Texas plant explosion highlights gutting of health and safety rules

By Andre Damon, wsws.org

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As of Friday evening, 14 people were confirmed dead, 200 injured, and 60 more missing after Wednesday’s explosion at a fertilizer storage and distribution facility in the city of West, Texas.

Residents of the small town compared the eruption of the facility, which stored the highly explosive substances anhydrous ammonia and ammonium nitrate, to the dropping of a bomb. The blast, which registered 2.1 on the Richter scale, left a mushroom cloud billowing over the town. It blew out windows for nearly two miles around and was heard more than 40 miles away.

The explosion leveled as many as 75 homes, destroyed a 50-unit apartment building and damaged a school. Most of the members of the town’s volunteer fire department are either killed, injured or missing.

While the details of what caused the disaster have yet to be determined, what has been made public points to severe regulatory and zoning failures as contributors to the tragedy. The fertilizer plant was located directly adjacent to a school, park, apartment complex and nursing home. One resident remembered playing in the shadow of “tanks and silos” as a child. The middle school adjacent to the plant was closed for a day in February due to a fire at the facility.

Despite the hazardous nature of the material stored in the plant and its proximity to homes and public facilities, it appears that enforcement of health and safety regulations was abysmally lax. In this, West Fertilizer is not an exception, but rather the rule after decades of deregulation and the gutting of government oversight of private companies—a process that has been accelerated under the Obama administration.

Industrial accidents are appallingly common in the United States. Nearly 4 million workers are injured on the job each year—11,000 every day. In 2011, over 4,600 workers died from work-related injuries in the US—90 every week, or 13 each day.

The New York Times reported Friday that Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) records show the last time the agency inspected the plant was 28 years ago. OSHA found five “serious” violations, “involving improper storage and handling of anhydrous ammonia and improper respiratory protection for workers,” the newspaper reported. For this, the company received a $30 fine.

The facility had no automatic shutoff system, firewalls or emergency management plans. In a recent filing with the Environmental Protection Agency, the facility’s operators stated that there were no risks of a fire or explosion. The worst-case scenario, according to the report, was a ten-minute release of ammonia gas that would pose only a minimal safety hazard.

West Fertilizer has been cited and occasionally fined for safety and environmental violations, but no serious measures have been taken to compel the company to address the problems.

FBI officials said Thursday there was “no indication of criminal activity” in the plant explosion. However, one cannot rule out the possibility of something other than an industrial accident, given the location and timing of the event.

The town of West, Texas is located 20 miles north of Waco, where an FBI assault on a religious compound initiated a fire that killed 76 men, women and children on April 19, 1993. Exactly two years later, on April 19, 1995, Timothy McVeigh carried out the Oklahoma City bombing, killing 168 people, in retaliation for the Waco siege. The West, Texas explosion took place within two days of the anniversary of these events.

The explosion in West, Texas is only the latest in a string of US industrial disasters. Below is a partial list of such events over the past decade:

• On March 23, 2005, a major explosion ripped through BP’s Texas City refinery, killing 15 workers and injuring over 170 others.

• On January 2, 2006, twelve miners died in Sago, West Virginia after a mine explosion and collapse. Two weeks before the disaster, a federal mine inspector concluded, after finding a buildup of coal dust, that “the operator has shown a high degree of negligence for the health and safety of the miners that work at this coal mine.”

• On February 7, 2008, fourteen people died in a sugar refinery explosion in Port Wentworth, Georgia after plant management allowed the buildup of combustible sugar dust in the facility.

• On April 5, 2010, twenty-nine miners were killed in the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster in Raleigh County, West Virginia. A regulatory investigation concluded that the disaster was due to gross negligence on the part of the mine’s operator, but fined the company only $10 million, and only one low-level superintendent was found guilty of a crime.

• On April 20, 2011, 11 workers died after an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico caused by negligent decisions by BP and Transocean, resulting in the largest marine oil spill and the largest environmental disaster in US history.

All of the incidents noted above involved major infractions of workplace safety rules, which regulators either did not have the resources to investigate or deliberately overlooked.

