Selasa, 11 Desember 2012

Class War news---tune in tonight.

It's handy deciding what is reported on the TV news and how it is reported. Here's a small example.  I actually don't watch too much local news because it's pretty bad, very provincial. On comes a story about county supervisors who were "forced" to vote to close a number of fire stations because "voters" refused to pass a parcel tax to pay to keep them open.  A parcel tax is a homeowners tax, or property tax.   These taxes on workers and the middle class are put on the ballot as the only way we can save education, save public services etc. I never support these taxes because they don't save what they are claimed to and it is simply continuing the assault on workers and the middle class and lastly, it makes it harder to build a united mass movement that can go after the minority who actually are stealing all the money.

So the reason that there are potential life threatening closures of fire stations is the voter won't increase their own taxes and reduce their disposable income.   There is no way one could come away with a different conclusion and that's intentional, it was stated as such.

The reporter could have said: "Due  to the 6 trillion or so of taxpayer money that Washington and the Pentagon are spending on wars to secure profits for US corporations abroad, Americans will have to do without vital services at home."

Or he could have said: "Due to the massive accumulation of wealth by fewer and fewer individuals and their shifting of this wealth , more than $26 trillion of it, in to offshore tax havens, Americans will have to do without more and more public services."

On the other hand, the reporter could have quoted Business Week, a very sober and astute journal of the 1% that warned over thirty years ago, "
-->It will be a hard pill for many Americans to swallow--the idea of doing with less so that big business can have more...Nothing that this nation, or any other nation, has done in modern economic history compares with the selling job that must be done to make people accept this reality. "Business Week 10-12-74.  He then could have apologized but added that we can't say we weren't warned.

All the above would be true of course.  But why tell the truth.  As I reported on this blog some time ago, I was sitting in my bosses office in my capacity as a shop steward one day and as he was out copying some document I glanced at the book he was reading.  I didn't get past the first page and the advice from the author who wrote: 
-->
"If you're going to strive to motivate workers through autonomy and empowerment, it's important to remember that the primary burden is to make sure employees believe what you say. Don't tell them you want them to be empowered to increase the company's profits.  Tell them you want them to be empowered because it's the best way to remain competitive and guarantee everyone their jobs."
Carl Robinson, Vice President, Organizational Psychologists.

But that's the advantage of owning the media and the means of information in society. It has a class point of view.  It's not an accident that the dominant ideology in feudal times was the Divine Right of Kings. The king was king by the grace of the creator of all life. I wonder where that idea came from.

And the story immediately following the one about stupid voters that put their community in danger because they didn't want to raise their taxes?   A detailed report on fraud and waste among public sector workers.

And there's no such thing as class war!

Family reunion?


Best of Craigslist

Feline Lap Surrogate


Date: 2012-11-28, 11:46AM EST


This title says it all. I work from home and I need someone to sit next to me and allow my cat to sit on their lap (the cat is attention seeking, and has been decreasing my productivity as of late). This is a morning shift from 8am-12pm at $15/hr. I do not need anyone in the afternoon since the sun warms the window sill by that point, and the cat will prefer the window sill to a lap. Breakfast and lunch will be provided each day.

You must have experience handling cats, no allergies, and a plus for experience with older cats (mine is 18yrs old).

Fox newsman punched: Things getting hot in Michigan

There is no doubt, especially due to the role of the Labor officialdom that supports the bosses' "shared sacrifice" policy, that sections of the US capitalist class are a little overconfident. They are forgetting our history and the battles fought to win what we have today in the face of the most blatant violence on the part of the bosses. Michigan is the home of the great 44 day Flint sit down and the factory occupations that forced the mighty GM to accept Unions. Flint should be US labor's 4th of July.  This anger we see here is the result of years of cuts and savage attacks on workers and our living standards and rights. The auto workers especially have seen drastic cuts. Unity, defiance of the law, opposition to racism, sexism, and all efforts to divide and weakens workers is what will turn this thing around. Factory and workplace occupations are what will win, organized anger.

Millions of Americans disgusted with Democrats and Republicans

There is no doubt that class polarization has increased in US society.  The massive widening of the inequality gap is accepted barring a few nutcases, the same types that might deny that global temperatures are on the rise, or that label climate change as a hoax.

In the electoral arena we have a dictatorship, a monopoly of the electoral process by the Democrats and the Republicans, the two political parties representing the corporations and Wall Street.  They have mapped out the electoral turf and designed it so that there are fewer and fewer areas that might be called “swing” states so that, as the Wall Street Journal points out, Republican areas are growing “darker red”while Democratic areas “darker blue.”

This is very useful in that there is no need for politicians of either party to waste much time in these “safe”areas.  The name of the game is to simply increase the number of “safe” areas for each party and battle it out on a much smaller scale for the rest. Their media will reach the others; that's what ads are for. That's one reason why elections cost hundreds billions of dollars really.  Outside of these safe areas, the red or the blue, the so-called “swing states”are rapidly declining in number. “The number of states that are so clearly red or so clearly blue that they aren’t seriously contested in presidential races, is climbing while the number of swing states in the middle is falling” the Journal reports. In 1960, 20 states were tight races, with the outcome decided by less than 5% of the votes. In 2000, only 12 were considered competitive states and this year only 4.

The Journal explains (something we all pretty much know) that there are many states, “..that have become so clearly aligned in presidential politics…..that neither parties presidential contenders seriously compete in them.”

This is all interesting stuff.  But there is a very stark and obvious statistic that doesn’t find its way in to the mix and that is those who have withdrawn from the political process altogether. It’s hard to determine that but we can get some idea. According to the Elections Project and leaving out the 5 million or more felons denied the right to vote because of felony disenfranchisement, there are 240,926,957 Americans of voting age.  Although the turnout for the fall election has not yet been calculated, the Bipartisan Research Center estimates it at 57.5% of the eligible voters.  I am assuming “eligible” is the same as voting age minus felon disenfranchisement, those living abroad etc. By my estimation that means that 138,000,000 Americans able to vote chose not to.

