The New Opening With the USA

Learning the Art of Coexistence
(We report this development with trepidation. What is up Washington’s sleeve?)

President Raúl Castro has put Cuba in a tacit alliance with BRICS and remains close to both Russia and China in their struggle with the West..

President Raúl Castro has put Cuba in a tacit alliance with BRICS and remains close to both Russia and China in their struggle with the West.

by RAUL CASTRO

[dropcap]Since my election[/dropcap] as President of the State Council and Council of Ministers I have reiterated in many occasions our willingness to hold a respectful dialogue with the United States on the basis of sovereign equality, in order to deal reciprocally with a wide variety of topics without detriment to the national Independence and self-determination of our people.

This stance was conveyed to the US Government both publicly and privately by Comrade Fidel on several occasions during our long standing struggle, stating the willingness to discuss and solve our differences without renouncing any of our principles.

The heroic Cuban people, in the wake of serious dangers, aggressions, adversities and sacrifices has proven to be faithful and will continue to be faithful to our ideals of independence and social justice. Strongly united throughout these 56 years of Revolution, we have kept our unswerving loyalty to those who died in defense of our principles since the beginning of our independence wars in 1868.

Today, despite the difficulties, we have embarked on the task of updating our economic model in order to build a prosperous and sustainable Socialism.

As a result of a dialogue at the highest level, which included a phone conversation I had yesterday with President Obama, we have been able to make headway in the solution of some topics of mutual interest for both nations.

As Fidel promised on June 2001,when he said: “They shall return!” Gerardo, Ramon, and Antonio have arrived today to our homeland.

The enormous joy of their families and of all our people, who have relentlessly fought for this goal, is shared by hundreds of solidarity committees and groups, governments, parliaments, organizations, institutions, and personalities, who for the last sixteen years have made tireless efforts demanding their release. We convey our deepest gratitude and commitment to all of them.

President Obama’s decision deserves the respect and acknowledgement of our people.

I wish to thank and acknowledge the support of the Vatican, most particularly the support of Pope Francisco in the efforts for improving relations between Cuba and the United States. I also want to thank the Government of Canada for facilitating the high-level dialogue between the two countries.

In turn, we have decided to release and send back to the United States a spy of Cuban origin who was working for that nation.

On the other hand, and for humanitarian reasons, today we have also sent the American citizen Alan Gross back to his country.

Unilaterally, as has always been our practice, and in strict compliance with the provisions of our legal system, the concerned prisoners have received legal benefits, including the release of those persons that the Government of the United States had conveyed their interest in.

We have also agreed to renew diplomatic relations.

This in no way means that the heart of the matter has been solved. The economic, commercial, and financial blockade, which causes enormous human and economic damages to our country, must cease.

Though the blockade has been codified into law, the President of the United States has the executive authority to modify its implementation.

We propose to the Government of the United States the adoption of mutual steps to improve the bilateral atmosphere and advance towards normalization of relations between our two countries, based on the principles of International Law and the United Nations Charter.

Cuba reiterates its willingness to cooperate in multilateral bodies, such as the United Nations.

While acknowledging our profound differences, particularly on issues related to national sovereignty, democracy, human rights and foreign policy, I reaffirm our willingness to dialogue on all these issues.

I call upon the Government of the United States to remove the obstacles hindering or restricting ties between peoples, families, and citizens of both countries, particularly restrictions on travelling, direct post services, and telecommunications.

The progress made in our exchanges proves that it is possible to find solutions to many problems.

As we have reiterated, we must learn the art of coexisting with our differences in a civilized manner.

Raul Castro is president of Cuba.

This is the text of Cuban President Raul Castro’s address to the nation this Wednesday broadcast on radio and television on the recent developments in the Cuba-US relations.




 

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Kiev Anti-Russian False Flag Planned?

Stephen Lendman


Mikhail Delyagin: A false flag to finally draw in Russia into an all-out confrontation is in the making.

Mikhail Delyagin: A false flag to finally draw in Russia into an all-out confrontation is in the making.

 

[dropcap]A[/dropcap]previous article discussed Russian economist/political analyst Mikhail Delyagin expecting a possible anti-Russian nuclear false flag. Fort Russ now cites intelligence “about impending terrorist attacks on Ukrainian strategic objects, which will justify an attack on Donbass.”

Suggesting a planned provocation. Other intelligence “confirmed the arrival of large numbers of mercenaries, equipment and machinery from NATO countries.” Ukraine’s general staff press service head, Vladislav Seleznev, announced possible resumed hostilities in so-called ATO (anti-terrorist operations) areas.

As well as “possible terrorist attacks by the militia on the objects of strategic importance.” Because socio/political/humanitarian conditions remain tense, he said, in ATO and bordering areas.

“There is also the risk of a resumption of active hostilities,” Seleznev added. “However, we do not eliminate the risk of terrorist and sabotage acts in these areas, at government and military facilities, as well as mass protests and civil disobedience.”

Earlier, illegitimate oligarch president Petro Poroshenko vowed to return Crimea to Ukraine. “Crimea will be back together with us,” he said.  US-installed NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg discussed Ukraine-supportive Alliance efforts with Kiev’s illegitimate putschist prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, on Monday. In Brussels.

Pledging “NATO stands with you.” Praising “Ukraine’s commitment to its partnership with NATO despite challenging circumstances, and pledged ongoing political and practical support. Your visit just underlines the strong partnership between NATO and Ukraine. We also very much appreciate that we are able to develop our partnership.”

“And especially because the people of Ukraine have chosen the path of democracy and closer cooperation with Europe.  And we welcome that. We underline that the decision by the people of Ukraine has to be respected.”

On Monday, artillery fire was heard. In Donetsk’s western outskirts. Ukrainian drones overflew the area. During December 14 and 15 evening hours, “Ukrainian law enforcers attacked the airport of Donetsk…” DPR freedom fighters didn’t respond in kind.

Ukrainian forces attacked their Yasnoye positions. Northwest of Dokuchayevsk. In Beryozovoye municipality. Artillery fire was heard in Lugansk. Fighting reported at Schastye. Self-defense force Prishib village positions were attacked.

Artillery fire was reported coming from Ukrainian army controlled Chernukhino, Gorodische and Zorinsk. An Odessa explosion was reported. In the vicinity of its refinery. At the same time, Russian humanitarian aid keeps coming. A 10th convoy is imminent, with vital supplies an Christmas gifts.

US-supported Kiev fascists threaten regional security, perhaps world peace. The respected Colonel Cassad site quoted what it called Georgi Diimitrov’s “classic definition of fascism.” Calling it “an open terrorist dictatorship of the most reactionary, the most chauvinistic, the most imperialistic elements of the financial capital…”

“Fascism is neither the government beyond classes nor the government of the petty bourgeois or the lumpen-proletariat over the financial capital. Fascism is the government of the financial capital itself. It is an organized massacre of the working class and the revolutionary slice of peasantry and intelligentsia.”

“Fascism in its foreign policy is the most brutal kind of chauvinism, which cultivates zoological hatred against other peoples.”

Kiev terrorizes opponents. Wants them eliminated altogether. Tactics include “physical extermination, intimidation, hostage-taking, warrantless arrests, abductions, torture, and other elements of terror.” Kiev putschists represent “the most radical forms of the Ukrainian integral nationalism and fascism…”

Monied interests run things. Billionaires contest with millionaires for power. Monied interests and “fascist squads (are) its instruments for building the fascist system of government, which is built on a terrorist dictatorship.”

Russophobia is Kiev’s ideological cornerstone. “(O)penly advocat(ing) oppressing and exterminating people based on their ethnicity, culture, and language.” Colonel Cassad site has declared Ukrainian conditions are “a 100% match for Dimitrov’s classical definition. (F)ascism in its most classical and pure form.”

Threatening regional peace, stability and security. Pentagon sources confirmed military buildup along Russia’s borders. To ensure regional “peace and stability.” NATO’s “collective security commitment.” In light of Russian “interference” in Ukraine. Moscow accused NATO of significant air activity and intelligence flights over border areas. Unjustifiable provocations. As well as NATO’s nearby land and sea presence. In Poland and Baltic countries. Black Sea naval exercises. The equivalent of Russia conducting its own in Mexican Gulf waters. Or off America’s east or west coasts.

Imagine Washington’s response, and the screaming scoundrel media headlines.

Lt. General Mikhail Mizintsev heads Russia’s Defense Ministry joint military command. He expressed concerns “over the significant increase of NATO military activity near the Russian borders.” Including doubled flight activity. To about 3,000 missions this year. Flying in “dangerous proximity” to long-range Russian military aircraft. At least 55 times in 2013 and 2014. At a distance of less than 100 meters. Lack of “any mutual exchange of information” ruined chances for trust.

