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FOCUS: Nuclear Proliferation Is Still the Greatest Threat We Face Print
Thursday, 14 May 2015 11:35

Plame Wilson writes: "Twenty-six years after the end of the Cold War, the world still has more than 15,000 nuclear weapons. Whatever other issues people care about - poverty, the environment, inequality and so many others - if we don't get this one right, and soon, nothing else will matter."

Valerie Plame Wilson (photo: Julie Brothers)
Valerie Plame Wilson (photo: Julie Brothers)


Nuclear Proliferation Is Still the Greatest Threat We Face

By Valerie Plame Wilson, Reader Supported News

14 May 15

 

s a former covert CIA operative, specializing in counter-proliferation, I still believe that the spread of nuclear weapons and the risk of their use is the greatest existential threat we face. Twenty-six years after the end of the Cold War, the world still has more than 15,000 nuclear weapons. Whatever other issues people care about -- poverty, the environment, inequality and so many others -- if we don't get this one right, and soon, nothing else will matter.

We are at a crossroads on this issue and the decisions we make over the next 10 years will set us on a course either toward the elimination of all nuclear weapons or toward expanding arsenals and proliferation.

There are some disturbing trends.

All of the nuclear countries are investing heavily, or planning to do so, in modernizing their forces and/or expanding their arsenals. President Obama is proposing a massive overhaul of the U.S. nuclear arsenal that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates will cost $1 trillion over the next 30 years. Russia has already begun a major upgrade of its arsenal. China is ramping up each leg of its nuclear triad, India is close to having a full nuclear triad with the addition of a nuclear submarine to its forces, and North Korea continues to develop its nuclear capability. Perhaps most worrisome is Pakistan, which has the fastest-growing nuclear arsenal and is plagued by persistent political instability and extremist elements.

In addition to developing new types of weapons, nuclear weapons countries also appear to be taking steps toward establishing the dangerous nuclear high-alert posture that the United States and Soviet Union adopted during the Cold War (and still maintain) -- shortening the decision time for launch and increasing the risk that nuclear weapons will be used in conflict, by accident or through unauthorized launch.

Longstanding regional conflicts involving nuclear-armed countries remain unresolved and tensions high, including on the South Asian Peninsula, the Korean Peninsula and the Middle East. Relations between Russia and the West have spiraled dangerously downward; Russia has even threatened to use nuclear force to defend its annexation of Crimea.

Meanwhile, terrorists are working to get their hands on the bomb. This danger has risen as states have failed and ungoverned zones have spread, especially in the Middle East and Africa. In the last two decades there have been dozens of incidents of nuclear explosive materials being lost or stolen. The so-called "Islamic State" group has already seized low-grade nuclear material from a facility in Mosul.

These are very difficult challenges. But there are also significant factors that could provide opportunities for progress.

A final agreement with Iran would verifiably prevent it from developing a nuclear bomb. It would negate a long-standing leading argument of opponents to Global Zero -- that Iran and countries like it would never agree to forgo nuclear weapons. And it provides a model -- multilateral negotiations and intrusive verification -- for pursuing global reductions in nuclear arsenals.

Budgeting pressures and austerity measures in key countries are forcing governments and militaries to rethink the value of nuclear weapons. This could call into question current plans for large-scale investments in nuclear forces -- and even plans to maintain arsenals at their current sizes. If forced to choose, military leaders would presumably opt for conventional weapons they actually use over nuclear weapons, which they don't. As U.S. Secretary of Defense Ash Carter said recently regarding budget pressures, "I will not send our troops into a fight with outdated equipment, inadequate readiness, or ineffective doctrine. But everything else is on the table -- including parts of our budget that have long been considered inviolate."

So what must be done to leverage these opportunities, overcome the obstacles and move away from a future of proliferation and increasing nuclear risks toward the elimination of nuclear weapons worldwide?

In the near-term, we need to get the Iran deal done -- a verifiable, negotiated deal is by far our best option for preventing Iran from getting the bomb. And President Obama must abandon plans to lock us into a $1 trillion nuclear arsenal for decades to come and instead refocus his efforts on finding ways to move toward the reduction of nuclear weapons worldwide.

One promising option involves "de-alerting" measures by nuclear countries -- practical steps to increase warning and decision time. This could lead to a multilateral agreement requiring all nuclear weapons countries to refrain from actively deploying nuclear weapons. This would immediately and dramatically reduce the risk that nuclear weapons will be used. It would also engage nuclear weapons countries -- beyond the United States and Russia -- in the process of arms control for the first time, laying the groundwork for multilateral negotiations on global nuclear arms reductions and elimination.

