A life devoted to seeding evil causes

Right-Wing Money Man Richard Mellon Scaife Dies at 82

By  , Editor in Chief, OpedNews.com

R. Mellon Scaife (Harvard Square Library)

[R]ichard Mellon Scaife, long before the Koch brothers, was one of the most important early contributors to the right wing think tanks and policy advocacy engines of the past 40 years. He has died at the age of 82.

Described by the Washington Post as “the funding father of the right,” his death could adversely affect funding for at least dozens of right wing groups, including anti-immigration groups.

Sourcewatch says:

Mellon Scaife, “was a billionaire contributor to the Republican Party and right-wing think tanks, one of the most influential men behind the American conservative movement[1]. Scaife has helped establish their biggest institutions and supported some of their most radical ideas through donations from his Scaife foundations.[2] “

and

Scaife and his family’s charitable foundations have given over a billion dollars to right-wing organzations, resulting in the creation of a vast conservative infrastructure. As theWashington Post reports:

Together these groups constitute a conservative intellectual infrastructure that provided ideas and human talent that helped Ronald Reagan initiate a new Republican era in 1980, and helped Newt Gingrich initiate another one in 1994. Conservative ideas once dismissed as flaky or extreme moved into the mainstream, and as the liberal National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy concluded in a recent report, “The long-standing conservative crusade to discredit government as a vehicle for societal progress has come to fruition as never before.”[5]

Among the right-wing organizations substantially funded by Scaife are the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise InstituteJudicial Watch, the Cato Institute,FreedomWorks, and the American Legislative Exchange Council.[6][7][8]

Mellon Scaife inherited a huge banking oil and aluminum fortune from his mother’s Mellon family. His father’s family was in the steel business. The NY Times obituary reports that he inherited $500 million, which grew to three times that amount, making him a billionaire.
As a student at Yale, the NY Times reports he was “suspended for drunken pranks, then expelled in his first year.”
Mellon Scaife’s early forays into politics included backing Barry Goldwater for president.
Wikipedia reports, ” He provided support for conservative and libertarian causes in the U.S., mostly through the private, nonprofit foundations he controlled: the Sarah Scaife Foundation,Carthage Foundation, and Allegheny Foundation, and until 2001, the Scaife Family Foundation, now controlled by his daughter Jennie and son David.[2][3] Scaife also helped fund the Arkansas Project, a campaign to investigate Bill Clinton‘s past business and personal affairs.”
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Even before Citizens United, Mellon Scaife was buying elections. Wikipedia states, “Scaife gained notoriety for making an end-run around weak campaign finance laws to donate US$990,000 to the 1972 re-election campaign of U.S. President Richard Nixon. Scaife was not charged with a crime, but about $45,000 went to a fund linked to the Watergate scandal.”
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Later Mellon Scaife played a major role in advocating for President Bill Clinton’s impeachment.
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Mellon Scaife bought the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review in 1973, and, Wikipedia says, “ The paper was frequently accused of bias, especially toward that era’s overwhelmingly Democratic political office holders in the county.”
And Wikipedia reports, “Scaife’s publications were substantially involved in coverage against then-President Bill Clinton. Scaife was the major backer of The American Spectator, whoseArkansas Project set out to find facts about Clinton and in which Paula Jones‘ accusations ofsexual harassment against Clinton were first widely publicized.
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Fair.org’s profile on Mellon Scaife in an article on the Heritage of Extremism includes this nugget, “Himself the owner of local news outlets, Scaife once responded to a reporter who asked him about his contributions to the right, “You f*cking Communist c-word, get out of here” (Columbia Journalism Review, 7-8/81).
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Wikipedia also informs us that “On April 20, 2008, two days before Pennsylvania’s presidential primary, Scaife’s Pittsburgh Tribune-Review endorsed Hillary Clinton for president.[23]
Sourcewatch lists some of the right-wing and Libertarian organizations Mellon Scaife helped fund:

Organizations Funded Through Scaife Foundations

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rob Kall is executive editor, publisher and website architect of OpEdNews.com, Host of the Rob Kall Bottom Up Radio Show (WNJC 1360 AM), and publisher of Storycon.org, President ofFuturehealth, Inc, and an inventor . He is also published regularly on the Huffingtonpost.com

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OPINIONS ON THE MAN

Josh Marshall  (Josh Marshall is editor and publisher of TalkingPointsMemo.com.)