“All achievements in the field of trust-building and voluntary transparency that NATO and Russia have formed over the years have ceased,” said Mizintsev. All Russian missions were “in strict compliance with international rules.” On Tuesday, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov explained how NATO policy affects Russia.

Saying its military doctrine “states…the security risks for Russia, among other things, are NATO expansion to the East and the movement of military infrastructure of NATO closer to the Russian borders…(N)ot NATO itself, but its militarized movement to the East is considered by the Russian military doctrine as a security risk and threat for Russia.”

Lavrov cited “serious reasons to believe” sanctions and other Western policies aim for regime change in Russia. Including US-instigated oil wars. Taking advantage of weakening economic conditions. Hammering Russia’s ruble. Making its economy scream. Wanting Putin supporters turned against him. Perhaps color revolution turbulence underway. A US specialty. Wanting Russia looking like Ukraine.

Risking open confrontation to achieve aims. Anything ahead is possible. Lavrov remains firm saying:

“I can assure you that Russia will not only survive, but will come out stronger out of this. We have been in much worse situations in our history, and every time we were getting out of these fixes much stronger.”

America represents its most serious challenge. Much greater than during Cold War years. Mutually assured destruction (MAD) reasoning seems forgotten. Lunatics and greedy crooks making policy in Washington risk the unthinkable. Cooler heads so far are unable to contain them.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanIII.html

Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.

Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.

It airs three times weekly: live on Sundays at 1PM Central time plus two prerecorded archived programs.




 

And now a word from the Editors of The Greanville Post


FRIENDS AND FELLOW ACTIVISTS—

AS YOU KNOW, THERE’S A COLOSSAL INFORMATION WAR GOING ON, AND THE FATE OF THE WORLD LITERALLY HANGS ON THE OUTCOME.

THEIR LIES.
THEIR CONSTANT PROPAGANDA.

OUR TRUTH.

HUGE ISSUES ARE BEING DECIDED: Nuclear war, whether we’ll live in democracy or tyranny, dignity or destitution, planetary salvation or doom…
It’s a battle of communications we can’t afford to lose. 


So, we request that you do something.
Reading is not enough. Action of some sort is needed.

Start with something simple: Share our posts.
If you don’t, how can we ever neutralize the power of the corporate media?

And if you took the time to read this article, and found it worth SHARING, then why not sign up with our special bulletin to be included in our future distributions? And please tell others about The Greanville Post. 


YOUR SUBSCRIPTIONS (SIGNUPS TO THE GREANVILLE POST BULLETIN, SEE BELOW) ARE COMPLETELY FREE, ALWAYS. AND WE DO NOT SELL OR RENT OUR EMAIL ADDRESS DATABASES—EVER. That’s a guarantee.

 




Chronicles of Inequality (TOO MUCH, December 15, 2014)

jamesmitchellCIAtorturedesigner Too Much THIS WEEK The greediest among us — those who grasp for ever more when they already have far more than enough — had another banner year in 2014. That somewhat complicates this last Too Much edition for the calendar year.We’re highlighting in this 2014 finale our annual list of the year’s “ten greediest.” But with so many greedy out there this year to choose from, getting down to just ten hasn’t been easy. But we’ve persevered and come up with a list of America’s greediest that offers an all-star array of 2014’s most avaricious.We have for you an heiress and a hedge fund billionaire, a psychologist and a banker, and, naturally, some denizens of Corporate America’s executive suites. All these — and some additional year-end reflections — in this week’s Too Much.We’ll be returning, right after the holiday break, with our first Too Much issue of the new year — and a new Too Much look as well. We think you’ll like it. In the meantime, all our best for the holiday season!

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IN FOCUS

America’s Ten Greediest: The 2014 Edition

This year’s all-stars of avarice range in age from thirty-somethings to just shy of octogenarian status. They’re all doing their greedy best to keep our world a staggeringly unequal place. 

How has the United States become so unequal? We need to look for answers, first and foremost, in our society’s underlying economic and political realities, at the policies and practices that let wealth concentrate — at the top — so intensely.

But we also ought to look at people, the real-life flesh-and-blood characters who make decisions that privilege the few over the many. These greedy souls love the shadows. Let’s shine some light — on this year’s greediest of them all.

May the greed we spotlight here help inspire the rest of us to do as much as we can, in 2015, to make our world a much more equal place.

10/ Paige Laurie Dubbert: Walmart Wealth

Paige Laurie Dubbert, the granddaughter of Walmart founder Sam Walton’s brother and business partner, is charging wage theft. The gent she wedded six years ago, says a Dubbert divorce filing, schemed to pay himself and a friend $70,000 a month to run her retail center for Southern Cal’s super rich.

The rather obvious irony here: Few firms over the years have feasted more off wage theft than Walmart.

This past spring, the company agreed to a $21-million settlement in a wage theft lawsuit in California. Labor attorney Theresa Traber handled the case. Retail giants like Walmart, she says, “use middlemen to hire workers in their warehouses to evade wage and hour laws.”

In 2012, cheated U.S. workers overall took in $280 million in backpay for wage-theft violations, almost twice what robbers grabbed for the year from banks, gas stations, and convenience stores.

Paige Laurie can look forward to inheriting far more than $280 million someday. Her mom and aunt are currently sitting on $6 billion worth of Walmart shares.

9/ Ken Langone: Zip It, Pope

LangoneThis 79-year-old venture capitalist began 2014 making headlines with his advice for Pope Francis. The pontiff, Ken Langone told New York’s archbishop, should cool it on the inequality front. Papal broadsides against “the powerful feeding upon the powerless,” Langone went on to pronounce, may leave America’s wealthy “incapable of feeling compassion for the poor.”

Langone himself has always been a generous sort. As a New York Stock Exchange director, he greased the skids for a $190-million exit package for his buddy, NYSE president Richard Grasso, in 2003.

Langone has been a bit less generous to the powerless. As a director at Yum! Brands, the home of Taco Bell and KFC, he cheered on company efforts to oppose hikes in the minimum wage.

Langone has always enjoyed railing against government regulations like our wage minimum. As he likes to put it: “Leave us alone and let us hire people.”

Home Depot, the retail giant Langone’s financing helped propel to big-box dominance, shows what happens when you leave corporations alone. Big-box giants, notes the research group Good Jobs First, don’t create jobs. They “grow mostly at the expense of existing competitors,” many of them local businesses.

Big-box giants, on the other hand, do create massive concentrations of personal wealth. Forbes now estimates Langone’s net worth at $1.6 billion.

8/ Dennis Jones: Doing Good Comfortably

JonesSome people do good volunteering in homeless shelters. St. Louis mega millionaire Dennis Jones says he does good sailing the seas on his brand-new $34 million yacht.

How’s that? The millions spent on his yacht, Jones told an interviewer earlier this year, kept a shipyard in business. And the $170,000 he spends every month keeping his boat ship-shape, Jones adds, funds paychecks for a 10-person crew.

Jones retired in 2000, after selling his pharmaceutical business for $3.4 billion, and now spends his terra firma time at a St. Louis mansion over 12 times the size of a typical new American home.

Between the manse and his yacht, Jones says, he and his wife enjoy the “same level” of luxury “wherever we go.”

Jones says he also does good outside yachting. His favorite charity? Maybe Junior Achievement, “because it teaches children about free enterprise.”

7/ Micky Arison: Miami’s Biggest Winner

ArisonPro basketball, the Miami Heat owner Micky Arison likes to say, only has one winner at the end of each year. But in business, he adds, “we can all be winners.”

Workers and customers at Arison’s prime business, the Carnival cruise ship empire, might beg to differ. Maritime lawyer Jim Walker  dubs Arison “hands down” the greediest executive in an exceptionally greedy industry.

Cruise lines like Carnival, notes Walker, incorporate abroad to sidestep U.S. taxes, labor laws, and safety regs. They then “pay dirt cheap wages” to the workers from developing nations they have staffing their ships.

Carnival of late has ratcheted up the squeeze on workers. Over the past two years, the cruise line has terminated retirement programs for Filipino workers, snatched tip income from staff hired in Mumbai, and fired 150 waiters who dared to protest. Such tactics have helped up Arison’s personal fortune over $6 billion.

Earlier this year, the 65-year-old Arison started cashing out chunks of his Carnival shares at about the same time passengers left adrift last year on a faulty Carnival ship were testifying in a lawsuit against the company.

