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01 Dec 15:16

John Cusack and Arundhati Roy: Things That Can and Cannot Be Said

by John Cusack, AlterNet
John Cusack in conversation with Arundhati Roy.
"Every nation-state tends towards the imperial - that is the point. Through banks, armies, secret police, propaganda, courts and jails, treaties, taxes, laws and orders, myths of civil obedience, assumptions of civic virtue at the top. Still it should be said of the political left, we expect something better. And correctly. We put more trust in those who show a measure of compassion, who denounce the hideous social arrangements that make war inevitable and human desire omnipresent; which fosters corporate selfishness, panders to appetites and disorder, waste the earth."—Daniel Berrigan, poet, Jesuit priest.

***

One morning as I scanned the news - horror in the Middle East, Russia and America facing off in the Ukraine, I thought of Edward Snowden and wondered how he was holding up in Moscow. I began to imagine a conversation between him and Daniel Ellsberg (who leaked the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam war). And then, interestingly, in my imagination a third person made her way into the room - the writer Arundhati Roy. It occurred to me that trying to get the three of them together would be a fine thing to do.

I had heard Roy speak in Chicago, and had met her several times. One gets the feeling very quickly with her and comes to the rapid conclusion that there are no pre-formatted assumptions or givens. Through our conversations I became very aware that what gets lost, or goes unsaid, in most of the debates around surveillance and whistleblowing is a perspective and context from outside the United States and Europe. The debates around them have gradually centred around corporate overreach and the rights of privacy of US citizens.

The philosopher/theosophist Rudolf Steiner says that any perception or truth that is isolated and removed from its larger context ceases to be true:

"When any single thought emerges in consciousness, I cannot rest until this is brought into harmony with the rest of my thinking. Such an isolated concept, apart from the rest of my mental world, is entirely unendurable...there exists an inwardly sustained harmony among thoughts...when our thought world bears the character of inner harmony, we can feel we are in possession of the truth.... All elements are related one to the other...every such isolation is an abnormality, an untruth."

In other words, every isolated idea that doesn't relate to others yet is taken as true (as a kind of niche truth) is not just bad politics, it is somehow also fundamentally untrue.... To me, Arundhati Roy's writing and thinking strives for such unity of thought. And for her, like for Steiner, reason comes from the heart.

I knew Dan and Ed because we all worked together on the Freedom of Press Foundation. And I knew Roy admired both of them greatly, but she was disconcerted by the photograph of Ed cradling the American flag in his arms that had appeared on the cover of Wired. On the other hand, she was impressed by what he had said in the interview - in particular that one of the factors that pushed him into doing what he did was the NSA's (National Security Agency) sharing real-time data of Palestinians in the United States with the Israeli government.

She thought what Dan and Ed had done were tremendous acts of courage, though as far as I could tell, her own politics were more in sync with Julian Assange's. "Snowden is the thoughtful, courageous saint of liberal reform," she once said to me. "And Julian Assange is a sort of radical, feral prophet who has been prowling this wilderness since he was 16 years old."

Daniel Ellsberg, Arundhati Roy, Edward Snowden and John Cusack gathering in Moscow.

I had recorded many of our conversations, Roy's and mine - for no reason other than that they were so intense I felt I needed to listen to them several times over to understand what we were really saying to each other.

I'll roll the tapes:

Arundhati Roy: All I'm saying is: what does that American flag mean to people outside of America? What does it mean in Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Palestine, Pakistan - even in India, your new natural ally?

JC: In his (Ed's) situation, he's got very little margin for error when it comes to controlling his image, his messaging, and he's done an incredible job up to this point. But you're troubled by that isolated iconography?

AR: Forget the genocide of American Indians, forget slavery, forget Hiroshima, forget Cambodia, forget Vietnam, you know....

JC: Why do we have to forget?
(Laughter)

AR: I'm just saying that, at one level, I am happy - awed - that there are people of such intelligence, such compassion, that have defected from the State. They are heroic. Absolutely. They've risked their lives, their freedom...but then there's that part of me that thinks...how could you ever have believed in it? What do you feel betrayed by? Is it possible to have a moral State? A moral superpower? I can't understand those people who believe that the excesses are just aberrations.... Of course, I understand it intellectually, but...part of me wants to retain that incomprehension.... Sometimes my anger gets in the way of their pain.

JC: Fair enough, but don't you think you're being a little harsh?

AR: Maybe (laughs). But then, having ranted as I have, I always say that the grand thing in the United States is that there has been real resistance from within. There have been soldiers who've refused to fight, who've burned their medals, who've been conscientious objectors. I don't think we have ever had a conscientious objector in the Indian Army. Not one. In the United States, you have this proud history, you know? And Snowden is part of that.

JC: My gut tells me Snowden is more radical than he lets on. He has to be so tactical....

AR: Just since 9/11...we're supposed to forget whatever happened in the past because 9/11 is where history begins. Okay, since 2001, how many wars have been started, how many countries have been destroyed? So now ISIS is the new evil - but how did that evil begin? Is it more evil to do what ISIS is doing, which is to go around massacring people - mainly, but not only, Shi'a - slitting throats? By the way, the US-backed militias are doing similar things, except they don't show beheadings of white folks on TV. Or is it more evil to contaminate the water supply, to bomb a place with depleted uranium, to cut off the supply of medicines, to say that half a million children dying from economic sanctions is a "hard price," but "worth it"?

JC: Madeleine Albright said so - about Iraq.

Edward Snowden on the cover of Wired magazine.

AR: Yes. Iraq. Is it alright to force a country to disarm, and then bomb it? To continue to create mayhem in the area? To pretend that you are fighting radical Islamism, when you're actually toppling all the regimes that are not radical Islamist regimes? Whatever else their faults may be, they were not radical Islamist states - Iraq was not, Syria is not, Libya was not. The most radical fundamentalist Islamist state is, of course, your ally Saudi Arabia. In Syria, you're on the side of those who want to depose Assad, right? And then suddenly, you're with Assad, wanting to fight ISIS. It's like some crazed, bewildered, rich giant bumbling around in a poor area with his pockets stuffed with money, and lots of weapons - just throwing stuff around. You don't even really know who you're giving it to - which murderous faction you are arming against which - feeling very relevant when actually.... All this destruction that has come in the wake of 9/11, all the countries that have been bombed...it ignites and magnifies these ancient antagonisms. They don't necessarily have to do with the United States; they pre-date the existence of the United States by centuries. But the United States is unable to understand how irrelevant it is, actually. And how wicked.... Your short-term gains are the rest of the world's long-term disasters - for everybody, including yourselves. And, I'm sorry, I've been saying you and the United States or America, when I actually mean the US government. There's a difference. Big one.

JC: Yeah.

AR: Conflating the two the way I just did is stupid...walking into a trap - it makes it easy for people to say, "Oh, she's anti-American, he's anti-American," when we're not. Of course not. There are things I love about America. Anyway, what is a country? When people say, "Tell me about India," I say, "Which India?.... The land of poetry and mad rebellion? The one that produces haunting music and exquisite textiles? The one that invented the caste system and celebrates the genocide of Muslims and Sikhs and the lynching of Dalits? The country of dollar billionaires? Or the one in which 800 million live on less than half-a-dollar a day? Which India?" When people say "America," which one? Bob Dylan's or Barack Obama's? New Orleans or New York? Just a few years ago India, Pakistan and Bangladesh were one country. Actually, we were many countries if you count the princely states.... Then the British drew a line, and now we're three countries, two of them pointing nukes at each other - the radical Hindu bomb and the radical Muslim bomb.

JC: Radical Islam and US exceptionalism are in bed with each other. They're like lovers, methinks....

AR: It's a revolving bed in a cheap motel.... Radical Hinduism is snuggled up somewhere in there, too. It's hard to keep track of the partners, they change so fast. Each new baby they make is the latest progeny of the means to wage eternal war.

JC: If you help manufacture an enemy that's really evil, you can point to the fact that it's really evil, and say, "Hey, it's really evil."

AR: Your enemies are always manufactured to suit your purpose, right? How can you have a good enemy? You have to have an utterly evil enemy - and then the evilness has to progress.

JC: It has to metastasise, right?

AR: Yes. And then...how often are we going to keep on saying the same things?

JC: Yeah, you get worn out by it.

AR: Truly, there's no alternative to stupidity. Cretinism is the mother of fascism. I have no defence against it, really....

JC: It's a real problem.
(Both laugh)

AR: It isn't the lies they tell, it's the quality of the lies that becomes so humiliating. They've stopped caring about even that. It's all a play. Hiroshima and Nagasaki happen, there are hundreds of thousands of dead, and the curtain comes down, and that's the end of that. Then Korea happens. Vietnam happens, all that happened in Latin America happens. And every now and then, this curtain comes down and history begins anew. New moralities and new indignations are manufactured...in a disappeared history.

JC: And a disappeared context.

AR: Yes, without any context or memory. But the people of the world have memories. There was a time when the women of Afghanistan - at least in Kabul - were out there. They were allowed to study, they were doctors and surgeons, walking free, wearing what they wanted. That was when it was under Soviet occupation. Then the United States starts funding the mujahideen. Reagan called them Afghanistan's "founding fathers." It reincarnates the idea of "jehad," virtually creates the Taliban. And what happens to the women? In Iraq, until before the war, the women were scientists, museum directors, doctors. I'm not valourising Saddam Hussein or the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, which was brutal and killed hundreds of thousands of people - it was the Soviet Union's Vietnam. I'm just saying that now, in these new wars, whole countries have slipped into mayhem - the women have just been pushed back into their burqas - and not by choice. I mean, to me, one thing is a culture in which women have not broken out of their subservience, but the horror of tomorrow, somebody turning around and telling me: "Arundhati, just go back into your veil, and sit in your kitchen and don't come out." Can you imagine the violence of that? That's what has happened to these women. In 2001, we were told that the war in Afghanistan was a feminist mission. The marines were liberating Afghan women from the Taliban. Can you really bomb feminism into a country? And now, after 25 years of brutal war - 10 years against the Soviet occupation, 15 years of US occupation - the Taliban is riding back to Kabul and will soon be back to doing business with the United States. I don't live in the United States but when I'm here, I begin to feel like my head is in a grinder - my brains are being scrambled by this language that they're using. Outside it's not so hard to understand because people know the score. But here, so many seem to swallow the propaganda so obediently.

Kabul, Afghanistan -- Photo from the 1960s, before the US started backing radical religious groups.

So that was one exchange. Here's another:

JC: So, what do you think? What do we think are the things we can't talk about in a civilised society, if you're a good, domesticated house pet?

AR: (Laughs) The occasional immorality of preaching nonviolence?
(This was a reference to Walking with the Comrades, Roy's account of her time spent with armed guerrillas in the forests of central India who were fighting paramilitary forces and vigilante militias trying to clear indigenous people off their land, which had been handed over to mining companies.)

JC: In the United States, we can talk about ISIS, but we can't talk about Palestine.

AR: Oh, in India, we can talk about Palestine but we can't talk about Kashmir. Nowadays, we can't talk about the daylight massacre of thousands of Muslims in Gujarat, because Narendra Modi might become prime minister. (As he did, subsequently in May 2014.) They like to say, "Let bygones be bygones." Bygones. Nice word...old-fashioned.

JC: Sounds like a sweet goodbye.

AR: And we can decide the most convenient place on which to airdrop history's markers. History is really a study of the future, not the past.

JC: I just want to know what I can't talk about, so I'll avoid it in social settings.

AR: You can say, for example, that it's wrong to behead people physically, like with a knife, which implies that it's alright to blow their heads off with a drone...isn't it?

JC: Well a drone is so surgical...and it's like, a quick thing. They don't suffer, right?

AR: But some muzzlims, as you call them, are also good, professional butchers. They do it quick.

JC: What else can and cannot be said?

AR: This is a lovely theme.... About Vietnam, you can say, "These Asians, they don't value their life, and so they force us to bear the burden of genocide." This is more or less a direct quote.

JC: From Robert McNamara, who then went on to "serve the poor."

AR: Who, before he supervised the destruction at Vietnam, planned the bombing of Tokyo in which 80,000 people were killed in a single night. Then he became the president of the World Bank, where he took great care of the world's poor. At the end of his life, he was tormented by one question - "How much evil do you have to do in order to do good?" That's a quote, too.

JC: It's tough love.

AR: Fucking selfless stuff.... We had these conversations sitting at my kitchen table, in New York corner booths, in a Puerto Rican diner that became a favourite spot. On impulse, I called New Delhi.

Wanna go to Moscow and meet Dan Ellsberg and Ed Snowden?
Don't talk rubbish...
Listen...if I can pull it off, should we go?

There was silence, and I felt the smile over the phone.

Yaa, Maan. Let's go.

Part 2: "We Brought You the Promise of the Future, but Our Tongue Stammered and Barked..."

by Arundhati Roy

John Cusack and Arundhati Roy meet with Snowden at room 1001 at the Ritz-Carlton in Moscow.

My phone rang at three in the morning. It was John Cusack asking me if I would go with him to Moscow to meet Edward Snowden. I'd met John several times; I'd walked the streets of Chicago with him, a hulking fellow hunched into his black hoo-die, trying not to be recognised. I'd seen and loved several of the iconic films he has written and acted in and I knew that he'd come out early on Snowden's side with The Snowden Principle, an essay he wrote only days after the story broke and the US government was calling for Snowden's head. We had had conversations that usually lasted several hours, but I embraced Cusack as a true comrade only after I opened his refrigerator and found nothing but an old brass bus horn and a pair of small antlers in his freezer.

I told him that I would love to meet Edward Snowden in Moscow.

The other person who would be travelling with us was Daniel Ellsberg - Snowden of the '60s - the whistleblower who made public the Pentagon papers during the Vietnam war. I had met Dan briefly, more than 10 years ago, when he gave me his book, Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers.

Dan comes down pretty ruthlessly on himself in his book. Only by reading it - and you should - can you even begin to understand the disquieting combination of guilt and pride he has lived with for about 50 of his 84 years. This makes Dan a complicated, conflicted man - half-hero, half-haunted spectre - a man who has tried to do penance for his past deeds by speaking, writing, protesting and getting arrested in acts of civil disobedience for decades.

In the first few chapters of Secrets, he tells of how, in 1965, when he was a young employee in the Pentagon, orders came straight from Robert McNamara's office ("It was like an order from God") to gather "atrocity details" about Viet Cong attacks on civilians and military bases anywhere in Vietnam. McNamara, Secretary of Defence at the time, needed the information to justify "retaliatory action" - which essentially meant he needed a justification for bombing South Vietnam. The "atrocity" gatherer that "God" chose was Daniel Ellsberg:

I had no doubts or hesitation as I went down to the Joint War Room to do my best. That's the memory I have to deal with.... Briefly I told the colonel I needed details of atrocities....

Above all I wanted the gory details of the injuries to the Americans at Pleiku and especially at Qui Nhon. I told the colonel "I need blood."... Most of the reports didn't go into gory details, but some of them did. The district chief had been disemboweled in front of the village, and his family, his wife and four children had been killed too. "Great! That's what I want to know! That's what we need! More of that! Can you find other stories like that?"

Within weeks, the campaign called Rolling Thunder was announced. American jets began to bomb South Vietnam. Something like 175,000 marines were deployed in that small country on the other side of the world, 8,000 miles away from Washington, DC. The war would go on for eight more years. (According to the testimonies in the recently published book about the Vietnam War Kill Anything that Moves by Nick Turse, what the US army did in Vietnam as it moved from village to village with orders to "kill anything that moves" - which included women, children and livestock - was just as vicious, though on a much larger scale, as anything ISIS is doing now. It had the added benefit of being backed up by the most powerful air force in the world.)

By the end of the Vietnam war, three million Vietnamese people and 58,000 US troops had been killed and enough bombs had been dropped to cover the whole of Vietnam in several inches of steel. Here's Dan again: "I have never been able to explain to myself - so I can't explain to anyone else - why I stayed in the Pentagon job after the bombing started. Simple careerism isn't an adequate explanation; I wasn't wedded to that role or to more research from the inside; I'd learned as much as I needed to. That nights' work was the worst thing I've ever done."

When I first read Secrets, I was unsettled by my admiration and sympathy for Dan on the one hand and my anger, not at him of course, but at what he so candidly admitted to having been part of on the other. Those two feelings ran on clear, parallel tracks, refusing to converge. I knew that when my raw nerves met his, we would be friends, which is how it turned out.

Perhaps my initial unease, my inability to react simply and generously to what was clearly an act of courage and conscience on Dan's part had to do with my having grown up in Kerala, where, in 1957, one of the first-ever democratically elected Communist governments in the world came to power. So, like Vietnam, we too had jungles, rivers, rice fields, and Communists. I grew up in a sea of red flags, workers' processions and chants of Inquilab Zindabad (Long Live the Revolution)! Had a strong wind blown the Vietnam war a couple of thousand miles westward, I would have been a "gook" - a kill-able, bomb-able, Napalm-able type - another body to add local colour in Apocalypse Now. (Hollywood won the Vietnam war, even if America didn't. And Vietnam is a Free Market Economy now. So who am I to be taking things to heart all these years later?)

