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FOCUS | Mandela Impacted Who I and Millions of Others Are Today Print
Friday, 06 December 2013 11:35

Galindez writes: "I became active in the divestiture movement on campus, the first activism that I engaged in. I began to read everything I could find about Nelson Mandela. He was my first political hero."

Nelson Mandela. (photo: AFP)
Nelson Mandela. (photo: AFP)


Mandela Impacted Who I and Millions of Others Are Today

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

06 December 13

 

Amandla (power) Awethu (to the people)

t was a cool spring morning on the campus of Syracuse University when I first heard those chants. Hundreds of students were protesting outside the administration building. I stopped and listened to young boy in a wheel chair talk about what it was like to be black in South Africa. It was 1985. Mandela was still in prison.

South Africa’s president was P.W. Botha, who that year offered to release Mandela if he would renounce armed struggle. Mandela refused, saying: "Only free men can negotiate. Prisoners cannot enter into contracts."

I became active in the divestiture movement on campus, the first activism that I engaged in. I began to read everything I could find about Nelson Mandela. He was my first political hero. Others would follow, Archbishop Oscar Romero, Phillip Berrigan, Mitch Snyder, William Thomas, Paul Wellstone, to name a few. Mandela though was the first.

I changed my major from broadcasting to political science. My life changed forever.

One quote that helped shape my activism was:

"For to be free is not merely to cast off one’s chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others."

I was always in awe of Mandela, Tutu, Boesak and others who even during the hateful apartheid regime spoke of reconciliation and hope. They knew in their hearts that they would end apartheid and they did not wish to punish those who punished them. They understood that if they adopted the hate of their oppressors then they too would just be replacing them.

"Resentment is like drinking poison and then hoping it will kill your enemies."

Another quote from Mandela that influenced people’s lives. I always wondered how someone who spent decades in prison and who lived the under the oppressive apartheid regime could so easily forgive.

Ironically the quote from Mandela that probably had the greatest influence on me was one he was too charismatic to follow himself:

"Lead from the back - and let others believe they are in front."

I was always the dedicated foot soldier organizing from behind the scenes. Mr. Mandela, you were never in the back - you led from the front. You made the world a better place and inspired me and millions of others to be better.

Amandla! (I can hear you saying) Awethu!


Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador's slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush's first stolen election. Scott will be spending a year covering the presidential election from Iowa.

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.

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Elizabeth Warren Would Like Us to Relax Now Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Thursday, 05 December 2013 14:27

Pierce writes: "Senator Professor Warren would like all of you to chill, please."

Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Boston Herald)
Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Boston Herald)


Elizabeth Warren Would Like Us to Relax Now

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

05 December 13

 

enator Professor Warren would like all of you to chill, please.

"I'm not running for president and I plan to serve out my term," Warren said at a press conference in Boston with Mayor-elect Martin J. Walsh. When peppered about her intentions, she added: "I pledge to serve out my term. "I am not running for president. I am working as hard as I can to be the best possible senator I can be," she said. "I am working as hard as I can to be the best the possible senator that I can be and to fight for the things that I promised during my campaign that I would fight for. I am fighting for bank accountability. I am fighting hard to help rebuild America's middle class."

This, of course, comes from former Senator McDreamy's most prominent local fanzine- one in which a featured columnist today argued that McDreamy would have won if it weren't for all the places that didn't vote for him- and notice the way things got themselves pivoted from politics to policy.

When asked if she sees a clash looming between Hillary Clinton's centrist wing of the party vs her liberal branch, Warren dodged any mention of the former U.S. Secretary of State. "It's not how pundits want to describe different parts of the process. The way I see it right now is about the changes we need to make. It's how we build a future going forward," she said. "Let me give you an example. We need to raise the minimum wage. We need to do it here in Mass. And we need to do it all across the country. Families who work full time should not live in poverty. That's something that I argued for, Democrats are arguing for, and frankly most people in the United States support. ...We need to get Congress in line with where the American people are. This is not about ideology. This is about concrete ways to help strengthen America's working families."

You see, substance is always a "dodge" of the important questions about the (Rrrrrrowrrrrrr!) Democratic catfight (!) Thus doth American political journalism roll.



Charlie has been a working journalist since 1976. He is the author of four books, most recently "Idiot America." He lives near Boston with his wife but no longer his three children.

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FOCUS | How Robots, Race and Neoliberalism Killed Detroit Print
Thursday, 05 December 2013 13:00

Cole writes: "The big question is whether Detroit's bankruptcy and likely further decline is a fluke or whether it tells us something about the dystopia that the United States is becoming. It seems to me that the city's problems are the difficulties of the country as a whole ..."

