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FOCUS: If You're a Sexual Predator, It Pays to Be a Rich One Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=21551"><span class="small">Carl Hiaasen, The Miami Herald</span></a>   
Sunday, 11 August 2019 12:08

Hiaasen writes: "The more we learn about the late Jeffrey Epstein's 13 months in so-called custody at the Palm Beach County Stockade, the clearer is the lesson: It definitely helped to be rich, even if you were a monstrous sexual predator."

Alleged Jeffrey Epstein victims Courtney Wild (left) and Annie Farmer (right). (photo: Jason Szenes/EPA-EFE/REX)
Alleged Jeffrey Epstein victims Courtney Wild (left) and Annie Farmer (right). (photo: Jason Szenes/EPA-EFE/REX)


If You're a Sexual Predator, It Pays to Be a Rich One

By Carl Hiaasen, The Miami Herald

11 August 19

 

he more we learn about the late Jeffrey Epstein’s 13 months in so-called custody at the Palm Beach County Stockade, the clearer is the lesson:

It definitely helped to be rich, even if you were a monstrous sexual predator.

It didn’t help Epstein that much at the Metropolitan Correction Center in Manhattan, where he hung himself early Saturday.

For the sake of his many victims, Epstein’s death can’t be the end of this story.

Just last week, Gov. Ron DeSantis ordered the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to investigate Epstein’s coddled life while serving 13 months of an 18-month sentence after pleading guilty in 2008 to two felony counts of prostitution.

One of those crimes involved soliciting sex from a minor, serial behavior of Epstein’s that had caught the attention of the FBI. A 53-page federal indictment resulting from that probe was spiked by then-U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta, paving the way for the multimillionaire’s mysteriously lenient plea deal.

Even the most jaded observers of the justice system wouldn’t expect that royal treatment would be given to a slimy perv who recruited high-school girls to visit his Palm Beach mansion and give him massages.

Yet, according to records from the jail and sheriff’s department, Epstein enjoyed perks that no other convicted sex criminal would ever have the gall to request.

He took the concept of “work-release” to a whole new level. He was allowed to leave the stockade 12 hours a day, six days a week and, upon his return, stayed in a mostly empty wing of the facility.

For Epstein, jail wasn’t an incarceration so much as an inconvenience. Deputies were given permission to leave his cell unlocked while he was there. He was more of an out-mate than an inmate.

Sometimes he got to watch TV in a room normally reserved for attorneys visiting jailed clients.

During his daily road trips, he was followed by off-duty deputies who were paid $126,000 for their respectful supervision. The officers often wore business suits and addressed him as “Mr. Epstein.”

That’s usually not how cops talk to child molesters, but most child molesters aren’t being driven around by their own personal chauffeurs.

Typically Epstein spent days at an office of the Florida Science Foundation, a nonprofit he founded shortly before his sentencing on the prostitution charges. WPTV reported it was the foundation that paid Epstein’s deputy escorts, who also were supposed to keep written records of who visited him there.

Attorney Bradley Edwards, who represents some of Epstein’s female accusers, said he knows of women who were brought to Epstein for sex while he was away from the stockade during the day. Those claims will be part of the new FDLE investigation.

Toward the end of his term, Epstein was even allowed to hang out at his mansion. That’s actually more “release-release” than “work-release,” but there were extenuating circumstances. How can you properly consult with your landscape architect if you’re cooped up in a cell?

The Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office has defended its handling of Epstein, saying he was treated no better than any first offender convicted of the same charges. To which imprisoned sex criminals all over the state might say:

So, can I get transferred to your jail? Please? Like, as soon as possible?

A spokesperson for Sheriff Ric Bradshaw told a reporter that there were no rules barring someone like Epstein from participating in work-release — and, besides, Epstein wasn’t officially registered as a sex offender until the day after his release from jail.

OK. Nothing like a pointless technicality to put everyone’s mind at ease.

DeSantis’ announcement of an independent investigation followed a letter from Bradshaw supporting the idea. A day earlier, state Sen. Lauren Book of Plantation had sent the governor more than 4,000 signatures on a petition urging him to take action.

The probe covers not only Epstein’s rich-and-famous lifestyle while in custody, but also the original investigation and plea settlement, including a controversial agreement sparing Epstein from federal prosecution.