But back then, in Kerala, we didn't need the Pentagon papers to make us furious about the Vietnam war. I remember as a very young child speaking at my first school debate, dressed as a Viet Cong woman, in my mother's printed sarong. I spoke with tutored indignation about the "Running Dogs of Imperialism." I played with children called Lenin and Stalin. (There weren't any little Leons or baby Trotskys around - maybe they'd have been exiled or shot.) Instead of the Pentagon papers, we could have done with some whistle-blowing about the reality of Stalin's purges or China's Great Leap Forward and the millions who perished in them. But all that was dismissed by the Communist parties as Western propaganda or explained away as a necessary part of Revolution.

But despite my reservations and criticism of the various Communist parties in India (my novel The God of Small Things was denounced by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in Kerala as anti-Communist), I believe that the decimation of the Left (by which I do not mean the defeat of the Soviet Union or the fall of the Berlin Wall) has led us to the embarrassingly foolish place we find ourselves in right now. Even capitalists must surely admit, that intellectually at least, socialism is a worthy opponent. It imparts intelligence even to its adversaries. Our tragedy today is not just that millions of people who called themselves communist or socialist were physically liquidated in Vietnam, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, not just that China and Russia, after all that revolution, have become capitalist economies, not just that the working class has been ruined in the United States and its unions dismantled, not just that Greece has been brought to its knees, or that Cuba will soon be assimilated into the free market - it is also that the language of the Left, thediscourse of the Left, has been marginalised and is sought to be eradicated. The debate - even though the protagonists on both sides betrayed everything they claimed to believe in - used to be about social justice, equality, liberty, and redistribution of wealth. All we seem to be left with now is paranoid gibberish about a War on Terror whose whole purpose is to expand the War, increase the Terror, and obfuscate the fact that the wars of today are not aberrations but systemic, logical exercises to preserve a way of life whose delicate pleasures and exquisite comforts can only be delivered to the chosen few by a continuous, protracted war for hegemony - Lifestyle Wars.

What I wanted to ask Ellsberg and Snowden was, can these be kind wars? Considerate wars? Good wars? Wars that respect human rights?

The comical understudy for what used to be a conversation about justice is what the New York Times recently called 'Bill and Melinda Gates's Pillow Talk' about "what they have learned from giving away $34 billion," which according to a back-of-the-envelope calculation by the Timescolumnist Nicholas Kristof, has saved the lives of 33 million children from diseases like polio:

"On the (Gates) foundation there's always a lot of pillow talk," Melinda said. "We do push hard on each other." ...Bill thought Melinda focused too much on field visits while Melinda thought Bill spent too much times with officials.... They also teach each other, Melinda says. In the case of gender, they've followed her lead in investing in contraception, but also they developed new metrics to satisfy Bill. So among their lessons learned from 15 years of philanthropy, one applies to any couple.... Listen to your spouse! (NYT, July 18, 2015).

They plan - the article goes on to say without irony - to save 61 million more children's lives in the next 15 years. (That, going by the same back-of-the-envelope calculation, would cost another $61 billion, at least.) All that money in one boardroom-bed - how do they sleep at night, Bill and Melinda? If you are nice to them and draw up a good project proposal, they may give you a grant so that you can also save the world in your own small way.

But seriously - what is one couple doing with that much money, which is just a small percentage of the indecent profits they make from the corporation they run? And even that small percentage runs into billions. It's enough to set the world's agenda, enough to buy government policy, determine university curricula, fund NGOs and activists. It gives them the power to mould the whole world to their will. Forget the politics, is that even polite? Even if it's "good" will? Who's to decide what's good and what's not?

So that, roughly, is where we are right now, politically speaking.

$34 Billion Charity: What is one couple doing with that much money, a small percentage of their indecent profits?

Coming back to the 3 am phone call - by dawn I was worrying about my air ticket and getting a Russian visa. I learned that I needed a hard copy of a confirmed hotel booking in Moscow, sealed and approved by the Ministry of Something or the Other in Russia. How the hell was I to do that? I had only three days. John's wizard assistant organised it and couriered it to me. My heart missed a beat when I saw it. The Ritz-Carlton. My last political outing had been some weeks spent walking with Maoist guerrillas and sleeping underneath the stars in the Dandakaranya forest. And this next one was going to be in the Ritz?

It wasn't just the money, it was...I don't know.... I had never imagined the Ritz-Carlton as a base camp - or a venue - for any kind of real politics. (In any case, the Ritz has turned out to be the venue of choice for several Snowden interviews, including John Oliver's famous conversation with him about "dick pics.")

I drove past the long, snaking queues outside the heavily guarded US consulate to get to the Russian embassy. It was empty. There was nobody at the counters marked "passport," "visa forms," or "collection." There was no bell, no way of attracting anybody's attention. Through a half-open door, I caught an occasional, fleeting glimpse of people moving around in the backroom. No queue whatsoever in the embassy of a country with a history of every imaginable type of queue. Varlam Shalamov describes them so vividly in Kolyma Tales, his stories about the labour camp in Kolyma - queues for food, for shoes, for a meagre scrap of clothing - a fight to the death over a piece of stale bread. I remembered a poem about queues by Anna Akhmatova - who unlike many of her peers, had survived the Gulag. Well, sort of:

In the terrible years of the Yezhov terror, I spent
Seventeen months in the prison lines of Leningrad.
Once someone 'recognised' me. Then a woman with
bluish lips standing behind me, who, of course, had
never heard me called by name before, woke up from
the stupor to which everybody had succumbed and
whispered in my ear (everybody spoke in whispers there):
"Can you describe this?"
And I answered: "Yes I can."
Then something that looked like a smile passed
over what had once been her face.

Akhmatova, her first husband Nikolay Gumilyov, Osip Mandelstam and three other poets were part of Acmeism, a poets' guild. In 1921, Gumilyov was shot by a firing squad for counter-revolutionary activity. Mandelstam was arrested in 1934 for writing an ode to Stalin that showed signs of satire and was not convincing enough in its praise. He died years later, starved and deranged, in a transit camp in Siberia. His poetry (which survived on scraps of paper hidden in pillow cases and cooking vessels, or committed to memory by people who loved him) was retrieved by his widow and by Anna Akhmatova.

This is the history of surveillance in the country that has offered asylum to Ed Snowden - wanted by the US government for exposing a surveillance apparatus that makes the operatives of the KGB and the Stassi look like preschool children. If the Snowden story were fiction, a good editor would dismiss its mirrored narrative symmetry as a cheap gimmick.

A man finally appeared at one of the counters at the Russian embassy and accepted my passport and visa form (as well as the sealed, stamped, hard copy of the confirmation of my hotel booking). He asked me to come back the next morning.

When I got home, I went straight to my bookshelf, looking for a passage I had marked long ago in Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon. Comrade N.S. Rubashov, once a high-level officer in the Soviet government, has been arrested for treason. He reminisces in his prison cell:

All our principles were right, but our results were wrong. This is a diseased century. We diagnosed the disease and its causes with microscopic exactness, but whenever we applied the healing knife a new sore appeared. Our will was hard and pure, we should have been loved by the people, but they hate us. Why are we so odious and detested? We brought you truth and in our mouth it sounded like a lie. We brought you freedom, and it looks in our hands like a whip. We brought you the living life, and where our voice is heard the trees wither and there is a rustling of dry leaves. We brought you the promise of the future, but our tongue stammered and barked....

Read now, it sounds like pillow talk between two old enemies who have fought a long, hard war and can no longer tell each other apart.
I got my visa the next morning. I was going to Russia.

Part 3: Things That Can and Cannot Be Said (Continued)

by John Cusack

Over the next week or so, the logistics had to be planned. It was short notice and a bit of a mad scramble. Roy made her own arrangements, but I had in mind Dan Ellsberg's history as a nuclear weapons planner for America's retaliation to a possible Soviet first strike. In other words, he had only spent a few years of his life planning the physical obliteration of the Soviet Union. Nuclear secrets, domino theory - he was in those rooms. Then there were the 85-plus arrests for civil disobedience, one of those in Russia on the Sirius, the Greenpeace boat protesting Soviet nuclear testing. But Dan's visa came. And mine came, too.

Meanwhile in India, some of Roy's worst fears had materialised. Eight months before, Narendra Modi had become the new Prime Minister of India. (In May, I received this text: Election results are out. The fascists in a landslide. The phantoms are real. What you see is what you get.)

I met up with Roy in London. She had been there for two weeks giving talks in Cambridge and the South Bank on her new work on Gandhi and B.R. Ambedkar. At Heathrow, she told me quite casually that some folks in India were burning effigies of her. "I seem to be goading the Gandhians to violence," she laughed, "but I was disappointed with the quality of the effigy."

We flew together to Stockholm to meet up with Dan, who was attending the ceremony of the Right Livelihood Awards - some call it the Alternative Nobel - because Ed was one of the laureates. We would fly to Moscow together from there.

The Stockholm streets were so clean you could eat off the ground.

On our first night, there was a dinner at a nautical museum with the complete salvaged wreckage of a huge 16th-century wooden warship as the centrepiece of the modernist structure. The Wasa, considered the Titanic of Swedish disasters, was built on the orders of yet another power-hungry king who wanted control of seas and the future. It was so overloaded with weapons and top-heavy, it capsized and sank before it even left the harbour.

It was a classic human rights evening, to be sure: gourmet food and good intentions, a choir singing beautiful Noels. I enjoyed watching the almost pathologically anti-gala Roy trying to mask her blind panic. Not her venue, as they say. Dan was busy and in great demand, meeting people, doing interviews.

We caught occasional glimpses of him - and managed to say a quick hello.

The awards ceremony took place in the Swedish parliament. Roy and I were graciously invited. We were late. It occurred to us that if neither of us would be comfortable sitting in the parliament halls of our own countries, what the fuck would we be doing sitting in the Swedish parliament? So we skulked around the corridors like petty criminals until we found a cramped balcony from which we could watch the ceremony. Our empty seats reflected back at us. The speeches were long. We slipped away and walked through the great chambers and found an empty banquet hall with a laid out feast. There was a metaphor there somewhere. I switched on my recorder again:

JC: What is the meaning of charity as a political tool?

AR: It's an old joke, right? If you want to control somebody, support them. Or marry them.
(Laughter)

JC: Sugar daddy politics....

AR: Embrace the resistance, seize it, fund it.

JC: Domesticate it....

AR: Make it depend on you. Turn it into an art project or a product of some kind. The minute what you think of as radical becomes an institutionalised, funded operation, you're in some trouble. And it's cleverly done. It's not all bad...some are doing genuinely good work.

JC: Like the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union)....

AR: They have money from the Ford Foundation, right? But they do excellent work. You can't fault people for the work they're doing, taken individually.

JC: People want to do something good, something useful....

AR: Yes. And it is these good intentions that are dragooned and put to work. It's a complicated thing. Think of a bead necklace. The beads on their own may be lovely, but when they're threaded together, they're not really free to skitter around as they please. When you look around and see how many NGOs are on, say, the Gates, Rockefeller or Ford Foundation's handout list, there has to be something wrong, right? They turn potential radicals into receivers of their largesse - and then, very subtly, without appearing to - they circumscribe the boundaries of radical politics. And you're sacked if you disobey...sacked, unfunded, whatever. And then there's always the game of pitting the "funded" against the "unfunded," in which the funder takes centrestage. So, I mean, I'm not against people being funded - because we're running out of options - but we have to understand - are you walking the dog or is the dog walking you? Or who's the dog and who is you?

JC: I'm definitely the dog...and I've definitely been walked.

AR: Everywhere - not just in America...repress, beat up, shoot, jail those you can, and throw money at those whom you can't - and gradually sandpaper the edge off them. They're in the business of creating what we in India call Paaltu Sher, which means Tamed Tigers. Like a pretend resistance...so you can let off steam without damaging anything.

JC: The first time you spoke at the World Social Forum...when was that?

AR: In 2002, I think, Porto Alegre...just before the US invasion of Iraq.

JC: In Mumbai. And then you went the next year and it was....

AR: Totally NGO-ised. So many major activists had turned into travel agents, just having to organise tickets and money, flying people up and down. The forum suddenly declared, "Only non-violence, no armed struggles...." They had turned Gandhian.

JC: So anyone involved in armed resistance....

AR: All out, all out. Many of the radical struggles were out. And I thought, fuck this. My question is, if, let's say, there are people who live in villages deep in the forest, four days walk from anywhere, and a thousand soldiers arrive and burn their villages and kill and rape people to scare them off their land because mining companies want it - what brand of non-violence would the stalwarts of the establishment recommend? Non-violence is radical political theatre.

JC: Effective only when there's an audience....

AR: Exactly. And who can pull in an audience? You need some capital, some stars, right? Gandhi was a superstar. The people in the forest don't have that capital, that drawing power. So they have no audience. Non-violence should be a tactic - not an ideology preached from the sidelines to victims of massiveviolence.... With me, it's been an evolution of seeing through these things.

JC: You begin to smell the digestive enzymes....

AR: (Laughing) But you know, the revolution cannot be funded. It's not the imagination of trusts and foundations that's going to bring real change.

JC: But what's the bigger game that we can name?

AR: The bigger game is keeping the world safe for the Free Market. Structural Adjustment, Privatisation, Free Market fundamentalism - all masquerading as Democracy and the Rule of Law. Many corporate foundation-funded NGOs - not all, but many - become the missionaries of the "new economy." They tinker with your imagination, with language. The idea of "human rights," for example - sometimes it bothers me. Not in itself, but because the concept of human rights has replaced the much grander idea of justice. Human rights are fundamental rights, they are the minimum, the very least we demand. Too often, they become the goal itself. What should be the minimum becomes the maximum - all we are supposed to expect - but human rights aren't enough. The goal is, and must always be, justice.

JC: The term human rights is, or can be, a kind of pacifier - filling the space in the political imagination that justice deserves?

AR: Look at the Israel-Palestine conflict, for example. If you look at a map from 1947 to now, you'll see that Israel has gobbled up almost all of Palestinian land with its illegal settlements. To talk about justice in that battle, you have to talk about those settlements. But, if you just talk about human rights, then you can say, "Oh, Hamas violates human rights," "Israel violates human rights." Ergo, both are bad.

JC: You can turn it into an equivalence....

AR: ...though it isn't one. But this discourse of human rights, it's a very good format for TV - the great atrocity analysis and condemnation industry (laughs). Who comes out smelling sweet in the atrocity analysis? States have invested themselves with the right to legitimise violence - so who gets criminalised and delegitimised? Only - or well that's excessive - usually, the resistance.

JC: So the term human rights can take the oxygen out of justice?

AR: Human rights takes history out of justice.

JC: Justice always has context....

AR: I sound as though I'm trashing human rights...I'm not. All I'm saying is that the idea of justice - even just dreaming of justice - is revolutionary. The language of human rights tends to accept a status quo that is intrinsically unjust - and then tries to make it more accountable. But then, of course, Catch-22 is that violating human rights is integral to the project of neoliberalism and global hegemony.

JC: ...as there's no other way of implementing those policies except violently.

AR: No way at all - but talk loud enough about human rights and it gives the impression of democracy at work, justice at work. There was a time when the United States waged war to topple democracies, because back then democracy was a threat to the Free Market. Countries were nationalising their resources, protecting their markets.... So then, real democracies were being toppled. They were toppled in Iran, they were toppled all across Latin America, Chile....

JC: The list is too long....

AR: Now we're in a situation where democracy has been taken into the workshop and fixed, remodeled to be market-friendly. So now the United States is fighting wars to instal democracies. First it was topple them, now it's instal them, right? And this whole rise of corporate-funded NGOs in the modern world, this notion of CSR, corporate social responsibility - it's all part of a New Managed Democracy. In that sense, it's all part of the same machine.

JC: Tentacles of the same squid.

AR: They moved in to the spaces that were left when "structural adjustment" forced states to pull back on public spending - on health, education, infrastructure, water supply - turning what ought to be people's rights, to education, to healthcare and so on, into charitable activity available to a few. Peace, Inc. is sometimes as worrying as War, Inc. It's a way of managing public anger. We're all being managed, and we don't even know it.... The IMF and the World Bank, the most opaque and secretive entities, put millions into NGOs who fight against "corruption" and for "transparency." They want the Rule of Law - as long as they make the laws. They want transparency in order to standardise a situation, so that global capital can flow without any impediment. Cage the People, Free the Money. The only thing that is allowed to move freely - unimpeded - around the world today is money...capital.

JC: It's all for efficiency, right? Stable markets, stable world...there's a great violence in the idea of a uniform "investment climate."

Democracy Masquerade: Uniform investment climate. A phrase interchangeable with Massacre.

AR: In India, that's a phrase we use interchangeably with "massacre." Stable markets, unstable world. Efficiency. Everybody hears about it. It's enough to make you want to be pro-inefficiency and pro-corruption. (Laughing) But seriously, if you look at the history of the Ford Foundation and Rockefeller, in Latin America, in Indonesia, where almost a million people, mainly Communists, were killed by General Suharto, who was backed by the CIA, in South Africa, in the US Civil Rights Movement - or even now, it's very disturbing. They have always worked closely with the US State Department.

JC: And yet now Ford funds The Act of Killing - the film about those same massacres. They profile the butchers...but not their masters. They won't follow the money.

