The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: May 2017
Can God Save Donald Trump? – Vanity Fair
Posted: May 23, 2017 at 11:26 pm
By Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg/Getty Images.
Early in his pontificate, Pope John Paul II met with Kurt Waldheim, the Austrian prime minister with a Nazi past; a few years later, he welcomed the Harlem Globetrotters to the Vatican and was named an honorary Globetrotter. Donald Trumps state visit to Pope Francis on Wednesday falls somewhere between those two encountersbetween the unnerving and the tacky, between the unseemly and the unlikely.
Whatever else it does, the visit upends the conventional wisdom about the discerning power of democracy and the nature of so-called populism. How strange is this: a group of 115 unelected celibate men of advanced age, bound to secrecy, choosing from amongst themselves and casting paper ballots in the Sistine Chapel, elects a relatively unknown man who turns out to possess abundant virtue and wisdom, and who is also clearly a man of the people; whereas an American voting public of 126 million men and women, working from the copious information produced by a robust free press and an endless run of presidential debates, has its votes channeled through arcane electoral math and bestowed on a self-serving huckster who has a poor grasp of notions like public service and the common good, and whose idea of the people is my people. Its enough to make you want to swap the Electoral College for the College of Cardinals.
On Wednesday, the most credible world leader of our time will meet the least credible; a person who shows the dynamism of character will meet a person who demonstrates the limits of character. If Donald Trumps presidency has clarified anything, it is the perdurance of characterand the improbability of people, especially wealthy and powerful people in their 70s, to change dramatically. A person rich in character can deepen and ripen, increase and multiply. Such a person is in St. Peters chair now. A person of poor character is reduced, even impoverished, by circumstances, until he is morally bankrupt. Such a person is in the White House now. Truly, Donald Trump is a walking, talking, tweeting demonstration of St. Augustines proposition that there is a stone so heavy that even God cannot lift itand that this stone is the human heart, weighed down with selfishness, pettiness, greed, envy, and all the other sins.
Only fools and moderate Republicans ever believed that Trump would undergo a conversion to statesmanship in the White House. It wasnt going to happen. No, Trump puts in mind the amoral, bounding industrialist Rex Mottram in Evelyn Waughs novel Brideshead Revisited, a wealthy, showy man of invincible ignorance, as the Catholic tradition used to call ita person who, a priest in the novel dryly reports, doesnt correspond to any degree of paganism known to the missionaries.
It is hard to imagine Trump receiving words of spiritual insight from Pope Francis: has a seed ever been sown on stonier ground? And it is hard to imagine this pope flattering this president: leave that to the petroleum potentates of Saudi Arabia. What good, thenif anycan come of this meeting?
If any piece of Franciss wisdom could get through to Trumpand stabilize his silly presidency, more Gong Show than reality TVit might be the rubric for discernment that Francis has followed since his days as Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Jesuit provincial (superior) and archbishop of Buenos Aires. Here it is, cited time and again in the accounts of his life: Time is greater than space; unity prevails over conflict; reality is more important than ideals; the whole is greater than the part.
Thats it, the whole thing: concise, clear, and simple enough to fit onto the one-page briefs required by a president whose attention span is as short as his fingers. Each part of the rubric, applied to Trumps presidency, can offer some of the clarity that he and we sorely need just now. Lets take each in turn.
Time is greater than space. As Franciss biographer Paul Vallely summarizes it, We live in tension between the present and what is to come, between trying to possess the space around us and trying to initiate processes that will bear fruit in an uncertain future. What does this mean for the presidency? The appointment of Robert Mueller as special counsel is likely to slow the brakeless roller-coaster of the Trump administration. While Muellers team does its work, the rest of us can work to undo some of the changes that Trump has jammed through in between controversiesnamely the rollbacks of regulations pertaining to the environment, climate, oil drilling, and natural resources. In matters of climate, especially, time is greater than space, but if we dont act quickly the human race will have to live, for many centuries to come, in our limited spacea planet that is barely habitable.
Unity prevails over conflict. Polls and approval ratings suggest that right now there is considerable unity around the idea that Donald Trump is faltering as president. Alas, the president himself is the person least likely to recognize this truth; but a man used to getting his way, accustomed to gaining the appearance of unity by purchasing subservience and demonizing resistance, will tire of pushing against super-majorities. And the reason for this is bound up with part three of the rubric.
Reality is more important than ideas. This maxim is sometimes translated as Reality over the ideal. Put that way, its pertinence to this presidency is all the more clear. Donald Trump has no ideals, and his only strongly held idea is that he is better at everything than everybody elseor could be if only everyone else would let him be. Because Trump is a supremely talented demagogue (as Andrew Sullivan has put it) rather than an ideologue, its likely that the vigorous application of reality stands a chance of overcoming him. In many respects, reality is already overcoming himfor example, through the events following his firing of F.B.I. Director James Comey and the huge body of reportage (much of it sourced to people in his government) that delineated his motives for the firing, forcing his administration to recalibrate its ideas to reality every few hours. It is now clear to everyone but Trump himself that even a president with both houses of Congress and the Supreme Court going his way cant do away with the reality of governingor with the ideas and ideals in which the thousands of career civil servants in the federal government have rooted their own careers.