Another aspect of the 2008 case begging to be examined is ex-State Attorney Barry Krischer’s decision not to prosecute the well-connected businessman on more serious child-sex charges, despite the urging of Palm Beach detectives.

Authorities in other jurisdictions where Epstein owns homes strongly suspect he continued pursuing and exploiting under-aged girls after he finished his sentence in Florida.

Public outrage about the case was reignited by new reporting from The Herald’s Julie K. Brown. The scandal cost Acosta, the former U.S. attorney, his job as labor secretary in the Trump administration. A key assistant in the case, A. Maria Villafana, resigned from the Justice Department late last week.

In July, Epstein was indicted in New York on sex-trafficking charges involving “dozens of minor girls” in Manhattan and Palm Beach between 2002 and 2005. Prosecutors said the victims were as young as 14.

Once the judge denied bail, Epstein knew he was stuck in jail until his trial.

This time, being rich didn’t matter. This time, the door on his cell stayed locked.

So the monster chose another way out, leaving a legacy of obscene privilege and predation.

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Trump Is Completely Under the Control of Russia Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51359"><span class="small">David Crosby, The Daily Beast</span></a>   
Sunday, 11 August 2019 08:24

Crosby writes: "In the 1950s, in the fearsome early days of the Cold War, American baby boomers learned to dive under their school desks in drills that even 8-year-olds knew were not going to do much good in a nuclear war that could end all human life on Earth."

David Crosby. (photo: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin)
David Crosby. (photo: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin)


Trump Is Completely Under the Control of Russia

By David Crosby, The Daily Beast

11 August 19

 

n the 1950s, in the fearsome early days of the Cold War, American baby boomers learned to dive under their school desks in drills that even 8-year-olds knew were not going to do much good in a nuclear war that could end all human life on Earth.

Through the ‘60s and ‘70s, the Soviet Union was very, very powerful, and convinced that its next major war would be with us, even as smaller wars raged from Korea and Southeast Asia to Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America.

Russian generals formulated a plan to charge through the Fulda Gap in Germany with a few thousand tanks and beat their nemesis, NATO. The Western allies developed counterstrategies. But by the 1980s, even though an apocalypse seemed possible, it no longer seemed likely.

And then: the Soviet Union crumbled from within. The Berlin Wall fell in November 1989, the East European satellite nations broke away, and by the autumn of 1991 the Soviet Union had collapsed, tearing apart not only the territories of the communist empire, but the Russian empire dating back centuries.

Demagogues don’t blame themselves, however, and Russia was full of them—including a former KGB spy named Vladimir Putin. The fault, they decided, lay with the United States, which had exploited their internal weaknesses.

Russia was no longer the powerhouse the Soviet Union had been, but Putin had a plan: Moscow would erode the Western democracies from within by exploiting their own weaknesses. That’s why it started its current campaign of attacks against us years ago, and why they are still going on.

Basically, the Russians take hold of any division in our society—racial prejudice, class war, fear of vaccines, any division that has two sides—and they work it. They pose as a group of radical people of color and say awful stuff about whites, and then they turn around and play white supremacist KKK crazies and say we should ship all blacks back to Africa. They do it with every issue they can. Their plan is to divide us and thus render us helpless.

In Donald Trump, they saw an opportunity that could not be better for them. Here was a man so ignorant, and so completely unaware of geopolitics, that he could be outwitted and misled before Putin got out of bed in the morning, easily—even without the very real possibility that Putin has incriminating evidence with which to blackmail the president.

It seems clear to me that Russia may well have some kind of info they are using to blackmail Trump with—“kompromat” as the Russians call it. It could be the alleged “pee tape,” could be some truth to the whispers that Trump has been laundering Russian mob money for at least 20 years through his New York real estate deals, stashing illegal money in multimillion-dollar apartments and condos all over town. Could just be the fact he lied about working on a deal for Trump Tower Moscow while he was running to be President of the United States in 2016. This could be why Trump is so completely under the control of Russia and so utterly disloyal to the United States. This could be why the Republican Party is blocking the passage of laws to protect our elections from outside influence, because that’s how they installed Trump, and that’s how they intend to win again in 2020.

I love this country. I believe democracy is the very best way for humans to live together under the rule of law. This next election involves rescuing our country from racism and greed and hatred, but it also involves saving the future of the whole human race from the horrors of climate change.

