RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
FOCUS | Demilitarizing Our Democracy: How the National Security State Has Come to Dominate a 'Civilian' Government Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=58099"><span class="small">Mandy Smithberger and William Hartung, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Thursday, 28 January 2021 12:54

Excerpt: "These days, it's completely normal for military and defense officials to weigh in endlessly on what once would have been civilian matters. As the Biden years begin, it's time to give some serious thought to how to demilitarize our democracy."

Aircraft assigned to the 354th Fighter Wing and 168th Wing park in formation on Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska. (photo: U.S. Air Force)
Aircraft assigned to the 354th Fighter Wing and 168th Wing park in formation on Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska. (photo: U.S. Air Force)


Demilitarizing Our Democracy: How the National Security State Has Come to Dominate a 'Civilian' Government

By Mandy Smithberger and William Hartung, TomDispatch

28 January 21

 


It’s ever more obvious that the forever wars the U.S. military has been fighting for almost two decades are coming home, especially in the wake of the creation of a Baghdad-style “Green Zone” in Washington, D.C., for the recent inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. We now know as well that, on January 6th, during the storming of the Capitol by a mob of white nationalists and QAnoners, the military arrived in Washington earlier than most of us imagined. NPR reports that, among those in that vast crowd who broke into the Capitol, ran riot, and have so far been charged with crimes, nearly one in five was a military veteran or a member of the armed forces. And keep in mind that National Guard officials removed 12 of the troops they sent to Washington to protect the inauguration, at least some for fear of similar inclinations. Of course, none of this should be surprising since, among the crew of Wolverine Watchmen arrested last October for planning the kidnapping and possible assassination of Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, at least two were Marine veterans.

Today, TomDispatch regulars and Pentagon experts Mandy Smithberger and William Hartung note a particular irony of this century: the less effective the U.S. military has been abroad, the more it’s fought those pointless forever wars to hell and back, the more it’s come to be prized, respected, and treasured here at home. In the process, as those two authors suggest today, American democracy, too, has been transformed into a kind of Green Zone. There should be a distinct irony in that, if anyone were paying real attention. Joe Biden typically ended his Inaugural Address, “May God bless America and may God protect our troops.” The question Smithberger and Hartung ask is, if God is protecting the troops, who’s protecting us? Not, it seems, the powers-that-be in Washington when it comes to the militarization of our political system.

-Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch



his month’s insurrection at the Capitol revealed the dismal failure of the Capitol Police and the Department of Defense to use their expertise and resources to thwart a clear and present danger to our democracy. As the government reform group Public Citizen tweeted, “If you’re spending $740,000,000,000 annually on ‘defense’ but fascists dressed for the renaissance fair can still storm the Capitol as they please, maybe it’s time to rethink national security?”

At a time of acute concern about the health of our democracy, any such rethinking must, among other things, focus on strengthening the authority of civilians and civilian institutions over the military in an American world where almost the only subject the two parties in Congress can agree on is putting up ever more money for the Pentagon. This means so many in our political system need to wean themselves from the counterproductive habit of reflexively seeking out military or retired military voices to validate them on issues ranging from public health to border security that should be quite outside the military’s purview.

It’s certainly one of the stranger phenomena of our era: after 20 years of endless war in which trillions of dollars were spent and hundreds of thousands died on all sides without the U.S. military achieving anything approaching victory, the Pentagon continues to be funded at staggering levels, while funding to deal with the greatest threats to our safety and “national security” — from the pandemic to climate change to white supremacy — proves woefully inadequate. In good times and bad, the U.S. military and the “industrial complex” that surrounds it, which President Dwight D. Eisenhower first warned us about in 1961, continue to maintain a central role in Washington, even though they’re remarkably irrelevant to the biggest challenges facing our democracy.

These days, it’s completely normal for military and defense officials to weigh in endlessly on what once would have been civilian matters. As the Biden years begin, it’s time to give some serious thought to how to demilitarize our democracy.

Unfortunately, in the America of 2021, the short-term benefit of relying on the widely accepted credibility of military figures to promote policies of every sort is obvious indeed. Who in the political class in the nation’s capital wouldn’t want a stamp of approval from dozens of generals, active or retired, endorsing their favorite initiative or candidate? (It’s something in years past the authors of this piece have been guilty of as well.) As it happens, though, such approval comes at a high price, undermining as it does the authority of civilian officials and agencies, while skewing resources toward the Pentagon that should be invested elsewhere to keep us truly safe.

It’s an essential attribute of the American system that the military remains under civilian authority. These days, however, given the number of current or retired military officers who have become key arbiters of what we should do on a dizzying array of critical issues, civilian control is the policy equivalent of an endangered species.