Run-down buildings at the old Packard car plant, a 40-acre site in east Detroit. (photo: Fabrizio Costantini)
Run-down buildings at the old Packard car plant, a 40-acre site in east Detroit. (photo: Fabrizio Costantini)


How Robots, Race and Neoliberalism Killed Detroit

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

05 December 13

 

etroit can go into bankruptcy, a judge has ruled. Likely it means that workers' pensions will be at least in part stolen from them.

It is a good occasion to reprint this recent piece on post-industrial decline, robots and the future of capital and labor:

Reprint Edition

The big question is whether Detroit's bankruptcy and likely further decline is a fluke or whether it tells us something about the dystopia that the United States is becoming. It seems to me that the city's problems are the difficulties of the country as a whole, especially the issues of deindustrialization, robotification, structural unemployment, the rise of the 1% in gated communities, and the racial divide. The mayor has called on families living in the largely depopulated west of the city to come in toward the center, so that they can be taken care of. It struck me as post-apocalyptic. Sometimes the abandoned neighborhoods accidentally catch fire, and 30 buildings will abruptly go up in smoke.

Detroit had nearly 2 million inhabitants in its heyday, in the 1950s. When I moved to southeast Michigan in 1984, the city still had over a million. I remember that at the time of the 1990 census, its leaders were eager to keep the status of a million-person city, since there were extra Federal monies for an urban area of that size, and they counted absolutely everyone they could find. They just barely pulled it off. But in 2000 the city fell below a million. In 2010 it was 714,000 or so. Google thinks it is now 706,000. There is no reason to believe that it won't shrink on down to almost nothing.

The foremost historian of modern Detroit, Thomas J. Sugrue, has explained the city's decline. First of all, Detroit grew from 400,000 to 1.84 million from 1910-1950 primarily because of the auto industry and the other industries that fed it (machine tools, spare parts, services, etc.) From 1950 until now, two big things happened to ruin the city with regard to industry. The first was robotification. The automation of many processes in the factories led to fewer workers being needed, and produced unemployment. (It was a trick industrial capitalism played on the African-Americans who flocked to Detroit in the 1940s to escape being sharecroppers in Georgia and elsewhere in the deep South, that by the time they got settled the jobs were beginning to disappear). Then, the auto industry began locating elsewhere, along with its support industries, to save money on labor or production costs or to escape regulation.

The refusal of the white population to allow African-American immigrants to integrate produced a strong racial divide and guaranteed inadequate housing and schools to the latter. Throughout the late 1950s and the 1960s, you had substantial white flight, of which the emigration from the city after the 1967 riots was a continuation. The white middle and business classes took their wealth with them to the suburbs, and so hurt the city's tax base. That decrease in income came on top of the migration of factories. The fewer taxes the city brought in, the worse its services became, and the more people fled. The black middle class began departing in the 1980s and now is mostly gone.

Other observers have suggested other concomitants of the decline, like poor city planning or the inability to attract foreign immigrants in sufficient numbers. I suspect that the decline of Detroit as a port is important somehow to the story (only one of the four old locks at Sault St. Marie lets big ships come down to the lower Great Lakes and therefore to Detroit any more. A new, big [pdf] modern lock is being built to accommodate larger vessels, but it will be a decade before it opens. Some observers point out that Detroit would make sense as a Midwest hub port for international shipping containers if its harbor was expanded and linked by rail to the cities of the region, but I suspect the new lock at the Soo is a prerequisite.

After all these decades of dashed hopes, it is hard for me to take too seriously any assertions that the city is about to turn the corner or that some renewal project is about to succeed. At this point it seems to me a question of whether you retain some of the population that will otherwise leave. I find particularly unlikely the idea that urban farming is part of the solution. It sounds cute, but farmers don't make nearly as much money as urban industrial workers, which is why they mostly went to the cities. You can't put money into a city that way.

While other cities have avoided Detroit's extreme fate, I think the nation as a whole faces some of the intractable problems that the city does, and I don't think we have a solution for them.

Take robots (and I really just mean highly mechanized and computerized production of commodities). More and more factory work is automated, and advances in computer technology could well make it possible to substantially increase productivity. This rise of the robots violates the deal that the capitalists made with American consumers after the great Depression, which is that they would provide people with well-paying jobs and the workers in turn would buy the commodities the factories produced, in a cycle of consumerism. If the goods can be produced without many workers, and if the workers then end up suffering long-term unemployment (as Detroit does), then who will buy the consumer goods? Capitalism can survive one Detroit, but what if we are heading toward having quite a few of them?