Global Zero is currently spearheading an effort to enlist nuclear countries to adopt de-alerting measures, led by its Commission on Nuclear Risk Reduction -- an international group of former military commanders, political leaders and diplomats chaired by retired U.S. Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General James E. Cartwright.

At the same time, we need to focus on building a grassroots movement for the elimination of nuclear weapons. More than anything, we will need public pressure to get to zero.

Global Zero has been systematically laying the groundwork for such a movement for several years, educating and training students and establishing hundreds of campus chapters worldwide, assembling a first-rate team of campaigners and testing innovative new approaches to grassroots organizing. All of this is now being dramatically scaled up with the launch of the Global Zero Action Corps -- an exciting new initiative to build a large-scale and sustained global grassroots movement.

Building such a movement with the power to push our political leaders toward zero will take years of dedicated, painstaking organizing work. There are no shortcuts. Unless we are willing to see a nuclear weapon used in the next 10 years, we all need to get involved and do our part.

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The Clintons and Their Banker Friends Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=35461"><span class="small">Nomi Prins, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Thursday, 14 May 2015 08:48

Prins writes: "Whatever her populist pitch may be in the 2016 campaign - and she will have one - note that, in all these years, Hillary Clinton has not publicly condemned Wall Street or any individual Wall Street leader."

From left, New York Assembly speaker Sheldon Silver, New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, Goldman Sachs Chairman and CEO Henry Paulson, New York governor George Pataki, Senator Charles Schumer, Battery Park City Authority Chairman James Gill and then Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton toss ceremonial shovels of dirt at the groundbreaking of the $2.4 billion Goldman Sachs world headquarters in lower Manhattan in 2005. (photo: Richard Drew/AP)
From left, New York Assembly speaker Sheldon Silver, New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, Goldman Sachs Chairman and CEO Henry Paulson, New York governor George Pataki, Senator Charles Schumer, Battery Park City Authority Chairman James Gill and then Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton toss ceremonial shovels of dirt at the groundbreaking of the $2.4 billion Goldman Sachs world headquarters in lower Manhattan in 2005. (photo: Richard Drew/AP)


The Clintons and Their Banker Friends

By Nomi Prins, TomDispatch

14 May 15

 

he past, especially the political past, doesn't just provide clues to the present. In the realm of the presidency and Wall Street, it provides an ongoing pathway for political-financial relationships and policies that remain a threat to the American economy going forward.

When Hillary Clinton video-announced her bid for the Oval Office, she claimed she wanted to be a "champion" for the American people. Since then, she has attempted to recast herself as a populist and distance herself from some of the policies of her husband. But Bill Clinton did not become president without sharing the friendships, associations, and ideologies of the elite banking sect, nor will Hillary Clinton. Such relationships run too deep and are too longstanding.

To grasp the dangers that the Big Six banks (JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley) presently pose to the financial stability of our nation and the world, you need to understand their history in Washington, starting with the Clinton years of the 1990s. Alliances established then (not exclusively with Democrats, since bankers are bipartisan by nature) enabled these firms to become as politically powerful as they are today and to exert that power over an unprecedented amount of capital. Rest assured of one thing: their past and present CEOs will prove as critical in backing a Hillary Clinton presidency as they were in enabling her husband's years in office.

In return, today's titans of finance and their hordes of lobbyists, more than half of whom held prior positions in the government, exact certain requirements from Washington. They need to know that a safety net or bailout will always be available in times of emergency and that the regulatory road will be open to whatever practices they deem most profitable.

Whatever her populist pitch may be in the 2016 campaign -- and she will have one -- note that, in all these years, Hillary Clinton has not publicly condemned Wall Street or any individual Wall Street leader. Though she may, in the heat of that campaign, raise the bad-apples or bad-situation explanation for Wall Street's role in the financial crisis of 2007-2008, rest assured that she will not point fingers at her friends. She will not chastise the people that pay her hundreds of thousands of dollars a pop to speak or the ones that have long shared the social circles in which she and her husband move. She is an undeniable component of the Clinton political-financial legacy that came to national fruition more than 23 years ago, which is why looking back at the history of the first Clinton presidency is likely to tell you so much about the shape and character of the possible second one.

The 1992 Election and the Rise of Bill Clinton

Challenging President George H.W. Bush, who was seeking a second term, Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton announced he would seek the 1992 Democratic nomination for the presidency on October 2, 1991. The upcoming presidential election would not, however, turn out to alter the path of mergers or White House support for deregulation that was already in play one iota.

First, though, Clinton needed money. A consummate fundraiser in his home state, he cleverly amassed backing and established early alliances with Wall Street. One of his key supporters would later change American banking forever. As Clinton put it, he received "invaluable early support" from Ken Brody, a Goldman Sachs executive seeking to delve into Democratic politics. Brody took Clinton "to a dinner with high-powered New York businesspeople, including Bob Rubin, whose tightly reasoned arguments for a new economic policy," Clinton later wrote, "made a lasting impression on me."

