose policies of growth with equity have helped pull millions of Brazilians out of poverty. While some worry about Rousseff's commitment to the environment (she was also Lula's Energy Minister), the fact that a progressive woman from the Labor Party will rule a powerhouse like Brazil is cause for celebration.
- Elizabeth Warren became "consumer czar." After the financial meltdown in 2008, Warren was appointed Chairwoman of the five-member Congressional Oversight Panel created to investigate the banking bailout and oversee TARP. She won tremendous public support by sharply criticizing the banks and calling for greater transparency and accountability. Warren advocated for a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to protect borrowers from abuses in mortgages, credit cards and other consumer loans. On September 17 President Obama named her special adviser by to oversee the development of this new bureau.
- The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Chinese literary critic and professor Liu Xiaobo. Liu, a critic of China's one party state, was sentenced to 11 years in prison for drafting a petition calling for free speech and open elections. The Chinese government usually escapes rebuke for its oppressive practices because the country is such an economic superpower. But according to Amnesty International, some 500,000 Chinese prisoners are in detention without charge or trial. Harassment, surveillance, house arrest, and imprisonment of human rights defenders are on the rise, as is Internet and media censorship. Repression continues for Falun Gong practitioners and minority groups, including Tibetans, Uighurs and Mongolians. The Nobel Prize for Liu Xiaobo has helped expose China's dirty secrets.
- Speaking of exposing secrets, WikiLeaks has sent shock waves around the world by exposing the inner machinations of U.S. foreign policy. After a decade of illegal wars, lack of accountability, government secrecy and embedded journalists, WikiLeaks has given the public a much-needed look at the way the U.S. government continues-under President Obama-to cajole, bribe and strong arm other nations into supporting U.S. policies. We look forward to more revelations in 2011 and we hope more people will step forward to defend WikiLeaks and suspected whistleblower Bradley Manning!
- Don't Ask Don't Tell was repealed. The LGBT community has been fighting to repeal Don't Ask Don't Tell since it was first introduced as a compromise measure by President Clinton in 1993. In an historic Senate vote on December 18 the policy was repealed and then signed by President Obama on December 22. While some find it hard to celebrate the ability of more people to now fight in U.S. wars, let's remember that this victory will help the gay community win upcoming, more important struggles for marriage rights and equality in the workplace.
- U.S. troop levels in Iraq declined dramatically. While President Obama has presided over a disastrous surge of troops in Afghanistan, he does seem to be holding to his promise of ending the U.S. military presence in Iraq. The number of U.S. troops has declined from some 144,000 in January 2009 to roughly 50,000 today. The remaining troops are supposed to leave the country by the end of 2011. The U.S. invasion of Iraq, based on lies and resulting in the death and displacement of millions of Iraqis, is one of the most shameful episodes in our history. The sooner it ends, the better.
- The health care bill passed. No, it was not a single payer bill and it didn't even have a public option, disappointing many of its original supporters. But the bill does extend health coverage to over 30 million Americans who would have otherwise been uninsured; it stops private insurance companies from rejecting people for preexisting conditions; and it allows children to remain covered by their parents' insurance until the age of 26. Taken as a whole, it represents a progressive shift in U.S. social policy, which is why it is being so viciously attacked by the right. And from the left, the fight for a single payer system, especially on the state level, is far from over!
- The Senate ratified the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) between the U.S. and Russia. The New START provides modest reductions in the number of deployed strategic nuclear weapons, and includes monitoring and verification procedures. Unfortunately, to get Republican support the U.S. commitment to disarmament is countered by a new commitment to spend $180 billion over 10 years to "modernize" U.S. weapons and delivery systems. But not passing the treaty would have been disastrous. The new treaty will undoubtedly improve U.S.-Russia relations and will hopefully move us closer to the eventual elimination of nuclear weapons.