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SEE ALSO: Citizen Scaife—A billionaire’s sordid work is never done

APPENDIX

The official, polite view: Scaife’s life as presented by the WaPo, one of the establishment papers of record. 

Richard Mellon Scaife, billionaire who funded anti-liberal causes, dies at 82

Richard Mellon Scaife published the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and funded libertarian and conservative political causes. In 2013, Forbes estimated his wealth at $1.4 billion. (Keith Srakocic/AP 1997 file)

 July 4,  Washington Post
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Richard Mellon Scaife, a billionaire publisher whose philanthropy helped redefine the American right wing in the 1980s and 1990s and who helped underwrite a range of anti-liberal causes, most famously political attacks against President Bill Clinton, died July 4, a day after his 82nd birthday.  His newspaper, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, announced the death but did not disclose the cause. In May, Mr. Scaife wrote in the newspaper that he had “an untreatable form of cancer.”An heir to the Mellon banking, oil and aluminum fortunes, the Pittsburgh-based Mr. Scaife spent hundreds of millions of dollars of his estimated net worth of $1.4 billion to counteract what he called “the liberal slant to American society.”He threw his financial support behind conservative newspapers and magazines, including the American Spectator and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Through those organs, his family-based funding entities and his presence on the boards of conservative and libertarian citadels such as the Heritage Foundation and the Hoover Institution, he championed small government, fewer regulations on business, low taxes and a strong national defense.Mr. Scaife’s conservative leanings were shaped during his youth. As a young man, he became friends with a family acquaintance, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. In the 1964 presidential election, Mr. Scaife became a strong supporter of the small-government, anti-communist candidate Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.), who lost in a landslide to President Lyndon B. Johnson.


L TO R: Frank Armour, Richard Mellon Scaife and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew at 1970 Republican Fundraising dinner at the Pittsburgh Hilton Hotel. (Harry Coughanour/Pittsburgh Post Gazette)

With generous donations to later candidates such as Richard M. Nixon and Ronald Reagan, Mr. Scaife began building momentum for a conservative Republican resurgence. He also was a guiding force behind the Contract With America initiatives of House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) in the early 1990s, as well as the GOP’s tea party progeny in the 21st century.

Mr. Scaife donated millions to such tea party-friendly groups as FreedomWorks, known for its anti-union campaigns and calls for reducing government regulation of business, privatizing Social Security and establishing English as the official language of the United States.

Throughout a life marked by bouts of alcoholism, two turbulent marriages and estrangement from many in his family, Mr. Scaife was at times an erratic shepherd of his deeply felt political beliefs. Some of his most public causes were rooted in elaborate conspiracy theories.

He was a major underwriter of the American Spectator magazine’s Arkansas Project to find evidence of financial and personal misdeeds by the Clintons in the 1990s. The effort included David Brock’s magazine story containing allegations from four Arkansas state troopers that they helped procure women for then-Gov. Bill Clinton.

Brock said he was suspicious of the troopers’ stories but supported their publication anyway, once telling The Washington Post, “I did what was politically useful. [Clinton] was a Democrat, therefore he was a target.”

Most notably, Mr. Scaife personally hired a freelance writer to try to establish that either President Clinton or then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton was instrumental in the death of Deputy White House Counsel Vincent W. Foster Jr. in 1993. Foster, a former law-firm partner of the first lady, was found dead from a gunshot wound to the mouth in Fort Marcy Park in Fairfax County.