How can a figure like this be ignored?  It’s not hard to figure that out. If we take the right to vote, it was won from the capitalist class through a long heroic struggle.  White men without property were unable to vote, blacks were unable to vote, not even considered citizens, women etc. Full enfranchisement was realized in 1965 with the passage of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the ratification of the 24th Amendmentin 1964.  (See here)

One hundred and thirty eight million possible voters are ignored because the political parties and their representatives have nothing to say to them that might inspire them to.  In some of these local elections, candidates are endorsed by the local trade Union movement (which means the leadership), as well as the Chamber of Commerce.  This is absurd when you think about it.  The US Chamber of Commerce supports the Right to Work (for less) laws and is anti-Union.

Some people argue that these people don’t vote because Americans are “apathetic”or we “don’t care”.  But this is the wrong conclusion to draw. They have simply drawn the conclusion that in the main their lives will not change that much, certainly on the issues that matter most, food, shelter, a job that pays the rent, health care, etc. Because the two Wall Street parties both agree that the burden of the capitalist crisis will borne born by workers, the poor and sections of the middle class, people who feel they must vote (for the right reasons) tend to vote on “moral”issues of importance to them personally, identity politics is the result: abortion or gun rights, prayer in school gay marriage etc.  It’s not that these issues are not important to people but the issues that matter most are food, shelter, security, health a job etc. If you’re going to earn $8 an hour no matter who gets in, then the other issues take on a greater importance.

The unfortunate aspect of this is that millions make the mistake that all politics is bad, all politicians are corrupt. Many young people are completely opposed to political activity due to this view that is strengthened with the absence of a genuine mass workers party.  That we have no party of our own is primarily the fault of the heads of organized Labor who are wedded to capitalism, the market and the Democratic Party.

This absence of a political alternative for workers has meant huge and at times violent battles in the streets and workplaces. We have seen a resurgence of this side of our heroic traditions with the Occupy Movement, that with all its weaknesses used direct action and open defiance of their laws while the Labor officialdom bow down to their laws, their courts and legality; the capitalist class responds to this with violence.   And despite the success of the Democrats and their allies atop organized labor to derail it, we saw 100,000 workers, many fresh layers, on the streets of Madison Wisconsin.  It’s clear that organized labor has been working inside Walmart and other retailers and the fast food industry trying to organize as recent actions in this sector show. The Union hierarchy sees tremendous revenue potential here. But, as is always the case, regardless of the intentions of those that initially give it life, a movement can get out of their control.

These 138 million people, and those that felt the need to vote if just to keep the nastier and most openly racist of the parties out of the White House, are not the conservative mass that the mass media would have us believe.  The continued attacks on basic Union rights is likely to intensify clashes on the streets and in the workplaces in the period ahead, especially as further economic crisis looms, and it is most likely out of such movements the workers’ independent political voice will be born.

Chinese farmer has built survival pod Mayan apocalypse


With just ten days to go before the Mayan apocalypse supposedly spells the end of the world, many believers may be looking for ways to dodge doomsday.

But one farmer in China believes he is ready for any eventuality after building seven emergency survival pods.

Liu Qiyuan created the fibreglass shells - dubbed Noah's Ark - after being inspired by the apocalyptic Hollywood movie 2012

Building them around a steel frame in a yard at his home in the village of Qiantun, Hebei province, south of Beijing, he says the pods can offer life-saving shelter during natural disasters such as tsunamis and hurricanes.

The pods are able to float on water and some of have their own propulsion.   The airtight spheres with varying interiors contain oxygen tanks and seatbelts with space for around 14 people, and are designed to remain upright when in water.


 source

Darwin the IKEA monkey had quite the wardrobe








Get your mind out of the gutter week


UK county using police cardboard cutouts to fight crime

Officers from across Doncaster took to the streets as part of the South Yorkshire Police Impact on Retail Crime. Pictured are the cardboard cops being used to assist with preventing shoplifting in stores.




South Yorkshire Police have spent £7,000 on a batch of new recruits – 280 cardboard coppers.

The paper PCs are being used to deter thieves across the county and force chiefs say they are having the desired effect.

They claim the slimline static cops have helped slash crime by up to 50 per cent in some areas where they have been deployed.

But the thin blue line is looking thinner than ever – the force has seen the numbers of South Yorkshire officers dwindle to less than 2,900 in 2012 from a high of 3,289 in 2008 before the budget cuts began to bite.

The cardboard coppers, which are life-size cutouts of a uniformed officer, cost £25 each and senior officers have ordered a new batch of 280 – costing the force £7,000.
Forty are being held in reserve, with the rest now providing a visible ‘police presence’ across the county.

The slim crimefighters are being displayed in shop doorways or foyers where shoplifting is a problem and the force say they are responsible, in conjunction with other police tactics, for reductions in crime of up to 50 per cent.

A South Yorkshire Police spokesman said: “The rationale for purchase and delivery was based upon research indicating previous success at reducing crime in other countries and elsewhere in UK.

If the crime statistics are accurate then perhaps the program can be expanded to cardboard teachers to increase literacy and cardboard doctors and nurses to improve health outcomes.  Though I would think twice about cardboard firefighters, the flames and water are great for cardboard.

source

Senin, 10 Desember 2012

Australian DJs discuss tragic prank call to hospital


Scrooge is that you?

 



A Kingston man complained to the Ross County Sheriff’s Office on Saturday after his neighbor on Kingston-Adelphi Road reportedly spelled out an expletive using Christmas lights and put an arrow pointing to his house.

A sheriff’s deputy told the neighbor he needed to take the lights down before serving him with an outstanding warrant for disorderly conduct, according to the incident report.

source

Get your mind out of the gutter week


Eurozone: An Italian job and a Greek tragedy

by Michael Roberts

So Italy’s ‘technocrat’ prime minister Mario Monti has decided to resign.  Once former right-wing billionaire premier Silvio Berlusconi announced that he was withdrawing the support of his weirdly entitled “People of Liberty” (PDL) party, Monti called Berlosconi’s bluff and Italy’s president Napolitano will probably announce an election in the next few days for late February or early March, just a couple of months earlier than planned.

It is just over a year since Monti took over after the EU leaders, Merkel and Sarkozy, organised a coup to remove Berlusconi by demanding that the Italian government impose austerity to meet fiscal targets or face financial penalties.  Under that threat, members of Berlusconi’s own party buckled and forced him to step down.  But now Italy’s own Murdoch-style) media mogul has decided that the political mood has changed enough in Italy for him to challenge Monti.  Also, there is a growing likelihood that he could soon end up in jail from a myriad of tax evasion, sex and corruption charges now under way.  So he needs to try and gain power again.

