Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Monday, July 11, 2016

Out of circulation notes: Rs. 2.4Mn stolen from CB


2016-07-11

Currency notes worth Rs. 2.4 million, of Rs.5,000 denomination, that had been earmarked for incineration at the Central Bank, had been lost.

 An office assistant (Karyala Karya Sahayake) had been arrested in connection with the loss. He was remanded till July 22 by Colombo Fort Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne on Friday. 

The Central Bank authorities had declared these notes unfit for circulation due to their being soiled and discoloured. 

The suspect, N.G.N. Kumara of Ja-Ela, had allegedly removed the notes one by one from the wads at the Bank over a period of time. The CID had arrested him and produced him in court. (Manopriya Gunasekara and Sumitta Jayawickrama)

Dadallage transforms into acroBAT –has started eating and defecating through the mouth - a threat to security of president !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -11.July.2016, 6.30PM) The ex secretary to ministry of public administration , Jinasiri Dadallage has stated he is ready to be a witness for the defense in the most infamous Sil redhi (SiI Clothes) fraud case that is being heard in the Colombo High court , and even had acted in a manner disregarding   the security threats presently posed to the president ,based on reports.
The main accused in this case relating to a  colossal fraud, which involved  the illegal distribution of Sil clothes among voters as bribes out of the funds of the SL Telecom regulatory commission amounting to Rs. 600 million  during the run up to the last presidential elections 2015, are former chairman  of the SL Telecom regulatory Commission cum  former secretary to the president Lalith Weeratunge and Director General Anusha Pelpita.
When the FCID conducted  an exhaustive investigation into this monumental fraud , it was revealed these disbursements were absolutely illegal. In addition to this financial fraud , state funds have been abused  to run an election office at Longden place , Colombo 07 on behalf of the presidential candidate Mahinda Rajapakse ; illegally providing transport , food and beverages to thousands of people involved in the election propaganda activities ; and several other offences.
 
It is significant to note it is in this case of grave and colossal fraud which drained away a staggering Rs. 600 million of public funds , Dadellage a government servant  is going to be a witness on behalf of the notorious crooks.
During the presidential elections , when public funds were being wasted and public officers were deployed  illegally for  the election campaign of Mahinda Rajapakse by Abeykoon the present secretary to the president who was then the secretary to the ministry of public administration ( which position is now held by Dadallage) , Dadallage was diametrically opposed to those activities. Yet Abeykoon who brazenly violated elections regulations then  became the secretary to the incumbent president after the elections,  and  Dadellage became the secretary to the ministry of public administration.
Dadallage  who was disillusioned over this therefore often had rifts with the secretary to the president.  Finally  ,he gradually drifted away from the government and turned not only hostile  to the government of good governance but even went as far as to sabotage the government . Finally Dadallage in addition to  biting the hand that fed him , even imbibed the habit of the Bat of eating and defecating through the mouth. The end result : he became a lackey and tool in the hands of the corrupt and brutal Rajapakses.

How Dadallage has become a threat to security of president…

The best illustration to prove this is ,  the obstruction created by Dadallage  to the President’s security situation. 
It is major Neville a henchman of Mahinda Rajapakse who is in an official house in the vicinity of president’s official residence, and he is one who is trained in firearms. Since Neville’s house and his  presence in the vicinity are  a threat to the security of the president, the secretary to the president instructed Dadallage who is in charge of allocating official houses, to arrange for a house to Neville in a different  location , Dadallage however has ignored the instructions made an umpteen number of times. If Dadallage had acted this negligently and been this dilatory under any government other than the good governance government Dadallage would be behind bars today because , if any State officer is acting in a manner that is posing threats intentionally  or unintentionally to the president’s security it is a most grave offence. 
When the high officials of the government became aware Dadallage who is uncaring about president’s security situation and is even getting ready to give evidence on behalf of the accused LaLith Weeratunge and Anusha Pilapitiya the notorious crooks in the Sil clothes swindle , it was decided that Dadallage be interdicted .Dadallage having got wind of this ,  in the Sunday edition of Divaina and Rivira newspapers on June 26 th via interviews severely castigated the good governance government in a way that was most unbecoming of a public servant , and not at all in keeping with the code of ethics and discipline  of public service , while seeking to give  the impression he is championing the cause of the State officers. So this is the  Dadallage the versatile  reptile – the BureaucRAT who has metamorphosed into an acroBAT (eating and defecating through the mouth) .
It is on the advice of the corrupt officers of Public administration organization comprising 136 of  them, and the joint opposition politicos ,Dadallage the versatile reptile ( BureaucRAT turned  AcroBAT) had taken this disastrous step to rescue the corrupt. Through  the interviews he had resorted  to   slam and slate the government in diverse ways .
Now   to paint the false picture  that it is his interviews that led to his interdiction, without any shame most unscrupulously safeguarded  and shielded the most corrupt and crooked Rajapakse regime.
Truly speaking , a separate disciplinary inquiry must be instituted against this BureaucRAT turned  AcroBAT  pertaining to his obnoxious and offensive statements made through the orifice  he uses to gourmandize   as well as defecate. Though he has by now been transferred to the postal services ministry , he had not accepted the appointment , he is now on a collision course with the government and is moving heaven and earth to justify the corrupt and fraudulent activities of the corrupt State officers facing charges  as well as prop and propel the criminal Rajapakses. This is his present atrocious plan and plot , it has come to light.
By issuing a statement ‘because I told the truth I was penalized and given a transfer’ to the Divaina newspaper on  the 7 th which published it as headline news, he had confirmed his venomous and villainous plans which are  detrimental to the country. 
It is Dadallage’s contention that if distribution of Sil cloths is wrong ,then the granting  of relief  by the government under Jana saviya and Samurdhi  are also wrong . The idiocy and imbecility of Dadallage is very clear because he had by these statements only betrayed he hasn’t the knowledge of even a grade 5 student - Government’s Jana saviya and Samurdhi relief have been ratified by the parliament , whereas Sil clothes distribution have not received any such ratification ,and most unlawfully carried out .
Dadallage who has already displayed his buffalo mentality is ready to give evidence in court on behalf of Weeratunge and Pelpita that the crooked state officers have a right  to carry out all the illegal orders issued by the politicos and to commit frauds while lining their own pockets too with part of the loot . Dadallage is so  stupid that he has even released his two penny half penny argument on behalf of the crooks to the media too. 