Three investigations, including one in 1997 by Independent Counsel Kenneth W. Starr, a luminary in the conservative firmament, ruled the death a suicide.

Mr. Scaife was unpersuaded. In 1998, he told George magazine editor in chief John F. Kennedy Jr. that the Foster death was “the Rosetta stone to the Clinton administration,” referring to the ancient Egyptian stone used to decipher hieroglyphics, and that Bill Clinton “can order people done away with at his will. He’s got the entire federal government behind him.”

He also questioned Starr’s other investigations of Clinton’s activities, including the president’s affair with former White House intern Monica S. Lewinsky. “Four years and $40 million later, we haven’t gotten anything,” he said. “Maybe Ken Starr is a mole working for the Democrats.”

As a strong backer of the legal and political strategies against the Clintons, Mr. Scaife made Time magazine’s list of the 25 most influential Americans in 1997. The magazine called him the “horsepower” behind the “resurgent” right.

He was widely believed to have been among those who Hillary Clinton alleged were at the heart of a “vast right-wing conspiracy” against her husband and the constant attacks on his policies and personal life.

Asked about any such conspiracy, Mr. Scaife responded, “If there is one, I don’t know of it.”

He said at the time that he didn’t harbor any personal animosity against the Clintons and that his philanthropy was not solely directed against political opponents or liberal issues. Unlike many fellow conservatives, for example, he supported public television and radio, giving more than $1 million to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in the late 1990s.

He also was known to turn on political leaders who disappointed him. After generously supporting Nixon’s two terms in the White House, he became outraged by the Watergate scandal in 1974, and his Tribune-Review newspaper called for the president’s impeachment.

“My country comes first; my party comes second,” he said at the time.

In 2008, the paper endorsed Sen. Hillary Clinton (N.Y.) over Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) in the Democratic primary for president, although some Democratic strategists speculated it was a canny move to support a weaker candidate against the GOP nominee in the general election.

Richard Mellon Scaife was born in Pittsburgh on July 3, 1932, the son of Alan Scaife, a member of a prominent Pittsburgh family, and the former Sarah Mellon, of the even more prominent Mellon family.

One of his mother’s smaller philanthropic gifts funded a virus research lab in Pittsburgh where Jonas Salk discovered his polio vaccine.

Mr. Scaife graduated in 1950 from the private Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts. He went on to Yale University, where he was expelled in his freshman year after a drunken night in which he rolled a beer keg down a flight of stairs and broke the legs of a classmate, according to Mellon family biographer Burton Hersh.

He transferred to the University of Pittsburgh, where his father chaired the board of trustees, and graduated in 1957 with a degree in English.

With his father’s unexpected death a year later, he inherited nominal positions on corporate boards. But his uncle, R.K. Mellon, retained central control, and the two became estranged.

After his mother’s death in 1965, Mr. Scaife assumed direct control of the foundations and trusts she had created. He began shifting the focus of her foundations away from hospitals, universities and family planning to assorted political causes, and within a decade, the bulk of the money was going to conservative think tanks and activist groups.

Mr. Scaife continued to support on a smaller scale a number of nonpolitical entities in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, including the Pittsburgh Symphony, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, and the Brandywine Conservancy in Chadds Ford, Pa., where paintings by Andrew Wyeth are preserved.

In addition, he helped underwrite a new school of public policy at Pepperdine University in California, a campus with a reputation for political conservatism that is affiliated with the Churches of Christ.

He also acquired media properties in the Pittsburgh area and used them to push his conservative themes.

In 1970, he purchased the Tribune-Review, a newspaper in the town of Greensburg 30 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. He moved it into Pittsburgh in 1992 during a crippling labor dispute involving the city’s two principal daily papers, and it quickly became a competing force.

