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Showing posts with label BREAKDOWN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BREAKDOWN. Show all posts

Monday, August 12, 2013

Stories bleeding cruelty block vision of justice, equality, liberty, democracy

Stories must move us to invest in individual and collective agency ─ Giroux
Excerpt, editing by Carolyn Bennett 

Henry Armand Giroux is an American cultural critic, a founding theorist of critical pedagogy in the United States best known for pioneering work in public pedagogy, cultural studies, youth studies, higher education, media studies, and critical theory. He has been described as one of the top fifty educational thinkers of the modern period. Currently living in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, Henry Giroux has held teaching positions on several North American university faculties including Boston University professor of education (1977-1983); Miami University (Oxford, Ohio, 1983) professor of education and renowned scholar in residence, Director at the Center for Education and Cultural Studies; Penn State University Waterbury Chair Professorship, Director of the Waterbury Forum in Education and Cultural Studies (1992-2004); and since May of 2004, McMaster University Global Television Network Chair in English and Cultural Studies.
Dr. Henry A. Giroux


Giroux appeared today on KPFA’s news and interviews program “Upfront.” Published today at Counterpunch and Rebellious Independent News and Film (RINF) are what I consider compellingly spot-on thoughts in his article “The Politics of Cruelty: America’s Descent into Madness.”

BEYOND the entrenched, regressive is

“The American public needs more than a show of outrage or endless demonstrations.

“It needs to develop a formative culture for producing a language of critique, possibility, and broad-based political change. Such a project is indispensable for developing an organized politics that speaks to a future that can provide sustainable jobs, decent health care, quality education, and communities of solidarity and support for young people.
 
“At stake here is a politics and vision that informs ongoing educational and political struggles to awaken the inhabitants of neoliberal societies to their current reality and what it means to be educated not only to think outside of a savage market-driven commonsense;

…but also to struggle for those values, hopes, modes of solidarity, power relations, and institutions that infuse democracy with a spirit of egalitarianism and economic and social justice.

“For this reason, any collective struggle that matters has to embrace education as the center of politics and the source of an embryonic vision of the good life outside of the imperatives of predatory capitalism.”

Warped stories ripe for change

“The stories we tell about ourselves as Americans no longer speak to the ideals of justice, equality, liberty, and democracy.

“There are no towering figures such as Martin Luther King, Jr. whose stories interweave moral outrage with courage and vision and inspired us to imagine a society that was never just enough. 
 
“Stories that once inflamed our imagination now degrade it, overwhelming a populace with nonstop advertisements that reduce our sense of agency to the imperatives of shopping. But these are not the only narratives that diminish our capacity to imagine a better world. 


 W







e are also inundated with stories of cruelty and fear that undermine communal bonds and tarnish any viable visions of the future. Different stories, ones that provided a sense of history, social responsibility, and respect for the public good, were once circulated by our parents, churches, synagogues, schools, and community leaders.

“Today, the stories that define who we are as individuals and as a nation are told by right-wing and liberal media that broadcast the conquests of celebrities, billionaires, and ethically frozen politicians who preach the mutually related virtues of the free market and a permanent war economy.

“… The stories that dominate the American landscape embody what stands for commonsense among market and religious fundamentalists in both mainstream political parties: 

shock-and-awe austerity measures;

tax cuts that serve the rich and powerful and destroy government programs that help the poor, elderly, and sick;

attacks on women’s reproductive rights;

attempts to suppress voter ID laws and rig electoral college votes

full-fledged assaults on the environment;

the militarization of everyday life;

the destruction of public education, if not critical thought itself; 

an ongoing attack on unions, on social provisions, and on the expansion of Medicaid and meaningful health care reform.

“These stories are endless, repeated by the neoliberal and neoconservative walking dead who roam the planet sucking the blood and life out of everyone they touch—from the millions killed in foreign wars to the millions incarcerated in our nation’s prisons.”

Cruelty compounded
Yields brutality

“Every once in a while we catch a brutal glimpse of what America has become in the narratives spun by politicians whose arrogance and quests for authority exceed their interest [in concealing] the narrow-mindedness, power-hungry blunders, cruelty, and hardship embedded in the policies they advocate.  
 