Corrupt Government officers seeking to sabotage the FCID

Immediately following the instructions given by the Attorney General (AG) to arrest a group of senior administrative officers in connection with a financial fraud at the Tourist promotion Authority some time ago , the officers who were linked to the corruption and frauds of the Rajapakse regime , and now holding high positions in the present good governance government became jittery and annoyed. In panic they are conspiring most vigorously and venomously to close down the FCID  the bugbear for crooks and the corrupt.
The officers including P.B.Abeykoon   secretary to the president and  Saman Ekanayake secretary to the P.M. have made all the preparations to first close down anti corruption committee secretariat after the 30 th of June , and then the FCID .Though Saman Ekanayake and Ms. Hema Dharmawardena  the additional secretary to P.M. who was to be arrested have prepared  the necessary letters and got them signed too,  the Cabinet on the 30th of June at the last moment extended the term of that secretariat for a further six months to the dismay and disappointment of the culprits and their accomplices.  It is Ranil  Wickremesinghe who submitted that cabinet paper.

It is significant to note it is  the anti corruption committee secretariat that facilitates the  police FCID in its complex financial fraud  investigations by providing them with intelligence data while also  securing legal advice to the Accountants , Auditors, stock exchange and financial markets  pertaining to their affairs . 
It is a  well and widely known fact the corrupt politicos and high rung State administrative officers of the Rajapakse Bue Brigand who crept into the government of good governance are actively and viciously engaged in impeding and hampering the on going investigations conducted by the police. Dadallage’s  despicable and deplorable  move to give evidence on  behalf of the culprits is the latest of those dastardly and desperate maneuvers and machinations. 
It is the opinion of political experts and  critics , if the president and the P.M.  who are assuming they are  standing high on the ladder without realizing the same ladder is stuck in the mud do not act fast and furiously  , to  take immediate decision, the government will have  to confront  serious problems in the face of  such tremendous  odds and an array of deadly villains and traitors all the time engaging in cut -throat and back stabbing activities , and not acting in the  best interests of the country and the people.
It is high time the present rulers understand that to cover the nakedness of this government it is only the cloak of good governance that can come to their  rescue and  no other.
By Kulagedera Yasakula Puthra
Translated by Jeff
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by     (2016-07-11 13:39:11)

The Modern Vegetable: Useless Blob Of Biomass


Colombo Telegraph
By Arjuna Seneviratne –July 10, 2016
 Arjuna Seneviratne
Arjuna Seneviratne
No one has ever called a fat person healthy. Fit fat people do not exist. Excesses of blubber and water don’t make the fitness grade you now. Without some other illness or ailment that the person cannot control, the run-of-mill fat people balloon themselves by stuffing their faces with excessive amounts of the resources of the planet for no good reason that they can reasonably justify for themselves. Being six times one’s healthy BMI is no health-wise good folks although whether that looks good or bad is up to individuals since beauty is in the eyes of the viewer.
Now, while a pretty large majority of people would probably agree with me on the health issues of obesity and might pity a fat person on the one side and roundly condemn the person on the other, they will embrace another fat entity with alacrity although that entity is fat for very similar reason.
I am talking about the modern vegetable.karavila
Look at that thing that you love so much: huge, fat, shiny, tasteless and filled with what? Nutrients?Nah.Minerals?Nah. Then what? Well, just biomass mostly. Carbon based materials that do zilch for our health and wellbeing. They have become so bloated because they are created by trick and truck to enhance their size and appearance and fed by a cocktail of killer toxins to keep them alive since their ability to keep themselves alive naturally has been compromised by the very unnaturalness of their design, birth and existence.
We…? LOVE ‘EM! Despite the fact that doctors and others are promoting us to “be just the size that will make us win”, despite the fact that we are very clear over-sized is under-healthy, we seem to have been mass hypnotized into ignoring this simple, straightforward truth. Why? Because we are nuts, let me tell you.
OK … enough giggles and politically incorrect comparisons and anecdotes. Let’s get down to the science of this thing and the meanness with which something that is very bad for us has been coaxed into our subconscious selves as something that is good for us, great for us and looked for by default over everything else.

Renewed Violence in South Sudan Threatens Fragile Peace Agreement

Renewed Violence in South Sudan Threatens Fragile Peace Agreement

BY JASON PATINKINTY MCCORMICK-JULY 10, 2016

NAIROBI — Intense fighting erupted once again in South Sudan’s capital, Juba, on Sunday, after days of clashes left more than 250 soldiers and former rebels dead, imperiling an already faltering peace deal and threatening to plunge the country back into all-out civil war.

Shots rang out around 8:30 a.m. in suburbs where troops loyal to First Vice President Riek Machar, the former rebel leader who returned to Juba in April as part of a deal to end the country’s two-year civil war, have set up camps. By late Sunday morning, witnesses said government attack helicopters were circling above the city and former rebels claimed that their camps had come under sustained bombardment with artillery and other heavy weapons.

“Fighting is still on; the war is still on,” said a displaced South Sudanese man who was holed up in a so-called Protection of Civilian (PoC) site on a U.N. base in Jebel, a Juba suburb adjacent to one camp occupied by the former rebels. “There are so many wounded people. Wounded people are flowing in now into [the] PoC, and some shells are landing inside [the] PoC.”

Shantal Persaud, a spokesperson for the U.N. mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), said that small arms fire as well as heavy artillery had originated from an area northeast of the U.N. compound in Jebel in the morning and “pretty much continued” throughout the day, suggesting that government troops had indeed taken aim at Machar’s former rebels who were camped to the southwest of the U.N. base.

But even with thousands of civilians and U.N. personnel caught in the crossfire, it appears that U.N. peacekeepers have not responded.

“These people, they are just around with their tanks … They are not shooting even,” the displaced South Sudanese man said, describing the U.N. peacekeepers stationed at Jebel in a telephone interview with FP.

He also recounted witnessing a young girl as she was struck by a shell inside the PoC as well seeing two adults get hit in the head by stray bullets.

As he was describing the situation over the phone, a loud explosion could be heard in the background. “That’s the landed shelling, just [on] the other side of UNMISS base,” he said.

The U.N. mission expressed “outrage at the resumption of violence” on Sunday, warning that the fighting has “severely” impacted the civilian population in the capital. “Both UNMISS compounds in Juba have sustained impacts from small arms and heavy weapons fire,” the mission said in a statement.

According to eyewitnesses, civilians could be seen frantically packing their belongings in the capital on Sunday and fleeing for the relative safety of various U.N. facilities. Roughly 2,000 people have taken refuge in the U.N.’s Tomping facility near the airport, across town from the Jebel base, and another 2,000 are taking cover in the World Food Programme’s compound, according an aid worker in Tomping who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

“People are visibly packing up and taking off,” another aid worker who was not authorized to speak to press, told FP by phone.

Fighting first broke out on Thursday evening between former rebels loyal to Machar and government soldiers manning a checkpoint in Juba. It escalated dramatically on Friday, when more than 250 fighters were reportedly killed in clashes, even as the two leaders appealed for calm in a joint press conference that afternoon. By Saturday, the fighting had died down and Juba was tense but quiet.