The whole is greater than the part. Four months into his presidency, Trump seems not to understand the truths that the president works for us and not the other way around, and that the president is not the C.E.O. of America, Inc. but the head of one branch of the United States government. It is hard for people in positions of great power to recognize that they are only one part of a whole, but some do.
One example will be near at hand during Trumps state visit to the Vatican: in fact, it will be right up the hill from the Vatican Palace, in the monastery behind St. Peters Basilica. Four and a half years ago, the worlds last absolute monarchPope Benedict XVIrecognized that the whole of the Catholic Church was greater than the part that was his embattled pontificate. Elected for life, he was beholden to nothing and no one under God. And yet he resigned, the first pope to do so in nearly 600 years, stepping out of his part for the sake of the whole. God willing, something of this will get through in Rome, and Donald Trump will go and do likewise.
PreviousNext
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
Photograph by Amy Lombard.
The rest is here:
Posted in Donald Trump
Comments Off on Can God Save Donald Trump? – Vanity Fair
At Israel’s Holocaust memorial, comparing Donald Trump, Obama and Bush notes – USA TODAY
Posted: at 11:26 pm
The message written by US President Donald Trump at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Museum guest book and signed by him and his wife Melania is seen after their visit on May 23, 2017, in Jerusalem.(Photo: Gali Tibbon, AFP/Getty Images)
President Trump visited Yad Vashem on Tuesday, and, like his predecessors, left behind a note in the Holocaust memorial's book of remembrance.
His note was brief:
"It is a great honor to be here with all of my friends so amazing & will never forget!"
Here's what Barack Obama, then in the middle of his first presidential campaign, wrote when he visited in July2008:
"I am grateful to Yad Vashem and all of those responsible for this remarkable institution. At a time of great peril and promise, war and strife, we are blessed to have such a powerful reminder of man's potential for great evil, but also our own capacity to rise up from tragedy and remake our world. Let our children come here, and know their history, so that they can add their voices to proclaim 'never again.' And may we remember those who perished, not only as victims, but also as individuals who hoped and loved and dreamed like us, and who have become symbols of the human spirit."
Of course, not all notes need to be long. Here's what then-President Bush wrote months before, in January 2008:
"God bless Israel."
Read or Share this story: https://usat.ly/2qS9IcN
Read the original here:
At Israel's Holocaust memorial, comparing Donald Trump, Obama and Bush notes - USA TODAY
Posted in Donald Trump
Comments Off on At Israel’s Holocaust memorial, comparing Donald Trump, Obama and Bush notes – USA TODAY
Donald Trump calls Manchester bomber (and many, many other people) ‘losers’ – USA TODAY
Posted: at 11:26 pm
Speaking in Bethlehem after a deadly bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, President Trump called the terror attack the work of "evil losers." USA TODAY
President Trump on Tuesday insisted that "evil losers" was the best way to describe those responsible for the bombing that killed some 22 people at the Ariana Grande concert in Manchester.
"Iwont call them monsters because they would like that term," Trump said in Jerusalem on Tuesday. "They would think thats a great name. I will call them from now on losers, because thats what they are. Theyre losers. And well have more of them. But theyre losers. Just remember that."The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the attack on the21,000-seat Manchester Arenaon Monday night.
Calling terrorists "losers" is an idea Trump has had before. Back in November 2015, the president tweeted, "The media must immediately stop calling ISIS leaders "MASTERMINDS." Call them instead thugs and losers. Young people must not go into ISIS!"
But calling people "losers" is a termTrump throws around rather liberally, and not just for terrorists.Here's a comprehensive list of other people and groupsthe president has considered a loser on Twitter (all before he took office):
Read or Share this story: https://usat.ly/2qSr2fX
View post:
Donald Trump calls Manchester bomber (and many, many other people) 'losers' - USA TODAY
Posted in Donald Trump
Comments Off on Donald Trump calls Manchester bomber (and many, many other people) ‘losers’ – USA TODAY
Westinghouse reaches deal for $800 million U.S. bankruptcy loan … – Reuters
Posted: at 11:26 pm
Westinghouse Electric Co told a U.S. court on Tuesday the nuclear power company had reached a deal to borrow $800 million after allaying creditors' concerns that the money would be flowing to non-bankrupt affiliates overseas.
Westinghouse, a unit of Japan's Toshiba Corp (6502.T), filed for bankruptcy in March following billions of dollars in cost overruns at two nuclear power plants it designed and is constructing in Georgia and South Carolina.
An attorney for Westinghouse said in U.S. bankruptcy court in New York that cash from the loan would allow the company to complete its business plan by July 27 and move toward exiting bankruptcy.
The Pittsburgh-based company has also said it needs cash to shore up its profitable overseas businesses, which provide nuclear fuel and services and also decommission power plants. The company has said those affiliates add value to its bankrupt business.
Since Westinghouse filed for bankruptcy, its European affiliate lost access to a cash pool shared with the U.S. business, according to court records. That has threatened customer contracts, prompted one unidentified regulator to demand a $130 million letter of credit and led to financial institutions to move to end swap agreements, according to a court filing.
Westinghouse received court approval to borrow an initial $350 million from affiliates of Apollo Global Management (APO.N) in March.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael Wiles in Manhattan indicated on Tuesday he would allow Westinghouse to borrow the remaining $450 million that Apollo agreed to provide, but said he wanted to review the agreement that resolved creditors' concerns.