In the last election season, long before the attack on the Capitol, there was already an intense national discussion about how to prevent violence at the polls, a conversation that all too quickly (and disturbingly) focused on what role the military should play in the process. General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was repeatedly asked to provide assurances that it would have no role in determining the outcome of the election, something that in another America would have been a given.

Meanwhile, some actually sought more military involvement. For example, in a widely debated “open letter” to Milley, retired Army officers John Nagl and Paul Yingling stated that “if Donald Trump refuses to leave office at the expiration of his constitutional term, the United States military must remove him by force, and you must give that order.” Proposals of this sort undermine the integrity of the many laws Congress and the states have put in place to prevent the military or armed vigilantes from playing any role in the electoral process.

Similarly, both former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden have identified the military as a key future player in distributing the Covid-19 vaccine, something that could and should be handled by public-health institutions, if only they, like the Pentagon, had adequate resources.

The Military Knows Best?

During and after the attack on the Capitol, officials from the military and national security worlds were given pride of place in discussions about the future of our democracy. Their opinions were sought out by the media and others on a wide range of issues that fell well outside their primary areas of expertise. A letter from 10 former secretaries of defense calling on the Republican caucus to respect the results of the election was given headline attention, while political figures pressed to have retired military officers involved in the January 6th assault tried in military, not civilian, courts.

Before pursuing the second impeachment of Donald Trump, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi typically turned to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs (who isn’t even in the civilian chain of command) to seek assurance that he could stop the president from starting a last-minute nuclear war. And none of this was faintly unusual, given that retired military officers have regularly been asked to weigh in on subjects as varied as abortion rights, climate change, and childhood obesity. It’s not, of course, that such figures shouldn’t be able, like anyone else, to offer their opinions or support on matters of public health and safety, but that their voices shouldn’t matter more than those of public-health experts, scientists, medical professionals, or other civilians.

Despite its failure to win a war in decades, the military remains one of America’s most respected institutions, getting the kind of appreciation that generally doesn’t extend to other more successful public servants. After almost 20 years of forever wars, it’s hard, at this point, to accept that the military’s reputation for wisdom is deserved. In fact, continually relying on retired generals and other present or former national security officials as validators effectively erodes the credibility of, and the public’s trust in, other institutions that are meant to keep us healthy and safe.

In the Covid-19 moment, it should be clear that relying on narrowly defined notions of national security harms our democracy, a subject that none of those military or former military figures are likely to deal with. In addition, in all too many cases, current and retired military officials have abused the public trust in ways that call into question their right to serve as judges of what’s important, or even to imagine that they could provide objective advice. For one thing, a striking number of high-ranking officers on leaving the military pass through the infamous revolving door of the military-industrial complex into positions as executives, lobbyists, board members, or consultants for the defense industry. They work on behalf of firms like Raytheon, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and General Dynamics that receive a combined $100 billion annually in Pentagon contracts with little accountability, even as they remain key go-to media figures.

They then use their former rank and the prestige attached to it to lobby Congress and influence the media on the need for endless wars and an ever-increasing military budget to support major weapons programs like Lockheed Martin’s troubled F-35 Joint Strike Fighter — all without bothering to disclose that they stand to gain financially from the positions they’re taking. And the prospect of a big, fat salary in the weapons sector upon retirement also exerts an unhealthy influence on officers still serving in the military who are often loath to anger, or in any way alienate, their potential future employers.

This revolving-door phenomenon is widespread. A study by the Project on Government Oversight found that, in 2018 alone, there were 645 cases in which the top 20 defense contractors hired former government officials, military officers, members of Congress, and senior congressional legislative staff as lobbyists, board members, or executives. This should hardly inspire public trust in their opinions.

In some cases, ex-military officers have even taken to the airwaves and the op-ed pages of newspapers to advocate for war without disclosing their ties to the arms industry. A 2008 New York Times investigation, for example, revealed that a number of retired-officers-turned-media pundits with continuing defense industry ties had, for years, advocated for the Iraq War at the Pentagon’s behest. Ex-generals like former Trump administration Defense Secretary James Mattis, who served on the board of General Dynamics before taking the helm of the Pentagon and returned there shortly after stepping down, too often use their stature to refrain from providing basic information to the media while befogging the transparency and accountability that should be a pillar of democracy.

The Politicization of the Military

When civilian voices and policies are eclipsed as the central determinants in how our democracy should operate, a larger dilemma arises: continuing to rely on the military as a primary source of judgment for what’s right or wrong in the civilian world risks politicizing the armed forces, too. From retired Lieutenant General Michael Flynn leading chants of “Lock her up!” at the 2016 Republican National Convention to the competition between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump as well as, in the 2020 election campaign, between Joe Biden and Donald Trump to see who could get more retired generals to endorse him or her only helps militarize the civilian election process and politicizes what should be a nonpartisan institution.