Climate change is real and is coming right at us, as months of record-breaking temperatures all over the world demonstrate. We are a great country. We have the brains, the money, and the know-how to lead this fight, and we should be leading it. I can’t just sit by and watch us squander our children’s future now that they, too, face a threat to all human life on Earth.

So here I am again, speaking my mind.

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Why Conservatives Hate Democracy Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=49450"><span class="small">Miles Culpepper, Jacobin</span></a>   
Sunday, 11 August 2019 08:22

Culpepper writes: "From the 1930s to today, the modern conservative movement has tried to restrict majority rule at every turn - because they know a mass democratic movement poses an existential threat to their power."

US Supreme Court justices pose for their official portrait on November 30, 2018 in Washington, DC. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
US Supreme Court justices pose for their official portrait on November 30, 2018 in Washington, DC. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)


Why Conservatives Hate Democracy

By Miles Culpepper, Jacobin

11 August 19


From the 1930s to today, the modern conservative movement has tried to restrict majority rule at every turn — because they know a mass democratic movement poses an existential threat to their power.

hroughout the 2016 election cycle, and immediately after, commentators repeatedly warned that Donald Trump represented a fascist threat to democracy, one so completely anomalous to the American experience that he was best compared to the fascist dictators of 1930s Europe, or perhaps Latin American caudillos and African strongmen. Between his attacks on the free press, his bigoted rhetoric, and his weak understanding of checks and balances, the argument went, Trump rejected the American ideal of liberal democracy itself.

It is true that Trump’s openly racist and misogynist rhetoric has plunged mainstream US political discourse to depths unseen since the days of Jim Crow. But Trump’s time in office has also revealed a more mundane truth: the president, for all his illiberalism and contempt for democracy, is a product of the mainstream American conservative movement.

Trump’s approval rating with Republican voters hovers around 90 percent, and there are few, if any, Republican politicians left who are willing to publicly criticize him. In 2012, Mitt Romney sought Trump’s endorsement, despite (or perhaps because of) his leading role in the racist birther conspiracy theory. Leading conservative media outlets that rejected Trump as an authoritarian clown in the 2016 Republican primary have by and large rebranded themselves as vocal supporters of the president and critics of the opposition. David Brooks and the rest of the Never Trumpers that remain are respected by moderate New York Times subscribers and cable news viewers, but not by conservatives.

The broader story, eclipsed by Trump’s scandalous behavior, is that for decades, the US right has been fighting to roll back the progress won by the great social movements of the twentieth century. To do so, they have proven time and again that they are willing to go after democracy itself in a bid to preserve the oligarchs’ stranglehold on power and wealth — aided in no small part by deft exploitation of the various counter-majoritarian institutions embedded in the American political system.

Democracy, of course, is about more than just representative government, majority rule, or access to the ballot box. Real democracies rest upon an egalitarian distribution of power in the economy and society writ large, as well as strong protections for minority groups and individuals. Yet even if we narrowly define democracy as the ability of ordinary people to select representatives who make policy on their behalf, it’s clear that the modern, mainstream conservative movement is openly hostile to democracy. And it has been since the very beginning.

Conservatives’ Long War on Voting Rights

The modern conservative movement was born in reaction against the labor movement and the New Deal welfare state, but it reached maturity fighting the civil rights movement. Barry Goldwater, the first Republican presidential candidate of the contemporary conservative movement, built his early political career on vocal opposition to the New Deal. By the time Goldwater secured the presidential nomination in 1964, he was vigorously fighting liberal proposals to marshal the power of the federal government to end southern apartheid. Goldwater insisted that he was no bigot, but that civil rights issues were best left to the states — even if those states prevented African Americans from participating in the political process at all. On the basis of that opposition, Goldwater became the first Republican to make meaningful inroads into the Dixiecrats’ “Solid South” since the end of Reconstruction.Future presidents George H.W. Bush, then running for Senate in Texas, and Ronald Reagan, a key spokesperson for the Goldwater campaign, followed Goldwater’s lead on the issue during the 1964 election. Bush vigorously campaigned against the 1964 Civil Rights Act in his losing bid for the Senate. And Reagan maintained his hostility to civil rights throughout his political career, kicking off his 1980 presidential campaign with a speech extolling states’ rights in a Mississippi county best known as the site of three voting rights activists’ assassination in 1964. Reagan also tried, but failed, to gut the Voting Rights Act during his first term. Only after a sustained public pressure campaign did he finally support renewing the law in 1982, absent his proposals to weaken the law. He also opposed making Martin Luther King Day a national holiday.