Westinghouse's lawyer said the company will share information with the official creditors' committee about its finances and give them an opportunity to object to the way Westinghouse is using the loan funds.
Westinghouse is expected to break its contracts for designing and constructing the Georgia and South Carolina nuclear plants, which have been beset by years of missteps.
A coalition of utilities led by Southern Co (S.N) owns the Plant Vogtle project in Georgia and the V.C. Summer project in South Carolina is majority-owned by SCANA Corp (SCG.N).
Toshiba's lawyer said at Tuesday's hearing the Japanese conglomerate is close to reaching an agreement with SCANA to cap Toshiba's liability, which should help ease Toshiba's financial stress while it tries to sell its coveted chip business.
Toshiba has reached a similar agreement for the Georgia project.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Tom Brown)
Private equity firm Apollo Global Management LLC is in advanced talks to acquire U.S. job-hunting website CareerBuilder LLC after negotiations with another buyout firm ended unsuccessfully, according to people familiar with the matter.
HONG KONG/BEIJING Chinese state-owned Sinochem and ChemChina are in merger talks to create the world's biggest industrial chemicals firm, to be headed by Sinochem chief Ning Gaoning, four people with knowledge of the negotiations said.
AMSTERDAM PPG Industries remains interested in negotiating a "consensual" deal with Akzo Nobel , even as the Dutch rival paint maker resists its 26.3 billion euro ($29.5 billion) takeover offer, PPG's top executive said on Tuesday.
Go here to read the rest:
Westinghouse reaches deal for $800 million U.S. bankruptcy loan ... - Reuters
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on Westinghouse reaches deal for $800 million U.S. bankruptcy loan … – Reuters
More Puerto Rico agencies enter bankruptcy – MarketWatch
Posted: at 11:26 pm
The federal board overseeing Puerto Rico's financial rehabilitation is enlarging the U.S. territory's court-supervised bankruptcy, placing its nearly depleted pension system and its transportation agency under court protection.
The Employees Retirement System, known as ERS, and the Highways and Transportation Authority, known as HTA, entered a debt-restructuring process that amounts to municipal bankruptcy Monday in the federal court in San Juan.
Those two systems are now under a federal debt-adjustment law known as Title III alongside the Puerto Rico government and its sales-tax bond issuer, known as Cofina. U.S. District Judge Laura Swain Taylor, who is presiding over the cases, held the first court hearing on the government's case last week.
"This is part of a court-supervised process within a framework that provides for an orderly restructuring of the debt of each entity and allows as much creditor consensus as possible," said a spokesman for Puerto Rico's fiscal agency.
The pension system's bankruptcy has implications for hundreds of thousands of government retirees and pensioners who are up against bondholders in the renegotiation of Puerto Rico's debts. So far, the oversight board has signaled it wanted more of the restructuring burden to fall on financial creditors compared with retirees, proposing a 10% cut in pension benefits while allocating less than a quarter of the debt service owed for the next 10 years.
Estimates vary as to the size of the gap between what the pension fund's assets and its promises to its beneficiaries, but Puerto Rico projects the unfunded liability at roughly $45 billion, the product of years of deficient funding by government employers. ERS also owes $3 billion to bondholders. The highway agency owes roughly $6.3 billion in debt, including $1.8 billion to Puerto Rico's insolvent industrial development bank, according to the oversight board.
Puerto Rico and its agencies owe roughly $73 billion in bond debt, dwarfing the roughly $9 billion owed by the city of Detroit when it entered what was previously the largest municipal bankruptcy in 2013.
The bankruptcy proceedings are the culmination of years of economic distress and heavy borrowing that has more recently pitted Wall Street creditors against local officials struggling for fiscal flexibility. Creditors are also battling each other for top priority.
Write to Andrew Scurria at Andrew.Scurria@wsj.com
Continue reading here:
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on More Puerto Rico agencies enter bankruptcy – MarketWatch
Puerto Rico’s bankruptcy will only prolong its economic meltdown – Fox News
Posted: at 11:26 pm
While serving in the U. S. Congress, I had the pleasure of working with the leadership of Puerto Rico and experiencing the Commonwealths rich and beautiful culture. Its future now hangs in the balance due to a financial crisis and the leadership of Puerto Rico has decided the most expedient way to confront the crisis is through Title III bankruptcy.
While I dont agree with this strategy, I understand it from a political standpoint: allowing a federal judge to make the difficult decisions that politicians would prefer to avoid.
Years of bad governance has led Puerto Rico to this point. Years of outspending its resources and borrowing billions of dollars from creditors.
Bankruptcy is a cop-out that not only absolves elected officials from making tough choices, but stretches out an already terrible situation and prevents Puerto Rico from having access to capital that is critical to its rebirth.
The creation in 2016 of the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management and Economic Stability Act (PROMESA) was a bipartisan effort on the part of the U.S. Congress and the Obama administration to find a way out of this mess and develop a fiscal plan for the country that only allowed bankruptcy as a last resort, after all other options had failed.
Unfortunately for the Puerto Rican people, all other options did fail. And now the governments decision to file for bankruptcy will jeopardize the recovery of the Commonwealth.
By choosing to allow U.S. District Court Judge Laura Taylor Swain of the Southern District of New York to determine how to impose and manage the bankruptcy, Puerto Rico will stretch out the process, deny itself access to capital markets, and increase the possibility of numerous lawsuits by unhappy creditors.