That incident subjected over 4,200 passengers to five days of overflowing toilets and rotting food. Carnival is calling the subsequent passenger lawsuit “an opportunistic attempt to benefit financially” from “alleged emotional distress.”

The Miami Herald recently asked Arison to share the secrets of his success. Repliedthe Bal Harbour billionaire: “There is no substitute for hard work.”

Or the right genes either. Arison’s daddy Ted founded Carnival in 1972.

6/ Jay Dweck: High-Tech Happiness

DweckBanker Jay Dweck has made enough on Wall Street, working for Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, to afford to live in a $4.8 million home an hour’s drive north of Manhattan. But Dweck has dreams that go beyond scoring big in high finance. His current vision? Dweck wants “to improve quality of life using technology.”

How does Dweck propose to do that improving? He’s pioneering new technology to make life sweeter — for the 1 percent. And the guinea pig for this new technology? Dweck himself! He’s now spending $3 million on new-tech renovations of his home and another $3 million on projects that involve his household amenities.

Dweck’s master bathroom will soon feature a TV by his whirlpool tub, another facing his toilet and bidet, a shower nook for a third TV, and a fourth screen across from his bathroom sink. All the TVs will turn on automatically whenever someone steps near them.

Dweck’s estate also features a violin-shaped pool that sports 440,000 hand-laid individual glass tiles and 5,600 fiber-optic cables. The tiles light up like multicolored Stradivarius strings, in time with Dweck’s favorite music.

Live Better Systems, a company Dweck set up this past May, will be marketingsimilar high-tech marvels to his fellow awesomely affluent, once all the kinks get worked out.

5/ Phil Knight: Just Do It, Ducks!

KnightThe University of Oregon Ducks will be playing for the national football championship this January, and no Oregon fan will be quacking more fervently than class of ’59 alum Phil Knight. But the billionaire Nike chairman does a lot more than just cheer for his dear Ducks.

Knight spent a reported $68 million on a three-building “Performance Center” for Oregon football, a plush temple to touchdowns that boasts 64 55-inch TVs in the main lobby and a weight room floor crafted from Brazilian hardwood.

In gratitude, the university’s football brass have set aside a locker in the facility’s space-age locker room for “Uncle Phil.”

Each locker comes with plenty of room and its own ventilation system. But Knight has storage needs that even the largest locker can’t possibly handle. That’s why he’s paying $7.6 million to construct a hangar for his personal $64.5-million Gulfstream private jet.

With a $22.4 billion fortune, Knight can afford to buy — and store — anything he could possibly covet. But his Nike corporate empire still can’t seem to afford to provide workplace decency for the company’s huge outsourced workforce.

Back in the 1990s Nike tried denying this workforce’s subminimum wages and horrible working conditions. Then the company reversed field and vowed to become a model employer.

But that  highly touted turnaround, political scientist Richard Locke concluded last year, remains a “disappointment.” Nike and Knight are still profiting mightily off factories suffering “from persistent problems with wages, work hours, and employee health and safety.”

4/ James Mitchell: The Torture Doc

MitchellLast week’s release of the long-awaited U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture tactics after 9/11 has made Dr. Jim Mitchell and his partner Dr. Bruce Jessen the world’s most notorious psychologists. The report details the pair’s role as the architects of the CIA “enhanced interrogation.”

“I’m just a guy who got asked to do something for his country by people at the highest level of government,” an unrepentant Mitchell has been telling reporters, “and I did the best that I could.”

That service to his country appears to have been something less than selfless. Mitchell, New York magazine notes, saw early on that the post-9/11 world would provide “business opportunities” for someone with his Air Force background in prepping pilots for the brutal interrogations they might face if captured.

Mitchell promptly corralled “his old friend Jessen,” and the pair convinced CIA officials they could get al-Qaeda detainees to talk.

Mitchell and Jensen, the Senate torture report reveals, had no experience conducting interrogations or any specialized knowledge about counterterrorism. But they had a great sales pitch — and soon found themselves orchestrating torturesthat ranged from waterboarding to standing detainees on broken limbs.

The tortures would make Mitchell a small fortune. His initial hourly consulting fee ran four times the CIA going rate for interrogations. Between 2005 and 2009, after the CIA outsourced the bulk of its interrogation work directly to a consulting company that Mitchell and Jessen had set up, the pair collected $81 million.

The CIA, Reuters notes, has so far shelled out another $1 million to protect Mitchell and Jessen from any legal liability for their barbarous work. Mitchell, now living a sunny life in Florida, last week called the Senate report “a load of hooey.”

3/ Paul Singer: Wall Street’s Top Vulture

SingerHedge fund billionaire Paul Singer has built his personal fortune practicing what the wags on Wall Street like to call “vulture investing.” He snaps up the bonds of economically distressed nations at “next to nothing,” then flexes his fortune to force those nations to pay him far more than what he paid.

One result: Instead of building schools, the Congo ended up paying Singer $127 million for Congolese debt he acquired for $10 million.

In Argentina, a government elected in 2003 convinced over 92 percent of the investors holding the old government’s defaulted bonds to accept partial payment. But Singer refused to go along.

The Wall Street kingpin then set up a front group to lobby in Washington and found a federal court that eventually ruled in his favor. Earlier this year, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear Argentina’s appeal. Singer originally paid $49 million for Argentinian debt. He now stands to collect as much as $832 million.

Argentina is still battling to stop Singer’s financial “extortion.” Early in December, Singer shot back against that resistance. Argentina, he charged, “has elevated a commercial dispute” into “a dispute about national dignity.”

2/ Travis Kalanick: Getting Uber Rich Quick

KalanickWhat a year for the CEO and co-founder of Uber, a taxi-like service that lets travelers hail cars through a mobile phone app. Back last January, Uber was running cars in just 60 cities. The current total: 250 cities — in 50 countries!

That growth has Uber now worth $40 billion, more than the value of top transportation heavyweights like Hertz and United Continental. Not bad for a company, the AP notes, “that didn’t exist five years ago.”

The 38-year-old Kalanick himself, Forbes estimates, is ending the year personally worth a cool $3 billion.

How has Uber soared so quickly? The company is pumping up profits, critics charge, by taking short cuts like not running adequate safety background checks on drivers. Officials in L.A. and San Francisco have just filed suitagainst Uber on driver safety checks, and governments from Spain to India have also taken legal action against the company.

Other critics include customers like Leah Kappen of Indianapolis. She took an Uber ride downtown to the December 6 Big Ten football championship game. That ride cost her $30. The 18-minute trip home after the game cost her $450. This past Halloween, an 18-mile-ride home ran New Yorker Elliott Asbury $539.

Uber’s “surge pricing” — a policy that keys rates to the market demands of the moment — generated these outsized fees. The riders these fees upset, says Kalanick, need to start “getting used to dynamic pricing in transportation.”

Uber drivers are complaining, too. One of Uber’s competitors, the Lyft service, gives the extra profit from “surge pricing” all to its drivers. Uber takes a 20 percent cut. Why not, the Wall Street Journal asked Kalanick, follow suit?

“We are a business,” he replied.

1/ Larry Ellison: Owning Everything

EllisonYear in and year out, Larry Ellison pulls down more compensation than any other corporate CEO in the United States. He topped the list for 2013 with $78.4 million. He’ll likely top the list for 2014 as well. He grabbed $67.3 million for the year, his Oracle software company announced in September.

Ellison will definitely not top the CEO pay list next year. The reason: In September, Ellison stepped down as Oracle’s chief exec, a slot he has filled since he started the company over three dozen years ago. But Ellison hasn’t quite retired yet. He’s now serving as Oracle’s “chief technology officer.”

Ellison also still holds about a quarter of Oracle’s shares, a stash that brings his net worth to $50.6 billion, enough to make him the world’s fifth-richest person.

In residences owned, Ellison may well rank as the world’s numero uno. This past March, a business publication took a shot at cataloging the homes and other properties Ellison has collected over the years. He has, notes Business Insider, “all but taken over entire neighborhoods in Malibu and the Lake Tahoe area.”

Ellison’s big-time collecting started back in 1988 when he picked up a $3.9-million home in San Francisco. He would later spend nine years recasting a 23-acre estate further down the San Francisco peninsula into a $70-million faux 16th-century Japanese emperor’s palace.

Ellison owns a real-life Japanese palace, too, a historic $86-million garden villa in Kyoto. And don’t forget his $10.5-million mansion in Rhode Island’s Newport or his $42.9-million golf estate in California’s Rancho Mirage. Or the $500 million he shelled out two years ago to buy 98 percent of the Hawaiian island of Lanai.

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Ellison, to be sure, has interests that go beyond real estate. He likes yachts. He currently has two, each over half as long as a football field.