Still, government soldiers reportedly prevented U.N. peacekeepers from patrolling the city, and even turned back an extraction team that had been sent to retrieve the head of UNMISS, Ellen Margrethe Løj, who took refuge in the U.S. Embassy during Friday’s fighting. By Saturday afternoon, the peacekeepers had been allowed through and she had been safely returned to the U.N. base.

The resumption of fighting on Sunday marked a dramatic escalation of the violence.

“President Salva Kiir’s forces are bombing Jebel site with helicopter gunships and shelling it with heavy artilleries [sic] and using tanks,” James Gatdet Dak, a spokesman for Machar, posted on Facebook around noon local time on Sunday.

Government spokesman Lul Ruai Koang confirmed that the fighting Sunday involved “heavy artillery and small arms fire,” but said, “We do not know why and who started it.”

Civil war broke out in South Sudan in December 2013, less than three years after the country gained independence from Sudan, with which it fought a decades-long war of secession. During that war, Kiir and Machar had been at times allies and at times rivals, but ultimately united under a U.S.-backed peace process that installed their Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) political party into power at independence in 2011. Kiir became president and Machar became vice president.

But hopes of a peaceful transition to independence were dashed when Kiir sacked Machar from his vice presidential post in July 2013, setting the stage for a violent power-struggle between the two men. War broke out five months later, after Kiir’s troops massacred people of Machar’s Nuer ethnic group in Juba. By the beginning of 2016, more than 2 million South Sudanese had been displaced and as many as 100,000 had been killed, though estimates vary widely.

peace agreement signed in August 2015 was intended to bring the two sides together into a unity government, but both had routinely flouted its provisions even before fighting broke out on Thursday. For instance, they repeatedly violated the ceasefire, dragged their feet on key constitutional reforms, and, perhaps most fatefully, failed to demilitarize the capital.

“This was expected to be a disaster, and it has turned out to be a disaster,” said Peter Biar Ajak, a millennium fellow at the Atlantic Council in Washington D.C. who studies South Sudan. “Everything in this peace agreement has turned out to be not well thought out. You have troops that are not well trained, not paid in some cases, and armed to the teeth. This was what was always going to happen.”

Top image: South Sudanese civilians flee fighting in an United Nations base in the northeastern town of Malakal on February 18, 2016. Image credit: JUSTIN LYNCH/AFP/Getty Images
 

Trump’s military pick for VP now looks less likely. Here’s why no one should be surprised.

Rt. Gen. Michael Flynn's name surfaced as a potential vice presidential candidate for Donald Trump, but the presumptive GOP nominee told The Post on Monday he was leaning toward a politician. (Lauren Victoria Burke/AP Photo)

 

Over the weekend, chatter around the GOP veepstakes went into overdrive as another contender, Ret. Gen. Michael Flynn, was reportedly being vetted as a potential running mate for presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump. But on Monday morning, in an interview with The Post, Trump suggested he was leaning toward an establishment politician who would be "good for unification," saying "I have such great respect for the general, but believe it or not that will be one of my strong suits."

Here's why that news isn't surprising: Yes, there's that not-so-little issue of Flynnindicating he supports a woman's right to choose in an interview with ABC's Martha Raddatz Sunday. (Fox News reported Monday he has clarified that statement, insisting he is "pro-life.") But as The Post examined in March, a major political party also has not had a general or admiral as a vice presidential candidate on its ticket in the modern era. Plenty of candidates have been veterans, but just two career military officers have run as vice presidential candidates since World War II, and both ran as independents.

The first was Curtis LeMay, a heavyweight in U.S. Air Force history who ran on former Alabama Gov. 
George Wallace's independent ticket in 1968. The leader of U.S. Strategic Air Command who led key bombing raids in World War II and who an ultimately became chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force, the gruff, cigar-loving hawk was seen as helping toinspire Stanley Kubrick's 1964 Cold War satire 'Dr. Strangelove.'

The other was U.S. Navy vice admiral James Stockdale, who was Ross Perot's running mate in 1992. A Vietnam War hero who was tortured and had been president of the Naval War College, Stockdale may be most remembered for the rhetorical question he asked in that year's vice presidential debate:  "Who am I? Why am I here?"

Military commanders are not picked very often, historians told me at the time, because they're less well known today, because they may not be interested in playing second fiddle and because they may not want to take on a job that is inherently political. Many don't vote while the serve in the military -- as Flynn told Raddatz Sunday, "I didn't vote much at -- in the military because I served whoever was the commander in chief in the military." They're picked by independents (recall that Mike Bloomberg was reportedly vetting Michael Mullen, the retired admiral and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff when considering a presidential run) for seeming nonpartisan.

Trump, meanwhile, is certainly an outsider (and like Perot, a wealthy businessman), but he's very much running as a Republican, not an independent. With extraordinary divisions in the party, it makes sense he could see someone with a political background as having the edge. In a race this polarized, healing divisions within the party could be more of a priority than picking up independents.

Moreover, generals' career serving commanders in chief of both parties may make them less oriented toward playing the role of political attack dog on the stump. That's something Trump's blunt, aggressive campaign style doesn't necessarily need, but that the tone and tenor of this year's extremely negative campaign would seem to command. In the Raddatz interview Sunday, Flynn didn't shy away from sharply criticizing Clinton, labeling recent remarks from her "totally irresponsible." But when asked about the decision not to charge her over the email probe, he focused more on FBI Director James Comey's commentary than on Clinton herself.

Of course, with speculation reaching a fever pitch -- Trump told Cillizza he'll make the decision in the next "three to four" days, and the answer could always swing again -- let's hope the most important resume factor for any potential No. 2 on either side of the aisle doesn't get overlooked.

It's worth remembering that military or non-military, establishment or extremist party member, attack dog temperament or not, the vice president's most important job isn't to draw swing state voters. It isn't to draw in certain demographics or signal strengths that the top candidate is lacking. It's to have the leadership skills, experience and know-how to take over the presidency if the worst should ever happen.

'Compelling evidence' of UK weapons being used on civilian targets in Yemen

Report detailing the use of UK-made weapons in Saudi-led airstrikes will form part of a legal bid to halt UK arms sales to the kingdom



A new report containing "compelling evidence" of UK weapons being used on civilian targets in Yemen will form part of a campaign group's legal bid to stop the government selling arms to Saudi Arabia.

Areeb Ullah's pictureAreeb Ullah-Monday 11 July 2016

Rubble from Saudi-led bombing in Yemen earlier this year (AFP)

The report by Human Rights Watch shows that Saudi Arabia has hit factories in Yemen using UK-made weaponry, including a Paveway guided bomb and a Hakim cruise missile, according to the Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT).

Andrew Smith, CAAT's spokesperson, said the report was the strongest confirmation yet that UK weapons are being used on civilians, and would form part of its court challenge against the British government to end weapons sales to Saudi Arabia. 