Monti has been the darling of finance capital and the financial markets.  In his year of office, he has imposed stinging fiscal austerity and attempted to ‘deregulate’ labour markets and dismantle Italy’s already rickety welfare state.   The Italian government is now running a surplus of tax revenues over spending (before interest payments on debt) and next year plans to balance the overall budget.  The hope is that this will lead to a stabilisation of the public sector debt ratio, which was the highest in the Eurozone before the global financial crisis and will still be the second highest after Greece in 2013, at 128% of GDP.  Monti slashed spending, introduced a wave of privatisations, reduced the value of public sector pensions, raised the retirement age and contributions on all pensions and has tried to get rid of employment protection rights and lower wages.

Financial markets have been very pleased with Monti and the cost for the Italian government to borrow money has dropped substantially.  But Italy’s people have been less pleased and Monti’s electoral popularity, which was sky high to begin with, has now plummeted as fast as it has risen with finance capital.
Although austerity may have worked for financial markets, it has not worked in reviving the Italian economy after the global slump.  This year, the economy will have declined by 2.5% in real terms and next year the forecast is for another 1.0-1.5% fall.
Itay real GDP
Indeed, real GDP has barely risen since the European single currency came into operation, making Italy the worst-performing country in the Eurozone.   The overall unemployment rate has jumped from 8.8% a year ago to 11.1% (although still below the euro-zone average); and for young people, it is a desperate 36.5% (well above it).  Italy’s track record is abysmal.  In the last decade or so, euro area average labour productivity has risen about 8%, not much.  But Italy’s has fallen 3% from 1999.
20121208_LDC603
And Italian capitalism is losing hand over fist compared to Germany.  Italy’s cost of production per unit of output is up 35% since 1999 compared to a rise in Germany of 10%.
Mainstream economics blames Italy’s ‘top heavy’ state bureaucracy, ‘trade union power’ and corruption for this failure.  Recently published rankings from the World Bank for the ease of doing business in 2012 put Italy among the worst in Europe. Among 185 countries, it came 73rd; on civil justice (ie, enforcing contracts) it ranked 160th.  Italy’s failure to exploit its labour resources is apparent in an employment rate among 15- to 64-year-olds of just 57% in 2011, the second-lowest in the euro area and far below Germany’s 73%.  Corruption is the second-worst in Europe after Greece, while paying tax is only ‘for the little people’ i.e employees in public services and large companies.  It’s not for the rich owners, executives, or doctors and dentists and other private sector professions and small businesses.

But this explanation for the failure of Italian capitalism hides the real story.  Italy’s public debt has only got so large because the private sector has failed to grow sufficiently to deliver decently paid jobs.  So tax revenues (partly because those who do earn good mone don’t pay them) have been inadequate to meet necessary public services.  Welfare benefits, pitiful as they are, have mushroomed as employment has stagnated.

Italian workers are not paid too much, do not receive bloated pensions or are blocking higher productivity.  On the contrary, according to my calculations (sources provided on request) the rate of surplus value that Italian employers extract from their workforce has been way higher than that achieved in Germany or the US.   I have calculated that the rate of exploitation in Italy has averaged 120% since 1963 compared to 70% in the US.   The problem is a lack of growth in productivity, not the share going to capital.

And that is because Italy’s capitalists have failed to invest sufficiently.   Net investment growth has averaged 3% a  year (in nominal terms) since 1963 and that growth has been steadily slowing, going negative in 2009.  That compares with average net investment growth by US capitalists of over 4% a year.  A difference of 1% pt a year for 50 years can make a huge difference.
Italy- net investment
Why have Italian capitalists failed to invest?  First, overseas investment has provided much better potential profitability (globalisation).   Overall profitability was the same in 2007 as in 1963 – but not in a straight line.  Since 2000 with Italy joining the Eurozone, the ROP has fallen over 20%, double the decline in the  US and the UK.
Italy - ROP
Berlusconi is not going to win the election.  His PDL party is trailing well behind the Democratic Left party, a coalition of ex-communists, socialists and centrist liberals.  The DL is polling between 30-38% compared to the PDL’s 15-20% and a new anti-euro protest party, Five Star, which is getting about 20%.  So most likely the newly elected DL leader,  Pier Luigi Bersani, will become prime minister in March.  And what will be his programme?  Sadly, exactly the same as Monti.  The DL has supported Monti with his austerity programme and anti-labour measures all the way.   So what the Italian people will get after March is more of the same, this time promoted by the left.

Mainstream politicians and economists do not have any alternative.  And yet, it can be seen that austerity does restore growth or jobs – indeed its objective is to do the opposite in order to improve ‘competitiveness’. The problem is that this ‘cleansing process’ could take a decade or more and is at the expense of the majority in order to help the elite.  And every major capitalist economy is applying various degrees of austerity (cutting public services, welfare benefits, lowering real wages) in order to improve profitability.  It is a race to the bottom.

Look what is happening in Greece.  The Greeks are now on their third ‘bailout package’, where austerity will be applied up to 2022 and then beyond!   Last year’s package aimed to reduce Greek public sector debt as a percentage of GDP to 120% by 2020.   And for the first time, the Euro leaders and the IMF were forced to accept that Europe’s banks should take a loss on their holdings of Greek government debt.  In other words, Greece defaulted.  This ‘organised default’ was supposed to put Greece back on track to meet its obligations on debt and deficits.