Given the more than a trillion dollars Americans annually invest in the national security state, it’s striking to note, for instance, how such institutions let us down when it came to addressing the threats of white nationalism. Last summer, the Intercept uncovered a buried FBI report on the shortcomings of various federal agencies when it came to dealing with domestic terrorism. Before the 2020 election, the bureau refused to release that report on the domestic threat of white supremacy. Last year, in a similar fashion, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) withheld for months its assessment of the same “lethal” threat of racist extremism in this country.

While there must be a full investigation of what happened at the Capitol on January 6th, reports seem to indicate a striking blindness in the national security state to the possibility of such an attack. It’s not that the DHS, the FBI, or the military need an influx of new funds to face the problem. Rather, what’s needed at this moment in history is a clearer focus on the real risks to our country, which have little to do with foreign terrorists, the Taliban, or other such groups the U.S. has been fighting abroad for years on end. The Department of Defense typically did itself and the rest of us no favors by burying a report on widespread racism in the ranks of the military, which, though completed in 2017, didn’t see the light of day until this January. Only in the aftermath of the riot at the Capitol did that organization finally begin to truly address its own white-supremacy problems.

The military, like so many other American institutions, has failed to reckon seriously with deep-seated racism in its ranks. Even before the January 6th insurrection, it was clear that such racism made it nearly impossible for Black officers to be promoted. And while many questioned the naming of key military bases after Confederate generals, the issue has only recently been addressed (over a presidential veto at that) with the creation of a new commission to rename them. Reports of active duty, reserve, and veteran members of the military aiding the Capitol insurrection only bring into stark relief the inexcusable costs of not having addressed the problem earlier.

More Pentagon Spending Won’t Make Us Safer

There are also high costs to be paid for relying on the Department of Defense to handle problems that have nothing to do with its primary mission. Using the armed forces as key players in addressing crises that aren’t military in nature only further undermines civilian institutions and is often counterproductive as well.

In the initial stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, a number of politicians called for President Trump to use the Defense Production Act (as it seems Biden will indeed soon do) and the Department of Defense to ramp up the production of N95 masks, ventilators, and other personal protective equipment. The story of what happened to such funds in the Trump years should be telling. The Washington Post discovered that $1 billion in supposed pandemic relief money was instead funneled directly to defense contractors and $70 million of the funds the Pentagon spent went to ventilators that proved unfit for Covid-19 patients. While some of that money did go to bolster mask supply chains, another Post investigation discovered that such efforts did not come close to addressing national shortfalls and amounted to less than the department spends on instruments, uniforms, and travel for military bands.

Perhaps the most disturbing cost of our overreliance on the military can be found in Congress’s budget and policy priorities. In December of last year, a bill to authorize nearly $740 billion in Pentagon spending garnered enough votes to easily overcome President Trump’s veto (motivated mainly by his refusal to condone renaming military bases named after Confederate generals) at the very moment when Congress was blocking legislation to give $2,000 relief checks directly to Covid-19 embattled Americans.

By now, two decades into the twenty-first century, it’s clear that more money for the Pentagon hasn’t made this country safer. It has, however, helped give the military an ever more central role in our previously civilian political world. Biden’s selection of retired General Lloyd Austin III to be secretary of defense only emphasizes this point. While it’s certainly laudatory to appoint the first Black leader to that position, Austin has retired so recently that he needed a congressional waiver from a law requiring a seven-year cooling off period before taking up such a civilian post (just as Mattis did four years ago) — another sign that civilian control of the military is continuing to weaken. In addition, now that he has retired from his role in private industry, Austin stands to make a small fortune, up to $1.7 million, when he divests his stock holdings in Raytheon Technologies.

“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex,” President Eisenhower warned Americans in his 1961 farewell address. How right he proved to be! Sixty years later, it’s become all too clear that more must be done to deal with that very “unwarranted influence.” The immediate crises of the American republic should be clear enough right now: responding to the pandemic and restoring our civilian democracy. Certainly, military leaders like Milley should be appreciated for agreeing on the need to prioritize the pandemic and oppose sedition. However, more Pentagon spending and more military influence will not, in the end, make us any safer.



Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel Frostlands (the second in the Splinterlands series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power and John Dower’s The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II.

Mandy Smithberger, a TomDispatch regular, is the director of the Center for Defense Information at the Project On Government Oversight (POGO).