The Puerto Rican people are witnessing an unemployment rate of over 12 percent, and over 45 percent of the people living in the island are living below the poverty line. Puerto Rico is also facing the critical issue that its pension programs are drying up. According to one news outlet, The three main retirement systems in Puerto Rico are expected to "deplete" all their assets between July and December [2017].
As an elected leader, it is difficult to see the people you represent suffer, but it is your responsibility to make the tough decisions and find a solution that will work.
Undeniably, the new governor of Puerto Rico, Ricardo Rossello, is facing an unprecedented budgetary and economic challenge. At $73 billion, the debt of Puerto Rico is the largest insolvency in U.S. history, far outstripping Detroits $18 billion restructuring in 2013. Due to a lack of funding, many critical government services across the island are at risk, including the health care system.
But this decision to file for Title III bankruptcy completely undermines the process designed by the U.S Congress, which was originally designed to resolve the situation out of the courts. And the reason for this is simple: by going to court, the debt crisis is stretched out over a long period of time which will only make everyones life on the island more difficult due to the uncertainty of the resolution.
The absence of clarity on how the bankruptcy will be restructured also makes investors nervous, and prevents capital from flowing into the island where it is so desperately needed.
Congress, the oversight board for PROMESA and the governor have all refused to make the hard decisions necessary to move the island forward. And on May 1, the day a freeze on litigation expired, several creditors filed lawsuits against the Commonwealth for the lack of good-faith negotiations. Two days later, Governor Rossello announced he would file for Title III protections.
If the governor wants to show real leadership, he should walk away from Title III and start serious negotiations with creditors and all parties. A comprehensive, fair and transparent restructuring plan will be difficult, but it will be better for the people of Puerto Rico and put the island on a faster path to recovery.
Title III is a cop-out that not only absolves elected officials from making tough choices, but stretches out an already terrible situation and prevents Puerto Rico from having access to capital that is critical to its rebirth.
As a Congressman, my advice and counsel was often sought by Americas Hispanic communities and leaders in Puerto Rico. It is my hope they will still listen.
Henry Bonilla represented Texas 23rd Congressional District from 1993 2007.
See the article here:
Puerto Rico's bankruptcy will only prolong its economic meltdown - Fox News
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on Puerto Rico’s bankruptcy will only prolong its economic meltdown – Fox News
How brokers are making bank from retail bankruptcies – The Real Deal Magazine
Posted: at 11:26 pm
From the retail issue: Retail has seen brighter days. But one companys loss may be anothers gain.
As more retailers shutter in the wake of shifting consumer patterns, the rampant store closures provide an unprecedented opportunity for brokers and attorneys to seize new business, unearthing a ripe market of backfilling, subleases, concession negotiations and litigation.
Brokers and consultants working for both tenants and landlords say theyve seen a surge in such business.
Every day I get a list of companies filing for bankruptcies, said Leslie Mayer, an executive director of retail services at Cushman & Wakefields West Los Angeles office. But these situations create an opportunity for both landlords and other tenants.
On the tenant side, brokers and bankruptcy attorneys can capitalize on retailers that want to optimize cash flow from their real estate assets. In many cases, this means hiring disposition teams to negotiate out of leases.
On the landlord side, leasing brokers have the opportunity to backfill vacated spaces and potentially bring in investors to reposition entire retail developments into mixed-use complexes.
Were seeing an uptick in litigation as well as strategic counseling and negotiation, said Y. David Scharf, a partner at Morrison Cohen, a Manhattan law firm that represents both retail tenants and landlords. The tensions are higher now than I recall seeing them in many, many years.
Losing liquidity
For the likes of Payless, BCBG and American Apparel, filing for bankruptcy can indicate that companies were not able to downsize in time, experts say. If retailers were more conscientious about how their leases affect their operations and hired the right disposition team, bankruptcy could be avoided.
The smartest companies get way ahead of it, but the typical company is in denial, said Thomas Mullaney, managing director of JLLs retail restructuring services in Manhattan. Like a patient on a gurney, they continue to lose blood liquidity month after month after month until they finally collapse into bankruptcy.
In bankruptcy proceedings, retailers have two choices with their leases: Assume the lease or surrender it to the landlord.
Within 60 days of filing, they must assess the performance of each retail location and make the decision to stay or to shutter it.
The bankruptcy filing will protect retailers from legal action and eviction by their landlords, and may excuse them from unpaid rent from the previous few months leading up to the bankruptcy. But when the petition is filed, the retailer is liable for every cent of rent owed from that point on.
However, a bankruptcy doesnt have to be the end of the world.
Bankruptcy doesnt mean youre going out of business, it just means youre going to restructure, said Mullaney, who works with retailers that want to consolidate.
More than a decade ago, Mullaney and his team helped the Houston-based crafts store Garden Ridge work through its bankruptcy. The company went public in 2016.
There are also strategic-closure bankruptcies, in which retailers will have already picked out real estate companies to work with to evaluate which leases to assume, which to reject and which to assume and then assign subleases, according to Garrick Brown, Cushman & Wakefields director of retail research in the Americas.
Among the entire brokerage community, the second we hear a retailer is going bankrupt, we try to get a list of their store locations and evaluate how good the real estate is, Brown told TRD. We have corporate services that specialize in this. Theres nothing new here except for the sheer number of bankruptcies its unprecedented.