Instead, it was a Greek tragedy.  Even a default on €200bn of privately held government debt could not do the trick when the Greek economy has contracted by up to 30% from 2008 and is still contracting.  So, once the right-wing coalition had narrowly won the June elections (which had to held twice!), another package of measures had to worked out.  The Greek coalition has forced through yet another round of austerity measures to raise €13bn and, in return, the EU and the IMF will provide funds to recapitalise the Greek banks so that do not have to be nationalised along with money to reduce the burden of debt repayments.   But the dreaded Troika admitted yet again that Greece would have to default on its debt by arranging for the Greek government to buy back some remaining debt held by the banks at 30-35c in the euro, in order to cut €20bn off the debt.  Even so, the debt target of 120% of GDP for 2020 has been revised out further to 2022.  So in ten years time, Greece’s debt ratio will still be higher than it was in 2008!  And all this assumes that Greece can grow at about an average 4% a year in nominal terms throughout the rest of this decade.
Indeed, in billions of euros, the Greek people’s public debt will have hardly fallen.
Greek public sector debt
It’s just that Greeks will owe 75% of this debt to other European governments and the IMF and no longer to the banks or the hedge funds.  They have been paid back, albeit with some ‘haircuts, by the European taxpayer.  So the Greeks will have endured up 15 years of hell in order that the banks and finance capital did not lose too much money.   Even then, it is not over.  The Greek government must go on applying austerity to the tune of 4.5% of GDP every year through the next decade to 2030!   Of course, this cannot happen – Greece will be forced to default again or the EU leaders will have to write off the loans they have made.  The package is just a way of delaying that to some time in the future.

The Italian economy teeters on the edge of a precipice like that bus in the final scene of that very bad British movie, The Italian job; the Greek economy has already gone over.

Minggu, 09 Desember 2012

Monkey in shearling coat spotted in IKEA

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A small monkey, dressed in a shearling winter coat, was on the loose outside an Ikea in Toronto’s North York area on Sunday, after letting itself out of its cage and the car belonging to its owners.

I just hope my wife doesn't see this story.  Because she doesn't own a shearling coat. She does have a fake shearling.  So I'm hoping the monkey is also in a faux shearling and not showing up my wife.

Where do buy monkey winter coats any way?

Happy Hanukkah!


Hamas leader Khaled Meshal, never said “kill Jews” in Gaza speech

We continuously read or hear on the TV about the threats Arabic or Muslim leaders (that aren't in cahoots with Halliburton or Chevron) make towards Israel.  The Zionist regime is always portrayed as the victim, the Palestinians, or Iranians, the aggressors. Anti-semitism along the lines of European anti-semitism is the cause of  Palestinian actions; they just hate Jews.  Comparing Palestinians to European anti-semites and Nazis is ludicrous. We share this from the Electronic Intifada as a perfect example of how the western media, even a paper with a liberal bent, distorts what is actually said and why it is important that translation of language is meticulously researched before publication.  In these cases its intentional but either way, it's crucial.

Workers must bear this in mind when we read or watch what the mass media tells us.  It lies about us, about a strike, it surely lies about events like the Palestinian struggle for justice. We always hear that Hamas, one of the few democratically elected governments/leaderships in the Middle East, doesn't  accept that Israel has a right to exist when the real issue is which Israel are we talking about?

(Hatem Omar / Maan Images)

UK’s Observer adds “kill Jews” to Hamas leader Khaled Meshal’s Gaza speech when he did not say it.

Submitted by Ali Abunimah on Sun, 12/09/2012 - 06:01
In its report on Hamas leader Khaled Meshal’s speech in Gaza on Saturday, The Observer, the Sunday sister paper of The Guardian, quoted Meshal saying the following words:
We don’t kill Jews because they are Jews. We kill the Zionists because they are conquerors and we will continue to kill anyone who takes our land and our holy places … We will free Jerusalem inch by inch, stone by stone.
This however is a blatant mistranslation. What Meshal actually said is:
We do not fight the Jews because they are Jews. We fight the Zionist occupiers and aggressors. And we will fight anyone who tries to occupy our lands or attacks us. We fight those who fight us, who attack us, who besiege us, who attack our holy places and our land.
Can you see the massive difference? To an untrained ear the Arabic verbs for “kill” and “fight” could sound the same because قتل – to kill – and قاتل – to fight or combat – come from the same root. But to any fluent Arabic speaker there is no ambiguity at all in what Meshal said as the clip below shows.

Resistance “a means not an end”

The Observer painted Meshal’s speech as “uncompromising” and most other media called it “fiery.” I even heard someone on the BBC World Service say it was little changed from Hamas’ founding charter.
I have not seen any reports pointing out this passage in Meshal’s speech
Resistance for us is a means and not an end. I am speaking to the whole world through the media. If the world finds a means, without resistance or bloodshed, to return Palestine and Jerusalem to us, and the right of return, and to end the Zionist occupation then we welcome it. We tried you [the world] for 64 years and you have done nothing. So if we resort to resistance do not blame us. If we found another way without war we would have seized it, but the history of nations shows that there is no victory or liberation without resistance, without battles, without sacrifice.
This is a theme Meshal has spoken about before, including in a speech in 2009 where he used almost identical words.
Meshal, while covering the bases, praising resistance and rebutting Mahmoud Abbas’ recent assertion that only the West Bank and Gaza are “Palestine” while the rest is “Israel,” was reaffirming Hamas’ longstanding openness to dealing with the world politically, rather than solely through armed resistance.
But if you read The Observer, you would think he said “kill Jews” where he said no such thing.

Update, 9 December

The Observer replaced the word “kill” with “fight” and added this note to its article: “This article was amended on Sunday 9 December 2012 to correct a mistranslation in a quote by Meshaal.”

Get your mind out of the gutter week


Sabtu, 08 Desember 2012

Sovereign Debt Crisis: Our Suffering is Their Abundance

Even before Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp swallowed the Wall Street Journal, that newspaper was renowned for its free marketer editorials and opinion pieces. Not only has this policy remained intact under Murdoch, but also the coverage of news and features is now fully in line with the right-wing editorial policy.

So I was quite surprised a week ago to find, tucked away on page A-11 of the November 30 edition, a piece by the WSJ’s Stephen Fidler that actually hinted at the identity of the real beneficiaries of the bailouts and debt crises:

“Despite the complications, this week's deal on Greece's debt points to an (almost) iron rule of sovereign-debt crises: Significant losses fall on taxpayers in creditor countries because debt originally extended by private creditors, one way or another, ends up on the balance sheet of the public sector.”

This sounds eerily like the searing indictment of the bailout in a recent book by York University professor David McNally:

“In short, the bad bank debt that triggered the crisis in 2008 never went away – it was simply shifted on to governments. Private debt became public debt. And as the dimensions of that metamorphosis became apparent in early 2010, the bank crisis morphed into a sovereign debt crisis. Put differently, the economic crisis of 2008-9 did not really end. It simply changed form. It mutated.