“Echoes of a culture of cruelty can be heard in politicians such as Senator Tom Coburn, a Republican from Oklahoma, who believes that even assistance to those unemployed, homeless, and working poor suffering the most in his home state should be cut in the name of austerity measures. 

“In the words of Mike Reynolds, we hear another politician from Oklahoma who insists that government has no responsibility to provide students with access to a college education through a state program ‘that provides post-secondary education scholarship to qualified low-income students.’

“We find evidence of a culture of cruelty in numerous policies that make clear that those who occupy the bottom rungs of American society—whether low-income families, poor minorities of color and class, or young, unemployed, and failed consumers—are considered disposable, utterly excluded in terms of ethical considerations and the grammar of human suffering.”

New ethos
New/renewed stories 
Imperative

“Before this dangerously authoritarian mindset has a chance to take hold of our collective imagination and animate our social institutions, it is crucial that all Americans think critically and ethically about the coercive forces shaping U.S. culture—and focus our energy on what can be done to change them.

“It will not be enough only to expose the falseness of the stories we are told. We also need to create alternative narratives about what the promise of democracy might be for our children and ourselves.




This demands
a break from established political parties, the creation of alternative public spheres in which to produce democratic narratives and visions, and a notion of politics that is educative,

…one that takes seriously how people interpret and mediate the world, how they see themselves in relation to others, and what it might mean to imagine otherwise in order to act otherwise. 

Why are millions not protesting in the streets over these barbaric policies that deprive them of life, liberty, justice, equality, and dignity?

What are the pedagogical technologies and practices at work that create the conditions for people to act against their own sense of dignity, agency, and collective possibilities?  

“Progressives and others need to make education central to any viable sense of politics so as to make matters of remembrance and consciousness central elements of what it means to be critical and engaged citizens.

“There is also a need for social movements that invoke stories as a form of public memory,


stories that have the potential to move people to invest in their own sense of individual and collective agency,

stories that make knowledge meaningful in order to make it critical and transformative.
 

“If democracy is to once again [or for the first time] inspire a populist politics, it is crucial to develop a number of social movements in which the stories told are never completed, but are always open to self- and social reflection, capable of pushing ever further the boundaries of our collective imagination and struggles against injustice wherever they might be. 

“Only then will the stories that now cripple our imaginations, politics, and democracy be challenged and hopefully overcome.”



Sources and notes
[Editor’s insert bracketed]

“The Politics of Cruelty: America’s Descent into Madness” by Henry Giroux, August 12, 2013, http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/08/12/americas-descent-into-madness/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=americas-descent-into-madness

Full article republished at RINF “America’s Descent into Madness” http://rinf.com/alt-news/latest-news/americas-descent-into-madness/58072/

Henry A. Giroux currently holds the Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department and a Distinguished Visiting Professorship at Ryerson University. His most recent book is The Educational Deficit and the War on Youth (Monthly Review Press, 2013), His web site is www.henryagiroux.com

Henry Giroux has published more than 50 books and more than 300 academic articles, addition to being a co-editor-in-chief of the Review of Education, Pedagogy and Cultural Studies; he is published widely throughout education and cultural studies literature.

Among Giroux’s major, recent publications  

The University in Chains: Confronting the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex (2007)
Against the Terror of Neoliberalism: Beyond the Politics of Greed (2008)
Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability? (2009)

Politics beyond Hope: Obama and the Crisis of Youth, Race, and Democracy. (2010)
Hearts of Darkness: Torturing Children in the War on Terror (2010)

Zombie Politics in the Age of Casino Capitalism (2011)
Education and the Public Sphere: Ideas of Radical Pedagogy (co-authored with Lech Witkowski) Cracow, Poland: Impuls (2011)
Education and the Crisis of Public Values (2011)

Disposable Youth: Racialized Memories, and the Culture of Cruelty (2012)
Twilight of the Social: Resurgent Publics in the Age of Disposability (2012)

“The Education Deficit and the War on Youth” (2013)
“Neoliberalism’s War Against Higher Education” (2013)
“Neoliberalism, Education, Terrorism: Contemporary Dialogues” (co-authored with Jeffrey DiLeo, Sophia McClennen, and Kenneth Saltman) (2013)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Giroux


“Up Front” is a program of interviews, debates, and news updates produced by KPFA’s News Department, http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/94244


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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire http://www.facebook.com/#!/bennetts2ndstudy

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Decades’ old CIA breakdown needs intelligent, independent, experienced leadership ─ Goodman

U.S. CIA
drone wars
killling by remote

 An agency blinded by ideology, politics; rogue empire, old ruins
Editing, excerpting, brief comment by 
Carolyn Bennett

Sixty-five years ago U.S. President Harry S. Truman created the CIA to produce intelligence free from bias of the policy process ─ particularly the military process. As he searches for a successor, Melvin A. Goodman wrote late last year, “President Barack Obama should keep this in mind.”