William D. Hartung, a TomDispatch regular, is the director of the Arms and Security Project at the Center for International Policy and the author of Prophets of War: Lockheed Martin and the Making of the Military-Industrial Complex.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: Is Marjorie Taylor Greene the Worst Person in Congress? An Investigation Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=44994"><span class="small">Bess Levin, Vanity Fair</span></a>   
Thursday, 28 January 2021 12:02

Levin writes: "The United States House of Representatives has always counted its share of horrible people, but the era of Donald Trump obviously upped the 'truly awful with a side of crazier than a sh#thouse mouse' quotient."

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. (photo: Saul Loeb/Getty)
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. (photo: Saul Loeb/Getty)


Is Marjorie Taylor Greene the Worst Person in Congress? An Investigation

By Bess Levin, Vanity Fair

28 January 21


There’s stiff competition, but the lawmaker who harassed a school shooting survivor is clearly the one to beat.

he United States House of Representatives has always counted its share of horrible people, but the era of Donald Trump obviously upped the “truly awful with a side of crazier than a shithouse mouse” quotient. Whereas past and present members like New York’s MichaelI’ll throw you off this fucking balconyGrimm and Wisconsin’s Glenn Grothman, who once put out a press release declaring that “almost no Black people today care about Kwanzaa—just white left-wingers who try to shove this down Black people’s throats in an effort to divide Americans,” used to handily top the charts, today’s competition requires elected officials to wake up a lot earlier in the morning to be crowned the House’s biggest asshole. That competition grew even more fierce on Wednesday, when a video surfaced of newly elected representative Marjorie Taylor Greene harassing a teenage survivor of a school shooting, in which she called him a “coward,” among other insults.

The video, posted by Fred Guttenberg, the father of a slain Parkland student, shows Greene following Parkland survivor David Hogg while he is apparently in D.C. to discuss gun control with lawmakers. In it, Greene suggests that Hogg is using dead children—like the 14 who were killed at his high school—to elicit sympathy. “Why are you using kids as a barrier? Do you not know how to defend your stance?” Greene yells at Hogg, who ignores her. “Look, I’m an American citizen. I’m a gun owner. I have a concealed carry permit. I carry a gun for protection for myself. And you are using your lobby and the money behind it and the kids to try to take away my Second Amendment rights. You don’t have anything to say for yourself? You can’t defend your stance? ... How did you get kids? Why do you use kids? Why kids?” Naturally, she then launches into a monologue about how if there’d been more guns at Marjory Stoneman Douglas, fewer people would have died. “You know, if school zones were protected with security guards with guns, there would be no mass shootings at schools. Do you know that? The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun is with a good guy with a gun,” she says. “But yet you’re attacking our Second Amendment. And you have nothing to say. No words.”

When it becomes clear Hogg isn’t going to dignify her questions with responses, Greene turns toward the camera to conspiratorially wonder how Hogg was able to get meetings with lawmakers when she wasn’t, a truly incredible self-own. “Guess what?” she says. “I’m a gun owner. I’m an American citizen. And I have nothing. But this guy with his George Soros funding and his major liberal funding has got everything.” Then she calls Hogg a “coward” because he won’t respond to the crazy lady who thinks school shootings are inside jobs by Democrats so they can take away her guns. “He’s a coward,” she says. “He can’t say one word because he can’t defend his stance. Because there is no defense for taking away guns. There is no defense for gun confiscation. Zero.”

That wasn’t the only video—originally posted on Greene’s own YouTube page—to resurface on Wednesday. In another, Greene suggests that the 2017 Las Vegas shooting was planned by anti-gun activists who specifically targeted the people at the country music festival because “performing a mass shooting into a crowd that is very likely to be conservative, very likely to vote Republican, very likely to be Trump supporters, very likely to be pro-Second Amendment, and very likely to own guns” helps the anti-gun liberals pass anti-gun legislation by making people scared of mass shootings.

The videos followed a Tuesday report by CNN’s KFile that Greene had liked comments supporting the executions of prominent Democrats and federal agents before she was elected. The congresswoman responded with a statement on Twitter claiming that it must have been someone else using her account who seemingly endorsed executing, among others, Nancy Pelosi, despite the fact that she also gave a speech saying Pelosi was “guilty of treason” and treason was “a crime punishable by death.”

Asked if the White House had any comment about Greene on Wednesday, press secretary Jen Psaki refused to dignify the congresswoman’s insane behavior with a response.

And yet!

Greene’s colleagues are loathe to come down on her too hard, apparently reserving such judgement for…well, actually, it’s not clear what she would have to do at this point to be universally condemned by the GOP, per CNN:

Most House Republicans were silent on Wednesday after CNN’s KFile reported that Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene repeatedly indicated support for executing prominent Democratic politicians in 2018 and 2019 before being elected to Congress.