Now, Brown added, every major national brokerage has groups that focus on distressed retailers and their leases. Still, nine times out of 10, its best for all parties involved if bankruptcy can be avoided.
Damage control
For the tenant at risk of bankruptcy, the first strategy is to look for a broker, according to Scharf, and make a contingency plan.
A broker will see what the market is going to bear in terms of getting replacement tenants for your leases. You may have assets in only some of these leases, and certain locations may be liabilities, he said. If theres going to be a bankruptcy, youll have to make decisions very early on, which leases youre assuming and which ones youre rejecting.
Next, with the broker, the retailer will want to engage its landlords and try to renegotiate lease terms.
Very often landlords will want to negotiate some kind of arrangement or discount because of the concern that if one tenant leaves and then another leaves, other tenants have an opportunity to legally cancel their lease, Scharf explained. So very often the larger tenants have leverage over landlords.
Scharf and his firm were recently tapped by Kenneth Cole to represent the designer in a lawsuit filed by Simon Property Group, which sought to keep 43 outlet stores open after Cole made the decision to shutter them.
There are several strategic issues that arise in the case of closures, the attorney said. An empty or dark store obviously looks bad for mall operators, so theyll likely invoke contractual obligations such as the go-dark provision, which says a tenant cannot cease operations at an ongoing lease.
In that case, however, a tenant may choose to dress the window and keep the light on but still halt the operation of the store, Scharf said. This tactic satisfies the obligation, but landlords hate it, which gives tenants a window for negotiating concessions on rent or other accommodations.
A lot of companies may not realize that the capitalized value of their leases may be as big as their bank loans or overall bonded indebtedness, according to Mullaney. But unless a retailer has an internal real estate department, like Macys or Sears, managing leases is typically too great a feat to handle.
Its entirely possible that a company has a borrowing capacity with Wells Fargo for $250 million, and that this is something the chief financial officer can deal with him or herself, he said. But when it comes to leases, they could have hundreds with countless different landlords. Thats a logistical nightmare, and thats where our firm comes in.
Mullaney operates a 10-person team scattered throughout the country to negotiate on behalf of retail chains. On the other side of the negotiations, the landlords have their own consultants as well.
Backfill patrol
When a tenant leaves, the landlords biggest fear is a domino effect with tenants leaving one after another. This means that it must consider providing concessions and abatements to keep [the store] operatingeven if it means forgiving past rent, Scharf said.
But when a big tenant leaves, it could be a golden opportunity for the mall operator, according to Larry Jensen, JLLs director of development, operations and tenant coordination.
There are so many options today that if its a piece of real estate, you really dont have to worry about it, said Jensen, whose team works with mall landlords to fill and sometimes even reposition large spaces vacated by struggling department stores.
Like the strategies employed on the tenant side, its best to have preemptive ones in place.
[As a landlord], you constantly assess the performance of your existing retailers. If this person leaves, if that person leaves, what do you do? he told TRD. You, the broker, have those discussions with the owners of that property. It might even trigger a landlords desire to sell the property.
Jensen worked with a Midwestern mall owner a couple of years ago to buy back a department store and redevelop the space into a mixed-use center with a theater, restaurant and a handful of smaller retailers including a Talbots, a DSW shoe store and a salon.
When theres an empty space, typically your first thought is entertainment. Can you add a theater? If so, can you add a restaurant, a Dave & Busters? And then you look at other options a Dicks, T.J. Maxx or a Home Goods, he said. Grocery stores and health clubs are other options.
For smaller spaces, there are retailers interested in taking what are called second-generation spaces.
Mayer, of Cushman in L.A., represents Skechers, a retailer that takes advantage of vacated properties.
Its kind of a bit of a musical-chairs situation, she told TRD. Skechers is one of the retailers taking advantage of these second-generation spacesthese are great opportunities for Sketchers to come in and say, We move fast and have great credit.
At the end of the day, the retail industry has no choice but to accept the changing market. But change isnt anything new.
If you went to a shopping center in the 1980s, you saw Stride Rites and Naturalizers. All of those guys are dinosaurs now, said JLLs Jensen. The mall has been reinvented three times. So thats whats new? We arent scared of it, we just deal with it let the young eat the old.
More here:
How brokers are making bank from retail bankruptcies - The Real Deal Magazine
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on How brokers are making bank from retail bankruptcies – The Real Deal Magazine
Seadrill: Bankruptcy Looming – Seeking Alpha
Posted: at 11:26 pm
Business Fundamentals
Seadrill Limited (NYSE:SDRL) is a company offering services in deep sea oil exploration, and its share price and business model has been seriously tested in the recent three years with low oil prices. As a result, Seadrill shares have dipped below $1.00 to $0.524 per share, 98.8% below its all-time high. In addition, the stock will be delisted from the NYSE unless it trades above $1.00 within 30 days. Unfortunately for Seadrill, the oil price situation is unlikely to improve soon, and investors should definitely stay away from Seadrill shares. For current Seadrill shareholders, the author recommends to sell shares even at the depressed valuation.
Summary of Company Information
Macro Headwinds: Revenue Decreasing, Contract Expiring
In general, Seadrill Limited needs around $65 to $75 in Brent crude for its services to be in demand. At the very least, Seadrill will need $65 to renew some of its existing contracts, and the company will require around $75 per barrel Brent to achieve decent day rates and full rig utilization.
