No work but teacher training institutes in KP eat up Rs1bn – DAWN.com

PESHAWAR: Khyber Pakhtunkhwas 21 regional institutes for teacher education have eaten up around Rs1 billion during the last two years despite an end to its only job of pre-service teacher training in 2016.

The government had done away with the condition of RITE training for appointment as teacher in 2016 but over 600 employees of the institutes continue to draw salary, sources told Dawn.

They said 300 of those employees held BPS 17-20 positions.

The sources said after the abolition of the pre-service training, the government had appointed untrained teachers and provided them with training thereafter.

They said the RITEs used to offer two-year training in associate degree in education (ADE) and one year in drawing master, while their annual salary and non-salary budget totaled around Rs500 million.

CM adviser says RITEs to be abolished

The sources said since the condition of professional degrees in teaching was not necessary for the teachers appointment, the elementary and secondary education department had decided to abolish the RITEs considering them to be a burden on kitty.

They said the Provincial Institute for Teacher Education (PITE) provided the required on-job training to teachers.

All staff members come to the institute just for marking attendance as they have no duty to perform, one of the RITE heads told Dawn. He said as directed by the elementary and secondary education department, the RITEs had stopped enrolling candidates for training since 2017.

We have no training programme and often learn from newspapers that the government is going to abolish RITEs, he said.

The elementary and secondary education department had moved a summary to the provincial restructuring committee some seven months ago for approval to abolish RITEs with valid reasons, sources said.

They said the restructuring committee had failed to take up the issue to stop the waste of taxpayers money.

The sources said some influential heads of RITEs having political background had approached the authorities at the helm of affairs to stop it just to take salary without performing duty.

They said the RITE heads had also approached the chief minister through many members of the provincial assembly against the abolition of RITEs.

The sources said the abolition of RITEs would not deprive their employees of job as they were teachers and clerks of the education department working there as part of the department and that they all would be transferred to schools.

When contacted, adviser to the chief minister on elementary and secondary education department Ziaullah Bangash said after the abolition of the condition to have professional degrees in teaching for the appointment, the existence of RITEs had no logic.

We are going to establish institutions at divisional level of the province to provide post-service training after abolishing RITEs, he said.

The adviser said millions of rupees would be saved to the provincial exchequer with the abolishment of RITEs.

He said teachers working in RITEs would be deployed at schools which were already short of teachers.

Published in Dawn, November 7th, 2019

Excerpt from:

No work but teacher training institutes in KP eat up Rs1bn - DAWN.com

The Irrepressible Conflict: Slavery, the Civil War and America’s Second Revolution – World Socialist Web Site

By Eric London 9 November 2019

The following lecture was delivered on Tuesday, November 5 at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. It was the second in a series of three lectures at the U of M in response to the New York Times 1619 Project, which presents a falsified, racialist interpretation of American history. Lectures on this topic are being held across the country under the title Race, Class and the Fight for Socialism: Perspectives for the Coming Revolution in America. The first lecture, titled Slavery and the American Revolution: A Response to the New York Times 1619 Project, was held November 1.

Slavery and the American Revolution: A Response to the New York Times 1619 Project

The purpose of this lecture series, hosted by the Socialist Equality Party, is to address the falsifications of the New York Times 1619 Project and undertake a historical materialist analysis of American history, and in this lecture, the Civil War. Our purpose is not academic. Our aim to elaborate the strategy for socialist revolution.

The 1619 Project is a politically motivated attack on historical truth. Through this initiative, the Democratic Party seeks to present race, and not class, as the essential dividing line in American and world society.

This historical falsification has a clear political value for the American financial aristocracy. In the US, the wealthiest 1 percent of households now owns 40 percent of the wealth. The next 9 percent owns another 30 percent, meaning the top 10 percent owns 70 percent of all wealth. The bottom 50 percent160 million peopleowns less than 2 percent. Thats less than the 3 percent owned by the richest 400 Americans.

Only an oligarchic society such as this one could produce a figure like Trump, who epitomizes in his reactionary politics and personal depravity all the characteristics of the degenerate financial aristocracy.

In a country of 320 million people, roughly 285 millionthe bottom 90 percentconstitute the working class. Of those, roughly 40 million are identified as black, 170 million are identified as white, 50 million are Hispanic, 17 million are Asian, and 4 million are Native American. Of all categories, roughly 40 million are foreign born, while another 35 million are second-generation immigrants. And, of course, within each category there are younger and older workers and women and men. Within this diverse working class, there exist various levels of stratificationfrom highly skilled workers with higher incomes to those living below or at the very fringes of solvency.

These are just the figures for the working class in America. Across the world the working class comes from all different national and cultural backgrounds. The workers position in society, however, is determined not by the color of their skin, their religion, their language or their gender, but by their classby the fact that they sell their labor power in order to survive. The task of socialists is to break down the racial myths, clarify the historical record and bring workers of all the backgrounds together in a common, united struggle for social equality.

Historical falsification and identity politics are strategic weapons in the hands of the ruling class, which deliberately employs these tools to weaken the objective position of the working class by pitting workers against each other and thereby suppressing the class struggle. Trump opts for the openly fascistic method, scape-goating immigrants, excoriating socialism and appealing to the most openly racist elements of American society.

But this lecture will address the Democratic Party and its history, its use of racial politicstoday and in the decades leading up to the Civil War. Today, this brand of racialism is in no way a progressive alternative to the fascism of Trump. In fact, as an ideology, the Democratic Partys identity politics shares much in common with the partys racist roots and with fascist racial and irrationalist theories of the early 20th century. It is an extremely dangerous and right-wing ideology and it must be opposed.

This critique will focus on two articles in the 1619 Project, the first by journalist and Times staff writer Nikole Hannah-Jones, the originator of the project, titled Our democracys founding ideals were false when they were written. Black Americans have fought to make them true, and the second, by Princeton sociologist Matthew Desmond, titled In order to understand the brutality of American capitalism, you have to start on the plantation.

Both Hannah-Jones and Desmond argue that slavery was the fault of all white people, who are fundamentally predisposed to be racist. Key to the argument of Hannah-Jones is the claim that even Abraham Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation had no relation to any progressive political struggle for equality. In her words, Lincoln blamed them [black people] for the [civil] war. The decision to free the slaves was merely a question of winning the war. She writes, Anti-black racism runs in the very DNA of this country, as does the belief, so well articulated by Lincoln, that black people are the obstacle to national unity. We will return to Mr. Lincoln momentarily.

The Times asserts that the entire white population, poor and rich alike, supported and benefited from slavery and violently opposed post-war Reconstruction. Desmond claims, Witnessing the horrors of slavery drilled into poor white workers that things could be worse. So they generally accepted their lot, and American freedom became broadly defined as the opposite of bondage. It was a freedom that understood what it was against but not what it was for; a malnourished and mean kind of freedom that kept you out of chains but did not provide bread or shelter. It was a freedom far too easily pleased.

Referencing the period following the Civil War, Hannah-Jones similarly states, The many gains of Reconstruction were met with fierce white resistance throughout the South, including unthinkable violence against the formerly enslaved, wide-scale voter suppression, electoral fraud and even, in some extreme cases, the overthrow of democratically elected biracial governments.

And further: White Southerners of all economic classes, on the other hand, thanks in significant part to the progressive policies and laws black people had championed, experienced substantial improvement in their lives even as they forced black people back into a quasi-slavery.

How convenient for the capitalist class and the multi-millionaire editors of the New York Times that the 1619 authors conclude that the historic levels of inequality and exploitation in America today are not the fault of todays ruling class, but of the DNA of the country in general, and white people of all economic classes in particular.

In our reply on the World Socialist Web Site, we juxtaposed to this racialist method the Marxist method of historical materialism. We wrote:

This is a false and dangerous conception. DNA is a chemical molecule that contains the genetic code of living organisms and determines their physical characteristics and development. The transfer of this critical biological term to the study of a countryeven if meant only in a metaphorical senseleads to bad history and reactionary politics. Countries do not have DNA, they have historically formed economic structures, antagonistic classes and complex political relationships. These do not exist apart from a certain level of technological development, nor independently of a more or less developed network of global economic interconnections.

The methodology that underlies the 1619 Project is idealist (i.e., it derives social being from thought, rather than the other way around) and, in the most fundamental sense of the word, irrationalist. All of history is to be explained from the existence of a supra-historical emotional impulse. Slavery is viewed and analyzed not as a specific economically rooted form of the exploitation of labor, but, rather, as the manifestation of white racism. But where does this racism come from? It is embedded, claims Hannah-Jones, in the historical DNA of American white people. Thus, it must persist independently of any change in political or economic conditions.

Having introduced the positions of the Times, lets address the real historical record, starting with the Great Emancipator, Abraham Lincoln.

Lincoln the attorney would have pointed out that since Hannah-Jones and Desmond have impeached his political character by claiming that he blamed blacks for the Civil War and have presented the abolition of slavery as a reluctant act of last resort, we are entitled to introduce evidence to rehabilitate him and in so doing address the Times underlying falsifications of the whole historical period.

As a preliminary issue, one feels the need to remind these people of the small matter that Lincoln did, in fact, carry out one of the most revolutionary acts of the 19th centuryfreeing the slavesa task for which he was assassinated. It was a world dominated by kings and tsars, with Europe mired in reaction following the defeats of the revolutions of 1848. Millions of serfs roamed Eastern Europe. The English crown was pumping China with opium and robbing the country blind. France invaded Mexico and established an emperor to collect its debts. Millions more risked their lives traveling on disease-ridden ships to throw off the weight of feudal reaction and make it in America. Fifteen years after Cavignac suppressed the Paris workers in blood and eight years before Theirs would do the same to the Commune, Abraham Lincoln sat as his desk and wrote that four million human beingswith a market price of billions of dollars in todays moneywere Thenceforth and forever free.

Lincoln is an absolutely unique figure in American history. His own life is insolubly connected to the American Revolution, which Tom Mackaman addressed in the first of this lecture series. Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809, with three weeks remaining in the second term of President Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence.

In his biography of Lincoln, Sidney Blumenthal summarizes Lincolns young career in relation to the question of slavery:

Lincolns deepening understanding of slavery in its full complexity as a moral, political, and constitutional dilemma began in his childhood among the Primitive Baptist antislavery dissidents in backwoods Kentucky and Indiana, whose churches his parents attended. As a boy he rode down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, where the open-air emporium of slaves on gaudy display shocked him. His development was hardly a straight line, but he was caught up in the currents of the time. His self-education, which started with his immersion in the Bible, Shakespeare, and the freethinking works of Thomas Paine and French philosophes, was the intellectual foundation for his profoundly felt condemnation of Southern Christian pro-slavery theology.

Lincolns hatred for slavery was in part personal. Blumenthal explains that at a campaign event, Lincoln, the man who had been extraordinarily reluctant about discussing his past, sensitive about his social inferiority, blurted out a startling confession:

I used to be a slave, said Lincoln. He did not explain what prompted him to make this incredible statement, why he branded himself as belonging to the most oppressed, stigmatized, and untouchable caste, far worse than being accused of being an abolitionist. Illinois, while a free state, had a draconian Black Code. Why would Lincoln announce that he was a former slave? The bare facts he did not disclose to his audience were these: Until he was twenty-one years old, Lincolns father had rented him out to neighbors in rural Indiana at a price of ten to thirty-one cents a day, to labor as a rail splitter, farmhand, hog butcher, and ferry operator. The father collected the sons wages. Lincoln was in effect an indentured servant, a slave. He regarded his semiliterate father as domineering and himself without rights.

Lincolns political career was dedicated to opposing the domination of the interests of the Southern slave owners on American political life, a domination they exercised after the conclusion of the so-called Era of Good Feelings through the newly formed Democratic Party. From the 1830s, Lincoln was attracted to and active within the Whig Party, led by Henry Clay of Kentucky, a vicious opponent of Andrew Jackson and the Democrats and an advocate of national economic developmenta specter the Democratic Party and the slaveholders opposed on the grounds that economic modernization would undercut the backward slave system.

A word about the Democratic Partys ignoble roots and its long strategy of inflaming racial divisions to maintain social stability and protect private property. The Democratic Party is the oldest bourgeois political party in the world, formally founded in 1828. It was consciously conceived of by Southern slave owners and Northern Tammany politicians as an alliance to protect the interests of the slave owners and preserve social stability in both South and North. The ideological glue of this alliance was an obsessive focus on race and identity, directed first and foremost against blacks, indigenous people and, later, the Chinese.

Two figures stand out in the enunciation of this strategy: John C. Calhoun and Martin Van Buren.

Democrat John C. Calhoun, South Carolina senator and vice president during the presidencies of John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, was an extremely class conscious slave owner, aware that slavery could not politically survive on the basis of sectionalism alone. In 1828, he appealed to wealthy Northerners and said: After we [the planters] are exhausted, the contest will be between the capitalist and operatives [workers]; for into these two classes it must, ultimately, divide society. The issue of the struggle here must be the same as it has been in Europe.

The historian Richard Hofstadter labeled Calhoun the Marx of the Master Class, writing:

Calhoun proposed that no revolution should be allowed to take place. To forestall it he suggested consistentlyover a period of yearswhat Richard Current has called planter-capitalist collaboration against the class enemy. In such a collaboration the South, with its superior social stability, had much to offer as a conservative force. In return, the conservative elements in the North should be willing to hold down abolitionist agitation; and they would do well to realize that an overthrow of slavery in the South would prepare the ground for social revolution in the North.

Calhoun said in the Senate:

There is and always has been in an advanced stage of wealth and civilization a conflict between labor and capital. The condition of society in the South exempts us from the disorders and dangers resulting from this conflict; and which explains why it is that the political condition of the slaveholding states has been so much more stable and quiet than that of the North The experience of the next generation will fully test how vastly more favorable our condition of society is to that of other sections for free and stable institutions, provided we are not disturbed by the interference of others, or shall resist promptly and successfully such interference.

Calhouns alliance was forged in no small part through the political talent of New Yorks Martin Van Buren, known as the little magician and the Red Fox of Kinderhook. He headed the Democratic ticket after Jacksons second term, becoming president for one term from 1837 to 41.

Van Buren was a master politician who, well before he became president, understood that growing Northern cities would become centers of class struggle and that the ruling class needed a strategy to maintain social order. The historian Daniel Walker Howe describes Van Burens own class conscious political motives for forging the Democratic alliance:

Leaders preoccupied with sovereignty and authority sensed a very real problem in America: the danger of anarchy. Significantly, when Martin Van Buren was in England at the time of the Great Reform Bill of 1832, his comments on it had to do not with improving the quality of representative government but his fears for maintaining order.

Such concerns among Northern elites led Calhoun to comment that those elites feared the needy and corrupt in their own section. They begin to feel what I have long foreseen, that they have more to fear from their own people than we from our slaves.

Through the Jackson administration and afterward, fanning racial hatred of the slaves and freed blacks became the Democrats ideological mechanism for tying the northern political machines to the political interests of the southern slave owners. In both cases this racial politics had equal utility, maintaining slavery in the south and maintaining profits for the urban northern industrialists. Poor whites and arriving immigrants were informed by the Democrats that it was not their class, but their race that determined their social position. They should fear a race war if the slaves were ever freed. This became the glue that held together the Democratic Partys cross-regional alliancesolidified by efforts to twist Northern workingmens organic hatred of the new capitalist exploitation by idealizing slavery as the lesser evil.

There was another tradition that arose in opposition to the slave owners conspiracy to dominate the entire political system, North, South, East and, in particular, West. Trailblazing abolitionists like publisher William Lloyd Garrison characterized the heroic spirit of these radical iconoclasts in his letter To the Public in the first edition of the abolitionist The Liberator on January 1, 1831, three decades before the war, published when Lincoln was a young man:

I determined, at every hazard, to lift up the standard of emancipation in the eyes of the nation, within sight of Bunker Hill and in the birth place of liberty. That standard is now unfurled; and long may it float, unhurt by the spoliations of time or the missiles of a desperate foeyea, till every chain be broken, and every bondman set free! Let southern oppressors tremblelet their secret abettors tremblelet their northern apologists tremblelet all the enemies of the persecuted blacks tremble.

Lincoln, though not an abolitionist, spent his young career opposing the Democratic Party, at first as a leader of the Whigs in Illinois. While Lincoln was active in the Whig Party, first in the state legislature and then as a representative in Congress, the US conquered new territory and forced its way westwardboth through robbing Mexico of half its territory in the Mexican-American war and through the extermination and forced removal of Native Americans. The question of slavery was addressed in numerous compromises regarding the extension of slavery, orchestrated by the Whigs and by Clay himself. The American population, though not overwhelmingly or explicitly abolitionist in its political sentiments, came to view the expansionist aims of the slave owners with increasing hostility. During this period, Garrisons isolation of the 1830s shifted greatly during the following quarter-century as the public turned against slavery.

By the early 1850s, Lincolnand millions moregrew weary of the Whig Partys incessant compromises with the Slave Power, which had shifted the framework of American politics to the right and more tightly under the control of the slave-owning minority. Lincolns former law partner, William Herndon, wrote:

The warriors [of the Whig Party], young and old, removed their armor from the walls, and began preparations for the impending conflict. Lincoln had made a few speeches in aid of [Whig candidate Winfield] Scott during the campaign of 1852, but they were efforts entirely unworthy of the man. Now, however, a live issue was presented to him. No one realized this sooner than he. In the office discussions he grew bolder in his utterances. He insisted that the social and political difference between slavery and freedom was becoming more marked; that one must overcome the other; and that postponing the struggle between them would only make it more deadly in the end. The day of compromise, he still contended, has passed. These two great ideas have been kept apart only by the most artful means. They are like two wild beasts in sight of each other, but chained and held apart. Someday these deadly antagonists will one or the other break their bonds, and then the question will be settled.