AR: They have so much money, they can fund everything, very bad things as well as very good things - documentary films, nuclear weapons planners, gender rights, feminist conferences, literature and film festivals, university chairs...anything, as long as it doesn't upset the "market" and the economic status quo. One of Ford's "good works" was to fund the CFR, the Council of Foreign Relations, which worked closely with the CIA. All the World Bank presidents since 1946 are from the CFR. Ford-funded RAND, the Research and Development Corporation, which works closely with the US defence forces.

JC: That was where Dan worked. That's where he laid his hands on the Pentagon papers.

AR: The Pentagon papers.... I couldn't believe what I was reading...that stuff about bombing dams, planning famines.... I wrote an introduction to an edition of Noam Chomsky's For Reasons of State in which he analyses the Pentagon papers. There was a chapter in the book called 'The Backroom Boys' - maybe that wasn't the Pentagon papers part, I don't remember...but there was a letter or a note of some kind, maybe from soldiers in the field, about how great it was that white phosphorous had been mixed in with napalm.... "It sticks to the gooks like shit to a blanket, and burns them to the bone." They were happy because white phosphorous kept burning even when the Vietnamese who had been firebombed tried to jump into water to stop their flesh from burning off....

JC: You remember that by rote?

AR: I can't forget it. It burned me to the bone.... I grew up in Kerala, remember. Communist country....

JC: You were talking about how the Ford Foundation funded RAND and the CFR.

AR: (Laughs) Yes...it's a bedroom comedy...actually a bedroom tragedy...is that a genre? Ford funded CFR and RAND. Robert McNamara moved from heading Ford Motors to the Pentagon. So, as you can see, we're encircled.

JC: ...and not just by the past.

AR: No - by the future, too. The future is Google, isn't it? In Julian Assange's book - brilliant book - When Google Met WikiLeaks, he suggests that there isn't much daylight between Google and the NSA. The three people who went along with Eric Schmidt - CEO of Google - to interview Julian were Jared Cohen, director of Google Ideas - ex-State Department and senior something or other on the CFR, adviser to Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton. The two others were Lisa Shields and Scott Malcolmson, also former State Department and CFR. It's serious shit. But when we talk about NGOs, there's something we must be careful about....

JC: What's that?

AR: When the attack on NGOs comes from the opposite end, from the far right, then those of us who've been criticising NGOs from a completely different perspective will look terrible...to liberals we'll be the bad guys....

JC: Once again pitting the "funded" against the "unfunded."

AR: For example, in India the new government - the members of the radical Hindu Right who want India to be a 'Hindu Nation' - they're bigots. Butchers. Massacres are their unofficial election campaigns - orchestrated to polarise communities and bring in the vote. It was so in Gujarat in 2002, and this year, in the run-up to the general elections, in a place called Muzaffarnagar, after which tens of thousands of Muslims had to flee from their villages and live in camps. Some of those who are accused of all that murdering are now cabinet ministers. Their support for straightforward, chest-thumping butchery makes you long for even the hypocrisy of the human rights discourse. But now if the "human rights" NGOs make a noise, or even whisper too loudly...this government will shut them down. And it can, very easily. All it has to do is to go after the funders...and the funders, whoever they are, especially those who are interested in India's huge "market" will either cave in or scuttle over to the other side. Those NGOs will blow over because they're a chimera, they don't have deep roots in society among the people, really, so they'll just disappear. Even the pretend resistance that has sucked the marrow out of genuine resistance will be gone.

JC: Is Modi going to succeed long-term?

AR: It's hard to say. There's no real opposition, you know? He has an absolute majority and a government that he completely controls, and he himself - and I think this is true of most people with murky pasts - doesn't trust any of his own people, so he's become this person who has to interface directly with people. The government is secondary. Public institutions are being peopled by his acolytes, school and university syllabi are being revamped, history is being rewritten in absurd ways. It's very dangerous, all of it. And a large section of young people, students, the IT crowd, the educated middle class and, of course, Big Business, are with him - the Hindu right-wing is with him. He's lowering the bar of public discourse - saying things like, "Oh, Hindus discovered plastic surgery in the Vedas because how else would we have had an elephant-headed god."

JC: (Laughing) He said that?

AR: Yes! It's dangerous. On the other hand, it's so corny that I don't know how long it can last. But for now people are wearing Modi masks and waving back at him.... He was democratically elected. There's no getting away from that. That's why when people say "the people" or "the public" as though it's the final repository of all morality, I sometimes flinch.

JC: As they say, "Kitsch is the Mask of Death."...

AR: Sounds about right.... But then, while there's no real opposition to him in Parliament, India's a very interesting place....there's no formal opposition, but there's genuine on-the-ground opposition. If you travel around - there are all kinds of people, brilliant people...journalists, activists, filmmakers, whether you go to Kashmir, the Indian part, or to an Adivasi village about to be submerged by a dam reservoir - the level of understanding of everything we've talked about - surveillance, globalisation, NGO-isation - is so high, you know? The wisdom of the resistance movements, which are ragged and tattered and pushed to the wall, is incredible. So...I look to them and keep the faith. (Laughs)

JC: So this isn't new to you...the debate about mass surveillance?

AR: Of course, the details are new to me, the technical stuff and the scale of it all - but for many of us in India who don't consider ourselves 'innocent', surveillance is something we have all always been aware of. Most of those who have been summarily executed by the army or the police - we call them 'encounters' - have been tracked down using their cellphones. In Kashmir, for years they have monitored every phone call, every e-mail, every Facebook account - that plus beating doors down, shooting into crowds, mass arrests, torture that puts Abu Ghraib in the shade. It's the same in Central India.

JC: In the forest where you went Walking with the Comrades?

AR: Yes. Where the poorest people in the world have stopped some of the richest mining corporations in their tracks. The great irony is that people who live in remote areas, who are illiterate and don't own TVs, are in some ways more free because they are beyond the reach of indoctrination by the modern mass media. There's a virtual civil war going on there and few know about it. Anyway, before I went into the forest, I was told by the Superintendent of Police, "Whoever crosses that river, can be shot on sight by my boys." The police call the area across the river 'Pakistan'. Anyway, then the cop says to me, "You know, Arundhati, I've told my seniors that however many police we put into this area, into the forest, we can't win this battle with force - the only way we can win it is to put a TV in every tribal person's house because these tribals don't understand greed." His point was that watching TV would teach them greed.

JC: Greed.... That's what this whole circus is about...huh?

AR: Yes.

***

That evening, after the awards ceremony, we met up with Dan. The next morning, we caught the flight to Moscow. Travelling with us was Ole von Uexküll from the Right Livelihood Foundation, a lovely man with clear eyes and impeccable manners. Ole was going to give Ed the prize since he couldn't travel to Stockholm to receive it. Ole would be our companion for the next few days. On the flight, Dan, who is 83 years old, was furiously reading Roy's new essay, The Doctor and the Saint, scribbling notes on a yellow legal pad. My mind began to race, wondering what Roy was making of this mini flying-circus hurtling toward Moscow. What I would learn from what she calls - with sinister silkiness and mischief twinkling in her dark brown eyes - "the gook perspective"? She can disarm you at any time with her friendly hustler's grin but her eyes see things and love things so fiercely, it's frightening at times.

Going through immigration of the country he once planned to annihilate, Dan flashed the peace sign. Soon we were driving through the freezing streets of Moscow. The Ritz Carlton is perched literally a few hundred yards from the Kremlin. The Red Square always seemed so much bigger on TV, during all those horror show military parades. It's so much smaller to the naked eye. We checked in and were whisked up to a VIP reception lounge with great views of the Kremlin and an Audi car display on its roof deck: The Ritz Terrace Brought to you by Audi. Another reminder hanging over Lenin's tomb that capitalism had supposedly ended history.

At noon the next day, I got the call I was waiting for in my room.

The meeting between these two living symbols of American conscience was historic. It needed to happen. Seeing Ed and Dan together, trading stories, exchanging notes, was both heartwarming and deeply inspiring, and the conversation with Roy and the two former President's Men was extraordinary. It had depth, insight, wit, generosity and a lightness of touch not possible in a formal, structured interview. Aware that we were being watched and monitored by forces greater than ourselves, we talked. Maybe one day the NSA will give us the minutes of our meeting. What was remarkable was how much agreement there was in the room. It wasn't just what was said, but the way it was said, not just the text, but the subtext, the warmth, and laughter that was so exhilarating. But that's another story. After two unforgettable days and 20 hours spent together, we said goodbye to Ed, wondering if we'd ever see him again.

During the last few hours with Ed, Dan had recounted in horrifying and empirical detail the history of the nuclear arms race - a history of lies - an apocalyptic tome of charnel monologues and murder rites.

At one point, Dan referred to Robert McNamara, his boss in the Pentagon, as a "moderate." Roy's eyes snapped wide open at the assertion. Dan then explained how, compared to the other lunatics in the Pentagon like Edwin Teller and Curtis LeMay, he was one. McNamara's moderate and reasonable argument, Dan said, was that the United States needed only 400 warheads instead of 1,000. Because after 400, there were "diminishing returns on genocide." It begins to flatten out. "You kill most people with 400, so if you have 800, you don't kill that many more - 400 warheads would kill 1.2 billion people out of the then total population of 3.7 billion. So why have 1,000?"

Roy listened to all this without saying very much. In The End of Imagination, the essay she wrote after India's 1998 nuclear tests, she had gotten herself into serious trouble when she declared, "If it is anti-national to protest against nuclear weapons, then I sec-ede. I declare myself a mobile republic." Dan, who is writing a book on the nuclear arms race, told me it was one of the finest things he's ever read on the subject. "Wouldn't you say," Roy said for the record, or to anybody willing to listen, "that nuclear weapons are the inevitable, toxic corollary of the idea of the Great Nation?"

Just after Ed left, Dan collapsed on to my bed - exhausted and blissful - with his arms stretched wide, but then a deep storm erupted. He became distressed and emotional. He quoted from The Man Without a Country by Edward Everett Hale, a short story about an American naval officer who was tried and court martialed. Hale's sentence was that he should forever go from ship to ship, and he should never hear the name "America" again. In the story, a character quotes the poem Patriotism by Sir Walter Scott:

Breathes there the man with soul so dead,
Who never to himself hath said,
"This is my own, my native land!"

Dan began to weep. Through his tears, he said, "I'm still that much of a patriot in some sense...not for the State but...." He talked about his son and how he came of age during the Vietnam war, and how he, Dan, used to think his son was born for jail. "That the best thing that the best people in our country like Ed can do is to go to prison.... Or be an exile in Russia? This is what it's come to in my country...it's horrible, you know...." Roy's eyes were sympathetic but distinctly unsettled.

It was our last night in Moscow. We went for a walk in the Red Square. The Kremlin was lit with fairy lights. Dan went off to buy himself a Cossack fur hat. We stepped carefully on to the treacherous sheet of ice that covered the Red Square, trying to guess where Putin's window might be and whether he was still at work. Roy kept talking as if she was still in room 1001:

AR: The diminishing returns of genocide...what's the subject heading? Math or economics? Zoology it should be. Mao said he was prepared to have millions of Chinese people perish in a nuclear war as long as China survived.... I'm beginning to find it more and more sick that only humans make it into our calculations.... Annihilate life on earth, but save the nation...what's the subject heading? Stupidity or Insanity?

JC: Social Service.... What do you think those maniacs look like in binary code?

AR: Good-looking. When you think of how much violence, how much blood...how much has been destroyed to create the great nations, America, Australia, Britain, Germany, France, Belgium - even India, Pakistan.

JC: The Soviet Union....

AR: Yes. Having destroyed so much to make them, we must have nuclear weapons to protect them - and climate change to hold up their way of life...a two-pronged annihilation project.

JC: We must all bow down to the flags.

AR: And - I might as well say it now that I'm in the Red Square - to capitalism. Every time I say the word capitalism, everyone just assumes....

JC: You must be a Marxist.

AR: I have plenty of Marxism in me, I do...but Russia and China had their bloody revolutions and even while they were Communist, they had the same idea about generating wealth - tear it out of the bowels of the earth. And now they have come out with the same idea in the end...you know, capitalism. But capitalism will fail, too. We need a new imagination. Until then, we're all just out here....

JC: Wandering....

AR: Thousands of years of ideological, philosophical and practical decisions were made. They altered the surface of the earth, the coordinates of our souls. For every one of those decisions, maybe there's another decision that could have been made, should have been made.

JC: Can be made....

AR: Of course. So I don't have the Big Idea. I don't have the arrogance to even want to have the Big Idea. But I believe the physics of resisting power is as old as the physics of accumulating power. That's what keeps the balance in the universe...the refusal to obey. I mean what's a country? It's just an administrative unit, a glorified municipality. Why do we imbue it with esoteric meaning and protect it with nuclear bombs? I can't bow down to a municipality....it's just not intelligent. The bastards will do what they have to do, and we'll do what we have to do. Even if they annihilate us, we'll go down on the other side.

I looked at Roy, and wondered what trouble awaited her back in India...an old Yugoslavian proverb came to mind - "Tell the truth and run." But some creatures will not run...even when maybe they should. They know that to show weakness only emboldens the bastards....

Suddenly she turned to me and thanked me formally for organising the meeting with Edward Snowden. "He presents himself as this cool systems man, but it's only passion that could make him do what he did. He's not just a systems man. That's what I needed to know."

We kept an eye on Dan in the distance bargaining with the hat-seller. I was worried he might slip on the ice.

"So, for the record, Ms Roy," I asked, "as someone with 'plenty of Marxism' in her, how does it feel to be walking on ice in the Red Square?" She nodded sagely, appearing to give my talk-show question serious consideration. "I think it should be privatised...handed over to a foundation that works tirelessly for the empowerment of women prisoners, abolishing of child labour and the improvement of relations between mass media and mining companies. Maybe to Bill and Melinda Gates."

She grinned with sadness in it.... I could almost hear the chimes of harmonic thinking, as clear as the church bells that suddenly filled the frozen air and the wind that chopped through the bleak winter night.

"Listen man," she said. "God's back in the Red Square."

Part 4: What Shall We Love?

by Arundhati Roy

The Moscow Un-Summit wasn't a formal interview. Nor was it a cloak-and-dagger underground rendezvous. The upshot is that we didn't get the cautious, diplomatic, regulation Edward Snowden. The downshot (that isn't a word, I know) is that the jokes, the humour and repartee that took place in Room 1001 cannot be reproduced. The Un-Summit cannot be written about in the detail that it deserves. Yet it definitely cannot not be written about. Because it did happen. And because the world is a millipede that inches forward on millions of real conversations. And this, certainly, was a real one.

What mattered, perhaps even more than what was said was the spirit in the room. There was Edward Snowden who after 9/11 was in his own words "straight up singing highly of Bush" and signing up for the Iraq war. And there were those of us who after 9/11 had been straight up doing exactly the opposite. It was a little late for this conversation, of course. Iraq has been all but destroyed. And now the map of what is so condescendingly called the 'Middle East' is being brutally redrawn (yet again). But still, there we were, all of us, talking to each other in a bizarre hotel in Russia.

Bizarre it certainly was. The opulent lobby of the Moscow Ritz-Carlton was teeming with drunk millionaires, high on new money, and gorgeous, high-stepping young women, half-peasant, half supermodel, draped on the arms of toady men - gazelles on their way to fame and fortune, paying their dues to the satyrs who would get them there. In the corridors, you passed serious fistfights, loud singing and quiet, liveried waiters wheeling trolleys with towers of food and silverware in and out of rooms. In Room 1001 we were so close to the Kremlin that if you put your hand out of the window, you could almost touch it. It was snowing outside. We were deep into the Russian winter - never credited enough for its part in the Second World War.

Edward Snowden was much smaller than I thought he'd be. Small, lithe, neat, like a housecat. He greeted Dan ecstatically and us warmly.

"I know why you're here," he said to me smiling.

"Why?"

"To radicalise me."

I laughed. We settled down on various perches, stools, chairs and John's bed.

Dan and Ed were so pleased to meet each other, and had so much to say to each other, that it felt a little impolite to intrude on them. At times they broke into some kind of arcane code language: "I jumped from nobody on the street, straight to TSSCI." No, because, again, this isn't DS at all, this is NSA. At CIA, it's called COMO." ."..It's kind of a similar role, but is it under support?" "PRISEC or PRIVAC?" "They start out with the TALENT KEYHOLE thing. Everyone then gets read into TS, SI, TK, and GAMMA - G clearance.... Nobody knows what it is...."

It took a while before I felt it was alright to interrupt them. Snowden's disarming answer to my question about being photographed cradling the American flag was to roll his eyes and say: "Oh, man. I don't know. Somebody handed me a flag, they took a picture." And when I asked him why he signed up for the Iraq war, when millions of people all over the world were marching against it, he replied, equally disarmingly: "I fell for the propaganda."