“With that mutation, the focus of ruling classes shifted toward a war against public services. Concerned to rein in government debts, they announced an age of austerity—of huge cuts to pensions, education budgets, social welfare programs, public sector wages, and jobs. In so doing, they effectively declared that working class people and the poor will pay the cost of the global bank bailout.” (Global Slump, p.4)

There has been much talk of these austerity cuts falling on corporations and workers, on rich and poor alike. The catch phrase is “shared sacrifice”. But as McNally explains:

“The ultimate purpose of all this is to preserve capitalism and the wealth and power of its elites. And so far the bailouts and their aftermath have decidedly served that end.  As a columnist with the Times of London observes, ‘The rich have come through the recession with flying colours … The rest of the country is going to have to face spending cuts, but it has little effect on the rich because they don’t consume public services.’  The candidness of this statement is to be appreciated. But there is one error in this passage. These cuts do in fact have an effect on the rich: they help them. After all, they are essential to the massive transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich that funded the rescue of the world banking system, the bailout of corporations, and the salvage of the investment portfolios of the wealthy.” (Global Slump, p.5)

How big was this bailout, this “massive transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich”?  Including loans, loan guarantees and outright handouts, McNally puts it at between $20 and $30 trillion – pretty much in line with other estimates, including last year’s audit of the U.S. Federal Reserve System.

But wealth knows no shame: the corporations and the super-rich not only profited grossly from the huge transfer of wealth, they now blame the resulting swollen public debt on the victims. For example, they blame the $2 trillion in cumulative U.S. state and municipal debt on public workers’ wages and pensions and on the cost of providing essential services to the poor, the disabled, and the elderly.  Politicians of both the Democratic and Republican parties agree on the need for cuts to all of these – they only disagree about the size and the pace of those cuts.  Meanwhile, in Europe, the Greek, Spanish, Portuguese, Irish, and Italian working classes are told that they are to blame for the sovereign debt crises in their respective countries. But as the Wall Street Journal’s Fidler observed in his previously referenced, and surprisingly candid, article:

“Lenders as well as borrowers created the crisis. For a decade after the euro's creation, investors and banks in Northern Europe financed directly or indirectly the deficits of governments like Greece, or the mortgages and construction loans of Spanish homeowners and builders, at very low interest rates. Their subsequent calculation that those investments were too risky to go on created the crisis.”

Fidler goes on to comment on the most recent terms for “settling” the Greek sovereign debt crisis, and notes that while it won’t alleviate the intense suffering imposed on the Greek people, it will indeed share the suffering – with the Northern European workers (Fidler calls them “taxpayers”, but there’s no doubt which taxpayers will bear the brunt of the burden):
 

But now, particularly after the proposed buyback of some of the remaining private-sector debt, a vast majority of Greece's debt will be held by the public sector—the euro-zone governments and their bailout fund—the European Financial Stability Facility—as well as the European Central Bank and the IMF.

They will thus have the onus to make sure it is manageable. Costs will fall on the shoulders of taxpayers in Northern Europe, in spite the past best efforts of their governments to avoid it. Getting to this point has been a tortuous journey, not to speak of a very painful one for the people of Greece. And it isn't yet over..”

Shakespeare observed in the opening scene of Coriolanus, “Our misery is their abundance; our suffering is a gain to them.” So it was. So it is. And so it will remain. Until we throw off their yoke.

Bikini Sunday

Anne Vyalitsyna

Privatizing public services from Barnet UK to Chicago Illinois

This video concerns a London borough called Barnet. It will be of interest to folks in Britain. But as we watch it, it could be Detroit MI or Stockton, Vallejo or Riverside here in California. It could be Central Falls Rhode island. Workers of the world unite makes sense when we see that what is happening here is happening thousands of miles away, an almost identical process. In the underdeveloped world it is happening in a slightly different and more openly brutal way. Striking miners shot in South Africa, garment workers that provide Walmart and other retailers with their wares murdered by criminal negligent bosses who refused to provide emergency exits in case of a fire and a fire killed them.

Workers and indigenous people being poisoned by energy companies in Latin America and Africa. The idea that those within a nation cannot be divided, are "one" is a ruse; workers and capitalists all Americans. We have more in common with workers throughout the world no matter what their language or cultural differences, we have a common class interests, the role we play in the production of human needs. We can only stop this madness because,  as Mario Savio famously said

"There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part! You can't even passively take part! And you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels…upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop! And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all!"

The time is even more ripe now, we have to stop their machine and set ours in motion. We cannot make capitalism "nice". Capitalism is a permanent state of war. We have allies in India, Africa, Latin America, all the continents. We have the power to change the world and build a future for all humanity. Time will not wait forever. Below is a short report from some of the activity in Barnet against these measures.  We are all in the same boat. We can all fight back against the same enemy.

Did the Royal Baby Prank really cause Jacintha Saldanha's death?

Sombre: Police guard the front of King Edward VII's hospital where Jacintha Saldanha had worked as a nurse for four years



By now everyone has heard about the tragic series of events that ended with the death of a British nurse, Jacintha Saldanha.


Just to recap, Australian DJs Christian Michael and Mel Greig called the hospital where the Duchess of Cambridge staying pretending to be Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip.  The call was received Saldanha who transferred to Kate's ward where some personal information was provided.  After the prank was posted on the radio station's website, Saladanha allegedly committed suicide.

The media and the public have had a field day since the death was reported.  The DJs have been suspened and they have been bombarded with abuse on Twitter following news of her suspected suicide. They later removed their accounts.  The radio station has also lost a lot of advertisers in the last couple of days.

But did the prank really cause the nurse to commit suicide?  She didn't even provide any information to the callers but merely transferred to call.  The hospital claims that no one had confronted her or blamed her for the security breach.  Does a normal person end their life after playing such a minor role in a prank?  I don't see it.

Over time much more will come to light regarding this tragic event.  Michael and Greig are guilty of a tasteless and foolish prank but it's an over reaction to accuse them of murder.  The media and public's initial reaction is totally overblown.

First night of Hanukkah is tonight


Bill Murray was abducted and tasered and forced to make an appearance on Last Night’s Letterman


Man goes out drinking, leaves infant with pitbull


A Florida man is charged with child neglect after allegedly leaving his 10-month-old baby in the care of his pit bull while he went to a bar.