It seems to me that we need to abandon capitalism as production becomes detached from human labor. I think all robot labor should be nationalized and put in the public sector, and all citizens should receive a basic stipend from it. Then, if robots make an automobile, the profits will not go solely to a corporation that owns the robots, but rather to all the citizens. It wouldn't be practical anyway for the robots to be making things for unemployed, penniless humans. Perhaps we need a 21st century version of 'from all according to their abilities, to all according to their needs.'

Communally-owned mechanized/ computerized forms of production would also help resolve the problem of increasing income inequality in the United States. The top 1% is now taking home 20% of the national income each month, up from 10% a few decades ago. The 1% did a special number on southeast Michigan with its derivatives and unregulated mortgage markets; the 2008 crash hit the region hard, and it had already been being hit hard. The Detroit area is a prime example of the blight that comes from having extreme wealth (Bloomfield Hills, Grosse Pointe) and extreme poverty (most of Detroit) co-existing in an urban metropolitan area. It doesn't work. The wealthy have no city to play in, and the city does not have the ability to tax or benefit from the local wealthy in the suburbs. These problems are exacerbated by de facto racial segregation, such that African-Americans are many times more likely to be unemployed than are whites, and to live in urban blight rather than in nice suburbs.

The crisis of capitalism is being delayed in part because of the rise of Asia and the emergence of new consumer markets in places with rapidly growing populations. American corporations have relocated to those places with increasing numbers of people and cheap labor, leaving working communities like Detroiters abandoned and idle. US companies are making goods in Vietnam to sell to middle class Chinese and Indians. But the world population will level off in 2050 and probably will decline thereafter. At that point, consumerism will have reached its limits, since there will be fewer consumers every year thereafter. (There is also the problem that classical 1940s and 1950s consumerism is environmentally unsustainable).

With robot labor, cheap wind and solar power, and a shrinking global population, post-2050 human beings could have universally high standards of living. They could put their energies into software creation, biotech, and artistic creativity, which are all sustainable. The stipend generated by robot labor would be a basic income for everyone, but they'd all be free to see if they could generate further income from entrepreneurship or creativity. And that everyone had a basic level of income would ensure that there were buyers for the extra goods or services. This future will depend on something like robot communalism, and an abandonment of racism, so that all members of the commune are equal and integrated into new, sustainable urban spaces.

Insisting on a 19th century political economy like barracuda capitalism in the face of the rise of mechanized smart labor and the decline of human-based industry produces Detroit. Racial segregation and prejudice produces Detroit. Shrinking and starving government and cutting services while forcing workers to work for ever shrinking wages (or even forcing them out of the labor market altogether) produces Detroit. In essence, Detroit is the natural outgrowth of the main principles of today's Tea Party-dominated Republican Party. It doesn't work, and isn't the future.

The future is not Detroit or today's GOP-dominated state legislature in Lansing. It is Something Else. Michigan's slow, painful decline is trying to tell us something, that robots, race and unhealthy forms of globalization are death to cities under robber baron rules. We need new rules.

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Third Way's Anti-Populist, Anti-Warren and Deceptive "Dead End" Print
Thursday, 05 December 2013 09:03

Eskow writes: "An almost palpable air of desperation clings to the anti-'populist,' anti-Elizabeth Warren editorial by Jonathan Cowan and Jim Kessler of the corporate-funded Third Way organization. If they’re worried, they’re right to worry. The world is changing."

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) (photo: Jacquelyn Martin/AP)
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) (photo: Jacquelyn Martin/AP)


Third Way's Anti-Populist, Anti-Warren and Deceptive "Dead End"

By Richard Eskow, Campaign for America's Future

05 December 13

 

n almost palpable air of desperation clings to the anti-“populist,” anti-Elizabeth Warren editorial by Jonathan Cowan and Jim Kessler of the corporate-funded Third Way organization. If they’re worried, they’re right to worry. The world is changing.

Economic Populism Is a Dead-End for Democrats” appeared in The Wall Street Journal, appropriately enough, and argues that the election of staunch progressives like Bill De Blasio as mayor in New York City and Warren as Massachusetts senator have no broader political significance.

For a piece that purports to address something called “economic populism,” Cowan and Kessler make some striking omissions. Nothing is said about today’s record levels of unemployment, including long-term unemployment. Or about the retirement crisis confronting most Americans. Or the wage stagnation that is crushing the middle class.

How is it possible to address “economic populism” without mentioning the three economic trends that have had the greatest impact on the general public?

Tax Dodge

Cowan and Kessler open their policy prescriptions with a feint against higher taxes for the wealthy and corporations – their group’s primary benefactors – by dismissing the income-generating potential of these taxes. Here’s the truth: Real corporate taxes rates are at or near their lowest levels in 60 years, despite record profits. The top marginal tax rate for individuals is less than half of what it was during the Eisenhower years.