Dan talked at some length about how it would be unusual for US citizens who joined the Pentagon and the NSA to have read much literature on US exceptionalism and its history of warfare. (And once they joined, it was unlikely to be a subject that interested them.) He and Ed had watched it play out live, in real time, and were horrified enough to stake their lives and their freedom when they decided to be whistleblowers. What the two of them clearly had in common was a strong, almost corporeal sense of moral righteousness - of right and wrong. A sense of righteousness that was obviously at work not just when they decided to blow the whistle on what they thought to be morally unacceptable, but also when they signed up for their jobs - Dan to save his country from Communism, Ed to save it from Islamist terrorism. What they did when they grew disillusioned was so electrifying, so dramatic, that they have come to be identified by that single act of moral courage.

I asked Ed Snowden what he thought about Washington's ability to destroy countries and its inability to win a war (despite mass surveillance). I think the question was phrased quite rudely - something like "When was the last time the United States won a war?" We spoke about whether the economic sanctions and subsequent invasion of Iraq could be accurately called genocide. We talked about how the CIA knew - and was preparing for the fact - that the world was heading to a place of not just inter-country war but of intra-country war in which mass surveillance would be necessary to control populations. And about how armies were being turned into police forces to administer countries they have invaded and occupied, while the police, even in places like India and Pakistan and Ferguson, Missouri, in the United States - were being trained to behave like armies to quell internal insurrections.

Ed spoke at some length about "sleepwalking into a total surveillance state." And here I quote him, because he's said this often before: "If we do nothing, we sort of sleepwalk into a total surveillance state where we have both a super-state that has unlimited capacity to apply force with an unlimited ability to know (about the people it is targeting) - and that's a very dangerous combination. That's the dark future. The fact that they know everything about us and we know nothing about them - because they are secret, they are privileged, and they are a separate class...the elite class, the political class, the resource class - we don't know where they live, we don't know what they do, we don't know who their friends are. They have the ability to know all that about us. This is the direction of the future, but I think there are changing possibilities in this...."

I asked Ed whether the NSA was just feigning annoyance at his revelations but might actually be secretly pleased at being known as the All Seeing, All Knowing Agency - because that would help to keep people fearful, off-balance, always looking over their shoulders and easy to manage.

Dan spoke about how even in the United States, a police state was only another 9/11 away: "We are not in a police state now, not yet. I'm talking about what may come. I realise I shouldn't put it that way.... White, middle-class, educated people like myself are not living in a police state.... Black, poor people are living in a police state. The repression starts with the semi-white, the Middle Easterners, including anybody who is allied with them, and goes on from there.... We don't have a police state. One more 9/11, and then I believe we will have hundreds of thousands of detentions. Middle Easterners and Muslims will be put in detention camps or deported. After 9/11, we had thousands of people arrested without charges.... But I'm talking about the future. I'm talking the level of the Japanese in World War II... I'm talking of hundreds of thousands in camps or deported. I think the surveillance is very relevant to that. They will know who to put away - the data is already collected." (When he said this, I did wonder, though I did not ask - how different would things have been if Snowden had not been White?)

We talked about war and greed, about terrorism, and what an accurate definition of it would be. We spoke about countries, flags and the meaning of patriotism. We talked about public opinion and the concept of public morality and how fickle it could be, and how easily manipulated.

It wasn't a Q&A type of conversation. We were an incongruous gathering. Ole, myself and three troublesome Americans. John Cusack, who thought up and organised this whole disruptive enterprise comes from a fine tradition, too - of musicians, writers, actors, athletes who have refused to buy the bullshit, however beautifully it was packaged.

What will become of Edward Snowden? Will he ever be able to return to the United States? His chances don't look good. The US government - the Deep State, as well as both the major political parties - wants to punish him for the enormous damage he has inflicted, in their perception, on the security establishment. (It's got Chelsea Manning and the other whistleblowers where it wants them.) If it does not manage to kill or jail Snowden, it must use everything in its power to limit the damage that he's done and continues to do. One of those ways is to try to contain, co-opt and usher the debate around whistleblowing in a direction that suits it. And it has, to some extent, managed to do that. In the Public Security vs. Mass Surveillance debate that is taking place in the establishment Western media, the Object of Love is America. America and her actions. Are they moral or immoral? Are they right or wrong? Are the whistleblowers American patriots or American traitors? Within this constricted matrix of morality, other countries, other cultures, other conversations - even if they are the victims of US wars - usually appear only as witnesses in the main trial. They either bolster the outrage of the prosecution or the indignation of the defence. The trial, when it is conducted on these terms, serves to reinforce the idea that there can be a moderate, moral superpower. Are we not witnessing it in action? Its heartache? Its guilt? Its self-correcting mechanisms? Its watchdog media? Its activists who will not stand for ordinary (innocent) American citizens being spied on by their own government? In these debates that appear to be fierce and intelligent, words likepublic and security and terrorism are thrown around, but they remain, as always, loosely defined and are used more often than not in the way the US state would like them to be used.

It is shocking that Barack Obama approved a "kill list" with 20 names on it.

Or is it?

What sort of list do the millions of people who have been killed in all the US wars belong on, if not a "kill list"?

Not There Yet: But another 9/11 and Dan Ellsberg thinks the US will be heading for a police state

In all of this, Snowden, in exile, has to remain strategic and tactical. He's in the impossible position of having to negotiate the terms of his amnesty/trial with the very institutions in the United States that feel betrayed by him, and the terms of his domicile in Russia with that Great Humanitarian, Vladimir Putin. So the superpowers have the Truth-teller in a position where he now has to be extremely careful about how he uses the spotlight he has earned and what he says publicly.

Even still, leaving aside what cannot be said, the conversation around whistleblowing is a thrilling one - it's Realpolitik - busy, important and full of legalese.

It has spies and spy-hunters, escapades, secrets and secret-leakers. It's a very adult and absorbing universe of its own. However, if it becomes, as it sometimes threatens to - a substitute for broader, more radical political thinking, then the conversation that Daniel Berrigan, Jesuit priest, poet and war resister (contemporary of Daniel Ellsberg) wanted to have when he said, "Every nation-state tends towards the imperial - that is the point," becomes a little inconvenient.

I was glad to see that when Snowden made his debut on Twitter (and chalked up half a million followers in half a second) he said, "I used to work for the government. Now I work for the public." Implicit in that sentence is the belief that the government does not work for the public. That's the beginning of a subversive and inconvenient conversation. By "the government," of course he means the US government, his former employer. But who does he mean by "the public"? The US public? Which part of the US public? He'll have to decide as he goes along. In democracies, the line between an elected government and "the public" is never all that clear. The elite is usually fused with the government pretty seamlessly. Viewed from an international perspective, if there really is such a thing as "the US public," it's a very privileged public indeed. The only "public" I know is a maddeningly tricky labyrinth.

Oddly, when I think back on the meeting in the Moscow Ritz, the memory that flashes up first in my mind is an image of Daniel Ellsberg. Dan, after all those hours of talking, lying back on John's bed, Christ-like, with his arms flung open, weeping for what the United States has turned into - a country whose "best people" must either go to prison or into exile. I was moved by his tears but troubled, too - because they were the tears of a man who has seen the machine up close. A man who was once on a first-name basis with the people who controlled it and who coldly contemplated the idea of annihilating life on earth. A man who risked everything to blow the whistle on them. Dan knows all the arguments, For as well as Against. He often uses the word imperialism to describe US history and foreign policy. He knows now, 40 years after he made the Pentagon papers public, that even though those particular individuals have gone, the machine keeps on turning.

Daniel Ellsberg's tears made me think about love, about loss, about dreams - and, most of all, about failure.

What sort of love is this love that we have for countries? What sort of country is it that will ever live up to our dreams? What sort of dreams were these that have been broken? Isn't the greatness of great nations directly proportionate to their ability to be ruthless, genocidal? Doesn't the height of a country's 'success' usually also mark the depths of its moral failure?

And what about our failure? Writers, artists, radicals, anti-nationals, mavericks, malcontents - what of the failure of our imaginations? What of our failure to replace the idea of flags and countries with a less lethal Object of Love? Human beings seem unable to live without war, but they are also unable to live without love. So the question is, what shall we love?

Writing this at a time when refugees are flooding into Europe - the result of decades of US and European foreign policy in the 'Middle East' makes me wonder: Who is a refugee? Is Edward Snowden a refugee? Surely, he is. Because of what he did, he cannot return to the place he thinks of as his country (although he can continue to live where he is most comfortable - inside the Internet). The refugees fleeing from wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria to Europe are refugees of the Lifestyle Wars. But the thousands of people in countries like India who are being jailed and killed by those same Lifestyle Wars, the millions who are being driven off their lands and farms, exiled from everything they have ever known - their language, their history, the landscape that formed them - are not. As long as their misery is contained within the arbitrarily drawn borders of their 'own' country, they are not considered refugees. But they are refugees. And certainly, in terms of numbers, such people are the great majority in the world today. Unfortunately in imaginations that are locked down into a grid of countries and borders, in minds that are shrink-wrapped in flags, they don't make the cut.

Perhaps the best-known refugee of the Lifestyle Wars is Julian Assange, the founder and editor of WikiLeaks, who is currently serving his fourth year as a fugitive-guest in a room in the Ecuadorian embassy in London. The British police are stationed in a small lobby just outside the front door. There are snipers on the roof, who have orders to arrest him, shoot him, drag him out if he so much as puts a toe out of the door, which for all legal purposes is an international border. The Ecuadorian embassy is located across the street from Harrods, the world's most famous department store. The day we met Julian, Harrods was sucking in and spewing out frenzied Christmas shoppers in their hundreds, or perhaps even thousands. In the middle of that tony London high street, the smell of opulence and excess met the smell of incarceration and the Free World's fear of free speech. (They shook hands and agreed never to be friends.)

On the day (actually the night) we met Julian, we were not allowed by security to take phones, cameras or any recording devices into the room. So that conversation also remains off the record.

Despite the odds stacked against its founder-editor, WikiLeaks continues its work, as cool and insouciant as ever. Most recently it has offered an award of$100,000 for anybody who can provide "smoking gun" documents about the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), a free trade agreement between Europe and the United States that aims to give multinational corporations the power to sue sovereign governments that do things that adversely impact corporate profits. Criminal acts could include governments increasing workers' minimum wages, not seen to be cracking down on "terrorist" villagers who impede the work of mining companies, or, say, having the temerity to turn down Monsanto's offer of genetically modified corporate-patented seeds. TTIP is just another weapon like intrusive surveillance or depleted uranium, to be used in the Lifestyle Wars.

Roy and Cusack visit Julian Assange in London. December, 2014

Looking at Julian Assange sitting across the table from me, pale and worn, without having had five minutes of sunshine on his skin for 900 days, but still refusing to disappear or capitulate the way his enemies would like him to, I smiled at the idea that nobody thinks of him as an Australian hero or an Australian traitor. To his enemies, Assange has betrayed much more than a country. He has betrayed the ideology of the ruling powers. For this, they hate him even more than they hate Edward Snowden. And that's saying a lot.

We're told, often enough, that as a species we are poised on the edge of the abyss. It's possible that our puffed-up, prideful intelligence has outstripped our instinct for survival and the road back to safety has already been washed away. In which case there's nothing much to be done. If there is something to be done, then one thing is for sure: those who created the problem will not be the ones who come up with a solution. Encrypting our e-mails will help, but not very much. Recalibrating our understanding of what love means, what happiness means - and, yes, what countries mean - might. Recalibrating our priorities might. An old-growth forest, a mountain range or a river valley is more important and certainly more loveable than any country will ever be. I could weep for a river-valley, and I have. But for a country? Oh man, I don't know....

This post is adapted from a four-part series at Outlook India.

 

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27 Nov 11:39

Naomi Klein: Now Marches Are Banned at the Paris Climate Conference - What's at Stake

by Naomi Klein, The Guardian
Hollande is silencing those facing the worst impacts of climate change and its monstrous violence.

Whose security gets protected by any means necessary? Whose security is casually sacrificed, despite the means to do so much better? Those are the questions at the heart of the climate crisis, and the answers are the reason climate summits so often end in acrimony and tears.

The French government’s decision to ban protests, marches and other “outdoor activities” during the Paris climate summit is disturbing on many levels. The one that preoccupies me most has to do with the way it reflects the fundamental inequity of the climate crisis itself – and that core question of whose security is ultimately valued in our lopsided world.

Here is the first thing to understand. The people facing the worst impacts of climate change have virtually no voice in western debates about whether to do anything serious to prevent catastrophic global warming. Huge climate summits like the one coming up in Paris are rare exceptions. For just two weeks every few years, the voices of the people who are getting hit first and worst get a little bit of space to be heard at the place where fateful decisions are made. That’s why Pacific islanders and Inuit hunters and low-income people of colour from places like New Orleans travel for thousands of miles to attend. The expense is enormous, in both dollars and carbon, but being at the summit is a precious chance to speak about climate change in moral terms and to put a human face to this unfolding catastrophe.

The next thing to understand is that even in these rare moments, frontline voices do not have enough of a platform in the official climate meetings, in which the microphone is dominated by governments and large, well-funded green groups. The voices of ordinary people are primarily heard in grassroots gatherings parallel to the summit, as well as in marches and protests, which in turn attract media coverage. Now the French government has decided to take away the loudest of these megaphones, claiming that securing marches would compromise its ability to secure the official summit zone where politicians will meet.

Some say this is all fair game against the backdrop of terror. But a UN climate summit is not like a meeting of the G8 or the World Trade Organisation, where the powerful meet and the powerless try to crash their party. Parallel “civil society” events are not an addendum to, or distractions from, the main event. They are integral to the process. Which is why the French government should never have been allowed to decide which parts of the summit it would cancel and which it would still hold.

Rather, after the horrific attacks of 13 November, it needed to determine whether it had the will and capacity to host the whole summit – with full participation from civil society, including in the streets. If it could not, it should have delayed and asked another country to step in. Instead the Hollande government has made a series of decisions that reflect a very particular set of values and priorities about who and what will get the full security protection of the state. Yes to world leaders, football matches and Christmas markets; no to climate marches and protests pointing out that the negotiations, with the current level of emission targets, endanger the lives and livelihoods of millions if not billions of people.

And who knows where this will end? Should we expect the UN to arbitrarily revoke the credentials of half the civil society participants? Those most likely to make trouble inside the fortressed summit? I would not be at all surprised.

It is worth thinking about what the decision to cancel marches and protests means in real, as well as symbolic, terms. Climate change is a moral crisis because every time governments of wealthy nations fail to act, it sends a message that we in the global north are putting our immediate comfort and economic security ahead of the suffering and survival of some of the poorest and most vulnerable people on Earth. The decision to ban the most important spaces where the voices of climate-impacted people would have been heard is a dramatic expression of this profoundly unethical abuse of power: once again, a wealthy western country is putting security for elites ahead of the interests of those fighting for survival. Once again, the message is: our security is non-negotiable, yours is up for grabs.

One further thought. I write these words from Stockholm, where I have been doing a series of climate-related public events. When I arrived, the press was having a field day with a tweet sent by Sweden’s environment minister, Åsa Romson. Shortly after news broke of the attacks in Paris, she tweeted her outrage and sadness at the loss of life. Then she tweeted that she thought it would be bad news for the climate summit, a thought that occurred to everyone I know who is in any way connected to this environmental moment. Yet she was pilloried for her supposed insensitivity – how could she be thinking about climate change at a time of such carnage?

The reaction was revealing, since it took for granted the notion that climate change is a minor issue, a cause without real casualties, frivolous even. Especially when serious issues like war and terrorism are taking centre stage. It made me think about something the writer Rebecca Solnit wrote not long ago: “climate change is violence.”

It is. Some of the violence is grindingly slow: rising seas that gradually erase whole nations, and droughts that kill many thousands. Some of the violence is terrifyingly fast: storms with names such as Katrina and Haiyan that steal thousands of lives in a single roiling event. When governments and corporations knowingly fail to act to prevent catastrophic warming, that is an act of violence. It is a violence so large, so global and inflicted against so many temporalities simultaneously (ancient cultures, present lives, future potential) that there is not yet a word capable of containing its monstrousness. And using acts of violence to silence the voices of those who are most vulnerable to climate violence is yet more violence.

In explaining why forthcoming football matches would go on as scheduled, France’s secretary of state for sport said: “Life must go on.” Indeed it must. That’s why I joined the climate justice movement. Because when governments and corporations fail to act in a way that reflects the value of all of life on Earth, they must be protested.

 

 

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22 Nov 19:39

Next Time Your Relatives Try to Ruin the Holidays With 'Proof' of Creationism, Show Them These Videos

by Arturo Garcia, Raw Story
When in doubt, try to explain slowly.

With Thanksgiving fast approaching, no doubt many progressives are dreading at least one part of the holiday ritual — trying to make peace with that one relative who rejects liberalism. Or science. Or evolution. Or all three.

While The Raw Story can’t help with everyone’s family dynamic, we can at least offer pro-evolution readers some useful videos to share with the creationist in their lives.

Starting with the basics, Stated Clearly explains evolution itself in this 9-minute video.

“Evidence overwhelmingly suggests that all life on Earth is related,” the group’s founder, Jon Perry, says in the clip. “So remember, next time you invite family and friends over for a holiday feast, you’re actually just inviting family. That includes the turkey, and the pumpkin pie.”

Perry’s tutorial can be seen below.

For something a bit faster, graphic designer Jurian Möller put together this animated video showing the breadth of human evolution across 550 million years:

Möller also turned the video into a 100-foot-long book illustrating the process through “153 great-grandfathers.”

