Monday, January 31, 2005
Juan Cole and Kucinich on the Iraqi Elections
The idea, mentioned by Condoleeza Rice on Sunday, that any significant number of Fallujans voted, is absurd and insulting. Most of the 250,000 Fallujans are still in exile, and the city is still occasionally the scene of fighting. There are reports of some voting in refugee camps outside the city. It is almost certainly motivated by a desire to have a legitimate, elected government that could effectively demand a US withdrawal.
Although some observers seem to be optimistic about the Sunni Arab vote, from what I could find out Sunday night, the signs were not actually good.
As for the neighbors, this Turkish author clearly fears both the religiosity of the Shiite party and the possible subnationalism of the Kurds.
In contrast, Iran clearly expects to benefit from the likely Shiite victory in the elections.
posted by Juan @ 1/31/2005 06:18:21 AM
Also, Dennis Kucinich's predictions five days before the elections:
It is clear, in just five days before the Iraqi elections are to be held, that it will be impossible to conclude anything about the extent to which corruption, voter intimidation or outright fraud will mar the results. The exercise will regrettably be a farce. The results will have no recognized legitimacy whatsoever, and surely do not merit association with the United States' notions of democracy.
"The elections will not yield certifiable results due to the pitifully small number of election observers, and the total absence of international election observers from the process. Indeed, according to the Washington Post, this is the first transitional election in the past two decades that will not have international election observers touring polling stations. As you know, international monitors have independently observed and evaluated elections throughout the world and have helped to point out when they are fraudulent and when they are legitimate."
In previous transitional elections across the world, the international community has sent teams of observers to polling sites. International observers have observed recent transitional elections in Nigeria in 1999, Haiti in 1990, East Timor in 2001-2002, and most recently in the second runoff election in the Ukraine.
A Corporate World
Our's is not the only country, btw, whose practices on an international basis are harming world citizens.
Given that many of the globalized economic practices of international forces are designed to maximize profits and minimize strain to the corporation, it seems the World Conference on Disaster Reduction ought to focus on these economic, globalization disasters that are wrecking havoc on the citizens of this planet.
It has been my experiences that these people don't fall. They will always have their cavier and yachts, while the little guy around them takes the brunt of their policies. From Commondreams:
As 50,000 people marched through Porto Alegre, in southern Brazil, to mark the opening of the annual World Social Forum on developing country issues, the report from ActionAid was set to highlight how power in the world food industry has become concentrated in a few hands.
The report will say that 30 companies now account for a third of the world's processed food; five companies control 75% of the international grain trade; and six companies manage 75% of the global pesticide market.
It It finds that two companies dominate sales of half the world's bananas, three trade 85% of the world's tea, and one, Wal-mart, now controls 40% of Mexico's retail food sector. It also found that Monsanto controls 91% of the global GM seed market.
Household names including Nestlé, Monsanto, Unilever, Tesco, Wal-mart, Bayer and Cargill are all said to have expanded hugely in size, power and influence in the past decade directly because of the trade liberalization policies being advanced by the US, Britain and other G8 countries whose leaders are meeting this week in Davos.
"A wave of mergers and business alliances has concentrated market power in very few hands," the report says.
It accuses the companies of shutting local companies out of the market, driving down prices, setting international and domestic trade rules to suit themselves, imposing tough standards that poor farmers cannot meet, and charging consumers more.
I'm just beginning to wade into this globalization issue. It seems to me that the empowerment of the small farmer ought to be a goal for activists. The following link is to a pdf. Support your local farmer's market, and grow your own when possible.
Here's what a proponent of globalization has to say about activists:
In large part, the corporation owes the strong environmental and social standards that it attaches to all its investments to extensive discussion with - and criticism from - activists. As we elevate our standards from "do no harm" to an even stronger level of responsibility, we welcome continuing dialogue with local and international activists.