Future presidents George H.W. Bush, then running for Senate in Texas, and Ronald Reagan, a key spokesperson for the Goldwater campaign, followed Goldwater’s lead on the issue during the 1964 election. Bush vigorously campaigned against the 1964 Civil Rights Act in his losing bid for the Senate. And Reagan maintained his hostility to civil rights throughout his political career, kicking off his 1980 presidential campaign with a speech extolling states’ rights in a Mississippi county best known as the site of three voting rights activists’ assassination in 1964. Reagan also tried, but failed, to gut the Voting Rights Act during his first term. Only after a sustained public pressure campaign did he finally support renewing the law in 1982, absent his proposals to weaken the law. He also opposed making Martin Luther King Day a national holiday.

Conservatives had to wait until 2013 to strip the Voting Rights Act of its power. Open opposition to the landmark law, which had become a symbol of racial equality and the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement, was untenable for any elected official. The Supreme Court, immune from such criticism, acted instead, ending meaningful federal oversight of electoral policy in states with a history of discrimination in a 5-4 ruling in Shelby County v. Holder (2013).

In the years since, a flood of voter suppression measures (including poll closures, purging of the voter rolls, and voter ID laws) has helped conservatives hold onto power even as their politics grow more extreme and less popular. Most recently, Florida Republicans used a poll tax to nix the results of a ballot referendum that restored voting rights to more than a million former felons.

Exploiting the Anti-Majoritarian Kinks of the American System

The American Constitution vests an unusually large amount of power in the courts. Supreme Court justices receive life terms, can overturn legislation (a product of the 1803 Marbury v. Madison decision), and undo executive orders, regardless of how popular they might be. At times, that prerogative has been used for progressive ends, as was the case during the heyday of postwar liberalism, when Earl Warren served as chief justice. Occasionally, the courts still serve such a function, like when the Supreme Court legalized gay marriage in 2015.

But for most of American history, the courts have been profoundly conservative institutions. During the “Lochner era” — beginning sometime after the end of Reconstruction and ending in Franklin Roosevelt’s second term — the courts ruthlessly punished union organizing and undermined even the most modest of social reforms. The infamous case from which the period gets its name, Lochner v. New York, ruled unconstitutional a state law that established a maximum sixty-hour work week for bakery workers. Even conservative Chief Justice John Roberts admits today the justices in the case weren’t “interpreting the law, they [were] making the law.”

Recognizing their inherent advantage in an undemocratic body, conservatives have been patiently working to return to the Lochner era for decades. By all accounts, the Roberts court is the most conservative in living memory, routinely rolling back civil rights, workplace regulations, and environmental protections. Today, two of the courts’ four liberals are eighty or older; the oldest conservative is only seventy-one. And there is a vast pool of talent in the lower courts for conservatives to choose from should any liberal die or retire at the wrong time.

Exploiting the Anti-Majoritarian Kinks of the American System

This summer, the court’s conservatives gave the green light for unfettered partisan gerrymandering, a key tactic for inflating right-wing power. Gerrymandering has played out with disastrous consequences in Wisconsin and North Carolina, among other states, where far-right governments out of step with public opinion have dominated state politics for the past decade.

In 2018, statewide election results in Wisconsin favored the Democrats easily, with the progressive Tammy Baldwin winning reelection to the Senate by an impressive 10.8 percent margin and moderate Tony Evers defeating the anti-union stooge Scott Walker in the governor’s race by a narrower one-point margin. Yet in the state assembly, sixty-three of ninety-nine legislative seats were taken by Republicans. In an election cycle that repudiated conservatives, the Right will nonetheless maintain the power to block any progressive state-level legislation from being enacted in Wisconsin.

Then there’s the Senate. Among the major compromises of the Constitutional Convention was the creation of a bicameral legislature, one with a fixed number of representatives per states and the other with the number of representatives pegged to the state’s population. Today, that means that while the nine largest states make up just over half the country’s population, they receive only eighteen votes out of 100 in the Senate. The small states tend to be overwhelmingly white, rural, and conservative, while the larger states tend to be more densely populated, urban, and left-leaning. Even before you factor in the power of big money, the Right has a built-in structural advantage.