“The differences between the generations on each page are very difficult to see,” he writes on the book’s website. “But the long, continuous ancestral line goes right back to our very origins.”

Finally, we turn to a reliable champion of evolution in “Science Guy” Bill Nye. If you don’t have time to watch his entire debate with Creation Museum founder Ken Ham, then we recommend this short video on how creationism can hurt children.

“I say to the grownups, if you want to deny evolution and live in your world, in your world that’s completely inconsistent with everything we observe in the universe, that’s fine,” Nye argues. “But don’t make your kids do it because we need them. We need scientifically literate voters and taxpayers for the future. We need people that can—we need engineers that can build stuff, solve problems.”

 

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20 Nov 01:14

Now the Truth Emerges: How the US Fuelled the Rise of ISIS in Syria and Iraq

by Seumas Milne, The Guardian
The sectarian terror group won’t be defeated by the western states that incubated it in the first place.

The war on terror, that campaign without end launched 14 years ago by George Bush, is tying itself up in ever more grotesque contortions. On Monday the trial in London of a Swedish man, Bherlin Gildo, accused of terrorism in Syria, collapsed after it became clear British intelligence had been arming the same rebel groups the defendant was charged with supporting.

The prosecution abandoned the case, apparently to avoid embarrassing the intelligence services. The defence argued that going ahead with the trial would have been an “affront to justice” when there was plenty of evidence the British state was itself providing “extensive support” to the armed Syrian opposition.

That didn’t only include the “non-lethal assistance” boasted of by the government (including body armour and military vehicles), but training, logistical support and the secret supply of “arms on a massive scale”. Reports were cited that MI6 had cooperated with the CIA on a “rat line” of arms transfers from Libyan stockpiles to the Syrian rebels in 2012 after the fall of the Gaddafi regime.

Clearly, the absurdity of sending someone to prison for doing what ministers and their security officials were up to themselves became too much. But it’s only the latest of a string of such cases. Less fortunate was a London cab driver Anis Sardar, who was given a life sentence a fortnight earlier for taking part in 2007 in resistance to the occupation of Iraq by US and British forces. Armed opposition to illegal invasion and occupation clearly doesn’t constitute terrorism or murder on most definitions, including the Geneva convention.

But terrorism is now squarely in the eye of the beholder. And nowhere is that more so than in the Middle East, where today’s terrorists are tomorrow’s fighters against tyranny – and allies are enemies – often at the bewildering whim of a western policymaker’s conference call.

For the past year, US, British and other western forces have been back in Iraq, supposedly in the cause of destroying the hyper-sectarian terror group Islamic State (formerly known as al-Qaida in Iraq). This was after Isis overran huge chunks of Iraqi and Syrian territory and proclaimed a self-styled Islamic caliphate.

The campaign isn’t going well. Last month, Isis rolled into the Iraqi city of Ramadi, while on the other side of the now nonexistent border its forces conquered the Syrian town of Palmyra. Al-Qaida’s official franchise, the Nusra Front, has also been making gains in Syria.

Some Iraqis complain that the US sat on its hands while all this was going on. The Americans insist they are trying to avoid civilian casualties, and claim significant successes. Privately, officials say they don’t want to be seen hammering Sunni strongholds in a sectarian war and risk upsetting their Sunni allies in the Gulf.

A revealing light on how we got here has now been shone by a recently declassified secret US intelligence report, written in August 2012, which uncannily predicts – and effectively welcomes – the prospect of a “Salafist principality” in eastern Syria and an al-Qaida-controlled Islamic state in Syria and Iraq. In stark contrast to western claims at the time, the Defense Intelligence Agency document identifies al-Qaida in Iraq (which became Isis) and fellow Salafists as the “major forces driving the insurgency in Syria” – and states that “western countries, the Gulf states and Turkey” were supporting the opposition’s efforts to take control of eastern Syria.

Raising the “possibility of establishing a declared or undeclared Salafist principality”, the Pentagon report goes on, “this is exactly what the supporting powers to the opposition want, in order to isolate the Syrian regime, which is considered the strategic depth of the Shia expansion (Iraq and Iran)”.

Which is pretty well exactly what happened two years later. The report isn’t a policy document. It’s heavily redacted and there are ambiguities in the language. But the implications are clear enough. A year into the Syrian rebellion, the US and its allies weren’t only supporting and arming an opposition they knew to be dominated by extreme sectarian groups; they were prepared to countenance the creation of some sort of “Islamic state” – despite the “grave danger” to Iraq’s unity – as a Sunni buffer to weaken Syria.

That doesn’t mean the US created Isis, of course, though some of its Gulf allies certainly played a role in it – as the US vice-president, Joe Biden, acknowledged last year. But there was no al-Qaida in Iraq until the US and Britain invaded. And the US has certainly exploited the existence of Isis against other forces in the region as part of a wider drive to maintain western control.

The calculus changed when Isis started beheading westerners and posting atrocities online, and the Gulf states are now backing other groups in the Syrian war, such as the Nusra Front. But this US and western habit of playing with jihadi groups, which then come back to bite them, goes back at least to the 1980s war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, which fostered the original al-Qaida under CIA tutelage.

It was recalibrated during the occupation of Iraq, when US forces led by General Petraeus sponsored an El Salvador-style dirty war of sectarian death squadsto weaken the Iraqi resistance. And it was reprised in 2011 in the Nato-orchestrated war in Libya, where Isis last week took control of Gaddafi’s home town of Sirte.

In reality, US and western policy in the conflagration that is now the Middle East is in the classic mould of imperial divide-and-rule. American forces bomb one set of rebels while backing another in Syria, and mount what are effectively joint military operations with Iran against Isis in Iraq while supporting Saudi Arabia’s military campaign against Iranian-backed Houthi forces in Yemen. However confused US policy may often be, a weak, partitioned Iraq and Syria fit such an approach perfectly.

What’s clear is that Isis and its monstrosities won’t be defeated by the same powers that brought it to Iraq and Syria in the first place, or whose open and covert war-making has fostered it in the years since. Endless western military interventions in the Middle East have brought only destruction and division. It’s the people of the region who can cure this disease – not those who incubated the virus.

 

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16 Nov 17:49

Krugman: Right-Wingers Don't Get That the Paris Terrorists Want to Provoke France into War

by AlterNet
It's quite obvious from a distance.

It's the kind of argument that seems to be over the head of Republican luminaries like Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz, and of course it does happen to be right. Krugman brings some calm and wisdom to the Paris attacks, responding to  "Jeb Bush’s declaration that “this is an organized attempt to destroy Western civilization.”

"No, it isn’t," Krugman writes. "It’s an organized attempt to sow panic, which isn’t at all the same thing. And remarks like that, which blur that distinction and make terrorists seem more powerful than they are, just help the jihadists’ cause."

Krugman continues:

A much bigger risk, in practice, is that the targets of terrorism will try to achieve perfect security by eliminating every conceivable threat — a response that inevitably makes things worse, because it’s a big, complicated world, and even superpowers can’t set everything right. On 9/11 Donald Rumsfeld told his aides: “Sweep it up. Related and not,” and immediately suggested using the attack as an excuse to invade Iraq. The result was a disastrous war that actually empowered terrorists, and set the stage for the rise of ISIS.

And let’s be clear: this wasn’t just a matter of bad judgment. Yes, Virginia, people can and do exploit terrorism for political gain, including using it to justify what they imagine will be a splendid, politically beneficial little war.

Oh, and whatever people like Ted Cruz may imagine, ending our reluctance to kill innocent civilians wouldn’t remove the limits to American power. It would, however, do wonders for terrorist recruitment.

Finally, terrorism is just one of many dangers in the world, and shouldn’t be allowed to divert our attention from other issues. Sorry, conservatives: when President Obama describes climate change as the greatest threat we face, he’s exactly right. Terrorism can’t and won’t destroy our civilization, but global warming could and might.

Read the rest here

 

 

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11 Nov 17:34

Alberto Mayol: “Los canales de TV han transformado los noticiarios en una gran colección de actos de delincuencia”

by El Mostrador/ EFE

Según datos de la Dirección Nacional de Orden y Seguridad de Carabineros, entre enero y julio de este año en la capital disminuyeron los delitos de mayor connotación social en comparación con el mismo periodo del año anterior.

Dentro de este tipo se encuentran los robos de vehículos motorizados, que bajaron un 1,2 %, y los robos en lugares habitados, que disminuyeron un 3,4 %.

El mismo análisis, llevado a nivel nacional, indica que en ese periodo los delitos violentos disminuyeron un 2,3 %, mientras que los delitos contra la propiedad bajaron un 1 %.

Los datos coinciden con los que maneja la Subsecretaria de Prevención del Delito, del Ministerio del Interior.

Al comparar las cifras del segundo trimestre de 2013 con el de 2015, la conclusión es que los robos de vehículos motorizados y los robos en lugares habitados han disminuido en un 1,2 y 0,6 % respectivamente en comparación entre el segundo trimestre del 2013

Mayol y canales de TV

En relación con la percepción ciudadana de inseguridad, el sociólogo y académico de la Universidad de Chile Alberto Mayol, autor del libro “El Chile Profundo” consideró que “los medios de comunicación cumplen un rol decisivo”.

“Los canales de televisión han transformado los noticiarios en una gran colección de actos de delincuencia, cada vez mejor cubiertos”, declaró.

En algunos sectores sociales, especialmente entre los más acomodados, la sensación de inseguridad les ha llevado a echarse a la calle para protagonizar sonoras manifestaciones de protesta.

Los “cacerolazos”, que nacieron en 1971 como expresión de descontento de la burguesía santiaguina contra el gobierno de la Unidad Popular, de Salvador Allende, se han repetido en los últimos meses, especialmente en el sector oriental de la capital.

A juicio de Mayol, “el temor a la delincuencia se concentra precisamente en las zonas donde hay menos delitos”, que son los sectores acomodados de Santiago.

En amplios sectores políticos y sociales está instalada la percepción de que en los tribunales existe una suerte de “puerta giratoria”, de manera que los delincuentes raramente terminan en la cárcel.

Sin embargo, este planteamiento dista de la realidad. Chile es el segundo país de la Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo (OCDE) con mayor tasa de encarcelamiento por cada 100.000 habitantes.

“La puerta giratoria no existe”, enfatizó durante un encuentro empresarial el presidente de la Corte Suprema, Sergio Muñoz, quien recordó que en los últimos diez años, de los casos en los que se solicitó prisión, sólo en un 2 % fue denegada.

Reflexión de Burgos

El ministro del Interior, Jorge Burgos, aseguró que el país debe sentirse satisfecho de los niveles de seguridad de los que goza en relación con los delitos más duros, sin embargo, “hay ciertos tipos de delitos que causan legítima preocupación en la ciudadanía”.

En ese sentido, el secretario de Estado aseguró que “no hay que caer en el simplismo de decir que ese miedo a ser víctima de un delito está instalado en las personas sólo como producto del exceso de noticias en los medios, que probablemente también lo hay”.

“Pero, a pesar de ese modo un poco exagerado de tratar estas noticias en la televisión, sería simplificar las cosas hasta el extremo decir que esto es una campaña”, admitió.

“Hay una situación de inseguridad que responde al sentimiento de las personas y de eso tenemos que hacernos cargo. Estamos trabajando en ello”, agregó Burgos.

“No es fácil, pero creo que poco a poco, con policías profesionales como las que tenemos y resolviendo ciertos nudos en la cadena de la lucha contra el delito donde participan el ministerio público y los tribunales de justicia vamos a tener buenas noticias en el mediano y largo plazo”, dijo el titular del Interior.










10 Nov 17:07

Noam Chomsky: America's Empire of Chaos

by C.J. Polychroniou, Truthout
Chomsky reflects on the violent dynamics of US foreign policy in the 21st century.

US foreign policy in the 21st century has little to offer other than massive military power. Indeed, gone are the days when military might was used in order to "recreate the world in America's image." In the post-Cold War era, US military interventions take place in the absence of an overall strategic vision and with ideological justifications lacking force and conviction even among the United States' traditional allies. Little wonder then that military interventions, always illegal and unjustifiable, end up accomplishing nothing more than the creation of black holes, while giving rise in turn to new and ever increasing violent terrorist organizations bent on spreading their own vision of social and political order.

In this exclusive interview for Truthout, Noam Chomsky reflects on the dynamics of US foreign policy in the 21st century and the implications of the policy of raining down destruction for world order. Chomsky also assesses the role of Russia's involvement in Syria, the rise of the Islamic State and the apparent attraction it holds for many young Muslims from Europe, and offers a grim view about the future of US foreign policy.

CJ Polychroniou: US military interventions in the 21st century (e.g., Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria) have proven totally disastrous, yet the terms of the intervention debate have yet to be redrawn among Washington's warmakers. What's the explanation for this?

Noam Chomsky: In part the old cliché: When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The comparative advantage of the US is in military force. When one form of intervention fails, doctrine and practice can be revised with new technologies, devices, etc. There is a good review of the process from World War II to the present in a recent book by Andrew Cockburn, Kill Chain. There are possible alternatives, such as supporting democratization (in reality, not rhetoric). But these have likely consequences that the US would not favor. That is why when the US supports "democracy"; it is "top-down" forms of democracy in which traditional elites linked to the US remain in power, to quote the leading scholar of "democracy promotion," Thomas Carothers, a former Reagan official who is a strong advocate of the process but who recognizes the reality, unhappily.

Some have argued that Obama's wars are quite different in both style and essence from those of his predecessor, George W. Bush. Is there any validity behind these claims?

Bush relied on shock-and-awe military violence, which proved disastrous for the victims and led to serious defeats for the US. Obama is relying on different tactics, primarily the drone global assassination campaign, which breaks new records in international terrorism, and Special Forces operations, by now over much of the globe. Nick Turse, the leading researcher on the topic, recently reported that US elite forces are "deployed to a record-shattering 147 Countries in 2015."

Destabilization and what I call the "creation of black holes" is the principal aim of the Empire of Chaos in the Middle East and elsewhere, but it is also clear that the US is sailing in a turbulent sea with no sense of direction and is, in fact, quite clueless in terms of what needs to be done once the task of destruction has been completed. How much of this is due to the decline of the US as a global hegemon?

The chaos and destabilization are real, but I don't think that's the aim. Rather, it is a consequence of hitting fragile systems that one does not understand with the sledgehammer that is the main tool, as in Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan and elsewhere. As for the continuing decline of US hegemonic power (actually, from 1945, with some ups and downs), there are consequences in the current world scene. Take, for example, the fate of Edward Snowden. Four Latin American countries are reported to have offered him asylum, no longer fearing the lash of Washington. Not a single European power is willing to face US anger. That is a consequence of very significant decline of US power in the Western hemisphere.

However, I doubt that the chaos in the Middle East traces substantially to this factor. One consequence of the US invasion of Iraq was to incite sectarian conflicts that are destroying Iraq and are now tearing the region to shreds. The Europe-initiated bombing of Libya created a disaster there, which has spread far beyond with weapons flow and stimulation of jihadi crimes. And there are many other effects of foreign violence. There are also many internal factors. I think that Middle East correspondent Patrick Cockburn is correct in his observation that the Wahhabization of Sunni Islam is one of the most dangerous developments of the modern era. By now many of the most horrible problems look virtually insoluble, like the Syrian catastrophe, where the only slim hopes lie in some kind of negotiated settlement towards which the powers involved seem to be slowly inching.

Russia is also raining down destruction in Syria. To what end, and does Russia pose a threat to US interests in the region?

Russian strategy evidently is to sustain the Assad regime, and it is indeed "raining down destruction," primarily attacking the jihadi-led forces supported by Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and to an extent the US. A recent article in the Washington Post suggested that the high tech weapons provided by the CIA to these forces (including TOW anti-tank missiles) had shifted the military balance against Assad and were a factor in drawing the Russians in. On "US interest," we have to be careful. The interests of US power and of the people of the United States are often quite different, as is commonly the case elsewhere as well. The official US interest is to eliminate Assad, and naturally Russian support for Assad poses a threat to that. And the confrontation not only is harmful, if not catastrophic, for Syria, but also carries a threat of accidental escalation that could be catastrophic far beyond.

Is ISIS a US-created monster?

A recent interview with the prominent Middle East analyst Graham Fuller is headlined, "Former CIA officer says US policies helped create IS." What Fuller says, correctly I think, is that, "I think the United States is one of the key creators of this organization. The United States did not plan the formation of ISIS, but its destructive interventions in the Middle East and the war in Iraq were the basic causes of the birth of ISIS. You will remember that that the starting point of this organization was to protest the US invasion of Iraq. In those days it was supported by many non-Islamist Sunnis as well because of their opposition to the Iraq's occupation. I think even today ISIS [now the Islamic State] is supported by many Sunnis who feel isolated by the Shiite government in Baghdad." Establishment of Shiite dominance was one direct consequence of the US invasion, a victory for Iran and one element of the remarkable US defeat in Iraq. So in answer to your question, US aggression was a factor in the rise of ISIS, but there is no merit to conspiracy theories circulating in the region that hold that the US planned the rise of this extraordinary monstrosity.