Unfortunately for the company, oil prices are currently stalling at around $54 per barrel Brent, and Seadrill will have no way to renew its expiring contracts. To make matters worse, the company's revenues have decreased for each of its last four quarters - most recently dropping 10% to 667 million for the fourth quarter of 2016. Refer to the following chart for details on the company's revenue and operating income in 2016.
Unfortunately, this decreasing revenue trend is expected to continue and even accelerate into 2017 because more and more contracts are expiring in 2017. In fact, take a look at the chart below for a summary of its contract situation and decreasing day rates.
Number of Contracts
Contracts expiring in 2017
20
Longer term contracts
27
Expiring contracts total day rate
~$5.0M per day worth of contracts in total expiring within 6 months
Due to the expiring contracts, the company may start to face liquidity problems as a total of $450M per quarter of revenue will start to expire within 6 months. As a result of these contract expirations, Seadrill's operating revenues are expected to decrease steadily in the next 6 months. To understand the severity of a loss of $450M per quarter in income, note that the company's total cash pile is only $1.2B with almost no way for additional debt financing (debt over $10B) or equity financing (shares at $0.50). In conclusion, expiring contracts are about to push Seadrill into bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy and Liquidity Situation
As noted above, Seadrill may have liquidity troubles as early as 2018. To avoid this situation, Seadrill will need the price of oil to breakthrough to $65 to $75 range to help the company renew contracts and bring in new revenue. In order for that to happen, two of the three following items may have to materialize:
Conclusion
In conclusion, Seadrill's future is bleak even though oil prices have broken through to $54 per barrel. Contracts will continue expiring and the company's revenues will continue to suffer. As a result, investors should sell or stay away from Seadrill common shares even at its current depressed valuation.
Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.
I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Editor's Note: This article covers one or more stocks trading at less than $1 per share and/or with less than a $100 million market cap. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.
Read more from the original source:
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on Seadrill: Bankruptcy Looming – Seeking Alpha
Latest: Coal giant emerges from bankruptcy – High Country News
Posted: at 11:26 pm
Peabody is benefiting from the natural gas price hike.
BACKSTORY Coal giant Peabody Energy filed for bankruptcy in 2016, raising doubts about whether it would fulfill its legal obligation to reclaim land that it mined in Wyomings Powder River Basin. The company had self-bonded, meaning that it promised to pay to restore damaged land and water sources rather than posting cash or bonds up front. After Peabody and two other self-bonded companies declared bankruptcy, the government released a policy advisory warning states against self-bonding (Coal company bankruptcies jeopardize reclamation, HCN, 1/25/16).
FOLLOW UP Peabody emerged from bankruptcy in March, with one of the conditions being that it will no longer self-bond. In May, the company reported a 29 percent increase in revenue over the same period last year, with quarterly net income the highest in five years. Peabody attributes this to increased revenue from its Australian mines and greater demand for coal from Western utility companies due to higher natural gas costs. It also praised the Trump administration for its strong actions supporting coal.
Original post:
Latest: Coal giant emerges from bankruptcy - High Country News
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on Latest: Coal giant emerges from bankruptcy – High Country News
Venezuela: Seven keys for understanding the current crisis – CADTM.org
Posted: at 11:25 pm
Venezuelas treatment by the international media is certainly special. Undoubtedly there are too many distortions, too much Manichaeism, too many slogans, too many manipulations and omissions.
Beyond the stupefying versions of media newspeak that interprets everything that happens in the country in the key of humanitarian crisis, dictatorship or political prisoners, or the heroic narrative of the Venezuela of socialism and revolution that interprets everything that happens in the country in terms of economic war or imperialist attack, there are many topics, subjects and processes that are invisible and that essentially constitute the national political scene. It is not possible to understand the current crisis in Venezuela without analysing the factors that develop from within.
The criterion of action and interpretation based on the logic of friend-enemy responds more to a dispute between the elites of the political parties and economic groups than the fundamental interests of the working classes and the defence of common goods Common goods In economics, common goods are characterized by being collectively owned, as opposed to either privately or publicly owned. In philosophy, the term denotes what is shared by the members of one community, whether a town or indeed all humanity, from a juridical, political or moral standpoint. . It is necessary to provide a comprehensive overview of the process of crisis and national conflict, which helps us plot the coordinates to transcend or deal with the current situation.
We present seven keys to your understanding, analysing not only the dispute between government and opposition, but also the processes that are developing in the political institutions, the social fabric, and the economic networks, while highlighting the complexities of neoliberalism and the forms of government and governance in the country. 1/ It is not possible to understand what is happening in Venezuela without taking foreign intervention into account
The rich and vast array of the countrys so-called natural resources; its geo-strategic position; its initial challenge to the policies of the Washington Consensus; its regional influence for integration; as well as its alliances with China, Russia and Iran, all give a considerable geopolitical significance to Venezuela. However, there are intellectual and media sectors that continually seek to avoid the very fluid international dynamics that impact on and determine the political future of the country, which highlights the persistent interventionist actions of the government and the power of the United States.
In this sense, these sectors are responsible for ridiculing the critique of imperialism, and present the national government as the sole actor of power at play in Venezuela, and therefore the sole object of political interrogation.