The battle for the White House kicked into high gear the following fall. William Schreyer, chairman and CEO of Merrill Lynch, showed his support for Bush by giving the maximum personal contribution to his campaign committee permitted by law: $1,000. But he wanted to do more. So when one of Bush's fundraisers solicited him to contribute to the Republican National Committee's nonfederal, or "soft money," account, Schreyer made a $100,000 donation.

The bankers' alliances remained divided among the candidates at first, as they considered which man would be best for their own power trajectories, but their donations were plentiful: mortgage and broker company contributions were $1.2 million; 46% to the GOP and 54% to the Democrats. Commercial banks poured in $14.8 million to the 1992 campaigns at a near 50-50 split.

Clinton, like every good Democrat, campaigned publicly against the bankers: "It's time to end the greed that consumed Wall Street and ruined our S&Ls [Savings and Loans] in the last decade," he said. But equally, he had no qualms about taking money from the financial sector. In the early months of his campaign, BusinessWeek estimated that he received $2 million of his initial $8.5 million in contributions from New York, under the care of Ken Brody.

"If I had a Ken Brody working for me in every state, I'd be like the Maytag man with nothing to do," said Rahm Emanuel, who ran Clinton's nationwide fundraising committee and later became Barack Obama's chief of staff. Wealthy donors and prospective fundraisers were invited to a select series of intimate meetings with Clinton at the plush Manhattan office of the prestigious private equity firm Blackstone.

Robert Rubin Comes to Washington

Clinton knew that embracing the bankers would help him get things done in Washington, and what he wanted to get done dovetailed nicely with their desires anyway. To facilitate his policies and maintain ties to Wall Street, he selected a man who had been instrumental to his campaign, Robert Rubin, as his economic adviser.

In 1980, Rubin had landed on Goldman Sachs' management committee alongside fellow Democrat Jon Corzine. A decade later, Rubin and Stephen Friedman were appointed cochairmen of Goldman Sachs. Rubin's political aspirations met an appropriate opportunity when Clinton captured the White House.

On January 25, 1993, Clinton appointed him as assistant to the president for economic policy. Shortly thereafter, the president created a unique role for his comrade, head of the newly created National Economic Council. "I asked Bob Rubin to take on a new job," Clinton later wrote, "coordinating economic policy in the White House as Chairman of the National Economic Council, which would operate in much the same way the National Security Council did, bringing all the relevant agencies together to formulate and implement policy... [I]f he could balance all of [Goldman Sachs'] egos and interests, he had a good chance to succeed with the job." (Ten years later, President George W. Bush gave the same position to Rubin's old partner, Friedman.)

Back at Goldman, Jon Corzine, co-head of fixed income, and Henry Paulson, co-head of investment banking, were ascending through the ranks. They became co-CEOs when Friedman retired at the end of 1994.

Those two men were the perfect bipartisan duo. Corzine was a staunch Democrat serving on the International Capital Markets Advisory Committee of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (from 1989 to 1999). He would co-chair a presidential commission for Clinton on capital budgeting between 1997 and 1999, while serving in a key role on the Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Treasury Department. Paulson was a well connected Republican and Harvard graduate who had served on the White House Domestic Council as staff assistant to the president in the Nixon administration.

Bankers Forge Ahead

By May 1995, Rubin was impatiently warning Congress that the Glass-Steagall Act could "conceivably impede safety and soundness by limiting revenue diversification." Banking deregulation was then inching through Congress. As they had during the previous Bush administration, both the House and Senate Banking Committees had approved separate versions of legislation to repeal Glass-Steagall, the 1933 Act passed by the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt that had separated deposit-taking and lending or "commercial" bank activities from speculative or "investment bank" activities, such as securities creation and trading. Conference negotiations had fallen apart, though, and the effort was stalled.

By 1996, however, other industries, representing core clients of the banking sector, were already being deregulated. On February 8, 1996, Clinton signed the Telecom Act, which killed many independent and smaller broadcasting companies by opening a national market for "cross-ownership." The result was mass mergers in that sector advised by banks.

Deregulation of companies that could transport energy across state lines came next. Before such deregulation, state commissions had regulated companies that owned power plants and transmission lines, which worked together to distribute power. Afterward, these could be divided and effectively traded without uniform regulation or responsibility to regional customers. This would lead to blackouts in California and a slew of energy derivatives, as well as trades at firms such as Enron that used the energy business as a front for fraudulent deals.