Ellison also likes to play basketball, even on his yachts. If a ball bounces over the railing, no problem. Ellison has a hired hand in a powerboat following his yacht, reports noted this past spring, “to retrieve balls that go overboard.”

Wisdom on Wealth:
The Year’s Best

Too Much has highlighted hundreds of perceptive pieces on economic inequality over the past 12 months. A sampling of our favorites . . .

Jed Rakoff, The Financial Crisis: Why Have No High-Level Executives Been Prosecuted? New York Review of Books, January 9, 2014.

Mark Bittman, Rethinking Our ‘Rights’ to Dangerous BehaviorsNew York Times, February 25, 2014.

James Surowiecki, The Mobility MythNew Yorker, March 3, 2014.

Colin Gordon, Our Inequality: An IntroductionDissent, March 6, 2014.

Robert Kuttner, The Inequality PuzzleAmerican Prospect, March 12, 2014.

Robert Wilmers, Why Excessive CEO Pay Is Bad for the EconomyAmerican Banker, March 14, 2014.

Dana Goldstein, How Higher Ed Contributes to InequalityAtlantic, April 9, 2014.

Atif Mian and Amir Sufi, Family Structure and InequalityHouse of Debt, April 10, 2014.

Jack Metzgar, Education as Answer to Inequality?Washington Spectator, March 18, 2014.

Bob Lord, A Third of a Trillion for Three FamiliesInequality.Org, March 20, 2014.

Zoë Carpenter, Will Phony Populists Hijack the Fight Against Inequality? Nation, April 21, 2014.

Damon Linker, Why we need a maximum wageThe Week, April 22, 2014.

Martin Wolf, A more equal society will not hinder growthFinancial Times, April 22, 2014.

Geoff Davies, More Effective Remedies for Inequality, Naked Capitalism, April 23, 2014.

Joe Firestone, Are We An Oligarchy Yet? New Economic Perspectives, April 29, 2014.

Jared Bernstein, Inequality and Pay: ‘Rents’ vs. MeritHuffington Post, April 29, 2014.

Timothy Noah, Sorry conservatives, America’s mobility problem is realMSNBC, April 29, 2014.

Breck MacGregor, Why inequality undermines societies: an evolutionary perspectiveContributoria, April 2014.

Kathleen Geier, What Piketty’s Neoliberal Critics Get WrongBaffler, May 15, 2014.

Paul Krugman, On Inequality DenialNew York Times, June 2, 2014.

Rabbi Philip Graubart, Income Inequality, the Spiritual DimensionSan Diego Jewish Journal, June 2014.

Donald Cohen, Privatization widens economic inequality and punishes communitiesThe Hill, June 6, 2014.

Nancy Koehn, Great Men, great pay? Why CEO compensation is sky highWashington Post, June 15, 2014.

Gar Alperovitz, After Piketty, the ownership revolutionAljazeera America, June 17, 2014.

Joseph Stiglitz, The Myth of America’s Golden Age: What growing up in Gary, Indiana, taught me about inequalityPolitico, July/August 2014.

Faiza Shaheen, Mind the gap: why UN development goals must tackle economic inequalityGuardian, July 1, 2014.

Benjamin Kunkel, Paupers and RichlingsLondon Review of Books, July 3, 2014.

Toni Gilpin, ‘Them That’s Got Are Them That Gets’: Piketty’s Lessons for ActivistsLabor Notes, July 3, 2014.

Sarah Anderson, The State of Runaway CEO Pay ResistanceOtherWords, July 9, 2014.

Simon Wren-Lewis, If minimum wages, why not maximum wages? Mainly Macro, July 28, 2014.

Robert Prasch, What’s Wrong with ‘Congestion Pricing’? New Economic Perspectives, August 1, 2014.

Harold Meyerson, Economic inequality, not just wages at the bottom, needs to be addressedWashington Post, August 13, 2014.

Lynn Stuart Parramore, The 1 percent’s devious new scheme: How CEOs are getting rich at your expenseSalon, August 23, 2014. H

Jay Parini, What Jesus knew about income inequalityCBS 6, August 23, 2014.

Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, A Convenient Truth: A Better Society for Us and The PlanetFabian Ideas, September 2014.

Robert Weissman, Is There a Billionaire Cancellation Effect? Huffington Post, September 10, 2014.

David Cay Johnston, How Corporate CEOs Get Rich off of TaxesNewsweek, September 12, 2014.

Lars Osberg, Is Education the Answer to Income Inequality? Inequality.Org, September 12, 2014.

Susan Holmberg and Mark Schmitt, The Overpaid CEODemocracy, Fall 2014.

Marjorie Wood, The Scourge of Siphon-Up EconomicsOtherWords, September 24, 2014.

Roger Martin, The Rise (and Likely Fall) of the Talent EconomyHarvard Business Review, October 2014.

Josh Hoxie, When Income Tax Cuts Masquerade As Estate Tax RepealForbes, October 1, 2014.

L. Randall Wray, Rising Tides Lift All Yachts: Why the 1% Grabs All the Gains from GrowthNew Economic Perspectives,October 1, 2014.

Dean Baker, World’s richest man tries to defend wealth inequalityAl Jazeera, October 16, 2014.

Nick Tabor, Breaking Up FortunesJacobin, October 16, 2014.

Linda Beale, Both the rich and ordinary Americans misunderstand their economic interestsA Taxing Matter, October 23, 2014.

Sean McElwee, The 1% are more likely to vote than the poor or the middle class, and it matters — a lotVox, October 24, 2014.

John Bellamy Foster and Michael Yates, Piketty and the Crisis of Neoclassical EconomicsMonthly Review, November 2013.

Gara LaMarche, Democracy and the Donor ClassDemocracy, Fall 2014.

Michael Konczal, Frenzied FinancializationWashington Monthly, November-December 2014.

Chuck Collins, Leave No Generation BehindOtherWords, November 12, 2014.

Robert Reich, The 1 percent is gutting America’s middle classSalon, November 19, 2014.

Pam Martens, Wiseguys: Drawing Parallels Between the Mafia and Wall StreetWall Street on Parade, November 19, 2014.

David Callahan, The Billionaires’ ParkGuardian, December 1, 2014.

Paul Buchheit, Slap-in-the-Face Wealth Gap ImagesCommon Dreams, December 1, 2014.

Scott Klinger, Corporate tax breaks come at the cost of the country’s futureBaltimore Sun, December 2, 2014.

Rich Don't Always Win

Give a gift of inspiration this holiday season, Too Mucheditor Sam Pizzigati’s gripping history of the triumph over America’s original plutocracy. Check the publisher discount!

ANTIDOTES TO INEQUALITY

2014’s Top Reasons for Egalitarian Cheer

A few years down the road from now, we may see these three new challenges to concentrated wealth that emerged in 2014 as the triggers for a global distributional turnaround.

Plutocrats didn’t have much reason to tremble in 2014. But they did have some. In fact, three developing stories over the course of the year may signal trouble ahead for the deepest-pocket set. The details . . .

PikettyToo Much readers have known all about French economist Thomas Piketty since the year-end Too Much issue back in 2006 hailed his innovative work. Piketty and his colleague Emmanuel Saez had begun annually updating “the dollars going to America’s most financially fortunate,” providing the first up-close look at the nation’s top 0.1 and 0.01 percents. In 2014, Piketty’s impact went global. His blockbuster Capital in the Twenty-First Century became a worldwide best-seller — and shoved the dangers of extreme wealth concentration right onto the international political center stage. Haven’t read the 696 pages of Piketty’s masterwork yet? You can check online all the book’s fascinating charts and graphs.

DeSaulnierOutrageous rewards give CEOs a powerful incentive to behave outrageously. In two states this year, Rhode Island and California, lawmakers took imaginative steps to limit those outrageous rewards. Rhode Island lawmakers moved to give preferential treatment in government contracting to firms that pay their top execs no more than 32 times what they pay their workers. In California, lawmakers took up legislation that raises the corporate tax rate on companies with wide gaps between CEO and worker pay. The bills didn’t pass, but both won senate majorities. The drive to place consequences on CEO-worker pay ratios may soon be coming to Washington. In November the co-sponsor of the California bill, Mark DeSaulnier, won his bid for Congress.