Greene has a track record of incendiary rhetoric, including past comments using Islamophobic and anti-Semitic tropes. She also has ties to the baseless and thoroughly debunked QAnon conspiracy theory. The CNN KFile report once again puts Republican leaders in a position of deciding how to respond—and so far most are declining to weigh in.

A rare Republican to speak out was Representative Adam Kinzinger, who tweeted, “She is not a Republican. There are many who claim the title of Republican and have nothing in common with our core values. They are RINOS. She is a RINO.” That might be giving Republicans a little too much credit but hey, it’s something!

Trump supporters think impeachment proves Democrats were always out to get him

Rather than that he committed a (second) impeachable offense. Per The New York Times:

For much of the American public and for the historical record, the second impeachment of former president Donald J. Trump represented a blistering censure from a coequal branch of government whose members’ lives had been imperiled days earlier by a mob of his supporters attacking the Capitol. But many of his defenders saw the second impeachment, a first for an American president, as something else: the culmination of years of unfair treatment by a Washington establishment that was always hostile to Mr. Trump and is now trying to end his political career once and for all.

Now, supporters of Mr. Trump whose blood boiled at the first impeachment are galvanized anew by the second, rising to his defense with the familiar refrains they have soaked up for years from conservative talking heads, from social media or from the president himself. Cries of a witch hunt and commands to “stop the steal.” Calling opponents “radical left Democrats” and the media “fake news.” Repeating the campaign slogan of “Keep America Great” as hundreds of thousands died of the coronavirus and the economy tanked.

“If he had done something bad in his presidency that was absolutely horrible, I could see it,” Trump supporter Ashley Klein told The New York Times. “But he was treated very unfairly for a guy who would have made way more money not being president.”

Meanwhile, at Trump’s D.C. hotel…

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
All Trump's Impeachment Defense Has Going for It Is the Essential Cowardice of Republican Senators Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Thursday, 28 January 2021 09:17

Pierce writes: "Forty-five Republican senators found a use for the Constitution as a fig leaf on Tuesday."

Sen. Rand Paul. (photo: Ting Shen/Getty)
Sen. Rand Paul. (photo: Ting Shen/Getty)


All Trump's Impeachment Defense Has Going for It Is the Essential Cowardice of Republican Senators

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

28 January 21


And that might just be enough.

orty-five Republican senators found a use for the Constitution as a fig leaf on Tuesday. The way we know this is the fact that they pretended to take Senator Rand Paul seriously as a constitutional scholar. (I don't even take him seriously as an ophthalmologist, but never mind.) They were trying to avoid being on the record as to their respective opinions on whether or not a president should be allowed to encourage seditious violence against another branch of the government. This doesn't seem to be a tough question to me, but I am not a miserable, cowardly wretch worried that some QAnon loon will run against me in the next Republican primary.

Paul's point of order that trying the ex-president* in the Senate now is unconstitutional failed, so the trial will open as scheduled on February 9, but that wasn't the point of Aqua Buddha's move anyway. It was a) to give his fellow poltroons cover against the wild kingdom now operating within their political party, and b) to create a vehicle for his fellow poltroons through which they can avoid discussing what actually happened around them on January 6. Basically, it is part of a campaign to minimize the enormity of the high crime of which the ex-president* stands accused, and of which all of them know he is plainly guilty. He fomented insurrection and the people in whom he fomented it knew it all too well. They put themselves on video putting the former president*'s words precisely into action. Up to me? I'd bill him personally for all the damages to the Capitol, not that he'd ever pay the bill anyway.

Trump stands accused of the worst crime of which a president possible be accused—of conspiring against the Constitution he swore to uphold. That crime sticks with him even though he's not president* anymore. (It should be noted that he was still president* when the House of Representatives voted to impeach him.) The only possible comparison that comes to my mind in regard to the gravity of the charges is the treason trial of former Vice President Aaron Burr in 1807. Burr was charged with treason against the United States through a scheme to pry loose what were then considered the "western" states and territories and build an empire there, possibly with the help of Great Britain.

The one overt act in furtherance of Burr's treason was said to have been a meeting at a place called Blennerhassett's Island in the Ohio River, at a point in what is now West Virginia. Chief Justice John Marshall, sitting in on Burr's trial because Marshall also was working as a federal circuit court judge for Virginia, ruled that the jury only could convict if they could prove that Burr's activities on the island were treasonous. The Chief Justice refused to consider a conspiracy charge without an overt act. (Marshall, a great Federalist, was not inclined to give Democratic-Republican President Thomas Jefferson any breaks). Unfortunately for the prosecution, Burr's defense team elicited testimony proving that Burr was 100 miles away from Blennerhassett Island on the day on which he was alleged to have been planning his treason. Burr was acquitted.