Between OSHA and state agencies, there are only 2,200 inspectors responsible for enforcing the safety of 130 million workers in America—which translates to about one inspector for every 59,000 workers. As a result of severe staffing cutbacks, OSHA has largely abandoned regular inspections in favor of investigating instances where there “has been a fatality, multiple hospitalizations, [or] where a worker files a formal complaint,” David Michaels, Assistant Secretary Of OHSA, told Congress in 2011.

Michaels added that, in 1977, OSHA had 37 inspectors for every million workers, while today there are only 22. Workplace regulations are being further weakened as a result of “sequester” budget cuts that began to take effect in March.

The recession that started in 2007 has fueled an even further erosion of workplace conditions, as employers have used the threat of layoffs to prevent workers from speaking out about unsafe conditions, while imposing speedup on workforces already decimated by job cuts.

The frequency of disasters and fatalities at US workplaces is rooted in the private ownership of the means of production and the subordination of all social questions to the accumulation of wealth in the hands of the financial-corporate elite. This elite monopolizes political life through its two corporate-controlled parties, which uphold the “right” of owners to dictatorial control of the workplace.

The only way to end the wanton maiming and killing of workers on the job, and the poisoning of the environment, is to establish genuine industrial democracy and workers’ control over production. This can be achieved only through a mass movement of the working class, armed with a socialist perspective. Major corporations and financial institutions must be nationalized and placed under public ownership, and economic life organized on the basis of social need, not private profit.




Corporate Terrorism in West, Texas

The Full Weight of Justice
by RUSSELL MOKHIBER
Barack Obama

In his first statement in response to the Boston bombings, President Obama said that “Michelle and I send our deepest thoughts and prayers to the families of the victims in the wake of this senseless loss.”

In the his first statement in response to the explosion outside Waco, Texas, President Obama said that “our prayers go out to the people of West, Texas in the aftermath of last night’s deadly explosion at a fertilizer plant.”

In his statement on Boston, President Obama said that “any responsible individuals, any responsible groups will feel the full weight of justice.”

But when it came to the explosion in Texas, President Obama said nothing about responsible individuals, responsible groups or the full weight of justice.

Why not?

Because when it comes to street crime, President Obama is the top cop.

When it comes to apparent corporate crime and violence, he’s the enabler in chief.

Make no mistake, if it becomes clear that the Texas explosion was triggered by a terrorist attack, a la the Oklahoma City bombing, then Obama will begin talking about “the full weight of justice.”

But if the focus is corporate crime and violence, corporate recklessness, workplace safety,  “full weight of justice” rhetoric won’t see the light of day.

After all, it was Obama’s Justice Department that in December 2011 settled the case of the April 2010 Massey Energy Upper Big Branch explosion, which killed 29 miners, with a “non prosecution agreement.”

Outrageously, the Justice Department said it would not criminally prosecute Massey even though the Labor Department concluded that Massey’s “unlawful policies and practices” were the “root cause of this tragedy.”

Massey had a track record of skirting the law and even kept two sets of books for at Upper Big Branch — one for internal use, which kept track of workplace hazards — and one for law enforcement, which did not.

David Uhlmann, the former head of the Department of Justice’s Environmental Crimes Section, and now a Professor at the University of Michigan Law School, says had he been in charge of the Massey Energy case, he would have criminally prosecuted Massey.

In his tenure at the Justice Department, he criminally prosecuted many major corporations for wrongdoing arguably less serious than one that results in the deaths of 29 workers.

And he says that the Massey non prosecution agreement is just part of a disturbing trend, one that has accelerated under the Obama administration, toward settling major corporate crime cases with deferred and non prosecution agreements.

Russell Mokhiber edits the Corporate Crime Reporter.




Two Acts of Terror, Only One Investigation

The Main Terrorists are the Corporate Execs Who’ve Bought the Regulators

Retail terrorists by the standards of corporate criminals and their political allies.