CAAT last month won the right to a judicial review of arms exports to Saudi Arabia, arguing that the British government could not guarantee UK-made weapons were not being used by Saudi Arabia against Yemeni civilians.

"The report presents clear and compelling evidence of UK bombs being used against businesses and civilian targets," Smith said.

"Saudi Arabia has been widely accused of breaking humanitarian law, and yet the arms sales have continued. It is imperative that the government acts on these allegations and ends arms sales to Saudi Arabia.

"The evidence provided by HRW will compliment evidence we already have for the judicial review," said Smith. "The evidence contained in this report is very thorough and we hope will be taken very seriously by the government.

“We didn’t launch the judicial review just to spark discussion, but also to create change. It has to be stressed that KSA is not just a buyer of UK arms. It is by far the largest buyer of UK arms, and this judicial review will go to the heart of UK arms export policy."

The Human Rights Watch report collected evidence from Yemen of what it said was the indiscriminate targeting of 13 civilian economic structures in 17 raids by the Saudi-led coalition, including food warehouses and a soft drinks factory.

HRW said 130 civilians were killed and 171 injured in the attacks, which contravened international law. 
The report says the group found remnants of US-made munitions at four sites and remnants of UK-made munitions at three. 

One of those munitions - a Paveway IV guided bomb - was produced in May 2015, meaning it was transferred to Saudi Arabia after the start of its aerial campaign in Yemen.

Another site was hit by a UK-made Hakim cruise missile, which was produced by a British company in the 1990s.  

Middle East Eye reported earlier this year that British forces continue to train their Saudi counterparts to use an updated cruise missile, the "Storm Shadow", which campaigners say has also been used in Yemen. 

Saudi Arabia has led a coalition of nine Arab countries in a military campaign against Houthi forces in Yemen since March 2015. 

According to CAAT, the UK government has since approved £2.8bn ($3.6bn) of weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, despite claims of grave human rights violations committed by coalition forces.

The Saudi-led operations have had military support from the US and the UK as well as others. The fighting has resulted in more than 3,200 civilian deaths, more than 60 percent of them from coalition airstrikes, according to the United Nations. 

“This report has proven that weapons sold after the start of this war have been used in unlawful strikes and on civilian targets,” said Priyanka Motaparthy, senior emergencies researcher at HRW, who wrote the report.  

The UK has assisted the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen by "providing technical support, precision guided weapons and exchanging information with the Saudi Arabian armed forces," the defence ministry said. 
The British government has insisted its granting of licences for weapons transfers are fully vetted. 

A spokesperson for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, the branch of the UK government responsible for issuing arms sales licences, told MEE: “Risks around human rights violations are a key part of [the UK government's] assessment against the consolidated criteria and a licence will not be issued, to Saudi Arabia or any other destination, if to do so would be inconsistent with any provision of the consolidated criteria.”

Send Our War Criminals to the Hague Court 

bush_blair

by Eric S. Margolis

( July 9, 2016, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) This week’s Chilcot report on Britain’s role in the 2003 invasion of Iraq was as polite and guarded as a proper English tea party.  No direct accusations, no talk of war crimes by then Prime Minister Tony Blair or his guiding light, President George W. Bush.  But still pretty damning.

Such government reports and commissions, as was wittily noted in the delightful program ‘Yes, Prime Minister,’ are designed to obscure rather than reveal the truth and bury awkward facts in mountains of paper.

And beneath mountains of lies.  The biggest lie on both sides of the Atlantic was that the invasion and destruction of Iraq was the result of ‘faulty intelligence.’  The Bush and Blair camps  and the US and British media keep pushing this absurd line.

This writer, who had covered Iraq since 1976, was one of the first to assert that Baghdad had no so-called weapons of mass destruction, and no means of delivering them even if it did.  For this I was dropped and black-listed by the leading US TV cable news network and leading US newspapers.

I had no love for the brutal Saddam Hussein, whose secret police threatened to hang me as a spy. But I could not abide the intense war propaganda coming from Washington and London, served up by the servile, mendacious US and British media.

The planned invasion of Iraq was not about nuclear weapons or democracy, as Bush claimed.  Two powerful factions in Washington were beating the war drums:  ardently pro-Israel neoconservatives who yearned to see an enemy of Israel destroyed, and a cabal of conservative oil men and imperialists around Vice President Dick Cheney who sought to grab Iraq’s huge oil reserves at a time they believed oil was running out.  They engineered the Iraq War, as blatant and illegal an aggression as Hitler’s invasion of Poland in 1939.

Britain’s smarmy Tony Blair tagged along with the war boosters in hopes that the UK could pick up the crumbs from the invasion and reassert its former economic and political power in the Arab world.  Blair had long been a favorite of British neoconservatives.  The silver-tongued Blair became point man for the war in preference to the tongue-twisted, stumbling George Bush.   But the real warlord was VP Dick Cheney.

There was no ‘flawed intelligence.’ There were intelligence agencies bullied into reporting a fake narrative to suit their political masters.  And a lot of fake reports concocted by our Mideast allies like Israel and Kuwait.

After the even mild Chilcot report, Blair’s reputation is in tatters, as it should be.  How such an intelligent, worldly man could have allowed himself to be led around by the doltish, swaggering Bush is hard to fathom.  Europe’s leaders and Canada refused to join the Anglo-American aggression.  France, which warned Bush of the disaster he would inflict, was slandered and smeared by US Republicans as ‘cheese-eating surrender monkeys.’

In the event, the real monkeys were the Bush and Blair governments.  Saddam Hussain, a former US ally, was deposed and lynched.  Iraq, the most advanced Arab nation, was almost totally destroyed.  Up to one million Iraqis may have been killed, though the Chilcot report claimed only a risible 150,000. As Saddam had predicted, the Bush-Blair invasion opened the gates of hell, and out came al-Qaida and then ISIS.

The US and British media, supposedly the bulwark of democracy, rolled over and  became an organ of government war propaganda.  Blair had the august BBC purged for failing to fully support his drive for war.  BBC has never recovered.

Interestingly,  this week’s news of the Chilcot investigation was buried deep inside the New York Times on Thursday.  The Times was a key partisan of the war.  So too the Wall Street Journal, Fox News, and the big TV networks.

Without their shameful connivance, the Iraq War might not have happened.

Bush and Blair have the deaths of nearly 4,500 US soldiers on their heads, the devastation of Iraq, our $1 trillion war, the ever-expanding mess in the Mideast, and the violence what we wrongly blame on  ‘terrorism’  and so-called ‘radical Islam.’

The men and women responsible for this biggest disaster in our era should be brought to account.   As long as Bush and Blair swan around and collect speaking fees, we have no right to lecture other nations, including Russia and China, on how to run a democracy or rule of law.  Bush and Blair should be facing trial for war crime at the Hague Court.