Renamed the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, it became the centerpiece of a conglomerate of radio stations and other papers throughout western Pennsylvania. From 1977 to 1989, Mr. Scaife was also an owner of the Sacramento Union newspaper in California.

Mr. Scaife had one sister, Cordelia Scaife May, from whom he grew estranged for many years while she managed her own funds in support of such charities as Planned Parenthood and the National Aviary of Pittsburgh. Shortly before her death in 2005, the two reconciled.

Mr. Scaife’s first marriage, to Frances Gilmore, ended in divorce. In 1991, Mr. Scaife married Margaret “Ritchie” Battle, who helped influence his financial giving patterns and expanded their cultural and social life in Pittsburgh.

The marriage became rocky, culminating in messy public divorce proceedings littered with claims and counterclaims over the couple’s possessions. At one point, Mr. Scaife reportedly planted a sign on his lawn that said, “Wife and dog missing — reward for dog.”

Survivors include two children from his first marriage, Jennie K. Scaife of Palm Beach, Fla., and David N. Scaife of Pittsburgh; and two grandchildren, the Tribune-Review reported.

According to news accounts, close friends said Mr. Scaife struggled with alcoholism for years but credited both of his wives and Scaife foundations aide R. Daniel McMichael with getting him into treatment and on the wagon in the early 1990s.

Associates described Mr. Scaife as viewing the political world as divided sharply between allies and adversaries. The late James R. Whelan, editor of the Sacramento Union when Mr. Scaife was an owner there, once told an interviewer: “If you’re not my friend, you’re my enemy — he lives by that kind of code.”

Valentine is a former staff writer for The Washington Post.




Does Capitalism Inevitably Produce Inequalities?

When Profits Trump Logic

Stiglitz

Stiglitz

by ANN ROBERTSON and BILL LEUMER

[I]n a recent New York Times op-ed article, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz theorized that capitalism does not inevitably produce inequalities in wealth. Instead, he argued, today’s inequalities result from policy decisions made by politicians on all sorts of matters that affect people’s income: the tax structure that favors the rich, the bailout of the banks during the Great Recession, subsidies for rich farmers, cutting of food stamps, etc. In fact, he concluded, today there are no “truly fundamental laws of capitalism.” Thanks to democracy, people can steer the economy in a variety of directions and no single outcome is inevitable.

In their 2010 book, “Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich Richer – and Turned Its Back on the Middle Class,” Yale Professor Jacob Hacker and U.C. Berkeley Professor Paul Pierson would seem to add additional support to Stiglitz’s conclusion. As reported by Bob Herbert in The New York Times, they argued that “the economic struggles of the middle and working classes in the U.S. since the late-1970s were not primarily the result of globalization and technological changes but rather a long series of policy changes in government that overwhelmingly favored the rich.”

Although there is certainly significant substance to Stiglitz’s argument – policy decisions can have profound impacts on economic outcomes – nevertheless capitalism is far more responsible for economic inequality because of its inherent nature and its extended reach in the area of policy decisions than Stiglitz is willing to concede.

To begin with, in capitalist society it is much easier to make money if you already have money, and much more difficult if you are poor. So, for example, a rich person can buy up a number of foreclosed houses and rent them out to desperate tenants at ridiculously high rates. Then, each time rent is paid, the landlord becomes richer and the tenant becomes poorer, and inequalities in wealth grow.

More importantly, at the very heart of capitalism lies an incentive that leads to the increase of inequalities. Capitalism is based on the principle of competition, and businesses must compete with one another in order to survive. Each company, therefore, strives to maximize its profits in order to achieve a competitive advantage. For example, they can use extra profits to offset lowering the price of their product, undersell their opponents, and push them out of the market.

But in order to maximize profits, businesses must keep productive costs to a minimum. And a major portion of productive costs includes labor. Consequently, as a general rule, in order for a business to survive, it must push labor costs to a minimum. And that is why, of course, so many businesses migrate from the U.S. and relocate in countries like China, Viet Nam, Mexico, and Bangladesh where wages are a mere pittance.