And just one loophole – the offshore tax haven – is allowing corporations to evade paying taxes on nearly $2 trillion in income. It’s clear that significant revenue can be raised with these tax increases.

These tax hikes are also smart politics. A recent poll by Americans for Tax Fairness showed that 70 percent of Americans want to offset the sequester spending cuts with tax increases for the wealthy and corporations.

Perverse Incentives

Instead, the authors push Social Security and Medicare cuts, which were supported by only 12 percent of those polled. They write of Medicare: “Sen. Warren and her acolytes are irresponsibly pushing off budget decisions that will guarantee huge benefit cuts and further tax hikes…”

But to treat Medicare as a “budget decision” is to misunderstand the problem. The core problem isn’t the Medicare budget. The problem is the cost of health care in the United States. Third Way-style solutions would not address that problem. They would merely shift the cost burden from the government to individual seniors who are entirely unequipped to handle it.

Eventually we’ll need to change a system of perverse provider incentives that distorts medical treatment patterns, billing practices and rates. That means addressing the destructive impact of investment income in the health care provider economy – something Wall Street-friendly groups would rather not discuss.

Don’t Fear the Boomers

Cowen and Kessler also indulge in typically misleading Social Security fear-mongering, writing of “a growing cascade of Baby Boomers (who) will be retiring in the coming years.” That “cascade” is actually shrinking, not growing, as death overtakes that generation. And its size has been well-known by actuaries since the last Boomer was born in 1964.

What changed? First, the rich began capturing a far greater percentage of the national income than had been the case in modern history – beginning with the Reagan years, continuing through the Clinton era, and continuing today. As a result, a much greater percentage of our national income lies above the payroll tax cap that funds Social Security. (No less an “economic populist” than Ronald Reagan’s chief actuary has helped explain why the Third Way position is wrong.)

Next, the predations of Wall Street banking firms – many of whom provide funding for Third Way and sit on its board – crashed the economy in 2008, throwing millions of people out of work and leaving millions more underemployed. Jobless people don’t contribute to Social Security, and underemployed people contribute less than they normally would.

A good way to address Social Security’s long-term shortfall, therefore, would be by lifting the payroll tax cap and addressing our nation’s persistent employment problem.

Liz Was Right

Social Security affords Cowan and Kessler the chance for another cheap shot against Elizabeth Warren. They write that she “wants to increase benefits for all seniors … and to pay for them by increasing taxes on working people and their employers” (italics ours).

But the increase would only apply to income above the tax cap, which is approximately $113,000 today. That’s hardly a “working people’s” income level.

What’s more, Americans are entirely willing to pay more taxes for Social Security. Three out of four Republicans said they’d be willing to pay more to protect the program. So did 86 percent of independents and 91 percent of Democrats. A “landslide” 62 percent of Republicans thought we should consider increasing the program’s benefits, as did 71 percent of independents and 84 percent of Democrats.

Political Death Wish

Social Security and Medicare cuts would also be political suicide. The same poll showed that 85 percent of those polled opposed asking seniors to pay more for Medicare, 83 percent opposed cuts to Medicaid coverage, and 67 percent – more than two-thirds of those polled – opposed the “chained CPI” Social Security cut which Third Way has heavily promoted.

It’s not as if Republicans are likely to cooperate politically after Democrats take the lead in cutting these programs. Consider what happened when Democrats, especially President Obama, made the mistake of listening to organizations like Third Way in the first two years of the Obama presidency:

  • The Democratic Party experienced a 20-point plunge in the polls on the question of which party is most “trusted” to handle Social Security;
  • The same poll showed that Barack Obama was less trusted than George W. Bush when it came to Social Security – even though Bush had tried to gut and privatize the program;
  • Republicans seized the advantage and ran to the left of Democrats on entitlements, heavily promoting a cynical “Seniors’ Bill of Rights” and promising to defend these programs from Democratic cuts;
  • Democrats, who had won seniors by seven points in 1996, lost them by 21 percentage points in 2010;
  • Democrats lost control of the House of Representatives.

If that sounds good to today’s Democrats, then by all means they should listen to Cowan and Kessler. Otherwise they’d do well to stay away.

Rocky Mountain High

Cowan and Kessler insist that the results of any New York City election are meaningless nationally. But just three years ago they were promoting Bill de Blasio’s predecessor, the “centrist” Michael Bloomberg, as an ideal presidential candidate for their slickly packaged but failed “No Labels” third-party initiative.