Anti-slavery sentiment continued to grow throughout the 1850s, in particular as anti-slavery forces conducted a campaign against the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, a reactionary measure orchestrated by Democrat Stephen A. Douglas that repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1850 and allowed slaverys expansion to the Kansas and Nebraska territories through popular sovereignty. By the mid-1850s, abolitionism had acquired an unprecedented degree of popularity, and abolitionists formed a key constituency in the founding of the Republican Party on explicitly anti-slavery principles.

Lincoln left the Whigs in 1854 and joined the new Republican Party. The domination of the slave owners over the Supreme Court, the Congress and the presidency came more and more to be viewed as a conspiracy against the interests of the entire population, free and slave. Lincolns attitude on slavery is well documented. Dozens of letters, speeches, and memoranda could be cited, not the least of which in terms of historical import was the Emancipation Proclamation.

But to give a sense of Lincolns own attitude toward slavery, here is an excerpt from a diary entry, not meant for public consumption, written in 1858, the year after the Supreme Courts notorious decision in Dred Scott v. Sanford, which exploded the Missouri Compromise and held that people of African descent were not citizens and had no rights no matter where they wereNorth or South. Lincoln wrote:

I have never professed an indifference to the honors of official station; and were I to do so now, I should only make myself ridiculous. Yet I have never faileddo not now failto remember that in the republican cause there is a higher aim than that of mere officeI have not allowed myself to forget that the abolition of the Slave-trade by Great Brittain [sic], was agitated a hundred years before it was a final success; that the measure had its open fire-eating opponents; its stealthy dont care opponents; its dollars and cent opponents; its inferior race opponents; its negro equality opponents; and its religion and good order opponents; that all these opponents got offices, and their adversaries got noneBut I have also remembered that though they blazed, like tallow-candles for a century, at last they flickered in the socket, died out, stank in the dark for a brief season, and were remembered no more, even by the smellSchool-boys know that Wilberforce, and Granville Sharpe, helped that cause forward; but who can now name a single man who labored to retard it? Remembering these things I can not but regard it as possible that the higher object of this contest may not be completely attained within the term of my natural life. But I can not doubt either that it will come in due time. Even in this view, I am proud, in my passing speck of time, to contribute an humble mite to that glorious consummation, which my own poor eyes may not last to see.

It does not undercut the unparalleled hardship and hatred for slavery felt by enslaved blacks nor reduce the historic significance of the slave rebellions of the 18th and 19th centuries to point out the courage and sacrifice of white abolitionists. The Times presentation of the category of white people as unified in support of slavery is an insult to the heroism of many who gave their lives for the cause of abolition. In October 1859, an abolitionist veteran of the crisis of Bleeding Kansas, John Brown, was captured by a military deployment commanded by then-US Army Colonel Robert E. Lee at Harpers Ferry, Virginia after attempting to capture an arms depot and trigger a slave rebellion in the central Piedmont. He was executed for the crime of treason on December 2, 1859, at the age of 59.

One final point on Lincoln. Lincolns assassination, less than a week after the surrender of the Confederacy, shocked the country and the world. He was, of course, not a Marxist. But Karl Marx recognized the historical significance of Lincolns life for the poor and oppressed of the world, writing in mid-May 1865:

The demon of the peculiar institution, for the supremacy of which the South rose in arms, would not allow his worshippers to honorably succumb on the open field. What he had begun in treason, he must needs end in infamy... It is not our part to call words of sorrow and horror, while the heart of two worlds heaves with emotion. Even the sycophants who, year after year, and day by day, stuck to their Sisyphus work of morally assassinating Abraham Lincoln and the great republic he headed stand now aghast at this universal outburst of popular feeling, and rival with each other to strew rhetorical flowers on his open grave. They have now at last found out that he was a man neither to be browbeaten by adversity nor intoxicated by success, inflexibly pressing on to his goal, never compromising it by blind haste, slowly maturing his steps, never retracing them, carried away by no surge of popular favor, disheartened by no slackening of the popular pulse, tempering stern acts by the gleams of a kind heart, illuminating scenes dark with passion by the smile of humor, doing his titanic work as humbly and homely as heaven-born rulers do little things with the grandiloquence of pomp and state; in one word, one of the rare men who succeed in becoming great without ceasing to be good.

Beneath the change in political attitudes that had been taking place over these critical decades, major transformations were taking place in America, especially in the North and Northwest. From 1820 to 1850, the urban population increased from 7 to 18 percent of the national total. In 1820 there were just five cities with a population over 25,000. By 1850, there were 26 cities of more than 25,000 and six of more than 100,000. Mass migration from 1820 to the end of the 1830s drew approximately 667,000 overseas immigrants, not including slaves. From 1840 through the 1850s, another 4.2 million migrants came to the US from Europe and Asia.

This period was also marked by the growth of social inequality and the changing character of work. In the largest American cities of the 1840s, the richest 5 percent of free males owned 70 percent of the real and personal property. The visibility of a small group of super-rich is attested by the invention of the word millionaire around 1840. The historian Howe writes, Instead of owning his tools and selling what he made with them, the mechanic now feared being left with nothing to sell but his labor. A lifetime as a wage-earner seemed a gloomy prospect to men who had imbibed the political outlook of Old Republicanism, who identified themselves with independent farmers or shopkeepers and looked upon wage labor as a form of dependency.

This new system was incompatible with the slave system. Slavery is a mode of production, a term that encompasses both the productive forceshow products are made, including the actual instruments and the labor involvedas well as the objective material and social relations that arise on the basis of the productive forces and exist independently of human consciousness. These were the objective forces beneath the changing attitudes on slavery which exploded in violent conflict.

The 1619 Project presents slavery as a purely racial and racist institution from which all whites benefited in the south. But such a view of slavery in the American South is not only wrong, it actually minimizes the thoroughly reactionary character of the social order which arose on the rotten foundations of human bondage, and, in a strange way, idealizes it. According to the Times, slavery was bad for the slaves but improved the lives of the majority of people in the South. To put it bluntly, the Times is are regurgitating the argument of the slaveholders.

In her 2017 book Masterless Men: Poor Whites and Slavery in the Antebellum South, the scholar Keri Leigh Merritt sheds critical light on the reactionary essence of slavery as an economic system. The vast majority of whites did not derive any social, political or economic benefits from the system of slavery. On the contrary, Merritt explains:

Under capitalism, labor power was the commodity of the laborer. Conversely, under feudalism, as well as under slavery, the ruling classes owned, either completely or partially, the labor power of the working classes. The system was predicated on elites coercing individuals to work, often by violent means. In the slave South, where laborers were in competition with brutalized, enslaved labor, the laborers, whether legally free or not, had little to no control over their labor power. The profitability and profusion of plantation slave labor consistently reduced the demand for free workers, lowered their wages, and rendered their bargaining power ineffective, indeed generally (except in the case of specialized skills) worthless. In essence, they were not truly free laborers, especially when they could be arrested and forced to labor for the state or for individuals.

In the first half of the 19th century, an oligarchy basing itself on slavery and aristocratic privilege enforced its rule through vigilante terror and police state dictatorship aimed at the whole non-slaveholding population, black and white alike.

This slaveholding class, enriching itself through trade with the ruling classes of aristocratic Europe, threatened to destroy the egalitarian and democratic principles of the American Revolution. Secession, which the oligarchy carried out in the face of broad opposition among poor whites, was not a popular movement from below. It was a counterrevolutionary rebellion from above against the principle enshrined in the Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal.

What were conditions for the majority of whites under Slavery?

The antebellum South was defined by extreme inequality, not only between slaveholders and their human property, but among whites. In 1850, 1,000 cotton state families received $50 million per year in income, as compared to $60 million per year for the remaining 66,000 families. A study of Louisiana found that 43 percent of whites lived in urban areas in 1860, and that of these city dwellers, 80 percent were semi-skilled or unskilled workers. Meanwhile, half of rural white families were landless, and half of those who owned land tilled less than 50 acres. Poor whites comprised the vast majority of the free population, and only about 14 percent of Louisianas whites could be classified as middle class.

In 1860, 56 percent of personal wealth in the United States was concentrated in the South. In that regions cotton belt, wealth in slaves accounted for 60 percent of all wealth, greater even than the value of the land itself. As the price of slaves rose in the final decade before the Civil War from $82,000 per slave in 1850 to $120,000 in 1860 (in 2011 dollars), the concentration of slave ownership at the top of Southern society increased dramatically. Slave ownership was far beyond the economic reach of even most landowning whites.

Whites lived in one-room shacks made of logs and mud, normally without windows. They had difficulty traveling from place to place, often in carts pulled by dogs. Without shoes, hookworm was a constant concern, and starvation was a threat. Not having enough to eat was a constant worry for a sizable percentage of the white population, Merritt writes, citing one slave who said, We had more to eat than they did. Of their white neighbors, the slave noted, They were sorry folk.

Merritt cites historian Avery Craven, who identified several similarities between the material lives of poor whites and slaves. Their cabins differed little in size or comfort, he wrote, as both were constructed from chinked logs and generally had only one room. Furthermore, these two underclasses dressed in homespuns, [and] went barefoot in season The women of both classes toiled in the fields or carried the burden of other manual labor and the children of both early reached the age of industrial accountability. Even the food they prepared and ate, Craven concluded, was strikingly similar.

White men often spent months apart from their families as they walked through the country looking for work. In contrast to the low divorce rates of the upper class, Merritt writes, poor whites relationships were similar to slaves in some respects due to this lack of economic stability.

Alcoholism and illiteracy were widespread. The southern antislavery advocate Hinton Helper explained that among Southern whites, Thousands... die at an advanced age as ignorant of the common alphabet as if it had never been invented. While a widespread system of common school public education had taken root in the North, there were hardly any schools in the antebellum South. Curtailing access to public education was a deliberate measure to socially control whites who were natural opponents of slavery. As Merritt explains:

Whether the means involved disenfranchising poor whites, keeping them uneducated and illiterate, heavily policing them and monitoring their behaviors, or simply leaving them to wallow in cyclical poverty, the ends were always the same: the Souths master class continued to lord over the region, attempting to control an increasingly unwieldy hierarchy. Slaveholders worst fears were coming to pass as the ranks of disaffected poor whites grew. As one editorial out of South Carolina contended, the biggest danger to southern society was neither northern abolitionists nor black slaves. Instead, the owners of flesh needed to concern themselves with the masterless men and women in their own neighborhoodsthis servile class of mechanics and laborers, unfit for self-government, and yet clothed with the attributes and powers of citizens.

To maintain order under conditions of extreme social inequality, an entire legal code was established to police non-slaveholding whites. The Souths first police forces and prison systems were established to impose social and racial conformity, with police jailing individuals for the most benign behavioral infractions. Indeed, the rise of professional law enforcement changed the entire system of criminal justice. In the antebellum South it was whites who filled the new jails, since black property was too valuable to remove from labor through incarceration. White convicts were subjected to brutal acts of public whipping and even water torture. Slave owners illegalized trade between poor whites and slaves and arrested whites suspected of befriending or engaging in sexual relationships with slaves.

Slaveowners established vigilante groups, especially following the devastating Panic of 1837, in an effort to force the population into acquiescence. They were not, as the Times claims, comprised merely of white people, but rather of wealthy white people.

Merritt explains that these vigilante groups were:

[E]ssentially bands of slave- and property-holders who monitored both the behaviors and beliefs of less affluent whites. [Historian Charles] Bolton described the targeted whites as those whose poverty or indolence made them undesirable. Slaveless whites increasingly found themselves inhabiting a world in which they had to censor every utterance and defend every action.

Under the direction of this oligarchic terror:

[L]ocal mobs lynching and killing poorer whites abounded in the late antebellum period. The majority of those brutalized were accused of abolitionism of some sortwhether they were distributing reading materials, talking to other non-slaveholders about workers rights, or simply seemed too friendly with African Americans.

This contradicts a claim made by the Times 1619 project that slave patrols throughout the nation were created by white people who were fearful of rebellion, and showed our nations unflinching willingness to use violence on nonwhite people.

Far from gaining political privilege as a result of slavery, poor whites supposed rights existed at the mercy of the masters. They could be jailed without charge, arrested for vagrancy, and even executed for committing property crimes like burglary and forgery. As Merritt notes, for all intents and purposes, due process was nullified.

Nor is it true, as the Times claims, that whites failed to oppose slavery in the South. Within the South, these class tensions made it impossiblepolitically, economically and militarilyfor the Confederacy to continue fighting the war. The Times falsification is aimed at eliminating the role of class and economic divisions from any study of US history. It is attempting to create a new narrative to abolish the class struggle from history to serve its reactionary contemporary aims.

Professor David Williams, author of the 2008 book Bitterly Divided: The Souths Inner Civil War, writes: Instead of the united front that has been passed down in Southern mythology, the South was in fact fighting two civil warsan external one that we know so much about and an internal one about which there is scant literature and virtually no public awareness.

Secession was held to statewide votes across the South, and was roundly defeated by poor whites. Williams notes:

The balloting for state convention delegates [preceding the war] makes clear that the Deep South was badly divided. It also suggests that those divisions were largely class related.

Williams explains that non-slaveholding whites in Louisiana saw the whole secession movement as an effort simply to maintain the peculiar rights of a privileged class, and that poor counties in Alabama, for example, voted to elect anti-secessionist delegates by margins of up to 90 percent.

Anti-Confederate rebellions broke out as early as 1861. In Winston County, Alabama, several union leaders organized mass meetings of unionists and declared the Free State of Winston, while poor whites did the same in areas across the South. A similar rebellion took place in Jones County, Mississippi, as described in Victoria Bynums critical work Free State of Jones: Mississippis Long War.

In April 1862, the Confederate legislature passed the first conscription act, followed in October by the Twenty Slaves Act, which exempted slave owners from military service.

It is estimated that up to two thirds of all Southern soldiers deserted from the army during the war. Whats more, 300,000 Southerners fled the South at the onset of the war to fight for the Union army. This number nearly equals the total number of Union soldiers killed throughout the course of the war.

The Confederate government sought to provide for the army by stealing from the poor through a process called impressment, depicted skillfully in the film Free State of Jones, based on the book by Bynum. Indeed, thousands of poor Southern whites opposed attempts by the Confederacy to steal their property. Industrial accidents were also extremely common as Southern industrialists cut costs to feed the war machine. Factory explosions killed hundreds in places like Jackson, Mississippi. In Virginia, a cartridge-manufacturing plant exploded, scattering workers like confetti. Child labor was especially common. Wrote one mother to Jefferson Davis in 1862:

It is folly for a poor mother to call on the rich people about here. There [sic] hearts are of steel. They would sooner throw what they have to spare to their dogs than give it to a starving child.

Strikes broke out from the onset of the war, beginning with a strike of ironworkers at Richmond, Virginias Tredegar Iron Works. In retaliation, the Confederacys Conscription Act of 1862 included a provision requiring conscription for striking workers.

The inner civil war deepened in 1863. On the war front, high desertion rates contributed greatly to the Southern losses at Vicksburg and Gettysburg in July. On the home front, the enmity of the poor toward the big planters threatened to take on political forms.

In several cities throughout the South, white workers organized Mechanics and Working Mens Tickets to challenge the planter classs control of the Confederate legislature and state legislatures. One South Carolina planter wrote: The poor hate the rich & make war on them everywhere & here especially with universal suffrage. Planters devised the idea of a poll tax to limit class opposition from finding reflection during the 1863 elections.

Bread riots spread in 1863 as well. Shops were ransacked, planters stores of tobacco and cotton were burned, and soldiers were sent to attack and jail demonstrators. A Mobile, Alabama newspaper noted in April 1863 that an army of women with axes, hatchets, hammers and brooms, swept through the town with banners that read Bread or Blood and Bread and Peace. According to a local merchant, The military was withdrawn from the field as soon as possiblefor there were unmistakable signs of fraternizing with the mob.

As the war dragged on, opposition to the Confederacy took on increasingly insurrectionary forms, especially guerrilla warfare. Pro-Union groups, often composed of blacks and whites, numbered in the tens, if not hundreds of thousands. They constructed their own lines of communication, supply chains and fortifications and attacked confederate soldiers. A network of safe houses was set up for deserters and abolitionists from Alabama through Chattanooga, the Sequatchie Valley and Possum Creek, Kentucky, leading to Union territory.

By 1864, wide sections of the South began to initiate popular votes to end the war or secede from the Confederacy.

The profound anger over the war that was boiling over by 1865 was expressed by one poor Southerner, who wrote a letter directed to the wealthy in a local newspaper:

That is right. Pile up wealthno matter whether bread be drawn from the mouth of the soldiers orphan or the one-armed, one limbed hero who hungry walks your streetstake every dollar you can, pay out as little as possible, deprive your noble warriors of every comfort and luxury, increase in every way the necessaries of life, make everybody but yourself and non-producers bear the taxes of the war; but be very careful to parade everything you give before the publictalk boldly on the street corners of your love of country, be a grand home generaland, when the war is over, point to your princely palace and its magnificent surroundings and exclaim with pompous swell, these are the results of my patriotism.

Among Northern soldiers, the war which began as a fight for national unity began to be viewed by millionsincluding hundreds of thousands of soldiersas a war for abolition. As James McPherson writes in his book What They Fought For, the Union Army was a highly political army, where soldiers were eagerly snapping up newspapers that were sometimes available in camp only a day or two after publication. McPherson quotes letters from several soldiers: One said he spent a good portion of my time reading the news and arguing politics, another referenced considerable excitement on politics in camp, a third: politics the principal topic of the day, and so on.

But even those many soldiers who held racial prejudices and previously opposed a war to free the slaves came to view abolition as a military necessity and the emancipation proclamation as a blow against the Southern slave owners, whose armies they were fighting. Many Union soldiers also interactedmost for the first timewith contraband slaves who had escaped to Northern lines. In the course of this revolutionary cultural experience, the masses of people underwent a remarkable political transformation.