However, since the inauguration of the Bolivarian Revolution there has been much US interventionism in Venezuela, which has intensified and become more aggressive since the death of president Chavez (2013) and the context of the exhaustion of the progressive cycle and conservative restoration in Latin America. It is worth remembering the executive order signed by President Barack Obama in March 2015 which stated that Venezuela was an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States. We already know what has happened to countries that are categorized in this way by the power to the north.
Now, we have the threatening statement of the head of the Southern Command, Admiral Kurt W. Tidd (April 6, 2017), arguing that The growing humanitarian crisis in Venezuela could eventually compel a regional response. This is combined with the evidence of the aggressive nature of the foreign policy of Donald Trump with the recent bombing of Syria, while the Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), Luis Almagro, together with other countries in the region, intends to apply the Democratic Charter to open a process of restoration of democracy in the country.
The ideologues and the media operators of the conservative restoration in the region are very concerned about the state of human rights in Venezuela, but fail to explain in their analysis why, strangely, there is no supranational effort of the same type in the face of the appalling crisis of human rights in countries such as Mexico and Colombia.
In this sense it seems that the moral indignation is relative and they remain silent. It is because, for reasons of political intent or analytical naivety these sectors depoliticize the role of the supranational bodies and are unaware of the geopolitical relations of power that constitute them, that are part of their own nature. While a paranoid reading of all the operations driven by these global bodies is one thing, another very different approach is a purely procedural interpretation of their actions, ignoring the international mechanisms of domination and control of markets and natural resources that have been channelled through these institutions of global and regional governance.
But there is something important to add. If we talk of intervention, we cannot just talk about the US. In Venezuela there are growing forms of Chinese interventionism in the political and economic measures that have been taken, which points to a loss of sovereignty, an increase in dependency on the Asian power and processes of greater economic flexibility.
A part of the left has preferred to remain silent on these dynamics, since it seems that the only intervention that deserves to be mentioned is that of the USA. But both streams of foreign interference are being developed to promote transnational capitalist accumulation, the appropriation of natural resources and have nothing to do with popular demands. 2/ The concept of dictatorship does not explain the Venezuelan case
From almost the beginning of the Bolivarian Revolution Venezuela has been branded a dictatorship. This concept remains the subject of extensive discussions in political theory because it has been challenged by the transformations and complexity of contemporary regimes and exercises of power, especially in the current globalized era, which raises serious gaps and imprecisions in its definition.
Dictatorship is usually associated with political regimes or types of government in which all power is concentrated, without limitation, into a single person or group; there is a lack of separation of powers; the absence of individual freedoms, freedom of political parties, freedom of expression; and sometimes the concept has even been vaguely defined as the opposite of democracy.
The term dictatorship has been used in relation to Venezuela in media jargon of a fairly superficial, visceral and moralizing kind, practically to raise it as a kind of specificity in Venezuela, distinct from the other countries of the region, where in theory there would be democratic regimes.
The thing is that in Venezuela at the present time it is difficult to say that all power is concentrated in one person or group, due to the fact that in this country we are faced with a map of actors, which, although hierarchical, is fragmented and volatile, especially after the death of President Chvez, with the existence of various power blocs that can link up or be at odds among themselves and that goes beyond the dichotomy between government and opposition.
Although there is a government with a significant military component, with increasing expressions of authoritarianism and with some capacity for centralization, the scenario is highly unstable. There is no total domination from top to bottom, and there is some parity between the disputing power groups. On the other hand, the conflict could spill over, making the situation even more chaotic.
The fact that the Venezuelan opposition controls the National Assembly, winning convincingly by the electoral path, also indicates that rather than a pure absence of separation of powers, there is a dispute between them, until now favourable to the executive-judicial combination. Rather than a homogeneous political regime, we are faced with a wide and conflicting network of forces. The metastasis of corruption means the exercise of power is decentralized even more, making its centralization by the constituted power difficult.
What is relevant to the old Roman concept of dictatorship, is that, in this context, the national government is governing through decrees and special measures in the framework of a declared state of emergency, which has officially existed since the beginning of 2016. In the name of the struggle against the economic war, the advance of criminality and para-militarism, and the subversive advances of the opposition, many institutional mediations and democratic procedures are being omitted.
Security policies stand out for their severity, exemplified by the Operacin de Liberacin del Pueblo (OLP Peoples Liberation Organization); there are direct interventions by the state security bodies in different parts of the country (rural, urban, suburbs), to fight the underworld, which tend to lead to a controversial number of deaths; there is the paralysis of the referendum; gubernatorial elections were suspended in 2016 and it is not yet clear when they will be held; there is increasing repression and police brutality in response to the social unrest resulting of the situation in the country; and there is an increase in processes of militarization, especially in the border areas and those declared to contain strategic natural resources.
This is the political map, which, together with the various forms of foreign intervention, sets the stage for a low-intensity war that runs through virtually all the spheres of everyday life for Venezuelans. This is the framework within which individual freedoms, party opposition and pluralism, the convening and realization of marches, expressions of dissent and criticism in the media, among other forms of so-called democracy in Venezuela, are developing. 3/ In Venezuela the social contract, institutions and frameworks of the formal economy are being overwhelmed
If there is something that could be defined as a specificity of the Venezuelan case, it is that the current socio-political scenario is torn, deeply corrupted and highly chaotic. We have argued that in this country we are facing one of the most severe institutional crises in all of Latin America, with reference to the set of legal, social, economic and political institutions, among others, that make up the Venezuelan Republic.