Experienced civilian leaders could demand reform. The former Central Intelligence Agency analyst said President Obama has an opportunity to name a director who will ─
 
[r]e-establish the CIA’s commitment to objective and balanced intelligence and rebuild the Office of the Inspector General, which has been severely weakened by the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations.

BREAKDOWN

“The role of strategic intelligence has deteriorated during the past decade with major failures including the lack of premonitory [early-warning] intelligence for the terror attacks of 9/11 and for the Arab Spring, as well as the false intelligence to justify the Iraq War in 2003,”  Goodman said. “There were major operational failures in Afghanistan in 2009, when eight CIA officers were killed, and in Libya, where the U.S. ambassador lost his life.”

Moral Bankruptcy

T
he politicized intelligence for the Iraq War, as well as CIA secret prisons and use of torture, revealed moral bankruptcy at the CIA …

“The CIA’s Inspector General has not investigated any of these failures since its examination of the 9/11 failure.

Incest, entrenchment, nepotism blinds
Civilian leadership, Independent analysis needed

Agency careerists, like the current acting director of the CIA, Goodman says, lack the stature for the job and military officers lack the background and often the intellect.

E
xperienced civilian leaders could demand a reform process to correct the flawed processes of the analytical and operational directorates and assure that the CIA strengthens independent analysis for the strategic needs of high-level decision-makers.

Decades' old BREAKDOWN
A new director, Goodman said, “must make sure that the CIA [has an Inspector General with the character of] a junkyard dog [aggressive, no-nonsense] as that statutory position requires.” 

Goodman says the CIA needs leaders “who understand the role of strategic intelligence.” His choices for the job (though not without linkage to established, entrenched, recycled Washington) are these men:

Former U.S. Senator from Nebraska (1997-2009), Charles Timothy (Chuck) Hagel (b. 1946)

Former U.S. Senator from Nebraska (1989-2001) and 35th Governor of that state (1983-1987), Joseph Robert (Bob) Kerrey (b. 1943)

Former U.S. Senator from New Jersey (1979-1997) and former candidate for U.S. presidency (2000), William Warren (Bill) Bradley (b. 1943)

Retired U. S. ambassador, formerly posted as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations (1989-1992), Senior Vice President for International Relations at Boeing (ending in 2006), Thomas Reeve (Tom) Pickering (b. 1931)

Current U.S. diplomat, former U. S. Ambassador to Russia (2005-2008) then acting U. S. Secretary of State (January 2009 HR Clinton stand-in), current Deputy Secretary of State, William Joseph Burns (b.1956)

Extrajudicial(lawless)
killings

Is it possible to move beyond old ruins?


T
hough the men suggested by Mel Goodman might be wonderful to head the Central Intelligence Agency, I expect there are even better suited, more qualified potential candidates [not Brennan] for the positions of Chief and Inspector General who do not rise from the pit of Washington’s ruined: the entrenched, the recycled, descendant old sons of nepotism.


Today’s News from Senate Committee Hearing: “[Obama-nominee] John Brennan CIA confirmation hearing interrupted by protesters” – Guardian UK Live
President Obama's
man for CIA chief

• Brennan grilled by Senate intelligence committee
 

• Floor cleared as anti-drone protesters interrupt session



Sources and note

“Restore Reliability and Accountability” (New York Times, December 3, 2012 Article by Melvin A. Goodman), http://www.ciponline.org/research/entry/restore-reliability-and-accountability; http://www.ciponline.org/research/entry/restore-reliability-and-accountability

Mel Goodman

Melvin A. Goodman is Director of the National Security Project at the Center for International Policy in Washington, D.C., and adjunct professor of government at Johns Hopkins University.