- In a little noticed automobile obituary, the last Hummer rolled off the production line on May 24 - a casualty of higher gas prices, the economic crunch and a shift in consumer preferences. The cool cars of today are no longer monstrous gas guzzlers but hybrid and electric cars. There are 28 hybrid models already on the market today. At least 12 plug-in electric cars are planned for 2011, kicking off a wave of new green vehicles.
And a few extras for good cheer:
- At the White House Tribal Nations Conference on December 15, President Obama announced that the United States would support the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The statement is significant because the United States was one of only four countries that voted against the declaration when the UN General Assembly adopted it in 2007, and the last of those four to have reversed its former opposition.
- In a policy reversal after the BP oil disaster, the Obama administration announced that it will not allow offshore oil drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico or off the Atlantic coast for at least seven more years. Meanwhile, offshore wind power is taking off from Maine to Georgia.
- Foreign private security contractors were banned by the governments of Iraq and Afghanistan, and Blackwater founder Eric Prince-hounded by lawsuits and bad press-felt compelled to sell the company and move out of the country.
- Thanks to California's Proposition 19, also known as the Regulate, Control & Tax Cannabis Act, the debate on failed Marijuana Prohibition has arrived! Despite not passing, 4 million people voted to control and tax marijuana, with endorsements coming from new allies from the SEIU to the NAACP to law enforcement groups.
- The government-supported student loan program was dramatically restructured, eliminating private banks and thereby ensuring that more money goes directly into the hands of low-income students.
I could keep the list going. It's an important reminder, as we go into what will be a very difficult new year, that people on all continents continue to struggle for a more peaceful, just, sustainable world. And as long as people keep organizing and mobilizing, there will be victories to celebrate.
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


241 Comments so far
Show AllOk we get you. Same old same old...
"Market yourself, fuck that 110%! Markets diminish and pollute everything they touch."
I don't mean that "market"
"Shadow Dancer has your number in one Marco!"
Like he'll do anything with it.
#16 - Bradley Manning's lucky to still be alive.
You have got to be f-ing kidding right Medea?
Notice that NONE of the things she lists makes any positive difference for the vast majority of the population.
This is a great article for the Fluffington Post or even good TV talking points.
The Lexus Latte Liberal crowd will eat this stuff up.
I have a few things of my own to celebrate this year.
1. 71% of us voters said NO to Obamacare in MO on August 3, 2010.
2. I could get a few moderate conservatives to finally appreciate single payer health care while also opposing Obamacare.
3. I learned to stop being an ass and start looking beyond the Democrats for any help or hope.
4. Obama getting us stuck in Afghanistan might be the best thing to kill this empire once and for all.
5. The health care scam that passed in March might finally make more Americans realize that insurance is nothing but scam.
All this fades into insignificance because we have a president who claims the right to execute or imprison without trial or any shadow of due process any American citizen...and he has the power to do so. The military can, using a secretive process with no right to confront your accusers or defend yourself, label you an enemy combatant, and then Obama can throw you into a dungeon or assassinate you, or your children or... So be afraid.
Now that you mention it, judging by a lot of articles posted on CD, one would get the impression no one ever heard of Hedges, Zinn, Kolko, Wolin, Chomsky, Chalmers Johnson, Hoffstaedter, Norman Finkelstein, Michael Hudson, David Harvey... et al. I suggest they start reading or write some articles refuting their claims and theses. Otherwise articles like these, written for an un-informed audience, are just plain insulting.
And what would you know about it? You're just a little switch engine, pulling real engines around the train yard.
(tongue in cheek here)
Are you comparing the two for their entertainment value? You talk about this as a personal preference...
Denial and avoidance are obviously a much more serious barrier than "negativity" is or could ever be.
I have no doubt that many would prefer to "put on a happy face" and are first and foremost concerned with their own personal emotional state. Just as Barbara Bush, they would rather not trouble their beautiful minds with harsh realities.
Sounds like things are going well for ya, still got a job? Been foreclosed on? Can you afford health care insurance? Can you afford to send your kids to good schools?