Worse, there is a feedback loop between the courts and the Senate, whereby capture of the counter-majoritarian Senate grants the power to control the flagrantly undemocratic court system. The 50-48 confirmation vote for Brett Kavanaugh last year was passed by senators representing just 44 percent of the population. Not content with such power, the hardline Tea Party faction of the conservative movement has been calling for the repeal of the 17th amendment for the better part of a decade, in a bid to strip voters of their ability to select senators at all.

The Census Controversy

The recent controversy over the Trump Administration’s census citizenship question provided fresh evidence of the extent to which the Right is willing to use anti-majoritarian means for its political ends.

The imbroglio began when the administration announced it would ask census respondents if they were US citizens, a move that would depress participation among immigrants and immigrant-adjacent communities. Legal challenges followed, ultimately culminating in a Supreme Court decision, handed down by a 5-4 majority, that rejected the Trump Administration’s arguments. John Roberts joined the Court’s four liberals, but he objected not to the fact that the citizenship question would produce a less accurate census or skew political representation, but because the Trump Administration’s argument — that the query would be used to better defend the Voting Rights Act — was a blatant lie.

Had Trump won in court, the consequences would have been dire. The census drives the distribution of political power and federal money across the United States. The government uses census data to decide how much funding a given state receives for crucial programs like Medicaid and CHIP. The survey also determines how many seats a state will receive in the House of Representatives for the following decade, and influences the districting process for state legislative seats as well.

The citizenship question wasn’t a fringe idea cooked up by the Bannonite wing of the GOP — it was first proposed to Trump’s transition team by the longtime party operative Tom Hofeller. Establishment conservative think tanks and politicians were unanimous in their support for the citizenship query. Four of the five conservative Supreme Court justices, each of them with longstanding ties to the mainstream Republican Party, supported the White House, despite the Justice Department’s dissembling rationale for it.

This was not the first time Republicans tried to rig the census in their favor. In the 1990s, the Clinton administration proposed a simple technocratic fix (switching to modern statistical sampling techniques) for a long-running problem: even the best-run census undercounts the working class, especially racial minorities. Not just immigrants but young children, low-income people lacking stable housing arrangements, American Indians, black people, and Latinos tend to be more difficult to count. The people who are easiest to count (and overcount) are aging white homeowners, a reliably conservative voting bloc.

Republicans pushed back against Clinton’s plan, essentially arguing that it was a liberal plot to invent fake people from whole cloth in order to gin up more federal funding and political representation for their base. Republicans won that fight, with ease, and their arguments made a reappearance in the run-up to the 2010 census, which likewise did not use sampling methods.

Over the last decade, in anticipation of the 2020 survey, conservatives’ austerity agenda starved the US Census Bureau of its funding, forcing the agency to adopt cheaper methods (including internet surveys and the use of public and private administrative records) that experts argue will lead to a much worse undercount than in 2010. The impact of this quiet tampering with the census will be huge. A study published by the Urban Institute estimated that even if courts blocked the citizenship question, the failure of these methods, coupled with the effects of long-standing state repression of immigrants, will likely lead to an undercount of 0.84 percent.

That figure may sound low, but it represents millions of people. If the uncounted population were to form a separate state, it would carry roughly the same electoral weight as Kansas. The undercount will be highest for black people (3.24%), Latinos (2.84%), and indigenous people (1.39%).

This is the census we get even with the recent ruling against the Trump administration.

Conservatives Against Democracy

Conservatives today relies on political institutions that brazenly undercut majority rule. The Senate, the courts, the Electoral College — all provide conservatives with structural advantages at the expense of the many. But the Right isn’t content to sit back and cash in on the tilted playing field. It actively labors to restrict voting rights, skew the census, gerrymander districts, and generally increase the sway of the country’s most anti-majoritarian institutions. When confronted with criticism, they resort to the nonsensical argument that “we’re a republic, not a democracy.”

Majoritarianism is not the same thing as democracy. Free speech rights, civil rights, and other protections are essential to a flourishing democracy. But conservatives’ contempt for majority rule does not spring from a concern for a beleaguered minority (unless you think big business qualifies as an oppressed group). The truth is, the Right doesn’t expect a majority of Americans to support their policies, nor do they particularly care.