Earlier he was a Soviet analyst at the CIA and the U.S. Department of State for 24 years; and a professor of international relations at the National War College for 18 years. He served in the U.S. Army in Athens, Greece (three years); and was intelligence adviser to the SALT delegation (1971–1972).

In addition to articles in a variety of news source, Goodman is author of Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA; National Insecurity: The Cost of American Militarism; Gorbachev’s Retreat: The Third World; The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze; The Phantom Defense: America’s Pursuit of the Star Wars Illusion; and Bush League Diplomacy: How the Neoconservatives are Putting the World at Risk

http://www.citylights.com/book/?GCOI=87286100245480&fa=author&person_id=16690

Center for International Policy

Founded by former diplomats and peace activists (1975) in the wake of the Vietnam War, the Center for International Policy, according to its website, is a nonprofit research that “advocates a U.S. foreign policy that promotes international cooperation, demilitarization and respect for human rights.”

The Center’s advocacy and policy research promotes transparency and accountability in U.S. foreign policy; and provides policy recommendations and analysis to decision makers in government, the private sector and civil society.

“Washington insiders with an outsider’s agenda,” they call themselves, a group of former senior government officials, journalists, academics and activists with programs focusing “on long-term policy questions ─ examining policy implications of important issues such as the drug war, military budget, global financial integrity, climate change ─ while quickly responding to breaking news.”

Programs have grown and expanded: In the late 1970s, the Indochina program promoted the normalization of relations between the United States and Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia; in the 1980s, CIP turned its focus to Central America; in the 1990s, the focus expanded to reform of the U.S. intelligence agencies. Then to wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and illicit financial flows; continually programs focused on issues and events’ impact on human rights and national security; and the role of money, money defining policy: in Washington, Latin America, the Middle East, Asia and Africa. http://www.ciponline.org/about-us


President Barack Obama chooses soiled for CIA chief
“John Brennan CIA confirmation hearing interrupted by protesters” – live, February 7, 2013, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/feb/07/john-brennan-senate-hearing-cia-nomination-live-blog

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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire http://www.facebook.com/#!/bennetts2ndstudy

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Friday, November 9, 2012

Rocky Anderson says [we're] not done yet ─ Just beginning


People
Social movements
 A proposal to the people of the United States from 2012 (former) candidate for the U.S. presidency: 
Excerpt, minor editing by Carolyn Bennett

“I ran the race to heighten awareness, to inspire people toward effective action,” Rocky Anderson says in a memo dropped in my inbox today.
Third-party presidential debates 2012

“As demonstrated by third-party candidates in the past …, a third-party effort ─ helping to catalyze a persistent, broad-based democratic movement for real change ─ can win far more than an election.


Our campaign was a call for the people of the United States to take chargethey must be the leaders and we must build a broad-based powerful movement ─ if we are to: 
Rocky Anderson
overthrow the plutocracy – government that is up for sale to the highest bidder 
end the imperial presidency 
restore the rule of law, and the most fundamental freedoms guaranteed under the Constitution of the United States 
end the two-tiered economic and justice systems, and achieve a republic where no one is above the law 
respect civil and human rights ─ here and abroad 
Only the people
end the empire-building serving only the interests of multi-national corporations and plutocrats 
end poverty in a nation where presidential candidates will not even discuss poverty 
end corporate cronyism that has caused economic devastation for the vast majority of American people 
end the deprivation of basic health care for tens of millions of people 
finally, bring an end to the strangle-hold the two corporatist, militarist political parties have on the U.S. electoral system and our government. 
 
Rocky Anderson after November 6
Join other engaged citizens in this continuing movement for economic, social, and environmental justice. If you are interested in working with me and others in carrying this movement forward,” Anderson says, “send a note, including contact information” to him at: rockyanderson.justice@gmail.com.


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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire http://www.facebook.com/#!/bennetts2ndstudy

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Tuesday, November 6, 2012

U.S. democracy eulogized awaits mass struggle, truly “new” leadership

Mass Struggle
against
U.S. and EU austerity
Joseph Kishore’s “Class issues in 2012 elections”
Excerpt, editing, re-reporting, commentary by Carolyn Bennett

Because of the “anti-democratic election laws” in the United States of America (often requiring tens of thousands of signatures just to get on the ballot), Kishore writes, Socialist Equality Party candidates for the U.S. presidency are blocked from full participation as a voter choice in today’s sham elections.