The Flagler County Sheriff's Office says 41-year-old James Irvine of Palm Coast was arrested early Saturday.

The Daytona Beach News-Journal reports the child's mother called police after learning Irvine left the baby alone while he went out to drink. She was at work at the time.

A police report says he told her the "pit bull was watching the baby." The child was in his bedroom with the door shut when she came home. A deputy reported the dog was sitting outside the room.

source

Fire breather charged with arson after spitting at people

Photo detail



A Greeley man faces arson charges after police say he spat flaming streams of lighter fluid at two other men, according.


Witnesses told police James Pachokas, 51, spat the fluid at two other men and lit it with a lighter, according to an arrest affidavit.  After he was arrested, Pachokas told officers he "'spit fire' for money," the report states.

Pachokas was in a house in the 1100 block of 9th Street with Zachary Flowers, 18, and Jacob Kehler, 38, on Nov. 20.  Flowers told police Pachokas spat flaming fluid 20-25 times.  Flowers and Kehler said the flames came close to their heads, and Flowers said he told Pachokas to stop.

Police say Pachokas had burns on his hands when they contacted him.

Pachokas is charged with two counts of fourth-degree arson, a felony, and two counts of reckless endangerment, a misdemeanor.

source

Get your mind out of the gutter week


Jumat, 07 Desember 2012

WSJ: U.S. Plans Military Intervention in Africa

“Terror Fight Shifts to Africa” screams the front-page headline on this morning’s Wall Street Journal.  The subhead elaborates: “U.S. Considers Seeking Congressional Backing for Operations Against Extremists”

The WSJ article explains: 

“The move, according to administration and congressional officials, would be aimed at allowing U.S. military operations in Mali, Nigeria, Libya and possibly other countries where militants have loose or nonexistent ties to al Qaeda’s Pakistan headquarters. Depending on the request, congressional authorization could cover the use of armed drones and special operations across a region larger than Iraq and Afghanistan combined, the officials said.” 

Well, this is good news indeed!  The U.S. is considering helping Africa to deal with the “Terror Fight” just as it has helped Iraq and Afghanistan.  We know what to expect: war, ruin, and destruction; villages “mistakenly” bombed, massive civilian deaths; drone assassinations. No doubt such an intervention would include targeting mass leaders of the Egyptian and Nigerian working classes. The region and its people will be made worse off by far than before the U.S. intervention. A generation of African youth will join the generations of Palestinians, Iraqis, Afghans, and Pakistani youth in their profound hatred for U.S. imperialism.  And then, the U.S. will move on, to combat yet another “terrorist” threat – perhaps this one in adjacent southern Africa, where the striking miners and farmworkers are already being accused of “anarchy” and “terror”.

When Barack Obama ran for president in 2008, he promised to end the war in Iraq. Many of his then-euphoric supporters took this to mean that he was an anti-war candidate. He was not. They had failed to read the fine print: Obama didn’t plan to end the war, he planned to move it east to Afghanistan – a “smarter war”, he said at the time, because “that’s where the terrorists are”. Well, things didn’t turn out appreciably better there than they had in Iraq – so it’s time to move the war (the “Terror Fight”) yet again.  The places change; the drive to maintain U.S. capitalist global hegemony remains.

The WSJ article quotes Christopher Anders of the American Civil Liberties Union, who warns, “This is the kind of thing that Americans could end up regretting; we could end up in another decade long war if this crazy idea isn’t stopped.”

We must do more than regret. We must demand that the U.S. immediately and unconditionally pull all military forces and CIA agents out of the Middle East, Afghanistan, and Africa and immediately end the drone murders. These demands already resonate with a vast number of American working people.

 
Our voices will be heard!

California Prop 37 election fraud?


For our readers' interest from  From Food Democracy Now Please feel free to "share" on Facebook or Twitter and visit the website to sign a letter.

Right now the votes for Prop 37 to label genetically engineered foods are still being counted. On Tuesday morning, Dec 4th, Prop 37 hit 6,004,628 votes on the California Secretary of State’s website, but this tally was quickly reversed within an hour of being publicized by Food Democracy Now!

Since November 6th, the vote count in California has been updated daily until December 4th, when the vote count hit 6 million for the first time. When contacted, the Secretary of State's office stated there would be no further updates to the vote totals until Dec 14th when state law requires the election results to be certified. County elected officials only have until COB Dec 7th to submit final results so we need your help now!

At the same time, Food Democracy Now! has learned that a team of independent statisticians have detected “statistical anomalies” in the largest precincts of 9 counties, including Orange, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Alameda and San Diego counties.

We find this news troubling and think it’s important that the Secretary of State’s office know that we are watching these developments closely and expect honest and fair election results.

Join us in standing up for open and transparent elections, it’s important that all votes be counted and any possible malfeasance is properly investigated by California election officials. Count all the ballots, be open and transparent, because we have the Right to Know!

Click here to download proof that Prop 37 has earned 6 million votes, share on Facebook and with your friends to demand openness and transparency in elections.


For those who want the background, here are the links:
1. "Proposition 37: Genetically Engineered Foods Labeling", California Secretary of State, December 3, 2012, 4:58 p.m.

http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/725?t=16&akid=685.163659.SGEb-s

2. “Election fraud in California Prop 37? vote count hits 6 million, then CA Secretary of States site loses 18,000 votes? pic.twitter.com/hlk4VM7i” @food_democracy,  December 4, 2012
http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/727?t=19&akid=685.163659.SGEb-s

3. “Documented Deceptions of No on 37 Campaign”, California Right to Know Campaign, November 2, 2012

http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/728?t=21&akid=685.163659.SGEb-s

4. "Rigged Elections", Op-Ed News, Michael Collins, October 22, 2012
http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/731?t=23&akid=685.163659.SGEb-s

5. “How to Rig an Election”, Victoria Collier, Harper’s Magazine, November 5, 2012

http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/729?t=25&akid=685.163659.SGEb-s

6. “None Dare Call it Stolen”, Mark Crispin Miller, Harper’s Magazine, August 2005

http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/730?t=27&akid=685.163659.SGEb-s

Friday Flashback - Smokey Robinson














Another flasher in a yearbook photo (obviously NSFW)

Earlier this year a grad photo showing a North Carolina student lifting up her gown went viral.  It's inevitable that another and it happened at Mother Teresa Catholic Secondary School in London,Ontario.  A guy flashed his privates in a group yearbook photo. By the time school officials noticed the yearbook contained nudity, only 360 copies from a press run of 1,300 remained undistributed. Boys will by boys.