Elevate our standars from "do no harm" to an even stronger level of responsibility(???) I ask you, Peter Woicke, Managing Director, World Bank and Executive Vice President, International Finance Corporation, who penciled the above words, what could be a greater responsibility than "do no harm"? And if that is your mantra then you have failed it miserably.
The truth is, it is the activists who are your your conscience, and we do it as we struggle to keep up with the rapid pace at which you are legally devouring up the world's resources in terms of ownership, often at times with little regard for the people of the communities your policies and practices will affect.
Could we say, Mr. Woicke, that debt is the tool of international globalists to ensnare an economy, rather than to nurture an ecoomy? From Susan George:
Debt is an efficient tool. It ensures access to other peoples' raw materials and infrastructure on the cheapest possible terms. Dozens of countries must compete for shrinking export markets and can export only a limited range of products because of Northern protectionism and their lack of cash to invest in diversification. Market saturation ensues, reducing exporters' income to a bare minimum while the North enjoys huge savings. The IMF cannot seem to understand that investing in ... [a] healthy, well-fed, literate population ... is the most intelligent economic choice a country can make.
-- Susan George, A Fate Worse Than Debt, (New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1990), pp. 143, 187, 23
To be continued.
"If you see death, you settle for a fever"
I’m sure people outside of the country are shaking their heads at the words ‘collective punishment’. “No, Riverbend,” they are saying, “That’s impossible.” But anything is possible these days. People in many areas are being told that if they don’t vote- Sunnis and Shia alike- the food and supply rations we are supposed to get monthly will be cut off. We’ve been getting these rations since the beginning of the nineties and for many families, it’s their main source of sustenance. What sort of democracy is it when you FORCE people to go vote for someone or another they don’t want?
Allawi’s people were passing out pamphlets a few days ago. I went out to the garden to check the low faucet, hoping to find a trickle of water and instead, I found some paper crushed under the garden gate. Upon studying it, it turned out to be some sort of “Elect Allawi” pamphlet promising security and prosperity, amongst other things, for occupied Iraq. I'd say it was a completely useless pamphlet but that isn't completely true. It fit nicely on the bottom of the cage of E.'s newly acquired pet parakeet.
They say the borders are closed with Jordan and possibly Syria. I also heard yesterday that people aren't being let into Baghdad. They have American check-points on the main roads leading into the city and they say that the cars are being turned back to wherever they came from. It's a bad situation and things are looking very bleak at this point.
It's amazing how as things get worse, you begin to require less and less. We have a saying for that in Iraq, "Ili yishoof il mawt, yirdha bil iskhooneh." Which means, "If you see death, you settle for a fever." We've given up on democracy, security and even electricity. Just bring back the water.
Iraqi vote schmote.
The Iraqi vote is theater for the conquests of George Bush 2.
The Iraqis will now be the poster children for the flag of George Bush democracy that he intends to fly over the tyrannies of the world. He might want to start with his own.
Four years have passed and two questionable elections that cast serious doubt on America's commitment to democracy within her own borders. Four years later and no end in sight to our deficit, no end in sight to the neocon ambitions in the middle east, and no end in sight to the ways in which they will try to trick and deceive a gullible public into believing outrageous falsehoods, such as the need to replace social security with private investment accounts. As though the stock market were more reliable than a social security check coming in the mail.
They want us all to become really, badly addicted gamblers, gambling away our future, our quality of life, our values.
Wether its betting on the establishment of democracy in Iraq, or the ups and downs of a stock market fueled with our social security money, its still gambling, its a dangerous game and one that we must refuse to play.
I wish that the Iraqis, the different factions, had been able to ban together to boycott the elections. It would have been the most peaceful form of protest to democracy forced down their throats at the end of a gun barrel. Ghandi would have loved it.
Several have written on Dailkos of the different factions involved, and what the election might portend, and it ain't all sugar coated. Go and read the comments. I don't know a great deal about the factions, but I understand something of motivations and their effect on events and consequences.