The number of mergers and stock and debt issuances ballooned on the back of all the deregulation that eliminated barriers that had kept companies separated. As industries consolidated, they also ramped up their complex transactions and special purpose vehicles (off-balance-sheet, offshore constructions tailored by the banking community to hide the true nature of their debts and shield their profits from taxes). Bankers kicked into overdrive to generate fees and create related deals. Many of these blew up in the early 2000s in a spate of scandals and bankruptcies, causing an earlier millennium recession.

Meanwhile, though, bankers plowed ahead with their advisory services, speculative enterprises, and deregulation pursuits. President Clinton and his team would soon provide them an epic gift, all in the name of U.S. global power and competitiveness. Robert Rubin would steer the White House ship to that goal.

On February 12, 1999, Rubin found a fresh angle to argue on behalf of banking deregulation. He addressed the House Committee on Banking and Financial Services, claiming that, "the problem U.S. financial services firms face abroad is more one of access than lack of competitiveness."

He was referring to the European banks' increasing control of distribution channels into the European institutional and retail client base. Unlike U.S. commercial banks, European banks had no restrictions keeping them from buying and teaming up with U.S. or other securities firms and investment banks to create or distribute their products. He did not appear concerned about the destruction caused by sizeable financial bets throughout Europe. The international competitiveness argument allowed him to focus the committee on what needed to be done domestically in the banking sector to remain competitive.

Rubin stressed the necessity of HR 665, the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, or the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, that was officially introduced on February 10, 1999. He said it took "fundamental actions to modernize our financial system by repealing the Glass-Steagall Act prohibitions on banks affiliating with securities firms and repealing the Bank Holding Company Act prohibitions on insurance underwriting."

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act Marches Forward

On February 24, 1999, in more testimony before the Senate Banking Committee, Rubin pushed for fewer prohibitions on bank affiliates that wanted to perform the same functions as their larger bank holding company, once the different types of financial firms could legally merge. That minor distinction would enable subsidiaries to place all sorts of bets and house all sorts of junk under the false premise that they had the same capital beneath them as their parent. The idea that a subsidiary's problems can't taint or destroy the host, or bank holding company, or create "catastrophic" risk, is a myth perpetuated by bankers and political enablers that continues to this day.

Rubin had no qualms with mega-consolidations across multiple service lines. His real problems were those of his banker friends, which lay with the financial modernization bill's "prohibition on the use of subsidiaries by larger banks." The bankers wanted the right to establish off-book subsidiaries where they could hide risks, and profits, as needed.

Again, Rubin decided to use the notion of remaining competitive with foreign banks to make his point. This technicality was "unacceptable to the administration," he said, not least because "foreign banks underwrite and deal in securities through subsidiaries in the United States, and U.S. banks [already] conduct securities and merchant banking activities abroad through so-called Edge subsidiaries." Rubin got his way. These off-book, risky, and barely regulated subsidiaries would be at the forefront of the 2008 financial crisis.

On March 1, 1999, Senator Phil Gramm released a final draft of the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 and scheduled committee consideration for March 4th. A bevy of excited financial titans who were close to Clinton, including Travelers CEO Sandy Weill, Bank of America CEO, Hugh McColl, and American Express CEO Harvey Golub, called for "swift congressional action."

The Quintessential Revolving-Door Man

The stock market continued its meteoric rise in anticipation of a banker-friendly conclusion to the legislation that would deregulate their industry. Rising consumer confidence reflected the nation's fondness for the markets and lack of empathy with the rest of the world's economic plight. On March 29, 1999, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 10,000 for the first time. Six weeks later, on May 6th, the Financial Services Modernization Act passed the Senate. It legalized, after the fact, the merger that created the nation's biggest bank. Citigroup, the marriage of Citibank and Travelers, had been finalized the previous October.

It was not until that point that one of Glass-Steagall's main assassins decided to leave Washington. Six days after the bill passed the Senate, on May 12, 1999, Robert Rubin abruptly announced his resignation. As Clinton wrote, "I believed he had been the best and most important treasury secretary since Alexander Hamilton... He had played a decisive role in our efforts to restore economic growth and spread its benefits to more Americans."

Clinton named Larry Summers to succeed Rubin. Two weeks later, BusinessWeek reported signs of trouble in merger paradise -- in the form of a growing rift between John Reed, the former Chairman of Citibank, and Sandy Weill at the new Citigroup. As Reed said, "Co-CEOs are hard." Perhaps to patch their rift, or simply to take advantage of a political opportunity, the two men enlisted a third person to join their relationship -- none other than Robert Rubin.

Rubin's resignation from Treasury became effective on July 2nd. At that time, he announced, "This almost six and a half years has been all-consuming, and I think it is time for me to go home to New York and to do whatever I'm going to do next." Rubin became chairman of Citigroup's executive committee and a member of the newly created "office of the chairman." His initial annual compensation package was worth around $40 million. It was more than worth the "hit" he took when he left Goldman for the Treasury post.