Fire horror kills workers in Bangladesh. Big corporations are murderers.

A few days ago we published an article on the 112 workers burnt to death in the garment factory in Bangladesh. More information has come out on this. It shows two things. One is that capitalism is a murderous system, or as we say it is much worse than we imagine. And the other is that the US and world corporations base themselves on this murderous system.

When the fire started the sirens went off.  The women workers ran to get out. But two managers blocked the way and told them it was only a test. Then the smoke began to rise and the women were trapped. The two managers had disappeared.

The murderous outfit in which these women were burnt to death is called Tazreen Fashions. Women work, or rather worked, at extremely high speed with all the consequent damage to their joints and bodies and minds. They were expected to stitch a hood to a jacket in 90 seconds, and do this every 90 seconds.

Who was collaborating with this murderous outfit? Some of the world's top outfitters. On the third floor where 69 bodies were found burnt to death jackets were being sewed for C and A, a European chain. On the fifth floor where workers were making Faded Glory shorts for Walmart ten bodies were found. On the sixth floor True Desire nighties were being made for Sears. Inside one office a licensee of the United States Marine Corps who made commercial apparel with the Marines logo was found.

One worker, a Mr. Rahman, rushed from his workplace and into the fire and helped save many workers. To do so he had to fight his way past a manager. The factory spent money on these thug managers. But it did not have fire sprinklers nor an outdoor fire escape.

These are some of the horrors of capitalism and the relatively cheap clothes they sell in the advanced capitalist countries and the huge profits that are made. Capitalism is a mad profit addicted system, frothing at the mouth with this addiction.

There is a huge change taking place in the workforce of the world. Half the factory workers in the world today are women. Most of these women workers are in the poor countries such as Bangladesh. The leaders of the labor movement in advanced capitalist countries such as the US are a disgrace. Not only will they not defend their own members, but they will not go out and organize the new workforces that are developing like these women workers in Bangladesh. So they are left to be burnt to death.

These trade union and labor leaders have to be removed. Their capitalist ideas have to be removed. Fighting international opposition movements must be built in the workplaces and union rank and files, in the communities, schools and colleges. These must link together to build a democratic socialist world.  Capitalism collaborates internationally on an economic, political and military basis. The working class must do the same. We have to mourn our sisters in Bangladesh. But we also have to organize internationally in their memory to end capitalism the murderous system which murdered them.

Sean.

South African farmworker's rallies

Denia Jansen, chair of this rally, and Mercia Andrews, one of its organizers (who can be seen walking at the front with a white top, bushy hair and who puts a hat on) were arrested during the general strike on 4/12/12 with others for organizing workers and charged with incitement, intimidation, and participating in an illegal strike. They will appear in court again on January 21. Martin Legassick This rally of farmworkers in Ashton, 2/12/12 was organized by Mawubuye Land Rights Forum and the Commercial, Stevedoring, Agricultural and Allied Workers Union both of whom have been patiently and heroically organizing Western Cape farmworkers against racist and repressive bosses for years. In eighteen years the COSATU union responsible for farmworkers, the Food and Allied Workers' Union, with all its resources, has organized only 3% of farmworkers nationwide. The Trust for Community Outreach and Education was a third organizer. Martin Legassick

Americans are ruining Canada's national sport


Let's face it hockey is Canada's national sport and the NHL is the premier hockey league.  But the NHL is dominated and controlled by Americans: 80% of franchises are located in the U.S., the NHL headquarters are in New York and the Commissioner is an American.

If it were up to the Canadian owners the current hockey labour dispute would have settle long ago.  They would have settled for the good of the game.  But the best interests of the game differ in the U.S.  The best interests of the game down there is the right economic model.

So why is the right economic model so important?  Well it's because so few American teams make money.  All six Canadian teams made a profit of at least $10 million last season.  Only six American teams or 25% of teams in the U.S. made a profit of $10 million and thirteen American teams lost money.  The Kings would have made it fourteen had they not earned all that playoff revenue by winning the Stanley Cup.

All those American teams are dragging down the NHL and essential make almost any reasonable economic model unworkable.  In Florida, southern California and the Arizona desert, hockey is a novelty and at best a niche sport.  The two LA based teams lose money while Toronto has only one NHL franchise.

Winnipeg which is a cow pasture compared to some of the huge American metropolitan areas was 10th in profit in their first season earning $13.3 million.  They have the smallest arena, well below NHL standards but they also have the 4th highest average ticket prices.  Winnipeg is a hockey town.  Dallas is not.  Miami is not.  Los Angeles is not.  Glendale is not.  Columbus is not.  Nashville is not.  Tampa is not.


The NHL lockout is about trying to save unsustainable American franchises.

This might be racist week


Kamis, 06 Desember 2012

Workers pepper sprayed as Union rights under assault in Michigan


Michigan State Legislature toda
by Richard Mellor
"Union busting is a field populated by bullies and built on deceit.  A campaign against a Union is an assault on individuals and a war on the truth.  As such, it is a war without honor.  The only way to bust a Union is to lie, distort, manipulate, threaten, and always, always attack."
Martin jay Levitt, Confessions of a Union Buster.

The heads of organized Labor will be whining about the Right to Work legislation that the Republicans just shoved through the Michigan State Legislature.  Workers were pepper sprayed by the police today and others were arrested as they protested and tried to disrupt the proceedings. "At one point, a man shouted, 'Heil Hitler! Heil Hitler! That's what you people are.' ", the Associated Press reported.  "We will remember in November." others shouted.  But what can we do in November?  Vote Democrat? The bosses have a monopoly in politics, they hold a dictatorship in the political arena and they don't fear their "other" party.