This inherent tendency to maximize profits while minimizing the cost of labor directly results in growing inequalities. Stiglitz himself mentions that C.E.O’s today “enjoy incomes that are on average 295 times that of the typical worker, a much higher ratio than in the past.” In fact, in 1970, the ratio was roughly 40 times. C.E.O.s who succeed in suppressing wages are routinely rewarded for their efforts. Hence, not only is there an incentive to keep wages low for the survival of the business, there is a personal incentive in play as well.

While Stiglitz is correct in arguing that politicians can influence economic outcomes by policy decisions, what he fails to acknowledge is that these policy decisions themselves are heavily influenced by the economic relations established by capitalism. There is no firewall between the economy and politics. Those who have acquired money from the economic sector can then put this money to work in the political sector by lobbying and showering politicians with campaign contributions. Although politicians religiously deny that these contributions have any influence on their decisions, it is inconceivable that businesses – always obsessed with their “bottom line” – would continue these contributions without a “return on their investment.”

Study after study has confirmed the influence of money on political decisions. The San Francisco Chronicle reported, for example: “In a state with nearly 38 million people, few have more influence than the top 100 donors to California campaigns – a powerful club that has contributed overwhelmingly to Democrats and spent $1.25 billion to influence voters over the past dozen years. These big spenders represent a tiny fraction of the hundreds of thousands of individuals and groups that donated to California campaigns from 2001 through 2011. But they supplied about one-third of the $3.67 billion given to state campaigns during that time, campaign records show. With a few exceptions, these campaign elites have gotten their money’s worth, according to California Watch’s analysis of campaign data from state finance records and the nonpartisan National Institute on Money in State Politics, which tracks the influence of campaign money on state elections.”

Even beyond campaign contributions, political decisions are not crafted in a vacuum, remote from capitalism. Capitalism is a way of life, and for that reason it generates its own peculiar culture and world view that envelopes every other social sphere, a culture that includes competition, individualism, materialism in the form of consumerism, operating in one’s self-interest without consideration for the needs of others, and so on. This culture infects everyone to one degree or another; it is like an ether that all those in its proximity inhale. It encourages people to evaluate one another according to their degree of wealth and power. It rewards those who doggedly pursue their narrow self-interests at the expense of others.

The culture of capitalism, because of its hyper individualism, also produces an extraordinarily narrow vision of the world. Viewing the world from an isolated standpoint, individuals tend to assume that they are self-made persons, not the products of their surrounding culture and social relations. So the rich assume that their wealth has been acquired through their personal talents alone, while they see those mired in poverty as lacking the ambition and willingness to work hard. People are unable to see the complexities underlying human behavior because of the atomization of social life. But the disciplines of psychology, sociology, and anthropology all concur that individuals are overwhelmingly a product of their social environment to their very core.

In 1947, for example, the American Anthropological Association argued in its Statement on Human Rights: “If we begin, as we must, with the individual, we find that from the moment of his birth not only his behavior, but his very thought, his hopes, aspirations, the moral values which direct his action and justify and give meaning to his life in his own eyes and those of his fellow, are shaped by the body of custom of the group of which he becomes a member.”

It is in this more subtle way that capitalism induces growing income inequalities. Because of their intensely competitive environment, politicians are more vulnerable to this capitalist culture than most. Capitalist culture engenders a mindset among politicians that leads them to craft public policies in favor of the good people, the rich and powerful, and turn their backs on the poor or punish them with mass incarceration.  They think it entirely natural to accept money from the wealthy in order to fund their re-election campaigns. And the more the inequalities in wealth grow, the more this mindset blinds politicians to the destructive implications of these “natural” decisions.