ByanyimaCharities haven’t traditionally focused on grand masses of private wealth — and the rich and the powerful certainly like things that way. But one of the world’s most visible charities, the London-based Oxfam, is now moving to make sure that no policy makers ever again get away with dismissing the danger that concentrated wealth poses. Oxfam in October launched a global Even It Up campaign against income and wealth maldistribution. A mere 1.5 percent tax on individual wealth above $1 billion, Oxfam notes, would raise $74 billion yearly, “enough money to fill the annual gaps in funding needed to get every child into school and to deliver health services in the world’s poorest countries.” Oxfam, says executive director Winnie Byanyima, is standing “with people everywhere who are demanding a more equal world.”

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Saving the Unity of Great Britain, Breaking the Unity of Greater Russia

FROM MONTHLY REVIEW
December 2014 (Volume 66, Number 7)

The people of Donetsk, as well as Luhansk and the rest of Novorussia and the Crimea have freely sought to unite with Russia.

The people of Donetsk, as well as Luhansk and the rest of Novorussia and the Crimea have freely sought to unite with Russia. This ineluctable and easily demonstrable fact is constantly denied by Western propaganda. (Click to enlarge this image)


[dropcap]The media compelled[/dropcap] all of us to follow closely both the Scottish referendum of September 2014 and the conflict between Russia and Ukraine that took on increased momentum starting in spring 2014. We all heard two opposing stories: the unity of Great Britain must be protected in the interest of the English and Scottish people. Moreover, the Scots freely chose, through a democratic vote, to remain in the Union. In contrast, we were told that the independence of Ukraine, freely chosen by the Ukrainian people, is being threatened by the Great Russian expansionist aims of the dictator Putin. Let us look at these facts that were presented to us as incontrovertibly obvious for a good-faith observer.

The Formation of Great Britain

Great Britain (the United Kingdom) unites four nations (these are the terms used by David Cameron): the English, Scots, Welsh, and Irish from Northern Ireland. These four nations must continue to live together in a single state because it is in their interest to do so. The choice of those in favor of Scottish independence was thus presented as irrational, emotional, and without any serious foundation. Independence would have brought nothing good to the Scots.

These are some of the common arguments we heard: the petroleum resources on which Scotland depends will be exhausted sooner than many believe. Moreover, it is foreign international companies that actually carry out the exploitation of those resources (the implication being that they could leave in the event of a vote in favor of independence). The Scots are anxious to maintain some social benefits in education and health that the Westminster Parliament abolished when it lent its support to the neoliberal dogmas adopted and imposed by the European Union. David Cameron promised to take these demands into account by enlarging the local powers (of each of the United Kingdom’s four nations). Of course, the final decision is not within his power, but in that of the Westminster Parliament and Brussels. An independent Scotland would have to renegotiate its membership in the European Union, if it would so desire, and the process would be painful, long, and difficult. We are not told why that would be the case. After all, if an independent Scotland were to maintain the major European laws in force (which the supporters of independence did not question), it is difficult to see why it could not have been immediately recognized as a member of the European Union. It is also difficult to see why this process of joining the European Union would have been as painful as that to which countries from afar have been subjected (Lithuania or Bulgaria, for example), which were forced to reform their economic and social systems completely. The media even dared to say, with a straight face, that an independent Scotland would no longer be able to export its whisky to England or elsewhere!

In this debate, there was one great silence: no one made the comparison to Norway, a country with a population comparable to Scotland’s, which even shares the same petroleum resources of the North Sea. Norway, moreover, has chosen to remain outside the European Union and has benefited from this choice with a margin of autonomy that allows it to protect—if it so wishes—its social policies. Norway has, nevertheless, chosen to align itself more and more with the liberal economic policies of the European Union (we will not discuss the impact of this choice here—negative, in my opinion).

Behind the debate on the interests of Scots as they appear to both sides today lie different interpretations of history. The Scots, just as the Welsh and the Irish, were Celts (and spoke Celtic languages) and fought the English (Anglo-Saxons) and subsequently Anglo-Norman invaders of the British Isles. They were ultimately defeated and integrated into what was a “Greater England.” The arrogance of the English monarchy and aristocracy in relation to the defeated was not erased from their memory, even if, it seems, this page was turned later, perhaps only after the Second World War, with the triumph of the Labour Party and the social advances that triumph made possible.

The Scots, nevertheless, were truly integrated: they permanently lost the use of their language, just like the Occitans or Bretons in France. It is pointless to welcome these changes (Anglicization or Francization) or deplore them: it is an historical and irreversible fact. The Scots benefited from the Union, because of which they were able to emigrate easily to the industrial cities of England, the colonies and dominions, and the United States. They provided a good number of officers for the British army to train troops recruited in the colonies (a little like the Corsicans in France). I will not discuss here the positive or negative aspects of these facts. But above all, and this appears to me to be the strongest argument, Scotland and England were formed into a single modern, completely unified capitalist economy (just as were northern France and Occitania). There are undoubtedly more Scots (or people of Scottish ancestry, even if distant) who live and work in England than in their country of origin. In that way, Scotland cannot be compared with Norway.

And yet, despite this profound integration, which is, let us acknowledge, no longer discriminatory, the Scots like to think of themselves as distinct from the English. The English monarchy and aristocracy invented the Anglican version of the “Reformation,” i.e., Catholicism without the Pope (who was replaced by the King of England). The Scots chose a different path, the Calvinist reformed churches. The difference no longer has importance today, but it was important in the nineteenth century and even in the first half of the twentieth century.

The official interpretation of history, widely accepted by the peoples concerned, unhesitantly describes the union of the four nations into the contemporary United Kingdom as “positive overall.” This is what David Cameron and the British leaders of all the major parties in the United Kingdom tirelessly repeated. But this is also the opinion expressed by half of Scottish voters. They might say, even if at the cost of fracturing a difficult-to-heal public opinion, that the “pro-independence” half made an irrational choice (contrary to its interests) out of romanticism. What is not said is that exceptional means were systematically brought to bear to convince voters. To describe these means as blackmail or even as intellectual terrorism would not be overdoing it. The election, even if in formal terms it was completely free and transparent, is not in itself proof of the legitimacy, credibility, and permanence of the choice it ratified.

The history of the formation and continuity of the United Kingdom is thus a beautiful history stained only by its failure in Southern Ireland (Eire). The conquest of Ireland by the arrogant English lords, who grabbed the land and reduced the Irish peasants to a condition close to serfdom, with its disastrous demographic effects (repeated famines, massive emigration, depopulation), was nothing but a particularly brutal form of colonization. The Irish people resisted by hanging onto their Catholicism and ultimately reconquered their independence in 1922. But it remains the case that colonization led to the imposition, to this day, of the dominant use of the English language. Eire today is part of the European Union, whose dependence on British capitalism is attenuated only by its dependence on other major partners in the contemporary liberal world economy.

In summary, then, the suggested conclusion is that the differences inherited from history by the four nations of the United Kingdom do not dictate the breakup of Great Britain. The history of British capitalism is painted in shades of rose, not black.

The Formation of Russia and the Soviet Union

The media discourse on Greater Russia—the former Russian Empire of the Tsars and also the Soviet Union—takes on a completely different tone. In this case, we are told that we must come to a different conclusion: the differences are such that there was no other solution than to break up the formerly unified entity into distinct and independent states. But let us look a little more closely. The development of Greater Russia within the framework of the Tsarist Empire, followed by its profound transformation during the construction of the Soviet Union, was, as we are supposed to understand it, a black history, governed by the continual exercise of extreme violence alone.


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I would like to challenge this view. The unification of three Slavic peoples (Great Russian, Ukrainian, and Belorussian) by the Tsars of Moscow, followed by Russian expansion to the Baltic in the west and to Siberia, the Transcaucasus, and Central Asia to the east and south, was no more violent and less respectful of the identity of the peoples affected than was the development of historical capitalism in the Atlantic West (and, within this context, of British capitalism) and its colonial expansion. The comparison even favors Russia. I am going to give a few examples. The reader will find more analyses in my other writings.

(1) The unification of the three “Russian” peoples (Great Russian, Ukrainian, and Belorussian) was certainly made through military conquest by the Tsars, as was the construction of France or Great Britain through military conquest by their kings. This political unification was the vector through which the Russian language was imposed—“naturally”—on local dialects. The latter were, moreover, considerably closer to one another than were, for example, the “langue d’Oil” and the “langue d’Oc” in France, English and the Celtic languages, or the Italian dialects in Sicily and Venice. To present linguistic Russification as a horror imposed by violence alone, as opposed to a supposedly tranquil expansion of French, English, or Italian, is to ignore historical reality. Again, I have no intention of evaluating here the nature of these linguistic expansions, whether it was long-term enrichment or cultural impoverishment. The point is that all of these linguistic expansions are historical facts of the same kind.