It matters our motivations in bringing about this war. I'm not talking about the public's motivations. Privately, our dear leaders, hoped for control of a country sitting on the largest oil field in the world, and democracy was an afterthought. You doubt me? Why no postwar plan then?
Public motivations for this war obviously created a great deal of delusion: we would be safer as a country if we attack Iraq, as though violence of that nature can guaruntee safety. I've always believed that an abiding principle of Dr. King's and Ghandi, is peaceful actions that ultimately encourage peace. Even if they disturb initially.
If we really cared about the Iraqi people, we would have never gone in in the first place, and we would have not backed the UN's sanctions on that pitiful country, harming their citizens. Shame on us. Shame, shame.
Peaceful protest all over the world, bocotts, alternatives created, this is what will defeat the tyranny of George Bush.
God be with the Iraqi people, and I hope they vote to kick us out.
Friday, January 28, 2005
Oppose the nomination of Alberto Gonzales
Do it for humanity. Do it for the tortured at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay. Do it because it is the right thing to do.
And please check out this list of bloggers who oppose the nomination of Alberto Gonzales, on the Dailykos blog.
Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Political Capital, and Fools
Are we an aberration, or are we a trend? There is a tsunami of public action by elected officials in this country, to destroy the social programs meant for the most needy of our lot.
And...the largely silent foreign government response to our actions in Iraq, may yet prove that we are a trend. Is their silence tacit approval of the American way, as it exists in this moment? Are these foreign governments hoping for better times to emerge, and using appeasement in the meantime?
Trends can be broken. Probabilities changed, altered.
Yes, some governments have withdrawn their troops from Iraq. This is an expedient way of saving lives, as much as a form of protest.
Perhaps governments are taking the silent approach so as to appease the monster, leaving its citizens to take up the mantle of "USA, Out of Iraq".
But remember the plight of children when there is but one, playground bully. The bully rules with terror, and sometimes violence. But allow one child to draw a line in the sand, punch the bully in the nose, and proclaim, "You will cross this boundary no more," and watch the bully reveal himself to be the coward that he is.
Who will draw a line in the sand? Who will punch the bully in the nose?
Our Senate is about to bend over backwards, or should I say, forwards, to approve an advocate of torture, someone who internally, with others, presided over a policy that harmed Iraqis, sometimes murdered them, and shamed the U.S. for an eternity. Not one senator has the courage to stand up to this man and vote against his nomination.
I just called Mary Landrieu's office. I could hear a pin drop as I asked the assistant why is it not a single senator, it looks like, will oppose the Gonzales nomination. Rumon has it, the assistant said, that democrats are saving up their political capital, for the supreme court nominations.
Or hiding the fact that they have no capital, because it was wasted when they chose not to oppose the war in Iraq, when they chose not to oppose the medicare bill, when many of them voted for the tax breaks for the rich, when not a single senator voted with Senator Boxer to challenge the electoral count in Ohio, when only 31 U.S. reps. had the courage to vote with Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, D-Ohio, to challenge the vote there.
What gives? And why? Why the hoarding of political capital? Since congress believes, apparently, that it is capital that is being saved, I will operate from that premise. Capital hoarded, is capital not invested. Capital hoarded is capital not spent to employ the people. Capital hoarded by a few is less, much less, capital for the many. Funny how the political strategy of our Congress mirrors our economic strategy these day.
When Congress finally shows some balls, and opposes the supreme court nominations, it will be a day late and a dollar short, in terms of credibility.
What is dissent, but a necessary exercise in human freedom?
The lack of dissent, leads to capitulation, and capitulation benefits no one, not those hoarding political capital, not those attempting to save their political ass, and not even those who are attempting to save their personal, private ass. Events have a way of catching up with a people, a nation.
We know dissent can be dangerous. Just look at Paul Wellstone. But dissent is made more dangerous by the lack of voices speaking up, the lack of involvement to reclaim our democracy. They can't assassinate all of us.