How do you explain the fascination that a completely barbaric and savage organization like the Islamic State holds for many young Muslim people living in Europe?

There has been a good deal of careful study of the phenomenon, by Scott Atran among others. The appeal seems to be primarily among young people who live under conditions of repression and humiliation, with little hope and little opportunity, and who seek some goal in life that offers dignity and self-realization; in this case, establishing a utopian Islamic state rising in opposition to centuries of subjugation and destruction by Western imperial power. In addition, there appears to be a good deal of peer pressure - members of the same soccer club, and so on. The sharply sectarian nature of the regional conflicts no doubt is also a factor - not just "defending Islam" but defending it from Shiite apostates. It's a very ugly and dangerous scene.

The Obama administration has shown little interest in re-evaluating the US relationship with authoritarian and fundamentalist regimes in places like Egypt and South Arabia. Is democracy promotion a completely sham element of US foreign policy?

There doubtless are people like Thomas Carothers, mentioned above, who really are dedicated to democracy promotion, and are within the government; he was involved in "democracy promotion" in the Reagan State Department. But the record shows quite clearly that it is scarcely an element in policy, and quite often democracy is considered a threat - for good reasons, when we look at popular opinion. To mention only one obvious example, polls of international opinion by the leading US polling agency (WIN/Gallup) show that the US is regarded as the greatest threat to world peace by a huge margin, Pakistan far behind in second place (presumably inflated by the Indian vote). Polls taken in Egypt on the eve of the Arab spring revealed considerable support for Iranian nuclear weapons to counterbalance Israeli and US power. Public opinion often favors social reform of the kind that would harm US-based multinationals. And much else. These are hardly policies that the US government would like to see instituted, but authentic democracy would give a significant voice to public opinion. For similar reasons, democracy is feared at home.

Do you anticipate any major changes in US foreign policy in the near future either under a Democratic or Republican administration?

Not under a Democratic administration, but the situation with a Republican administration is much less clear. The party has drifted far off the spectrum of parliamentary politics. If the pronouncements of the current crop of candidates can be taken seriously, the world could be facing deep trouble. Take, for example, the nuclear deal with Iran. Not only are they unanimously opposed to it but they are competing on how quickly to bomb Iran. It's a very strange moment in American political history, and in a state with awesome powers of destruction, that should cause not a little concern.

 

Copyright, Truthout.org. Reprinted with permission

 

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05 Nov 21:07

Farmacia popular

by malaimagen

04 Nov 19:51

Apoyo

by malaimagen

03 Nov 03:02

[Foto] Consumidores castigan a marcas de confort coludidas y dejan vacía góndola de la competencia

by El Mostrador

El denominado caso del “Cartel del Confort” ha traído consigo, además del desprestigio internacional del mundo empresarial chileno –cabe recordar que fue motivo de análisis en medios como la BBC, The Guardian, El País y El Comercio–, un gran descontento en los consumidores.

Es por esto que la colusión entre la empresa de la Familia Matte, la CMPC y la compañía sueca SCA –antes PISA, propiedad del ex ministro de Sebastián Piñera, Gabriel Ruiz-Tagle– llevó a que la ciudadanía se organizara por redes sociales y en los mismos supermercados creando una protesta de “castigo” para las empresas coludidas.

De esta forma había distintos carteles pegados en las góndolas de los supermecados y viralizados en redes sociales, que llamaban a no comprar los productos de dichas empresas, entre ellos las marcas: Elite, Confort, Noble, Abolengo, favorita, Lider y Acuenta.

Es así como este fin de semana algunas salas de supermercados quebraban stock de marcas como Scott, la que no está dentro de las empresas coludidas en Chile, mientras que las de la CMPC y SCA lucían repletando los estantes.

Me sumaré a esta campaña… Prefiera #Scott el del perrito 🐶 #CartelDelConfort #Colusion #colusiondelconfort pic.twitter.com/rKDWTzbU0U

— Darliiita (@nairdarling) noviembre 2, 2015

Papel higiénico “no coludido” agotado en varias ciudades Foto de Antofagasta Talca y Santiago #nomasrobos #RT pic.twitter.com/pSrteIf6DR

— DonColusión (@dngonzalo) noviembre 2, 2015

Campaña ciudadana en redes llama a boicotear productos del #CartelDelConfort https://t.co/awqMRJRqok pic.twitter.com/1jeNMFvcjI

— El Desconcierto (@eldesconcierto) noviembre 2, 2015

papel higiénico

La foto fue escogida como “la imagen del día en CNN”










03 Nov 03:00

Perdón

by malaimagen

26 Oct 09:14

It Only Took a Little Flour to Bring Out What We Always Knew Was the Truth

funny halloween cats It Only Took a Little Flour to Bring Out What We Always Knew Was the Truth

Submitted by: (via unimpressedcats)

Tagged: halloween , Cats , funny , image
23 Oct 19:21

Cheering For This Cute Goal Never Gets Old

Submitted by: (via musahala)

23 Oct 19:12

This Rare South African Mamba Has an Amazing Warning Call

Submitted by: (via Brian Coleman)

Tagged: snakes , yas , Video
22 Oct 15:20

What Is 'Graysexuality'?

by Kirstin Kelley, Bitch Magazine
“Graysexual” covers the area between people who are sexual and people who aren’t.

One of the biggest changes we can celebrate in our media over recent years is the increasing visibility of LGBT people onscreen. But what about people whose sexuality doesn’t fit into any of those labels?

There are many, many people who think of themselves as not quite gay or straight—especially asexual-leaning and questioning people who struggle to find the right name for their identities.  Filmmaker Christopher Stoudt has an interesting new visibility project for people who don’t fit neatly into any orientation: His video “I’m Graysexual,” which explores his romantic life as a 30-year-old graysexual man.

“Graysexual” is a term that covers the fluid area between people who are sexual and people who aren’t. While graysexuality is usually under the asexuality umbrella, a huge term that includes a lot of different identities, it’s a bit of a misnomer to include graysexual people in the same category as people who never experience sexual attraction or sexual desire in any circumstances.

According to the Asexual Visibility and Education Network, people who are graysexual (or gray-A or gray-ace) might not normally experience sexual attraction, but do sometimes. They might also experience sexual attraction, but a low sex drive. Or they could experience sexual attraction and drive, but not strongly enough to want to act on them. They could also be people who can enjoy and desire sex, but only under very limited and specific circumstances. There are a lot of options there. Altogether, the term graysexual helps to describe people who really don’t want sex very often, but who do sometimes experience sexual attraction or sexual desire—those who experience fluidity or don’t fit cleanly into the asexual or sexual camps.

Graysexuality is not a brand-new term—this The Frisky article from 2011 explores the personal experiences of two women who identify as graysexual. Both women enjoy certain types of physical intimacy, but the way they experience and express those feelings are very different. And that’s pretty common for people that are graysexual. The experience can take a lot of different forms, but there is room for everyone’s story.

This short video from Christopher Stoudt is important because it draws attention to two groups that often get forgotten: asexuals and people on both the sexual and asexual spectrum who experience some type of fluidity.

I’m sure a lot of people will wonder why if you think of yourself as having a fluid sexuality, you’d want to find a label for yourself at all. In her article “The Questioning Continuum,” Bitch contributor Joshunda Sanders shared just how alienating it can be to not fit any of the existing categories. “Like many people, I long to fit into a neat category, and it irks me to be so open to the possibility of love in any form. But a lifetime is a long time to be at war with yourself,” she writes. It’s important to create spaces for people who don’t clearly fit labels because their identities and their experiences are real, and they matter. It’s an incredible feeling to discover you are not the only person experiencing something.

And people who are fluid really aren’t alone. A lot of people feel this way—a recent study showed that 19 percent of British adults identify as something other than completely straight or fully gay. That’s a lot of experiences that don’t have a neat label! So far there isn’t a lot of data about how many people identify as graysexual, but creating language that describes being grasexual is necessary if we ever hope to grasp what graysexuality really looks like.

People who are fluid in their sexuality are often overlooked in part because they're not easily labeled. But that doesn’t make their experiences any less valid. Having language that more accurately describes those experiences helps us all to understand them better and allows us to talk about them in ways that normalize those experiences. It’s nice to have a label that recognizes how narrow most labels are.

 

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17 Oct 00:45

'Sadism and Savagery I've Never Seen Before': Max Blumenthal & Chris Hedges Discuss 2014 Assault on Gaza

by Adam Johnson, AlterNet
As tensions rise in the occupied territories, last summer's brutal siege of Gaza can't be forgotten.

Recent tensions in the West Bank and East Jerusalem have brought the long-standing Israeli occupation of Palestine back into the news. Discussion of a third Intifada and a "wave of violence" have John Kerry rushing to the region to "calm things down" and pundits scrambling to lay blame. Missing from recent news is an important piece of context: Palestine is still reeling from the Israeli assault on Gaza last summer that left 11,000 wounded and over 2,200 dead, 70% of them children. 

Pulitzer Prize-winner Chris Hedges and AlterNet's Max Blumenthal recently sat down to discuss the situation on Hedges' new teleSUR show, "Days of Revolt," a series that focuses on people around the world fighting injustice. 

"The homes [in Gaza] are three to four stories high," Blumenthal said, "and each floor represents a generation, so when it gets hit by a missile, you see a family liquidated." His words play over video of explosions destroying apartment complexes and sometimes entire city blocks. The UN estimates that over 20,000 homes were destroyed and over 500,000 Gazans displaced during last summer's Operation Protective Edge.

The two men also discuss a chilling economic angle on the carnage. A major sector of Israel's economy is the design, manufacturing and exporting of weapons and weapons systems.

"These horrific weapons they are testing," Hedges said. "I mean, they're using the people of Gaza like guinea pigs." The weapons in question, so-called DIME bombs (or dense inert metal explosives), are, according to Blumenthal, "tungsten-based and attack human tissue over a matter of days... [they have] a very small entry wound and result in the massive burning of the organs." The use of these weapons, Hedges notes, creates a perverse incentive to test new, brutal weapons that can later be exported.

As the false symmetry of "tit for tat" framing plays out in our media, their discussion is a useful reminder that over the past few years, what's happened in Palestine is anything but symmetrical. 

Watch the video:

 

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13 Oct 02:23

AlterNet Comics: Brian McFadden on How Obama Offers Condolences for Accidental Bombings

by Brian McFadden, AlterNet
29 Sep 16:48

Apple Censors App That Tracks Drone Strikes, Calling It 'Objectionable Content'

by Zaid Jilani, AlterNet
What's the real reason behind this block?

The Apple App Store over the weekend removed Metadata+, an app developed by The Intercept research editor Josh Begley, giving the standard message that the program featured “excessively crude or objectionable content.” (The following image is from Begley's Twitter project, @dronestream.)

 

While you'd expect an app to be banned for featuring ultra-violent or pornographic content, all this one did was list data and location of drone strikes as well as name the victims, offering notifications each time a new one occurred.

The removal of the program seems to signal that the App Store does not view basic details about the wars we are involved in as matters of public information, but rather content that is too profane for the delicate sensibilities of its users.

 

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28 Sep 08:53

10 Ways Monopoly Airlines Use 'Calculated Misery' to Make Flying an Increasingly Overpriced Nightmare

by Kali Holloway, AlterNet
The airline industry profits by having you pay extra to be treated like a human being.

If you’ve ever seen those pictures of flight from the air industry’s “Golden Age” – roughly the 1950s to the 1970s – you know how hard it is to reconcile those images of spacious cabins, piano bars and in-flight freebies with today’s bare-bones, claustrophobic, no-free-lunch (or anything else) flight experiences. You might even say the discrepancy is a bit infuriating, especially considering that we’re in the midst of a boom time for airlines. In the three months of last quarter, America’s commercial airlines collectively made $5.5 billion, up 53 percent over the same period a year before and the highest tally since the pre-Recessionary days of 2007.

And yet, customers have never been more unhappy. The Air Travel Consumer Report from the U.S. Department of Transportation finds that in the first six months of this year, complaints from air travelers were up 20 percent over the same timeframe in 2014. It’s nothing short of confounding that as commercial airline profits and revenues skyrocket, customer service is worse than ever.

Confounding – though not confusing – when you consider airlines’ singular focus on their bottom lines. In an illuminating piece titled “Why Airlines Want to Make You Suffer,” Columbia Law professor and New Yorkercontributor Tim Wu posits that bad, no-frills service has become a cornerstone of commercial airlines’ business strategy. “Here’s the thing: in order for fees to work, there needs be something worth paying to avoid,” Wu writes. “That necessitates, at some level, a strategy that can be described as ‘calculated misery.’ Basic service, without fees, must be sufficiently degraded in order to make people want to pay to escape it. And that’s where the suffering begins.”

In other words, customer dissatisfaction pays off big for airlines. The industry figured out that if it only made flying a nightmarish experience for the average traveller – one in which things like food and comfort come a la carte and at additional cost – customers would pay extra for even the most basic services. Airlines get to pretend that they’re offering customer choice, and passengers are duped into believing they’re spending more for premium service. It’s a case study in basic consumer psychology – this tendency to pay more for less and then somehow think you’re getting a deal – and airlines are capitalizing on it like never before.

Generally, if you are unhappy with a business, you may take yours elsewhere, but that’s no longer true for the air industry. Following a series of mergers over the last seven years, the New York Timesfinds that “80 percent of the nation’s air traffic is concentrated among four airlines – American, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines.” An Econ 101 student with a low “C” in the class might’ve predicted those mergers would result in consumers getting screwed. But back in 2013, the Department of Justice Assistant Attorney for its antitrust division, General William J. Baer, defended the agency’s decision to allow an American Airlines-US Airways merger because it “open[ed] up the marketplace as never before.”

Two years later, as New York Magazine reported in June, the DOJ has launched its own investigation into America’s major airlines, which it suspects of collusion in order to bilk passengers out of billions. Per New York, “Investigators hope to find out whether these airlines let each other know about added flights and extra seats, in an effort to keep the number of open seats low and prices high.”

With the recent earnings announcement confirming airlines are profiting like crazy, it seemed like a good time to look at some of the many and various indignities visited upon air travelers. And by every data-drive measure, things are pretty bad out there. So let’s get into it. Here are 10 Ways Monopoly Airlines Use 'Calculated Misery' to Make Flying an Increasingly Overpriced Nightmare.


1. Charging hefty fees for checked baggage.

Between January and March of 2015, American commercial airlines collected $1.6 billion in fees for checked baggage, according to a report from the AP. That’s an increase of 7.4 percent over the same period a year prior. Between June of 2014 and 2015, they made an astounding $3.6 billion off of fees on checked luggage. Which is an impressive haul by any measure, but particularly stand-out considering it used to be free.

Most airlines now demand $25 for one piece of checked luggage, with costs increasing for each additional bag, and reaching as high as $200 in some cases. JetBlue, which for years distinguished itself from the pack with free baggage check, finally caved in November, and began charging for checked bags this past June. That leaves Southwest as the lone airline that doesn’t charge checked baggage fees.

The whole issue has gotten so out of hand that in June, Republican Representative John Mica introduced a bill that would prohibit airlines from charging more than $4.50 per checked bag.

2. Charging exorbitant fees for ticket changes.

Consider United an innovator in the shameless cash-grab that ticket change fees have become. In 2013, the airline became the first to make people pay dearly for changing their travel plans, raising its ticket change cost from $150 – already nothing to sneeze at – to $200. (For some international flights, that figure can rise to $300.) That’s now the industry standard, earning American commercial airlines a collective total of $3 billion in flight change fees between June of 2014 and 2015.

As the Washington Postreports, a small backlash has been brewing. Since change fees can sometimes be pricier than simply buying a new ticket, no-shows have become more common. The practice not only saves the customer money, it also prevents the airline from reselling their seat. The Post piece includes the awesome story of a woman named Laura Attwood who, instead of paying the change fees for an earlier flight, cashed in miles for the ticket she needed – then purposely made sure the airline couldn’t get paid twice for her seat.

“In fact, I checked in and picked my seat on the flight I wasn’t going to make, and confirmed it,” Attwood told the Post. “That way, they couldn’t resell my seat. I was so mad that I had to pay a change fee.”

3. Being late.

Look, while it’s true that inclement weather and airplane maintenance can muck with flight times, it’s also true that some delays are completely unnecessary. The Air Quality Rating report, released in April this year, found that industry on-time arrival percentages worsened between 2013 and 2014, dropping from 78.4 percent to 76.2 percent.

Some offenders were much worse than others. Spirit continued its streak of seemingly being awful at everything; it’s flights have only a 50-50 chance of arriving within 15 minutes of schedule. The AP reports that’s “the worst on-time performance by a major airline in 10 years.”

United was a distant second, with 33.7 percent of its flights arriving late to their destination.  

4. Booking (and often overbooking) flights.

For most of the last century, most flights were 50 to 60 percent full, because that was enough to make a flight profitable. That all started to change in the 1990s, as Bill McGee notes in USA Today, when flight loads were raised to 70 percent. By 2014, flight loads on average stood at 84 percent. And as McGill points out, “such a high average, of course, means many flights are at 100 percent.” His also notes that this figure is an historic high with only one precedent. “Domestic cabins are fuller than at any time since airlines were troop carriers during World War II, and the misery index keeps rising.”