It is astonishing how things has changed in reference to freeing the Negros, wrote one Illinois farmer and union soldier. It allwais has been plane to me that this rase must be freed befor god would recognize us we bost liberty and we Should not be Selfish in it as god gives us chanes will Soon be bursted now I belive we are on gods side now I can fight with a good heart.

A Michigan soldier wrote, the more I learn of the cursed institution of Slavery, the more I feel willing to endure, for its final destruction After this war is over, this whole country will undergo a change for the better abolishing slavery will dignify labor; that fact of itself will revolutionize everything.

It would require an additional lecture to address another critical fact: that the reactionary governments of Britain and France were prevented from intervening militarily on the side of the South by the overwhelming support among British and French workers for the cause of abolition.

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The Irrepressible Conflict: Slavery, the Civil War and America's Second Revolution - World Socialist Web Site

Maximising voter turnout should be a priority for this election and all others – The Independent

While it is true that younger people have always been generally less interested in party politics than their parents and grandparents, there is certainly a case for arguing that the present cohort of younger people is more politically engaged in the broadest sense than their predecessors. They are better educated for a start, and new technologies have engaged many more of them in (widely defined) current affairs. Recent climate strikes and protests show as much, as does the commitment of so many of those born since the UK entered the EU in 1973 to hold on tothe huge gains in the quality of our national life that were made as a result.

The rise of social media, far from zombifying young voters, is drawing many of them in, giving them a voice and stimulating debate. This has, indeed,been the experience of the digital revolution over the last decade or so more abuse and violent language, yes, but also the creation of many sharp conversations for which there was no forum in the era of print and conventional broadcasting.

In the general election of 2019, the young have a further opportunity to make their voice count. Pushing hard for action overthe climate crisis, highlighting the housing crisis and calling for a rise in living standardsall help to force politicians to respond. Yet there is no more powerful a weapon, in aggregate, than the vote. In the 2017 general election, for example, there was a noticeable increase in turnout among younger voters those in their late twenties and thirties, as compared with the vote in 2015. This, it may be assumed, was down to that cohort of people being epically badly affected by the cost of housing and the austerity drivestill, at that time, being pursued by the Conservative government.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

The supposed Corbynite youthquake in 2017 was indeed found to be mostly a myth but there was something in the idea of the youngish voters moving the political dial, in this case to the left. Today, tellingly, all the main parties have abandoned austerity and are much more willing to spend and borrow to improve public services.

So voting makes a difference, demonstrably, and there is no limit to the support that should be given to the efforts of groups such as My Life My Say and Vote for Your Future that work hard to get young people on the electoral register the first step in democratic emancipation.

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 2

Getty

Currently held by Labour with a majority of 20

Getty

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 21

Getty

Currently held by independent, formerly Labour, MP Ian Austin with a majority of 22

LivingInMediocrity

Currently held by Labour with a majority of 30

Derek Harper

Currently held by the Conservatives with a majority of 31

Rob Candish

Currently held by the Conservatives with a majority of 45

Robin Webster

Currently held by Labour with a majority of 48

Jaggery

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 60

Alec MacKinnon

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 75

Christine Johnstone

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 2

Getty

Currently held by Labour with a majority of 20

Getty

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 21

Getty

Currently held by independent, formerly Labour, MP Ian Austin with a majority of 22

LivingInMediocrity

Currently held by Labour with a majority of 30

Derek Harper

Currently held by the Conservatives with a majority of 31

Rob Candish

Currently held by the Conservatives with a majority of 45

Robin Webster

Currently held by Labour with a majority of 48

Jaggery

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 60

Alec MacKinnon

Currently held by the SNP with a majority of 75

Christine Johnstone

But there is much more thatcan be done. One of the least-covered but most pernicious of the acts of the coalition government of 2010-15 (whatever its other achievements) was the abolition of bulk registration for university students, enacted in 2014. After all, students account for around half of young people, and many may not even be aware that they could register at university as well as at home. The timing of this December election, coinciding as it does with the end of term, is a particularly unfortunate one and the opposition parties caved in too easily to government demands to hold it on 12December than a few, vital, days earlier.

If the Conservatives do win the next election, they promise (at least in the now-redundantQueens Speech) to bring in legislation to make photo identification compulsory at polling stations a grievous suppressing of the franchise that restricts human rights for people of all ages. It is widely thought to be a move that will unfairly favour the Conservatives and, it might be fairly assumed, there will be more such ploys to come.

Instead, the government should be trying to maximise the vote and turnout. All manner of public authorities the DVLA, HMRC, the passports office hold relevant data on individuals that could be used to enrol them to vote automatically. As Mete Coban argues in our Voices section, if every major tech brand sent out a push notification to young users it would make a huge difference to getting young people onto the register. Social media companies so powerful these days and so much a part of our democratic process, willingly or not should be encouraged to do so.

In any event, anyone eligible including Commonwealth citizens can register for the general election here. The more who do so, the more the election will count.

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Maximising voter turnout should be a priority for this election and all others - The Independent

France – Withdrawal from a work situation versus the right to strike – Lexology

ByAnne-LaurePeries, Firm:Capstan

This article sets out some legal insights into an exceptional social movement that occurred recently in France, claimed as a right of withdrawal in the rail transport system, which created major disruption.

Between 18 and 21 October 2019, following an accident between a regional train and a lorry at a level crossing in the North of France, French train drivers (between 700 drivers according to the SNCF management and 17,000 drivers according to the CGT union) refused to keep working since they considered themselves in danger.

This movement spread so widely and rapidly around the country that rail traffic was severely affected, on the eve of the French half-term holiday.

Was this right of withdrawal, which affected thousands of travellers, justified under French law?

The question can also apply to other countries in Europe, since Council directive 89/391 provides protection to workers who, in the event of serious, imminent and unavoidable danger, leave their workstation and/or a dangerous area.

In the French Labour Code, article L 4131-1 states that the worker should immediately alert the employer to any situation that he or she can reasonably consider to present a serious and imminent danger to his or her life or health. The employee should also alert the employer to any default that he or she notices in the protection systems. He or she can withdraw from such a work situation.

The employer cannot ask the employee to go back to work after the use of such a withdrawal right if the danger still exists, particularly due to a fault in the protection system.

The collision on 16 October 2019 had cut all the alerting equipment, forcing the slightly injured driver, to walk around one kilometre along the railway line, in order to raise the alarm, leaving behind 70 passengers alone in the train. The drivers and later the CGT union representatives complained that, unlike in earlier times, the regional train did not have a ticket inspector on board. They argued therefore that train drivers were in danger and the drivers interrupted their work, even in trains which did have a ticket inspector on board (such as high speed trains).

The SNCF explained that the presence of a ticket inspector on board would not have improved the safety in this situation and that in the Paris suburbs area, trains have not had a ticket inspector on board for the last 30 years. Despite this, many train drivers only went back to work several days later.

The French government critised this unplanned social movement as being a wild strike (unauthorised) and illegal. Indeed, in the public transport system, the law requires each future striker to declare him or herself at least 48 hours before going on strike. The management (bound by an obligation of public service) can then reorganise traffic for the passengers.

Under French law, this type of accident cannot justify a right of withdrawal for all the other drivers who operate a train without a ticket inspector. The absence of an inspector cannot be considered as a serious and imminent danger. The exercising of a right of withdrawal is even more debatable for those drivers who operate a train with a ticket inspector.

The analysis could have been different if a fault in the security systems had been identified for each driver who stopped working.

On the other hand, security and safety concerns could provide a valid reason for a strike but it would have to follow conciliation proceedings and the notice period imposed by French law for that sector.

A strike has already been announced at SNCF for 5 December 2019 by three unions, in the context of social upheaval resulting from the abolition of the special status accorded to railway drivers for new recruits from 1 January 2020. It is also a response to a controversial reform of retirement, which has a direct impact on the special regime applicable to train drivers and the opening to competition of the railway market at the end of 2020.

On 25 October 2019, the SNCF decided to implement various new security measures to improve the alerting system and procedures on regional trains.

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France - Withdrawal from a work situation versus the right to strike - Lexology

Irish workers abroad shaped the pathways later emigrants followed – The Irish Times

Irish writer Brendan Behan once remarked: People who say manual labour is a good thing have never done any.

Nevertheless, the fruits of the toil of Irish labourers can be seen throughout the world. From the Transcontinental Railroad that first linked the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans, to the Channel tunnel that connects Great Britain to the Eurasian mainland, Irish hands have shaped the routes and pathways upon which many subsequent travellers and emigrants have journeyed. Today our diaspora plays a leading role in shaping not just the physical world, but also the virtual spaces we inhabit and spend more of our time.

Yet regardless of whether the tools we use are hammers and chisels or laptops and tablets, our work often determines where we go and who we are. What we do and how we do it matters it underpins our very sense of identity. The objects we choose to retain and surround ourselves with provide insights into perceptions of ourselves, our pasts and perhaps even in our futures.

For the last 18 months EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum in Dublin has been collecting the stories of the things that migrants keep with them. Whether that be a treasured family heirloom, a favourite pair of jeans or simply a memento of a cherished event no two stories are alike. Often these objects relate to our working lives. For some they remind us of our aspirations.

Dubliner Declan Curtis never travelled anywhere without his treasured philosophy tome (book): I left Dublin to undertake my Masters in Philosophy in St Andrews, Scotland. It was a very affluent school, Prince William and Kate Middleton met there. This book really sums up my thoughts on the world. When I later emigrated to Paris, I worked in a language school as a librarian and brought the book with me.

For others these objects can become symbols of transition. Maura Flood shared the story of a commemorative plate she received while working in the UK: I am Irish, and I lived in London between 1985 and 1990. I worked in the Stock Exchange when the financial markets were deregulated on October 27th, 1986. This was called the Big Bang, which meant the abolition of fixed commission.

Before this, stock brokers would buy shares from stock jobbers on the floor. With deregulation, they got rid of the stock jobbers - it was the end of the trading floor and bargaining in person. Now all the trading is done on a screen. All of the staff who ran the stock exchange at the time got a commemorative plate.

For others the right tools can change our lives. Peter Varga, who arrived in Ireland from Hungary, tells the story of his camera: I arrived in Dublin when I was 19 from Budapest. I was originally studying as a mechanic. I worked for about seven years in a restaurant in Dublin but then I met my partner who encouraged me to pursue my passion for photography.

"I didnt even have a camera. But I wanted to start on a small project before I began my studies. I used to enjoy talking to the customers in the cafe but my manager wanted me to make more coffee! So I quit to pursue my passion. I started Humans of Dublin, a project where I photograph strangers on the street and interview them about their lives. I never expected it to grow as big as it did. I feel sometimes you need to be in an uncomfortable position to change and create something different. To me, my camera represents success and the benefits of following your dreams.

Do you have any objects that encapsulate your memories and experiences? This Saturday, EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum, in collaboration with the Europeana network would like to hear the stories of your working life. Share them with us at our Working Away: Story Collecting Day.

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Irish workers abroad shaped the pathways later emigrants followed - The Irish Times

Shrink the Military, Shrink Injustice – Resilience

The climate crisis does not respect national borders, and neither should programs that respond to it. The Green New Deal, unlike most proposed climatelegislation, addresses justice, not just emissions. But to be truly transformative, it must consider justice internationally, not just in the country implementing a GND.

United States House Resolution 109, the document thatproposesa Green New Deal, focuses narrowly on the US. Itthreatensto create Green New Colonialism through increased extraction abroad. It also gives no mention of the US militarys environmentalimpactor its ability to maintain global injustice by force.

Happily, the GND holds a radical understanding of how environmental injustice comes to be. The GND names social, political, and economicoppressionas root causes of environmental injustice. Traditional policy approaches for environmental justice, by contrast,focuson disproportionate shares of environmental consequences in a way that laments, rather than counteracts, underlying oppressions.

The fact is, socially and economically marginalized people bear the brunt of environmental hazards. Speaking plainly, environmental injustice occurs along race and class lines. 2018s Hurricane Michael hit poor counties in Florida and Georgia hardest, demonstrating a pattern where environmental hazardsexacerbateexisting inequalities. This injustice does not confine itself to the United States or other countries that have produced the lions share of the emissions causing climate chaos. Shortly after Hurricane Michael, two serious cyclones hammered the coast of Mozambique, withmorefrequent storms expected in the future.

Climate mitigation and adaptationnot hazards alonecan also create or perpetuate injustice. For instance, implementing the GNDs call for net-zero emissions would require vast increases in production of renewable energy technologies and batteries. Accordingly, it wouldintensify miningin places such as China, Congo-Kinshasa, and Chile. This mining contributes to water toxification inInner Mongolia,dependson child labor in Congo, and threatens todegradeIndigenous and peasant farmland in the Andes. The lack of attention to these energy and environmental injusticesconstitutesa green colonialism, where the global north achieves a high standard of living and a sheen of carbon neutrality by exploiting the health, labor, and land of the global south.

It is true that renewable energy production can cut greenhouse gas emissions in the wealthiest countries, mitigating climate changes most acute threats in the global south. Climate change is certainly a mortal threat and in itself an environmental injustice, but simply replacing one energy source with another would hardly be a just transition. Instead, as Elena Hofferberth writes, in order to prevent green colonialism, [t]heacknowledgementof the global historical responsibility [for oppression and discrimination] must translate into true environmental justice

Accordingly, an internationally just GND must target the processes that generate global oppression. But what are those processes? Why are marginalized people at greater risk? And who marginalized them in the first place? The short answer is that state power determines who is protected from environmental injustice and who suffers it. Environmental hazards mostly result from economic processes, all of which require ecosystem destruction or disruption. Within a given state, non-marginalized people, those with economic means and social privileges, can protect themselves from these risks by influencing decisions or using legal processes to mitigate existing harms. Or they can simply pay to protect their land, often in the form of conservation easements.

But these people are usually playing a zero-sum game. If their communities avoid risks, others will not. Corporations have to grow or die, so they wont surrender dirty projects if they do not have to. Rather, they will move them to where poor and marginalized people live. The state will thus favor industrial interests over people without political, economic, or social power who challenge them. In the US, this patternconcentratespollution in low-income areas, especially those populated by people of color. Internationally, global south countriesbearthe brunt of resource extraction and waste disposal.

These conflicts also arise across international borders. Where no one state dominates, the political fights take the form of military competition. Without a global government, there is no single body that can back up or arbitrate economic processes, so economic processes, especially raw material extraction, depend on international stability that results from military power. A central example is the US militarys tightlinkto major US fossil fuel corporations. In other words, it is no coincidence that the US has the largest economy in the worldandthe largest military.

A transformative GND, one committed to environmental justice and avoiding green colonialism, should therefore reduce American military capacity. This reduction would degrade one of the primary mechanisms on which injustice and exploitation depend. Thankfully, the current House Resolution already contains the seeds of that more transformative vision.

First and foremost, the GND already calls for justice through stopping current, preventing future, and repairing historic oppressionof [I]ndigenous peoples, communities of color, migrant communities, deindustrialized communities, depopulated rural communities, the poor, low-income workers, women, the elderly, the unhoused, people with disabilities, and youth (my emphasis). One only needs to go one step further to acknowledge that oppression based in militarism reproduces injustice on a global scale.

Consider military bases. The US militaryoperatesapproximately 800 bases around a globe composed of 206 UN-recognized countries. They amount to hundreds of sitesaround the globe are where the military can store its weapons, station its troops, detain suspects, launch its drones, and monitor global affairs. This storage, stationing, detaining, launching, and monitoring all comprise a mechanism for oppression, one that projects the interests of the United States and holds the rest of the world in check. But bases can also create direct environmental injustices themselves. Bases, current and former, have left a range of environmentalhazardsaround the world, [f]rom Agent Orange in Vietnam, depleted uranium in Iraq, and munitions dumps and firing ranges in Vieques, Puerto Rico, to a toxic brew of poisons along the Potomac River Often, these hazards impact people along colonial lines, such as military basesimpacton traditional Native American foods in Alaska.

Accordingly, the GND should halt oppression by significantly reducing the number of US military bases around the world. In doing so, the GND would weaken the capacity of the United States to inflict environmental injustice, while simultaneously directly mitigating existing environmental hazards. Of course, this process would not do away with the injustices of extractivism in and of itself. What it woulddo is decrease imperial power and shrink local sites of environmental injustice.

This process would easily fit with GND jobs. Decommissioning bases, managing their contents, and remediating their impacts would require a huge amount of work. A GND committed to base reduction would also significantly cut oil consumption. The US military itself is the worlds largestconsumerof oil, and shrinking it would cut itshugegreenhouse gas emissions. Reduced military expenditure could also free up federal funding to pay for other aspects of the GND.

Critics may rightfully ask why this proposal does not simply call for full demilitarization and the abolition of the armed forces. After all, why simplylessenthe potential for environmental injustice rather thaneliminateit? One response could be that it is not justmilitarismbutimperialismwhich the GND must target. But the two are intricately linked, and tackling the latter would warrant a more radical opposition to the military. My only defense against that is tactical restraint. A major strength of the GND has been its popularity, and too strong of a critique of American militarism could decrease support. I admit this defense is based on speculation about public opinion, but limiting the worst dangers from climate change requires mitigation as soon as possible. Compromises on rhetoric are warranted to adopt a transformative GND within the existing political structure. Since the proposed GND is largely aspirational, the GND goals could perhaps be framed in a way that is sympathetic to public opinion while policies themselves could be more radical.

These issues need to be carefully worked through in the creation of an anti-imperialist GND. The conversation should start by recognizing that reduction of military capacity provides an effective means of combating imperialism and environmental injustices alike.