Copyright  Eric S. Margolis 2016

May to succeed Cameron as PM on Wednesday

11_may_r_w
Monday 11 Jul 2016

David Cameron has just announced that he will leave No. 10 on Wednesday for the last time after Prime Minister’s Questions. He whizzed round to Parliament when Theresa May got back from Birmingham and at 3.20pm met her there in the office that will very soon be hers.

He wished her well and then returned to Downing Street to announce, looking very sombre and emotional, that he would go to see the Queen on Wednesday afternoon to stand down as Prime Minister. He said he was “delighted” the timetable for his succession had been shortened but he looked anything but delighted.

David Cameron said Andrea Leadsom had done the right thing by standing aside. Mrs Leadsom phoned Theresa May just after the Home Secretary had finished her speech in Birmingham and before Mrs Leadsom herself announced her intention to pull out of the leadership contest.

Yesterday she was at a barbecue with friends and family. The hostile tweets from Tory MPs played quite a role in her decision to stand aside, supportive MPs say. They hurt her, made her wonder if it was all worth the candle and suggested that the parliamentary party might be ungovernable. One MP who attended her 11am briefing to core supporters this morning said: “We worried it was going to be like Iain Duncan Smith all over again.”

One supporter of Andrea Leadsom said: “We felt her chances of winning the leadership had (with The Times interview and the antagonism flowing out of Tory MPs) fallen from a 30 per cent chance to a 15 per cent chance. It wasn’t worth the pain and it wasn’t worth the wait for the country.”

Ms Leadsom was clearly tearful and upset about the fall-out from her Times interview, as the Telegraph records in its interview with her published today.

But there was also an acknowledgement that she hadn’t spoken cleverly and hadn’t been managed by a core team on top of their game. One MP supporter said: “She can’t be Chancellor right now, Chief Secretary maybe.”
The speech that Theresa May had just given in Birmingham was clearer than her leadership bid launch speech on the direction her government might take.

She talks of a “housing deficit” and promises to focus on solutions. She calls for a “proper industrial strategy,” suggesting that Sajid Javid may not be long in his current job. She attacks the way quantitative easing has benefited those who already have a home and hurt those aspiring to have one. There are a number of implied criticisms of George Osborne you might detect in the speech.

She promises “a different kind of Conservatism”, though as I mentioned earlier, it can’t be that different from the 2015 manifesto or she will come under pressure to have another general election.

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Anything Lanka can learn from Brexit?-Cosmopolitan internationalism versus bleeding heart nativism

The school of Athens with Plato and Aristotle in the middle.The first enlightenment painted by a forerunner of the second, Raphael

Internationalist poster Nigel Farage addresses a Brexit rally

by Kumar David-July 9, 2016

article_imageThe world can be examined along different axes, that is, employing different dimensions. Three are well established. The terminology ‘advanced countries’ and ‘developing countries’ (or less polite versions of the latter) has a huge following and has crept into everyday use. Living standards, economic development, politics, power and trade are the cornerstones of this discourse. A second dimension is culture in the broad sense (language, ethnicity and religion), both intra-national and international. The third is class, within a nation or region ("The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of the class struggle") and global categories such as imperialism, globalization and the appeal to the "workers of the world (to) unite".

Interestingly in recent times a fourth dimension has gained prominence – internationalism versus nativism. The former is heir to the eighteenth century Enlightenment – Marxists, even nationalist ones like Mao and Ho Chi Min to a large extent, belong here. Finance capital is global for acquisitive reasons, Pope Francis for spiritual ones, so is the EU. Let me use EI (Enlightenment Internationalism) collectively for this lot notwithstanding class and ideological divides. An example of this consanguinity is the UK’s pro-EU (anti-Brexit) melange of financers, big bourgeoisie, cosmopolitan, professional, multi-lingual elites and some two-thirds of the working class.

The antithesis of EI, Nativist Nationalism (Nativism), consists of strands of nationalism from the rational and pragmatic to the xenophobic, and embraces unabashed adherents of sovereignty. The borderline between EI and Nativism is sometimes blurred. For example the celebration of pluralism belongs to both; the portion of the English working class that ignored Labour Party advice and voted to leave the EU is an aberration, and so on. On other occasions there is no blurring, the difference is clear-cut. Scientists are firm that their epistemology and methodology are unified and global; science is an international enlightenment paradigm. Clowns argue that there is one science that is Judeo-Christian; another is indigenous (as though the laws of physics morph at passport control). Scientists and clowns belong on different planets.

An unambiguous Nativist cross-class, cross-ideological political example is the Brexit Leave Camp which brought together the gentry in provincial England (the bedrock Tory vote) and the "give us our country back, let’s get out of the EU" UKIP petty bourgeoisie. The ethics that binds them, despite disparate class characters, is a ‘We are British first, European only second’ identity and emotion.

There are indeed grounds for Europeans - and the poorer the more justified – being fed-up with the EU. Yes the single market is a source of economic strength for industrial and financial capital, not only industrial Germany, the financial pinnacle in the City of London and energetic Poland, but for weaker economies as well. Class-wise, crumbs from the rich man’s affluent table fall on the floor for lower orders to lick. Inequality of wealth and income too is not as grotesque in Europe as in the United States. Notwithstanding all this, austerity, privation, poor housing, unemployment and neediness in the midst of displays of wealth have incited an anti-EU backlash. Even Jeremy Corbyn’s alleged lukewarm stance on European unity I think is a reflection of this widespread perception of the EU as a bosses’ club.

The bigger factor in the Nativist revolt in UK, France, Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden is political. Immigration inflames the gentry, petty bourgeois and jobless worker. Free movement and settlement of people within the EU has opened the door to three million EU migrants in the UK, and many into Germany, France and other parts of Western Europe. Another political grouse is that European elite and Brussels bureaucrats are, it is alleged, attempting to dispense with individual states and forge a single EW-wide supra-state.

If we tie all these threads together the manifest fact is that people have lost faith in political and business establishments, governing elites and political parties of all hues across Europe, America and much of the rest of the world. The ‘system’ is perceived as a club run by political elites who lord it over millions but ignore them and ice the cake for big capital. The hubris of the rich, the political elite and the bureaucracy is detested by the citizenry. Now there are demands for referenda to quit the EU or exit the Euro elsewhere, and if they succeed, loathing of Brussels’ bureaucrats will be no small reason. The demand that people from the Brexiters, the radical left (Bernie Sanders, Spain’s Podemos, Corbyn, or Greece’s Syriza), the European new-right, and the Trump mobs, are all making is a change of the ‘system’ from a top-down project run by global capital and elites into a polity responsive to people’s will. It manifests itself as Nativist ideology when driven by the new-right and as a forward thrust of EI ideals when led by the left.