Jam-packed flights have a bunch of obvious downsides for travelers, among them “boarding headaches, overhead bin shortages and increases in involuntary bumping.” When airlines push for profits even harder, overbooking flights, some customers inevitably lose – the seats they paid money for. Between 2013 and 2014, there was an increase of 3 percent in customers that were bumped from flights.

5. Expensive ticket prices.

Remember when airfare prices shot up, and everyone went along with it begrudgingly because fuel was really expensive and that all seemed to make sense? Well, gas prices have plummeted since then, but ticket prices haven’t budged. In fact, domestic fares actually crept up by about 3 percent last year. And the reasons why mostly come down to supply and demand, with a little market manipulation thrown in for good measure.

As transportation economist George Hoffer pointed out to the Huffington Post points last year, there have been a whole lot of airline mergers over the last few years, “between Continental Airlines and United Airlines, Northwest Airlines and Delta Air Lines, AirTran and Southwest Airlines and, most recently, American Airlines and US Airways.” All of which amounted to a fairly tidy (and totally legal – don’t forget our Justice Department approved those mergers!) way of eliminating annoyances like, you know, competition. 

At the same time, Department of Transportation numbers show that more Americans are flying now than ever before, even surpassing totals seen prior to the Great Recession. Airlines are careful to ensure that the number of flights offered almost, but not quite, meet demand – creating the perfect conditions to maximize profits while nearly abandoning customer service.

Miami University economics professor James Brock, speaking to the Huffington Post, explained, "The industry has become more concentrated, more oligopolistic, less competitive, and with greater market pricing power. In a more competitive market, lower fuel costs would flow through to lower fares. In a less competitive market? Not so much."

6. Limiting where you can buy tickets.

Comparison shopping is the key to getting the best price on airline tickets. Which is why airlines are trying really hard to make sure you can no longer do it.

Over the last few months, a few commercial airline companies have been removing their ticket pricing information from online travel sites, making it harder for ticket buyers to bargain hunt. Instead, the goal is to send them to official company sites, where airlines can limit pricing options and more effectively peddle extras that bring in more money. It also means that airlines don’t have to pay commission fees to third-party vendors.

A recent New York Times piece notes that Delta has pulled ticket pricing information from TripAdvisor as well as a number of European sites. While Lufthansa has actually begun charging people $18 when they book from any non-Lufthansa property. So far, airlines haven’t pulled out of the top travel sites, like Expedia (which recently bought Orbitz and Travelocity), Priceline and Kayak. For now, at least.

The cost of not being able to compare ticket prices is paid, of course, by the consumer. TheWashington Postcites a recent study from the Travel Technology Association which finds “restricting what seat price and schedule information was shared with third-party sites could cost passengers more than $6 billion a year.”

7. Bundling services aka upselling you on pretty much everything.   

With no-frills travel now the norm, and every amenity that used to come with the price of ticket incurring an additional fee, airlines have had the brilliant idea of “bundling” services, which essentially swindles people into thinking they’re getting a sweet deal on the most basic of offerings. You want to check a bag, extra legroom, and a few beverages on your flight? You can pay for those separately, or you can buy a bundle that includes all three, and save money. (Just kidding. You’ll onlythinkyou’re saving money.) Scott McCartney, who writes about air travel for the Wall Street Journal, gave a few more examples during an interview with NPR:

American has started a new bundling where they include Group One boarding and a free checked bag round trip, in a waiver of that dastardly domestic change fee that makes everybody crazy. And that's $68 roundtrip, flat fee. Delta has a bundle that they call A Send that's priority boarding, plus 24-hour Wi-Fi. That's $42, a bit of a discount over what you would get if you buy those separately. Southwest has a new thing where they'll give you early boarding that they sell at the gate, and that's $40 for each flight.

Interestingly, as the New York Times notes, this ruse only works because of a bit of psychological trickery. First, consumers like the option of having three choices, because it simply feels safer: when airlines present bundles as somewhere between a perk-free economy ticket and top dollar business or first class ticket, the bundle is transformed into a sensible midpoint. What’s more, consumers feel like they’re getting an “enhanced flight experience,” instead of what's actually happening – that they're just paying for stuff that used to be free. And there’s this:

J. D. Power & Associates found that when people paid for benefits like more legroom, early boarding and in-flight Wi-Fi, their satisfaction with the costs and fees was actually higher than if they got those amenities free.

That's right. Even our brains are conspiring with the airlines at this point.

8. Boarding in the least efficient, most misery-causing ways possible.

Last year, the New Yorker’s Tim Wu wrote about his reasons for parting ways with United as his airline of choice. He had already weathered a series of maddening changes following the Continental-United merger – pricey baggage and ticket change fees; increasingly rude employees; and rickety planes – but remained a United loyalist. But after a flight when Wu notice boarding procedures had been amended “to favor a few élite fliers over the convenience of everyone else,” he finally lost his patience with airline, and decided to not only take his business elsewhere, but to deliver an entire column detailing United’s flawed and counterintuitive post-merger practices.

Wu isn’t alone in his annoyance with airline boarding methods. Last year, a Bloomberg piece titled “The Dumb Way We Board Airplanes Remains Impervious to Good Data” looked at just how flawed the current system is. Most airlines allow business and first class passengers to board first – that keeps them safe from the riffraff, obviously – before loading other passengers, back-to-front. Which, as a Mythbusters investigation confirms, is the absolute slowest way of getting everyone on the plane. (“Free-for-all” boarding actually takes the least time, but customers also like it the least.) There are plenty of boarding options airlines could choose – so why do they consistently opt for the one the least efficient? Bloomberg has a few ideas:

One possibility is that airlines have no incentive to improve the process. As long as it remains terrible, they can sell early boarding privileges. Southwest, for example, charges $40 to be among the first 15 to board. Consider the indignity: The stress of boarding is so bad that people are willing to pay money to wait in the plane, rather than outside it – and they pay money to the very company causing that stress...Another minor perk that's growing throughout the industry is the increased use of zone boarding as a way for airlines to reward passengers with a small status perk. Just owning a Delta Amex Card brings early boarding privileges. These customers may not be able to upgrade to a higher class, but they can be consoled by making it to their bad seat earlier than others.

Wired notes that Jason Steffen, an astrophysicist, has done the tedious work of figuring out how best to speed up the boarding process. He told the magazine that only Virgin America has bothered to reach out to him for more insight, though that yielded no concrete changes.

9. Seats that are small and getting smaller.

Once a place to luxuriate under your (free) blanket as you enjoyed your (complimentary) highball and (gratis) three-course meal, airplane seats have grown increasingly smaller as airlines have devised ways to sardine in as many paying customers as possible. In economy class, seat pitch, which essentially serves as a measure of legroom, has shrunk from an average of 35 inches in the 1970s – those heady days before airline deregulation – to just 31 inches today. The disparity is even greater when you include discount airlines like Frontier and Spirit, where seat pitches can drop as low as 28 inches. Similarly, seat widths have been downsized from an average of 18 to 16 ½ inches. As USA Today's Bill McGee noted in a column last year, “[t]he roomiest economy seats you can book on the nation's four largest airlines are narrower than the tightest economy seats offered in the 1990s.” And yet, as has been unceasingly noted, and proven in studies by the CDC and others, Americans are getting bigger – they’re both heavier and taller than in the past.

While flyers’ discomfort is the most obvious consequence of the Incredible Shrinking Airline Seat, safety is a potential issue as well. The Federal Aviation Administration conducts routine emergency evacuation exercises, but has yet to do so using a plane with a seat pitch of less than 29 inches. And, to again cite USA Today, “[f]light attendants say it’s harder to provide passengers with medical care in tightly packed seat rows, and doctors warn of ‘economy class syndrome,’ or deep vein thrombosis, which can afflict passengers who can’t move their legs on longer flights.”

In the meantime, not content with the profits earned by torturing us in a seated position, China’s Spring Airlines is actually trying to make “standing seats” happen. These would place travelers in a sort of upright seat like the one seen here, and potentially increase capacity by up to 40 percent. In addition, Boeing has announced its newest 737 MAX jets, to begin rollout in 2017, will have 189 seats, up from the current total of 169. And Zodiac Seats France, which produces airline seats but apparently dabbles in sadism on the side, has created these weird seats that face each other. Because there is too much joy in the world.  

Flyersrights.org, an airline passenger advocacy group, currently has a petition that requests Congress establish a minimum standard for seat pitch. It’s been signed by nearly 33,000 people and can be found here.

10. Wi-fi on many flights stinks.

Back in 2009, everyone was sharing this clip of Louis C.K. on the Conan O’Brien Show kvetching about how we've all become entitled babies about technology. The comedian cited complaints about the speed of wi-fi on planes, which he regarded as a miraculous development we should all be marveling at all the time. It’s a funny bit that made sense in 2009, but in 2015, it feels a bit dated. These days, while in-flight wi-fi could be awesome, it rarely is, and those complaints now seem totally justifiable.

For one thing, it’s often slow and, to add insult to injury, expensive. (JetBlue offers free, speedy Internet access, but it’s the exception that proves the rule.) Why, at this late date, does this remain true? Forbes points out that Gogo has a virtual monopoly on in-flight wi-fi service – it’s used by “American, Virgin America, Delta, Alaska Airlines and some United coast-to-coast flights” – which gives the provider a lot of leverage, price-wise. And since it operates under the assumption that most business flyers are expensing the cost of wi-fi during air travel, they charge what might be called “corporate level” prices.

“Gogo has figured out that you make more revenue by charging as much money as possible to a very small number of people,” Tim Farrar, satellite telecom analyst for TMF Associates, told Wired. The magazine notes that “[t]ypically, only 7 percent of passengers opt to pay for Internet on Gogo flights, but that’s enough for Gogo to cover its costs and send a big check to its airline partners each month.”

The article goes on to indicate the technology used by each provider, which determines speed. Gogo, which again, serves most of the major airlines, "relies primarily on its air-to-ground network, which is essentially a cellular network pointed at the heavens,” though satellite technology would be far faster. In the rare cases it does employ satellite technology, the network is used by every flight in the vicinity. So not only is it slowed by the number of people using the Internet on your flight, but by the number of people logged on in every plane that shares the same flight route.

Forbes notes that, despite all these technical glitches, Gogo has been increasing the cost of its service to customers. 

 

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26 Sep 02:32

Paying For Your Parent's Mistake

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Submitted by: (via Tumblr)

Tagged: baby , bills , conception , parents
24 Sep 01:18

8 Foods You Should Eat Every Day

by David Zinczenko, Huffington Post
Nutritious and delicious, these are the key superfoods that should be a part of a healthy daily diet.

(image: Alena Haurylik/Shutterstock)

Spinach

It may be green and leafy, but spinach is no nutritional wallflower, and you know from reading Eat This, Not That!. This noted muscle builder is a rich source of plant-based omega-3s and folate, which help reduce the risk of heart disease, stroke, and osteoporosis. Bonus: Folate also increases blood flow to the nether regions, helping to protect you against age-related sexual issues. And spinach is packed with lutein, a compound that fights macular degeneration (and may help your sex drive). Aim for 1 cup fresh spinach or 1/2 cup cooked per day.

SUBSTITUTES: Kale, bok choy, romaine lettuce

FIT IT IN: Make your salads with spinach; add spinach to scrambled eggs; drape it over pizza; mix it with marinara sauce and then microwave for an instant dip.

PINCH HITTER: Sesame Stir-Braised Kale > Heat 4 cloves minced garlic, 1 Tbsp. minced fresh ginger, and 1 tsp. sesame oil in a skillet. Add 2 Tbsp. water and 1 bunch kale (stemmed and chopped). Cover and cook for 3 minutes. Drain. Add 1 tsp. soy sauce and 1 Tbsp. sesame seeds.

(image: mama_mia/Shutterstock)

Yogurt

Various cultures claim yogurt as their own creation, but the 2,000-year-old food's health benefits are not disputed: Fermentation spawns hundreds of millions of probiotic organisms that serve as reinforcements to the battalions of beneficial bacteria in your body. That helps boost your immune system and helps provide protection against cancer. Not all yogurts are probiotic, though, so make sure the label says "live and active cultures." Aim for 1 cup of the calcium and protein-rich goop a day. And choose wisely: Use our Best and Worst Yogurts.

SUBSTITUTES: Kefir, soy yogurt

FIT IT IN: Yogurt topped with blueberries, walnuts, flaxseed, and honey is the ultimate breakfast -- or dessert. Plain low-fat yogurt is also a perfect base for creamy salad dressings and dips.

HOME RUN: Power Smoothie > Blend 1 cup low-fat yogurt, 1 cup fresh or frozen blueberries, 1 cup carrot juice, and 1 cup fresh baby spinach for a nutrient-rich blast.

(image: DUSAN ZIDAR/Shutterstock)

Tomatoes

There are two things you need to know about tomatoes: Red are the best, because they're packed with more of the antioxidant lycopene, and processed tomatoes are just as potent as fresh ones, because it's easier for the body to absorb the lycopene. Studies show that a diet rich in lycopene can decrease your risk of bladder, lung, prostate, skin, and stomach cancers, as well as reduce the risk of coronary artery disease. Aim for 22 mg of lycopene a day, which is about eight red cherry tomatoes or a glass of tomato juice. For the best picks in the produce aisle, click here.

SUBSTITUTES: Red watermelon, pink grapefruit, Japanese persimmon, papaya, guava

FIT IT IN: Pile on the ketchup and Ragú; guzzle low-sodium V8 and gazpacho; double the amount of tomato paste called for in a recipe.

PINCH HITTER: Red and Pink Fruit Bowl > Chop 1 small watermelon, 2 grapefruits, and 1 papaya. Garnish with mint.

(image: LiliGraphie/Shutterstock)

Carrots

Most red, yellow, or orange vegetables and fruits are spiked with carotenoids -- fat-soluble compounds that are associated with a reduction in a wide range of cancers, as well as reduced risk and severity of inflammatory conditions such as asthma and rheumatoid arthritis -- but none are as easy to prepare, or have as low a caloric density, as carrots. Aim for 1/2 cup a day.

SUBSTITUTES: Sweet potato, pumpkin, butternut squash, yellow bell pepper, mango

FIT IT IN: Raw baby carrots, sliced raw yellow pepper, butternut squash soup, baked sweet potato, pumpkin pie, mango sorbet, carrot cake

PINCH HITTER: Baked Sweet Potato Fries > Scrub and dry 2 sweet potatoes. Cut each into 8 slices, and then toss with olive oil and paprika. Spread on a baking sheet and bake for 15 minutes at 350°F. Turn and bake for 10 minutes more.

(image: Anna Moskvina/Shutterstock)

Blueberries

Host to more antioxidants than any other North American fruit, blueberries can help prevent cancer, diabetes, and age-related memory changes (hence the nickname "brain berry"). Studies show that blueberries, which are rich in fiber and vitamins A and C, also boost cardiovascular health. Aim for 1 cup fresh blueberries a day, or 1/2 cup frozen or dried. Try this amazing blueberry smoothie!

SUBSTITUTES: Acai berries, purple grapes, prunes, raisins, strawberries

FIT IT IN: Blueberries maintain most of their power in dried, frozen, or jam form.

PINCH HITTER: Acai, an Amazonian berry, has even more antioxidants than the blueberry. Try acai juice from Sambazon or add 2 Tbsp. of acai pulp to cereal, yogurt, or a smoothie.

(image: Gayvoronskaya_Yana/Shutterstock)

Black Beans

All beans are good for your heart, but none can boost your brain power like black beans. That's because they're full of anthocyanins, antioxidant compounds that have been shown to improve brain function. A daily 1/2-cup serving provides 8 grams of protein and 7.5 grams of fiber. It's also low in calories and free of saturated fat.

SUBSTITUTES: Peas, lentils, and pinto, kidney, fava, and lima beans

FIT IT IN: Wrap black beans in a breakfast burrito; use both black beans and kidney beans in your chili; puree 1 cup black beans with 1/4 cup olive oil and roasted garlic for a healthy dip; add favas, limas, or peas to pasta dishes.

HOME RUN: Black Bean and Tomato Salsa > Dice 4 tomatoes, 1 onion, 3 cloves garlic, 2 jalapeños, 1 yellow bell pepper, and 1 mango. Mix in a can of black beans and garnish with 1/2 cup chopped cilantro and the juice of 2 limes.

(image: inyucho/Flickr)

Walnuts

Richer in heart-healthyomega-3s than salmon, loaded with more anti-inflammatory polyphenols than red wine, and packing half as much muscle-building protein as chicken, the walnut sounds like a Frankenfood, but it grows on trees. Other nuts combine only one or two of these features, not all three. A serving of walnuts -- about 1 ounce, or 7 nuts -- is good anytime, but especially as a post-workout recovery snack.

SUBSTITUTES: Almonds, peanuts, pistachios, macadamia nuts, hazelnuts

FIT IT IN: Sprinkle on top of salads; chop and add to pancake batter; spoon peanut butter into curries; grind and mix with olive oil to make a marinade for grilled fish or chicken.

HOME RUN: Mix 1 cup walnuts with 1/2 cup dried blueberries and 1/4 cup dark chocolate chunks.