It is all perception. As long as things are going well for you, fuck everyone else.
That is exactly how we art taught to be as good merkans. You are a good merkan.
So things are just fine, the recession is over, the wars are over, the Empire is closing down bases and the trillion dollar MIC budget has been used for infrastructure and education, and thousands good-paying jobs with benefits are being added daily. Things are looking up
Thanks for setting us straight. We are just the professional left purists complaining that Utopia has not arrived.
"It is all perception."
Notional Security.
Mark Abram does this all the time. He comes off as a Democrat Party apologist always blaming Nader for everything, a Monsanto/GMO apologist as I just discovered in one of the recent articles from a few days ago, and generally a status quo shill. For him, I would much rather get dirty trying to clean a pig right out of the barn than bother reasoning with him. :)
I have a hard time understanding where you really want to see a change of direction. On the one hand, you admit that our election system is broken beyond repair and yes, I agree that a run-off election system would help.
However, calling us "obsessed" with GMO just because we point out the long term risks and consequences is typical of most Americans conditioned into ignorance and "accepting" abuse. We cannot afford to look the other way while getting poisoned. Society has already done that on allowing factory farming to wipe out the competition on small and local food production and the long term health consequences should be obvious by now.
As for your blaming Nader for Dubya, the blame has been disproven so many times on this site but you still refuse to get past your "fixed" hatred of Nader. Running for office isn't just about winning. Like anyone vying for a job position, it is about proving that you can best do the job. Gore messed up on his own far more than Nader "spoiling" Gore's chances.
Things are not going fine, by the numbers, for the majority. Half of the people are trying to survive on $30,000 per year or less.
If this is not "the Great Darkness" that we are experiencing now, then what in the world would qualify as that in your mind? Endless war, the Patriot Act, FISA, jobs disappearing, wages collapsing, the infrastructure crumbling, endless illegal wars and occupations, torture, detention and rendition, unprecedented corruption of all of the institutions, a collapsing environment, food and water supplies at dire risk...
WTF?
Clue - denying the darkness is worse than surrendering to it.
You see the "possibility of changing people's minds?" How about yours? That is the one that I think needs a little changing. Can that mind be changed?
duplicate
There's not a mountain that we can't climb! There's not a river we can't make it over! There's not tomorrow that we can't find if we try! You know we're gonna make it! Nothing can stop us now!
Actually Mark, I think it's a depression brought about by an Empire financially-backed by an economy built upon a dwindling supply of fossil-fuels.
Hence we do need someone like Hedges, who challenges us to look at and consider the entire puzzle. It's damn difficult, because the outlook doesn't look promising.
"I think we you guys erred though, is not giving Medea more credit for Code P being on the front lines in the early days."
What kind of a sentence is that?
"Nobody WANTS to be sold out to Obama, I think most of us shed a tear over him, he had the world in his hands."
This is an obvious run-on.
"I do think her reply was curt, I wrote about her in a whimsical peace in which I scatted on her name."
Didn't you mean to say "piece" instead of "peace" in that sentence of yours?
You failed to read our responses carefully as you would have realized that we are not negative about Medea but that we have a right to critique the flaws of her "good things about this year". Your grammar also stinks and there are more errors than I have bothered to point out !
I don't see Jennifer attacking you any more than you attacking her the way you did. She may have been emotional in the past and she may have called you an Obamabot like she used to think of me but she has long grown up and matured while you are still sitting here acting like some hee-haw kid fluffing up on your karate skills. You ought to listen to your own advice before hurting other people's feelings. You owe her an apology for attacking her.
P.S.: JenniferB is my niece and I am proud of her. Had I not saved her life, I would probably never have discovered this site or learned to break out of relying on the Democrats to oppose the Republicans on anything.