Yet for all their wealth and power, the Right’s ideas are only growing more unpopular with time. When progressive policies appear on the ballot in a direct referendum, shorn from half-hearted, business-friendly Democratic Party messengers, conservatives lose, time and again, be it right-to-work laws, minimum wage hikes, or Medicaid expansion, even in Republican strongholds.

The Right is afraid of the people — because they know that a mass democratic movement can win.

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A World of Walls: The Brutish Power of Man-Made Barriers Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51363"><span class="small">Catherine Slessor, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Sunday, 11 August 2019 08:14

Slessor writes: "Words have consequences. And so do walls."

Tijuana, Mexico, 2017: Melanie Rodriguez stands with her doll at the US-Mexico border overlooking border wall prototypes under construction. photo: ZUMA Press, Inc./Alamy
Tijuana, Mexico, 2017: Melanie Rodriguez stands with her doll at the US-Mexico border overlooking border wall prototypes under construction. (photo: ZUMA Press, Inc./Alamy)


A World of Walls: The Brutish Power of Man-Made Barriers

By Catherine Slessor, Guardian UK

11 August 19


A recent Supreme Court vote in favour of funding for Trump’s border wall has focused attention back on one of the most grotesque aspects of his presidency. But the US regime isn’t unique. From Calais to Hungary, walls are always with us…

he southern border wall, as it is euphemistically known, between the United States and Mexico has come to represent much more than a line on a map. Since the 2016 US presidential campaign, it has assumed the status of an all-consuming ideological crusade for Donald Trump. Propelled into power on spittle-flecked chants of “Build the wall!”, Trump exploited the potency of a simplistic slogan calculated to incite fear and loathing. Migrants fleeing violence or seeking a better life in the US were reframed through Trump’s racist prism as an unstoppable torrent of dark-skinned psychopaths and spongers. Only a wall – Trump’s wall – could save America.

Words have consequences. And so do walls. The latest atrocity in El Paso, when an avowed white supremacist drove for 10 hours to a supermarket used by Latino families in order to murder and maim, was explicitly motivated by Trump’s baleful, anti-immigrant rhetoric. He was also a big fan of Trump’s wall, which Trump himself has rhapsodically described as ‘‘an impenetrable, physical, tall, powerful, beautiful southern border wall”.

Yet despite its Ozymandian ambition, the “beautiful wall” has stuttered and stumbled, still more frenzied rallying cry than bricks and mortar reality. Geography and logistics quietly conspire against it – America’s border with Mexico is nearly 2,000 miles long, for a start. Incendiary talk of spiralling migrant numbers is also misleading. The number of people detained on the border has fallen from 82,000 per month under George W Bush’s administration to around 40,000 under Trump. This figure is rising, but even when migrant numbers were at historic lows, Trump persisted with his inflammatory hyperbole, characterising the situation on the border as a national security crisis.

In a country founded on the premise of immigration, such mendacious pearl-clutching is deeply discomfiting. Yet for successive US governments, building border barriers has long been seen as an easy way of making presidential incumbents appear tough and vote-winning. Trump’s virulent wall mania is simply the exceptionally thin end of a historic political wedge.

At the end of July, the US Supreme Court narrowly ruled by five votes to four that funding of $2.5bn could be released to build sections of Trump’s wall in California, Arizona and New Mexico. However, this falls far short of the estimated $25bn required to build a barrier along the entire length of the border. The wall’s final physical form also remains as yet undetermined. Invitations to tender design proposals resulted in a shortlist of eight 30ft-high steel and concrete prototypes, which underwent “breachability” tests by the US Customs and Border Protection agency (CBP). None met the CBP’s operational requirements, though they did provide “valuable data” that could be used in future barrier designs. So far, Trump’s wall remains an expensive mirage.

The response of architects to this unedifying sequence of events has veered wildly between supine complicity and impotent outrage. When the initial request for design proposals was issued, dozens of prominent American architecture and engineering firms threw their hats in the ring, eager for a tilt at the multibillion-dollar project. If nothing else, it showed that concerns raised on Trump’s accession about professional collusion with the administration’s partisan agenda were prescient and well-founded.