(image: jacqueline/Flickr)

Oats

The éminence grise of health food, oats garnered the FDA's first seal of approval. They are packed with soluble fiber, which lowers the risk of heart disease. Yes, oats are loaded with carbs, but the release of those sugars is slowed by the fiber, and because oats also have 10 grams of protein per 1/2-cup serving, they deliver steady, muscle-friendly energy. Or have a sandwich, from our list of the Best and Worst Breakfast Sandwiches.

SUBSTITUTES: Quinoa, flaxseed, wild rice

FIT IT IN: Eat granolas and cereals that have a fiber content of at least 5 grams per serving. Sprinkle 2 Tbsp. ground flaxseed on cereals, salads, and yogurt.

PINCH HITTER: Quinoa Salad > Quinoa has twice the protein of most cereals, and fewer carbs. Boil 1 cup quinoa in 2 cups of water. Let cool. In a large bowl, toss it with 2 diced apples, 1 cup fresh blueberries, 1/2 cup chopped walnuts, and 1 cup plain fat-free yogurt.

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The Reason Local Fruits and Vegetables Taste So Much Better

 

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20 Sep 16:25

Did I Really?

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Submitted by: (via acidcow)

20 Sep 07:54

Israeli Arms Fuel Atrocities in Africa

by Rania Khalek, The Electronic Intafada
Since its secession in 2011, South Sudan has descended into civil war between opposing political factions.

Israeli weapons are fueling atrocities in South Sudan, according to a United Nations report that sheds new light on the secretive Israeli arms trade in Africa.

Authored by an investigative team assembled by the UN Security Council, the report cites photographic evidence of automatic rifles made by Israel Military Industries (IMI) being in the arsenal of South Sudan’s army and police. Known as Galil ACE, the guns have particularly been used by bodyguards of high-ranking politicians and by senior army officers.

South Sudan was granted independence in 2011 following a civil war that lasted for decades. Within days of its establishment, leading figures in the Israeli weapons industry rushed to advance their interests in the new allyagainst Iran’s influence in Sudan.

Since its secession in 2011, South Sudan has descended into civil war between opposing political factions.

The Israeli-armed South Sudanese military and government-aligned militias are employing a “scorched earth policy” characterized by the systematic rape of women and children, indiscriminate killings and the burning down of entire villages with families inside their homes, according to the UN report.

South Sudan is not the only African country in which the Israeli arms industry is profiting from bloodshed.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Israel does not disclose detailed information about its arms deals, most of which are brokered by shady intermediaries, typically retired Israeli military personnel or civilian expatriates.

However, occasional news reports, public statements from officials and investigations by nongovernmental organizations have drawn back the curtain in recent years, revealing military involvement in more corners of Africa than can be detailed in a single article.

Using those sources, SIPRI was able to document the sale of major Israeli weapons to Cameroon, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Lesotho, Nigeria, Rwanda, the Seychelles, South Africa and Uganda from 2006 to 2010.

Champion arms dealer

 

Despite its small size, for decades Israel has ranked among the world’s top 10 arms exporters, an impressive feat for a nation no geographically bigger than New Jersey.

This is partly due to Israel’s use of the occupied West Bank and Gaza as laboratories to test and refine weapons and methods of domination and control. This dynamic allows Israeli military firms to market their products as “battle-tested” and “combat proven” — coveted labels that give the nation a competitive edge in the international arms trade.

Israel’s success is also attributable to its willingness to do business with repressive regimes that even the United States and European countries avoid arming directly.

In the case of South Sudan, the magnitude of atrocities compelled the European Union to impose an arms embargo and issue sanctions against the country’s military leaders.

The US has similarly suspended military aid and issued sanctions, though it should be noted that the Obama administration enthusiastically aided the build-up of the South Sudanese army, despite knowing that it had several thousand child soldiers within its ranks.

Israel, meanwhile, hosted South Sudan at a weapons expo as recently as June.

Aiding genocide

 

Acting as a weapons conduit to murderous regimes is hardly a new phenomenon for Israel.

Under the leadership of Yitzhak Rabin, then prime minister, and Shimon Peres, then foreign minister, Israel supplied the Hutu-dominated Rwandan government forces as well as the rebel army led by Paul Kagame with bullets, rifles and grenades as genocide was underway in that country during the 1990s.

In addition to arming the killers, Israel trained the Rwandan military and paramilitary forces in the years leading up to the bloodbath.

After touring the killing fields, an Israeli arms dealer reportedly lauded himself as a humanitarian for helping the victims die quickly with bullets instead of machetes. “I’m actually a doctor,” he remarked.

Israel has since forged close ties with Kagame, Rwanda’s current autocratic president who enjoys much support in the West.

Weapons depot for despots

 

As Israeli weapons contracts from the US and Europe decline due to reduced defense budgets, developing countries in Latin America and Africa have become Israel’s fastest-growing markets.

Israeli arms sales to Africa doubled between 2012 and 2013 and ballooned another 40 percent in 2014, reaching $318 million that year.

It’s unclear whether these totals account for the weapons and military training Israel provided to Uganda and possibly Rwanda as compensation for agreeing to take in African refugees expelled from Israel.

While Israel has no qualms contributing to turmoil in African countries, it refuses to grant asylum to Africans on its soil, preferring instead to imprison and deport them back to the horrors they escaped. Some have been imprisoned, tortured and even killed since their expulsion.

What is clear is that Israel’s African customers comprise a who’s who of undemocratic regimes that brutally oppress their citizens.

Cameroon’s Rapid Intervention Brigade (BIR), which engages in routine extrajudicial assassinations and “disappearances”, is trained by a retired Israeli army commander, Mayer Heretz.

In 2009, BIR was deployed to crush demonstrations against economic inequality, killing as many as 100 protesters.

Cameroon’s notoriously brutal presidential guard unit, which is vital to maintaining the 33-year rule of dictator Paul Biya, was trained by another retired Israeli army commander, Avi Sivan.

Prolonging the rule of repressive regimes in Africa is a long-held Israeli tradition.

Israel equipped the South African apartheid regime with weapons in the 1970s and ’80s in violation of international sanctions.

Safeguarding corporate plunder

 

Decades of stealing and colonizing Palestinian land and resources has qualified Israel with unique expertise in subduing resistance and maintaining colonial plunder.

As Jimmy Johnson, an activist and researcher on Israel’s arms trade, has explained, “The 19th century ethnocentric nationalism that drove the creation of Israel … often obscures the fact that the dispossession of Palestinians has included a massive upward transfer of wealth from colonized to colonizer and from occupied to occupier.”

Israel isn’t just delivering arms to Africa. It is offering a successful model for securing the spoils of neocolonialism from a growing underclass dispossessed and abandoned by the ravages of globalized capitalism.

Israel’s occupation is “exported to fight the redistribution of wealth,” as Johnson has noted.

Just south of Cameroon, Israeli military companies have raked in millions of dollars selling military hardware to the tiny oil-rich nation of Equatorial Guinea.

Equatorial Guinea is home to one of the most unequal societies in the world.

The former Spanish colony’s ruthless dictator, Teodoro Obiang, has enriched himself with handsome paymentsfrom US oil companies, which in turn exploit the country’s massive oil reserves without hindrance.

To preserve his rule, Obiang depends on a presidential guard almost certainly trained by Israel, while relying on Israeli hardware perfected in Gaza to protect Exxon’s oil rigs.

Obiang’s security forces are notorious for carrying out widespread torture and summary executions of political opponents.

In 2008, Israel secured an estimated $100 million weapons deal with Equatorial Guinea, which involved the purchase of four IMI Shaldag patrol boats and a Saar missile boat manufactured by Israel Shipyards. “IMI’s boats are intended to secure the oil rigs at sea,” according to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

These are the same vessels used by the Israeli navy to enforce the sea blockade of Gaza and fire on its inhabitants.

While Israel helps US oil companies and the Obiang family cash in, 1 in 10 children in Equatorial Guinea diesbefore his or her fifth birthday. Moreover, less than half the country’s citizens have access to clean drinking water.

In Angola’s Cabinda province, Aerostar, a drone made by the Israeli company Aeronautics Defense Systems, safeguards offshore oil rigs for private companies, including Chevron.

In the Niger Delta, an assortment of Israeli surveillance vehicles, including the Aerostar and Seastar from Aeronautics and the Shaldag patrol boat from Israel Shipyards, protect Chevron’s oil platforms from potential obstacles to the corporate pillaging of Nigeria’s resources.

This is in addition to Nigeria’s Internet surveillance system, installed by Israel’s largest military firm, Elbit Systems, in 2013.

Exporting “war on terror”

 

With the rise of Boko Haram, Nigeria has in recent years adopted the “war on terror” doctrine first pushed by Israel to justify its ongoing conquest of Palestine.

“Israel has been a crucial and loyal ally in our fight against Boko Haram,” a Nigerian government official was quoted as saying early this year.

“It is a sad reality that Israel has a great deal of experience confronting terrorism. Our Israeli partners have used that experience, and the unique expertise gained over years of fighting terror within its own borders, to assist us,” added the official, conflating Palestinian resistance to Israeli colonial violence with terrorism perpetrated by a militant group to which Palestinians have no relation.

Fully supportive of his government’s conduct, one Nigerian Christian activist told The Jerusalem Post, “I am like an Israeli settler in the West Bank in the midst of Palestinians.”

This attitude has been nothing short of disastrous.

Since 2012, under the cover of routing Boko Haram, the Nigerian military has extrajudicially executed 1,200 people and arbitrarily arrested 20,000 boys and young men, at least 7,000 of whom died in military detention from starvation, medical neglect and overcrowding.

Kenyan death squads in the General Service Unit, the paramilitary wing of that country’s police and military, have similarly adopted the “Israeli rulebook” for extrajudicial killings of outspoken Muslim clerics.

Death squad officers interviewed by Al Jazeera last year revealed that their units are trained by Israel.

“Exporting the experience of Zionism”

 

In his 1987 book The Israeli Connection, Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi characterized Israel’s support for tyrants in developing countries as “a direct outgrowth of what it has done at home.”

“What Israel is doing in the Third World,” asserted Beit-Hallahmi, “is simply to export the Middle East experience of Zionism,” characterized by conquest and pacification.

Israel is exporting “not just a technology of domination, but a worldview that undergirds that technology,” he added.

It is exporting “the logic of the oppressor … a certain frame of mind, a feeling that the Third World can be controlled and dominated, that radical movements in the Third World can be stopped, that modern Crusaders still have a future.”

This is precisely what Israel is doing in Africa today, with predictably deadly consequences.

 

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17 Sep 17:31

Cajera de peaje recibe descuento en su sueldo después de levantar la barrera durante el terremoto

by El Mostrador

“Antes de ser cajera de peaje, soy persona. Tengo conciencia, valores y principios. No me arrepiento de haber levantado la barrera hoy, ni de las pérdidas que tuve. No me interesa la plata, me interesa el bienestar de las personas, sea quien sea. Díganme weona o como quieran. Prefiero ser weona antes que una mina individualista que no se arriesga a perder un peso en una situaión así. La conciencia y conmoción social empieza en  casa y se desplaza por las calles. Es por eso que no todos la tenemos”.

Esto posteó la joven Daamaris Carrimán de 20 años en su cuenta de Facebook. La mujer decidió levantar la barrera del peaje San José en la Autopista Los Libertadores a la hora del terremoto que se sintió ayer en la zona centro norte de Chile.

“El suelo se movía demasiado y salí de la cabina y me puse en la calle. Después los autos y la gente empezaron a desesperarse. Y aún en medio del terremoto, no se cómo corrimos con mis compañeras, volvimos a la caseta y abrimos las barreras”, contó a El Dínamo.

La decisión tuvo sus consecuencias. En principio la empresa concesionaria iba a descontarle la cantidad de 21 mil pesos de su sueldo pero finalmente el descuento será de 6 mil cuatrocientos. De cualquier manera la cajera, más que el dinero, lamentó haber estado retenida hasta las 11 de la noche.

“Cada vez que pasa un auto sin pagar a nosotros nos lo cobran, lo descuentas de nuestro propio sueldo”, cuenta. “En cada replica que había levantaba la barrera. Y la jefa empezó a decirnos que no se podían levantar las barreras. Yo quería irme. Porque tengo una hija, tengo familia y estaba desesperada. Y me dijo que no. Que habían ordenado que nadie se podía ir. Y me retuvieron ahí hasta el fin del turno. Hasta las 11 de la noche”, aseguró.

Daamaris Carrimán reconoce que el descuento la tiene sin cuidado El descuento que me van a hacer a mí me da lo mismo, porque lo que hice lo hice consciente y usé el criterio. Lo que me mantiene desconcertada en realidad es que no me hayan dejado irme. Me retuvieron ahí habiendo un terremoto. O sea, el criterio era dejar las barreras arriba y que todos se vayan, si es un terremoto y no es menor. Pero no lo hicieron. Todas tuvimos que quedarnos ahí, todas igual de mal”

La Autopista Los Libertadores es parte de los 700 kilómetros concesionados que en distintas rutas administra el grupo español Abertis, que ingresó a Chile en 2012 comprando las operaciones de la también hispana OHL.










16 Sep 18:05

Pro vida

by malaimagen







16 Sep 14:02

List: Radiohead Song or Accurate Description of My Parenting? by Kimberly Harrington

1. Scatterbrain
2. Arbitrary Justice
3. I Might Be Wrong
4. Slammed Doors
5. 2 + 2 = 5
6. Go To Sleep
7. I Can’t
8. Head In Hands
9. Down is the New Up
10. Existential Implosion
11. Sulk
12. Stop Whispering
13. Dirty Laundry Infinity
14. Shouting Out of Proportion
15. Let Down
16. I Told You A Thousand Times
17. You and Whose Army?
18. Man Down
19. Slips of Permission
20. Fog
21. Life In A Glass House
22. Who’s The Adult?
23. Worrywort
24. You Never Wash Up After Yourself
25. Red Wine Massacre
26. 4 Minute Warning
27. Crying in Public
28. These Are My Twisted Words
29. A Reminder
30. I Never Said I Knew What I Was Doing
31. House of Cards
32. At a Loss
33. I Am Citizen Insane
34. Accidental Successes
35. Permanent Daylight
36. What

Radiohead song: 1, 6, 7, 9, 11, 12, 17, 20, 21, 24, 26, 28, 29, 31, 35
Accurate description of my parenting: 2, 4, 8, 10, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 22, 25, 27, 30, 32, 34, 36
Both: 3, 5, 15, 23, 33

15 Sep 13:48

List: Biblical Cross-Stitch Patterns from Kim Davis’s Etsy Account by Jake Dawe

The following are available in
quilts, throw pillows, and tea cozies.

Philippians 4:13

“I can ignore the Supreme Court through Christ, who strengthens me.”

Psalm 119:105

“Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path and a flame unto my office trashcan in which I burn requests for same-sex marriage licenses.”

Matthew 28:20

“I am with you always, even unto the end of the world, even when you invoke my name and completely misunderstand the intended message of the New Testament.”

Joshua 24:15

“As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord, and ignore the voting public who elected me to this office and awarded me a salary of $80,000 per year plus a comprehensive health and dental plan, which I will continue to collect during this controversy, though I no longer perform the duties of my office.”

Romans 12:12

“Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer, obstinate in bureaucracy, discriminatory in work, and uncooperative in legal proceedings.”

Psalm 17:8

“Guard me from all evil things under the shadows of your wings, such as same-sex partners who have lived together longer and more faithfully than I have in any of my four marriages — the first marriage having fallen apart due to adultery, which I committed, resulting in twins born out of wedlock.”

Exodus 20:14

“You shalt not commit adultery, unless you commit adultery before you are born again.”

I Corinthians 13:13

“And now these four remain: faith, hope, love, and contempt of court. The greatest of these is love. Contempt of court is a close second.”

Hebrews 2:13

“I will put my trust in Him, believing He would want me to deny my neighbor equal protection under the law.”

Psalm 46:10

“Be still, and know that I am God. Be ignorant, and forget that I said more things about shellfish and foreskins than homosexuality.”

09 Sep 17:45

Find Out In :59 Seconds If You're A Good Liar

Are you a good liar? Setting aside the moral question of if there's such a thing as a "good liar," let us refocus on the question. Are you good at lying? Before today, we only knew of one way to tell if someone is good at lying, namely watching them lie and get away with it. However, one scientist says he's figured out a way of telling if someone is a good liar without having them lie. <br /> <br /> While this test might seem ridiculous it does have a basis in science. The test is based off a study by R.G. Hass published in 1984 called "Perspective-Taking And Self-Awareness: Drawing An E On Your Forehead."<br /> <br /> The test only takes seconds to conduct, but might give you a new perspective on how you see yourself. So take the test and let us know if you're a good liar. We can trust you, right?
08 Sep 20:53

AlterNet Comics: Jen Sorensen Imagines Trump as a Desperate Refugee

by Jen Sorensen, AlterNet
What if The Donald found himself on the other end of the immigration debate?

Trump the Refugee.
Photo Credit: 
Jen Sorsensen
 

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08 Sep 20:52

AlterNet Comics: Matt Bors on How Jesus Would Treat Syrian Refugees

by Matt Bors, AlterNet