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Shrink the Military, Shrink Injustice - Resilience

Defining Prison Abolitionism In A Time of Progressive Prosecutors – The Peoples Vanguard of Davis

By Danielle Silva

In a time where progressive prosecutors are becoming a national movement, several organizations came together to create a document outlining abolitionist principles and strategies titled Abolitionist Principles & Campaign Strategies for Prosecutor Organizing.

Community Justice Exchange presented the document at a webinar on Nov. 11, 2019.

The presentation began with words from Mariame Kaba, the founder and director of Project NIA and co-founder organizer with Survived and Punished New York. She noted how, in 2014, many police-related shootings had gained attention and these incidents were not addressed by the prosecution.

During that time, Kaba and other individuals engaged in a campaign after the police shooting and cover-up of Laquan McDonald involved Cook County states attorney Anita Alvarez. Their campaign #ByeAnita spoke out against her poor practices as a prosecuting attorney as she was running for her third term in office. Alvarez was replaced by Kim Foxx in 2015, a person regarded as a progressive prosecutor.

Kaba wanted to address that, while they did not support the Alvarez, that didnt mean they supported Foxx.

The Abolitionist Principes for Prosecutor Organizing was created to help address the distinction between supporting progressive policies and progressive prosecutors.

Abolitionism, at its core, focuses on reducing the Prison Industrial Complex or the overlapping interests of government and industry that use surveillance, policing, and imprisonment as solutions to economic, social and political problems. The document, made by Community Justice Exchange, Court Watch MA, Families for Justice as Healing, Project NIA, and Survived and Punished NY, wanted to clarify how abolitionism didnt just support progressive policies but seeking to reduce the power of the PIC, which included the role of prosecutors.

Kaba explained that the document isnt supposed to be taken as law but should be seen as establishing abolitionism as a set of needs and of values.

Jamani Montague, National Membership Coordinator of Critical Resistance, presented some definitions to help better understand the document.

Montague reiterated that the definitions arent static but are working definitions that allowed them to articulate what abolition meant.

Prison Industrial Complex (PIC) Abolition is a political vision with the goal of eliminating imprisonment, policing, and surveillance and creating lasting alternatives to punishment and imprisonment, Montague stated.

She elaborated that abolition should be seen as a practical organizing tool and a long-term goal. While there are no perfect solutions, they argued that abolitionist strategies can work on undoing the current system that has given power to the PIC that should be given to the people.

Montague also explained the difference between Reformist reform and Non-Reformist reform. Non-reformist reform, also known as abolitionist reform, is a practical effort or step that changes aspects of the prison industrial complex towards completely dismantling the system. Reformist reform, on the other hand, addressed immediate issues but grew the scope of the PIC.

To determine if a policy is non-reformist reform, the policy must: reduce funding to police; challenge the notion that police increase safety; reduce tools/tactics/technology police have at their disposal; and reduce the scale of policing.

Prosecutors are seen as individuals who have a large role in putting individuals in prison and, as such, non-reformist reform encourages prosecutors to have less power and authority.

Individualizing police violence or prosecutorial harm creates this false distinction between good prosecutors and bad prosecutors, and good police and bad police rather than challenging the assumption that theres a system that these folks are playing their role in, Montague stated.

It needs not to be seen as an individual issue but a systemic one, she added.

The Critical Resistance circle outlines the effects of the Prison Industrial Complex (PIC) on communities.

They used solutions to overcrowding in jails as examples in comparing non-reformist and reformist. Reformist argues for more jail construction and building new jails as old ones are closed as a solution to overcrowding. Non-reformist argues for reducing the jail population and closing more jails.

Rachel Foran, Tactical Organizing Director of Community Justice Exchange, spoke next, introducing the document.

She reiterated the idea that prosecutors should be seen as law enforcement and part of the prosecution, even if they have progressive politics. While they may have policies that seem attractive in helping individuals who are incarcerated, the document states, Prosecutors are not social workers They cannot and should not provide services to people who are in need.

Resource shifting from carceral prosecution to carceral social services is not de-resourcing. Social services become another punishment tool of the punishment system whether housed in or mandated by the prosecuting office, the document states.

Abolitionist principles state that the prosecuting office must be stripped of its power and resources and cannot be co-governed with/by community organizations.

While there isnt one path to the answer, the document outlines how abolitionist campaign strategies should first focus on increasing the number of people who share a vision for abolition, raising awareness, shifting the narrative away from stigmatizing language used in traditional punishment narratives, and encouraging Mutual Aid.

Mutual Aid is a form of political participation in which people take responsibility for caring for one another and changing political conditions, not just through symbolic acts or putting pressure on their representatives in government, but by actually building new social relations that are survivable.

These strategies are a base for higher goals for abolition. In focusing on the prosecution office, they encourage electoral organizing to remove officeholders and staff in the prosecuting office committed to status quo punishment and harm, shifting office and policy culture to hold elected prosecutors accountable to implementing promised policy changes, shrinking the systems of harm by implementing policies that reduce the reach and influence of the prosecutor, and pressuring state and local actors to prioritize funding for community-based resources that produce safety and well-being.

These steps contribute to an overarching goal to address the goal of shrinking structural power.

The document also provides a section explaining examples of demands organizers may need to utilize in their local context, such as de-resourcing, funding the community, rejecting hi-tech interventions that reinforce racism, rejecting and disrupting media narratives that use individual cases to applaud the role of the prosecutor and obscure the daily grind of prosecutions, and demanding transparency in the prosecutors office.

Two examples were provided by other speakers in the context of using abolitionist principles with the prosecutors who claim progressive policies.

Woods Ervin of the San Francisco Chapter of Critical Resistance stated how he had been a part of the No New San Francisco Jail Coalition.

In 2015, the Board of Supervisors rejected an $8 million jail construction proposal from the state and established City Workgroup to investigate alternatives to depopulate the jail after years of No New SF Jail Coalition organizing. The money was instead used for the Jail Replacement Project to research community-based alternative solutions to decrease San Franciscos reliance on imprisonment from a group of

In June 2016, San Francisco District Attorney George Gascn, the now-former SF DA who also took a stance against the proposed jail, began backroom deals for a partially locked mental health facility run by Sheriffs known as the Behavioral Health Justice Center.

The Coalition was using the JRP to push for decarceration, expansion affordable housing, and community-based mental health care, Ervin stated. Gascn derailed and attempted to push funding for this project lead by his office.

The JRP ended in a stalemate but the Coalition continued to organize against the construction of new jails. Ervin explained that Gascns stance as a progressive prosecutor and a prosecutor for decarceration made it difficult to limit his power as a prosecutor in a city like San Francisco.

A representative from Court Watch MA gave another example of speaking out against unfair practices against progressive prosecutors while not immediately showing support for the prosecutors office.

The policies stated in the document have helped them navigate how they interact with Boston District Attorney Rachel Rollins, considering supporting her policies that are non-reformist such as decarceration policies while also establishing they dont support the role of a prosecution office.

DA Rollins received racist attacks due to being a black, female district attorney. While Court Watch MA continued to push DA Rollins to hold up to her promised decarceration policies, they also made sure to push back against the racist comments that targetted DA Rollins.

She stated that she looked beyond simply the policies of Rollins but the prosecuting office as a whole. The representative recommended looking into the details of the policy to make sure to see the extent of decriminalization that the policy contains as some policies may only apply to certain cases. One such instance is the idea of need she argued that the prosecuting office deciding what a person needs should not be something the prosecuting office does.

Court Watch MA has also released a report called Rhetoric, Not Reform: Prosecutors & Pretrial Practices in Suffolk, Middlesex, and Berkshire Counties that explored pre-trial reform and how practices promised from prosecutors often are not kept.

In the short question and answer portion, the speakers of the webinar pointed out that solutions should be focused on community healing and community advisory. Committees should not be working with prosecutors as, simply because of how the system is set-up, prosecutors will always have committees subject to their policies.

Working with towards opportunities for communities should be the emphasis and, if there are non-reformist policies like decarceration that a prosecutor pushes for, the community should hold them to it. They encouraged individuals to continue the conversation and organizing interventions.

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Defining Prison Abolitionism In A Time of Progressive Prosecutors - The Peoples Vanguard of Davis

‘Exhausted teachers terrorised by nonsensical Ofsted’ – TES News

Teachers are "physically exhausted and mentally broken" by an unmanageable workload, imposed in part by a "nonsensical" inspection framework, according to the joint general secretary of the NEU teaching union.

Speaking at the Universities' Council for the Education of Teachers (UCET) conference in Stratford-upon-Avon this morning, Mary Bousted said"thesingle most important thing we have to do to reinvigorate teaching is to reduce workload" which would involve the abolition of both Ofsted and school league tables, and a "radical change" of the assessment system.

Workload: 'Bureaucracy is ruining teachers' lives'

Impact:Five out of six teachers say Ofsted burdens schools

Viewpoint:Why is Ofsted blaming school leaders for workload?

She said a focus on accountability hadled to a "huge intensification of pointless work in the profession" with teachers "terrorised" and "frightened" by the prospect of inspections.

Criticisingthe new Ofsted framework, along with its past iterations, Ms Bousted said: Teaching and learningis far too complex to measure in this way.

Professionalism does not thrive in a climate of fear. It is not intellectually attractive work; it is exhausting. And exhausted and defeated, unable to fulfilthe ethical impulse thatdrove them to the profession, many teachers are leaving.

We need radical reform. If we dont get radical reform, we will continue to lose our teachers.

When asked about teachers teaming up to share ideas outside of work, Ms Bousted added: Why do we require our teachers to be martyrs to their profession?

Teachers need a home life; they need to be able to see their family; they need to be able to talk to their children; they need to be able to see their friends; they need to be able to have coffees; they need to be able to keep fit. And I see too many teachers who are physically exhausted and mentally broken.

We have to take much better care of our teachers.

Ofsted has been approached for comment.

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'Exhausted teachers terrorised by nonsensical Ofsted' - TES News

Post-Capitalists Must Understand the Role of Migration in Global Capitalism – Resilience

This article is part of ourEconomys Decolonising the economyseries.

Following a decade of the global financial crisis, the unravelling of neoliberal centrism and the hardening of right-wing immigration politics, the urgency and renewal of socialist politics have brought its core ideas to the centre of mainstream debate in many high-income countries. There is a popular appetite for alternatives to disastrous capitalism. Yet as it stands, post-neoliberal or even post-capitalist visions of society tend to ignore or take for granted the role of over-exploited migrant labour in successive capitalist orders. Without this understanding, socialist transformation will not be possible.

The character of the globalised labour market challenges the idea of emancipating workers only on a national level. It is not that all migrants, and migrations, are driven by the market under oppressive conditions. Fundamentally, migration has always been, and will always be, a part of human development. There is no use in casting it as a good or bad phenomenon in itself: the notion of being pro or anti migration is a useless hook for popular debate and undermines the dignity of people who have migrated. It makes no more sense than being pro- or anti- women or any other group of humans that forms a constant part of society. Migration represents the diversity of humanity and human experience in all its turbulence, complexity and wonder.

What does need recognition, however, is a global regime of labour mobility which overly determines the character of migration as people finds themselves constrained by the destruction of livelihoods at home, narrow and unstable channels of migration, arbitrary and violent border and detention systems, and labour markets that are structured to enable firms bottom line at any cost to working people. The vast majority of economic migrants havenot become so by choice.

In capitalist production, unending demands for natural resources, land and labour at lower costs creates structural migration as people are compelled to move from one place to another for work. Concerted labour policies such as, historically, the slave trade, colonial or apartheid-type labour regimes, and now many guestworker programmes and selective immigration regimes with varying restrictions on citizenship and legality, are a constant feature of capitalist development in wealthy economies.

Legal-bureaucratic structures control discriminatory mobilities of racialised groups of people with an impact far beyond the individuals who confront these constraints directly as they travel and work. It amounts to an apartheid-type system in which geographical regions contain impoverished people who are forced to migrate for household survival and whose labour is exploited in the service of dominant capitalist interests. In a world whereas much as 88 percent of people are strugglingagainst poverty, many are forced out of their communities and into the unknown as surplus labour, while70 million peoplehave also been displaced by conflict and persecution. This sustains capitals power over labour as a whole.

Migration is not only a consequence of imperial development but is also at its foundation.Samir Amin,the late Marxist political economist who was based in Dakar, Senegal, wrote about distinct patterns of development and coercive labour migration withinregions of Africa, starting by the end of the nineteenth century. He observed that mobility of labour was a core feature of West and Southern Africas regional patterns of colonial development, which were based on agricultural export crops and extraction of mineral wealth respectively. In the Congo River Basin, the colonial economy was based on plunder, forcing societies into a vicious labour regime that many resisted by escaping.

The underlying patterns of trade that generated labour migration dynamics have persisted within the uneven development created by the system of global capitalism. Labour migration has created and reproduced regional paradigms of uneven development and has aggravated inequalities, ultimately sustaining the global hierarchy of so-called developed and developing countries.

Amins theorisation has proven useful for understanding other regional patterns, including contemporary migrations from Mexico to the US in agricultural labour where activists demand the right to stay home as peoples livelihoods and land have been destroyed by corporate farming, and with some food imports from the north cheaper than the cost of production. 1994 was a pivotal year in both migration systems: adevastating currency devaluationin West and Central Africas franc zones, and the establishment of NAFTA in the Americas, created enormous displacement, instability and forms of migration and remittance dependence in entire communities.

It is common to look to people in oppressed countries to fight for their own emancipation, but socialism cannot exist in one country alone it needs transformations elsewhere and in particular in advanced capitalist countries where economic power and influence is concentrated. Samir Amin, in assessingpopular movements towards socialism, hence reflected on the lack of succession to the Paris Commune or to Russian, Chinese and Mexican revolutions in Asian and African countries. For him, the tragedy was not in the inadequacies then, the fatal deviations of the peripheries nations but in the pro-imperialist alignments of the peoples of the centres.

Not only was this imperialist alignment unhelpful to the liberation struggles of the global south, but also, asRosa Luxemburg arguedfrom the socialist perspective, no nation is free whose national existence is based upon the enslavement of another people. This internationalism is not just about having sympathies with oppressed peoples. It also demands recognition of the basis of that oppression and an understanding that the position of working people in imperial centresis also weakenedby segmented and divided labour markets.

Illustrating this, in 1870, Karl Marx had written aletterto German-American correspondents that focused on Irelands national question but also presented an extensive picture of migration from Ireland to England. He argued that the secret of the power of the ruling class in England was found in its use of tools such as the media and entertainment, indeed any tools at its disposal, to aggravate antagonisms between English workers and those who had been evicted from Ireland. The way to upend the ruling class was found in English workers recognition that their own emancipation would be realised in the national emancipation of Ireland. Hence there should be no real class division between migrants and native-born people.

Accordingly, the mostradical route to empowermentfor all working people is found in their alliances.Such alliances, whether between outsourced cleaners, activist groups, trade unions, students and left-wing politicians in London, or between racialised local communities in US cities who are coerced into competition and hostility, must be vigorously reported and supported by the left as their fierce capacity for transformation is met by violent counter-revolutionary force.

Impoverished communities and punishing workplaces of the global north are a battleground for dignity and survival. Such communities find themselves excluded by whatWalter Rodneydescribed as the imperialist worker elite that dominates northern labour movements in politics and the media. Such description needs a concrete class analysis in the present day asworking classes have been destabilisedby runaway neoliberalism, which expands the importance and scope of heightened transnational solidarity.

Marxs letter was not only about understanding the position of migrants, who had been evicted from the land to make way for the export of cheap meat and wool to England, but also about liberating territories and workers in both oppressing and oppressed nations. He considered that there would be a decisive victory for labouring classes both in the overthrow of the English aristocracy in Ireland and in the advancement of the Chartist movement in England.

To conclude, when reading and hearing of ambitious programmes for social transformation, it is our task to consider whether or not such programmes have a sense of the real determinants of economic development that Marx recognised: international relations of production, the international division of labour in a world market, exploitation of resources and emigration of displaced people, and at the forefront of these processes, the inner structures of middle and working classes and relations between them.

The fight for the dignity of working people and for the abolition of the racist and imperial structuring of the world is inextricably linked with the fight for an ecologically viable system of production. The displacements exemplified above emerge in environmental as well as economic devastation. Nostalgia for the Keynesian welfare state and aims to improve this model in the UK and elsewhere lacks this sense if it neglects the states historical reliance on the imperial exploitation of resources and labour to grow. Visions of universal basic income or full automation risk doing precisely the same in the post-colonial world unless they fully acknowledge thesocial relationsof globalised labour and production.

Teaser photo credit: By Tarquin Binary Own work, CC BY-SA 2.5

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Post-Capitalists Must Understand the Role of Migration in Global Capitalism - Resilience

Our Bootstraps Narrative Is Tying Us Down – Forbes

I think a lot about the bootstraps narrative. You know the one someone who assumes personal responsibility, works hard, and has strong core values can accomplish anything. Weve had some version of that story ripple through the American experience since our founding. And I believe two profound shifts happening in important sectors of our society right now are, at their core, a recognition that you cant have a bootstraps narrative on a tilted playing field.

The two sectors Ive spent my career in business and philanthropy are undergoing a period of self-examination and taking steps toward change that I find deeply encouraging. In philanthropy, the shift is best exemplified by Ford Foundation President Darren Walkers new book From Generosity to Justice: A New Gospel of Wealth. In it, Walker takes what was once the foundational document of our sector The Gospel of Wealth written by Andrew Carnegie in 1899 and turns it on its head. The original Gospel was written pre-womens suffrage, post-Civil War, mid-Jim Crow and toward the end of the Gilded Age a time of extreme wealth inequality not unlike what were seeing in the United States today.