Retail terrorists by the standards of corporate criminals and their political allies.

by DAVE LINDORFF

The way I see it, we had two acts of terrorism in the US this week. The first took place at the end of the historic Boston Marathon, when two bombs went off near the finish line, killing three and seriously injuring dozens of runners and spectators. The second happened a couple days later in the town of West, Texas, where a fertilizer plant blew up, incinerating or otherwise killing at least 15, and injuring at least 150 people, and probably more as the search for the dead and the injured continues.

It’s pretty clear that the Boston Marathon bombing was an act of terrorism, with police making arrests and having killed one of the two suspects who had earlier been captured on film and video at the scene of the bombings.

The villains in the West Fertilizer Co. explosion are can be much more easily identified: the managers and owners of the plant.

West Fertilizer was built in the middle of the small town of West, TX, a community founded in the 19th century and named after the first local postmaster, T.M. West. It makes no sense, of course, to put a facility that uses highly toxic anhydrous ammonia as a primary feed stock — a compound that burns the lungs and kills on contact, and that, because it must be stored under pressure, is highly prone to leaks and explosive releases — and that makes as its main product ammonium nitrate fertilizer. Ammonium nitrate is the highly explosive compound favored by truck bombers like the Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. It was the fertilizer, vast quantities of which were stored at the West Fertilizer plant site, which caused the colossal explosion that leveled much of the town of West.

Building such a dangerous facility in the midst of a residential and business area, and allowing homes, nursing homes, hospitals, schools and playgrounds to be built alongside it, is the result of a corrupt process that is common in towns and cities across America, where business leaders routinely have their way with local planning and zoning commissions, safety inspectors and city councils. Businesses small and large also have their way with state and federal safety and health inspectors.

We know that the EPA, back in 2006, cited West Fertilizer for not having an emergency risk management plan. That is, a dangerous and explosion-prone plant that was using a hazardous chemical in large quantities, and that was storing highly explosive material also in large quantities, had made little or no effort to assess the risks of what it was doing. Indeed, it has been reported that the company had assured the EPA, in response to the complaint, that there was “no risk” of an explosion at the plant! An AP article reports that the company, five years after being cited for lacking a risk plan, did file one with the EPA, but that the report claimed the company “…was not handling flammable materials and did not have sprinklers, water-deluge systems, blast walls, fire walls or other safety mechanisms in place at the plant.”

Yet the AP article goes on to say that “State officials require all facilities that handle anhydrous ammonia to have sprinklers and other safety measures because it is a flammable substance, according to Mike Wilson, head of air permitting for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.”

The article says:

“Records reviewed by The Associated Press show the U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration fined West Fertilizer $10,000 last summer for safety violations that included planning to transport anhydrous ammonia without a security plan. An inspector also found the plant’s ammonia tanks weren’t properly labeled.”

Then the article gets to the crux of the problem, saying:

“The government accepted $5,250 after the company took what it described as corrective actions, the records show. It is not unusual for companies to negotiate lower fines with regulators.”

Aside from the ridiculousness of West Fertilizer management’s reported assertion that the plant wasn’t handling flammable materials (a claim that the current deadly catastrophe has demonstrably proved was false), consider the incredible response of the EPA to this incredible assertion: The agency, emasculated by the Bush administration, and still a joke under the Obama administration, levied a pathetically small fine, but did nothing to shut the operation down until it put in place critical safety measures.

The other agency that could have acted, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), is even more of a paper tiger than the EPA. Despite their inherent risks and hazards, it is reported that OSHA has made only six investigations of fertilizer plant operators in Texas in the last six years. West Fertilizer was not one of them. In six years, it has not been visited by OSHA inspectors!

How can this be so? Because the entire health and safety regulatory apparatus of the US, from the federal level to the states and right down to local government, has been effectively neutered by corporate interests, who have used everything from threats of relocating to campaign contributions and outright bribes of officials and elected representatives to buy or win the right to basically operate as unsafely as they like, free of supervision.

As a result, regulation of dangerous plants and factories in the US these days is essentially nonexistent.

That, to me, is a kind of terrorism, and it is far more dangerous to the health and safety of the American people than any foreign or domestic terrorist or terrorist organization.

