Archive for June 26th, 2007


Socialism for the rich

JP Morgan Chase & Co. will receive over $750 million dollars in rent subsidies from New York City and state authorities as an incentive to relocate its offices from Midtown Manhattan to ground zero.

In 2005, Goldman Sachs got $650 million in subsidies for a similar move.

Gee, a trillion here, a trillion there, and pretty soon you’re talking real money. And that’s a trillion that won’t be spent on the people of New York City, but rather on the already super-wealthy.

Clearly, the US already has socialism. But right now, it’s just for the wealthy. We need it for everyone.

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War: unwinnable

Observation #5: A militant group and the state can have very different goals in a conflict; thus at he same time, both may believe they are winning.

Back in 1999, I worked in Sri Lanka on a team that included Sharif Abdullah of the Commonway Institute. In one of his many gems of wisdom, he observed that the LTTE’s goal for the war was to gain influence, while the GOSL’s goal was to control territory. GOSL said it was winning if it could control (or say it controlled) “uncleared areas”– territory formerly open to the LTTE. But LTTE said it was winning if it hurt GOSL and gained support among the Tamils.

This fundamental divergence of interests makes post-modern conflict more intractable: if both sides believe they are winning, then they have little incentive to stop fighting.

Observation #6: In a post-modern war, there can be no military victory without genocide.

This is another of Sharif’s insights. He said of the war in Sri Lanka in 1999, “As long as babies are being born, there will be more soldiers.” At the time, this was incredibly profound, because it touched on the new nature of war in post-modern times.

From kingdoms to nation states, the goal of war was to defeat the opposing military and replace the government. The people, it was assumed, would go along– and often enough, they did. Modern times gave us “total war,” in which the populace became militarized in factory production, and also became a legitimate military target. But the goal remained: defeat the military and install a government to rule the people.

In post-modern war, conflict is often associated with a segment people, not a government. That segment may be ethnic, linguistic, or religious. The difference is, the segment is represented not by a government but by a militant group that relies, at least in some measure, on its identity with that segment for survival and success. It uses that segment not only for recruits and support, but for cover– the militants “hide” within the civilian population.  Thus a war against that militant group is a war against the segment of people it represents. The militant group cannot be conquered militarily without destroying the segment itself as a recognizable identity.

In essence, this eliminates military action as a useful offensive tool. First, it can’t win, and second, as previously observed, it actually makes the militants stronger. Which suggests that a militant group must be “subdued” by non-military means.

Together, these two observations suggest another characteristic of post-modern war: it is self-perpetuating.  Both sides believe that they are winning, but in actual fact the war cannot be won. If left to the combatants, the war will continue without end.

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Day of Silence

Save Net Radio
Thousands of Internet radio stations will observe a partial or complete day of silence today to bring attention to proposed huge royalty rate increases that could mean the end of net radio. The rates go into effect on July 15 and are retroactive to Jan 1, 2006. Oh yeah, that’s certainly fair…

Launchcast, Yahoo, Pandora, Live365, and KRCW are among those participating.

Kurt Hanson and SaveNetRadio have more.

This is one of those focused-issue campaigns that is having a demonstrable effect on Congress, who, due to the pressure, will be holding more hearings about it. Call your Congress members now.

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Decline and Fall of the liberal left

Ted Rall

Still need convincing?

The views of Obama and Romney on war and imperialism are virtually the same, says a WaPo op-ed. Both want more troops, more intervention by the US, and criticize Bush not for doing too much, not for a starting a war based on lies, but for doing too little.

If Iraq-weary voters are looking for someone who will call on America to “come home,” they won’t find that candidate here.

The end of the war will come when the people demand it. The ANSWER Coalition has called for all antiwar groups to unite under the banner of End The War Now, and have the biggest protest ever in DC sometime in the next several months. If we put a million people in the streets they will be forced to listen.

The aim is not just one more demonstration but the largest antiwar demonstration in US history.

A mobilization of one million people marching on Washington DC would be the best possible trigger for an avalanche of grassroots organizing throughout the country and among service members and their families and veterans. It is time for something bold and broad. Something that sends an unmistakable message to the powers that be that the people of the United States have entered the field of politics in such a way as to become an irresistible force.

Barack Obama is just another Slick Willy, pretending to be liberal but is not really that way at all. By his own words, he’s a mouthpiece for the status quo in DC and for continued aggression abroad. Forget about hoping that presidential candidates will get bring the troops home. They (and Congress) will act only when the power of the people force them to. That’s why we need to make this the biggest antiwar protest in history.

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Desert dust cuts snowpack duration

Dust from deserts is blowing onto snowpack in the Rockies, China, and the Himalayas, causing the snow to melt a month or more earlier than normal. This could create a feedback loop that will lead to even faster snowmelt.

Early snowmelt means much less water is available for those areas in the late Spring and Summer, something which is extremely bad news for southern California and the US southwest.

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