Three days after the conference committee endorsed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley bill, Rubin assumed his Citigroup position, joining the institution destined to dominate the financial industry. That very same day, Reed and Weill issued a joint statement praising Washington for "liberating our financial companies from an antiquated regulatory structure," stating that "this legislation will unleash the creativity of our industry and ensure our global competitiveness."

On November 4th, the Senate approved the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act by a vote of 90 to 8. (The House voted 362–57 in favor.) Critics famously referred to it as the Citigroup Authorization Act.

Mirth abounded in Clinton's White House. "Today Congress voted to update the rules that have governed financial services since the Great Depression and replace them with a system for the twenty-first century," Summers said. "This historic legislation will better enable American companies to compete in the new economy."

But the happiness was misguided. Deregulating the banking industry might have helped the titans of Wall Street but not people on Main Street. The Clinton era epitomized the vast difference between appearance and reality, spin and actuality. As the decade drew to a close, Clinton basked in the glow of a lofty stock market, a budget surplus, and the passage of this key banking "modernization." It would be revealed in the 2000s that many corporate profits of the 1990s were based on inflated evaluations, manipulation, and fraud. When Clinton left office, the gap between rich and poor was greater than it had been in 1992, and yet the Democrats heralded him as some sort of prosperity hero.

When he resigned in 1997, Robert Reich, Clinton's labor secretary, said, "America is prospering, but the prosperity is not being widely shared, certainly not as widely shared as it once was... We have made progress in growing the economy. But growing together again must be our central goal in the future." Instead, the growth of wealth inequality in the United States accelerated, as the men yielding the most financial power wielded it with increasingly less culpability or restriction. By 2015, that wealth or prosperity gap would stand near historic highs.

The power of the bankers increased dramatically in the wake of the repeal of Glass-Steagall. The Clinton administration had rendered twenty-first-century banking practices similar to those of the pre-1929 crash. But worse. "Modernizing" meant utilizing government-backed depositors' funds as collateral for the creation and distribution of all types of complex securities and derivatives whose proliferation would be increasingly quick and dangerous.

Eviscerating Glass-Steagall allowed big banks to compete against Europe and also enabled them to go on a rampage: more acquisitions, greater speculation, and more risky products. The big banks used their bloated balance sheets to engage in more complex activity, while counting on customer deposits and loans as capital chips on the global betting table. Bankers used hefty trading profits and wealth to increase lobbying funds and campaign donations, creating an endless circle of influence and mutual reinforcement of boundary-less speculation, endorsed by the White House.

Deposits could be used to garner larger windfalls, just as cheap labor and commodities in developing countries were used to formulate more expensive goods for profit in the upper echelons of the global financial hierarchy. Energy and telecoms proved especially fertile ground for the investment banking fee business (and later for fraud, extensive lawsuits, and bankruptcies). Deregulation greased the wheels of complex financial instruments such as collateralized debt obligations, junk bonds, toxic assets, and unregulated derivatives.

The Glass-Steagall repeal led to unfettered derivatives growth and unstable balance sheets at commercial banks that merged with investment banks and at investment banks that preferred to remain solo but engaged in dodgier practices to remain "competitive." In conjunction with the tight political-financial alignment and associated collaboration that began with Bush and increased under Clinton, bankers channeled the 1920s, only with more power over an immense and growing pile of global financial assets and increasingly "open" markets. In the process, accountability would evaporate.

Every bank accelerated its hunt for acquisitions and deposits to amass global influence while creating, trading, and distributing increasingly convoluted securities and derivatives. These practices would foster the kind of shaky, interconnected, and opaque financial environment that provided the backdrop and conditions leading up to the financial meltdown of 2008.

The Realities of 2016

Hillary Clinton is, of course, not her husband. But her access to his past banker alliances, amplified by the ones that she has formed herself, makes her more of a friend than an adversary to the banking industry. In her brief 2008 candidacy, all four of the New York-based Big Six banks ranked among her top 10 corporate donors. They have also contributed to the Clinton Foundation. She needs them to win, just as both Barack Obama and Bill Clinton did.

No matter what spin is used for campaigning purposes, the idea that a critical distance can be maintained between the White House and Wall Street is naïve given the multiple channels of money and favors that flow between the two. It is even more improbable, given the history of connections that Hillary Clinton has established through her associations with key bank leaders in the early 1990s, during her time as a senator from New York, and given their contributions to the Clinton foundation while she was secretary of state. At some level, the situation couldn't be less complicated: her path aligns with that of the country's most powerful bankers. If she becomes president, that will remain the case.