The Russians did not eliminate the Ukrainian and Belorussian (“feudal”) landowners; they were integrated into the same system that dominated Great Russia. The serfs and (after 1865) the free peasants of Ukraine and Belorussia were not treated differently than those of Great Russia; just as poorly, if you prefer.

The Bolsheviks’ communist ideology painted the history of Tsarism in shades of black, for good class reasons. Consequently, the Soviet Union recognized the differences (denied in the “civilized” West) and created distinct republics. What is more, to fight the danger of being accused of Great Russian chauvinism, the Soviets gave these republics boundaries that largely exceeded those that would have been drawn by a strict ethnolinguistic definition. One territory, such as Russian Crimea, could be transferred to another republic (in this case to Ukraine) without a problem. Novorossiya (“New Russia”—the Donetsk region), distinct from Malaia Rossiia (“Small Russia”—Ukraine), could be entrusted to Kiev’s administration rather than Moscow’s without causing any problems. The Bolsheviks had not imagined that these boundaries would become the borders of independent states.

(2) The Russians conquered the Baltic countries during the same time period the English settled Ulster. The Russians did not commit any horrors comparable to those of the English. They respected the rights of the local landowning elites (in this case, Baltic barons of German origin) and did not discriminate against the local subjects of the Tsar, who were certainly poorly treated, just like the serfs of Great Russia. The Russian Baltic countries certainly experienced nothing comparable to the savage dispossession of the Irish people in Northern Ireland, chased out by the invasion of the “Orangemen.” Later, the Soviets restored the fundamental rights of the Baltic republics—the use of their own languages and the promotion of their own cultures.

(3) The expansion of the Tsarist Empire beyond the Slavic regions is not comparable to the colonial conquest by the countries of Western capitalism. The violence carried out by the “civilized” countries in their colonies is unparalleled. It amounted to accumulation by dispossession of entire peoples, with no hesitation about resorting to straightforward extermination, i.e., genocide, if necessary (the North American Indians and the Australian Aborigines, exterminated by the English), or, alternatively, brutal control by a colonial government (India, Africa, Southeast Asia). The Tsars, precisely because their system was not yet a capitalist one, conquered territories without dispossessing the inhabitants. Some of the conquered peoples were integrated into the Empire and were Russified to varying degrees, notably through using the Russian language and often forgetting their own. This was the case with many of the Turco-Mongolian minorities, though they retained their religion, be it Muslim, Buddhist, or Shamanist. Others preserved their national and linguistic identity—the Transcaucasus and Central Asia south of Kazakhstan. None of these peoples were exterminated like the North American Indians or Australian Aborigines. The brutal autocratic administration of the conquered territories and Russian arrogance prevent us from painting this history in shades of rose. But it remains less black than was the behavior of the English in Ireland (not in Scotland), India, North America, or the French in Algeria. The Bolsheviks painted this history in shades of black, and always for the same good reasons of class.

The Soviet system brought changes for the better. It gave these republics, regions, and autonomous districts, established over huge territories, the right to their cultural and linguistic expression, which had been despised by the Tsarist government. The United States, Canada, and Australia never did this with their indigenous peoples and are certainly not ready to do so now. The Soviet government did much more: it established a system to transfer capital from the rich regions of the Union (western Russia, Ukraine, Belorussia, later the Baltic countries) to the developing regions of the east and south. It standardized the wage system and social rights throughout the entire territory of the Union, something the Western powers never did with their colonies, of course. In other words, the Soviets invented an authentic development assistance, which presents a stark contrast with the false development assistance of the so-called donor countries of today.

There was no inherent reason that this system, with an economy that was completely integrated at the level of the Union, had to disintegrate. There was no objective necessity that had to lead to the breakup of the Union into independent states, sometimes even in conflict with one another. Western media chatter about the “necessary end of empires” does not hold water. Yet, the USSR indeed broke apart, which needs to be explained.

The Break Up of the USSR: Inevitability or Conjuncture Created by Recent History?

The peoples of the Soviet Union did not choose independence. There was no electoral process, neither in Russia nor elsewhere in the Union, prior to the declarations of independence, which were proclaimed by those in power, who themselves had not really been elected. The ruling classes of the republics, above all in Russia, bear complete responsibility for the Union’s dissolution. The only question is to know why they made this choice when they made it. The leaders of the central Asian republics did not really want to separate from Russia. It was the latter that presented them with a fait accompli: the dissolution of the Union.

I will not examine this question in detail here, for which I have already presented my arguments elsewhere. Yeltsin and Gorbachev, who rallied to the idea of completely and immediately reestablishing liberal capitalism through “shock therapy,” wanted to get rid of the burdensome republics of central Asia and the Transcaucasus (which benefited, in the Soviet Union, from capital transfers from Russia). Europe took it on itself to force the independence of the Baltic republics, which were immediately annexed to the European Union. In Russia and Ukraine, the same oligarchs stemming from the Soviet nomenklatura seized both absolute political power and major assets from the large industrial complexes of the Soviet economy, privatized in haste for their exclusive benefit. It is they who decided to separate into distinct states. The western powers—the United States and Europe—are not responsible for the disaster at this initial stage. But they immediately understood the advantage they could gain from the disappearance of the Union and then became active agents intervening in the two countries (Russia and Ukraine), stirring up hostility between their corrupt oligarchs.

Of course, the collapse is not solely the result of its immediate cause: the disastrous choice of the ruling classes in 1990–1991. The Soviet system had been rotten for at least two decades. The abandonment of the revolutionary democracy of 1917 in favor of an autocratic management by the new Soviet state capitalism is, in fact, the origin of the rigidity of the Brezhnev era, the rallying of the political ruling class to the capitalist perspective, and the ultimate disaster.

Although it has retained the neoliberal capitalist model for its internal economic management (in a “Jurassic Park” version, to use Aleksandr Buzgalin’s expression), Putin’s Russia has not been accepted by contemporary collective imperialism (the G7: United States, Europe, and Japan) as an equal partner. Washington and Brussels’ objective is to destroy the Russian state (and the Ukrainian state), reducing them to regions subject to the expansion of the capitalism of the Western oligopolies. Putin became aware of this later, when the Western powers prepared, financed, and supported what can only be described as an Euro-fascist coup d’état in Kiev.

The question that is posed now is thus a new one: Will Putin break with economic neoliberalism to embark on, with and like others (China in particular), an authentic project of economic and social renaissance, the “Eurasian” alternative that he announced the intention of constructing? It must be understood, though, that this construction can move forward only if it knows how to “walk on two legs,” i.e., pursue both an independent foreign policy and economic and social reconstruction.

Double Standards?

By comparing the Scottish situation with that of Ukraine, we can only note the duplicity of the words and actions of the Western powers: a double standard. The same duplicity exists for a host of other issues about which I will say nothing here: “for” German unity, paid for dearly by the annexed “Easterners,” but “against” the unity of Yugoslavia, Iraq, and Syria. In reality, behind this appearance looms the one and only criterion that governs the choices of the governments of collective imperialism (United States, Europe, Japan): the viewpoint of dominant financial capital. But to see this clearly in their choices we must proceed further in analyzing the system of contemporary capitalism.

The State in Contemporary Capitalism

I shall only take up here the main points of the analyses I have offered in recent writings to answer the question posed in this article: Why (and by what means) are the dominant policies used to strengthen the state in some places and destroy it elsewhere?

(1) The system of capitalist production has been involved for the last thirty years (beginning in 1980) in a qualitative transformation that can be summed up in this way: what we are seeing is the emergence of a globalized production system that is gradually being substituted for the earlier national production systems (in the center, autonomous and simultaneously aggressively open systems; in the peripheries, dominated systems to varying degrees and in various forms), themselves articulated in a hierarchical world system (characterized, among other things, by the center/periphery contrast and the hierarchy of imperialist powers).

In the 1970s, Sweezy, Magdoff, and I had already advanced this thesis, formulated by André Gunder Frank and me in a work published in 1978. We said that monopoly capitalism was entering a new age, characterized by the gradual—but rapid—dismantling of national production systems. The production of a growing number of market goods can no longer be defined by the label “made in France” (or the Soviet Union or the United States), but becomes “made in the world,” because its manufacture is now broken into segments, located here and there throughout the whole world.