Yet the bulk of the American people are focusing their fears on terrorists from abroad, or in some cases here at home, not on the corporate suites where the real evil and the real danger lies.

Until we Americans wake up and insist that our elected officials and the regulatory bureaucrats they appoint, actually act in the public interest and not in the interest of the moneyed corporate elite (booting out those that betray us), we will increasingly all pay the price as plants blow up or leak toxic gas, as oil and gas companies wantonly pollute our water tables with carcinogenic toxins, and as nuclear power plants dump isotopes into our environment, all in the interest of profits.

The real terrorists in our midst are not men with knapsacks and white baseball caps who plant homemade bombs. They are not swarthy terrorists from the Middle East. Rather, they are the mostly white men (and women) in business suits on Wall Street and Main Street who callously use their wealth to subvert the political system to their short-term advantage, causing common-sense safety and health precautions to be ignored, or getting those laws watered down or outright cancelled.

Of course, a classic terrorist is trying to kill while the corporate executive is often “just” putting concerns about profits ahead of concerns about the safety or workers and people who live nearby, but in the final analysis, the victim of a terrorist’s bomb. The difference is that we won’t see the FBI or the local police tracking down and arresting the killers and maimers in the case of a fertilizer plant explosion. The people responsible for that type of outrage typically just collect their insurance payments (maybe paying some token fine), rebuild, and go on making their dangerous product as before — usually in the same location.

Dave Lindorff is a  founder of This Can’t Be Happening and a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion, published by AK Press. Hopeless is also available in a Kindle edition. Lindorff’s article on drones in Philadelphia appears in the March issue of CounterPunch magazine. He lives in Philadelphia.




Our Missing Left Opposition

The Rot Within

by ANDREW LEVINE

 hillaryClint
The Clintons practically incarnate the corruption of the Democrats.

From the time of the French Revolution, when the more radical delegates to the National Assembly seated themselves to the left of the presiding officer, Left and Right have designated relatively stable, though evolving and multi-faceted, political orientations.

These poles constitute a spectrum along which policies, programs, political parties, and individuals too can be arrayed.

What that spectrum represents — what left and right signify — is impossible to say precisely, though the differences are generally recognizable and well understood.

The Left is dedicated to continuing, and deepening, the commitment to “liberty, equality, and fraternity (solidarity)” put forward in the French Revolution.  Tradition, authority and order are core values for the Right.

There is overlap of course; the Right, especially lately and especially in the United States and other neoliberal bastions, has taken a keen interest in “liberty” or “freedom” (the words are interchangeable).   But its purchase on that concept differs from the Left’s.

Historically, the Right has not cared as much about civil liberties as the Left has.  What nowadays obsesses the Right is state interference with capitalist market relations.  They want it diminished or, in the extreme, eliminated altogether — for the sake, they claim, of economic freedom.

Even in times and places where feudal vestiges survived and where liberalism was a pole of attraction, the Left never enthused over that kind of freedom.  Its anti-capitalist component was, of course, hostile towards it.

It is worth reflecting on why the usual political understandings seem not to hold any longer in the American case, insofar as we identify our Left and Right with the Democratic and Republican Parties.

Some (right-wing) libertarians, Republicans (indeed, Tea Partiers) all, have been remarkably decent on civil liberties, while many liberal (ostensibly “leftish”) mainstream Democrats have been fair to awful.

And when it comes to promoting policies capitalists favor, the Democrats are second to none, Republicans included.  Barack Obama’s grand bargaining is just the latest egregious episode.

A “left” that panders to capitalists’ interests is no longer as rare as it used to be; it has become a worldwide phenomenon, explained in part by the failures of the last century’s boldest anti-capitalist ventures.  The historic defeat of Communism weighs especially heavily on the contemporary scene.

Our “left’s” take on civil liberties is more conjunctural.  Deference to Obama’s and Attorney General Eric Holder’s assaults on due process and other longstanding rights and liberties accounts, at least in part, for this improbable and unfortunate turn of events.