Reading Carnegies words through a modern lens is shocking in places. He is mostly untroubled by the chasm between rich and poor, and actually views it as a sign of the worth of those who have managed to make it. Despite advocating for charity, he deems its recipients unworthy. Those worthy of assistance, except in rare cases, seldom require assistance. The really valuable men of the race never do, except in cases of accident or sudden change he writes. He repeatedly refers to the race as in the human race, but never grapples with the subject of race in a country only thirty years removed from the abolition of slavery and in the midst of a nakedly separate and unequal society.

What Walker calls for is advancing justice economic, racial, social, and political justice. And in doing so, calling on the philanthropic sector and others too to examine our privilege, transform how we operate, and use our various forms of power to dismantle the systems that allowed such injustices to fester for so long. What Carnegie advocated for in terms of philanthropic acts of generosity funding a bed in a shelter for example though valuable and good isnt enough, Walker argues. Justice is about changing inequitable systems, and the attitudes and beliefs that perpetuate them and keep the bootstraps narrative from becoming a reality. And the path Walker prescribes is one many philanthropists are now on. Many of us are early in our journeys, joining with others much further along, but the shift is real, and it will make philanthropy both the sector and those are impacted by it stronger.

But even if Walkers vision is fully realized, the levers that philanthropy has to pull are not enough. Not even close. The combined financial endowments of even the most major philanthropy foundations in the world are not enough. If we are going to begin to reverse the startling 40-year negative trends in both inequity and inequality in this country, capitalism must also evolve. The recent announcement by the Business Roundtable (BRT), setting forth a new purpose for corporations, one where one where all stakeholders customers, employees, suppliers, communities, and not just shareholders are essential, represents an important shift.

Like Walkers call back to philanthropys history, the BRTs move is a break from an important point in the history of business, when the idea of shareholder democracy first began to take shape. Andrew Ross Sorkin has written about and discussed this history in detail, but in short, it was a movement sparked in the 1970s and fueled by the economist Milton Friedman promoting the idea that corporations were too bloated, not efficient, and overly generous to customers, suppliers, employees and to their communities. Over time, that led to a dramatic shift, making a companys stock price the CEOs top priority. Among other negative effects, the trend pushed companies toward overvaluing short-term performance metrics like quarterly earnings at the expense of long-term planning and other factors like social impact.It led to the era of the leveraged buyout where corporate raiders forced companies to strip down by firing employees, eliminating perks, and cutting back on charitable giving, among other measures, to raise profits and the companys stock price.

The problems with this formula are easy to see especially in hindsight. These newly-trimmed companies lost much of their overall value by that I mean value to customers, to employees, and to the communities in which they work. The raiders made out like bandits. The employees, customers, suppliers, and communities did not. Its not hard to see how this trend dramatically exacerbated inequality in this country.

Thats why rejecting the idea of fealty to shareholders above all else deeply embedded in corporate culture is a critical shift. What we must do now is ensure that the CEOs who signed the BRT pledge both grow their ranks and put specific plans into action to make this shift real. Many were cynical when the BRT made its announcement, with good reason. The onus is on the CEOs who signed that statement to show us they mean it and role model for the broader business community how to deliver on it.

And that goes for us in philanthropy, too. We who have profited from inequity CEOs and philanthropic leaders, among them must listen to the communities who have been most damaged by it, solicit their ideas and give them our support, as well as our humble gratitude for leading a fight we should have joined long ago. Then, together, lets build a country where equity is an animating force and prosperity is widely shared.

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Our Bootstraps Narrative Is Tying Us Down - Forbes

Russia and Africa Resolved on Concrete Actions in Trade and Investment – IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

By Kester Kenn Klomegah

MOSCOW (IDN) After the first Russia-Africa Summit in the Black Sea city Sochi on October 23-24, Russia and Africa have resolved to move from mere intentions to concrete actions in raising the current bilateral trade and investment to appreciably higher levels in the coming years.

As a first step, Russia plans to offer trade subsidies and investment guarantees as an emergency support for Russian companies to penetrate into African market, part of the strategy for strengthening economic ties between Russia and Africa, according to a report by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The report noted further that Africa has huge natural resources still untapped, all kinds of emerging business opportunities and constantly growing consumer market due to the increasing population. It has currently become a new business field for global players.

"There was a lot of interesting and demanding work ahead, and perhaps, there is a need to pay attention to the experience of China, which provides its enterprises with state guarantees and subsidies, thus ensuring the ability of companies to work on a systematic and long-term basis," Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said.

According to Lavrov, the Russian Foreign Ministry would continue to provide all-round support for initiatives aimed at strengthening relations between Russia and Africa. "Our African friends have spoken up for closer interaction with Russia and would welcome our companies on their markets. But much depends on the reciprocity of Russian businesses and their readiness to show initiative and ingenuity, as well as to offer quality goods and services," he stressed.

He urged Russian entrepreneurs, both small and medium-sized, to race against other foreign players to get access to the African markets and its trading resources, be fearless of competition and rivalry but play with adequate caution to save Russia's image in Africa.

"We find it important to estimate options for attracting small and medium-sized businesses to African markets. This segment of our cooperation is still insignificant. We will rely on the existing and strengthening foundation of Russian-African cooperation. This year we have significantly intensified political dialogue, cooperation between parliaments and civil societies," Lavrov explained.

"This positive groundwork allows us to convert this into increasing trade, economic and investment exchanges, to expand banking cooperation, the implementation of mutually beneficial projects," he underlined, and further underscored the fact that trade and economic relations have reached a new level, the first Russia-Africa summit would give a special impetus to these processes.

The former Special Presidential Representative to Africa, Professor Alexey Vasileyev, pointed out that the level and scope of Russian economic cooperation with Africa has doubled in recent years, "but unfortunately Russian-African cooperation is not in the top five of the foreign players in Africa".

Speaking particularly about trade, Professor Vasileyev noted that not all African countries have signed agreements with Russia, for example, on the abolition of double taxation. He urged African countries to make trade choices that are in their best economic interests and further suggested that Russia should also consider the issue of removal of tariff and non-tariff restrictions on economic relations.

In order to increase trade, Russia has to improve its manufacturing base and Africa has to standardize its export products to compete in external markets. Russia has only few manufactured goods that could successfully compete with Western-made products in Africa.

The former Presidential Envoy believes that it is also necessary to create, for example, free trade areas. "But before creating them, we need information. And here, I am ready to reproach the Russian side, providing little or inadequate information to Africans about their capabilities, and on the other hand, reproach the African side, because when our business comes to Africa, they should know where they go, why and what they will get as a result," Professor Vasileyev added.

Interestingly, there are few Russian traders in Africa and African exporters are not trading in Russia's market, in both cases, due to multiple reasons including inadequate knowledge of trade procedures, rules and regulations as well as the existing market conditions, he said.

"The task before us, especially before the both parliaments, is to harmonize the norms of trade, contract and civil law. The parliamentarians of the two sides have the task to work together on a legislative framework that would be in the interests of both sides. This should be a matter of priority," Professor Vasileyev concluded.

Russia is interested in new markets and external alliances more than ever before, while Africa also looks for ways toward economic growth in recent years. In this context, African countries need to think about the smart approaches, mechanisms, and tools to use for effective trade cooperation

With the current sanctions of the United States and Europe against Russia, there is massive opportunity for African producers to develop more effectively their trade relationships with Russia. Try to find answers to a few questions, for example, what are the key initiatives and competencies that can create a deeper strategic trade partnership between Russia and Africa?

In diplomacy, parties usually talk about mutual benefits. While Africans will benefit largely from Russia's trade with the continent, taking into account the changing consumer landscape, it is deeply important for Africans, for example, to negotiate for trade preferences, tariff and tax relief) for their products to Russia and its neighboring republics. But this factor is often missed.

Nevertheless, African leaders have to take steps to explore two-way corporate business, begin looking at wide range of ways on promoting Africa and its business interests in the Russian Federation.

Quite recently, Dr. Gideon Shoo, Media Business Consultant based in Kilimanjaro Region in Tanzania, explained in an interview discussion with IDN that Russian companies need to prove their superiority in the business spheres and African governments have to make it easier for Russian companies to set up and operate in the continent.

"Russian financial institutions can offer credit support that will allow them to localize their production in Africa's industrial zones, especially southern and eastern African regions that show some stability and have good investment and business incentives. In order to operate more effectively, Russians have to risk by investing, recognize the importance of cooperation on key investment issues and to work closely on the challenges and opportunities on the continent," he added.

On the other hand, Dr. Shoo noted that Russia is, so far, a closed market to many African countries. It is difficult to access the Russian market. However, African countries have to look to new emerging markets for export products, make efforts to negotiate for access to these markets. This can be another aspect of the economic cooperation and great business opportunity for both regions.

Nearly all the experts have acknowledged here that import and export trade have been slow due to multiple reasons including inadequate knowledge of trade procedures, complicated certification procedures, expensive logistics, security and guarantee issues, rules and regulations as well as the existing market conditions.

By looking at and revising the rules and regulations, the situation about Russia's presence in Africa and Africa's presence in Russia could change. All that is necessary here is for Russia and Africa to make consistent efforts to look for new ways, practical efforts at removing existing obstacles that have impeded trade over the years.

Isabel dos Santos, the richest woman in Africa, according to Forbes, and the Russian daughter of former Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, believes that Russia has a vast potential in high technology and plans to invest in those sectors, she said in an interview with TASS, a Russian News Agency, on the sidelines of the Russia-Africa Summit.

She suggested that increasing cooperation between business communities of Russia and African countries help forge economic ties. "It is always better to bridge gaps first in business. When the two countries' entrepreneurs join efforts and get ahead, it creates a favorable environment for the future growth," she stressed. According to her, legal protection of investment is crucial, "since under those conditions any investor will be more willing to invest, for instance in Angola or in any other African country."

"Some countries provide insurance for export loans, which creates conditions for investors. However, this practice does not exist between Russia and Africa yet," Dos Santos said referring to the barriers hampering Russian companies' more active presence in Africa. "But in case it existed, it would be easier for Russian companies to operate in Africa and to sell goods and services. It could give some guarantees and reduce risks for business."

She is of the view that various venues should be used to gain a better understanding of the market. "For instance, a financial dimension. Should Russian and African banks collaborate more closely, it will create a database and a channel to exchange it," she explained. Dos Santos is convinced that investment should come both ways - both from Russia to Africa and back, and further underlined the fact that Russia is abundant in talented people who are capable of developing a product "with a twist" that will be in demand "in specific markets."

According to Senior Investment Adviser at the BCS Brokerage firm, Maxim Koyasan, when making plans to expand its influence on the African continent, Russia seeks political benefits rather than economic ones. By writing off debts, a country can make political gains and get profitable contracts for agricultural supplies and the exploitation of mineral resources. "African countries have already become an export market for Russia, and in light of the political instability in the African region and the constant regime-change, there are huge prospects for arms supplies," the expert emphasized.

"Significantly expanding trade is a rather surmountable challenge," head of the Center for Global and Strategic Studies at the Russian Academy of Sciences' Institute for African Studies, Kirill Aleshin, told Kommersant Financial Daily newspaper. "It's possible to increase the number of export destinations and expand the list of export goods," he pointed out. According to Aleshin, in order to stimulate trade, Moscow should set up new trade missions in African countries and establish more intergovernmental commissions, as well as improve the image of African countries in Russia.

TeleTrade Chief Analyst, Pyotr Pushkarev, told Nezavisimaya Gazeta that Africa was not only a continent rich in natural resources but also a huge potential market. "To get an appropriate share of this market, it is not enough to export finished goods, one should establish local manufacturing facilities like others do. Given the low cost of local labor and most production processes, African countries may become a source of goods for us. Since manufacturing expenditures are low, a wide range of new and cheap goods of sufficient quality will be created," the expert noted.

Some experts have offered both criticism and expert advice, often comparing Russia's economic investment and influence on other foreign players. As Dane Erickson, a lecturer at the Graduate School of Public Affairs at the University of Colorado and formerly a visiting scholar at the Africa Studies Center at Beijing University, argues in an emailed interview with IDN that the reality is that China is among many international players that have increased their attention to Africa in recent years.

Largely due to Africa's growing reputation as a region for commerce, over the past few years China, India, Japan, and the European Union all have hosted regional meetings similar to the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit. Africa's fractional share in global foreign direct investment (FDI) is on the rise, and trade between Africa and a multitude of nations is also increasing rapidly, according to Erickson.

Soviet Union and Africa had very close and, in many respects, allied relations with most of the African countries during the decolonization of Africa. For obvious reasons, the Soviet Union ceased to exist in 1991. As a result, Russia has to struggle through many internal and external difficulties. The past few years, it is still struggling to survive both the United States and European sanctions.

Amid a stagnating economy and after five years of Western sanctions, Moscow is looking for both allies and an opportunity to boost growth. Russia's trade with Africa is less than half that of France with the continent, and 10 times less than that of China. In terms of arms sales, Russia leads the pack in Africa, and Moscow still has a long way to catch-up with many other foreign players there.

Nevertheless, Moscow plans to boost its presence in Africa and double its overall trade with countries of the region in the coming years. [IDN-InDepthNews 07 November 2019]

Please click here for Kester Kenn Klomegahs previous articles on IDN https://www.indepthnews.net/kester_kenn_klomegah

Photo credit: Roscongress | Vyacheslav Viktorov

IDN is flagship agency of the International Press Syndicate.

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Russia and Africa Resolved on Concrete Actions in Trade and Investment - IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

Keralas modernity and its discontents – The Hindu

On November 1, Kerala completed 63 years as an economic-political entity. Keralas transformative experience in education, health, social security, land reforms and decentralised governance has been widely acknowledged as a model for other States. This article is an effort to evaluate Keralas modernity in the context of the transformation that took place in Kerala society in the early part of the 20th century and the events that unfolded over the last six decades or so.

From a freedom perspective, Keralas modernity may be said to epitomise the social actions of a community to fight successfully the caste, class iniquities and capability deprivations of the lower castes. It was a great process of renaissance that tried to discover human progress, exemplified in the teachings of Sree Narayana Guru and in the social demands of several community leaders of those times. The abolition of agrestic slavery and untouchability, the successful fighting for the right to worship in temples meant for the upper castes, the right to wear clothes of ones choice, the right to walk on roads exclusively meant for the upper castes, and so on were great achievements towards enhancing peoples capabilities and freedom. Importantly these happened in a unique geographic environment of rich biodiversity, water bodies, mountain ranges, wetlands, and so on, which are rare natural endowments. Indeed, it is for the Kerala people and its governance system to carry forward the process of expanding freedoms, and development without damage to its unique ecosystems.

The ecological overkill that happened in recent decades cannot be seen independent of the political decision-making. The colonial rationality of exploiting natural resources cannot be the guiding principle of any socially responsible political party. However, that aggressively happened in Kerala. The majority of the State Legislative Committees on Environment, except the 16th, which submitted its Report to the Assembly on July 4, 2019, were lukewarm to the issue of Keralas unique environment. The 16th Report speaks of the cruel and mean interventions in Idukki and Wayanad districts, besides pointing out that the illegal quarries were ten times the legal ones. That even after the floods and landslides, more quarrying and crushing units were granted amidst protests shows that the concern for the future of the State is but rhetoric.

Despite the constraints of a State in Indias quasi-federation, the quality of State and local politics is key to reducing corruption, conserving the environment, improving higher education and health care, and making policy choices that enhance freedom and social equity. That Keralites voted a Communist government to power in 1957, which initiated several progressive measures besides delivering an uncorrupt regime in the early years, cannot be forgotten. Kerala has come a long way from there.

In retrospect, the development trajectory over the last 62 years shows an early phase which sought to sustain the egalitarian project whereas the period between 1979 and 1988 witnessed a stagnation of the economy. This was followed by two events which radically altered the character of Keralas polity, society and economy: (a) the growing outmigration of Keralites following the Gulf boom which resulted in a steady flow of remittances and (b) the introduction of Central government-led economic reforms towards liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation which not only accelerated the foreign remittance inflow, but also promoted the market-mediated growth process. These forces triggered an unprecedented increase in per capita consumption (resulting in generation of waste) and unleashed a construction boom that adversely impacted the environment, widened inequalities, and created a service-led growth process. In the absence of a strong and determined political leadership to steer the State towards a better tomorrow (which was contingent on the productive management of the inflow of foreign remittances), we see powerful real estate mafia, liquor mafia, forest mafia, sand mafia, quarry mafia, and so on hijacking the development process. Mafia groups can bend rule of law and accountability norms. The Maradu building complexes of Kochi that attracted the wrath of the Supreme Court and the Palarivattom bridge that is under demolition are standing monuments of the endemic corruption underway. The State Finance Minister, Thomas Isaac, wrote in 2000: Contractors made big profits, which were shared with politicians who connived to grant the work, engineers who gave technical sanction and monitored the work, as well as clerical staff who approved payment of bills.

Looking back the situation has only worsened. Frequent custodial deaths, political murders, increase in crime, atrocities against women, increase in liquor consumption, increase in per day deaths caused by road accidents, and so on are disquieting signs. Can the political class ignore the writing on the wall?

A moot question any concerned citizen may ask is: what has happened to Keralas public action tradition? That public reasoning worked well in Kerala cannot be denied. Unseeability, untouchability and agrestic slavery that alienated the Dalits, and several rituals and superstitions among the Namboodiris, came to be accepted as irrational by the public. Of late, particularly after the emergence of innumerable political parties with the support of religious and community leaders, Kerala has become a virtual post-truth society. The TV debates of many Malayalam channels will bear this out. Civil society is fast slipping away from public rationality and public morality.

True, public action will affect different social groups with diverse initial endowments differently. The ethnographic study of Osella and Osella (2000) documents how the progress of the Izhava community from a former untouchable class achieved tremendous social mobility and progress by making the best use of their exposure to modernity. On the other hand, the Dalits, the real tillers, got only homestead rights and many were confined to colonies of Harijans which were certainly not uplifting choices for them. Similarly the Adivasis and fisherfolk were marginalised because they too were outside the political society and its discourse. That the marginalised communities remain as outliers is a conspicuous social failure.