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Feminism Isn't a Label Republicans Can Slap on When It's Convenient Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=30488"><span class="small">Jessica Valenti, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Thursday, 14 May 2015 08:44

Valenti writes: "Republicans are going to have to perform some serious magic with female voters. They'll have to make all those pesky rape comments disappear, use sleight-of hand to distract us from their idiotic beliefs about women's biology and the fact that the core of their platform is about maintaining inequality."

Carly Fiorina has been hailed a feminist despite her conservative positions. (photo: Chris Keane/Reuters)
Carly Fiorina has been hailed a feminist despite her conservative positions. (photo: Chris Keane/Reuters)


Feminism Isn't a Label Republicans Can Slap on When It's Convenient

By Jessica Valenti, Guardian UK

14 May 15

 

Conservatives who eschewed feminist ideals for years have started to call themselves the real feminists, despite wanting to roll back women's rights

n the lead-up to 2016, Republicans are going to have to perform some serious magic with female voters. They'll have to make all those pesky rape comments disappear, use sleight-of hand to distract us from their idiotic beliefs about women's biology and the fact that the core of their platform is about maintaining inequality.

But the GOP's real abracadabra moment will come if they pull off the trick they've been working on for years: convincing Americans that Republicans are not only good for women, but actual feminists.

Last week, presidential hopeful Carly Fiorina was anointed a "real feminist" by The Week, even though "she has no use for laws mandating 'equal pay' or paid maternity leave or contraceptive coverage." In Jeb Bush's Liberty University commencement speech over the weekend, the likely Republican presidential candidate told his audience that "wherever there is a child waiting to be born, we say choose life," and in the same breath added, without irony, that he derided the "arrogance" of treating women and girls "as possessions without rights and dignity."

And next month, the Independent Women's Forum - a powerful conservative women's group based in DC - is hosting a "Women Lead" summit to "move forward with a positive agenda for women." The speakers include Christina Hoff Sommers (who has defended the misogynist horde known as GamerGate), Naomi Schaefer Riley (who wrote that a woman who was raped and murdered "should have known better" than to be at a bar alone), and Katie Pavlich (who says feminists oppose guns because "modern feminism can't survive without victims" and the movement would rather see women raped than armed). These are the women, we're told, who will "discuss the progressive women's landscape."

But glomming on to the cultural cache of feminism is a losing strategy for Republicans - and has been for years. In 2008, when the Wall Street Journal coined the term "Sarah Palin Feminism", Republicans cynically believed that any woman on the ticket - no matter what she believed - would bring in women's votes. (It didn't.) And as feminism's influence and power has grown over the last decade, conservative women who eschewed feminist ideals for years have started to call themselves the real feminists.

But try as they might, Republicans will not be able to extricate themselves from their anti-choice, anti-birth control positions or convince female voters that said beliefs are actually in line with what's best for women. We know that's not true.

As Naral Pro-Choice America president Ilyse Hogue told me over email, Americans are "embracing the fact that women are the bellweather of economic well-being for the family unit, reproductive freedom and abortion rights are critical to economic opportunity and job security, and that women's rights are human rights."

Republicans won't be able to run away from women's bodies and rights this time - no matter how many times they use the word 'feminist' or 'empowerment'. Because feminism isn't just a label that anyone can slap on themselves when it's politically convenient. It's an actual movement, with actual people behind it - people who aren't willing to let their hard work be co-opted by those who want to see women's rights rolled back while telling us its progress.

There aren't enough smoke and mirrors in the world for that trick to work.

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Global Internet Activists Give Thumbs Down to Facebook's Internet.org Print
Thursday, 14 May 2015 08:37

Karr writes: "Mark Zuckerberg's plan for world domination is in trouble. The billionaire Facebook founder recently took to his social network in a bid to save Internet.org, his plan to give billions of the planet's poorest people a limited taste of the World Wide Web."

Mark Zuckerberg, and Facebook plans to fund and assist Internet.org. (photo: Maurizio Pesce/flickr CC 2.0/edited from original)
Mark Zuckerberg, and Facebook plans to fund and assist Internet.org. (photo: Maurizio Pesce/flickr CC 2.0/edited from original)


Global Internet Activists Give Thumbs Down to Facebook's Internet.org

By Tim Karr, Moyers & Company

14 May 15

 

ark Zuckerberg's plan for world domination is in trouble.

The billionaire Facebook founder recently took to his social network in a bid to save Internet.org, his plan to give billions of the planet's poorest people a limited taste of the World Wide Web.

"We have a historic opportunity ahead of us to improve the lives of billions of people," he said in an impassioned video plea. "It's just the right thing to do."

Internet.org is essentially a mobile application that provides free access to a handful of other applications, platforms and websites, including Facebook, Wikipedia and the BBC. Use of Internet.org comes at no cost; local carriers stream data via the service for free.