The more resolute stand of a few Republican legislators seems ideologically driven, though there is plainly an opportunistic component to it as well.  Besting Democrats on civil liberties is yet another way, as if more were needed, to make Obama look bad.

There are other differences between Left and Right understandings of liberty.

The Left’s interest has always had more to do with how able individuals are to do what they want than with how much state or non-state actors impede individuals’ activities.  The Right has generally been concerned with little else.

An interest in autonomy, in being the author of one’s own ends, has also been more a concern of the Left than the Right.

But what this has to do with Democrats and Republicans is not as obvious as may appear because the terms “left” and “right” can be – and in this case are – used in ways that diverge from the usual historical understandings.

Being spatial metaphors, “left” and “right” are relational concepts, defined in contrast to one another.  This introduces a certain ambiguity into descriptions of political orientations.

Political parties and social movements that everyone understands to be on the Left have left and right wings, as do movements and parties of the Right.  As with any continuum, there are also finer gradations.  How many there are, and how they should be described, depends on the context.

And what is true of its component parts is also true of the political culture at large.  This is how it is possible – natural even – to identify the Democratic Party with the Left.  It is not where it fits on the notional left/right spectrum that warrants this description, but how it stands in comparison to the GOP.

Where there is a left and a right, there is also a center.  In politics, the center is almost never a midpoint.  Neither is it what Aristotle called an “intermediary” or “mean.” Those terms denote positions that are appropriate to prevailing circumstances.  There is no reason to think that centrist positions are always or, for that matter, ever appropriate in this sense.

Rather, what counts as centrist depends on the nature of the political mainstream at particular times and places.  “Center” is therefore even less amenable to a general characterization than “Left” or “Right”.  Typically, the Center leans towards one or another pole on the spectrum, though it is almost always at some remove from each of them.

In  crises, centers sometimes fail to hold; centrists then fall into one or the other extreme.
However, in normal times, most individuals and parties cluster around the center.

Both Democrats and Republicans have always been parties of the center-right – both in reference to the idealized political spectrum that still governs political thinking, and in comparison to the norm in other developed capitalist countries.  Because Democrats are more dependent than Republicans on votes from working-class and other poorly off constituencies, they are and long have been the less rightist, and therefore more centrist, of the two.

Political organizations don’t just reflect views already present in the ambient political culture; they also help shape them.

Being a non-ideological, “catch-all” party, more interested in garnering votes than promoting ideas or policies, the Democrats are outliers in this respect too in comparison with the left-most mainstream political formations of other countries.  Their efforts on behalf of liberty, equality and fraternity, though significant in the middle decades of the twentieth century, pale in comparison with the achievements of the others.

Indeed, Democrats have always been more interested in tamping down working class expectations than in representing them.  And, though better than their rivals, especially in recent decades, they have dealt with African Americans, Latinos, and other socially excluded “minorities” in much the same way.

In recent years, for a variety of interrelated institutional, regional and historical reasons, our electoral system has forced the Democratic Party to move so far to the right in recent decades that it bears hardly any resemblance to the center-right party of the pre-Clinton era.

This was true even before the last, fragile barriers that somewhat insulated the political sphere from the predations of “malefactors of great wealth” fell; it is more true now that ever.

But since there is nowhere else in the mainstream where even a pale leftist presence can be expressed, the Democratic Party is still a home for the handful of legislators who stand to the left of their party’s – and their country’s — center.

The Obama administration takes them for granted in much the way that it takes the labor movement for granted and, more generally, in the way that it ignores the aspirations of the ample, increasingly left-leaning segment of the electorate from which Democrats draw most of their votes.

And why not?  If you demand nothing, that is exactly what you get.  It is also what you deserve.

The party’s right turn took off at full steam in the 1980s. The Clintons and the forces around them sealed the deal in the following decade.

And so, we now find ourselves in a situation where the only effective opposition to the Obama perpetual war regime, and to his War on Progress in what we now call the “homeland,” comes from the Republican side.  That is to say, it comes from the Right in both the notional and comparative sense.