The divided communities and multiplicity of political parties have fragmented the society and slackened the expansion of a reasoned public sphere. University and the higher education system have become a caricature of what they ought to be. Student, teacher and bureaucrats politics dissipate the time and energy of universities whose primary purpose is the production and dissemination of knowledge. Has the stream of reason lost its way in Kerala?

M.A. Oommen is an Honorary Fellow, Centre for Development Studies, Thiruvananthapuram

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Keralas modernity and its discontents - The Hindu

Meet the female pastors who dress and act like priests in Netherlands dying Catholic church – Lifesite

November 8, 2019 (LifeSiteNews) While Synod Fathers in Rome recently called for ministries to be conferred on women in the Amazonian church, parishes in the Netherlands have already opened their doors to females addressed as pastors who perform many tasks traditionally carried out by priests.

While these female pastoral workers dress and often act like priests in the running of Dutch parishes, they are really professional paid workers who have no ministerial functions and they are not ordained.However, in some places these women overstep their role, giving the impression that they are virtual priests, choosing to wear what looks like liturgical garments and being officially addressed as Pastor.

This is actually a play on words. In the Netherlands, this used to be the title used for Protestant preachers, with the accent on the first syllable, while Catholic priests were known as Pastoor, pronounced like store with the accent on the second syllable.

The confusion gets even worse because many ordained priests in Catholic parishes have chosen to be called Pastor rather than Pastoor since VaticanII in order to appear closer to the people.

Examples abound of female pastoral workers who are officially presented as Pastor and also called that way such as Carla Roetgerink at St Paul's parish in Groenlo.

In one of the numerous villages that are linked to that parish, Rekken, another lady pastor wearing what looks like an alb and a triangular green stola blessed hunters dogs at the end of the St. Hubert celebration, as can be seen in this revealing video. It is true that the name of God and of his only Son are remarkable by their absence from the words of benediction, in which Pastor Mia Tankink wishes them happy hunting, a happy homecoming and above all the gift of unity between man and beast.

Whether the celebration was a Mass or not is not clear. Pastoral workers are not allowed to celebrate the sacraments but in the Netherlands, where religious practice on the part of a dwindling Catholic population is also on a downward slope, there are ever fewer priests and while many churches are being closed, others keep up a level of activity by organizing celebrations of the Word instead of the Eucharist. Such celebrations can be led by women in the more compliant parishes.

Wearing priest-like vestments is forbidden for women and unordained male pastoral workers who also exist under official church guidelines. Nor are they allowed to wear liturgical stoles. But the ample off-white robes sported by these female pastoral workers, who also wear variations on pseudo-diaconal triangular sashes in the traditional liturgical colors create an ambiguity that is omnipresent in the more progressive parishes.

One such near-priestly dress was designed by Pastor Dorenda Gies, who recently moved to St James the Greater in Dronrijp from another parish. After having studied theology, as pastoral workers are expected to, she married and started her career in a number of Dutch parishes a job she shares with her husband who was also a pastoral worker.

Dorenda Gies recently told a local newspaper that she was free to create liturgical robes as she wished, provided that they were not priests garb. She designed a scarf or sash that looks like a cross between a priests stole and a deacons stole in Novus ordo vestments. She has a pseudo stole for each liturgical color, always embroidered with crosses in gold thread.

She explained that her design, visible here, was somewhat monastic, allowing for ample and characterful liturgical gestures. As a self-named pastor it appears to be her official title in her new parish Mrs. Gies, a paid worker, is present near the altar during Mass and she also accompanies funeral ceremonies in the absence of the actual priest.

You can get a glimpse of her speaking to the congregation in near-priestly robes in the video of her welcoming ceremony in Dronrijp at the 1hr35 mn time mark.

Other examples of women dressing, acting and being presented almost on the same level as priests abound.

In a parish around Walcheren, Ria Mangnus, Alida van Veldhoven and Katrien van de Wiele second the local parish priest at the behest of Bishop Liesen of Breda. They are all presented as Pastors on the parish website.

Their male counterpart, Wiel Hacking, is remarkable in his own right. He runs a blog in which he presented the pain of a male homosexual pair who married civilly in 2014, months before one of the two men died of a grave illness. Their pain was the result of the fact that they could not be blessed in church, Hacking explained. Finally, a former chapel was chosen by the retired (Catholic) priest of the parish to offer Leo and Erik a blessing for their union.

The installation ceremony of pastoral worker Ria Mangnus in nearby Vlissingen in 2010 also deserves a mention. Four parishioners handed her ecclesial symbols: a candle, a paten, a palm-leaf and a bible. She was given an official mission by her local bishop, Mgr Van den Hende. While she was not ordained and received no ministry as is the rule for pastoral workers, the confusion in the faithfuls minds can easily be imagined when seeing someone who looks and acts like a priest being entrusted with a public pastoral role.

It is the more confusing that the Catholic church has always had consecrated virgins and that their religious habit sets them apart, be they cloistered contemplatives or members of charitable congregations who help, teach, nurse and heal their contemporaries. Pastoral workers, female or male, are clearly not religious. They certainly give the impression of being auxiliary priests who do everything but celebrate the sacraments.

Pastoral workers in the Netherlands are named by the Bishop and given a mission by him but they are linked to their parish by a work contract and appear in some measure as Church functionaries. They can give their notice and step down: this happened with Jeanine Heezemans at St. Peter Damians in Goes, who decided to leave on September1, 2017 although MrsMangnus had been on sick leave and a place for a further pastor was vacant since the beginning of the year.

Another pastor is Myriam Oosting. Her garb is more discreet but she is still honored with the title pastor as can be seen here. The faithful of the Saint-Hildegard parish near Groningen who need to talk or organize a funeral are invited to contact one of the local pastors, and only to call the parish priest if they need to organize a christening.

Mrs. Jos Lange, who works in Emmen, in the North-East of the Netherlands, also has a degree in theology and appears on the website of the Good Pastor parish speaking from the lectern visibly within the church, wearing a plain white alb but also a triangular red scarf. As a local Catholic religious commented for LifeSite, she also is spoken of as pastor, which is, in fact, an ideological term meant to resemble and then replace the term pastoor, title of the parish priest.

Mrs. Hilda van Schalkwijk-Trimp is in a category of her own. She took leave of the Hildegard parish in Zuidhorn at the beginning of 2019. Together with female colleagues, this pastor made a public speech during her good-bye ceremony in which she underscored that her bishop, MgrDe Korte even though he is known as a discreet progressive did not understand why she had problems with the teachings of the Church.

She also complained about the evolution of her situation. Schalwijk-Trimp explained that when one of the first female pastoral workers was appointed in the diocese, 26 years ago the then bishop, MgrMller, wrote that the faithful would do better to go to their own parish on Sundays even if a female pastoral worker was leading the ceremony of the word and communion there rather than drive to a nearby village where they could have Mass. How differently did that go under the bishops who came after him. They kept insisting that the Eucharist is the source and summit of church life. She openly deplored that in later times, the priest would take care of catechesis for first Communion and confirmation.

During that same occasion, another pastoral worker, Corina, recalled how one of the first parish priests she had known as a child dreamed with her that one day they would stand at the altar together. When you are big, Corina, it will be the most normal thing in the world, even in our Catholic Church, he told her. Unfortunately that was not to be and I don't think he will witness that during his lifetime, she added. He was a member of the notorious Dutch 8-May movement that organized a public protest of Catholic priests and lay people in 1985 against John-Paul II when he visited the Netherlands.

Schalwijk-Trimp was knighted in 2016 by the civil authorities in the Saint-Joseph church of Zuidhom for her work with asylum-seekers in the Netherlands. As a sign of the lack of public interest in a church with female pastoral workers attracts, the celebration was one of the last to take place in that church; the parish, due to a dearth of parishioners, merged with Hildegarde parish nearby.

On a personal note, I remember the funeral of an aunt in the Netherlands where a Mass was said by a priest who had a woman wearing an alb and is stole-like ornament standing next to him at the altar, even during the consecration. It is when she started saying the words of the consecration with him that I stepped outside, hoping to find a more Catholic atmosphere in the fresh spring air.

Is this what the future of the Church looks like? Some of the worst liturgical abuses in the world have taken place in the Netherlands since the modernization of the liturgy after VaticanII, but it is also in this country which formerly was one onto the biggest purveyors of missionaries in the whole world that a renewed episcopate appears to be opting for more traditional practice.

Bishop Mustaerts, auxiliary bishop of Den Bosch, recently told LifeSite, in substance, that the number of female pastoral workers is actually dwindling in the Netherlands because the finances of the Church are in a bad state and hiring them is expensive.

But clearly, some dioceses are continuing and even expanding this relatively recent innovation, refusing to make clear as to the precise role and status within the Church. The older variety of priests are still of the generation that can remember the Pastoral council of the Dutch Church province charged with implementing VaticanII through four-year long reunions in the former church center of Noordwijkerhout between 1966 and 1970.

Its intent was to use the signs of the times as a third source of revelation alongside holy Scripture and Tradition; it was in open revolt against the Pope, created agitation in favor of the abolition of priestly celibacy and against the prohibition of contraception in Humanae vitae.

It is that part of the clergy and faithful that is in practice dying out in the Netherlands, clinging to straws by paying workers, men and women alike, to look after the spiritual needs of the people. This is no success story.

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Meet the female pastors who dress and act like priests in Netherlands dying Catholic church - Lifesite

Oh, brother! Rowan and Charles Moore debate Brexit, global heating, liberalism and beyond – The Guardian

Dear Charles, we share, I think, some fundamental values and beliefs: in freedom, democracy, justice, the rule of law, also in the value of education, knowledge and art. Yet these beliefs lead us to opposite conclusions about contemporary issues such as Europe, climate change, the position of Islam in western culture and the versions of conservatism now being practised by leaders of the UK and the US. I find these differences intriguing, sometimes mystifying, sometimes troubling. Id like to get to the bottom of them.

In your biography of Margaret Thatcher you describe her versions of these beliefs, about her faith in economic liberty, her overall philosophy of everyone having a stake, also about her occupation of the moral high ground. You could say that she made a promise that if you work hard, play by the rules and trust in the market you will be rewarded but that the 2008 crash shattered that promise. It seemed that one rich and privileged group of society was entitled to break rules and get away with it, and that everyone else had to pay the price.

Since Thatcher left power in 1990 this country has been ruled either by Conservatives or by Labour prime ministers strongly influenced by her. Do you think they have achieved her ambition, as one of her policy advisers put it, to liberate people to do things?

I agree with you about what we agree about! I am not, in my ultimate beliefs, a liberal; but I strongly believe in a liberal order, with the elements you describe, as the most civilised way of governing a country.

I also agree that many people (I include myself) feel cheated as a result of the credit crunch of 2008, for the reasons you state. I would not agree that much of this should be laid at Mrs Thatchers door, 18 years after she left office.

In assessing a political leader fairly, one must understand what problems they had to confront. In 1979, in the economic sphere, Mrs Thatcher had to confront inflation, overmighty trade union leaders, loss-making nationalised industries and a lack of openness to world markets. Broadly speaking and with significant mistakes along the way she confronted them successfully.

When you free up any area, that freedom includes the likelihood that some things will go wrong. The Thatcher governments abolition of exchange controls in 1979 transformed the capacity of the world to invest in this country, because at last outsiders had the guarantee that money could move freely in and out. This action probably contributed a bit to the financial overheating of the 21st century, but if she had not done what she did, she would have missed her best chance to create a more liberal economic order.

Similarly, she had to face down the miners strike of 1984-5. If she had not won, trade union boss power would have continued to dominate our economy and our politics, with terrible results for prosperity, liberty and democracy. In 1979, 29.4m working days were lost to strikes. In 1990, the year she left, the figure was below 2m. The figure in 2018 was 273,000 working days lost. This divisive character brought industrial peace, which continues to this day.

It is to the discredit of people who think of themselves as liberals that most of them did not support Mrs Thatcher in this, but evaded the issue by moaning about her confrontational style. After she had won they quietly pocketed the gains. Many self-styled liberals hate taking responsibility for unpopular decisions. They seem more preoccupied with the display of virtue than with doing what is right.

Are you saying that a truly Thatcherite government, if it had stayed in power all that time, would have managed to avoid a crisis like that of 2008? What would it have done differently from Major and Blair? If you felt cheated by 2008, what policies or politicians offer, for you, redress?

Given that the problem is not now overmighty trades unions, how might a Thatcher of the past decade responding, as you say, to the issues of the time have responded to the problems we now have: the loss of security and stagnation of prospects for large sections of the population, compared with the concentration of wealth among a very small percentage?

I make it a rule not to speculate about what Mrs Thatcher would do nowadays. What I know she did worry about, however, especially, in her last couple of years in office, was the way that what was then the European Community (later the EU) offered much clearer benefit to its leaders and officials than to its citizens. She worried about the loss of identity, sovereignty, national independence and democratic accountability under an ever-centralising EU.

She also worried about the excessive power of bankers and central bankers opposing, unlike her followers, an independent Bank of England, on the grounds that key financial decisions affecting the lives of all citizens should not ultimately be taken by technical experts but by democratically answerable politicians.

She was ahead of her time about these matters. The alienation of general European populations from those who rule them has emerged very strongly after the creation of the euro (for reasons she predicted), and because of the 2008 crash and has spread throughout the EU.

The current right adopts tough-sounding and offensive positions on the basis that their very offensiveness and toughness must make them right

Except that we are now finding out that the EU does have clear benefits to its citizens frictionless borders, the single market, cooperation on security and medicine, freedom of movement, peace. Well miss them when theyve gone. The alienation of populations from government has hardly been unique to the eurozone, or the EU.

The argument for the EU is not that it is perfect, or even that it is perfectible, but that, like individuals, nations can make themselves stronger by working with others. A lot of anti-EU positions conceive a zero-sum game, in which anything that goes to the EU is automatically a loss to us, and they magnify the disadvantages and minimise the benefits to an absurd degree.

In volume three of your biography there are some striking insights into the Euroscepticism of Thatchers last years in power. What also comes across vividly is the way in which the bitterness of her removal from office, of which disagreement about Europe was the catalyst but not the only cause, has infected the issue ever since. A lot of the European debate has been a domestic drama in the Conservative party, to which the rest of us are obliged to listen.

This history matters to our current situation. It contributes to the absolutist positions, the quasi-military language and the tribalism of the current debate, and the branding (for example) of legitimate critics of the process of enabling the referendum result as enemies of the people.

I quite agree that the EU brings some benefits for its citizens. It would be incredible if, after so much expense and so many treaties, it did not; but it does not by its own theology, cannot deal with the questions I raise. It explicitly opposes national sovereignty and with it the idea that a country can choose and kick out the people who ultimately rule it. It is therefore undemocratic. The European parliament can make little headway against this problem, because there is no European demos.

If it is true that national sovereignty means little in the modern world, then democracy is also an illusion. Democracy does not mean merely the right to vote, but the fact that the vote is decisive, rather than advisory: government is formed by the wishes of the people. The Brexit debate has brought out with frightening clarity that large numbers of Remainers dislike democratic power.

This behaviour has brought out my fundamental worry about people who think of themselves as liberal. They seem terribly motivated by disapproval. They look down on people who are less well educated, and fight culture wars that they cast as enlightenment versus barbarism. This makes them intolerant, which is perhaps the least truly liberal of all dispositions.

Take, for example, the widespread belief among liberals that opposition to mass immigration is racist. This is a de haut en bas attitude which grossly misrepresents the attitudes of millions of people. Nowadays almost all liberal arguments about race, LGBT, sexism, the environment, abortion etc are framed thus. The consequence is intolerance; hence the justified popular revolt against metropolitan elites.

On climate change, the aim of the large numbers of alarmists is unprecedented government control

Youre making some assumptions here. First that the EU are/were our rulers and that the British electorate and its representatives are therefore powerless. In practice Mrs Thatchers fear that, for example, Britain would be forced to join the single currency did not come true: after due political process the British government made the sovereign decision not to join. Speaking for myself, I dont think that the era of national sovereignty is dead, but I also think that sovereignty is capable of many versions and interpretations.

Second, theres the belief that the Brexit debate can be framed as one of Remainer elites against the Leave-voting people. Id suggest that what actually happened after the referendum was this: what you might call the Leave elites exerted their influence over Theresa Mays government (which included several prominent Leavers) to exclude possibilities such as remaining in the customs union and the single market that members of the Leave campaign had explicitly said would be possible after a no vote. This disrespected both Remain voters and those Leave voters who didnt want a hard Brexit. Most of the agonies of the past few months the Commons votes, the court cases are due to opposition to what is an arrogant and dangerous position.

Who are these Leaver elites? No British institutions were dominated by Leavers in 2016, with the exception of a few national newspapers. This dominance has scarcely moved since.

All others main political parties, House of Commons, House of Lords, Bank of England, Confederation of British Industry, Trades Union Congress, civil service, BBC, Financial Times, Economist, all of academia, supreme court, bishops, Scottish government, Welsh government are dominated by Remainers. Even the Daily Mail moved Paul Dacre because he was too pro-Brexit. Remainers controlled our government until Boris Johnson became prime minister just over 100 days ago.

Obviously Remain was a legitimate point of view and commanded widespread support in the referendum. But the reaction of the elites to the result shocked me and shocks me still. With frequent expressions of contempt, they are still trying to frustrate the largest vote for anything in British history, a vote that defied all their leadership and all their pressure. Dont any of them think they might have got something wrong?

Wow. We really do see the world in different ways. I see an immensely powerful coalition of most of the national press with politicians who now form the cabinet. You see a plucky band of rebels opposing a phalanx of institutions.

Do you disagree that any of the institutions I named are dominated by Remainers?