Recognizing this fact, now common knowledge, does not imply that there is only one explanation of the major cause for the transformation in question. For my part, I explain it by the leap forward in the degree of centralization in the control of capital by the monopolies, which I have described as the move from the capitalism of monopolies to the capitalism of generalized monopolies. In fifteen years (between 1975 to 1990) a large number of these monopolies (or oligopolies) located in the countries of the dominant triad (United States, Europe, Japan) became capable of controlling all production activities, in their own countries and in the entire world, reducing the entities involved, de jure or de facto, to subcontractors. Consequently, they have been able to siphon off a significant share of the surplus value produced by these subcontracted activities, which ends up increasing the rent of the dominant monopolies in the system. The information revolution, among other factors, provides the means that make possible the management of this globally dispersed production system. But for me, these means are only implemented in response to a new objective need created by the leap forward in the centralized control of capital. For others, on the other hand, the means—the information revolution and the revolution in production technologies—are themselves the cause of the transformation in question.

The dismantlement of national production systems, themselves the product of the long earlier history of the development of capitalism, involves almost every country in the world. In the centers (the triad), this dismantlement of national production systems can appear relatively slow and limited due to the weight of the inherited and still active system. But each day it advances a bit more. In contrast, in the national production systems of the peripheries, which had made progress towards the construction of a modernized national industrial system (the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and to a lesser degree in scattered places in Asia, Africa, and Latin America), the aggression of the capitalism of the generalized monopolies (through submission—voluntary or forced—to the so-called principles of globalized neoliberalism) is expressed by a violent, rapid, and total dismantlement of the national systems in question and the transformation of local production activities in these countries into subcontracted activities. The rent of the generalized monopolies of the triad, the beneficiaries of this dismantlement, becomes an imperialist rent. I have described this transformation, viewed from the peripheries, as “re-compradorization.” This process has affected all countries from the former Eastern bloc (former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe) and all countries in the South. China alone is a partial exception.

The emergence of this globalized production system eliminates coherent “national development” policies (diverse and unequally effective), but it does not substitute a new coherence, which would be that of the globalized system. The reason for that is the absence of a globalized bourgeoisie and globalized state, which I will examine later. Consequently, the globalized production system is incoherent by nature.

Another important consequence of this qualitative transformation of contemporary capitalism is the emergence of the collective imperialism of the triad, which takes the place of the historical national imperialisms (of the United States, Great Britain, Japan, Germany, France, and a few others). Collective imperialism finds its raison d’être in the awareness by the bourgeoisies in the triad nations of the necessity for their joint management of the world and particularly of the subjected, and yet to be subjected, societies of the peripheries.

(2) Some draw two correlates from the thesis of the emergence of a globalized production system: the emergence of a globalized bourgeoisie and the emergence of a globalized state, both of which would find their objective foundation in this new production system. My interpretation of the current changes and crises leads me to reject these two correlates.

There is no globalized bourgeoisie (or dominant class) in the process of being formed, neither on the world scale nor in the countries of the imperialist triad. We do note an increase in direct and portfolio investment flows from the triad (particularly major flows between the trans-Atlantic partners). Nevertheless, based on my critical interpretation of the major empirical works that have been devoted to the subject, I am led to emphasize the fact that the centralization of control over the capital of the monopolies takes place within the nation-states of the triad (United States, each member of the European Union, Japan) much more than it does in the relations between the partners of the triad, or even between members of the European Union. The bourgeoisies (or oligopolistic groups) are in competition within nations (and the national state manages this competition, in part at least) and between nations. Thus the German oligopolies (and the German state) took on the leadership of European affairs, not for the equal benefit of everyone, but first of all for their own benefit. At the level of the triad, it is obviously the bourgeoisie of the United States that leads the alliance, once again with an unequal distribution of the benefits.

The idea that the objective cause—the emergence of the globalized production system—entails ipso facto the emergence of a globalized dominant class is based on the underlying hypothesis that the system must be coherent. In reality, it is possible for it not to be coherent. In fact, it is not coherent and hence this chaotic system is not viable.


The expansion of the Tsarist Empire beyond the Slavic regions is not comparable to the colonial conquest by the countries of Western capitalism. The violence carried out by the “civilized” countries in their colonies is unparalleled. 


In the peripheries, the globalization of the production system occurs in conjunction with the replacement of the hegemonic blocs of earlier eras by a new hegemonic bloc dominated by the new comprador bourgeoisie, the exclusive beneficiary of the dismantling of the earlier systems (the means by which this transformation was produced are well known: “privatization” of parts of the old dismantled system, the assets of which were sold at artificial prices incommensurate with their values). These new comprador bourgeoisies are not constitutive elements of a globalized bourgeoisie, but only subaltern allies of the bourgeoisies of the dominant triad.

Just like there is no globalized bourgeoisie in the process of formation, there is also no globalized state on the horizon. The major reason for that is that the current globalized system does not attenuate, but actually accentuates conflict (already visible or potential) between the societies of the triad and those of the rest of the world. I do indeed mean conflict between societies and, consequently, potentially conflict between states. The advantage derived from the triad’s dominant position (imperialist rent) allows the hegemonic bloc formed around the generalized monopolies to benefit from a legitimacy that is expressed, in turn, by the convergence of all major electoral parties, right and left, and their equal commitment to neoliberal economic policies and continual intervention in the affairs of the peripheries. In contrast, the neo-comprador bourgeoisies of the peripheries are neither legitimate nor credible in the eyes of their own people (because the policies they serve do not make it possible to “catch up,” and most often lead to the impasse of lumpen-development). Instability of the current governments is thus the rule in this context.

Just as there is no globalized bourgeoisie even at the level of the triad or that of the European Union, there is also no globalized state at these levels. Instead, there is only an alliance of states. These states, in turn, willingly accept the hierarchy that allows that alliance to function: general leadership is taken on by Washington, and leadership in Europe by Berlin. The national state remains in place to serve globalization as it is. It is an active state because the spread of neoliberalism and the pursuit of external interventions require that it be so. We can thus understand that the weakening of this state by a possible breakup for any of a variety of reasons is not desirable for capital of the generalized monopolies (hence the hostility to the Scottish cause examined above).

There is an idea circulating in postmodernist currents that contemporary capitalism no longer needs the state to manage the world economy and thus that the state system is in the process of withering away to the benefit of the emergence of civil society. I will not go back over the arguments that I have developed elsewhere against this naive thesis, one moreover that is propagated by the dominant governments and the media clergy in their service. There is no capitalism without the state. Capitalist globalization could not be pursued without the interventions of the United States armed forces and the management of the dollar. Clearly, the armed forces and money are instruments of the state, not of the market.

But since there is no world state, the United States intends to fulfill this function. The societies of the triad consider this function to be legitimate; other societies do not. But what does that matter? The self-proclaimed “international community,” i.e., the G7 plus Saudi Arabia, which has surely become a democratic republic, does not recognize the legitimacy of the opinion of 85 percent of the world’s population!

There is thus an asymmetry between the functions of the state in the dominant imperialist centers and those of the state in the subject, or yet to be subjected, peripheries. The state in the compradorized peripheries is inherently unstable and, consequently, a potential enemy, when it is not already one.

There are enemies with which the dominant imperialist powers have been forced to coexist—at least up until now. This is the case with China because it has rejected (up until now) the neo-comprador option and is pursuing its sovereign project of integrated and coherent national development. Russia became an enemy as soon as Putin refused to align politically with the triad and wanted to block the expansionist ambitions of the latter in Ukraine, even if he does not envision (or not yet?) leaving the rut of economic liberalism.

The great majority of comprador states in the South (that is, states in the service of their comprador bourgeoisies) are allies, not enemies—as long as each of these comprador states gives the appearance of being in charge of its country. But leaders in Washington, London, Berlin, and Paris know that these states are fragile. As soon as a popular movement of revolt—with or without a viable alternative strategy—threatens one of these states, the triad arrogates to itself the right to intervene. Intervention can even lead to contemplating the destruction of these states and, beyond them, of the societies concerned. This strategy is currently at work in Iraq, Syria, and elsewhere. The raison d’être of the strategy for military control of the world by the triad led by Washington is located entirely in this “realist” vision, which is in direct counterpoint to the naive view—à la Negri—of a globalized state in the process of formation.

(3) Does the emergence of the globalized production system offer better chances of “catching up” to the countries of the periphery?

The ideological propaganda of the dominant powers—expressed by the World Bank, for example—is devoted to making us believe that: if you join in globalization, play the game of competition, you will record respectable, even fabulous, growth rates and improve your chances of catching up! In the countries of the South, social and political forces that support neoliberalism obviously latch on to this discourse. The naive left—again in the manner of Negri—does so as well.

I have already said it and I shall repeat it: if the prospect of catching up by capitalist methods and within globalized capitalism were truly possible, no social, political, or ideological force would be able to block that road, even in the name of another, preferable future for all of humanity. But that is simply not possible: the development of globalized capitalism at all stages of its history, today within the framework of the emergence of a globalized production system just as much as at earlier stages, can only produce, reproduce, and deepen the center/periphery contrast. The capitalist path is an impasse for 80 percent of humanity. The periphery remains, consequently, the “zone of storms.”