In 2011, Stiglitz wrote a compelling article, “Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%,” in which he argued forcefully that large inequalities in wealth are in no one’s interest. But since then the politicians have continued to accept campaign contributions from the rich, socialize with them, and do their bidding. They ritually denounce the shamelessly low taxes on the 1%, but have done nothing to alter them. The culture of capitalism trumps logical arguments, and thus the inequalities in wealth continue to expand. Capitalism has an iron grip on the political process.

Stiglitz concluded his article with this prophetic statement: “The top 1 percent have the best houses, the best educations, the best doctors, and the best lifestyles, but there is one thing that money doesn’t seem to have bought: an understanding that their fate is bound up with how the other 99 percent live. Throughout history, this is something that the top 1 percent eventually do learn. Too late.”

While Stiglitz’s arguments have had no impact on growing inequalities, thanks to the power of capitalism, nevertheless capitalism gets credit for producing the one force that can put a stop to these destructive trends: the working class. As Karl Marx argued, capitalism produces its own “gravediggers.” In the 1930s workers massively organized unions and fought militant battles to defend their right to unionize and their right to fair compensation. These unions, which Stiglitz fails to mention, played a decisive role in reining in inequalities and unleashing a period in which the ranks of “the middle class” grew.

As Marx noted in his “Contribution to a Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right,” “The weapon of criticism cannot, of course, replace criticism of the weapon, material force must be overthrown by material force; but theory also becomes a material force as soon as it has gripped the masses.”

Stiglitz’s criticisms of growing inequality will have little impact on policy decisions until they are embraced by the masses, the working class, those that capitalism cruelly exploits and who are so easily dismissed by politicians and academics. At that point the working class will finally stand up and collectively declare enough is enough.




UKRAINEAN AIR FORCE BOMBING VILLAGES, KILLING CIVILIANS

A Dispatch by Special Correspondent André Vltchek

ukraine-OSCE-Confirms-Bombing-of-Civilians-Ukraine_0
“Respected Andre, I am from Kharkov. You gave me your name card, in front of the Lenin Courthouse, during the trial with Mr. Topaz (anti-coup dissident). Here is the link to video, showing how the Ukrainian armed forces are bombing peaceful inhabitants – please show this to the world; let the world see what ‘terrorists’ the Ukrainian authorities are targeting”:  

http://www.odnoklassniki.ru/video/62695015219305-1

Youtube link: http://youtu.be/kQ5-Q09C63s

A Ukrainian fighter flies above Lugansk during a battle between resistance fighters and the Ukrainian National Guard in June 2, 2014 (RIA Novosti / Evgeny Biyatov)

A Ukrainian fighter flies above Lugansk during a battle between resistance fighters and the Ukrainian National Guard in June 2, 2014 (RIA Novosti / Evgeny Biyatov)

I hit the link. On the choppy video, frustrated people are talking one over the other.

Roads are dotted with craters.

“July 2nd, 2014”, declares a voice in Russian, with Ukrainian accent. “Luhanska Village… The plane flew over the city of Luhansk and then hit the village Luhanska. What was it aiming at is not clear… Here is a crater, here are private parking lots…”

The smoke is rising towards the sky. Houses are damaged, some totally destroyed.

Confused dialogue continues: “What were they aiming at? A train station?”

Camera moves further, towards destroyed cars and more destroyed houses. Those who are filming appear to be shocked, constantly exclaiming, in disbelief: “Fuck your mother!” a Russian phrase expressing bewilderment and distress.

As the cameraperson moves further down the road, it becomes clear that some houses are leveled with the ground. Fires are still burning. It is 11:37AM, tells the voice, but we never learn at what time exactly came the attack, although one of the voices says that what we see is taking place approximately half an hour after the bombing.

Big part of the village is thoroughly devastated. Craters, burning gas pipes, broken windows… Then, two corpses…

“Go film there!” Screams an outraged man. “Go, damn it! Show what the fascists did! People are torn to pieces.” There is a third corpse nearby, covered by blanket.

“Damn Nazi, that whore Poroshenko!” someone refers to the pro-Western President of Ukraine, and a head of confectionary empire.