Socialist Equality Party candidates (president) Jerry White and (vice president) Phyllis Scherrer’s names appear on the ballot in only three U.S. states: Wisconsin, Colorado and Louisiana; and in several other states under “official write-in certification.”

Louisiana and Wisconsin: White and Scherrer on the ballot and identified as the candidates of the Socialist Equality Party.

Colorado: White and Scherrer’ names listed on the ballot with the party designation SEP, full name of the party not spelled out.

California: write-in procedure depends on whether you vote by mail or cast a ballot at the polls on November 6. White and Scherrer were included on a list of qualified write-in candidates made available October 26 to voters. (Other instructions apply)

Michigan: voters must write the names of the candidates on the ballot card in the space indicated for write-in candidates. Jerry White and Phyllis Scherrer are official write-in candidates and votes for them will be tabulated and reported by the state election division.

New York: the procedure for casting a write-in vote varies depending on whether your precinct has machines with mechanical levers or optical scanning.

Illinois: counting of write-in votes is a function of the county election authorities, not the states, votes for White and Scherrer will be recorded in Cook County and the city of Chicago; Dupage County (suburban Chicago); and Rock Island County.
 
Kentucky: write-in space appears on the ballot under the heading “President and Vice President of the United States.”  In all other states, supporters must write in the names of White and Scherrer as a “class conscious statement of support for the socialist alternative to the two parties of big business.”


Americans who bother to consider voting, millions don’t, seem caught up in a frenzy of Republican-Democratic tribalism as in the throes of some cult or religious madness and as such are blinded, blissfully oblivious, to loss of the whole critical establishment of law and liberty. 

The establishment of rights under law, the establishment of a more perfect union.  The establishment of liberty. The establishment of democracy ─ this republic for which we stand (or do not stand). 

A republic is not a tribal construct: Democratic, Republican; conservative, liberal; pink, brown; blue, red. These are the false flags in which the people, too many people, blindly cloak themselves.

Loss of faith in crucial institutions

At a level higher than the combined ballots cast for these Democratic and Republican candidates for the 2012 presidency, an astonishing “58 percent” of U.S. eligible voters will sit out today’s general election. This means that whoever wins will have been voted into office by less than one fourth of eligible voters. The shame of it all. This is not "democratic" either in process or participation (electorate or contenders).

Is it any wonder that a group calling itself “Attack the System,” referenced today in a Press TV story, holds the belief “that the existing U.S. system is basically illegitimate.”


B
ut Joseph Kishore’s thoughts are better articulated than mine. 


Veterans for Peace
“Under conditions of global economic crisis,” Kishore writes, United States militarism erupts and leads “inexorably to world war with catastrophic consequences.”

One piece of evidence of the undermining of the establishment of liberty and its possibility in democratic rights is that on this long, multi-million-dollar slog to Election Day, the exclusive Republican and Democratic Party candidates cleverly avoided discussing murder by remote: the U.S. government’s global policy of extra-judicial assassination of foreigners and U.S. citizens.
Far-reaching
Unconscionable
Consequences

The officials in the government of the United States, Kishore writes, have “jettisoned the core democratic principle of due process” yet this fact never rose in the "debates"; and it “was virtually ignored by the media on the Right and on the Left.”

Moreover, he says, “by any objective legal standard, the president of the United States should be subject to impeachment proceedings—but his principal opponent and the entire media and political establishment are complicit in the crime.”

Mass Struggle
Wisconsin, USA
Layered crises awaiting mass struggle, incorruptible leadership
  

Mass Struggle
Egypt
 “In the backdrop to these elections is a global crisis of capitalism,” Kishore writes. “All around the world, the corporations and banks are demanding that the working class accept a historic reversal in its living conditions.
Mass Struggle
Montreal, Canada

“Capitalism holds out to the population of the United States and the world a future of poverty, unemployment, war, dictatorship.”

Mass struggle “transformed into a conscious revolutionary movement against capitalism” is imperative, Kishore says. And for this to happen, truly new leadership must be born.  