I expect that most people in those institutions have Remainer sympathies. But its insulting to them to assume that those sympathies colour all their actions. A lot of Remainer MPs voted more than once to leave the EU it was with the help of European Research Group votes that we stayed in for so long. Theresa May made a sincere if not very competent attempt to respect the referendum result. The BBC it seems to me tries agonisingly hard to maintain balance you can certainly find plenty on the left who feel it is biased against them. The unanimous decision of the supreme court was a case of the justices reading the law as they saw it ie doing their job. In the same way that the Queen was doing her job (arguably) in assenting to Johnsons request for prorogation it doesnt make her part of a leaver conspiracy.

To speak more generally about elites and populism: yes, there is such a thing as virtue-signalling, as well as the genuine and justified speaking out for minorities who, as a matter of fact, continue to suffer from prejudice and discrimination. But Id question the view that members of conservative elites such as yourself seem to have of the people as being inherently conservative on social issues and immigration.

The current right practises what has fairly been called vice-signalling. That is the adoption of tough-sounding and offensive positions on the basis that their very offensiveness and toughness must make them right. Boris Johnsons article comparing Muslim women to letterboxes and bankrobbers is one manifestation. His game here seems to be to provoke liberal outrage by using racist language while disingenuously sheltering behind the defence that he wasnt actually calling for a ban on face-coverings. Should he or anyone else be playing games with peoples lives like this?

Like you, I hate both vice- and virtue-signalling, but I do feel oppressed by a culture war in which liberal people with privileges disdain the less fortunate, particularly those people who declare themselves proud to be British. By the way, the late, great Deborah Orr wrote about the Muslim veil with views very similar to those of Boris.

It is indeed important to speak out for minorities, but the selection process is interesting. Which liberals speak out for Christians?

Also, modern liberal doctrines that are supposed to embody tolerance often operate intolerantly. Take the word diversity. In practice, it means uniformity a set of contestable opinions to which you must subscribe if you wish to work in the public service.

Your mention of Christianity is significant. I get the impression that you feel that something fundamental to western society is endangered, both by critics within and non-Christian societies outside. Am I right?

I do feel that something fundamental to western society is endangered, but much more by critics within than by non-Christian societies outside. The main exterior threats are the rise of China, the belligerence of Putins Russia and global Islamist extremism (sometimes known as political Islam), but all of these are containable if our elites would defend the western way of life.

My late friend [former Spectator editor] Frank Johnson observed 25 years ago that: The left, having failed to nationalise the economy, is nationalising people. Nowadays, liberal thought is barely distinguishable from the left. Liberals want to legislate against hate speech, inequality, Islamophobia, as if all these concepts could easily be defined by law and as if no free speech considerations applied. They are also actively hostile to orthodox Christian belief (and mainstream Jewish teaching too).

Im glad you include Putin on your list of threats. Theres a tendency on the right to go easy on him, and on Trumps complicity with him. Perhaps because both Putin and Trump are somehow seen as defenders of traditional values.

You speak in quite general terms, which makes it hard to address your points. I know what you mean by liberal intolerance. I also believe in free speech and question the urge to manage it with legislation. At the same time, racism is real. In cases where free speech serves no purpose but to incite violence against minorities, workable legislation against it shouldnt be ruled out.

But I would like to know what you think conservatism is now. Do you subscribe to the conservative philosopher Michael Oakeshotts saying that conservatism is about preferring such things as the familiar to the unknown, fact to mystery, the convenient to the perfect? It seems to me that a figure like a Dominic Cummings an idealist who likes smashing things up is the opposite of this. We currently have a Conservative party that, unlike its forebears, opposes itself to a lot of business, to agriculture, to the judiciary, and which has lost its interest in balancing budgets.

This is a version of what is happening in the US, where Republicans support a president clearly hostile to the constitution, who breaks the law, and is unconcerned about running up a huge deficit. Do you think that is a price worth paying for his pushback against liberalism?

I do feel as Oakeshott does, very much, but I dont see Brexit as a smashing of old ways. It is a restoration of national independence and democratic rights which the EU has undermined. Oakeshott opposed EEC membership for this reason, by the way.

Cummings is trying to stand up for the democratically dispossessed.

Boris has not violated the constitution. His arguably unwise attempt at prorogation was, as David Cameron put it, sharp practice, but no worse than that. He felt driven to it by Speaker John Bercows far greater subversion in which he destroyed the doctrine of the crown in parliament on which our constitution rests. We have had parliament pretending to be the government, delaying a general election and thus making our system unworkable. Any prime minister has to try to overcome that, especially when all these efforts by the elites are aimed to frustrate the result of the largest popular vote ever. So Boris is quite right to call this election.

Refusing to accept the result of the referendum is just as bad as refusing to accept an unwelcome general election result, an outrage we have never attempted in our history.

If the referendum were a general election it would have been rerun because of the Leave campaigns breaches of electoral law (about which Cummings put himself in contempt of parliament by refusing to answer questions how is that conservative?).

The point also remains that the right wing of the Conservative party keeps pushing for a version of Brexit for which there has never been a popular majority. Most of the agonies of parliament, including Bercows interventions, relate to that.

Id still be interested to know if you think Trump is conservative. Id also like to understand your position on climate change.

Sorry, but no discovery of electoral malpractice has ever overturned a margin of 1,300,000 votes. It is important not to get into the Leave didnt really win frame of mind, not only because it isnt true, but also because it avoids the need to take Leave feeling seriously.

The key question for the liberals who were defeated is: How, with your massive in-built advantages, did you manage to lose? You must, collectively, have been astonishingly out of touch. Check your privilege, as they say in PC circles.

As for Trump, no, I dont believe he is a conservative. His essential message is Trump first. The only thing I like about him is his refusal to be cowed by the self-righteousness of his opponents.

On climate change, I resist what I see as a political viewpoint masquerading as the science. The aim of the large numbers of alarmists is unprecedented government control and the relative impoverishment of western societies. Cheap energy is one of the greatest emancipations produced by our civilisation.

You asked about the current state of conservatism. Pretty bad, I would say uncreative and negative. A mirror image, almost, of the state of liberalism.

When I said at the beginning that I am not ultimately a liberal, I meant that liberalism lacks content because it has no teleology. When it sticks to its core idea of freedom, however, it is a vital element of a good society. I wish it would let the bird of freedom particularly our countrys democratic independence soar, instead of pursing its lips in disapproval.

Im sure if the malpractice had been on the Remain side you would be crying foul.

Re Trump: I wish you and your fellow conservatives would express your criticism more plainly.

Yes, I do take the Leave vote seriously. But it was a narrow vote after a flawed campaign that has been taken as a licence for whatever Brexiter politicians want it to mean. The missed opportunity was to unite the country around a way of leaving the EU that most people would be happy with. I believe Boris Johnson argued for such a thing at the time.

Re climate: if conservatives like yourself dont want the issue used against you, perhaps you should try harder to show how capitalism can be reconciled with protecting the environment. Thirty years after Mrs Thatcher raised the issue the noises from the right seem to be saying its not really happening or its not that bad or well muddle through.

What I find really striking is how strongly you feel that the world is against you and likeminded people, and unfairly so. What I see is 40 years in which the Conservatives have mostly been in power (without ever winning a majority of the vote, thanks to our electoral system), in which Thatcherism has been hugely influential, and in which the Daily Telegraph has, with an amazing blurring of editorial and news, helped to put your fellow columnist into Downing Street.

Of course, if you think you are wrongly oppressed anything is allowable Cummingss rulebreaking, Johnsons lies and betrayals but I would ask you, too, to check your privilege.

However, you have given me a clearer idea of how liberal assumptions can sound from the outside. I intend to watch myself when I fall into the lazy habits that can go with my worldview. I hope you or anyone else who feels like it will point them out to me.

As for teleology, thats a discussion for another day.

Snap: we both feel oppressed! But I must add that I do not feel personally so at all. I have been lucky. My worry is that normal British people are scorned by many liberals for the non-crime of believing in democratic self-government.

Perhaps we at least agree that it would be much better if a more liberal disposition which is not the same as a liberal ideology prevailed on both sides of the Brexit divide.

Read more:

Oh, brother! Rowan and Charles Moore debate Brexit, global heating, liberalism and beyond - The Guardian

Jonathan Dodd: Once More Unto the Breach – On The Wight

Jonathan Doddslatest column. Guest opinion articles do not necessarily reflect the views of the publication. Ed

Wellwell, here we are again. Despite everyones best efforts, were being asked tovote for one of many evils. No wonder that so many people are confused andfrustrated and angry, and all of the other things people feel right now, thatthey either didnt feel before the so-called referendum was foisted on us, orthat they did feel, but were too polite to mention. That politeness hascertainly gone to ground lately. I dont expect anything to be resolved in anydirection by this election, but I dont actually think thats so much of a badthing.

Thetrouble with long periods of peace and relative prosperity is that people getbored, and they forget the terrible times that caused the troubles in the past,which made us grateful to join in with efforts to try to make it never happenagain. After a while we become enchanted, our senses are lulled by bright andpretty things, and we start to feel that we deserve the world fit for heroesthat so many people fought and died for. We start to think that we should haveeverything we wish for, and we forget that you get what you deserve after all,rather than what you want regardless of the actual cost.

Moving forward on Progress RoadIm talking about everyone here. The so-called people, the rich people, the excluded people, the smug people, the politicians, and you, and me. I cant speak for you, but I can speak for me. Ive reaped the rewards of a lifetime of freedom and peace. Ive worked hard (mostly), Ive had hard and difficult things happen, sometimes Ive failed to heed the writing on the wall, and sometimes Ive never even noticed that writing on that wall. Im just an ordinary manwho tries to keep up, and I make an effort to make sense of the things I see.

Ialways had a sense of things moving forward on Progress Road, a broad highwaythat leads from the darkness of the past towards the light up ahead, wheregradually, through hard work and unselfish effort, everyone gets to be safe andcomfortable, and everyone takes advantage of improved healthcare and educationto become more aware and more considerate, because they understand that beingwise and taking care of oneself and others is the key to civilisation and agood and long life. I thought that was obvious. What folly. Thats where I waslulled.

Slavishly climbing on each others backs up that greasy ladderI forgot about the very few people in the world who own practically everything, and whose appetite for ownership will never be satisfied. I forgot about the unending need of politicians to pretend to be truthful and working for the common good, while slavishly climbing oneach othersbacks up that greasy ladder, and lying endlessly because it makes them look good or score more points. I forgot that politicians no longer have to resign if theyre caught breaking the law, or taking money, or with their trousers down. I was never so bothered by the trousers, but the corruption thingis a step too far for me. Not every politician has indulged in these activities, but they all seem to look the same and speak the same language, and theyre not very good at denouncing each other when wrongdoing occurs, and theyre in too much thrall to the party and their position within it.

Orso it seems, at least to me. I forgot about a lot of things. I was busy gettingon with my life, and I didnt protest enough about the things I cared about.Staying in Europe, for goodness sake. Stopping those disgusting wars and theconsequent endless streams of displaced people roaming around the world lookingfor refuge via frozen lorries and leaky boats, dying in their thousands andending up, if theyre lucky,as illegal aliens in countries such as ours,with no rightsand hardly any future. I forgot about the ability of somehumans to become enormously rich on the proceeds ofpeople-smugglingandso-called modernslavery andtraffickingof all sorts of stuff that our governments should be dealing with rather thanreducing thevery workforcethat should be policing it.

Averting those crises didnt defeat them or make them go awayI forgot that its not enough to set up the United Nations and then prevent it from carrying out the very functions it was created to serve. I forgot that governments could fail to regulate bankers, then allow them to wreck the economy, then give them huge amounts of money so they didnt go bust, thenreduce our welfare state and education system and our civil service and schools and social care system to pay for all that, and were still more in debt than we were then. I forgot that politicians can be as lulled as I have been all this time.

Ialso forgot that the climate crisis and the great extinction that were causinghas been going on for decades. Back at the end of the Sixties there were manywarnings about all of these things, and a great flurry of concerns over famineand overpopulation and other end-of-the-world scenarios. I forgotthataverting those crises didnt defeat them or make them go away, itjust delayed the inevitable, and made the effects of that ignoring far moredrastic.

Eternal vigilanceI forgot so many things, but the most important thing I forgot was that most precious of quotes The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. It used to annoy me that nobody could agree on who actually said it first. It has been attributed to Andrew Jackson, Thomas Paine, Benjamin Franklin, and many others. But that just makes it more relevant and true, in my honest opinion. Getting freedom, or equality, or the vote, or universal education, or a welfare state, or a national health service, or a bill of rights, or an honest government and judiciary, or the abolition of slavery, is very hard work.

Everything that we ever achieved was ground out against the implacable opposition of all those who didnt want to put their hands in their pockets, or were defending their own privileges, or their traditions, or their religious intolerances. And those people dont go away. The moment some victory is won, the opposing forces start to gather their strength and resources, and the plotting begins to reverse this affront to their determination to return the world to their own golden age when nobody dared to challenge their supremacy. We also forget that there are lots of people out there who have no privileges, and are desperate to grab power at anycost. Some of those are now raising their heads above the parapets as we speak.

We should be ashamed of ourselves, but its not too lateThe first thing we forget is that getting rights and freedoms isnt a foregone conclusion. They can be reversed, rather easily. The second thing we forget is that the gaining of freedoms and rights isnt atick box, all done. They need to be defended against assaults of all kinds and from all quarters. We nearly forgot that in the 1930s, and the actual cost of stopping Nazism was far greater than it would have been if we had acted earlier and more definitively. The third thing we forget is thatfor everyfreedom won, there are morefreedomsto be fought for. We still dont have so many of the things that should be inplaceto ensure that everyonegetsan equal chance in this country.

Iwas determined not to write a rant this week. So many times in the recent pastIve started to write and had to stop anddeleteeverything becauseIm so angry, but Ive not found a way to say what I want without blowing mytop. We should be ashamed of ourselves, but its not too late. We canrescueourselvesfrom thelifeboatweve thrown ourselvesinto. It takes some effort, and maybe some sacrifices, and probably a lot ofcompromise along the way, but its always possible, and achieving a result thatpleases most people is so much more productive and safe, for the world and forall the people who live in it. Not to mention the environment.

Spend a few minutes imagining how the world should beWhat Im suggesting that you might try to do is to stop thinking and talking about what makes youangry, and what you dont like, and what you dontwant, for just a fewminutes. Id like you to spend a few minutes imagining yourself sometime in the future. It might be a year or so, or twenty years. It might be when your children or grandchildren have grown up. Id like you to imagine what sort of world you want to find yourself and your loved ones in when you reach thatfuture. Id like you to include as many others, and their loved ones in that future too.

Weve seen a lot of versions ofunpleasant futures lately, with wars and environmental disasters.Weveheard about wars for oil, and wars for water, and enormous movements of people fromwarzones into places of safety, and the destabilising of those very places as a result. Weve seen the results of the foolish election of unfit leaders, and the rise of leaders who are divisive and dangerous.

Weveexperienced the increase in hate and anger and frustration. How about spending a fewminutesimagining howtheworld should be instead, and trying to find ways toresolvethese difficulties, so that we and our children, and the world cansurvive, and our precious freedoms can be preserved?

Vote for the future, rather than for the pastPlease take a look at thecandidatesfor thiselection, and decide for yourself which of them, if any, couldpossiblybe trusted toworktowards that positive future, rather than carrying on in the same old destructive way. Ill be trying my best to do that. Ill be voting for the future, rather than for the past, or for hatred and division. I want to hear the voice of reason in our Houses of Parliament again, and the speaking of truth and belief rather than point-scoring.

Ill be voting for life and liberty, and staying on Progress Road, rather than running off blindly downthe Road to Perdition.

If you have been, thank you for reading this.

Main Image: wiredforsound23 under CC BY 2.0

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Jonathan Dodd: Once More Unto the Breach - On The Wight

Nobel Peace Laureates Call for Abolition of Nuclear Weapons – IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

By J Nastranis

NEW YORK (IDN) Ten Nobel Peace Laureates and 30 organisations bestowed that honour have expressed profound concern that 74 years after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, nuclear weapons continue to pose an existential threat to humankind, reiterated the warning of the catastrophic consequences of nuclear war, and accentuated the need to strengthen basic freedoms.

In their Declaration titled Make Your Mark for Peace emerging from the 17th Nobel Peace Summit, they also express deep concern over the withdrawal of the United States from the agreement on the Iranian nuclear program reached in Vienna on July 14, 2015, between Iran and the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the UN Security CouncilChina, France, Russia, United Kingdom, United Statesplus Germany) together with the European Union. Formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the agreement was reached after 20 months of "arduous" negotiations.

The Nobel Peace Laureates are also vexed over the withdrawal of the United States and Russia from the 1987 Intermediate Forces (INF) Treaty which gives precise definitions of the banned ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles: An intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) is a ground-launched ballistic or cruise missile having a range capability between 1,000 and 5,500 kilometres.

President Ronald Reagan and his Soviet counterpart Mikhail Gorbachev signed the Treaty on December 8, 1987. It required the United States and the Soviet Union to eliminate and permanently forswear all of their nuclear and conventional ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500 kilometres.

The Treaty marked the first time the superpowers had agreed to reduce their nuclear arsenals, eliminate an entire category of nuclear weapons, and employ extensive on-site inspections for verification. As a result of the INF Treaty, the United States and the Soviet Union destroyed a total of 2,692 short-, medium-, and intermediate-range missiles by the treaty's implementation deadline of June 1, 1991.

The Nobel Peace Laureates say, threats to international peace do not come only from nuclear weapons. They are extremely concerned about escalating expenditure on conventional arms and the development of new and deadly weapons systems, as the Declaration of the summit in Mrida, Mexico on September 22, 2019, states.