To pursue the parallel perhaps further than is wise, the ex-president*'s defense doesn't even have the advantages that Aaron Burr had in 1807. His incitement to sedition occurred on television. There is video of the ensuing seditious acts in which the rioters announce that they were storming the Capitol at his invitation. All the ex-president*'s defense has going for it is the essential cowardice of the Republican minority in the Senate, and alas, that's probably enough.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
RSN: Trump Plunder by a Thousand Cuts Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=27921"><span class="small">Mort Rosenblum, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Wednesday, 27 January 2021 13:42

Rosenblum writes: "This will be short; we've all wasted enough words on Donald Trump. But as he sulks in defeat and disgrace, awaiting a second trial for treachery far more heinous than the last, we had best take stock of an America he so badly crippled."

Former San Carlos Apache Tribe chairman Wendsler Noise Sr. speaks at the Save Oak Flat Rally at the US Capitol on March 11, 2020. (photo: Matthew Sobocinski/USA Today)
Former San Carlos Apache Tribe chairman Wendsler Noise Sr. speaks at the Save Oak Flat Rally at the US Capitol on March 11, 2020. (photo: Matthew Sobocinski/USA Today)


Trump Plunder by a Thousand Cuts

By Mort Rosenblum, Reader Supported News

27 January 21

 

ONOITA, Arizona – This will be short; we’ve all wasted enough words on Donald Trump. But as he sulks in defeat and disgrace, awaiting a second trial for treachery far more heinous than the last, we had best take stock of an America he so badly crippled.

The pandemic will eventually subside. Shocked by a bald coup attempt that might have crowned Trump king, voters may finally unite to rid Congress and statehouses of self-serving snakes. In time, the outside world may again believe in American values.

But headlong plunder of natural resources, Native American cultures and wild splendor – heritage that belongs to future generations – has caused irreparable devastation from Florida wetlands to the northern reaches of Alaska.

The big picture is achingly clear: the plague Trump let run wild has already killed more Americans than Hitler and Hirohito did in World War II. His inaction on testing, masks and vaccinations now causes 1,000 more deaths each day than terrorists did on 9/11.

A Harvard team calculated in October that Covid-19 had stolen 2.5 million years of Americans’ lives. That has since doubled. A lucky few pile up huge profits while the rest suffer. Jeff Bezos earned an extra $68 billion; perhaps 50 million others go hungry.

Damage from the Trump virus is incalculably pervasive. Beyond the fatalities after he ordered a lynch mob to the U.S. Capitol, at least 38 police officers overrun by unmasked insurrectionists have tested positive for Covid-19.

Yet a thumping majority of Republicans, ignorant of facts, or simply ignorant, still rally behind him. He likely won’t run in 2024, but someone else will, on a similar oligarchic, authoritarian platform based on lies and distortions.

Congress is now shot full of faithless partisans fixated on their ambitions. A smattering of conspiracy-theorist newcomers with their own twisted realities stretch the limits of abnormal psychology.

The roots of this American Nightmare run deep. Ronald Reagan set in motion income inequality that is now a yawning abyss between rich and desperate. He dumbed down schools, quashed labor unions, cut taxes at the top and gave big business free rein.

Barack Obama restored prosperity after George W. Bush’s $6 trillion wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But factions hardened in Congress and statehouses. Mitch McConnell’s intransigence eroded a historic tradition of compromise.

And then Trump, the bad shepherd, flocked America, fleecing his sheep-like followers to within an inch of their lives. He used his one great talent – slinging bullshit – to create a base of zealots who politicians and tycoons exploited to their own advantage.

With repeated big lies, a mob-style crook with serial bankruptcies and dubious foreign loans claimed credit for his predecessors’ triumphs. His touted economic miracle doubled unemployment and left behind financial crises that recall the Great Depression.

Last year’s three-month growth spike was no more than clawing out of a hole he dug himself by ignoring the pandemic that, beyond the death toll, added losses and costs high in the trillions to the national economy.

Meantime, former lobbyists and industry insiders in the cabinet allowed big business to loot America for immediate profit as if there were no tomorrow.

Lasting damage is starkly evident in Arizona, from Sonoita, a crossroads near the now-fortified Mexican border, to sacred Indian sites and tourist meccas in copper country to the dwindling Colorado River through the Grand Canyon up north.