Mass Struggle
Greece
Maybe the movement will begin taking shape after the frenzy. Kishore takes the view that the “ruling class” is delusional if it believes it can continue to pursue oppressive policies (globally and domestically) without provoking mass struggles. In fact, he observes, these struggles “have already begun to erupt.”



Sources and notes

“The class issues in the 2012 elections” (By Joseph Kishore), November 6, 2012, http://wsws.org/articles/2012/nov2012/pers-n06.shtml

“How to vote for SEP candidates Jerry White and Phyllis Scherrer,” November 1, 2012,
http://wsws.org/articles/2012/nov2012/vote-n01.shtml


“58 percent of eligible US voters boycott presidential election,” Press TV November 6, 2012,
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/11/06/270729/58-of-eligible-us-voters-boycott-polls/


Today in 1860, Abraham Lincoln won election to the U.S. presidency.

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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire http://www.facebook.com/#!/bennetts2ndstudy

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Neo-liberalism advances quick profit, divides people, disestablishes nations: Honduras as U.S., U.S. as Honduras

Tales of boondoggles in the Americas 
by Luis E. Aguilar (co-edited and translated by Colectivo Morazán; Source: Resistencia Honduras)

Photo caption:  Hondurans protest charter cities proposal.   Banner reads: Model Cities  Expulsion of Garifuna People from Honduras.  Photo G. Trucchi.

Edited for Today’s Insight News by
Carolyn Bennett

Leveraging country against itself, against its people

At issue in Neoliberals’ boondoggles, Luis Aguilar says, are at least two critical elements:

The Relationship between proposed projects and a country’s tradition of “development” strategy [and]

The Cynicism with which circles of power in a country plan and present a substantially ambitious model to the society that is clearly contrary to the collective welfare of the people of that country


“Charter Cities”: short term, returns to few, foreign counseled

The “Charter Cities” scheme, proposed at the Honduras Open for Business or HOB conference of May 2011, Aguilar says, is linked to a “plan by Stanford University professor Paul Romer.” Though Aguilar was writing about Central America's Honduras, his observations on the neoliberal invasion of Honduras are the neoliberal invasion of North America's USA.

 “We do not know with exact certitude what the master design for Honduras is or whether it is being prepared in Tegucigalpa [Honduras’s capital] in association with Washington or exclusively in Washington,” Luis E. Aguilar writes.” And the issue is not whether neoliberal projects can be implemented, or whether they are being used simply as ‘development’ bait for public consumption; but what is clear is that ─

Counseling for the projects comes from abroad and in close collaboration with pro-market liberalists and the right wing which functions as a transnational network society.

They attack a problem they see as temporary and respond with even more elements of the neoliberal agenda… even creating a particularly new element such as charter cities.


Imperialists export “American Dream”: divide to conquer

The “Charter City” project (like U.S. charter schools and cities within cities) in Honduras is a major boondoggle that“falls within the framework of the anti-union strategies, the last scream of globalization.”  It is “a plan to make Honduras (as with other Latin American countries) a guinea pig for one of the most nefarious conspiracies of Western imperialism on the working classes.”

In these proposed autonomous cities, where authorities could sign their own treaties and international free trade agreements, labor laws would be rendered inapplicable, Aguilar says.

The few vs. the many: In the “Carter Cities” construct, inhabitants “could establish their own privatized security forces and courts (parallel cities within cities in U.S. state of Georgia or U.S. Iraq), while offering the typical tax-exemptions, among other neoliberal policies.

“The Charter City is a physical barrier that offers a legal framework coveted by transnational capitalists. This experiment ─ which in essence breaks down the structure of the Nation State ─ is put in place to join the global system of tax havens, duty-free export processing zones” (maquilas or maquiladora, processing fees: e.g., foreign-owned factory where imported parts are assembled by lower-paid workers into products for export) “and other as yet undefined schemes that place the desires of corporations above all else.”


Vultures descend into manufactured or inevitable distraction

A society battered by violence facilitates a process of short-sighted individualization, he says.

Vacuum in infrastructure: In the aftermath of Honduras’s 2009 coup, “right-wing politicians filled with a desperate desire (the United States’ long-neglected, poorer states and cities) to turn Honduras into some sort of model of development [invited] neoliberal proposals which continue to create hotter and more polluted cities,” Aguilar said, “where desperate drivers stuck in traffic are idiotically happier to have their own space ─

 away from crowds of people and protected by the glass and metal of their own cars as opposed to using public transportation, requiring people to make contact with each other.