If Obama’s assault on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid fails, we will only have Republican obstinacy to thank.  Over the past four and a half years, that obstinacy has been a mixed blessing.  It is too soon to tell whether it has done more harm than good, but it has kept Obama from doing more harm than he otherwise would.

It is sometimes said that the differences between Republicans and Democrats are  “philosophical.”   This is a mistake, and not just because the word is too grandiose to describe Republican thinking.  “Ideological” overstates the case too, for much the same reason.

The overriding fact is that Democrats and Republicans are too much on the same page to have genuinely principled differences.  They feed from the same trough, they obey the same masters, and their deeper political inclinations are of a piece.

And yet those two parties are as polarized as can be.  This is because they are each concerned with one thing only: jockeying for electoral advantage – an objective they pursue with single-minded diligence and, in the Republican case, with tactical aplomb.

On the Republican side too, there is a Tea Party constituency that insists on being placated.  Their representatives entered Congress en masse in 2010, and they have as little patience with tactical opportunism as they do with reasoned arguments.

But because there is nothing in their heads beyond confusion and mean-spirited passion, what they are for seldom exceeds a brute determination to block the Obama administration at every turn.

And since they will not acquiesce, the way the Democratic “left” habitually does, it has become all but impossible for the GOP leadership to coordinate its activities on behalf of economic elites with the Administration’s.

The resulting gridlock makes Republicans look ridiculous but, at a deeper level, it suits their purposes.  Not unreasonably, they think that obstinacy has worked for them so far, notwithstanding the 2012 election.   Why should they become reasonable now?

How did it come to this?  How did jockeying for electoral advantage become the be all and end all of American politics, at the expense of anything resembling a public interest or even an enlightened (ruling) class interest?

The short answer is money.   For Democrats and Republicans, it is all that matters; it is what makes their world turn round.

These days, it is indispensable for getting elected; more important, by far, than eloquence or charm or even that elusive factor, charisma – and vastly more important than ideas.

Political scientists used to talk about how the poles on the left/right spectrum go after the median voter.   It was argued that this is why the center generally prevails.   But that was then – before the median voter gave way to the median dollar.

Elections turn on money, but so does what happens to politicians after their “last hurrah” – when the time comes to cash in their chips.  That is when political opportunism gives way to outright cupidity.

Graft in office is rare on our shores.  But cashing in afterwards is commonplace and easy.  What used to be called “public service” is now, for many, little more than a royal road to riches.  In this too, that dreadful Clinton family is emblematic – as both a symptom and a cause.

The situation has become so awful that it is hard to resist despair.  At election time especially, illusions are all that is left.  It is not for nothing that the most meretricious – and successful – politician of our time got to where he is with vain promises of “change” and “hope.”

This is, on balance, a welcome sign; it shows that cynicism has not yet completely won.  But it also reveals the hopelessness upon which cynicism feeds.  That hopelessness is inherent in the constraints we now confront.

On the one hand, there is, it seems, no getting beyond the hold of our duopoly party system.  “Third” parties have been trying from time immemorial and gotten exactly nowhere.

In the last election, Jill Stein and Cheri Honkala ran a spirited and principled campaign on the Green ticket.  At great cost and effort, they succeeded in getting on the ballot in thirty-eight states and the District of Columbia, enough to count, by any reckoning, as serious candidates.  They took positions many, perhaps most, voters favor.  But not only did they receive only a handful of votes; hardly anyone even knew they were running.

It would be tedious to resume the reasons why.  It is enough to recall that in the 2000 election, before the onset of the moral and political rot we have brought upon ourselves in the aftermath of 9/11, even such a figure as Ralph Nader, running against the likes of Al Gore and George W. Bush could only garner 2.74% of the vote.

Needless to say, third party and independent candidacies do good by spreading the word, to the extent that they can make themselves heard.  But for breaking through the duopoly’s stranglehold, the third party route is a non-starter.

Reforming the rot from within seems, if anything, even more hopeless.  Today, that fight is led by the PDA, the Progressive Democrats of America.  They are the latest in a long line that, not too many years ago, even included proponents of (small-d) democratic socialism.  We all know how that worked out.