I believe many of Congress carry a secret, firm belief in their lack of safety. Many in Congress are afraid. There can be no other explanation for their continuous, inability to take on the bully on the playground.
Who will cross the line drawn in the sand by the bullies now in charge of our government, who are decimating our treasury, sending our young men and women to be in harm's way in Iraq, and dismantling our social programs?
Who will throw the first punch to break the nose of this bully?
Monday, January 03, 2005
A "Crisis" Invented
EDITORIAL
The Social Security Fear FactorPublished: January 3, 2005
If you've lent even one ear to the administration's recent comments on Social Security, you have no doubt heard President Bush and his aides asserting that a $10 trillion shortfall threatens the retirement system - and the economy itself. That $10 trillion hole is the basis of the president's claim last month that "the [Social Security] crisis is now." It's also the basis of the administration's claim that the cost of doing nothing to reform the system would be far greater than the cost of acting now.
Well, the $10 trillion figure is the closest you can get to pulling a number out of the air. Make that the ether. Starting last year, as the groundwork was being set for the emerging debate, the Social Security trustees took the liberty of projecting the system's solvency over infinity, rather than sticking to the traditional 75-year time horizon. That world-without-end assumption generates the scary $10 trillion estimate, and with it, Mr. Bush's putative rationale for dismantling Social Security in favor of a system centered on private savings accounts. The American Academy of Actuaries, the profession's premier trade association, objected to the change. In a letter to the trustees, the actuaries wrote that infinite projections provide "little if any useful information about the program's long-range finances and indeed are likely to mislead any [nonexpert] into believing that the program is in far worse financial condition than is actually indicated."
As it often does with dissenting professional opinion, the administration is ignoring the actuaries. But that doesn't alter the facts or common sense. If the $10 trillion figure is essentially bogus, so is the claim that Social Security is in crisis. The assertion that doing nothing would be costlier than enacting a privatization plan also turns out to be wrong, by the estimates of Congress's own budget agency.
Over a 75-year time frame, Social Security's shortfall is estimated by the Congressional Budget Office at $2 trillion and by the Social Security trustees at $3.7 trillion, a manageable sliver of the economy in each case. If the shortfall is on the low side, Social Security will be in the black until 2052, when it will be able to pay out 80 percent of the promised benefits. If it is on the high side, the system will pay full benefits until 2042, when it will cover 70 percent.
Contrary to Mr. Bush's frequent assertion that Social Security is constantly imperiled by political meddling, it has in fact been preserved and improved by political intervention throughout its 70-year history, most significantly in 1983. The system could - and should - be strengthened again by a modest package of benefit cuts and tax increases phased in over decades.
Instead, the administration wants workers to divert some of the payroll taxes that currently pay for Social Security into private investment accounts, in exchange for a much-reduced government benefit. To replace the taxes it would otherwise have collected - money it needs to pay benefits to current and near retirees - the government would borrow an estimated $2 trillion over the next 10 years or so and even more thereafter.
In effect, the administration's plan would get rid of the financial burden of Social Security by getting rid of Social Security. The plan shifts the financial risk of growing old onto each individual and off of the government - where it is dispersed among a very large population, as with any sensible insurance policy. In a privatized system, you may do fine, but your fellow retirees may not, or vice versa.
In any event, doing well under privatization is relative. Congress's budget agency analyzed the privatized plan that is widely regarded as the template for future legislation and found that total retirement benefits - including payouts from the private account plus the government subsidy - would be less than under the present system. The amount available from the privatized system was less even after midcentury, when the current system is projected to come up short.
Page 2 of 2)
It should come as no shock that individual investors might not do as well as hoped. The stock market's historical returns - some 7 percent a year - are predicated on a hypothetical investor who bought an array of stocks in the past, reinvested all dividends, never cashed in and never paid commissions or fees. That's not how investing works in the real world. An especially grave danger is that investors would withdraw their funds before retirement, a pattern that is pronounced in 401(k) plans. It would be politically very difficult to refuse people access to accounts that were sold to them on the premise that they - not the government - would own them.