Camera then shows one old beaten fire truck. It cannot clearly cope with the tragedy of this scope.

“How many people died?”

“Ten”, someone answered, “But there are more people dead inside the houses”. [The actual tally was put today at 181 by Russian news sources, and is said to be incomplete.—Eds]

“Damn! This is real aerial bombardment! This is real war.”

Cameraperson is abruptly intercepted and confronted by locals:

“Who are you?”

“A journalist.”

“Journalist from where?”

“Journalist from Russia. TNT from Saratov…”

“From Russia? So why the hell is Putin silent?”

“I feel shame,” mumbles the reporter… And then he keeps repeating: “So many people died… so many people.”

The footage ends when a man approaches journalists and screams: “Come, I will take you… where my mother is… her corpse… I will show you everything…”

*

Next day, the BBC reports, phlegmatically: “The new Ukrainian defence minister vows to hold “a victory parade” in Crimea as fighting continues against pro-Russian rebels in the east.”

Somewhere at the very bottom of report appear few lines:

“Rebels in Luhansk accused government forces of killing civilians in the village of Luhanska on Wednesday. District mayor Volodymyr Bilous told Ukrainian news agency UNN that warplanes had bombed the area, killing nine and injuring 11. Another report spoke of 12 deaths…”

Kremlin is uncharacteristically quiet, while Kiev is in overdrive, increasingly aggressive and bold, with both the US and EU right behind its soiled back.

ABOUT ANDRE VLTCHEK

Andre Vltchek is a novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. The result is his latest book: “Fighting Against Western Imperialism ‘Pluto’ published his discussion with Noam Chomsky: On Western Terrorism. His critically acclaimed political novel Point of No Return is re-edited and available. Oceania is his book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific. His provocative book about post-Suharto Indonesia and the market-fundamentalist model is called “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear”. His feature documentary, “Rwanda Gambit” is about Rwandan history and the plunder of DR Congo. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and Africa. He can be reached through his website or his Twitter.

 

 




Toppling the Fossil Fuel Empire

Can You Imagine?fuels-oilLobbystsby MURRAY DOBBIN, Counterpunch

“We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”

– Albert Einstein

[A]s the world struggles with how to deal with the slow motion apocalypse of global climate change it becomes more and more apparent that we are trapped in “the kind of thinking” that got us here. While I don’t want to wear out Einstein’s quotability, his other little piece of wisdom that we need to keep top of mind is this: ”Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.”

Our failure of imagination regarding the ever-increasing production and use of fossil fuels will, over time, kill billions of us and irreversibly change all life on the planet. It is a failure of imagination, not at a policy level but at the level of civilization. It’s not a lack of knowledge — we have a staggering amount of information and analysis, a frightening compendium of what we are doing to ourselves and every other species on the planet. We keep piling it on, study after study, dire warning after dire warning, irrefutable science, actual evidence of melting ice-caps, the virtually unprecedented level of agreement on the part of scientists about where we are headed. Additional information is already hitting up against the principle of diminishing returns.

We have seen especially alarming predictions in the past few months. Two studies released almost simultaneously claim with a high degree of certainty that the glaciers in the western Antarctic are irreversibly melting. The first, by NASA and the University of California-Irvine, examined a group of large glaciers that collectively contain the equivalent of four feet of sea level rise. They are in “continuous and rapid retreat and there is “no [major] obstacle that would prevent the glaciers from further retreat.” They have “have passed the point of no return.”

Another study by the University of Washington came to the same conclusion and suggested the melting of the Thwaites Glacier could undermine the rest of the Antarctic ice shield holding 10 to 13 feet of sea level rise. None of this will happen soon and the maximum rise could take centuries, yet Greenland expert and glaciologist Jason Box concludes we have already set in motion 69 feet of sea level rise.