Still, try as it might, the Democratic Party leadership cannot rid itself entirely of the remnants of the party’s formerly robust left wing.  Therefore, they tolerate an opposition they cannot expel or otherwise extinguish.

From their point of view, a Left opposition, a pale one especially, may be annoying, but it has its uses.  If nothing else, it helps keep voters on board.

Moreover, the party bigwigs know the importance of keeping their friends close, and their enemies closer.  Meanwhile, Obama is so busy wooing plutocrats away from the GOP that, on matters of such unimportance (to him), he lets them have their way.

This is a later-day example of the phenomenon Herbert Marcuse called “repressive tolerance.”   Decades ago, when the political landscape was situated many notches further to the (notional) left than it now is, Marcuse realized that in generally liberal societies the best way to neuter opposition is just to let dissenters blow off steam.   For quashing effective resistance, tolerance can be more effective than overt repression.

The idea, then, is not to eliminate opposition but to marginalize it — or rather to eliminate it by marginalizing it.   In this, if nothing else, Democrats are more adept than Republicans.

But not even Marcuse in his most pessimistic moments would have denied that the truth can still set us free – if only ways can be found to accord it its due.

The problem is organizational, not intellectual.  The situations we confront are well understood; what’s wrong and what’s right is not a mystery.  There is no need to collect more evidence or to await a conceptual breakthrough.

Readers of CounterPunch know what is wrong in a thousand and one ways, and each day’s news brings yet more reasons.  CounterPunchreaders are not alone; not by any means.

Indeed, there is a critical mass out there that understands the situation well.   But there is nothing that comes of it because no one, in our time and place, has figured out how to translate ideas into action.

This is why we have no effective Left opposition; why the only real opposition to Obama’s courtship of Wall Street and his stewardship of the empire and its national security state comes from the Right – for all the wrong reasons.

Must we then learn to live with despair?  That is not an unreasonable conclusion.  But it is not an inevitable one.

If we have learned anything from the past, it is that change comes suddenly and when it is least expected, and it comes for reasons that become evident only in retrospect.  On this, Hegel was right: the owl of Minerva takes flight at the setting of the sun.

Nobody expected Occupy Wall Street; it was a beacon of hope — suggesting, for the first time in a long while, that anything is possible.

To be sure, it turned out to be a flash in the pan. Looking back on those heady days, this should have been obvious.

Everyone knows that movements without a political direction and structure are bound to fizzle.  Anarchic spontaneity was Occupy’s strength, but it was also its downfall.

Occupy was weak on “theory” too; it was good on inequality, but vague about its causes.  It never clarified its attitude towards capitalism; and, to its detriment, it abstained from party politics and from criticizing Obama, even as Obama and his minions saw to it that what might have become a serious problem for the plutocracy would, in short order, fade away.

But the Occupy movement laid the groundwork for the next time, and the next.  So do the critiques and analyses that the Left has gotten right.  It may all just be sound and fury.  More likely, though, it is a way of building a foundation — for something we can now only scarcely imagine.

Perhaps even such exercises in futility as working for progressive third parties or trying to change the Democratic Party from within can be helpful too.  It is hard to see how, but one never knows.

What is sure is just that everything changes and that what human beings have made human beings can unmake and reconstruct.  A watchword of the not too distant past, when there still was a large and growing Left opposition, is relevant now: “a single spark can start a prairie fire.”  So too is the contemporaneous advice that when opportunities present themselves, the first order of business is to “seize the time.”

The first order of business now, while the villains still ride high, is to prepare the way.

ANDREW LEVINE is a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, the author most recently of THE AMERICAN IDEOLOGY (Routledge) and POLITICAL KEY WORDS (Blackwell) as well as of many other books and articles in political philosophy. His most recent book is In Bad Faith: What’s Wrong With the Opium of the People. He was a Professor (philosophy) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a Research Professor (philosophy) at the University of Maryland-College Park.  He is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK Press).