Jennifer may have come across as a bit too harsh against your bloviated ego but her attack was directed at your pathetic writing, not you personally. If you hadn't written the way you're flaming here, she might not have bothered to respond but I seriously doubt that anyone here would agree to your allegation of attacking her when she was actually nice to you compared to your attacks against her and others who were critical of Medea's article. I may not be that "vanguard" of your version of the progressive movement and I may be a practical liberal but I have done a better job of getting even moderate conservatives to think progressively on daily issues affecting their lives in the real world. Your blog may say one set of things but your behavior disgraces you. Jennifer has nothing personally against you and neither do I. Your reply to her wasn't even close to a rebuttal and she was right to not bother responding to your immature attack. You can brag about your karate skills but she has a black belt in karate too and yet doesn't show off her bravado about it. It is funny how you shamelessly attack dissent and then act like a child with your "leave me alone" trick when your cranky ego gets reduced harmlessly. If your blog is really that wordpress blog I came across, then the jasondylan here doesn't reflect the jasondylan over there.
I understand and thank you for clarifying. Good luck to you and your efforts out there.
I did not expect anything much from Obama so he can only further anger me having come off worse than I had feared. Poor Jason is in macho ego mode that he couldn't write anything coherent. His further replies are totally unworthy of a response. Let that lame brain zombie rot in hell.
As for the USA that the genocidal maniacs (I mean "settlers") built, take heart. This nation is failing and the whole world is laughing. If you live in another nation, get ready for more entertainment as our nation sinks in denial mode. ::(
When you get your chance to shout on the radio, you just tell us where to dial in and we will listen. As for the rest of your lame brain rant, it is unworthy of a reply. I might not have bothered to go after your poor grammar had you anything thoughtful to say at the very least. As for me, you have no idea as to who I am or what I have done on my part to change things. Take your macho rant and stick it where the sun don't shine.
P.S.: Your sick attitude that you display here is the reason this nation is the butt of all jokes.
Jason, I peacefully accept that regardless of my disagreements and I will try not to be too hard even by accident. Peace to you as well.
I'm glad you see the need to tone it down. You have lots to contribute, just be careful not to be insulting or too arrogant.
Listen, we are (very slightly) more free to smoke pot without being imprisoned, and (very slightly) less likely to have to look at Hummers on the road. I don't what in the world else you whiny, pout-y progressives want. I guess nothing will ever make you happy. You are all just addicted to your negativity.
We are not addicted to negativity but we stick to truth and honesty no matter how negativity or inconvenient it is. If that is too high an expectation, whiny, makes us look like we're too addicted to negativity, or just plain filthy, then I for one proudly accept that trade off. ::)
You go JB!!
Well stated, JenniferBedingfield! I couldn't agree more.
I suppose that is a sign of how bad things are - I write what I think is obviously an absurd parody of the cheerleader crowd, and people think I am being serious LOL.
You are mixing up old Europe with modern Europe to begin with. Most of Europe has long given up its intentions to occupy other nations, inside and outside of her continent. The USA eventually became too rough and rugged individualist a nation for Europe to handle so putting all the blame on Europe alone is wrong. If you had been to Europe this year, you would have found out that unlike the USA, the people there are standing up to tyranny and "austerity" hell knowing very well the long term fate and consequences of what happened to the USA as a result of letting it happen for the last 30 years. In fact, even most conservatives in Europe are farther to the left of most of the NEUTERED USA "Left" as Medea's article shows.
Shadow Dancer: Do you really think you're accomplishing anything by your broken record, "Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive."???
Hi, SD,
It's weird to see that criticism of your sig line, which I've always admired:
"Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive."
That says a lot to me! And I try to live by it.
Also, whose sig line was it, as I haven't seen it in a long time: "But I could be wrong!" That also applies to me!
As for this "controversy" with a few bloggers here: this is fun banter. I usually don't read many posts, but I'm wasting time today and caught some of those threads with JB, Stanley, hk, and you. Funny! "But I could be wrong!"
"Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive." Thanks, SD.
Bill in Dubuque
"Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, what did you think of the play?"