New Yorkers tried it Cowan and Kessler’s way for 12 years, primarily because Michael Bloomberg spent an extraordinary amount of his own fortune to win and retain office. They didn’t like it.

If New York’s irrelevant, which region does Cowan and Kessler think does matter?

Colorado.

(When was the last time Colorado elected a president of the United States, you ask? Actually, never.)

Cowan and Kessler note that “on the same day that de Blasio won in New York City, a referendum to raise taxes on high-income Coloradans … failed in a landslide.” But they failed to note that Californians overwhelmingly voted to increase their own taxes. Since California began the anti-tax trend in the 1970s with Proposition 13, you’d think this would be worthy of note.

Oregon voters raised their own taxes, too. New Jersey voters chose to increase the minimum wage by a landslide. And Elizabeth Warren’s election has much greater significance than Cowan and Kessler would have readers believe.

Cowan and Kessler attempt to dismiss Warren’s election by describing her state as “midnight blue,” by which they presumably mean it’s deeply Democratic. But the GOP’s 2012 presidential candidate was once governor of that state, and the election of Warren’s Republican predecessor was described as the start of a sea-change in American politics.

Are they blue? Hardly.

A Dream Deterred

We don’t know why the leaders of an organization that claims to embrace “civility” have stooped to such tactics. But they certainly have reasons to worry. Perhaps they saw a recent Washington Post article entitled, “More liberal, populist movement emerging in Democratic Party ahead of 2016 elections.” The party’s growing rejection of Third Way’s Social Security cuts was a central theme.

They might also have seen recent polling that shows an overwhelming majority of Americans – nearly 70 percent – support an “economically populist” increase in the minimum wage.

Theirs was the real “we can have it all” fantasy – one where politicians could receive fat campaign contributions from Wall Street firms, look forward to a post-political life of ease in the corporate world, and still enjoy the adoration of a grateful nation. The country can’t afford that fantasy anymore.

Times have changed. The Clinton era was a bubble-fueled illusion. Deregulation crashed the economy. And Third Way policies are political poison, which is why Barack Obama quickly shifted back to populist rhetoric in 2012 – a move that ensured his reelection.

True, it’s too early to count the Third Way crowd out. They have powerful connections and vast reservoirs of funding. But the world is different now, as the country begins to understand that the Third Way leads only to a “dead end.” They had their day, and their self-centered dream, but eventually the “centrists” will have to face reality:

The dream is over.


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California Ballot Initiative Would Rig Next Presidential Election for Republicans Print
Wednesday, 04 December 2013 13:43

Millhiser writes: "Last winter, shortly after President Obama won his second term in office, many Republicans rallied behind a pair of election-rigging plans designed to make it virtually impossible for a Democrat to win White House again."

Republican National Committee Chair Reince Priebus 'endorsed the same election-rigging scheme' last January. (photo: AP)
Republican National Committee Chair Reince Priebus 'endorsed the same election-rigging scheme' last January. (photo: AP)


California Ballot Initiative Would Rig Next Presidential Election for Republicans

By Ian Millhiser, ThinkProgress

04 December 13

 

ast winter, shortly after President Obama won his second term in office, many Republicans rallied behind a pair of election-rigging plans designed to make it virtually impossible for a Democrat to win White House again. Though the two plans differ in important ways, the crux of both plans is to rig the Electoral College by requiring blue states to award a significant portion of their electoral votes to Republican presidential candidates - all while ensuring that red states will award 100 percent of their electoral votes to the Republican as well. Though these election-rigging plans appeared dead after a wave of Republican officials came out against them, one of them has just returned to life in California.

On November 22, a man named Hal Nickle filed a proposed ballot initiative in California which would change the way that state allocates electoral votes to ensure that a large chunk of California's 55 electors go to the GOP, even though Californians consistently prefer Democratic candidates to Republicans. Rather than allocating all of California's electoral votes to the winner of the state as a whole, as nearly all states currently award their votes, the election-rigging initiative would allocate the states votes proportionally according to the percentage of votes won by each candidate. Thus, if this plan had been in effect in 2012, Mitt Romney would have received 37.12 percent of California's electors - adding 20 to his overall total.

The trick behind this proposal is that if would only change the law in California, while leaving red states free to award all of their electors to the Republican:

If enacted in enough blue states, this plan would make it virtually impossible for a Democrat to win the presidency no matter how they performed in the popular vote.

In 2007, Republican activists attempted to place a similar election-rigging plan on the state's ballot, although this effort ultimately failed. Last January, Republican National Committee Chair Reince Priebus endorsed the same election-rigging scheme, explaining that he thinks "it's something that a lot of states that have been consistently blue that are fully controlled red ought to be looking at."

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