Though in the context of the Brexit debate I have focussed on the West so far, the EI versus Nativism dichotomy is global, it is universal. One example will do before I turn my attention to Lanka. Daesh (Islamic State) and similar jihadist movements though the most potent and widespread terrorist enterprises history has ever known and despite their global reach, are narrowly sectarian and ideologically constricted. They are clear examples of what I have termed ideological Nativism.

There are those in Lanka who believe (obviously they won’t articulate it openly) that: "If we want to lynch ‘our’ Tamils what bloody business of foreign human rights busybodies is it?" The point is not the morality or otherwise of the sentiments; the point here is that I am locating this mind-set at one extreme of my Nativism versus EI dichotomy. I said a few paragraphs ago that people in many countries have lost faith in political and business establishments, governing elites and political parties of all hues. Lankan Nativism however is not anti-establishment since for the three generations the state itself has affiliated itself with such sentiments and in 1958 and 1983 dipped its own hand in blood. The spurning of the establishment I spoke of is for this reason somewhat skewed in contemporary Lanka.

We did have three anti-establishment movements in the past, two have mellowed and one has been erased. From the mid-1930s to the mid-1960s the LSSP-CP did represent an anti-establishment EI trend to which the appellation Marxism-Leninism with or without the further qualifier ‘revolutionary’ is applied. The second burst was the JVP, twice, and the second occasion, the 1989-90 punchi-aanduva, was the only time in our post-independence history that the state was brought to its knees. The third of course is the battle hardened Tamil nationalism of the LTTE. None of these are now relevant as anti-establishment forces in the way the term is used in this essay. The first has wilted, the second domesticated and the third expunged. Again I am not moralising whether these movements and their transformations are good or not, merely recording the prevailing political landscape.

Lanka fortunately is at least momentarily in atypical distemper unlike much of the West, the Middle East and Africa, and portions of South and Central America where primitive movements are rising. The crazies mobilising around Trump or the European far-right do not use physical violence or terrorism but the damage to the country in question, or the world at large that these forces could do if invested with state power is large. A loony with his finger on the nuclear button in Washington is Armageddon. Lanka’s loonies are, for now at least, on the side-lines.

My theme today is that globally, during the last generation at first gradually and more swiftly in the last decade, the nature of contradiction and conflict has morphed. Traditional modes of engagement have been supplemented by a contradiction between modernist internationalism and nativist nationalism and the emergence of powerful new players - jihdism (and its miniscule relative Sinhala-Buddhist chauvinism) and Western manifestations of an intrinsically analogous phenomenon in Trump and the European new-right.

Let’s do a little thought experiment to illustrate how deep the change is. Imagine that fresh elections are called in the UK in a few months; conjecture that the main contenders in England are the Conservatives under a traditional leader, UKIP led by Nigel Farage and a left-leaning Labour led by Jeremy Corbyn; this assumes he has cleared the Augean Stables of conspirators and moved the party to the left reflecting Bernie Saunders’ programme in America. Here is my hypothesis, assuming that the traditional party, the Tories, win the largest number of seats, which is the most pro-traditional assumption one can make, I hypothesise that UKIP and a left Labour Party, will between them, collect more popular votes than the Tories despite their parliamentary majority or plurality; say 40% poll to traditionalists and 60% to UKIP and Labour between them. If you can grant this as a plausible scenario then I have won the case I have been arguing in this essay, viz.the global political landscape has changed remarkably.

Are We Heading Toward Global Autocracy, Ecological Collapse, Political Malaise?


Are We Heading Toward Global Autocracy, Ecological Collapse, Political Malaise?Jul 09, 2016
What follows are preliminary reactions to both the BREXIT vote and the world according to Trump, but also a commentary on the related alienation of large segments of the public that are being badly served by both the established elites and their demagogic adversaries. The failures of neoliberalism, the successes of digitization, the scourge of random violence, and more broadly, the dilemmas posed by late modernity are among the root causes of this global crisis of legitimate governance, which is deepened while being mishandled by unprecedented ecological challenges, extremely irresponsible geopolitical leadership, and a variety of ultra-nationalist backlashes against the encroachments of economic globalization.

