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| From: NY TRANSFER NEWS |
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| Subj: Blum: London, Another Casualty of "War o |
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Those laws are still on the books and, as written, will be very difficult to
change. And what Iraqi governing body will be able to make the US close its
bases, including the new ones currently being built? Saving Africa. For
whom? We"ve just gone through one of the periodic Save Africa campaigns --
the G-8 was meeting, Live 8 was performing, aid was increasing, debts were
canceling ... Paul McCartney, Bono, Stevie Wonder ... "Make Poverty History"
... But does anyone doubt that after the songs have been sung and the
current campaign is history Africa will be swimming in the very same river
of misery?
Even if all the G-8 pledges of aid are fulfilled, which, if history is any
guide, will not come close; and by 2010, the target date for the aid, those
making the pledges are likely to be out of office for some time. One can
offer any number of reasons for this sad state of affairs, not least of
which are the workings of globalization as championed by the G-8,
particularly their subsidies for their own agricultural products, which
African farmers can"t compete with, and IMF structural adjustment, which
forces countries receiving aid to cut back on all manner of social services
and open up the economy to the multinationals. It is to advance such ends
that the G8 exists; it is not, truth be told, a charity to help poorer
nations.
But also high on the list of reasons for failure is corruption. In the past,
much of whatever real aid was forthcoming didn"t reach those most in need,
while African government officials drove around in Mercedes Benzes and flew
to Switzerland to be closer to their money. What can be done about this?
Find better leaders of course; leaders genuinely concerned about the welfare
of those on the bottom. Hmmm.
But what would happen if a Salvador Allende or a Jean-Bertrand Aristide or a
Fidel Castro or a Hugo Chavez came to power in an African country? The
United States would do its very best to overthrow him, or, failing that,
make his rule as difficult as possible. Such was the fate of Patrice Lumumba
in the Congo and Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana in the 1960s, and Agostinho Neto in
Angola beginning in the 1970s.
Washington also installed its own special monsters like Hissan Habr€ in Chad
in the 1980s and Joseph Mobutu in Zaire for three decades ending in the
1990s. The US didn"t have to subvert Nelson Mandela because in office he was
not particularly progressive, instituting an extensive program of
privatization and IMF structural adjustment, which did nothing to relieve
the destitution of millions of South Africans.
Once more with feeling On July 2, an American airstrike in the mountains of
Afghanistan destroyed a house, and as villagers gathered to look at the
damage, a US warplane dropped a second bomb on the same target. The second
bomb killed 17 civilians, including women and children, according to the
governor of the province. The US military confirmed civilian deaths but said
the numbers were unclear, stating that the targeted house was a known
operating base for terrorist attacks. The statement added that US forces
"regret the loss of innocent lives."
Two days later, after the Afghanistan government of American ally Hamid
Karzai also criticized the bombing attacks, the US State Department
declared: "We deeply regret any loss of civilian life in the course of
military actions."{3}
In 1999, during the 78-day NATO (read US) bombing of Yugoslavia, "We regret
the loss of innocent lives" was a common _expression from the mouths of NATO
spokesmen. It was also an _expression regularly used by the IRA following
one of their misdirected bombings in Northern Ireland. But the IRA actions
were regularly called "terrorist".
If all the economists were laid end to end they still wouldn"t reach any
useful conclusions
The poor people of the world fell off the cosmic agenda centuries ago. In
India, the homeless are large enough to constitute fair-sized cities, the
slums large enough to constitute a major metropolis; "crushing poverty" or
"dirt poor" don"t quite capture it; "a food-free diet" comes closer. We all
know the picture. The Wall Street Journal, though, sees things we don"t.
"India"s economy expanded a larger-than-expected 7 percent during the three
months ended March 31," they breathlessly informed us July 5. "India"s gross
domestic product has recorded some of the biggest growth in the world this
year."
Gross domestic product ... that"s a real beauty that one; you can put almost
anything you want in it, like it"s a garbage can; anything called a product,
anything called a service. You wanna be a good citizen and increase the GDP?
Burn down a building (which then has to be rebuilt), or go out and kill
someone (services of undertakers, cemeteries, lawyers, etc.) As one
economist has noted, marry your cleaning person, and you will make GDP drop
(a paid service changing to an unpaid one). So much of it is arbitrary, so
arbitrarily complex; and then the complexity is multiplied by comparing the
GDP among different countries. Who knows what India puts into its particular
garbage can? Is it the exact same garbage calculated in the exact same
manner as in the United States? Hardly likely.
But economists, politicians, the media, they all make use of their favorite
Leading Economic Indicators to paint the kind of picture they want us to
see; since India is waist-deep in the joys of globalization it"s vital to
globalization cheer leaders like the Wall Street Journal to paint smiley
faces.
What would you like to believe against all evidence to the contrary? "A few
months ago I told the American people that I did not trade arms for
hostages. My heart and my best intentions still tell me that is true, but
the facts and evidence tell me it is not." President Ronald Reagan, 1987{4}
Reagan may well have been in his pre-Alzheimer"s condition when he made his
famous denials about not trading arms for the American hostages held in
Iran, but what is the excuse for the fantasies of present-day Republicans?
Like Vice President Dick Cheney, revealing unsuspected gifts as a humorist
by declaring in June that prisoners at the US detention center at Guant€namo
Bay, Cuba are well treated. "They"re living in the tropics. They"re well
fed. They"ve got everything they could possibly want."{5}
Not to be outdone, Congressman Duncan Hunter of California held a news
conference a few days later concerning Guant€namo. Displaying some yummy
traditional meals, he said the government spends $12 a day for food for each
person. "So the point is that the inmates in Guant€namo have never eaten
better, they"ve never been treated better, and they"ve never been more
comfortable in their lives than in this situation.{6}
Normally, I don"t bother commenting on the tales told by the dial-a-lie
Bushpeople; such stuff is as surprising and newsworthy as Paris Hilton
posing in scanty attire. But what I find interesting is how well the
Bushpeople have grasped a fundamental truth, first given great currency by a
certain Mr. A. Hitler, originally of Austria. This individual, though often
castigated, actually arrived at a number of very perceptive insights into
how the world worked. One of them was this:
"The great masses of the people in the very bottom of their hearts tend to
be corrupted rather than consciously and purposely evil ... therefore, in
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--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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