Demand for lion bones offers South African breeders a lucrative return

Fears of a rise in poaching as Asian traders look for alternatives to tigers as a source of ingredients for traditional medicine

lion-cubs-resting_609_600x450

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Highly prized ... the growing market for lion bones offers breeders a way of boosting their earnings. Photograph: Alamy

Highly prized … the growing market for lion bones offers breeders a way of boosting their earnings. Photograph: Alamy

Koos Hermanus would rather not give names to the lions he breeds. So here, behind a 2.4-metre high electric fence, is 1R, a three-and-a-half-year-old male, who consumes 5kg of meat a day and weighs almost 200kg. It will only leave its enclosure once it has been “booked”‘ by a hunter, most of whom are from the United States. At that point the big cat will be set loose in the wild for the first time in its life, 96 hours before the hunt begins. It usually takes about four days to track down the prey, with the trophy hunter following its trail on foot, accompanied by big-game professionals including Hermanus. He currently has 14 lions at his property near Groot Marico, about two and a half hours by road west of Johannesburg.

After the kill Hermanus will be paid $10,000, but he can boost his earnings further by selling the lion’s bones to a Chinese dealer based in Durban. At $165 a kilo (an average figure obtained from several sources) the breeder will pocket something in the region of $5,000.

If his client does not want to keep the lion’s head as a trophy, the skull will fetch another $1,100. “If you put your money in the bank you get 8% interest,” he explains, “but at present lions show a 30% return.”

According to several specialists the new market is soaring. “In the past three months we have issued as many export licences as in a whole year,” says an official in Free State, home to most of South Africa‘s 200 lion breeders. In 2012 more than 600 lions were killed by trophy hunters. The most recent official figures date from 2009, certifying export of 92 carcasses to Laos and Vietnam. At about that time breeders started digging up the lion bones they had buried here and there, for lack of an outlet.

Asian traders started taking an interest in South African lions in 2008, when the decline in tiger numbers – now in danger of extinction – became acute. In traditional Chinese medicine, tiger wine, made using powdered bones, allegedly cures many ills including ulcers, cramp, rheumatism, stomach ache and malaria. The beverage is also claimed to have tonic qualities, boosting virility.

Despite the lack of scientific proof this potion is very popular, so with tiger bones increasingly scarce, vendors are replacing them with the remains of lions. Traders soon realised that South Africa could be a promising source. It is home to 4,000 to 5,000 captive lions, with a further 2,000 roaming freely in protected reserves such as the Kruger national park. Furthermore such trade is perfectly legal.

But a South African investigator, who has been working in this field for 35 years, paints a murky picture. “The legal market only accounts for about half the business, the other half depends on fraud and poaching, which make it possible to obtain bigger volumes, more quickly, and without attracting attention,” he asserts, adding: “It’s exactly the same people buying lion bones and poaching rhino horns. It’s all connected.”Sentenced to 40 years in prison last November for fraudulently obtaining and exporting rhino horns, the Thai trafficker Chumlong Lemtongthai also purchased lion bones on his trips to South Africa. “At the end of last year, at Johannesburg international airport, we intercepted several lion bones among bits of rhino horn and ivory, all in a packet ready for despatch,” says Hugo Taljaard, head of the Revenue Service’s detector dog units. In six months’ time South Africa will have 16 dogs trained to detect the smell of lion bones, compared with only two at present.

In June 2012 an online petition calling on President Jacob Zuma to ban the export of lion bones and body parts attracted 750,000 signatures. “The fact that the business is legal just fuels demand, but with the supply-side unable to keep up, buyers will increasingly switch to lions that are still in the wild, including elsewhere in Africa, despite them being endangered,” warns Pieter Kat at the NGO LionAid. “To prevent that risk, it would be better to let us cater for growing demand,” counters Pieter Potgieter, head of the South African Predator Breeders Association.

“As the price of bones is rising steadily, some breeders have started slaughtering their own lions, without obtaining a permit or getting a vet to put the animal to sleep,” says a fraud inspector. “But with the present wave of rhino poaching, we’ve neither the time nor the resources to address the problem.”

• This story appeared in Guardian Weekly, which incorporates material from Le Monde