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

Friday, June 30, 2017

New houses for families in landslide high risk areas

New houses for families in landslide high risk areas

Jun 30, 2017

Cabinet approval has been granted to provide financial assistance to buy land and houses or grant houses from government housing projects for families who live in areas that are highly at risk of landslides.

Reports say 14,680 such families have so far been identified in nine districts. They are to be given houses in safe areas as their present ones are exposed to danger during heavy rains.

SriLankan Airlines: Compromising Flight Safety Chairman Dias Adamant In Passing Out CEO Ratwatte Despite Hushed Safety Blunder

SriLankan Airlines Chairman Ajith Dias despite compromising flight safety training is hell bent on having his CEO Capt. Suren Ratwatte passed out as a qualified Airbus 320 pilot, even if it means he has to tender his resignation.
Ajith Dias
This is after his deputy CEO Ratwatte was involved in a serious ‘tail strike’ blunder during his Simulator Training which was not documented by his handpicked and appointed Instructor Capt. Mohan Pragasam.
The saga in granting of a virtual scholarship to the CEO costing the tax payer around US $ 50,000, has now snowballed to such an effect that Chairman Ajith Dias has in an unprecedented move ordered Capt. Rajind Ranantunga the Head of Flight Operations to hand over the entire Crew Rostering Department to Pradeepa Kekualawela the airline’s Head of Human Resources.
According to an email sent by the Chairman to Capt. Rajind Ranatunga his instructions was that this transfer process be completed and made effective from 1st of July 2017.
This is after Capt. Ranatunga had only a few days ago written to CEO Ratwatte and asked him to ‘back off’, after the CEO had muscled his way and got his assigned Line Flying Instructor changed to an Instructor of his choice for his first flight scheduled for the 12th of July 2017.
Earlier Capt. Ratwatte had also used his authority and had selected Instructors of his preference to visit his office at the World Trade Center and conduct personal Ground School Training Classes, besides seeking the help of two Simulator Instructor Captains to conduct his Simulator Training and Final Check.
This is where it came to light that Capt. Mohan Pragasam a retired Captain compromising flight safety had refrained from documenting the incident involving CEO Ratwatte, when he had hit the tail of the aircraft on the ground, during his training phase.
Meanwhile the Board of Directors shot down Chairman Dias’ idea of transferring the Crew Scheduling Department to Human Resources, when it was brought up for discussion at the Board Meeting last Thursday. The Board of Directors also declined to approve of a further promotion to HHR Pradeepa Kekulawela which was proposed by Chairman Dias, when it was brought up too for discussion and approval.
Chairman Dias despite not having his Board of Directors approval is still going ahead with his decision. He now claims that he does not require approval of the Board of Directors when making an internal restructure and reallocation of processes as and when deemed necessary by the airline. Incidentally even the approval of the Director General Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka has not been sought regarding this issue.
As a global aviation practice majority of the world’s successful airlines bring the Crew Scheduling Department under the responsibility of a Post Holder of the airline or the Flight Operational Department Head, as many functions conducted by Crew Rostering require the blessings of the Civil Aviation Authority of each respective country.
Meanwhile Colombo Telegraph reliably learns that this sinister move being currently implemented by Chairman Dias, is to help facilitate the smooth training and passing out of the CEO Suren Ratwatte’s Airbus 320 conversion training and rating to fly the much smaller aircraft as opposed to the double decker Airbus 380 he once flew when employed with Emirates Airline.
Capt. Ranatunga is due to officially inform the Airline Pilots Guild of Sri Lanka of this move this coming Tuesday only after the process is fully implemented.
Meanwhile in a startling revelation Colombo Telegraph reliably learns that during his Simulator Training, Capt. Suren Ratwatte had been involved in a ‘tail strike’. A tail strike is when the tail of the aircraft hits the runway during the phases of either a takeoff or landing maneuver.
The sensitivity involving the training of a CEO and the reporting of such safety flaws and moreover the covering up of such incidents causes serious violations and compromises flight safety.

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Uma Oya project: USD 248Mn misappropriated – activist-‘Who shared commissions?’

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Tennakoon

by Shamindra Ferdinando- 

Following a massive public protest in the Bandarawela town early this week against unprecedented environmental problems caused by Uma Oya project, a leading civil society organisation yesterday alleged that as much as USD 248 mn had been misappropriated by the politicians and officials who launched it during the previous SLFP-led UPFA administration.

The protest, backed by all political parties, drew large crowds from various parts of the Badulla District. Having joined the protect, Badulla District UNP MP Chaminda Wijesiri assured the crowd that he would sit as an independent member in Parliament unless the government took immediate measures to provide relief to the affected.

Executive Director of CAFFE (Campaign for Free and Fair Election) and Anti-Corruption Front (ACF) advisor Rajith Keerthi Tennakoon yesterday told The Island that the government should immediately launch an inquiry into the Uma Oya project.

Tennakoon participated in the Bandawela protest.

Tennakoon insisted that there was absolutely no basis for the Uma Oya water being diverted to Hambantota.

The CAFFE Executive Director claimed that the Uma Oya development had been approved in spite of a cost overrun of USD 248 mn during the same administration.

Tennakoon said President Maithripala Sirisena’s pledge to bring in foreign experts to address the issue did not make sense. He called for an examination of the role played by Iran which provided funds for the project.

According to him, a Canadian consultancy firm had estimated the cost of the project at USD 155 mn in 2005-2006 though it was significantly increased by Iran resulting in disagreement with Sri Lanka, Tennakoon said. Emphasising that those who had represented Sri Lanka at negotiations with the Iranians had strongly objected the move to push the cost beyond USD 300 mn, Tennakoon said that within six months later the then government finalised the project at a staggering cost of USD 548 mn. Iran has assured 85 per cent of the funding whereas Sri Lanka provided the rest.

Claiming that he had been able to collect a lot of information about the Uma Oya project, Tennakoon said that it would be pertinent to question Sri Lankan officials who in consultation with Iranian experts in Dec 2008 recommended the implementation of the project at a cost of USD 548 mn. Although the then Irrigation Secretary A.D. S. Gunawardena objected to the joint proposal, the government gave the go ahead.

Tennakoon said Gunawardena could be requested to provide a statement to police investigators and on the basis of his statement further action could be taken.

Iran stepped in three years after the Canadian estimate.

Tennakoon alleged that corrupt politicians had put pressure on officials to go ahead with the project without being bothered about cost. "Political pressure led to Irrigation Secretary A. D. S. Gunawardena quitting his post on January 9, 2009," Tennakoon said, adding that in his letter of resignation, Gunawardena had declared that he had decided to resign as he couldn’t sign an agreement which caused the country to incur an additional expenditure of USD 248 mn.

Tennakoon said Gunawardena had received appreciation as the senior irrigation engineer responsible for rehabilitation of Parakrama Samudraya following the breaching of its bund some years back.

Tennakoon said the project received environmental impact assessment reports on April 12, 2011 after the government had given the go ahead. He questioned the validity of securing environmental impact assessment reports after launching such a project.

Tennakoon said all documents pertaining to Uma Oya project could be easily found and most importantly as those supported and opposed were still in the land of the living they could be questioned. Responding to another query, Tennakoon said that he was ready to face the consequences if he could be proved wrong.

GMOA (Govt. Medical Oppressors Association) contracts AIDS ! Seemingly there is no cure for that !


LEN logo.(Lanka-e-News - 30.June.2017, 11.45PM) The GMOA (Government Medical Officers association)  now dubbed  Government Medical Oppressors Association has  once again contracted AIDS,   ‘Acquired Intelligence Deficiency Strike’  syndrome . The GMOA which is supposedly comprising doctors who are being paid by the government to  spend their time on treating and curing patients , rather than waste their time on strikes like idlers and street loafers have once again threatened to stage an indefinite strike to put lives of patients in dire jeopardy , and to the detriment of the entire country.
The  GMOA now says it has not agreed  with any of the proposals pertaining to  the acquisition of SAITM by the government . It is well to recall Dr. monster   Padeniya’s   GMOA which has all along proved going by their (mis)conduct ,as an association of medical oppressors and not medical officers  called off the indefinite strike it staged earlier on of its own accord  after their face saving secret discussions with the president came to light , and amidst  the mounting threats of their getting manhandled by the justifiably provoked public  .
Meanwhile minister Champika at the recent cabinet meeting revealed , since SAITM issue is now before court , holding discussions with the GMOA is of no relevance  or consequence.  Moreover , the standard of medical education should be discussed only with the Sri Lanka (SL) Medical Council , Deans of the faculties of medicine and the medical  specialists association.
The minister also informed the cabinet , it serves no point or purpose discussing the standard of medical education with trade unions pursuing  political agendas . Minister of health Rajitha Senaratne at the media discussion to reveal cabinet decisions pointed out , the cabinet has still not concurred in the proposals of Champika.
Meanwhile sports minister the policy less cabinet spokesman Dayasiri Jayasekera whose  mouth is as large as that of a spittoon and talks more nonsense  than sense if he opens his cavernous mouth , oblivious of  his cabinet ministerial responsibilities and the decisions of the cabinet made a diametrically opposing statement that the SAITM must be closed down.  This sports minister to whom his foolish behavior is also a sport and play  said, the students are eager to get baton charged by the police during demonstrations because of their desire to get their photos published in the newspapers the following day. 
At all events , at the crucial hour when the country is threatened with a dengue epidemic , the GMOA mafia playing with the lives of helpless and hapless patients is most abominable , despicable and deplorable . The  people must therefore teach these medical oppressors masquerading  as medical officers not one but many   lessons of their life time ,and put a full stop to the AIDS (acquired intelligence deficiency strike ) syndrome of the  GMOA mafia  . The public must meet  them face to face , and ask from these doctor monsters ‘how many more lives  do you wish to sacrifice  before you decide to cure your own AIDS  sickness ?’  Otherwise these ruthless monsters calling themselves doctors will send all the patients not back home cured  but to the grave .
The bottom line is , when monster doctors   become   mentally sick , they must be treated as patients before they are greeted as humans . Going by the misconduct  of the GMOA and its leaders , it is obvious the SAITM  issue has made these GMOA medical oppressors mental patients . Hence before they are greeted as medics by the president , prime minister and the people they must be treated as lunatics ,and cured. 


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by     (2017-07-01 00:30:48)

Udayanga’s passports impounded

Lakmal Sooriyagoda-Saturday, July 1, 2017
The Colombo Fort Magistrate yesterday, ordered to impound two passports belonging to former Ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga in the magisterial inquiry pertaining to the controversial MiG aircraft transaction.
Accordingly, a diplomatic passport bearing number D 3643585 and a general passport bearing number N 5400885 issued by the Sri Lankan government to Udayanga Weeratunga were ordered to be impounded by Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne in accordance with Section 124 of the Criminal Procedure Code and Section 51 C of the Immigrants and Emigrants Act.
The FCID conducting investigations into the controversial MiG aircraft transaction informed Court that they have sought the assistance of Interpol to trace former Ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga who is currently living in United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The FCID informed Court that they were yet to ascertain Udayanga’s exact address in UAE and further said he has visited multiple countries including Japan using passports issued by Sri Lankan government.
FCID Chief Inspector Nihal Francis made request to impound two passports belonging to Udayanga Weeratunga as it may deem necessary to procure the attendance of the accused.
“We have recorded a statement from Deputy Minister Arundika Fernando about a meeting with Udayanga Weeratunga in Japan.
Deputy Minister Arundika Fernando had admitted to having met with Udayanga Weeratunga in Japan,” Chief Inspector added.
Colombo Fort Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne had earlier issued a warrant through the Interpol for the arrest of former Ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga, a first cousin of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa over alleged financial fraud that is alleged to have taken place in procuring seven MiG-27 ground attack craft for the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLFA). The FCID conducting investigations into the MiG aircraft transaction had named Udayanga Weeratunga as a suspect in the case through a B report dated October 11, 2016. The FCID sought a warrant written in English through the Interpol from the Fort Magistrate’s Court to arrest former Ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga over alleged financial fraud that is alleged to have taken place in procuring seven MiG-27 ground attack craft for the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLFA). The FCID told Court that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was unable to serve notices on Udayanga Weeratunga who has been residing in Ukraine for several years.
The FCID had informed Court that Udayanga Weeratunga had directly intervened into the questionable transaction in procuring MiG-27 ground attack craft. The FCID said the deal amounted to US$14 million. On June 9, 2016, the Colombo Fort Magistrate had issued notices on Weeratunga to appear in Court July 15 but he did not turn up.The FCID had told Court that they were investigating whether the former Sri Lankan ambassador in Russia had invested money in a company called Sri Lankan Limited Liability Company in Moscow, which were allegedly earned through the Mig-27 transaction. The FCID launched this investigation following a complaint lodged by defence columnist and political writer Iqbal Athas.
In his complaint to the FCID, journalist Iqbal Athas stated that he had written several articles regarding the financial irregularities that had taken place in procuring four Mig-27 aircraft at a higher price. He told the police that these ground attack aircrafts had been manufactured between 1980 and 1983. He said financial irregularities had taken place during the transaction between Sri Lank and Ukraine. 
UK's largest Palestine group removed from global 'terrorism list'


Thousands attended marches organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in 2014 (AFP)

Areeb Ullah's pictureAreeb Ullah-Friday 30 June 2017


Palestine Solidarity Campaign had accounts frozen in 2015 after being added to 'World-Check' list due to claims on right-wing blogs

The UK's largest Palestinian rights group has been removed from a non-governmental "terrorism" watch list that led to its bank accounts being closed by leading financial institutions.
The Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) said its lawyers had successfully fought to have the group and its chairman, Hugh Lanning, taken off World-Check list, to which it had been added in 2015 based on what it said were "smears" and false claims of links to terrorism.
The World-Check database, a subsidiary of Thomson Reuters, apologised to the group and said that it should never have been included on the database, according to lawyers representing the PSC. 
Global financial institutions use World-Check to risk assess individuals who use or intend to use their services. However, several British organisations and individuals have successfully fought inclusion, citing "unfounded allegations" and lack of evidence.
Lanning said he believed his inclusion was partly influenced by smears from "the Israeli government and its supporters".
"I hope the government and their supporters follow this good example and stop repeating unfounded smears about the PSC and its members," he said.
"We expect the media to take note of the vindication and rethink printing smears made without qualification, as was done following my deportation from Israel.
"I am pleased that World-Check agreed it was wrong to include my name in the database as there are no grounds for me being associated with terrorism."
Ravi Naik, who represented PSC, said the group "should not have been on the database" and that it was put on the list based on "unfounded allegations".
They added: "Our clients maintain that they do not present any financial risk and the agreement reached between them and World-Check regarding the profile has vindicated this position.”
In a statement to Middle East Eye, Thomson Reuters said that all its profiles on World-Check are reviewed on an ongoing basis and that it will take action to ensure "their complete accuracy".
"A clear privacy statement online sets out our commitment and our obligations to the regulatory authorities," the statement said. "It also explains how to contact us in order to review a profile or discuss its amendment. We investigate all such requests fully and would urge anyone with concerns to contact us." 
No immediate reason, however, was given as to why the PSC was put on the list. An investigation by VICE News suggested the organisation was accused of links with terrorists by right-wing blogs based in America. 
Each terrorism profile compiled by Thomson Reuters includes a list of the sources of information used by World-Check when compiling the profile.
World-Check's literature explains that as well as listing sanctioned and convicted individuals, it lists individuals "facing charges, but not yet convicted".
Those include including anyone "accused, investigated, arrested, charged, indicted, detained, questioned or on trial" for World-Check listed crimes. 
The listed crimes include terrorism, hostage-taking, slave labour and sexual exploitation of children.
Other organisations such as rights group CAGE and numerous Muslim organisations in Britain have had their bank accounts shut down after being arbitrarily placed on the World-Check database. 
Earlier this year, the Finsbury Park mosque in north London won damages from the organisation of £10,000, after it had been placed on the list for allegedly having links with terrorist activities. 
The mosque had its bank accounts frozen without any reason being given. 
In a statement to MEE after the Finsbury Park decision, Thomson Reuters said that World-Check was based on sanctions data from official bodies and "reliable and reputable public domain sources".
"We also provide secondary identifying information on individuals, such as dates and place of birth, and this will be similarly verified with reputable and official sources," it said.
"If blog content appears, it is only as a supporting source for that secondary information, and we make that clear."

Mahmoud Abbas’ high stakes gamble in Gaza


Mahmoud Abbas — in his 13th year of a four-year presidential term — has lost any semblance of popular legitimacy. Ashraf AmraAPA images

Omar Karmi- 27 June 2017

The English philosopher John Locke wrote one of the first recorded warnings we know of the unforeseen consequences of a policy proposal, a rather dry, admonitory letter dated 7 November 1691 to an unnamed member of the British parliament about interest rates.

The application to the social sciences and politics of a law of unintended consequences had to wait another two-and-a-half centuries before gaining popular currency, however, with the publication in 1936 of Robert K. Norton’s essay “The Unanticipated Consequences of Purposive Social Action.”

Some 66 years later, the idea was given a contemporary twist (in every sense) by Donald Rumsfeld’s attempt to explain what the US administration – in which he served as secretary of defense at the time – could and couldn’t say about the impending invasion of Iraq. (He neglected to mention that one of the “known unknowns” was the existence of any weapons of mass destruction or indeed any program to pursue such munitions in Iraq, the subsequent war’s very casus belli.)

The invasion of Iraq and all that followed may stand as the mother of all examples of the law of unintended consequences. Its effects are still tearing through a region today that is more sharply divided between Sunnis and Shiites (read: Saudi Arabia and Iran) than ever before. It helped set in motion the latest such ripple, the ostracism by Saudi Arabia and its allies of Qatar.

The latest crisis forced on Gaza by Israel and the Palestinian Authority has also produced unexpected side effects. Notably, it has prompted Hamas to cooperate with a previously bitter rival.

High stakes

The decision by Mahmoud Abbas, head of the Palestinian Authority, to suspend payments to Israel for electricity for Gaza was made back in April.

That month, the Fatah-led, occupied West Bank-based PA also decided to reinstate taxes on fuel destined for Gaza, leaving Hamas, which administers the coastal strip, unable to pay.

This caused the shutdown of Gaza’s only power plant, which was already operating at reduced capacity due to damage sustained in repeated Israeli bombardments over the past 11 years and reduced the amount of electricity available to Palestinians in Gaza to four hours a day.

April – clearly the cruelest month – also saw the PA slash funding to Gaza’s hospitals and clinics as well as put into effect a salary cut of between 30 to 70 percent to public sector employees who had hitherto been paid to stay home rather than work for a Hamas administration, but whose salaries have provided a vital stream of revenue in the impoverished Gaza Strip.

The PA has long argued that Hamas has been diverting money from taxes for its own ends rather than pay for fuel. But the ultimate intention was clear and explicit: the PA was going to squeeze Hamas financially to secure concessions that would allow the West Bank leadership to regain some measure of control over Gaza 10 years after Hamas quelled a Fatah insurgency sparked by the Islamist movement’s parliamentary election victory in 2006.

Hussein Sheikh, head of the PA’s civil affairs committee, stated: “We are not going to continue financing the Hamas coup in Gaza.”

But this is a high stakes gamble. Abbas is effectively prepared to look like he is making common cause with Israel against Hamas while playing politics with the welfare of two million Palestinians. He does so to no obvious end, and offering no alternative. There is no peace process and Israeli settlement building in the West Bank continues apace.

If the PA president thought this was the way to curry favor with the US administration of Donald Trump, a blazing row with Washington over welfare payments to families of prisoners, as well as the Trump administration’s general unpredictability, should put paid to that notion.

My enemy’s enemy

Moreover, two can play the “the enemy of my enemy is my friend” game. Abbas may have hoped that there would be an uprising against Hamas in Gaza, but he surely couldn’t have expected it. He may have hoped for a conflagration with Israel that would achieve what three previous all-out military assaults failed to do and dislodge Hamas from power. But that too would have been a far from certain outcome and Israel has already said it does not want to be dragged into any such confrontation.

What Abbas could not have foreseen – here’s that law of unintended consequences – is an unlikely alliance between Hamas and Muhammad Dahlan, the erstwhile Gaza security chief, sworn enemy of Hamas and longstanding Abbas rival who was sacked from Fatah in 2011 amid corruption charges that were eventually dropped.

But that is exactly what is happening.

Earlier this month, Hamas publicly called for the establishment of a “national rescue front” to challenge the PA and announced an agreement to cooperate with Dahlan. Meetings have already taken place in Egypt, and Dahlan is seen as instrumental in forging the agreement with Egypt that saw Cairo deliver 1.1 million liters of diesel fuel for Gaza’s power station on 21 June.

leaked document publicized this week now suggests Dahlan could become the leader of Gaza’s government under a secret agreement with Hamas.

This is quite a turnaround for both parties. Dahlan was not just any senior Fatah official in Gaza. He was the senior Fatah security leader in Gaza in 2007 and instrumental in leading Fatah into conflict with Hamas after the latter had won parliamentary elections in 2006.
The eventual insurgency was supported by the US and was meant to nip Hamas rule in the bud.

New doors open

Much will depend on whether Egypt keeps up fuel deliveries, and whether these can be both sustainable and paid for. But Cairo has its own interests. Egypt wants order in the Sinai, where it has been battling a self-styled Islamic State group for several years, and believes Hamas can help.

Hamas has for some time been keen to improve relations with Cairo – which operates the only crossing into Gaza not directly controlled by Israel. Relations had suffered dramatically after the military coup that ousted Muhammad Morsi, the democratically elected Egyptian president, in 2013, and saw Abdulfattah al-Sisi seize power and then outlaw Morsi’s Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.
Notable in this context, but not much remarked upon at the time, was the publication earlier this year of a new Hamas charter that omits any mention of the wider Muslim Brotherhood.

Instead, the document stresses Hamas’ role as a national liberation movement and explicitly condemns any outside interference in Palestinian decision making. In effect, the charter saw the Palestinian Islamists formally sever ties with the regional Muslim Brotherhood.

Hamas needs international support: its charter was a clear attempt at making the movement more acceptable to outside, but especially regional, actors. Qatar’s current isolation makes this need acute.
An alliance between Hamas and Dahlan opens the door for the United Arab Emirates, which hosts and supports the former Fatah official, to step into a breach that has hitherto been filled by Qatar’s financial assistance.

Moreover, the so-called Arab Quartet – the UAE, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan – was frustrated by Abbas’ refusal before last year’s seventh Fatah general conference to make nice with Dahlan, who appears to be the Gulf states’ favored candidate to succeed Abbas, an octogenarian smoker.

What that will mean for Hamas is not clear. What it means for Palestinians generally is also not obvious, though as the Saudi-led Gulf Cooperation Council countries and Israel have been casting come hither glances at each other, the signs are not propitious.

A crisis of legitimacy

What it could mean for Abbas seems less difficult to discern. Rather than facing an outcast and isolated Islamist movement struggling to feed the population over which it exercises control, he may well face a new alliance of wealthy Gulf states, Egypt, Fatah dissidents and a Hamas movement bent on payback.

Abbas did get one calculation correct: there was no discernible protest in the West Bank at the decision to cut electricity payments for Gaza. That should not be mistaken for support for the move, however. Ten years of division and enforced physical separation have rendered Palestinians divided not just politically but emotionally. Gaza is almost like a foreign country.

More importantly, though, Palestinians in the West Bank are wary of a PA security apparatus that has become increasingly draconian in quelling dissent. Just this month, the PA shut down 11 websites, all allegedly affiliated to Hamas or Dahlan, even if officials denied a political motivation.

Poll after poll after poll after poll find that more than 60 percent of Palestinians want Abbas to resign, even in the absence of a popular alternative.

It’s one thing to be less popular than a rival. It’s quite another to lose out to no one in particular. What the polls and the resort to authoritarianism both suggest is that Abbas – in his 13th year of a four-year presidential term – has lost any semblance of popular legitimacy.

Abbas might do worse than to brush up on his John Locke. Back in 1690, before he fired off his aforementioned turgid letter, Locke published his Two Treatises of Government, the core of his political philosophy.

No political authority is absolute, the philosopher argued. It rests ultimately on the consent of the governed. Not only can that consent, Locke said, be withdrawn. Under the right circumstances, there is a right to revolution.

He wrote:

“And thus the Community perpetually retains a Supream Power of saving themselves from the attempts and designs of any Body, even of their Legislators, whenever they shall be so foolish, or so wicked, as to lay and carry on designs against the Liberties and Properties of the Subject.”


Omar Karmi is a former Jerusalem and Washington, DC, correspondent for The National newspaper.

Hitler’s American Model: The United States & The Making Of Nazi Race Law

Prof. Charles Sarvan
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Book Review – James Whitman, Hitler’s American Model: The United States and the Making of Nazi Race LawPrinceton and Oxford, 2017
Hannah Arendt in The Origins of Totalitarianism states that one of the major contributions of the Western world has been “race-thinking”, as distinct from “class-thinking”. Race is a political, and not a biological, concept. ‘Race’, a concept without scientific foundation, does not lead to racism; rather it’s racism that creates race. Ta-Nehisi Coates writes in Between the World and Me that racism is not the innocent product of Mother Nature; race is not the father of racism but its child. And, Whitman observes (p. 117), unfortunately even mentally gifted individuals are not immune from the sickness of racism.
Whitman, a Professor of Law at Yale, is meticulously careful not to over-state the case in his study: influence does not mean exact imitation but, rather, selective borrowing and adaptation. The Nazis were not demons who suddenly erupted on stages: there were traditions within which they worked, continuities, examples and inspirations (p. 15). It must be borne in mind that contemporary Germany rests on the moral foundation of refusing to deny responsibility for what happened under the Nazis (ibid). Germany has repeatedly acknowledged guilt, expressed contrition, paid reparation. One recalls Willie Brandt, Chancellor of Germany, spontaneously kneeling (7 December 1970) at the monument to the victims of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. It was a silent but brave and eloquent gesture, most unusual for a head of state. Equally, it may seem strange to see America as an inspiration for the Nazis because the USA soon fought Germany, and has long set itself as a bastion of freedom and democracy (p. 140).
James Whitman, Hitler’s American Model: The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law, Princeton and Oxford, 2017
But in the 1930s, Nazi Germany and ‘Jim Crow’ America were similar in that both were “unapologetically racist regimes”. For example, “American blacks being de jure citizens, were de facto second class” (p. 39) while Nazi Germany had Reichsbürger who possessed full rights and mere StaatsangehörigeAmerica was for the Nazis an excellent example of a country with racist legislation and practice. Prior to the Shoah, sporadic riots and attacks on Jews, condoned but not organised by the State, were equated with the lynch-mobs in America: one recalls the song  “Strange fruit grows on Southern trees”, made famous by the 1939 Billie Holliday recording (now available on the ‘Net’). Hitler admired the way Americans had killed and reduced millions of Native Americans to a few hundred, and kept the modest remnant under observation in cages: Hitler, quoted on p. 9. (In passing, I would draw attention to The Other Slavery: The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America by Andres Resendez, 2016.) To the Nazis, the very foundation of America was a fateful turning point in the worldwide rise of white domination:  the US Naturalization Act of 1790 opened naturalization to “any alien, being a free white person” (p. 34).  “America may have been the global leader in the creation of racist law, well known and much cited long before Hitler came to power” (p. 70). Germans paid “studious scholarly attention to American immigration Law”” (52), “hailing America as a forerunner of Nazism” (p. 54). On 23 September 1935, forty-five leading Nazi lawyers sailed to America on a first-hand study-tour (p. 132) because in the early twentieth century, America was “the leading racist jurisdiction” (p. 138, original emphasis). Characteristic of race-thinking the world over, a very small minority (here, the blacks) were seen as trying to “get the upper hand” (67).
But the nefandus (such shame or evil that it cannot be spoken of) both for Americans and Nazis was inter-racial sexual relationships outside and within marriage; more precisely, between individuals of different skin pigmentation. (Often what is meant by a “race” problem in the West means a “problem” of colour difference. Elsewhere, I have suggested that in such contexts, “colourism” is a more accurate word than “racism”.) Of course, American society turned a blind eye on children born of the rape of slave women: the incidence was too common.

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Don’t sugarcoat this. Trump just called for 32 million people to lose health coverage.


(Evan Vucci/Associated Press)



THE MORNING PLUM:

President Trump’s profound ignorance about policy and the inner workings of our system, and his total disinterest in informing himself about these topics, have produced an unfortunate result: Many of his tweets about matters of substance tend to get ignored as Trump just being Trump. Meanwhile, the viscerally disgusting insults (such as the one claiming Mika Brzezinski bled from her face-lift) make international news.

But Trump’s tweet this morning about health care actually does matter, a lot:
If Republican Senators are unable to pass what they are working on now, they should immediately REPEAL, and then REPLACE at a later date!
This is getting a lot of attention today, but mainly as a call for Republicans to adopt a particular legislative strategy. As such, it makes little sense: Republicans are struggling to find 50 votes for their current repeal-and-replace bill, with many moderates balking, so it’s hard to see how outright repeal could get a bare majority.

Beyond this, though, it’s worth taking Trump’s tweet as an actual policy statement. Trump has now called for total repeal of the Affordable Care Act, with no guarantee of any specific replacement later, or even a guarantee that any replacement would ever materialize at all.

The Republicans' time-crunched effort to pass a health-care bill is hitting a lot of resistance in the Senate. The Post's Paige Cunningham explains five key reasons the party is struggling to move their plan forward. (Video: Jenny Starrs/Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

It’s hard to estimate what would happen if Republicans did act on this and Trump signed it. Republicans probably wouldn’t be able to repeal some key portions of the Affordable Care Act — particularly its insurance-market regulations — via a simple majority “reconciliation” vote. But they could theoretically repeal things with a budgetary orientation, such as the individual mandate and the Medicaid expansion and the subsidies to lower-income people why buy insurance on the exchanges.
We can estimate the impact of repealing those things. Indeed, the Congressional Budget Office has already done so, when it analyzed a previous version of a GOP repeal bill over a year ago. And that analysis found that repealing those things would result in 32 million people losing coverage by 2026, 19 million of them people who would lose Medicaid coverage.

President Trump and his advisors claim spending for Medicaid will continue to increase under the Senate health-care proposal. CBO projections suggest otherwise. (Video: Meg Kelly/Photo: Julio Negron/The Washington Post)

This is unequivocally what Trump has now called for. And it is substantially worse than what is currently being debated in the Senate, which would result in 22 million people losing coverage over 10 years, 15 million of them from Medicaid, per the CBO.

“When Republicans floated their repeal bill back in 2016, CBO concluded that 32 million people would lose coverage, relative to the current baseline, by 2026,” Nicholas Bagley, a health policy expert at the University of Michigan, emailed me today. “Fully 19 million people would be kicked off of Medicaid. Those coverage losses are even grimmer than the losses from the House and Senate bills that are currently under discussion.”

Whether Trump meant this or not, or even knew what he was calling for, are irrelevant. That’s because it could theoretically happen. In fact, conservative senators such as Rand Paul of Kentucky and Ben Sasse of Nebraska are actively calling on fellow Republicans to go forward with repeal alone right now. Sasse doubled down by tweeting an endorsement of Trump’s demand.

Trump, it pains me to inform you, is the president. When he calls on Congress to do something, he is basically saying that he would sign it if they did do it. There is no reason to treat this as trivial or frivolous simply because Trump is an ignoramus and a buffoon. Indeed, Republicans have in fact voted for repeal multiple times in the past. The only reason they aren’t doing so right now is because repeal cannot pass, now that there is a Republican in the White House who would actually sign such a bill. (Yes, Trump would sign such a bill in two seconds. He called for one today, remember?)

In this sense, Trump’s tweet is actually kind of useful. It reveals once again that Republicans have been running a massive scam on Obamacare for years. They constantly fulminated for repeal, and voted repeatedly for it, in the full knowledge that President Barack Obama would veto it and that they would not face the consequences of their rhetoric and vote. The promise of unspecified replacements allowed Republicans to claim they would act to make sure millions didn’t lose coverage, without saying how. But now that repeal could become a reality, they are no longer willing to vote for it, because they would be held accountable for those consequences. By calling for straight-up repeal right now, Trump has inadvertently called their bluff.

Indeed, it’s not even clear that Senate Republicans can pass repeal and replace, because it has become obvious that even this would result in many millions losing health coverage, extracting an immense human toll that is now a genuine possibility. Moderate Republican senators have conceded this to be the case, and their seemingly genuine qualms about this constitute a pleasant surprise. But Republicans who have no serious misgivings about such an awful outcome have resorted, for political reasons, to all manner of lies and obfuscation to obscure this reality.

This includes Trump and the White House, who have dissembled relentlessly about how their plan would leave everybody covered and wouldn’t cut Medicaid at all. But now Trump has confirmed that he is indeed for full repeal, full stop — which would result in 32 million fewer covered — without any guaranteed “replacement” providing any cover to advance the lie that millions wouldn’t lose coverage. Trump has unmasked his own scam.

* BLEEDING-HEART REPUBLICANS OBJECT TO TAXES ON RICH: Note how Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) is now criticizing the GOP health bill:
“It’s not equitable to have a situation where you’re increasing the burden on lower-income citizens and lessening the burden on wealthy citizens. That’s not a proposition that is sustainable, and I think leadership knows that.”
That’s nice, but there is no way the final bill will not do this to a great extent, even if they throw a bit more  spending into it. Yet Corker will still vote “yes” in the end.
* IS WHITE HOUSE PLANNING TRADE WARS? Axios reports that at a tense meeting this week, top White House officials debated whether to launch trade wars by seeking to boost tariffs on steel and other imports. Trump and top adviser Stephen K. Bannon favor this. But:
More than 75% of those present … were adamantly opposed, arguing it was bad economics and bad global politics. At one point, Trump was told his almost entire cabinet thought this was a bad idea. But everyone left the room believing the country is headed toward a major trade confrontation. The reason, we’re told: Trump’s base — which drives more and more decisions, as his popularity sinks — likes the idea, and will love the fight.
We’ll find out soon enough how real this is, but for now, the disturbing thing is that it is perfectly plausible that this actually is the “thinking.”
* DEBUNKING WHITE HOUSE NONSENSE ABOUT MEDICAID: Trump and the White House like to say that the health bill wouldn’t actually “cut” Medicaid, because spending would still rise more slowly. Michelle Ye Hee Lee sets the record straight:
In 2017, the federal government spent $393 billion on Medicaid. If no change is made to the current law, that spending is expected to be $624 billion by 2026. The CBO calculates this by taking several factors into account, such as projected enrollment growth, health-care costs, inflation, population growth and policies that states may enact. … But things would change under the Senate bill. Instead of Medicaid spending growing to $624 billion by 2026, it would be $464 billion — a difference of $160 billion in 2026. This means a reduction of $772 billion over 10 years, from 2017 to 2026.
It’s amazing that what the White House claims is not a cut would somehow result in 15 million fewer people on the program, isn’t it?
* REPUBLICANS FACE DAUNTING SUMMER AGENDA: NBC’s First Read crew points out that Republicans have a ton of hurdles ahead, even putting aside the health-care mess:
Trump and Congress have a lot on their plate before their summer recess in August — raising the debt limit, passing a budget, moving on tax reform. It’s a daunting agenda during the best of times. And it’s much, much harder with a distracted president, a commander-in-chief whose approval rating is in the 30s and 40s.
Just wait until Trump starts tweeting about the debt limit.
* WHY REPUBLICANS KEEP PUSHING FOR REPEAL AND REPLACE: Paul Krugman explains it:
Because Republicans spent almost the entire Obama administration railing against the imaginary horrors of the Affordable Care Act — death panels! — repealing Obamacare was bound to be their first priority. Once the prospect of repeal became real, however, Republicans had to face the fact that Obamacare, far from being the failure they portrayed, has done what it was supposed to do: It used higher taxes on the rich to pay for a vast expansion of health coverage. Correspondingly, trying to reverse the A.C.A. means taking away health care from people who desperately need it in order to cut taxes on the rich.
Right. And no matter how hard they hope for a magical escape hatch from the political and moral predicament this has created, this is what they will be supporting if they vote “yes.”
* JOE AND MIKA HIT BACK: Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski write a joint op-ed hitting back at Trump’s claim that Brzezinski was “bleeding badly from a face-lift,” claiming that the face-lift never happened and that Trump “is not well.” Note this:
The president’s unhealthy obsession with our show has been in the public record for months … This year, top White House staff members warned that the National Enquirer was planning to publish a negative article about us unless we begged the president to have the story spiked. We ignored their desperate pleas.
It’s hard to know what’s stranger about this anecdote — the suggestion that White House staffers made this warning or the claim that they demanded a show of groveling to the president.
* WHITE HOUSE DEFENDS TRUMP’S MIKA TWEET: Top Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway was asked on “Good Morning America” if she endorses Trump’s tweets about Brzezinski. Conway replied:
“I like the fact that the president uses his social media platform to connect directly with Americans. And in this case … the president normally does not draw first blood. He is a counter-puncher.”

The funny thing about this is that it’s probably more about keeping Trump’s ego puffed up than about convincing anyone else. Trump likes to think of himself as a “counter-puncher.”