As apps go this might seem well and good but Zuckerberg sees Internet.org as far more than an app. If things proceed as planned, it will represent the entity of the Internet for a significant proportion of the world's population.

And that's the problem because Internet.org isn't the Internet. It's an enclosed digital domain that doesn't benefit the poor so much as it pads Facebook's bottom line. Imagine the benefits of a billion new subscribers for a company whose business is built on harvesting user data.

As Facebook pushes Internet.org from continent to continent, backlash against the effort has also spread.

From India to Indonesia, Brazil and Africa

The plan ran aground in India last month as local Net Neutrality supporters saw Internet.org as a violation of the open Internet. They rallied Indian activists and pressured mobile phone services to abandon the Facebook partnership. Several prominent partners withdrew from the program, citing concerns about Facebook's gatekeeper approach.

It's now facing opposition in Brazil, where local digital rights advocates sent a letter to President Dilma Rousseff objecting to the government's partnership with Internet.org. "We believe this project … could jeopardize the future of Brazil's information society, the digital economy and the rights of users on the network, such as privacy, freedom of expression and Net Neutrality," the letter reads.

In Indonesia, one of the largest mobile carriers, XL Axiata, recently withdrew from the initiative, citing the controversy in India among other concerns. And tech entrepreneurs and activists across North and East Africa are organizing opposition to Internet.org at two upcoming regional conferences.

Meanwhile, Facebook's high-profile scheme has overshadowed local efforts to get people connected to the full Internet.

Last week Zuckerberg launched a passive-aggressive response to the mounting opposition. "We have to ask ourselves what kind of community do we want to be," he said. "Are we a community that values people and improving people's lives above all else? Or are we a community that puts the intellectual purity of technology above people's needs?"

Lurking behind this false choice is a critique of the global Net Neutrality advocates who have led the charge against Internet.org.

"It's not the community of people that are fighting for Net Neutrality that are depriving people of full Internet connectivity," said Niels ten Oever, head of digital for free speech group Article 19. "It's the telcos, companies and governments that have the capacity and resources to do so, but who don't."

"If defending Net Neutrality is a challenge, try convincing policymakers that there are better solutions to affordable access than offering the 'free Internet' via cellphones," Cristiana Gonzalez of the University of Sao Paulo wrote in an email. Gonzalez points to ambitious programs like GESAC, a collaboration between the Brazilian government and communities that provides high-speed connectivity to some of the country's most underserved and remote regions.

In their letter to Brazilian President Rousseff, advocates mention alternatives to Internet.org like Uruguay's Plan Ceibal, which promotes free access, and Coletivo Digital, which is attempting to build 3,000 "digital inclusion telecenters" across the country.

"The Googles and Facebooks of the world can lure local users onto their global sites and platforms, but what happens to local Internet entrepreneurs who are trying to launch their own online businesses and services?" asked Ali Hussein Kassim, a Nairobi-based tech entrepreneur and advocate.

Kassim is helping to place Internet.org on the agenda of African Internet forums in Tunisia later this month and in Nairobi in July.

Kenya has launched a Universal Service Fund, which obligates telecommunications companies to contribute a small percentage of revenues to connecting rural and low-income communities. While the program remains untested in the field, Kassim is encouraged that program funding has begun to flow.

In the face of the growing criticism, Facebook recently decided to open Internet.org to more partners — while maintaining its gatekeeper role. "It's like inviting me into your house and telling me that I can do this and that," Kassim said. "People like us will continue pushing and pushing and pushing and pushing until they hear us. We will not give up."

The ZuckerNet's Small World

"To argue that providing a non-neutral Internet to people in poverty is better because it's free is to say that such people do not require the public policy protections that are provided to others," said Parminder Jeet Singh, executive director of IT for Change in India. Activists in India, who have collected more than a million signatures in support of Net Neutrality protections, are among those most vocally opposed to Internet.org.

Zuckerberg doesn't want to offer poor people the open Internet; he wants to provide access to only the sites that meet Internet.org's criteria. The Zuckernet is a small universe where you can "like" your favorite pet meme, look up Wikipedia's definition of "paternalism" and read text-based news briefs from the BBC World Service.

Because of its limitations on the use of rich media, Internet.org not a place where you can upload videos exposing local corruption or police brutality. It's not a place where you can share photos with distant family members. And if you're hoping to start your own online business, you'll first have to maneuver through Facebook's predatory approval process and privacy policy before you can charge customers.

The real Internet is the better option, of course. And there are genuine efforts underway to connect more people in the regions Zuckerberg has targeted.

If Zuckerberg actually cares about helping the world's poorest in this way, he should use his wealth and influence to boost the initiatives that are already on the ground.