Imagining the World after the Cold War
After the end of the Cold War there were various projections that tried to anticipate the likely future of the world in broad interpretative strokes. Three of the most influential conjectures by three prominent American authors received attention in the public sphere: those of Francis Fukuyama, Samuel Huntington, and Robert Kaplan.
Fukuyama challenged conventional political imagination with his provocative claim that with the collapse of the Soviet version of state socialism and the triumph of capitalist liberalism the world had reached ‘the end of history.’ It was also somewhat dubious that Fukuyama validated his views by reference to the Hegelian contention that history is made by the march and interplay of ideas rather than through the agency of material forces. In this respect history came to a supposedly glorious end because there was no grander possible political vision than that of market-based constitutionalism, epitomized by the American political system. Even the most casual observer of the global scene must have noticed the befogged Western optic through which Fukuyama saw the world.
Huntington, no less provocative or biased, although less comforting for the West, anticipated a ‘the clash of civilizations’ as the sequel to the Cold War, especially stressing the confrontation between the liberal West and the non-West or simply ‘the rest.’ His suggestive emphasis was on blood-soaked fault lines between states, civilizations, and peoples associated with Islam and the Western polities descending from the Enlightenment tradition as it unfolded in Europe, taking root in North America and elsewhere.
Kaplan, also punctured the Fukuyama triumphalist tone of geopolitical serenity, by writing of ‘the coming anarchy,’ the breakdown of order at the level of the state. His views were shaped by perceptions of decolonization leading to ungovernable and essentially non-viable political spaces, particularly in Africa where he regarded many of the post-colonial states as incapable of achieving minimum order within territorial space.
25 years later it appears that each of these authors saw part of the elephant, but none of the three managed to capture this imposing animal in its majestic totality. Fukuyama was importantly correct in positing market-driven liberalism as the hegemonic ideology of the global future for decades to come, and especially so with respect to the ascendancy of the transnational private sector as shaped by financial flows in a borderless world. The universalization of the liberal international order was devised by and for the West after World War II with the overriding goal of avoiding a return of the Great Depression and retaining as many of the benefits of colonialism as possible in the aftermath of its collapse. This globalizing arrangement of economic and political forces proved robust enough to generate sustained economic growth, as well as to crowd out rivals, thereby making itself into ‘the only game in town.’ That this phase of globalization was grossly uneven in the distribution of benefits and burdens was generally overlooked, as was its predatory character as viewed from the perspective of the economic losers.
At the same time, the idea of reaching an endpoint in history even if conceived in Hegelian terms of ideas seemed rather absurd, if not grotesque, to many from its moment of utterance. Given the ideological assault on modernity that has been mounted from the perspective of religion, drawing into question secularism and rationalism, the liberal vision was indeed being challenged from a number of angles. In this regard, transnational terrorism viewed in isolation is a less radical repudiation of Fukuyama’s blueprint for the future than are the various associated challenges to Westphalian territorial sovereignty that have been mounted by Islamic leaders, articulated clearly by both Ayatollah Khomeini and Osama Bin Laden. Both insisted that the territorial sovereignty was not the primary legitimate basis for political community, and indeed put forward less convincing claims to political community than were the organic identities that had been shaped by centries of religious and civilizational traditions and devotional practices.
ISIS added its own version of this world order stance in a less reflective modality. Its leaders gave voice to the view that in the Middle East, in particular, armed struggle was undoing the harm done a hundred years earlier. ISIS bluntly repudiated the territorial legacies and authority of the Sykes-Picot Agreement that in 1916 had carved up the Ottoman Empire to satisfy British and French colonial ambitions. Such European hubris had cast the region adrift by creating governance zones that were, at best, artificial political communities that could only be held together by the iron fist of state power, which if removed would lead to chaos. The effect of giving over the fate of the peoples to the mercies of European colonial powers fractured the natural community of Islam and did away with the more ethnically constituted units (or millets) established by the Ottoman Empire. It is hard to be confident about whether the peoples of the region as of 2016, if left free to choose, would prefer the distortions of imposed Westphalian states or opt for boundaries that better reflected the existential sentiments and values of the current national majorities among those living in the region.
The Unexpected Appeal and Rise of the Reactionary Right
Perhaps, more fundamental in its implications for the future, is the shifting ground shaking the foundations of the edifice of ideas and interest upholding neoliberal globalization. That the ground is shaking has been revealed for most crisis deniers by the surge of populist support that allowed Trump to crush a wide field of Republican presidential aspirants with mainstream party credentials. This astonishing outcome has been strongly reinforced by the electrifying vote by Britain in June 2016 to exit the European Union, so-called BREXIT, and what that portends for Britain, the EU, and even the world.
We can also throw into the new mix the Sanders Phenomenon, essentially a youth revolt against what the man from Vermont kept calling ‘a rigged system’ good for the 1%, horrible for the other 99%, and especially for the bottom 40-60%. We will not grasp the full meaning of what has occurred for years to come, and surely the November 2016 American presidential election will either be a restorative moment for the established socio-economic order or a death warrant portending that radical, most likely disruptive, change is on its way. Should Hilary Clinton win, especially if she wins decisively as even most of the Republican leadership fear and some even wish for, it will quiet some of the voices on right and left calling for change, but only temporarily, and this is the point as the roots of the crisis are far deeper than this or that election or referendum result.
An Establishment Out of Touch
What strikes me most forcefully, aside from these unexpected outcomes, is how out of touch liberal, urban elites seem to be with the sharply alienated mood of the populace as a whole. This first struck me while visiting Cairo in the months after the overthrow of Mubarak in early 2011 when Egyptians across a wide spectrum welcomed change, and were naively expecting the political transition to be managed according to the will of the people by the Supreme Council of the Egyptian Armed Forces. The political analogue to this trust displayed by the leaders of the uprising in the military wing of the former oppressive regime was the widespread expectation that Amr Moussa, Secretary General of the Arab League and once the Foreign Minister under Mubarak e would overwhelm opponents in the promised presidential elections.
Many in Cairo voiced their personal doubts about Moussa’s suitability, complaining of his complicity with the prior regime and wondering whether he had a genuine willingness and capability to push through a liberal agenda of national reform and manage an economic program that offered some hope to the poor and marginalized Egyptian masses. What representatives of the Cairo establishment and even its critics didn’t disagree about was the near certainty of a Moussa victory in the scheduled 2012 presidential elections because no other candidate had comparable name recognition or possessed elite credibility. As it turned out Moussa, despite his acceptability to urban elites, ended up with less than 12% of the vote in the first round, disqualifying him from competing in the second and final round of the electoral process that surprisingly pitted an undisguised Murarak loyalist, Ahmed Shafek, against the candidate of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Morsi. There has been much commentary on this sequence of developments, but what I want to stress is how out of touch the Cairo policymakers and media were with ‘the people’ of Egypt, especially the poor and those living around the country outside the two urban centers of Cairo and Alexandria.
Losing it in America
The utterly unanticipated success of Trump, Sanders, and BREXIT left those who earn their livings by telling us what to think and what will happen in an apparently shell shocked. Because policy wonks can lose their relevance quickly, and maybe their jobs, if they are honest enough to dwell upon their mistaken judgments, they tend to shift the conversation to what these unexpected developments tell us about the vagaries of mass public opinion. They continue to write with the same old assurance and command over details, articulating anew as (un)knowingly as ever their views about what is to come, earning them invitations to influential talk shows and the like. They have no shame. At this moment the prevailing wonk consensus is that Trump cannot possibly win in the national elections next November, and will probably lead the Republicans to a devastating national defeat leaving the party discredited even among its most faithful followers. This scenario has become the latest American version of the liberal wet dream.
What is so far missing, or almost so, from the public discourse is a soul searching assessment of why the underclass anger, why the magnetic appeal of political personalities who are ‘outsiders,’ and why the loopy defensiveness and seeming irrelevance of those who speak softly, wrongly supposing that the voice of reason and moderation will win out. Even now there is little discussion of how best to account for this ‘revolt of the masses,’ why it is happening now and not earlier, as well as what can and should be thought and done.