The Right to Work measures passed in the House will mean that private unions will not be able to charge employees fees. The Senate also voted to impose the same requirement on most public unions, reports say.  When an employee objects to paying union dues for whatever reason, they were required to pay the equivalent to a charity or agency that in the case of my former workplace was offered as an alternative. The bosses claim this is to give workers more "freedom" to choose.   No worker believes this. They claim that if they can get rid of costly Unions they will create more jobs. Michigan officials point to Indiana which has wages and conditions of many third world countries. Caterpillar just closed a plant in Ontario to move to Indiana where wages are 50% less.  A spectre is haunting the US I would say.

There's a few lessons to be learned here.  The first is an easy one and that is that the Democratic Party is not a political party that represents workers' interests and we cannot rely on it to defend what took us decades and heroic sacrifice to win.  Even when it has a majority as it did nationally during the Carter years holding both Houses and the presidency, not one piece of legislation of major importance to Labor was passed, the same with Clinton's first two years. We must build an alternative working people's party in this country.

The other important issue is that the blame for this situation, the increasingly successful assault on workers and our organizations, lies squarely on the shoulders of the heads of organized Labor, those folks that run the AFL-CIO and the Change to Win Coalition. When he was seeking a role in the leadership of the AFL-CIO after the exit of the moribund lane Kirkland Richard Trumka, now president of that organization said:

"While we are always willing to negotiate as equals, the era of union busting, contract trashing and strike breaking is at an end.  Today, we say that when you pick a fight with any of us, you pick a fight with all of us! And that when you push us, we will push back."
Oct 1996.

John Sweeney, who Trumka succeeded as head of the AFL-CIO talked of blocking bridges as a   direct action tactic in our struggle against the bosses and their offensive on Labor.  These were just election campaign rhetoric as Sweeney's "blocking bridges" became building them, not between the rank and file and the leadership of the Unions but between the bosses and the leadership of the Unions. This is done through the Team Concept on the job with the numerous Labor/management committees, Quality of Life circles and other such euphemistic terms for class collaboration and betrayal and through the Team Concept in politics with the blood bond between the Union hierarchy and the Democrats.

You can go to any Unionized workplace these days and it would be impossible not to find two sets of workers.  The older hires whose benefits, wages and conditions have been cut and the new hires, mostly younger workers whose wages, benefits, conditions and chances of retirement are ten times worse. 

Talk to grocery workers here in California. Talk to the new hires in any of these situations and they'll tell you they got a raw deal from the Union.  They pay dues yet do the same job for less money and worse benefits.  The Union officialdom with their position of damage control which means pleading with the bosses' for slightly fewer concessions than they're asking for, cast the future workers, the new hires to the wolves. It's very easy to do as not yet being hired, the new young folk can't vote on a  crappy contract that in many cases pays them 50% less.  This causes animosity on the job and animosity to "the Union" for not putting up a fight.  The greater victory for the boss, greater than the money saved even, is the weakening of solidarity on the shop floor.

Even when we had 100,000 workers in the streets of Madison Wisconsin, both Democrats and the trade Union hierarchy accepted concessions, agreed to all the cuts. Only dues check off and a seat at the table mattered.  The Democrats for the  money they get from our dues at election time and the Labor heads in order to have a job at all.

As working conditions continue to deteriorate and wages decline as Union dues go up, the anger at "the Union" increases.  Workers built and join Unions because they improve our material well being, the same with voting.  Neither are an exercise in civics.  When your dues go up and wages go down, the Union doesn't appeal so much any more.

I was talking to a young leftist the other day and like many leftists they use all sorts of excuses for not waging a struggle within their Unions.  In my experience, many of them that do attend meetings do not openly challenge the leadership and their concessionary policies and wage a campaign among the rank and file for an alternative.  They have their "private" meetings outside the workers' movement for their militant side. They often argue that you have to play the game, or that the leadership won't do anything so why place demands on them? "Why confront them when the members aren't even there?" one socialist in the movement told me. These are excuses.  It's more important to defend anyone when they are not there than when they are.  It's the harder thing to do but it also is part of building an opposition as workers hear that there's division taking place at the meetings.  They hear that someone's speaking up for them and the leadership will talk crap about them which will spark interest among the ranks who want to know what it's all about.  And it's also important for oppositionists to mark their turf whether the ranks are there or not, it helps hold our feet to the fire.

If we are active in Unions we have to wage an open campaign against the concessionary policies of the present leadership.  We are in a struggle for the consciousness of the members, of the working class as a whole.  This is part of building rank and file oppositions around a fighting program and direct action fight to win tactics.

Most workers recognize that they're better off with a Union, even a bad one.  But years of class collaboration and concessionary contracts forced on members by a bloated bureaucracy that does not have to work under them,  have made it a lot easier for the bosses and their politicians to undermine the Union and attack Union rights.

As myself and others on this blog have stated many times, this logjam will be broken at some point.  The police are getting more aggressive as the bosses are becoming overconfident. But we are suffering undue hardship due to the refusal of the leadership to fight which means we we are forced to start from a much deeper hole than necessary when these small clashes like in  Michigan today become generalized and take on a national  character.

But we have the power, this is indisputable.  We just have to use it and openly fight all the bosses' divide and rule tactics, racism, sexism,  blaming immigrants etc. aimed at weakening our unity.

Stop the madness


Burglar calls 911 after homeowner holds him at gunpoint


In a strange flip of events, a burglary suspect called 911 early Tuesday to report that he was being held at gunpoint by a Springtown homeowner and his son.


The homeowner called 911, too, but by then he was in control, holding him at gunpoint and demanding to know what he was doing in his home.

The incident happened around 12:30 a.m. when the homeowner and his wife woke up to find an intruder in the bedroom of their home in the 100 block of Lelon Lane.  The suspect, identified as 41-year-old Christopher Lance Moore of Bedford, left the home and sat in his GMC pickup, parked in the family’s driveway. The homeowner followed him with a pistol, took the suspect’s keys and blocked his getaway with his own vehicle, while his stepson trained a shotgun on Moore, Fox 4 News reports.


When deputies arrived, both men were on the phone with 911. Deputies asked Moore why he had broken into the home, to which he merely said he had “bad intentions.”

source

NASA Satellite images of Earth at night

This image of the continental United States at night is a composite assembled from data acquired by the Suomi NPP satellite in April and October 2012. The images show the impact that man-made light has on our planet.  It's no wonder you can't see many stars in the sky from metropolitan areas.