The Congressional Budget Office analysis also likely understates the costs to individuals of privatizing Social Security. The borrowing that would be needed to establish private accounts could lead to higher interest rates, a weaker dollar and slower economic growth. It is also likely that future tax hikes would be required to cover the interest payments on the additional national debt.
The only hands-down winner would be Wall Street, as fees to manage millions of accounts poured in. (Those fees, not incidentally, would come out of your return.) Current stockholders would also stand to benefit, as increased demand pushed up stock prices, giving existing owners a gain at the expense of newcomers who would be forced to buy high. The affluent, who could afford professional investing advice, would also be advantaged, even though everyone would be taking the same risks.
The zeal over privatization is fueled by the belief of Mr. Bush and his supporters that free-market fixes are appropriate for virtually every problem. That faith is misguided. For a society to be functional and humane, it's not enough that some people have a chance to be rich in old age. Rather, all old people must have the dignity of financial security, and that requires universal coverage.
Social Security is the core tier of old-age support, replacing about a third of preretirement income for a typical retiree and providing inflation-proof income for life - a feature not available in private accounts. Its purpose is not to supplant other retirement investing, but to provide a crucial safety net. Anyone who wants to maintain his or her standard of living into old age must also amass substantial personal savings and investments. To introduce the same risk into the core tier of benefits that already exists for the bulk of one's retirement savings would be as unfair as it is unwise.
If Mr. Bush were not so serious about privatizing Social Security, his urgency would be silly. Compared with other challenges looming for the government, it's a non-problem. The shortfall in the Medicare hospital insurance fund is two to three times the size of the Social Security shortfall, and that fund is projected to be insolvent some two to three decades before Social Security. Taken together, the costs of the Medicare prescription benefit and of making the tax cuts permanent - Mr. Bush's two main domestic initiatives - are 5 to 8.5 times larger. And his hair is on fire over Social Security?
One of the most distressing aspects of the debate over Social Security privatization is that it distracts from more pressing issues and obscures better solutions to the problem of secure retirement. A future editorial will discuss new strategies to increase private savings outside of Social Security that draw on market theory and behavioral economics and are more promising than rehashing the same tired formula of tax-sheltered savings accounts. In the meantime, however, Mr. Bush and his supporters will be pursuing their idée fixe of privatization. It's bad policy. And it's bad politics, too, driven by reflex, ideology and special interests, and sustained by conformism that masquerades as party discipline. Lawmakers who still value their right and obligation to think for themselves - and to act in the best interest of their constituents - must champion solutions that will build on Social Security, not undermine it.
Attention, Bloggers, Attention, Attention
On the Internet, a volunteer army of bloggers escalated their guerrilla war against the mainstream media… Nevertheless, they stay on the margins—because, like all insurgents, they're about sniping, not governing.
—Andrew Sullivan, in Time's "Person of the Year" issue.
No, Mr. Andrew, the bloggers, the media ought not to govern, anyone but themselves. I would say though, that the blogger spirit of self-governance is a bit more honest, direct and real than the self-governance within the press.
We respond, and have the freedom to respond, exactly as we feel and believe. Why do we have this freedom? Because we nurture it with our writings, and it is our inherent right as individuals. We police and govern ourselves, and each other, with criticism, comments, reviews, essays, emails; we are the only form of free press remaining in this country.
The press's need for self-governance reflects a whole other set of values: what will the corporate sponsorship think. There may no longer be a need to ask such a question, though, because the identity of corporation and media have so merged, to be now indistinguishable, even to the parties involved.
Does a news anchor on MSNBC question the version of the news she is to read that day? She might feel twinges of remorse, or awareness of the deliberate bias, but she might also set aside these thoughts as not belonging in her newfound reality any longer. She has arrived. She has succeeded. And she can't do without the salary because the house has been bought, along with the BMW. She is another willing dupe of the corporate machine that same machine that gobbles bites of freedom of the press whenever it can, and shits the news you and I hear.