While some of these changes will unfold over decades and centuries, a report from the U.S. National Research Council warns of the distinct possibility of tipping points: “… the scientific community has been paying increasing attention to the possibility that at least some changes will be abrupt, perhaps crossing a threshold or ‘tipping point’ to change so quickly that there will be little time to react.” Another study examining the speed of species extinction says the extinction rate is 1000 times faster than it should be according to historical rates.

One of the major political factors preventing serious consideration of major and rapid policy changes is the sheer power of the fossil fuel industry. Unimaginable wealth translates into unimaginable power worldwide. To imagine bringing the industry to heel in a serious effort to slow climate change, we have to imagine treating the industry like we eventually treated the tobacco industry: as an existential threat to human health. For decades the tobacco giants exerted so much political influence they were virtually untouchable. To the extent that this changed (it is obviously still a health scourge especially in the developing world), it changed because the notion of corporate “rights” was successfully challenged.

Multiply the impact of the tobacco industry by 1,000 and you have some idea of how difficult it will be to escape the political and social conventional thinking that protects the oil “industry” from rational policy. Indeed part of that conventional thinking is seeing the giant corporations involved as just another industry. This actually serves to protect this sociopathic monster because we have rules governing industries and the individual companies that make them up. Companies are “citizens” with rights (thanks to our Charter) and they live forever. They have literally unlimited money to lobby governments for continued subsidies ($2 billion yearly from Ottawa), and tax breaks against subsidies for renewables which could save the planet. Even though 97 per cent of climate scientists agree about climate change, these corporations have the power to trash science and sow doubts about global warming.

The energy giants are protected by rogue governments like those in Alberta and Ottawa. They are permitted to take as much of the stuff out of the ground as fast as they can ship it and sell it, regardless of the global consequences. Like no other sector of the economy (except perhaps nuclear power) they are allowed to externalize hundreds of billions — possibly trillions — in costs they should be paying: air and water pollution costs, health costs, the costs associated with distorting the rest of the economy, the cost of new roads and bridges and freeways and paved-over farm land. We refuse to tax it to cover those costs, and that means ridiculously low prices and little incentive to wean ourselves from its pernicious and deadly effects.

The mega-corporations that peddle fossil fuels and effectively sponsor climate change and the melting of the ice caps are not an “industry.” They are a plague. And indeed their impact is already tantamount to a plague — the fastest rate of species extinction since the end of the dinosaurs — and will over the next hundred years kill exponentially more people than all the plagues in world history combined. Speaking of dinosaurs, if we mobilized to confront the criminal negligence of the fossil fuel empire in the same way we would mobilize to divert a collision-course comet, perhaps we might achieve a realistic sense of the scale of the coming catastrophe and what needs to be done to avoid it.

And it would require us to listen to Einstein’s observation about the need to use a different kind of thinking to solve our problem. No, I mean a really different kind of thinking, the kind of big idea thinking I have referred to in earlier columns. The sooner we begin to think of the fossil fuel empire as a criminal conspiracy and not just another industrial sector, the sooner we will actually get to the point where it is not just acceptable to nationalize and control fossil fuels but necessary for the survival of all life on the planet.

How could this actually happen? What would such a course of action look like? I have no idea. That’s why imagination is more important than knowledge — and why if we don’t begin trying to imagine controlling the private fossil fuel empire it will never happen. And if it doesn’t happen, we condemn our grandchildren and their grandchildren to an unimaginable dystopia. Perhaps a sign that things are moving in the right direction will be when a group of young people make a mock citizens’ arrest of the CEO of an oil company on a charge of species murder. I can hardly wait.

MURRAY DOBBIN, now living in Powell River, BC has been a journalist, broadcaster, author and social activist for over forty years.  He now writes a bi-weekly column for the on-line journals the Tyee and rabble.ca. He can be reached at murraydobbin@shaw.ca

http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/07/01/toppling-the-fossil-fuel-empire/

 




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