Sanders alone pointed to the relevance of acute inequality as discrediting the prevailing political order and what the two political parties were offering the American people. He was sensitive to social dislocations caused by this inequality being closely linked to the declining real incomes of the middle classes and the poor. He also recognized that such a downward spiral is further aggravated by a dysfunctionally expensive health system, intolerable burdens of student debt, and a bipartisan willingness to sacrifice the fundamental wellbeing of workers in a deindustrializing America on the altar of free trade. In effect, Sanders was putting before the American people a sharply critical diagnosis of the ills besetting the country together with a laundry list of social democratic correctives.
Trump, despite being himself a major economic predator, has enjoyed this surge of fanatical backing due to his diabolical talent for blaming ‘the other’ for the failures being experienced by large disaffected sectors of the American people. From this paranoid standpoint it becomes almost logical to threaten China with a trade war, to bar all Muslims from entering the country, and to build a high wall that keeps illegal Latinos from coming across the Mexican border as well as getting rid as rapidly as possible all those who managed to enter illegally in the past, and to accomplish this massive dispossession through the medium of cruel and indiscriminate deportation. All of this negativity is given a smiling face by the catchy, yet vauous, Trump slogan “to make America great again.” Such a heartwarming slogan makes Trump into a kind of political alchemist transforming the base metals of xenophobic negativity into the glow that will follow from recovering a lost never existing American positive exceptionalism, which if decoded simply promises to restore a social order presided over by white men.
The Global Landscape
Looking around the world is a disquieting complement to myopic readings of these potentially earth shattering recent developments as happening only in Anglo-American political space. What seems evident is that there are throughout the planet converging trends reflecting some widely shared societal grievances coupled with a mood of disillusionment about the purported achievements and promises of democratic forms of governance. It is difficult to recall that after the Cold War a major aspect of American triumphalism was the confidence that the political embrace of American style democracy (what was then being called ‘market-oriented constitutionalism’) would spread to more and more countries in the world, and that this trend should be welcomed everywhere as an irreversible sign that a higher stage of political evolution had been reached. Bill Clinton liberals were forever talking up ‘enlargement’ (the expanding community of democratic states) while subscribing to the tenuous and vague claims of ‘democratic peace’ (the Kantian idea that democracies do not make war against one another).
Later George W. Bush neocons more belligerently pushed ‘democracy promotion,’ being impatient or distrustful of leaving the future to the workings of internal political dynamics and the flow of history. They held the geopolitically convenient, yet totally ahistorical, belief that military intervention would be popularly received as a liberating gift even by peoples newly freed from the shackles of European colonialism. In 2003, this commitment to coercing a democratic future was put into practice in Iraq, failing miserably and in an incredibly costly manner. Again what should be a cause for reflection is the misperception of the historical circumstances by the American establishment. This belief is abetted by the accompanying false assumption that if democracy is formally established, ex-colonial societies will docilely accept a prolonged foreign occupation of their country while continuing to endure high levels of chronic unemployment and mass poverty, a situation inflamed by national elites wallowing in luxury, having often gained their wealth by rapacious levels of corruption, rewards for serving the foreign occupiers and associated representatives of global capital.
‘It’s the System, Stupid’
If democratization seemed the wave of the global future as seen from the perspective of the 1990s there are now different horizons of expectation that darkly dominate the political imagination with a blending of fear, rage, and despair. What has so far emerged is a series of drastic political moves in a diverse group of countries that is cumulatively leading national governing processes in inward-looking authoritarian directions. Each national narrative can offer its own plausible explanation of such developments by focusing on the particularities of the national situation without paying much attention to external factors.
Yet the fact that such diverse countries share this experience of diminishing democracy and increasing authoritarianism suggests that wider systemic factors are at play. To some extent, this disturbing set of developments is disguised in the constitutional societies of the West where these trends are being validated by popular forces, that is, in full accord with the discipline and legitimacy of what might be understood as procedural democracy, that is, free and fair elections as supplemented by rivalry between political parties, a seemingly free press, referenda, legislation, judicial action, and executive initiatives that appears respectful of the constraints of the rule of law. These authoritarian outcomes should be interpreted mainly as failures of substantive democracy as obscured by the persistence of procedural democracy. This reality is beginning to be perceived by large portions of the population, especially those struggling with poverty, joblessness, and declining standards of living, although it is not articulated by reference to the substantive shortcomings of contemporary democracy. What makes this context so confusing is this tension within democracy between its procedural and substantive dimensions.
These substantive democratic failures of equity and performance are not generally experienced by those leading comfortable lives even if unlike earlier generations, expectations about the future at all levels of society are far less hopeful than during the last decades of the 20th century. Gone are the days when it was widely believed that children would almost certainly fare better than their parents. Those who are experiencing this sharp downturn in expectations are just now awakening to insist upon answers, and the easiest place to find them is through scapegoating. In this regard, the influx of foreign cheap labor is believed, and not always inaccurately, to exert downward pressures on wages and cause disquieting increases in the local crime rate. It also tempts many to regard the present challenges to homeland security as the work of ‘Islamic radicalism,’ while the widening gap between rich and poor is depicted as a mixture of corruption and free trade that pushes jobs out of the country to foreign labor markets with low wages, weak or no unions,lax safety and environmental regulations, and bribery as a way of life.
Although this shift from democratization to autocratization is being mainly experienced as a national phenomenon or as a series of distinct national dramas, the systemic aspects are crucial. An essential part of the socio-economic mixture of causes is the replacement of human labor by machine labor, a process that is accelerating via automation, and likely to increase at a geometrical pace for many years to come. As a result, a new source of chronic unemployment affecting all classes is occurring. Another aggravating feature results from migration flows escaping from war torn regions or from ecological collapse brought about by climate change. Further, the rise and manipulation of transnational terrorism and counterterrorism gives priority to the security agenda, lending support to a vast expansion of state police powers at the expense of societal autonomy and personal freedom.
What such developments portend is the presence of large numbers of desperate people within most national spaces who are blocked in their search for a decent life, are made to feel unnecessary and unwanted or treated, and are regarded as a burdensome democratic surplus by the established order. All that most of these persons want is social change and a recovery of their sense of societal worth, creating a frightening vulnerability to the siren calls of demagogues. Such a pattern is already visible on the global stage, although it tends to be blurred by relying on this still dominant optic of state-by-state developments that suppresses the reality of systemic pressures, and diverts attention from the kind of radical political therapy that is needed.
Current global trends exhibit two equally devastating approaches, which are in some settings combined. The most prevalent tendency is to mandate the state to impose order at any cost involving increasing levels of coercion, reinforced by intrusive surveillance, seeking its own legitimacy by claiming fear-mongering alarmism and through scapegoating of immigrants, Muslims, and all outsiders, those ethnically and religiously ‘other.’ A complementary tendency is associated with the demagogic arousal of populist masses that also mandate the state to carry out similar kinds of order-maintaining policies. In effect, the somewhat more cosmopolitan middle is being squeezed between the elites seeking to withstand anti-establishment politics and the aroused masses eager to smash the established order. Both sources of anti-democratic pressure favor closing borders, building walls, and deporting those whose very existence assaults nativist conceptions of the nation.
As previously assessed, procedural democracy is not currently much of an obstacle in the face of various populist embraces of proto-fascist political appeals that is offering aspiring demagogues a field day. The advocacy of extremist, simplistic, and violent solutions to complex problems is on the rise, and yet we should know that the present agenda of concerns cannot be effectively addressed until a structural analysis is acted upon and the neoliberal underpinning of the status quo is significantly adjusted. A correct political diagnosis would emphasize the alienating shortcomings of substantive democracy given the degree to which neoliberal capitalism is seen as responsible for accentuating inequality, corruption, and downward standards of living for the majority leaving many without adequate material security as it relates to employment, shelter, health, and education.
Overall as the world confronts such challenges as climate change, diminishing biodiversity, and nuclear weaponry that are cumulatively threatening humanity with catastrophe, this emergent reality of global autocracy may be the worst news of all.
By Richard Falk
https://www.transcend.org-