The Peace Laureates say they took note of the letter received from the former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and fully support his call to all leaders of nuclear-weapon powers to reaffirm without delay the proposition that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought and to return to the negotiating table to agree on reducing and eliminating the nuclear arsenals.

The Declaration implores in particular:

The Declaration also emphasises the need for a renewed understanding of the concept of peace. After the devastation of two World Wars and a series of ideological, religious and civil wars, the relative absence of war has been mistaken as the achievement of peace.

But the fact is that as long as basic freedoms are violated and gross corruption, violence, extreme poverty, inequality, racism, modern-day slavery and trafficking of persons, discrimination, and discrimination phobias exist, there can be no true peace. We proclaim that true peace is inseparable from the achievement of true justice, the Nobel Peace Laureates declare.

The ten Laureates who attended the summit in Mrida included: former President Frederik Willem De Klerk of South Africa; former President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia; and former President Lech Walesa of Poland.

Other participants were: Iranian human rights activist Dr Shirin Ebadi; Yemeni journalist and activist Tawakkol Karman; Northern Irish politician Lord David Trimble; American political activist Prof Jody Williams, known for her work in banning anti-personnel landmines; Liberian peace activist Leymah Gbowee; children's rights activist from India, Kailash Satyarthi; and political and human rights activist from Guatemala, Rigoberta Mench. [IDN-InDepthNews 30 September 2019]

Image credit: World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates.

IDN is flagship agency of the International Press Syndicate.

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Nobel Peace Laureates Call for Abolition of Nuclear Weapons - IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

Kara Walker Turbine Hall review a shark-infested monument to the victims of British slavery – The Guardian

The real challenge of Kara Walkers Fons Americanus is not the scale of her 13 metre-high fountain in Tate Moderns Turbine Hall. Nor that at first glance, we are faced with an outmoded work of monumental public sculpture, populated by figures and sea creatures, which towers towards the roof, accompanied by the sound of rushing water. The challenge, instead, is one of tone.

One of Walkers reference points has been the Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace: a great, ludicrous heap of marble and gilded nonsense, topped by a Winged Victory so Fons Americanus is also a heap of allusions and references, humour and horror. Playing on an odious sentimentality, inverting stereotypes, Walkers aim is to entertain as she instructs. Fons Americanus is a sustainable, non-toxic, solvent-free, marble-like gift, a monument not to the beneficiaries of the British empire, but to its victims, and to the hypocrisies and accommodations to evil that led to slavery.

Part-way down the Turbine Hall ramp, a black boy is up to his chest in a lake of his own tears in an open conch shell, a pearl in an oyster, drowning. In the fountain, sharks rather than dolphins sport in the spume.

Describing her work, in its full, lengthy cod-18th century title (which she has printed on the Turbine Hall wall) as an allegorical wonder, Walker lards up an already over-the-top monument. How could it be other? This miserable monument to the slave trade and colonialism is a ripe and fitting cenotaph to imperial ambition, and the human and material profiting on misery at the heart of empire.

Her sculpted allegory owes its edge to the regency-era political cartoons of James Gillray and Thomas Rowlandson, and also to its multilayered, internal references. JMW Turners abolitionist painting Slave Ship, originally titled Slavers Throwing overboard the Dead and Dying Typhoon Coming On, is rendered as a bath-toy frigate, riding plaster waves. Walker nods to Damien Hirsts shark in formaldehyde, but one must also think of John Singleton Copleys 1778 painting Watson and the Shark. Twelve-year-old Brook Watson was saved following a shark attack in Havana harbour, and Copleys painting shows him rescued by a small group of sailors, including a black man. Watson went on to become a British MP and Lord Mayor of London. He also voted against the abolition of slavery.

The black man adrift in a rowing boat is taken from Winslow Homers 1899 painting The Gulf Stream, but the name engraved on the back of the craft is K West a reference either to Key West, in the Straits of Florida, or to Kanye West (West, like Walker, spent his childhood in Atlanta). Or both.

Walkers art, with its frequent, sometimes controversial use of antebellum imagery, is in any case a shark-infested pool of citations. Venus, naked on the top of the monument, throws her head back and spurts water from her nipples and her cut throat, which arcs noisily to the pool below. Is this Tintorettos The Origin of the Milky Way? And who is the seated black buccaneer captain in his four-league boots? And what of the boy with the snorkel, playing oblivious in the water? The man holding a figure whose back is riddled with bullet-holes, the Gillray-like bewigged figure praying, and the figure with seaweed-braided hair (or are they dreadlocks?) in the pool, and the figure crouching under the raised skirt of an African Caribbean deity all have their referents. We are never far from lynchings in Walkers work, and heres a noose, dangling from a branch.

The key reference in the work is Thomas Stothards preposterous and disgusting 1801 engraving of a black Venus, carried on a shell, wafted across the Atlantic by white cherubs and a Neptune bearing a Union Jack. The engraving was used in 1801 as the frontispiece to a pro-slavery book entitled The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies. Walker invites us to marvel and contemplate, to Gasp Plaintively, Sigh Mournfully and Gaze Knowingly and Regard the Immaterial Void of the Abyss in what she calls a Delightful Family Friendly Setting. Fons Americanus is sardonic, barbed, monstrous, absurd, astonishing and funny, tipping over into the obscene. Monuments are always troubling, and rarely to be trusted. Walker has got the tone just right.

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Kara Walker Turbine Hall review a shark-infested monument to the victims of British slavery - The Guardian

11 of Ava DuVernay’s Must-Watch Movies and TV Series – Oprah Mag

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A director, writer, producer, and rapper (!), Ava DuVernay is a one-woman movement. From the beginning of her stage career dropping rhymes in the musical duo Figures of Speech to her visits to the Emmys and the launch of her Array Alliance's curated film series this fall, DuVernay has amassed a body of work that aims to go beyond just entertaining an audience. Rather, DuVernay has set out to shift cultural perception and reshape the entertainment industry as we know it. The womanto say the leastis very busy.

Here, we take a look at that body of work: movies, videos, and TV series shes either produced, directed, starred in, or all three. Its an impressive resume. Over the years, the extraordinaire has helmed a powerful hip-hop production starring the music industrys most notorious power couple (Beyonc and Jay-Z), offered a different take on a historical figure everyone thought they knew through and through (Selma), secured a cameo in one of 2018s most notable additions to the female-fronted raunch comedy (Girls Trip), and so much more.

With the announcements of The New Gods, her DC Comics adaptation, and Battle of Versailles, a historical fashion film housed by HBOboth of which shes writing and directingher decade-plus-spanning career isnt slowing down anytime soon. Read on to see all of the critically acclaimed pit stops the filmmaker and television producer has made along the way.

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1This Is the Life

This Is the Life, DuVernays very first foray into helming a feature-length project, is a documentary that lends the mic to the emcees of The Good Life Cafe and their movement of unprocessed hip-hop that found its voice during the '90s, a time when artists like Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg dominated the West Coast music scene.

Then a member of the rap duo Figures of Speech, DuVernay and her film focused on bringing forth the sound emanating from a Los Angeles hot spot (including her own, as she makes an appearance in the film). But its the praise coming from critics one cant drown out: Rich, thoroughly enjoyable, and exceptional are just a few of the descriptors film critics use to refer to the film.

2I Will Follow

A shoestring-budget film that explores every facet of a single human emotion, grief, this early-career DuVernay gem doesnt skimp on quality storytelling. In what feels like a more soulful and independent Waiting to Exhale, one woman (Beverly Todd of Crash and Lean on Me fame) packs away the life of her aunt who only recently died from breast cancer.

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3Middle of Nowhere

Before marching in Selma with David Oyelowo and sowing a wrinkle in time with Oprah, DuVernay was getting her bearings in the Middle of Nowhere. One of her earliest films, the 97-minute drama written and directed by DuVernay is also one of her best.

Emayatzy Corinealdi stars as Ruby, a woman who spends every waking minute either working a nursing shift or tending to the needs of her incarcerated husbandwhich includes making the four-hour trip weekly for visits. A journey to self-discovery, the film watches Ruby go from somebodys wife to her own person. And just like everything DuVernay touches, Middle of Nowhere found its way into many a winners circle.

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4Selma

DuVernay is the first Black female director to score a Best Picture Oscar nomination. And she rightfully did so with Selma, a peek into the moral and social complexities of Martin Luther King Jr. during the time when he led the 1965 civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama. It also features a glorious cameo by Oprah, who plays activist Annie Lee Cooper. The film did take home a statue for the best original song, Glory, performed by Common and John Legend, not to mention a slew of other awards and accolades.

But, really, this is all just to say that Selma is a groundbreaking film the helped to shatter cinema walls and usher in Black stories. While it glimpsed our nations history, it was making history of its own. And with a woman leading the way.

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5Queen Sugar

Recently renewed for a fifth season on the OWN network, the female-directed Queen Sugar follows the lives of Nova (Rutina Wesley from True Blood), Charley (Dawn-Lyen Gardner from Unforgettable), and Ralph Angel (Kofi Siriboe from Awkward), a trio of Bordelon siblings living in Deep South Louisiana.

Show creator DuVernay shares executive producer responsibilities with the Oprah Winfrey and told Variety that shes thrilled to further explore the beauty, pain and triumph of this African-American family, with hopes that their story will continue to resonate with audiences who see themselves in the Bordelons. Its a real honor to create this work with Warner Horizon and OWN as their support is rock-solid and wonderful.

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6Girls Trip

No, DuVernay doesnt direct the comedy about a group of best friends who converge on the streets of NOLAthat job went to Malcolm D. Lee. And, no, shes not one of the executive producers of the hit that made Tiffany Haddish a household namethose gigs went to the makers of Birth of a Nation and Think like a Man. Girls Trip is actually included on this list, thanks to a DuVernay cameo.

When the women are at the Essence Festival, DuVernay can be seen being interviewed onstage. In real life, she had this to tweet about the films insta-success: History: Film centering four black women having fun with no big cause, mission, problem or catastrophe hits big at box office, and included a GIF to depict a stunned Hollywood.

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713th

A searing portrait of a prison system that not only isnt working, its enslaving the American population, 13th is DuVernays return to nonfiction. Posing the idea that todays prisons just might be the new plantations, the film traces the roots from the abolition of slavery in 1865 to the current system of locking up as many Black Americans as quickly as possible.

Through interviews with leaders in their industries, including Senator Cory Booker, news commentator Van Jones, and activist Angela Davis, the Oscar-nominated film takes a no-nonsense approach to exploring mass incarceration and the 13th Amendment.

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8A Wrinkle in Time

A delightful and visually impressive time-hopping addition to the Disney Vault, A Wrinkle in Time has serious star power in the form of its three magical beings: Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, and Mindy Kaling play a trio of Mrs. who help a 12-year-old and her younger brother navigate, bend, and fold the layers of time in a quest to find their missing father.

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9Family Feud

Lest we not forget, DuVernay has roots in hip-hop: As we mentioned before, she was one-half of the duo Figures of Speech and went by the stage name MC Eve.

Here, MC Eve directs a fellow 90s-era hip-hop artist, Jay-Z, in a nearly eight-minute music video thats titled Family Feud and features his wife, Beyonc. More a cultural-event short film, Family Feud employs an all-star castincluding Michael B. Jordan, Thandie Newton, Jessica Chastain, David Oyelowo, Brie Larson, Constance Wu, and Emayatzy Corinealdito depict a future after women rewrite the Constitution.

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10When They See Us

Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, and Korey Wise, the men who were falsely accused of rape and assault in 1989 and became known through news headlines as the Central Park Five, have had their stories adapted for the masses in just about every form, from book to documentary to miniseries.

DuVernay applies the latter to When They See Us, a loosely based-on-truth reenactment of the events that have forever changed the Black and Latino men who spent years behind bars, serving time for a crime DNA proved they did not commit.

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11The Red Line

As executive producer on the CBS cop drama that premiered just this past April, DuVernay threw her creative weight behind a project that once again explores criminal justice through a racially charged lens.

I read the script to the first episode and thought it was really beautifully done. It had a story that touched points across race, gender and sexual identity. I wanted to support it, so I came on board with [co-executive producer] Greg Berlanti to help get it on air, DuVernay said to Rolling Stone in April.

Even though Deadline has reported that The Red Line has aired its final episode, the limited series, which stars Noah Wylie (ER) and Emayatzy Corinealdi (Middle of Nowhere), is a valiant effort at exposing the aftermath of a police shooting.

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11 of Ava DuVernay's Must-Watch Movies and TV Series - Oprah Mag

Bromsgrove Labour leader quits his role and the party over national policy – Bromsgrove Standard

THE LEADER of Bromsgrove Labour Group has resigned from the party and will continue as an independent.

Coun Michael Thompson, who also stood as the Prospective Parliamentary Candidate (PPC) at the last general election has taken the tough decision because of Labours general election manifesto commitment to integrate all private schools into the state sector.

Coun Thompson has made no secret of the fact he works at Bromsgrove School which is in the independent sector which he said made his position untenable.

He added: The motion has placed a number of Labour Party members who work at independent schools, or whose children attend or have attended independent schools, in a difficult and arguably untenable position.

I do not to intend to stand down as a councillor I will remain and serve those who elected me to the best of my ability.

I have been a tireless activist for the Labour Party for many years.

The party is many things to many people but, to me, it was always the Party of kindness, compassion and understanding and it is with these values in mind that I will continue my work for the people of Charford and wider Bromsgrove.

On leaving the party, I am simply devastated.

I would like to thank all the wonderful, wonderful members of the Bromsgrove Labour family, past and present, for their support and friendship, which I will cherish always. It breaks my heart more than you will ever know to leave.

The Labour promise in its manifesto would include, but would not be limited to, the withdrawal of charitable status and all other public subsidies and tax privileges, including business rate exemption.

The policy would also ensure universities admitted the same proportion of private school students as in the wider population (currently seven per cent).

Under the scheme endowments, investment and properties held by private schools would be redistributed democratically and fairly across the countrys educational institutions.

The motion has been widely interpreted as an abolition of independent schools.

Rory Shannon, the chairman of Bromsgrove Labour Party, said: Its not the decision we would have wanted and it might not be one we agree with but we respect him for it and wish him well.

Michael has been a great councillor for us and Im sure he will continue to be.

The decision he took was on his own personal circumstances it is something which has come up and he has had to act on it.

He hasnt changed his politics or crossed the floor and Im sure he will work with Labour members going forward.

We show him no animosity.

Its a difficult time for us but we have plans in place and we will deal with it and move on.

Mr Shannon added claims on social media Mr Thompson was due to be Labours Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Bromsgrove at the next election were incorrect.

He was the partys PPC at the last national vote but when that election ended, he ceased in that role.

Mr Shannon added several people had put their hats in the ring to be the next Bromsgrove Labour PPC but Mr Thompson had not been one of them.

Coun Peter McDonald Picture by Marcus Mingins 3918022MMR http://www.buyphotos247.com

FOLLOWING the announcement by Coun Michael Thompson, the Bromsgrove Labour Party met last night (Monday) to elect a new leader.

Coun Peter McDonald who has held the post previously as well as the leader of the Worcestershire County Council leadership was elected to the position.

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Bromsgrove Labour leader quits his role and the party over national policy - Bromsgrove Standard

Opinion: Land reform needs more action and less talk | The Star – Independent Online

Opinion & Analysis/1 October 2019, 1:34pm/Douglas Gibson

EFF leader Julius Malema opined: Heritage Day means nothing without the return of the land.

Both were exaggerating. Land does not necessarily confer dignity. Our Constitution protects and promotes human dignity and the rights and freedoms of all of us. Nowhere does it provide that if we have no land, we have no dignity.

Malemas idea of the return of the land is the abolition of private ownership, with each of us becoming tenants of the state. Hardly the recipe for dignity. Despite this, it is one of the hallmarks of free societies and constitutional democracies that people should be able to own, occupy, sell, lease or mortgage land, and have their rights protected.

Land reform has been a disastrous failure. Anyone who expects it to improve will be disappointed. One read over the weekend about hundreds of thousands of properties the state owns but does not know the addresses, the extent or the value. Many could be sold or given to landless people if we really do care.

Land does not only mean farm land. It also includes land in townships, rural and urban.

Almost 40 years ago, the PW Botha government, realising that change was necessary, appointed a commission of inquiry, known as the Venter Commission, into township development. Colin Eglin and I were appointed to represent the PFP, together with a swathe of National Party politicians. Eglin was a senior parliamentarian and a practising land surveyor. I was the leader of the opposition in the Transvaal Provincial Council, and also a practising attorney and conveyancer.

I started off as a minority of one determined to persuade the commission to recommend the marriage of the two deeds registry systems into one system for all. South Africa had one of the best deeds registry systems in the world for white people and an unsatisfactory system for black people. At the end of a year or so, the commission unanimously recommended that there be one system for all.

One of the problems we encountered was that much of the land occupied by black people had not been surveyed and, as a result, was not registrable and title deeds could not be issued. We made recommendations about overcoming the surveying problem and expediting the survey of land.

Forty years later, the ANC has done little to fix the problem. I understand that many RDP houses were built on unsurveyed land, perpetuating the problem that could have ceased to exist decades ago. The result is that, every now and then, 1 000 or so title deeds are handed over but hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who could become home owners are forgotten. Time for another Venter Commission of Inquiry?

I have not touched on the tribal land that ought to be made available to those who live on them and work them. The Kgalema Motlanthe recommendations, eminently sensible, have been dumped. Nor have I dealt with the looming disaster of the theft of private property under the guise of legitimacy by being called expropriation without compensation.

Why dont we tackle what can be done and stop faffing around about land while doing nothing more than mouthing platitudes and idle promises?

Douglas Gibson is a former opposition chief whip and a former ambassador to Thailand. His website is douglasgibsonsouthafrica.com

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Opinion: Land reform needs more action and less talk | The Star - Independent Online