We are expected to ingest this shit as though it were the holy grail. Day after day, night after night, the talking heads bobble and gaggle in their self-importance, sucking a cock or two or being fellated themselves, it is all about me, they say and my views, only they don't see that they have already been swallowed by the machine, and are completely deluded by their self-promoted sense of importance, pawns in the matrix itself, willingly self-delusional, paying homage to the king of all delusions, that cock-sucker in the whitehouse, and his gang of follies.
Blog on, fellow citizens, Blog on a though your life depended on it. And it may. Blog on as though it were the truly democratic thing to do. Because it is. Blog on as a form of individualistic, self-expression, the kind originally encouraged and enhanced by our Constitution. It may be the one Constitutional freedom, this freedom of speech, that in the end, saves all of the others.
I give you Matt Taibbi's response, in the New York Press, to Andrew Sullivan's quote above:
It's amazing how useful a bad writer can be in exposing the vagaries of mainstream thought.
Sullivan probably doesn't mean to use the word "governing" in the above passage. He probably needs a phrase, something like "being good citizens," or "behaving responsibly." Sullivan is trying to compare bloggers to the Iraqi insurgency—a wrongheaded and unfair comparison to begin with, one that outrages both parties—but the way he writes it, he implies that the real media's natural role is to govern. In the shaky parallel structure of this sentence, bloggers and guerrilla insurgents make up one pair, while mainstream media and legitimate ruling government make up the other.
We know what he means, but this is the kind of thing one doesn't usually say out loud. Last time I checked, the press was not supposed to be part of the ruling structure in our system of government. On the contrary—and I'm just going by Jefferson and Madison, so I may be out of date—it's supposed to be an antagonist to it, a check on civil power. Sullivan's sentence would make fine rhetorical sense in Myanmar, the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany, but in the United States one hopes it is just bad writing.
It's a very odd thing, watching the reaction of the so-called mainstream media to the phenomenon of blogs. The response is almost universally one of total disdain and disgust, but the stated reasons vary.
An argument I see sometimes and occasionally even agree with is that bloggers don't have the same factual and ethical standards that the mainstream media supposedly has, which leads to such fiascoes as the bogus Kerry-mistress story sweeping the country, or the name of Kobe's accuser being made public.
But more often than not, the gripe about bloggers isn't that they're unethical. It's that they're small. In the minds of people like Sullivan, not being part of a big structure intrinsically degrades the amateur, makes him a member of a separate and lower class; whereas in fact the solidarity of any journalist should always lie with the blogger before it lies with, say, the president. Journalists are all on the same side, or ought to be, anyway.
Not Time magazine, though. Time lay with the president. Time big-time lay with the president. What was great about Sullivan's "Year of the Insurgents" column last week was how beautifully it threw the rest of the "Person of the Year" issue into contrast. Here's Sullivan bitching about bloggers needing to stay on the margins where they belong; meanwhile, his "respectable" media company is joyously prancing back and forth along 190 glossy pages with George Bush's cock wedged firmly in its mouth.
The "Person of the Year" issue has always been a symphonic tribute to the heroic possibilities of pompous sycophancy, but the pomposity of this year's issue bests by a factor of at least two or three the pomposity of any previous issue. From the Rushmorean cover portrait of Bush (which over the headline "An American Revolutionary" was such a brazen and transparent effort to recall George Washington that it was embarrassing) to the "Why We Fight" black-and-white portraiture of the aggrieved president sitting somberly at the bedside of the war-wounded, this issue is positively hysterical in its iconolatry. One even senses that this avalanche of overwrought power worship is inspired by the very fact of George Bush's being such an obviously unworthy receptacle for such attentions. From beginning to end, the magazine behaves like a man who knocks himself out making an extravagant six-course candlelit dinner for a blow-up doll, in an effort to convince himself he's really in love.
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