For American architects, the invitation to participate in designing a border wall struck a particularly raw nerve. Historically, the profession has proved willing to comply with political schemes that discriminated against marginalised communities and concretised systemic inequalities. During the second world war, American architects were engaged in the design of Japanese internment camps. In the federal highway projects that followed, architects and engineers created new infrastructure that invidiously targeted minority communities for “slum” clearance. And as cities were reshaped, many mass housing schemes served to profit developers by breaking anti-discrimination laws, yet architects often chose to disregard their wider social responsibilities. Now comes Trump’s wall.

American architects’ readiness to cosy up to El Presidente is emblematic of a profession that has become passive about its ethical mission, disempowered to the point where it can no longer assert moral agency. There has been a backlash, of sorts, but it lacks an effective, activist focus. Instead, it is diffused into an assortment of “more unites us than divides us” clickbait, featuring whimsical speculations such as a 2,000-mile-long dining table, a flat-pack Ikea “Börder Wåll” kit, a crowdfunding campaign to construct a golden picket fence around Trump’s Palm Beach compound and a trio of pink seesaws installed between the steel slats of the existing border barrier. Though these stunts get energetic traction on social media, they have no chance of derailing Trump’s loathsome infrastructure juggernaut.

Trump would not be the first or last potentate to obsessively fixate on a wall. History is full of walls and wall builders. Picked over by archaeologists, their crumbling carcasses are doleful monuments to antique hubris. But the wall is always with us, reinventing itself for the modern era, parcelling up the globe into neat nation states and enclaves. Lines on a map effectively turn land into territory and people into citizens. Cartography is a political tool. Walls are merely the most visible manifestation of a larger apparatus of militarised surveillance and technology employed to defend territory and keep people in their place.

Some sense of this brute physicality and absurdity is conveyed in the group exhibition Walls of Power, part of the 2019 Arles photography festival. In theory, the fall of the Berlin Wall, pixellated into a million souvenir chunks, heralded a new era of global openness, transparency and mobility. In practice, it was marked by a furore of barrier-building. Of the 66 physical barriers currently in existence between nation states, 50 were built after 2000. More recently, Europe has rushed to consolidate its border infrastructure in response to the flow of refugees and migrants from Syria and Africa. Images of young men clinging to border fences in the Spanish enclave of Melilla in Morocco show human desperation – and defiance – at its most extreme.

In 2015, Hungary erected a 110-mile border fence topped with concertina wire along its southern border. Despite criticism from the EU for breaching its legal obligations to process and resettle people, the Hungarian government refused to cooperate or demolish the fence, sending the EU a bill for €400m, which it claimed was half the construction cost. The EU declined to pay. Hungary’s right-wing premier, Viktor Orbán, has also claimed “ethnic homogeneity” is vital for his country’s economic prosperity. Like Trump’s wall, Orbán’s fence shores up a manifestly toxic and reactionary vision of national identity.

Closer to home, Britain helped to fund the “Great Wall of Calais”, a border barrier designed to deter migrants from hitching rides across the Channel on trains and lorries. And in Belfast, the so-called “peace walls”, put in place during the Troubles to separate nationalist and unionist communities, still endure, casually cutting through roads, housing estates and back yards. At the last count, Belfast had 97 individual barriers, many of which are now tourist attractions, absorbed into city’s fabric in the same way as the Berlin Wall or Nicosia’s Green Line became an unremarked part of daily life.

Beyond the geopolitics of borders are the more prosaic manifestations of walled neighbourhoods and gated communities, which categorise people by more intricate denominators of status, class, race, faith and age. With exquisite irony, Americans describe it as “forting up”. From the domestic compound to Trump’s wall, the dread of the world outside our gates casts an increasingly long shadow.

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Trump's Cruelty Knows No Bounds Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36361"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Saturday, 10 August 2019 13:13

Reich writes: "While Trump was supposed to be comforting grieving communities in Texas and Ohio, his enablers were ripping families apart in Mississippi."

Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)
Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)


Trump's Cruelty Knows No Bounds

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page

10 August 19

 

hile Trump was supposed to be comforting grieving communities in Texas and Ohio, his enablers were ripping families apart in Mississippi. As he arrived in El Paso yesterday, immigration officials conducted their largest raid in years, detaining 680 workers and marching them onto buses with their hands zip-tied behind their back while their children looked on.

Trump’s rhetoric is stoking hatred and his policies are terrorizing communities. While the nation grieves, Trump and his enablers are tearing families apart. Their cruelty knows no bounds.

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