For much of a century, federal agencies have fought to protect waterways, forests and wilderness from big mining and petroleum companies while protecting tribal territory and national monuments. Rapacious “deregulation” reversed much of that.

Joe Biden’s executive orders seek to roll back environmental threats across America. But what is dead or dying, bulldozed or blasted, is gone forever. New last-minute permits will be hard to stop.

Arizona legislators and complacent governors have mostly sided with hard-rock miners since before 1912 statehood. They explore on public land, pay only token taxes, and an old federal law meant to develop the West exempts them from extraction royalties.

As a result, companies destroy priceless mountain majesty that returns substantial earnings from recreational use. And executives are generous with contributions to politicians who keep pesky conservationists and other opponents off their backs.

Resolution Copper and Rosemont Mine, projected multibillion-dollar foreign-owned copper mines, are now making the front pages when it may be too late. I profiled both in Harper’s two years ago.

The piece opened with an aerial view of the old Silver Bell Mine, just northwest of Tucson, shielded behind rocky hills and barbed wire from suburban homes nearby. Now, owned by a Mexican billionaire notorious for polluting and union busting, it is no longer pickaxes and burros:

Seen from above, it is an upside-down Machu Picchu: vast open pits terraced deep into the earth, some with bright turquoise toxic pools at the bottom. House-sized trucks haul copper ore under a ghostly dust haze to tin-sided structures for crushing. Waste rock piles high along the perimeter at a rate of 1.8 million tons a month. At 19,000 acres, the mine site is a third larger than Manhattan.

The magazine used coated paper for Samuel James’s stunning photos: panoramas of the Morenci Mine, an eight-mile gash along the Coronado Scenic Highway, and others across the state. Sam focused mainly on San Carlos Apaches at war with Resolution Copper. But the Harper’s display caused little stir over a sideshow in Trump’s circus.

Oak Flat, as holy to San Carlos Apaches as Mount Sinai is to Christians, may be weeks away from being the private property of Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton, an Anglo-Australian tandem. Trump approved the title transfer in January and shortened a final review period to 60 days.

The mine would drill down from Apache Leap, possibly collapsing its dramatic cliff face, and flooding Oak Flat, where Native Americans have settled for millennia. Huge waste heaps would mar spectacular land for miles around.

Hudbay Minerals of Canada is battling tribes and environmentalists in court to exploit Rosemont Mine in the Santa Ritas near here, a mile-wide open pit, with a looming crushed-rock mountain. It would devastate rare wetlands and an aquifer that feeds Tucson’s water supply.

Both mines would ship ore concentrate to Asia for smelting, with profits going to Australia, Britain and Canada. Executives and top managers would cycle in from abroad, with a limited local labor force to operate gigantic shovels and ore haulers.

The biggest player is Freeport-McMoRan, based in Phoenix, which owns five Arizona copper mines, including Morenci. Its stock price rose last year from $4.82 to $32.49.

State governments can oppose U.S. Forest Service and Army Corps of Engineers decisions if they threaten to pollute air, rivers or groundwater. But although Arizona voted for Biden and a second blue senator, its deeply red legislature is hostile to green.

Disputes work their way through the courts, which until Trump’s massive packing mostly kept destruction at bay. Now, despite years of testimony and damning reports by the Environmental Protection Agency, new judges take a different view.

Two Republican senators, John McCain and Jeff Flake, first cleared the way for Resolution Copper in a last-minute rider in an omnibus bill that Obama was forced to sign. Oak Flat had been protected since the Eisenhower administration. Ironically, Arizona Republicans are now hellbent on censuring McCain’s widow and drumming Flake out of the party as too liberal for their pro-plunder policies.

In Sonoita, green Border Guard trucks fill a vast parking yard, a base for the fortified barrier Trump erected at breakneck speed while the nation was focused on the pandemic. Wall construction tore up Indian burial sites and blocked wildlife migration.

To the east, developers plan a huge community that would deplete groundwater, likely drying up the San Pedro River, which attracts more than 400 of the 900 bird species in North America. Each year, they find less water in the internationally treasured wetlands habitat.

The outlook is bleak. McConnell, now minority leader, lost a fight to paralyze the Senate and retain his control. But he is still there. With so many urgent priorities, the environment and land use risk slipping behind on the Democrats’ crowded agenda.

This is a sampling; the list is long. If a president who spent his time watching TV, tweeting twaddle, golfing and nursing an insatiable ego can devastate so much of America in four years, just imagine what a competent despot could do in the White House after 2024.