What then? There is no other alternative than choosing to construct an autonomous national system based on the establishment of self-sustaining industry combined with the renewal of agriculture organized around food sovereignty. I will say no more about that here, having already offered several analyses on the subject. It is not a question of nostalgia for a return to the past—Soviet or national popular—but the creation of conditions making possible the development of a second wave of awakening for the peoples of the South who could then link their struggles with those of peoples of the North, who are also victims of a savage capitalism in crisis and for which the emergence of a globalized production system offers nothing. Then humanity could finally advance on the long road to communism, a higher stage of human civilization.

References

About Russia, the Soviet Union, and the Ukrainian conflict, see:

In contrast, about China, see:

  • Samir Amin, “China 2013,” Monthly Review 64, 10 (March 2013): 14­­­­-33.

About contemporary capitalism, see:


Samir Amin is director of the Third World Forum in Dakar, Senegal. His books published by Monthly Review Press include The Liberal VirusThe World We Wish to SeeThe Law of Worldwide Value, and, most recently, The Implosion of Contemporary Capitalism.

This article was translated from the French by James Membrez. 




 

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The Black Panthers Had the Right Idea

Who will Protect and Defend Black Life?

 Black Panther Party - 1960s
CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENLARGE

THANDISIZWE CHIMURENGA 

[dropcap]It’s kind of fitting[/dropcap] that police officers Darren Wilson and Daniel Pantaleo, murderers of Mike Brown in Missouri and Eric Garner in New York, were cleared of criminal wrong-doing in the last several weeks. The eruption of protest, activism and organizing in response to the (bad) decisions of legal bodies to not hold these officers accountable for their crimes has occurred at a time of special significance for the legacy of the Black Panther Party (BPP).

October 15th saw the 48th anniversary of the birth of the BPP in Oakland, CA.  Originally named the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense, the BPP had a self-defense strategy against the brutal terror of the police. The strategy unashamedly and unapologetically maintained that Black people have human rights that are to be respected, including the right of armed self-defense, and BPP members had a right to intervene with those arms if necessary when law enforcement – those touted as the ones whose job was allegedly to protect and serve – violated those rights. In Los Angeles, the month of October also saw the deaths of Ronald and Roland Freeman, brothers who were co-founders and leading members of the Southern California Chapter of the Black Panther Party.  Ronald and Roland, who were born one year apart and died one week apart, were also survivors of the Dec. 8, 1969 shootout with the Los Angeles Police Department’s SWAT team on 41st Street and Central Avenue. The pre-dawn attack, the SWAT team’s first major engagement, lasted 5 hours and saw 13 members of the BPP stand trial for attempted murder of police officers. All 13 of the Panthers would eventually be acquitted of all charges in December, 1971 due to the illegal actions of the LAPD.

One day after the New York grand jury failed to indict Pantaleo (Dec. 4) came the 45th anniversary of the murders of Mark Clark and Fred Hampton by Chicago Police. The pre-dawn “shoot in” was the result of collusion between the local police, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Illinois State’s Attorney’s office to neutralize Hampton and the work of the Illinois Panther Party.


BPP3-PoliceFrisk-Humiliate

Images from films and popular culture saturate our consciousness of stern-looking, black leather-jacketed and black beret-wearing young men (predominantly) holding shotguns, some with bandoliers strapped across their chest.  Those images are intended to instill fear and, in today’s climate, a bit of incredulousness.  Along with those images are the mischaracterizations and outright lies that the BPP wanted to kill whites and police officers. Racist white police officers – overzealous in the performance of their “duties” – often bore the brunt of the Panthers’ strategy but the BPP understood it was not about individual officers but a system that allowed for violations of Black life.  With law texts in one hand and guns in the other, police officers that were observed violating the human rights and dignity of Blacks were confronted with a choice.  The majority of those confrontations were resolved without fanfare or gunplay.

Protecting Black Life

black_panthers_in_marvel_uThe Panthers’ self-defense strategy is primarily ridiculed and condemned as militarist and adventurist but rarely acknowledged as a central tenet of human rights activism. If we focus on the idea of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense and not the image we have been given, the idea makes perfect sense.

Imagine that, instead of bystanders filming CHP Officer Daniel Andrew mercilessly beating a helpless Marlene Pinnock by the side of the I-10 freeway last August, a handful of those bystanders had trained their weapons on Andrew, demanded he cease and desist, handcuffed him and waited until a commander from the CHP arrived on the scene?

Another scenario: imagine if, in addition to Ramsey Orta filming the murder of Eric Garner by Pantaleo, bystanders had intervened and subdued Pantaleo who continued to keep Garner in a chokehold after Garner was on the ground and complaining of not being able to breathe?

Or: if some of the residents of Canfield Green Estates in Ferguson, MO, had surrounded Officer Darren Wilson after he had emptied his service weapon in a populated apartment complex in broad daylight, killing Mike Brown with six shots; what if those residents had surrounded Wilson and demand that he cease and desist, disarmed and handcuffed him, and then delivered him to the Ferguson Police Department? In spite of the shenanigans of the Ferguson PD, imagine: in all instances, Black lives could have been spared; abusive police officers would have been immediately neutralized; and the citizens themselves would have played a role in maintaining a safe and secure environment for themselves and their families.

Imagine.

BPP2

Thousands of people rally at the Hall of Justice in downtown Los Angeles December 11, 1969, three days after the LAPD’s SWAT unit illegally attacked the Southern California Chapter of the Black Panther Party headquarters on 41st Street and Central Avenue in South Los Angeles (Los Angeles Herald Examiner Newspaper).

The characterization of the BPP via popular culture and law enforcement lies does not match the current reality of police murders occuring today. The overwhelming majority of police murder victims that activists have been calling attention to were either unarmed or nonthreatening at the time of their deaths, calling into question why there was a need for police presence at all; or the officers lied and/attempted to cover-up their crimes. In both instances, the legal system which claims both moral authority and jurisdiction over such matters has failed to hold police accountable for their crimes or secure a modicum of punishment for the officers’ crimes. That translates into a lack of respect for and protection of Black life.

Who will protect and defend Black life when those who are charged with protecting and serving are the very ones who violate our right to life … unjustifiably and with impunity?

Who?

The murders of Garner, Brown and countless others have unleashed a fury of activism and organizing not seen since the BPP was on the American landscape.  This current iteration of activity, like many of its predecessors, has connected the dots of racism, militarism and economic exploitation that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. talked about. They have linked the heightened militarism and terrorism of local police with U.S. foreign policy, and laid bare a domestic policy that relies on punitive measures such as stop-and-frisk and.over-incarceration to the shredding of a social safety net. The bulk of the activism and organizing of these young people has involved direct-actions and civil disobedience. The majority of their actions have been nonviolent. The majority of actions in opposition to them – by law enforcement and right-wing, white supremacist organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan – have been violent or encouraged the use od violence. This is unacceptable.

black-panthers-seattle-1969-armed-on-capitol-steps-600x350

Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, co-founders of the BPP, believed the organization to be following in the logical footsteps of Malcolm X who believed in the sanctity and the assertion of Black peoples’ human rights “by any means necessary.” Malcolm X was seen as a necessary – and scarier – counterbalance to Dr. King. In order for this new movement to be successful, a movement currently challenging the failure of the legal system to hold its officers accountable for the murders of Black people, this new generation could also use a counterbalance.

They shouldn’t have far to look for some ideas.


Killing Trayvons: an Anthology of American Violence, and to the forthcoming Hands Up Don’t Shoot: Collected Essays/Stories on the Racialization of Murder.


THEIR LIES.
THEIR CONSTANT PROPAGANDA.
OUR TRUTH.
HUGE ISSUES ARE BEING DECIDED: Nuclear war, whether we’ll live in democracy or tyranny, dignity or destitution, planetary salvation or doom…
It’s a battle of communications we can’t afford to lose. 


So, do something.

If you took the time to read this article, and found it worth SHARING, then why not sign up with our special bulletin to be included in our future distributions? And please tell others about The Greanville Post. Share our posts. If you don’t, how can we ever neutralize the power of the corporate media?


YOUR SUBSCRIPTIONS (SIGNUPS TO THE GREANVILLE POST BULLETIN) ARE COMPLETELY FREE, ALWAYS. AND WE DO NOT SELL OR RENT OUR EMAIL ADDRESS DATABASES—EVER. That’s a guarantee.