(At the end of the year, I like to have a little fun with some gallows humor - to energize me and my friends for the hard work to come. Of course, we could just all be cheery and happy, and try to reassure people and lull them into a false sense of naive and delusional optimism - so we can all feel good about ourselves - but that would be pretty irresponsible and self-serving, wouldn't it?)
Here is some good news from the year past - the reign of the chipper do-gooders and upscale activists, who have had complete control over any and all opposition to the ruling class, may finally be coming to an end.
I am with you all the way on this one, Two Americas!
mellow fellow?
are you sure you aren't jasondonovan?
Very high minded response, Jill.
peace,
rita
yeah yeah- all well and good.
But where the hell is the fat free no cal chocolate cake?
At least one person on this site has a sense of humor.
My list, my list!
1)Glaciers are melting [a negative]
2)Garbage islands in oceans as big as states in US [negative]
3)"dead zones" in oceans [negative]
4)permafrost melting;loads of bad gases here and progressive [negative]
5)Weather screwy everywhere [negative]
6)War is for peace [negative]
7)Occupation of Iraq and Afghaistan [negative]
8)War on drugs [negative]
9)Brought democracy to Central and South America [negative]
10)Brought any,any help and stability to Haiti [negative]
This is a short list and no one mentioned; not even the author the 2 big elephants in any discussion about what might be positive about 2010. The environment and war and piss on barry and all his minnions.Where on here does anyone see a positive? Tony
Now, now, Tony, stop your wallowing. When we get done with this planet, we'll just throw it away and buy a new one.
NS; good one! Tony
Dude, you're pretty funny but man you need help. Seriously.
I think it is best to ignore him entirely. He has shown plainly that he receives any and all criticisms or differing opinions with a childish tantrum or three. To continue to post the obvious becomes too much like stalking. He has nothing of value to contribute, is most likely not even a Native American, and is, in general, worthy of a turbo scroll past his "new age" crap.
I think you're right. I've been getting into one too many messy conversations with him in my attempts to help him out. I hope nobody other than "readbetweenthe_lines" mistakes me as a racist. I have lots of respect for the natives and I'm sorry for what happened to them a long time ago.
"It appears that your retreaded compassion slipped off the wheel."
Dude, you're lost. Try to keep up with the context of the conversation.
truth
Shallow thinker much?
The poster in question dreams of a return to a past that never was, turns into Mr. Hyde at the slightest suggestion of an opposing point of view and, worst of all, lumps all Native Americans into the same bag as if there were only one band, one tribe, one nation, one spirituality and one lifestyle in a rather diverse population. That is why I do not believe him to even be a Native American, my own personal view and one I do not insist that anyone else share.
"He knows nothing ,believes he knows everything, and is obviously pursuing a political career." A butchering fo a Mencken quote....
No matter what your opinion of what you call "the poster in question," that does not justify or mitigate the barrage of racist comments we have all had to wade through. Posters making racist comments are the ones in question, in my view.
The poster you are referring to is talking about the present, not the past, and talking about whites, not indigenous people. Yes, he refers to the past - actually to the seamless continuum that has persisted right up until this evening. He has not pretended to speak for all indigenous people, rather he has talked about white views toward all indigenous people. It is the whites who have throughout history and do now "lump all Native Americans into the same bag as if there were only one band, one tribe, one nation, one spirituality and one lifestyle in a rather diverse population." Your remarks about lumping and the past are off base.
How could you determine what the other person was or wasn't if you yourself did not have a "lumped" vision - an idea as to how an indigenous person should or should not talk, what they should or should not think?
The validity of what the poster is saying that you have a problem with does not depend upon what he "is," so your authenticity test is meaningless.
I don't know if you "are" a racist. There is no way to tell what is inside a person, so the denials by people - "I am not a racist" - are really meaningless.
You have made several racist comments tonight, including this latest one - "what happened to them a long time ago."
Are you now going to turn every thread here into an opportunity for you to declare that you are not a racist?