Together we stand
Collective means benefiting whole society stymied

“Among other benefits,” Luis Aguilar correctly observes, “large scale collective means have much longer life …; “they promote local industry and the transfer of technological know-how.”

But the vultures thwart expansion of collective means. In the best of cases, as happened in North America, imperialists “halt support of advancements in technology and research.” From the start of the neoliberal period, Aguilar says, “imperialism has been erasing collective means from the continent.”

  

We stand together 
Sources and notes

“Three Neoliberal Tales in Honduras: The Inter-oceanic Train, Metro-buses and Charter Cities (Luis E. Aguilar, co-edited and translated by Colectivo Morazán; Source: Resistencia Honduras), July 29, 2011,  http://upsidedownworld.org/main/honduras-archives-46/3138-three-neoliberal-tales-in-honduras-the-inter-oceanic-train-metro-buses-and-charter-cities


Honduras

Republic of Honduras (Spanish: República de Honduras), a Central American country situated between Guatemala and El Salvador to the west, Nicaragua to the south and east; on its northern coast the Caribbean Sea, on its narrow coast to the south the Pacific Ocean. Honduras’s area includes the offshore Caribbean department of the Bay Islands.

The capital is Tegucigalpa (with Comayagüela) and another city of equal importance industrially and commercially, though half the capital’s population. is San Pedro Sula. The bulk of Honduras’s population, citizens presented with innumerable economic and social challenges in a   “developing nation,” lives a generally isolated existence in the mountainous interior. Britannica note

Coup of June 2009 (Wikipedia notes)

The 2009 Honduran coup d’état was part of the 2009 Honduran constitutional crisis that occurred when the Honduran Army on orders from the Honduran Supreme Court ousted President Manuel Zelaya and sent him into exile on June 28, 2009. Soldiers stormed the presidential residence in Tegucigalpa early on the morning of the 28th. They disarmed the presidential guard, woke the president and put him on a plane to Costa Rica.

Many governments, media, and human-rights organizations outside Honduras have termed the ouster a coup. Though the U.S. government was not as unequivocal in its official statements at the time, soon after the event, a confidential U.S. Embassy cable (later leaked by WikiLeaks) summarized the legal situation this way:

The Embassy perspective is that there is no doubt that the military, Supreme Court and National Congress conspired on June 28 in what constituted an illegal and unconstitutional coup against the Executive Branch, while accepting that there may be a prima facie case that Zelaya may have committed illegalities and may have even violated the constitution.

There is equally no doubt from our perspective that Roberto Micheletti’s assumption of power was illegitimate.

Nevertheless, it is also evident that the constitution itself may be deficient in terms of providing clear procedures for dealing with alleged illegal acts by the President and resolving conflicts between the branches of government. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Honduran_coup_d%27%C3%A9tat

Upside Down World

Founded in 2003, Upside Down World is an online magazine covering activism and politics in Latin America. It is made up of work from writers, activists, artists and regular citizens from around the globe who are interested in flipping the world upside down...or right side up.

Upside Down World provides concerned global citizens with independent reporting on Latin American social movements and governments that have refused to prostrate themselves to the interests of corporate globalization, and instead have focused their work on addressing the needs of the people.

While corporate media often distort or overlook this progressive, regional trend, Upside Down World seeks to provide an alternative resource for information about the achievements and challenges of these people-powered movements.

From Bolivia’s gas conflicts to worker-run factories in Argentina, from Guatemalan resistance to mining to the new political process in Venezuela—Upside Down World has produced original reporting and perspectives that help readers understand what’s happening on the ground in the region.

One hundred percent reader-funded, Upside Down World publishes weekly articles, news briefs and blogs on Latin America. Its articles have been translated and republished in hundreds of websites, magazines and newspapers. Of the thousands of people reading the magazine each week are political analysts, journalists, academics and activists based around the globe.

Editorial Collective: Benjamin Dangl (founder): Ben(at)upsidedownworld.org
Cyril Mychalejko: Cyril(at)upsidedownworld.org
Jason Wallach
April Howard: april.m.howard(at)gmail.com
Contributing Editors/Translators:
Patricia Simon
Marielle Cauthin
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