As Internet.org sputters, the tech billionaire should chart a new course — one that supports the people and organizations that have devoted a great amount of time and energy to solving this problem.

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A Picture of Loneliness: You Are Looking at the Last Male Northern White Rhino Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9018"><span class="small">Jonathan Jones, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Thursday, 14 May 2015 08:26

Jones writes: "What is it like to look at the very last of something? To contemplate the passing of a unique wonder that will soon vanish from the face of the earth? You are seeing it."

'Sudan doesn't know how precious he is. His eye is a sad black dot in his massive wrinkled face as he wanders the reserve with his guards.' (photo: CB2/ZOB/Brent Stirton/National Geographic)
'Sudan doesn't know how precious he is. His eye is a sad black dot in his massive wrinkled face as he wanders the reserve with his guards.' (photo: CB2/ZOB/Brent Stirton/National Geographic)


A Picture of Loneliness: You Are Looking at the Last Male Northern White Rhino

By Jonathan Jones, Guardian UK

14 May 15

 

The image of Sudan the rhino, surrounded by the armed guards who protect him from poachers, shows how little humans have learned since the ice age

hat is it like to look at the very last of something? To contemplate the passing of a unique wonder that will soon vanish from the face of the earth? You are seeing it. Sudan is the last male northern white rhino on the planet. If he does not mate successfully soon with one of two female northern white rhinos at Ol Pejeta conservancy, there will be no more of their kind, male or female, born anywhere. And it seems a slim chance, as Sudan is getting old at 42 and breeding efforts have so far failed. Apart from these three animals there are only two other northern white rhinos in the world, both in zoos, both female.

It seems an image of human tenderness that Sudan is lovingly guarded by armed men who stand vigilantly and caringly with him. But of course it is an image of brutality. Even at this last desperate stage in the fate of the northern white rhino, poachers would kill Sudan if they could and hack off his horn to sell it on the Asian medicine market.

Sudan doesn't know how precious he is. His eye is a sad black dot in his massive wrinkled face as he wanders the reserve with his guards. His head is a marvellous thing. It is a majestic rectangle of strong bone and leathery flesh, a head that expresses pure strength. How terrible that such a mighty head can in reality be so vulnerable. It is lowered melancholically beneath the sinister sky, as if weighed down by fate. This is the noble head of an old warrior, his armour battered, his appetite for struggle fading.

Today, immense love is invested in rhinos, yet they are being slaughtered in ever greater numbers

Under his immense looming shoulder, his legs protrude like squat columns from the tough tank of his body. The way his foreleg emerges from his thick coat of skin reminds us how long human beings have been wondering at the natural spectacle that is the rhino. For Sudan does not look so different from the rhinoceros that Albrecht Dürer portrayed in 1515. They have the same little legs stuck out of a majestic body and they even lower their heads in the same contemplative way. Dürer was a Renaissance artist picturing an exotic beast from the exotic lands that Europe was starting to see more and more of. In 1515 a live Indian rhinoceros was sent by the ruler of Gujarat to the king of Portugal: he in turn sent it to the Pope, but on the way it died in a shipwreck.

Human beings – we always kill the things we love. We have been doing so since the ice age. There are beautiful pictures of European woolly rhinos in caves in France, that were painted up to 30,000 years ago. These ancient relatives of Sudan share his heroic bulk, mighty power and paradoxical air of gentleness. A woolly rhino in Chauvet cave seems agile and young, a creature full of life. But the same people who painted such sensitive portraits of ice age rhinos helped to kill them off. As climate turned against the woolly megafauna with the end of the last ice age, human spears probably delivered the coup de grace.

Today, immense love is invested in rhinos, yet they are being slaughtered in ever greater numbers. The northern white rhino is the rarest species of African rhino. There are far greater numbers of southern white rhinos and black rhinos. But the demand in Asian countries such as Vietnam for rhino horn as a traditional medicine believed to cure everything from flu to cancer is fuelling a boom in poaching. From 2007, when just 13 rhinos were killed by poachers in South Africa, the killings have grown horrifically. Last year 1,215 rhinos were slaughtered for their horns in South Africa. This year already looks certain to beat that dreadful record.

This is a photograph from the front line of a crisis. The vulnerable northern white rhino has been hunted virtually to extinction – in spite of every precaution, in spite of these guards and their guns – and other varieties of African rhino are under a sustained attack from poachers that is totally out of control. The Javan rhinoceros is also on the verge of extinction. India has successfully protected the Indian rhinoceros after it was almost wiped out by British hunters in colonial times, but here too poaching is a menace. What a majestic creature this picture records, and what futile human destructiveness. Have we learned nothing since the ice age? Can the better angels of our nature not defeat the impulse to kill?

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