Mort Rosenblum has reported from seven continents as Associated Press special correspondent, edited the International Herald Tribune in Paris, and written 14 books on subjects ranging from global geopolitics to chocolate. He now runs MortReport.org.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: Our System Is Rigged so the Minority Can Rule Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=53457"><span class="small">Jesse Jackson, Chicago Sun Times</span></a>   
Wednesday, 27 January 2021 13:05

Jackson writes: "The Electoral College, Republican gerrymandering and the filibuster are all examples of how American democracy is at risk."

On Jan. 7, Vice President Mike Pence (C) walks back from the House Chamber followed by a Senate procession carrying boxes of electoral votes at the Capitol. (photo: Olivier Douliery/Getty)
On Jan. 7, Vice President Mike Pence (C) walks back from the House Chamber followed by a Senate procession carrying boxes of electoral votes at the Capitol. (photo: Olivier Douliery/Getty)


Our System Is Rigged so the Minority Can Rule

By Jesse Jackson, The Chicago Sun-Times

27 January 21


The Electoral College, Republican gerrymandering and the filibuster are all examples of how American democracy is at risk.

he majority does not rule in the United States. The foundation of any democracy — one person, one vote — is mocked by institutionalized impediments that allow the minority to win even when they lose at the ballot box. In this era, even when Democrats win, they lose. And the will of the majority of the people is frustrated by a system rigged to empower the minority.

Consider: Democratic candidates have won the popular vote in seven of the last eight presidential elections but have become president only five times. Trump became president four years ago despite losing the popular vote by nearly 3 million votes. Presidents who lost the majority of the votes have nominated five of the nine Supreme Court justices. The reason, of course, is the Electoral College, which tallies votes by state, not by voter. This institution is a legacy of slavery, designed by the founders to ensure that the less populated slave states would be able to balance the free states that had nearly three times the population.

In frustrating the popular vote, the Electoral College puts the democracy at risk. Because of the Electoral College, Trump’s margin of defeat wasn’t 7 million across the nation, but about 65,000 votes in three states and the 2nd District of Nebraska. That helped empower him to mislead millions by claiming the election was stolen, despite Biden’s landslide popular vote victory.

In the Senate, Democrats and Republicans each have 50 senators (with Vice President Kamala Harris the tie-breaking vote). The 50 Democrats represent 41 million more voters than the 50 Republicans. Smaller, more rural states with few people, like Wyoming or Idaho, have as many senators as large populous states like California and New York. To add insult to injury, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, which have more voters than several states, are denied statehood with no final vote on any legislation.

That means, among other things, that three Supreme Court justices — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett — were all nominated by a president who lost the popular vote and confirmed by a bloc of senators who represent less than half the country.

In the House, Democrats have a small majority. But to win a majority, it is estimated that they must win 6 percent to 7 percent more votes than Republicans across the country, because Republican gerrymandering — drawing districts to pack Democratic voters in a few districts (usually disproportionately people of color) while giving Republicans an edge in many — has rigged the system against the party that represents the majority. And worse, Supreme Court judges nominated by minority presidents have ruled that the federal courts will do nothing to protect against grotesquely distorted gerrymandering.

The same distortions exist in state legislatures, where gerrymandered districts help the party with the minority of votes gain the majority. That majority then has the power to redraw the districts to rig the system even more. More than 59 million Americans live under minority rule in a state where the party with fewer votes controls a majority of the legislative seats. In Wisconsin, 44.7% of voters cast ballots for Republican Assembly candidates, but the GOP won 64.6% of the seats. With gerrymandering, voters aren’t choosing their representatives; representatives are choosing their voters.

The right-wing Supreme Court majority has ruled that money is speech and that corporations are citizens, so their ability to throw money into elections cannot be limited. The result, not surprisingly, is that American elections get more costly and big money and entrenched interests grow more powerful.

The fix is in — and the results are ruinous. Today, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is refusing to agree to rules to govern the Senate unless Democrats agree to sustain the filibuster. The filibuster — the requirement that virtually any legislation receive not a majority of the vote but a supermajority of 60 votes — is the instrument McConnell used to obstruct virtually everything President Obama sought to do, with the stated purpose of making him a one-term president. The result is a Senate that is frozen in the midst of cumulating crises. Even Joe Biden’s pandemic emergency rescue package is stalled. America becomes more and more dysfunctional as it becomes less and less democratic.

The Democratic majority in the House has passed legislation — HR 1 in the last session of Congress — that would remedy some of these inequities. The 51-vote majority in the new Senate wants this to be its first act. But, of course, if the filibuster is sustained the minority will block even these common-sense reforms.

The sacking of the Capitol sent a message around the world that America’s democracy is literally under siege. The reality is worse: our system is rigged so that the minority can rule. The disconnect — the frustration of the will of the majority — is a clear and present danger.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 Next > End >>

Page 218 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN