OpEds: Did Obama “Radicalize” the Tsarnaevs?

Forget Misha, Look to the Drones

dnews-files-2013-01-schools-sleeper-drones-cormorant-uav-660

by SHELDON RICHMAN

If the Brothers Tsarnaev’s bombing at the Boston Marathon is an argument against immigration, then Tim McVeigh’s bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City is an argument against reproductive freedom.

Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev came to the United States from the Caucasus as youngsters. On what grounds should they have been barred from the country? That their family was Muslim? Does that mean all Muslims should be forbidden from immigrating? And if so, wouldn’t that mean no Muslim should be allowed to visit the United States either?

That’s where this silly line of thinking leads: the exclusion of an entire group of people because of their families’ religious affiliation. Yet this is a position embraced by many conservatives, such asLaura Ingraham, a radio talk-show host, author Ann Coulter, and Fox News Channel host Sean Hannity. After the bombings, Hannity said, “If people are coming from countries where perhaps they grew up under Sharia law, I think we can make a safe assumption that they have been radicalized. I think allowing foreign students into the country without investigative background checks that are exhaustive is a mistake and it’s putting Americans at risk.”

What would an exhaustive investigative background check on 16-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev and 9-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev have revealed? Not much, I imagine. About as much as would have been revealed by a background check on 16-year-old Tim McVeigh. Perhaps Hannity and his ilk would find it simpler just to exclude anyone coming from a Muslim country. But then they would have a problem with the prospect that an immigrant might convert to Islam once he or she is in the United States. Would they prohibit that? Or perhaps they would deport anyone converting to Islam. They might have a constitutional problem expelling an American citizen who became a Muslim, but their stated devotion to limited government has not deterred them in the past.

Authentic advocates of freedom — who understand that the freedom to cross arbitrary national boundaries without first securing government permission is a natural right — are appalled by the fear mongers’ attempt to seize on the Boston Marathon bombing to score points for the anti-immigrant cause. The fear mongers are trying their hardest to break the momentum of even the bogus immigration “reform” moving through Congress. Bogus “reform”? Yes, indeed. The consensus that has emerged, and which the xenophobic right can’t abide, holds that those human beings who have come here without government permission ought to have a pathway to legal status — but only if they pay fines and taxes and learn English. This act of alleged humanitarianism would be combined with a reinforced border and revised rules to make sure that only immigrants of a quality “we” can use are allowed into the country.

Hannity & Co. call this amnesty, while fearing that the border won’t be secure enough.

Like these conservatives, I believe amnesty is inappropriate — but for a very different reason: The people who crossed the border without permission did nothing wrong, so there’s no offense to forgive. But didn’t they break the law? To be sure, they violated a statute, but as natural-law advocates have long taught, a statute that conflicts with natural law and natural rights is no law at all. Thus, so-called illegal immigrants, who are merely people without government papers — big deal! — should just be left alone: no penalty, no fees, no back taxes, and no hounding them to learn English. And the welcome mat should be put out for those who wish to come here. We’d all benefit.

The government should no more engineer the immigrant population than it should engineer the native population. Freedom really should count for something. (Note that conservatives don’t think free enterprise includes the freedom to hire whoever is willing to work.)

But let’s not deny the potential danger that someone who comes to this country might want revenge against Americans for a perceived injustice. There’s actually a good way for the government to reduce the chances of this happening: it can stop invading, occupying, bombing, droning, embargoing, and torturing people in foreign countries.

Who “radicalized” the Brothers Tsarnaev? My candidate is President Obama.

Sheldon Richman is vice president and editor at The Future of Freedom Foundation (www.fff.org) in Fairfax, Va. He can be reached through his blog, Free Association.

 




Science versus Idealism

Virtual_University7

Science versus Idealism
In Defence of Philosophy against Positivism and Pragmatism

by Maurice Cornforth
SOURCE: autodidactproject.org

Chapter 18
Pragmatism

7. An “Idealism of Action “—Philosophy of
American Imperialism

a1]

a2]

Thus Dewey announces that pragmatism is an “idealism of action,” which considers itself “invincible,” and which proceeds to “rearrange and reconstruct” the world, and to “create a future,” without seeking any accurate knowledge of “what is or has been” and refusing “to stake itself upon propositions about the past.”

Certain prominent features of this “idealism of action” may at once be noted.

(a) It is characterised by the central point of view, expressed by William James, that the “worth” of every idea is to be judged by the “payments” it brings.

In his Pragmatism, James complained of critics who had misrepresented the pragmatists’ principle that “the true is that which works” as meaning “that we are persons who think that by saying whatever you find it pleasant to say and calling it truth you fulfil every pragmatistic requirement. “And he indignantly exclaimed: “I leave it to you to judge whether this be not an impudent slander.” [a3]

Of course it was a slander. James and the pragmatists never suggested that whatever one finds it pleasant to believe may be regarded as true. They said that whatever it pays to believe may be regarded as true. It is definite and tangible results that count, and results that have a “cash value.” Thus the [end of p. 413] pragmatic “idealism of action” inculcates what James called “our general obligation to do what pays.”

(b) In affirming this obligation, pragmatism betrays no awareness that what pays one set of people may not pay another. For example, following his “general obligation to do what pays” a capitalist may install some new machinery, with the result that a number of workers find themselves unemployed. This pays the capitalist, but it does not pay the workers. In fact, all that they secure from the transaction is a loss of payments.

Again, if we are to judge the “worth” of ideas by the way they “pass into actions which rearrange and reconstruct the world,” then people with different interests—such as capitalists and workers—must often judge of their worth differently. For even on a question of reconstructing the world in a “little” way, class interests in fact diverge; and still more do they diverge on questions of reconstructing the world in a “large” way.

But this consideration never seems to occur to the pragmatists. Pragmatist philosophy always speaks from a point of view in which it is assumed that there is agreement as to what does or does not pay. When it says that “the true is that which works,” it assumes agreement as to “that which works.”

(c) In saying that every idea is to be regarded as a means or instrumentality for securing payments, and is to be judged by how well it works for such ends, pragmatism is extremely optimistic of the prospects for securing payments, and an indefinite continuation of payments, so long as one goes the right way about it. In this respect it stands in marked contrast to all those types of philosophy which preach the vanity of human efforts, or which represent man as facing a cosmos whose forces he cannot hope to master.

But this optimism is of a curious and irrational kind. On the one hand it is characterised by confidence that “we” can rearrange and reconstruct the world in whatever way suits “our” particular interests, and so can go on securing the kind of payments in which “we” are interested. On the other hand it is characterised by an equal assurance that to achieve this it is not necessary to trouble overmuch about “what is or has been.” [414]

Thus this optimism is not based on any sober consideration of objective fact or study of the laws of historical development. It regards the objective world as something quite “indeterminate”—so much raw material waiting to be turned into cash values.

Do not stake yourself upon propositions about the past, for the past does not exist. Never mind about what is or has been. Go all out for future payments, create for yourself the conditions to secure them, and then you will be invincible. That is the message of this “idealism of action.”

Such a philosophy was from the beginning peculiarly American. It was born at that period in the history of the United States which followed the victory of the North over the South in the Civil War. It arose at a late stage of the development of the capitalist mode of production, when technique was already highly developed, and when the transition to the monopoly stage was already being prepared. It well expressed the aspirations—the “idealism of action”—of the American capitalist class of that period, the eager search for maximum profits, for ousting competitors, for opening out virgin territories, for continually revolutionising production technique, for overtaking and surpassing the “old world.” It expressed the spirit of individual enterprise and initiative., It expressed also the clamant optimism of a period when every citizen (except, of course, black ones) was supposed to be free and equal, and to have an equal opportunity for success and to set up and own his own business.

It was these conditions that brought it about that pragmatists could speak about “payments” and about “ideas that work” without any difficulty being felt by them or their audiences as to what was meant. A millionaire and a worker were both supposed to have the same conception of what constituted successful practice, i.e., the millionaire’s conception. And if the worker’s son went to a university, it was hoped that he would learn there the same ideas which helped the millionaire to be successful.

Pragmatism taught that ideas of that sort were the “true” ones, and all others were worthless. More, it taught that nothing else could be meant by “truth” than the quality of leading to success. To mean anything else was to be [415] unpractical, to adopt a contemplative philosophy instead of a practical one.

Thus William James, in his lectures on Pragmatism, poured scorn on the whole idea that truth consisted in correspondence with fact—that true ideas in some sense “copied” facts.

“I can indeed imagine what the copying might mean,” he said, “but I can conjure up no motive.” What difference does it make to “copy” reality? he asked; and answered, none at all. “When the Irishman’s admirers ran him along to the place of banquet in a sedan chair with no bottom, he said, ‘Faith, if it wasn’t for the honour of the thing, I might as well have come on foot!'” So, “but for the honour of the thing,” reality might just as well remain uncopied. [b1]

What was wanted was not to “copy” reality in ideas, not to look for any objective standard by which we should judge the truth of our ideas, but to assert whatever would best serve our practical ends. Ideas are to be judged in terms of their practical success.

The pragmatist philosophy played an important role in American education. Dewey is as famous for his books on educational theory as for his books on philosophy. He insisted that education begins from birth, and that its purpose is to equip the individual for his practical life as a citizen. This practical side is the important thing, not to fill the youthful mind with “dead knowledge.” Another pragmatist, Oliver Wendell Holmes, applied pragmatism in law, proclaiming that law could not be founded on any principles of right but was to be framed entirely for purposes of practical social expediency. In history, the pragmatist John Fiske said that the supreme object of history must be to proclaim “the manifest destiny of the Anglo‑Saxon Race. [b2]

The cultural significance of the pragmatist idea of “success” was quite eloquently expressed by Professor Ralph Barton Perry, of Harvard University, in a contribution on Is There a North American Philosophy? at the Second Inter‑American Congress of Philosophy (December, 1947). Some European readers may think the professor was trying to be funny; but no, he was perfectly serious. He defined the conception [416] of “success” and defended it from the charge of being “materialistic.”

“It is a mistake to suppose that the American idea of success is limited to material success. That which is characteristically American is not the exclusion of art, literature, science and religion by the pursuit of wealth, but the introduction into art, literature, science and religion of something of the same spirit and attitude of which the pursuit of wealth affords the most notable or notorious manifestation: not the drowning of culture by the hum of industry, but the idea of making culture hum. And so material success, yes, but any kind of success, with no prejudice whatever against cultural attainment provided it can be recognised and measured as success. The standard is not essentially sordid or commercial, but it is essentially competitive, whether that consists in beating records or in beating other competitors.” [c1]

The pragmatist “idealism of action,” this philosophy of success, had and continues to have the strongest appeal in the United States. It has never had the same appeal in Europe. Almost without exception the European bourgeois philosophers, whether “rationalist” or “empiricist,” have found it hard to understand, unconvincing, and even shocking.

Russell, for instance, in his History of Western Philosophy, finds it decidedly shocking. Its general attitude to the universe he describes as “cosmic impiety.” He calls it “a power philosophy” associated with “the age of industrialism,” and even says that it expresses “an intoxication of power.” “It is natural,” he adds, “that its strongest appeal should be to Americans.” [c2]

Lord Russell is ready enough nowadays to accept American “world leadership.” But, like other members of the British ruling class, he often feels that the Americans go too far and too fast. Their “power philosophy” disturbs him. Its practical results seem dangerous, while its theory hurts his intellectual susceptibilities; he is unwilling to give up the joys of “contemplation.”

In England the successful capitalists had tended to imitate the way of life of the landed gentry. As Engels once put it, there was “a compromise between the rising middle‑class and the ex‑feudal landowners. . . . What should the English bourgeois do without his aristocracy, which taught him manners, such as they were, and invented fashions for him—which furnished officers for the army which kept order at home, and the navy which conquered colonial possessions and new markets abroad?” [d1] Hence the persistent demand, still expressed at a high level in the universities, and expressed in the writings of Lord Russell and of a host of less exalted philosophers, for a philosophy adapted to the outlook of a leisure class. In England, and the same was true in other European countries, capitalist culture intermarried with the culture of the landed gentry. But in the United States there was no such marriage. There, the ideal was not leisured contemplation of the good, true and beautiful, but to “make culture hum.” The American universities were financed by businessmen, run by businessmen and were intended to produce successful businessmen. Hence the origin of a truly businesslike philosophy—pragmatism. This philosophy is practical, optimistic, ready for rapid change; and its sole standard of values is that which works—which pays.

Pragmatism was, then, the intellectual product of the newest capitalist country, the U.S.A., and of the specific and new conditions of development of capitalist enterprise which obtained there.

It is just this, indeed, which gives it the advanced and go-ahead air which it assumes in comparison with most European bourgeois philosophy. Of all the philosophies of capitalist society, it is the most purely capitalist. More than any other brand of bourgeois or capitalist philosophy, it has emancipated itself from the scholasticism and mysticism dating from pre-capitalist conditions. And with that, it has emancipated itself too from every remaining scruple regarding the search for truth and fidelity to principles. It expresses a single-minded devotion to securing profits and payments, to scoring over competitors, to making good, to opening up new fields for business enterprise, to subordinating absolutely everything to that enterprise. [418]

It is a philosophy of action completely brutal, cynical and ruthless in its expression of capitalist individualism. And at the same time, as Dewey boasts, it is an “idealism of action.” It succeeds in idealising as no other philosophy has done the capitalist scramble and fight for profits and competitive advantage under cover of high‑sounding doctrines about knowledge and truth and human welfare.

It denounces “materialism,” treats religion and morality with the greatest respect—and at the same time succeeds in combining this with a “naturalistic” view of human affairs by which it stakes its claim to be fully scientific, down to earth, free of illusions and idealistic fancies.

If once one grasps the capitalist nature of pragmatist philosophy, and concretely that it is the “idealism of action” of American capitalism, then all its seeming confusions and inconsistencies fall into place. As a logical system it altogether lacks consistency, as a class ideology it is strikingly consistent.

The entire pragmatist theory of knowledge and truth is idealist, and its “naturalism” is nothing but a camouflage of subjective idealism. Its demand that theory shall serve the ends of practice, disguised as it often is by phrases about general “human welfare”—for the pragmatists are convinced that successful business enterprise is synonymous with human progress—amounts to the demand that theory shall serve the ends of capitalist practice, of business enterprise.

It is a subtle form of idealism in which was expressed the outlook and aspirations of the American capitalist class, their “idealism of action.” And at the same time it is a system of social demagogy and deception. For the whole tendency of the spread and popularisation of pragmatist philosophy has been to help instil this same capitalist outlook in the minds of the American people. It has glorified the ways of capitalism before the people, taught those who suffer exploitation to identify their own interests with those of their exploiters and to entertain illusory hopes for their own future within the framework of the capitalist social system.

The founders of the pragmatist philosophy in the last quarter of the 19th century looked both backwards and forwards. Looking backwards, they could not but feel that the old type of theology and religious philosophy which was then being [420] widely taught in the United States was played out. They were right. For it was not adapted to serve the new conditions of rapid capitalist industrial development, either as a system of ideas satisfying to the capitalist forces themselves or as an ideological defence against the growing organised struggle of the working class. Hence the attack upon the traditional doctrines of idealism with which the pragmatists began their philosophical campaign. Looking forwards, they invented the doctrine that truth is that which works, that setting practical ends before themselves and seeking practical “fruits” and “payments,” people are justified in asserting as true whatever serves those ends. Truth, principle, reason were all to be replaced by expediency.

It was in this way that while American capitalism was still moving into the monopoly stage, and while American imperialism was still in process of gestation, American philosophers produced those ideas which constituted the most perfect ideological preparation for the acceptance of imperialism, and which provided American imperialism itself with its philosophy.

The pragmatist philosophy perfectly expresses the world outlook and aspirations of those forces which have gathered to themselves and monopolised all the “fruits and payments” accruing from capitalist development—big business and the billionaire trusts.

Behind all Dewey’s generalities about theory and practice, knowledge and truth, in which everything is subordinated to success measured by results and payments, lies the ruthless justification of the expansionist policy of big business, which is idealised as “the creation of the future” and “the reconstruction of the world in which we live.”

Taken at its face value, as a philosophical statement, the pragmatist principle that “the true is that which works “is an extremely confused and inaccurate theory about truth—a theory that, philosophically speaking, works very badly. But this theory becomes the perfect expression of the regard for truth of all the agents and hangers‑on of the big business world. It is the “philosophy” of the sales expert, of the party boss, of the imperialist politician. All of them are purveyors of ideas who are interested in getting certain results, and the sole [421] property of ideas which concerns them is the property of helping to get those results.

At the same time, the pragmatist philosophy has a characteristically deceptive, demagogic flavour. In John Dewey’s writings, for instance, this demagogy was carried to great lengths.

That is the real meaning of Dewey’s extraordinary verbosity, of his way of covering up whatever he has to say with a curtain of vague, ambiguous and high‑sounding phrases—a way of writing which became more pronounced with every new book he wrote in the course of his long career as a philosopher of imperialism. Dewey’s philosophy was subjective idealism, but he managed to present it as “naturalistic.” Dewey’s philosophy recognised no such thing as truth, but he managed to present it as a theory of truth.

Imperialism always has recourse to social demagogy. The American imperialists have nothing to learn in this respect from their junior partners, the British, or from the German fascists and Japanese militarists they have now taken under their wing. American imperialism has its own brand of demagogy, of which the pragmatist philosophy serves as one of the expressions. It calls big business monopolies “free enterprise” and their unrestricted rule “democracy.” It seeks to extend its domination over other peoples under cover of opposing antiquated conceptions of nationalism and national sovereignty, and to trample on human rights in the name of the defence of individual freedom. Dewey and the pragmatists are past masters of such demagogy in the sphere of philosophy.

Lastly, the significance of the pragmatist teachings about the existence of the objective world, and of the peculiar tone of optimism pervading the pragmatist philosophy needs to be appreciated.

The pragmatist “idealism of action” says that “ideas are statements, not of what is or has been, but of acts to be performed.” It is “devoted to the creation of a future, instead of staking itself upon propositions about the past.” This is the same attitude as was expressed more crudely by Henry Ford, when he said that “history is bunk.” He was optimistic about the “invincibility” of Ford Motors, and that such an enterprise would not suffer the fate of various other enterprises of [421] the past. Nevertheless Henry Ford was wrong, and so are the pragmatists.

Objective facts and the laws of history are inexorable. Capitalist “progress” inevitably leads to crises, poverty, wars and the destruction of the very means of production which capitalist enterprise creates. The system of business enterprise creates the conditions for its own decline and fall, and has already created them.

But such being the objective fact, pragmatism, as the philosophy of business enterprise, teaches that there is no objective fact, that the objective world is something indeterminate awaiting determination by enterprising practical men, and that we can go ahead to create a future without concern for the past.

This is a naive and illusory optimism. But it has come to constitute a perfect expression of the expansionist strivings of American big business. It expresses the blind determination to “create a future” and to stamp the pattern of that future upon any recalcitrant objective facts which get in the way. At the same time, it prepares men’s minds to accept and applaud the ways of American imperialism as an “idealism of action,” and to believe that such “idealism of action” is “invincible.”

Pragmatism, then, particularly in the form which Dewey has given it, is the philosophy of American imperialism. It expresses the outlook and aspirations of American big business in philosophical form. That is its basis, the real content of all its doctrines.

From this source it derives its go‑ahead appearance and its opposition to various “contemplative” forms of idealism, unsuited to the practical pursuit of maximum profits. But it is impossible not to see that it is itself a form of idealism, and that its real attack is spearheaded, not against idealism, but against materialism, and against Marxist materialism in particular. The pragmatists are least of all “ivory tower” philosophers, but militant partisans of the camp of imperialism against the camp of socialism. That is the meaning of their opposition to the “contemplative” forms of idealism.

And expressing the militant, class point of view of the most reactionary and aggressive section of monopoly capitalism, the American imperialists, pragmatism is at the same time a system [end of p. 422] of demagogy and deception addressed to the American people, seeking to mould their outlook to the outlook of imperialism, to delude them with false slogans about free enterprise and democracy, about creating a future and reconstructing the world, while inciting them against whatever is anti‑imperialist and progressive.

NOTES

a1  Quest for Certainty, p. 289. [—> main text]

a2  Ibid., p. 133. [—> main text]

a3  W. James: Pragmatism, p. 233. [—> main text]

b1  W. James: Pragmatism, p. 235. [—> main text]

b2  See H. K. Wells: Pragmatism, Philosophy of Imperialism. [—> main text]

c1  Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. IX, No. 3, March, 1949, p. 358. [—> main text]

c2  Russell: History of Western Philosophy, pp. 854‑6. [—> main text]

d1  Engels: Socialism, Utopian and Scientific, Introduction. [—> main text]


SOURCE: Cornforth, Maurice [Campbell]. Science versus Idealism: In Defence of Philosophy against Positivism and Pragmatism. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, Publishers, 1975. Reprint of the 1962 ed. published by International Publishers, New York. 463 pp. Original edition 1955. Based on Science versus Idealism(1946) and In Defence of Philosophy (1950). Chapter 18: Pragmatism, section 7: “An “Idealism of Action “—Philosophy of American Imperialism,” pp. 413-423. Footnotes have been converted into endnotes and renumbered for ease of reference.




The Fall of Libya: A Study in Hypocrisy

By Max Ajl

Gaddafi's brutal murder at the hands of fanatical hyenas unleashed on him by the Western alliance was a cynical and cold-blooded war crime. Hillary memorably joked about his killing.

Gaddafi’s brutal murder at the hands of the fanatical hyenas unleashed on him by the US-led Western alliance was a cynical and cold-blooded war crime. Hillary Clinton typically and memorably joked about his killing.

Global Research, April 29, 2013

Monthly Review | 

Maximilian Forte, could have known better, had they only looked.

UK's Daily Mirror a typical media dog for the imperialists, whitewashing the ugliness of what its masters did. The headlines are a complete lie.

UK’s Daily Mirror, a typical media prostitute for the imperialists, whitewashing the ugliness of what they do around the world. The headlines are a complete lie. The Mirror, which usually favours Labour, pretends to be on the side of the people.

Forte is an anthropologist, and what he offers us in Slouching Towards SirteNATO’s War on Libya and Africa is an ethnography of U.S. culture and the way it enabled and contributed to the destruction of Libya. It is also a meticulously documented study in hypocrisy: that of the U.S. elite, of the Gulf ruling classes who have lately welded their agenda directly onto that of the United States, and of the liberal bombardiers who emerged in the crucible of the “humanitarian” wars of the 1990s only to reemerge as cheerleaders for the destruction of another Arab country in 2011.

Finally, it is a study of the breakdown of the anti-war principles of leftists in the United States and Europe, so many of whom, for so long, sustained an infatuation with confused rebels whose leadership early on had their hand out to the U.S. empire, prepared to pay any cost—including Libya itself—to take out a leader under whom they no longer were prepared to live.

Forte begins by describing Sirte, the emblem of the new state Qadhafi—and almost literally, Qadhafi—had constructed with the post–1973 torrent of petrodollars flowing into Libyan coffers in the wake of a series of price increases which Qadhafi’s aggressive resource nationalism had played a part in securing. Sirte was, in effect, a second capital, thick with new buildings and lavished with benefits from the money which had streamed into the new Libya. Qadhafi hosted numerous convocations there, including summits for the Organization for African Unity, a new pan-African network which he played a large part in developing. Sirte was also the place where Qadhafi had chosen to summon the ConocoPhillips CEO in 2008 to criticize the way he was dealing with the company’s oil contracts in Libya.

Forte turns the fate of Sirte into a parable of the fate of Libya, as it fell under, and with, Qadhafi. Indeed, Sirte was one of the places especially targeted by the rebellious forces of the National Transition Council: Forte quotes an AP report stating that “Residents now believe the Misrata fighters intentionally destroyed Sirte, beyond the collateral damage of fighting.”

It is to that destruction that Forte turns. Against too many accounts of the attack on Libya which make far too much of the partial rapprochement between Libya and the United States in the post-Global War on Terror interlude, Forte looks back at the historically belligerent face the United States had shown Libya, especially under Reagan: bombing it repeatedly, and taking down Libyan fighter jets defending Libyan land in the Gulf of Sirte, trying to get members of the Organization for African Unity to censure Libya, and then putting in place a series of sanctions against the Libyan government. Although many of the sanctions were eventually lifted, the close U.S. alliance with Saudi Arabia, sponsor of the mujahideen who had attempted to assassinate Qadhafi in 1996, continued, contributing to lasting friction between the government of Libya and the government of the United States.

Forte’s contribution here is to complicate the meaning of words like “rebellion” and “revolution” too often incanted to short circuit independent thought. His method is to look at the revolt which was happening in parts of Libya and then to zoom in on Sirte, the Qadhafi stronghold, to see if indeed the revolt was taking place there. To the contrary, Forte finds that the NATO/NTC (National Transitional Council) assault on Sirte continued for months before the rebels were finally able to take control of the city. Their assault consisted of indiscriminate bombing using heavy weaponry, a fact Forte is able to establish using mainstream media reporting of the civil war.

Furthermore, Forte is able to bring to bear evidence that NATO carried out extensive war crimes during its “liberation” of Sirte, and the evidence he brings to bear is impeccable: the statements of the NATO command and the various human rights organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, finding evidence of massacres of captured pro-Qadhafi fighters and even of civilians. Even more damning is the quotation from Georg Charpentier, the United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Libya, who could speak in October 2011 of the “liberation of Bani Walid and Sirte in October,” and then in another note that “Public infrastructure, housing, education and health facilities need to be rehabilitated, reconstructed, and reactivated, intense and focused reconciliation efforts also need to be encouraged.”

This and dozens of quotations like it attest to NATO’s knowledge of what it was doing: intervening on one side of a civil war, for “reconciliation” is only necessary when you have two sides, and by elevating one side to angelic revolutionaries, one is laying the groundwork for legitimizing the wholesale destruction of the other.

Another strength of the book is Forte’s account of the double standards not just of the Western states and human rights organizations but also—perhaps especially—of Al Jazeera and its inflated, not to say fabricated, accounts of atrocities and particularly the way it incited racial hatred against darker Libyans.

Forte also clearly shows that Qadhafi had what is now spitefully referred to as a “social base”—as though the modern state is merely a crime syndicate rather than tightly integrated into social reproduction. The avoidance of these questions by dominant currents of the Euro-Atlantic socialist left led to a situation in which too many no longer seem able to distinguish between riots, revolts, and revolutions.

So how did NATO go about intervening? And how did it exploit the Libyan regime’s vulnerabilities? Here Forte seems to misstep a little. He writes of the very real improvements in social welfare, under a populist rentier social contract, and links those improvements to the government. But here some more delving into the academic literature, books such as Ruth First’s or Dirk Vandewalle’s, would have been helpful. While living standards were improving, and the oil wealth was going to the hands of the Libyan people—at least in part—the deliberate “statelessness” of the Qadhafi government had created a situation within which the state was materially embedded within the society, but links between the two were one of a social rather than a civic contract. Anomie and estrangement prevailed under the later Qadhafi, and the people living under his government increasingly felt that they were not the owners of their country. Legitimate discontent grew.

With the advent of the Arab Spring, that discontent found an outlet: revolt. Here Forte moves to surer ground. Disregarding narratives of a “peaceful revolt” militarized only in reluctant response to state savagery, he finds that the revolt was militarized practically from day one, with an attack on a Libyan military barracks. Forte documents that the right wing of the regime was clearly prepared to execute a coup d’état against Qadhafi, with the open assistance of France, the United States, and especially Qatar, which sent in special forces, airplanes, and gunships to ensure his rapid deposition.

Forte goes further than most other analysts of the Libyan coup d’état but at the same time not far enough. Al Jazeera, the television station owned by the Emir of Qatar and early on christened the voice of the Arab Spring, started reporting on “massacres” carried out by “black mercenaries” in Libya, starting February 17 and 18, 2011. The sourcing tended to be to anonymous activists in Benghazi or elsewhere—a script later replayed in Syria, where articles from Al Jazeera are so liberally brocaded with “activists say” to the point where little of what the article says is anything but what activists have said. Such subterfuges have escaped much of the left, and for that reason Forte’s account is laced with contempt for their gullibility with respect to opposition propaganda.

Furthermore, Forte does a very good job of pulling together the reasons the United States never liked Qadhafi—his prickliness with respect to U.S. investment, his leadership in Africa, his support of the African National Congress, and his resolute hostility to AFRICOM and U.S. bases on African soil. Far too much has been made of Qadhafi’s cozying up to the United States after 2004. What is forgotten is that the United States maintains hostility to any state-capitalist regime that is not fully integrated with and subservient to the U.S. global system, with respect both to the free flow of capital and foreign policy. On both counts, Qadhafi failed—the Heritage Foundation, which reports on what matters to the people who matter, found that Iran, Libya, and Syria have been the most “economically repressed” countries in the region—that is, the least open to U.S. investment, while far too often supporting Palestinian resistance movements, decrying normalization with Israel, giving aid to the left wing of Fateh, and other recalcitrant behavior which U.S. imperialists never forgot.

Libya offers a place to rethink dominant theories of imperialism, which have trouble accounting for the role of Western capitalist interests with respect to state-capitalist regimes, even ones implementing neoliberal economic programs or hollowing out their domestic industrial or agricultural sectors. What those theories miss is the resolute hostility of the U.S. state and ruling class to any foreign leadership which seems to be carrying out a national project.

A weakness of Forte’s book is that although he is a leftist, he is not a Marxist. So an occasion is lost to think about the ways in which the positive social transformations carried out under the Qadhafi junta also had the effect of contributing to the future downfall of Libya—for lacking a revolution within the Green Revolution, there was a counter-coup by the regime’s right wing against the populist coup d’état under which Qadhafi came to power. The left needs to understand both the benefits afforded by populist regimes and the limits they impose. The object is to understand what kind of opposition movements can arise which can both defend the gains of previous—and also deeply flawed—governments while simultaneously advancing on them, to further horizons. But these are theoretical and political problems that were with us before the destruction of Libya and will remain with us after. It is to the knowledge of this sordid event of the Euro-Atlantic left that Forte has made an important contribution, one which ought be on the bookshelf of anyone interested in and concerned about the destruction of Libya, and looking to understand more fully the next targets of empire.


SLOUCHING TOWARDS SIRTE: NATO’S WAR ON LIBYA AND AFRICA

Available to order from Global Research

Slouching Towards Sirte:
NATO’s War on Libya and Africa

by Maximilian Forte

ISBN: 978-1-926824-52-9
Year: 2012
Pages: 352 with 27 BW photos, 3 maps
Publisher: Baraka Books

Price: $24.95

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Should We Invade Syria? Obama and U.S. Military Divided Over Syria

By Shamus Cooke

Global Research, April 29, 2013

obamadoublespeak

Has Syria crossed the “red line” that warrants a U.S. military invasion? Has it not? The political establishment in the United States seems at odds over itself. Obama’s government cannot speak with one voice on the issue, and the U.S. media is likewise spewing from both sides of its mouth in an attempt to reconcile U.S. foreign policy with that most stubborn of annoyances, truth.

The New York Times reports:

“The White House said on Thursday that American intelligence agencies now believed, with “varying degrees of confidence,” that the Syrian government had used chemical weapons…”

Immediately afterwards, Obama’s Secretary of Defense, Chuck Hagel, gave a blunt rebuke: “Suspicions are one thing; evidence is another.”

This disunity mirrored the recent disagreement that Chuck Hagel had with Obama’s Secretary of State, John Kerry, when both testified in front of Congress with nearly opposite versions of what was happening in Syria and how the U.S. should respond. Kerry was a cheerleader for intervention while Hagel — the military’s mouthpiece — advised caution.

The U.S. government’s internal squabbling over whether the Syrian government used chemical weapons is really an argument on whether the U.S. should invade Syria, since Obama claimed that any use of chemical weapons was a “red line” that, if crossed, would invoke an American military response. Never mind that Obama’s “red line” rhetoric was stolen from the mouth of Bush Jr., who enjoyed saying all kinds of similarly stupid things to sound tough.

But now Obama’s Bushism must be enforced, say the politicians, less the U.S. look weak by inaction. This seemingly childish argument is in fact very compelling among the U.S. political establishment, who view foreign policy only in terms of military power. If Syria is not frightened into submission by U.S. military threats, then Iran and other countries might follow suit and do as they please and U.S. “influence” would wane. Only a “firm response” can stop this domino effect from starting.This type of logic is the basis for the recent Syria chemical weapons accusations, which was conjured up by the U.S. “Intelligence” service (CIA) and its British and Israeli counterparts (the same people who “proved” that Iraq had Weapons of Mass Destruction, which later proved to be a fabricated lie). All three of these countries’ intelligence agencies simply announced that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons, provided zero evidence, and then let their respective nations’ media run with the story, which referred to the baseless accusations as “mounting evidence.”In the real world it appears that the U.S.-backed Syrian rebels are the ones responsible for having used chemical weapons against the Syrian government. It was the Syrian government who initially accused the U.S.-backed rebels of using chemical weapons, and asked the UN to investigate the attack. This triggered the Syrian rebels and later the Obama administration to accuse the Syrian government of the attack.A very revealing New York Times article quoted U.S.-backed Syrian rebels admitting that the chemical weapons attack took place in a Syrian government controlled territory and that 16 Syrian government soldiers died as a result of the attack, along with 10 civilians plus a hundred more injured. But the rebels later made the absurd claim that the Syrian government accidentally bombed its own military with the chemical weapons.Interestingly, the Russian government later accused the United States of trying to stall the UN investigation requested by the Syrian government, by insisting that the parameters of the investigation be expanded to such a degree that a never-ending discussion over jurisdiction and rules would eventually abort the investigation.Complicating the U.S.’ stumbling march to war against Syria is the fact that the only effective U.S.-backed rebel forces are Islamist extremists, the best fighters of which have sworn allegiance to Al-Qaeda. The same week that the U.S. media was screaming about chemical weapons, The NewYork Times actually published a realistic picture of the U.S.-backed Syrian rebels, which warrants extended quotes:“Across Syria, rebel-held areas are dotted with Islamic courts staffed by lawyers and clerics, and by fighting brigades led by extremists. Even the Supreme Military Council, the umbrella rebel organization whose formation the West had hoped would sideline radical groups, is stocked with commanders who want to infuse Islamic law into a future Syrian government.”

“Nowhere in rebel-controlled Syria is there a secular fighting force to speak of.”

“The Islamist character of the [rebel] opposition reflects the main constituency of the rebellion…The religious agenda of the combatants sets them apart from many civilian activists, protesters and aid workers who had hoped the uprising would create a civil, democratic Syria.”

Thus, yet another secular Middle Eastern government — after Iraq and Libya — is being pushed into the abyss of Islamist extremism, and the shoving is being done by the United States, which The NewYork Times discovered was funneling thousands of tons of weapons into Syria through U.S. allies in the region, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. We now know that these weapons were given to the Islamist extremists; directly or indirectly, it doesn’t matter.

Even after this U.S.-organized weapons trafficking was uncovered, the Obama administration still has the nerve to say that the U.S. is only supplying “non lethal” aid to the Syrian rebels. Never mind that many of the guns that the U.S. is transporting into Syria from its allies were sold to the allies by the United States, where the weapons were manufactured.Now, many politicians are demanding that Obama institute a “no fly zone” in Syria, a euphemism for military invasion — one country cannot enforce a no fly zone inside another country without first destroying the enemy Air Force, not to mention its surface to air missiles, etc. We saw in Libya that a no fly zone quickly evolved into a full scale invasion, which would happen again in Syria, with the difference being that Syria has a more powerful army with more sophisticated weaponry, not to mention powerful allies — Iran and Russia.This is the real reason that the U.S. military is not aligned with the Obama administration over Syria. Such a war would be incredibly risky, and inevitably lead to a wider conflict that would engulf an already war-drenched region, creating yet more “terrorists” who would like to attack the United States.The U.S. public has learned the lessons of Iraq’s WMD’s, and that lesson is not lost on U.S. soldiers, few of whom want to fight another war for oil against a country which is a zero-threat to the United States.
•••
_____________________________
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Shamus Cooke
 is a social service worker, trade unionist, and writer for Workers Action (www.workerscompass.org)  He can be reached at shamuscooke@gmail.com



Chronicles of Inequality [TOO MUCH, 29 April 2013]

Too Much April 29, 2013
THIS WEEK
Ed Stack, the CEO of Dick’s Sporting Goods, has a rather unique claim to fame. A few years back, Stack invented “the stupid list.” He asked his managers and employees to list the three things Dick’s does “that make no sense.”We have a suggestion for the Dick’s “stupid list”: the windfalls Dick’s is stuffing into the pockets of Ed Stack. In 2012, news reports last week informed us, CEO Stack grabbed an astonishing $137 million cashing out stock options, on top of $10.7 million in his regular annual compensation.How much more did Stack take home last year than his workers? We don’t know. Under the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, firms like Dick’s must reveal the gap between their CEO and median worker pay. But the federal Securities and Exchange Commission has so far made no move to enforce the Dodd-Frank mandate.Two dozen national citizen groups have just asked the new SEC chair, Mary Jo White, to stop the foot-dragging and start requiring CEO-worker pay disclosure. We need her to listen. More on the reasons why in this week’s Too Much. About Too Much,
a project of the
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GREED AT A GLANCE
America’s fourth- and ninth-biggest dailies, the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribunemay soon become the property of Koch Industries, the privately held corporation that fuels the fortune of America’s two most notorious right-wing billionaires, Charles and David Koch. The two papers stand as the crown jewels of an eight-daily chain that also includes high-profile papers in Baltimore and Orlando. The likely cost of the total package: $623 million, pocket change for the Koch brothers. Their personal net worths now total, Bloomberg estimates, $45 billion each. A Koch Industries flack is telling reporters that the Kochs would not meddle with the “independence” of any media that might fall into the Koch camp. But a new Columbia Journalism Review analysis of a media property already under Koch control shows a tendency to “blur reporting and opinion.••••

Doug OberhelmanCaterpillar CEO Doug Oberhelman has spent billions the last few years buying up heavy equipment rivals. But that buy-up spree hasn’t juiced up company earnings. So Oberhelman has tried squeezing a closer-to-home asset: his workers. He threw 700 employees out of work at a Cat plant in Canada after workers there rejected a 50 percent wage cut. Then, charges the United Steelworkers, Oberhelman bullied 800 workers at an Illinois plant into major pay concessions. In Wisconsin, the company threatened to axe 40 percent of one plant’s workforce just days before bargaining began on a new contract. Oberhelman’s strategy appears to be working — for Oberhelman. His take-home last year jumped by $5.5 million. Oberhelman’s 2012 $22.4 million, Caterpillar noted last week,reflects the company’s “pay-for-performance philosophy.”

Cara David, the top marketing exec at American Express, has some great news to report — for the businesses that service America’s rich. The latest AmexSurvey of Affluence and Wealth in America, co-authored with the Harrison Group,is estimating that luxury sales will grow 3.4 percent this year, over twice the growth forecast for national GDP. America’s top 1 percent, says David, have maneuvered themselves into “a better position to spend on luxury.” Gushes Harrison’s Jim Taylor: “Lessons learned from the recession — resourcefulness, self-reliance, and a deep sense of financial responsibility — continue to dominate purchasing strategies in the country’s most successful households.”

Quote of the Week

“We used to be a country with a rich heart. Now we’re the land of the heartless rich.”
Pam MartensKoch Brothers’ Wealth Grew By $33 Billion . . . as America’s Schools Report 1 Million Homeless Kids,Wall Street on Parade, April 24, 2013

PETULANT PLUTOCRAT OF THE WEEK
Mark BertoliniMark Bertolini, the CEO at health insurer giant Aetna, has been loudly warning Americans to beware next January 1, the date Obamacare finally goes into near full effect. Consumers, says Bertolini, will be facing “rate shock” when they see how much their insurance premiums are going to be costing. But he’s not saying why. Aetna and other insurers, industry whistle-blower Wendell Potter points out, have been making big bucks selling low-premium policies that lead consumers to believe they’re buying much more coverage than they actually get. Obamacare bans this “junk insurance,” and firms like Aetna will have to offer policies that provide real coverage. Expect Aetna to charge dearly for these policies. How else will the insurer be able to continue paying Bertolini his going rate? He pulled in a sweet $36.4 million last year. Share Too Much with your friends! They can sign up here to have Too Muchdelivered to their inboxes every Monday afternoon.
PROGRESS AND PROMISE
Know Where Your Premiums Are Going?  Only one state in America, Vermont, has so far moved to shove giant health insurers and their lavishly paid execs out of their central role in the nation’s health care. Vermont lawmakers two years ago passed legislation that puts the state on track to creating a “single-payer” health care system. But single-payer remains years away. In the meantime, Vermont is moving to up the heat on health insurer CEOs. State legislation enacted last year requires insurers to reveal to consumers exactly how much they spend on lobbying and advertising, how often they deny consumer claims, and how much they pay their CEOs. Take Action
on InequalityUrge your rep in Congress to back the Inclusive Prosperity Act, the new bill that would set a financial transactions tax on Wall Street speculation. More at the Robin Hood campaign.
IMAGES OF INEQUALITY
London mansion••••

The property in London’s 10 most exclusive boroughs, we learned earlier this year, now holds more value than all the property combined in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Insatiable global billionaire demand for London addresses now appears poised to drive that gap even wider. The second largest manse in London has just gone on the market for £250 million, about $382 million. The sale, if completed at the asking price, will make the “palatial Regency mansion” at 18 Carlton House Terrace the developed world’s most expensive abode.

 

Web Gem

Global Rich List/ See where you rate in the worldwide distribution of income.

INEQUALITY BY THE NUMBERS
Pew wealth study Stat of the Week

In the world’s top four financial hubs — New York, London, Hong Kong, and Singapore — over 300 residential properties sold for over $15.5 million in 2012, says a new report co-produced by Deutsche Bank. The total outlay for the 300 properties: over $10 billion, for an average over $33 million each.

 

IN FOCUS
From a Sloppy Spreadsheet, an Eternal TruthIf we let wealth continue to concentrate — and corrupt every element of our contemporary societies — we’ll all end up crying ’96 tears.’

Aging baby boomers may remember, from way back in 1966, a one-hit-wonder rock band that sported an all-time great of a name. That band — Question Mark and the Mysterians — may now have a worthy rival on the name front. Make way for Reinhart-Rogoff and the Austerians.

Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff don’t make smash records. They write learned economic papers that make austerians happy — and help smash the life prospects of average working families.

Austerians preach the absolute necessity of whacking away at government spending for public services. We must, these champions of austerity solemnly intone, discipline ourselves to reduce government deficit and debt, no matter the pain austerity may bring us.

And austerity does bring pain. People lose access to basic services. People lose jobs. People even go hungry. But some people — extremely affluent people — don’t mind austerity at all.

These affluents don’t send their kids to public schools. They don’t spend weekend afternoons at public parks. They never step aboard public transit. These wealthy don’t need public services and resent having to pay taxes to support them.

Austerity works for these affluents. Cutbacks in public services won’t, by and large, bring any discomfort to their daily lives.

And if austerity should create some unanticipated discomfort, they can always get their friends in high places to intervene — as Americans saw last week when lawmakers rushed to undo recent austerity cutbacks in the Federal Aviation Administration budget that had affluent people cooling their heels in airports.

Austerity cutbacks, notes Center for Economic and Policy Research economist Dean Baker, promise even greater payoffs — for the rich — down the road. The austerity push for cuts in programs like Social Security, he points out, “opens the door for lowering tax rates on the wealthy in the future.”

“If these sorts of social commitments can be reduced,” Baker writes, “then the wealthy can look forward to being able to keep more of their income.”

All this may help explain why pollsters have found, as economist Paul Krugmanpointed out last Friday, that wealthy Americans “by a large majority” consider budget deficits “the most important problem we face.”

America’s wealthy make their personal predilection for austerity equally plain to the politicians who seek their favor. These pols, for their part, want to be helpful to their deep-pocketed patrons. But these pols, Dean Baker reminds us, also have needs of their own. They need “evidence” they can use to show the general public that “austerity serves the general good and not just the rich.”

Three years ago, Harvard’s Reinhart and Rogoff supplied that “evidence,” via an academic paper that purported to show a clear and imminent danger whenever government debt hits a particular percent of Gross Domestic Product.

This Reinhart-Rogoff paper rushed to the “top of the charts,” in elite public policy circles. Austerians worldwide waved the paper at every opportunity. They cited Reinhart and Rogoff’s work as an unassailable justification for cutting government spending quick and cutting government spending deep.

Reinhart and Rogoff made no meaningful move to discourage the austerians. They basked instead in their global celebrity — until earlier this month when a team of unorthodox economists at the University of Massachusetts exposed the Reinhart-Rogoff paper as essentially a sloppy scholarly fraud.

This Massachusetts work quickly went viral. By last week, Reinhart and Rogoff’s Excel spreadsheet errors had become fodder for late-night TV comics.

End of story? Not quite. We have much more here than a spectacularly failed attempt to make the case for a doctrine that suits the sensibilities of the richest among us. We have powerful proof that inequality corrupts every corner of contemporary societies, even — and especially — our ivory towers.

The academic peers of Reinhart and Rogoff, the scholars who hold the nation’s most prestigious endowed chairs in economics, never once made any effort to check out the Harvard pair’s findings. The unraveling of their bogus case for austerity started with the digging of a skeptical grad student.

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The lesson in all this? In a staggeringly unequal society, as Paul Krugman summed up last week, “what the top 1 percent wants becomes what economic science says we must do.”

The rest of us, of course, don’t have to listen, on austerity or any other front.

New Wisdom
on WealthMichael Peppard, Plutocracy in action: the FAA vs. National ParksCommonweal, April 26, 2013. Gridlock in Congress magically ends — when the affluent squeal.Sean Reardon, No Rich Child Left BehindNew York Times, April 28, 2013. A Stanford sociologist explains why rising income inequality needs to take center stage in debates over our education future.

 

 

 

 

The Rich Don’t Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class cover

Find out more about Too Much editor Sam Pizzigati’snew bookThe Rich Don’t Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class, 1900-1970.

NEW AND NOTABLE
Why Mitt Lost: The Role Inequality PlayedLarry Bartels, The Class War Gets Personal: Inequality as a Political Issue in the 2012 Election, NYU Law School Colloquium on Tax Policy
and Public Finance, April 23, 2013.Vanderbilt political scientist Larry Bartels has written widely and wisely about inequality over recent years. Last week, he presented this new analysis of the impact of inequality on the 2012 election, a study based in significant part on specially commissioned survey data. His basic finding: Mitt Romney owes his 2012 defeat to a “widespread public perception that he cared more about wealthy people like himself than about poor and middle-class Americans.”
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