Archive for February 27th, 2008


Matt Gonzalez on Obama

Matt Gonzalez, former president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and Green Party member, examines Obama’s voting record and finds it seriously lacking.

Once I started looking at the votes Obama actually cast, I began to hear his rhetoric differently. The principal conclusion I draw about “change” and Barack Obama is that Obama needs to change his voting habits and stop pandering to win votes. If he does this he might someday make a decent candidate who could earn my support. For now Obama has fallen into a dangerous pattern of capitulation that he cannot reconcile with his growing popularity as an agent of change.

Tip: Green Lisa

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China Olympics water diversion threatens millions

river

The diversion of water to Beijing for the Olympics and for big hydropower projects threatens the lives of millions of peasant farmers in China’s north-western provinces, according to a senior Chinese government official.

The Chinese government plans to pump enornous amounts of water from the provinces to Beijing to flush out water from polluted and degraded waterways simply to put on a happy face for the Olympics.

Yet this will have a severe effect upon the provinces.

“In order to preserve the quality of Beijing’s water we have to close all our factories. But we still need to live. So I say the government needs to compensate Shaanxi,” Mr An said. “If you don’t compensate the masses then how can they survive?”

China is trying to have it both ways, rigid state control as well as rampant capitalism. These contradictions can’t and won’t last. For one thing, the business owners will loudly protest is they don’t have adequate water supplies. Also, the state itself is often an part or full owner owner in those very same businesses.

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Waterproof concrete

concrete
Hycrete admixture is waterproof concrete. No external membranes needed and it can be crushed then reused, rather than being dumped in a landfill.

Applications include deep foundation slabs and walls, podium and plaza decks, roof, parking and tunnel structures.

Tip: Triple Pundit

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The Fed cut rates 2.25% since September

Yet mortgage rates are going back up again. I guess their plan didn’t work. Although cynics among might say the rate cuts were to save the investment banks and hedge funds, not homeowners.

Meanwhile, a group of hospitals is screaming to the SEC to do something about the frozen auction rate security market. There are currently no buyers for this debt, and the hospitals need the money now. These securities were supposed to be the equivalent of cash, able to be sold instantly. But that was before the buyers disappeared.

There sure seem to be a number of financial calamities lately that were not ever supposed to happen.

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Sectarianism on the Left

dogsarguing.jpg
(Another post in the wake of my post, “I got purged” from a far left grouplet.)

Peter Camejo nails it, describing how the absolutist views of Marxist vanguard parties (coupled with their imitation of who they think Lenin was) virtually guarantees such parties will be highly sectarian and doomed to being on the fringe.

The appearance of the “correct program”, “we are a Leninist Party” ideology has tended to always require a “leftist” view of reality and prognostications that cataclysmic events will soon catapult the sect into importance. This phenomenon is also to be found in all cults.

The “leftist” side is necessary because the sect members have to be more radical than any living movement. The attraction of association with a living process has to be broken to maintain the sect. This requires forever knocking any positive development in social movements. Analyses have to be made continuously showing the failings of all movements and their inevitable collapse and failure.

Much of the endless sectarianism on the left is due to precisely that, the insistence by the sect that only their view is the correct one. To allow other views to be accepted within the group would lead to the breakdown of their groupthink. Hence, vitriolic criticism of the perceived failings of any other group or movement has to be near constant.

But there are more productive and effective ways to work towards social justice.

Imitating others is a dead end, but one can learn from almost any experiences, especially successful ones. For a period, large numbers set out to imitate the Cubans in Latin America. This was a mistake. So were the attempts to imitate the Russians after 1917. People who can think for themselves have the best chance of success.

For more on Camejo, his history, and on sectarianism and regroupment, read Dave Riley’s comment to our previouas post on this topic. Dave has a wealth of information and insight to share and blogs at LeftCast (among other sites.)

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TSA Gangstaz. Tha Unfriendly Skiez

“How I can be sure you’re not a member of al Qaida?
Now excuse my wand while I slide it up inside ya.”

Hilarious. NOT worksafe.

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Community-based gang intervention model

An innovative plan, developed by the community to stop gangs has been unanimously passed by the LA City Council.

From author, blogger, poet, activist, and former gang member Luis J. Rodriguez

It’s a real problem deserving of real and serious attention. For example, communities in East LA and South Central LA (now called South LA) have murder rates among African Americans and Latinos as high or higher than the murder rates in South Africa or El Salvador (both these countries have the world’s highest murder rates).

We believe gang intervention must be community-based, driven and led by community, not the police or politicians. Of course, the police, schools, city officials, city departments, and such should be integral to any urban peace plan. We welcome all members of the community to take positive and active steps to curtail the violence that is destroying families and communities.

And now the city of L.A. has adopted the plan. Excellent. Clearly the suppression-by-police model doesn’t work. If it did, L.A. wouldn’t have 700 gangs, many of them virulent and trans-national by now.

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Wave-powered boat

Suntory Mermaid II Wave-Powered Boat
The Suntory Mermaid II will go from Hawaii to Japan on a month long test voyage soon, and uses solar to power the instrumentation.

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