The historic crisis of oil rentier model of accumulation, the metastasis of corruption in the country, severe violations to the social fabric from the neoliberal period and in particular since 2013, and the intensity of the attacks and political disputes, have overflowed the frameworks of the formal institutions of all areas of society, channelling a good part of the social dynamics by means of informal mechanisms, often underground and illegal.
In the economic sphere, corruption has become a transversal mechanism for distribution of oil revenues, diverting enormous amounts of foreign exchange at the discretion of a few, and undermining the foundations of the formal rentier economy. This occurs in a decisive manner with PDVSA, the main industry of the country, as well as with key funds like the Sino-Venezuelan Fund or a number of nationalized companies.
The collapse of the formal economy has made informality practically one of the drivers of the national economy as a whole. The sources of social opportunities, whether for social ascent or the possibility of higher profits, are often in the so-called bachaqueo in foodstuffs (illegal trade, at extremely high prices, on the black market) or other forms of trade in the various parallel markets, exchange, medicines, gasoline, and so on.
In the political-legal order, the rule of law lacks respect and recognition on the part of the main political actors, who not only mutually repudiate each other but are willing to do anything to overcome each other.
The national government faces what it considers the enemy forces with emergency measures, while the most reactionary opposition groups deploy violent operations of vandalism, confrontation and attacks on infrastructure. In this scenario the rule of law has been greatly eroded, making the Venezuelan people very vulnerable.
Impunity is ever greater, and has spread to all sectors of the population. This leads to corruption becoming even more rooted and impossible to prevent, and means the people expect nothing from the legal system, increasingly taking the law into their own hands.
The collapse of the social contract generates trends of everybody for themselves among the people. The fragmentation of power has also helped to generate, grow and strengthen various territorial powers, like the so-called miners unions that control gold mines in Bolivar state by force of arms, or the criminal gangs that dominate sectors of Caracas like El Cementerio or La Cota 905.
The framework presented implies nothing more and nothing less than the future and political definitions of the current situation in the country being developed to a great extent by force. 4/ The long-term crisis of Venezuelan rentier capitalism (1983-2017)
The collapse of the international price of crude oil has been instrumental in the development of the Venezuelan crisis, but it is not the only factor that explains this process. Since the 1980s there are growing signs of exhaustion of the model of accumulation based on the extraction of oil and the distribution of income that it generates. The current phase of increasing chaos in the national economy (2013-present) is also a product of the trends of the last 30 years in the countrys economy. Why?
For several reasons. About 60% of Venezuelan crude is heavy or extra-heavy. This crude is economically more costly and requires greater use of energy and the use of further processing for marketing. The profitability of the business that feeds the country is declining with respect to earlier times, when conventional crude prevailed. This is happening as the model requires ever more rentier profits and increased social investment to deal with the needs of a population that is still growing.
The hyper-concentration of the population in the cities (over 90%) promotes the use of profits directed primarily towards consumption (imported goods) rather than production. The boom years promoted the strengthening of the extractive (primary) sector - the effects of the so-called Dutch Disease - while significantly weakening the already weak productive sectors. After the end of the boom (as happened at the end of the 70s and now from 2014), the economy was more dependent and even weaker in the face of a new crisis.
The socio-political corruption in the system also makes it possible for leakages and fraudulent diversion of profits, which prevents the development of coherent distribution policies to alleviate the crisis.
The increasing volatility of international prices of crude oil, as well as changes in the global power balances in oil (such as the progressive loss of influence of OPEC OPEC Organization of Petroleum-Exporting Countries OPEP is a group of 11 DC which produce petroleum: Algeria, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Venezuela. These 11 countries represent 41% of oil-production in the world and own more than 75% of known reserves. Founded in September 1960and based in Vienna (Austria), OPEC is in charge of co-ordinating and unifying the petroleum-related policies of its members, with the aim of guaranteeing them all stable revenues. To this end, production is organized on a quota system. Each country, represented by its Minister of Energy and Petroleum, takes a turn in running the organization. Since 1st July 2002, the Venezuelan Alvaro Silva-Calderon is the Secretary General of OPEC.
OPEC : http://www.opec.org/opec_web/en/ ) also has significant impacts on the national economy.
While all these economic shocks are affecting the country, ecological resources will continue to be undermined and depleted, which threatens the livelihood of millions of Venezuelans for the present and future.
The governments current solution has been to greatly increase external indebtedness, distribute income more regressively, expand extractivism and favour transnational capital.
To sum up, any of the elites who rule in the coming years will have to face the historic limits that have been reached with the old oil-based model. It is not enough just await a stroke of luck and a rise in oil prices. Momentous changes are taking place and it is necessary to be prepared to deal with them. 5/ Socialism? Venezuela is carrying out a process of progressive economic flexibility and adjustment
Venezuela is developing a process of progressive and sectoralized adjustment of the economy, with more flexibility in comparison with prior regulations and restrictions on capital, and the gradual dismantling of social advances achieved in earlier times in the Bolivarian Revolution. These changes are masked by the name of socialism and revolution, although they represent policies increasingly rejected by the population.
This includes policies such as the creation of Special Economic Zones, which represents a comprehensive liberalisation of parts of the national territory, with sovereignty being delivered to foreign capital which administers practically without limitations in these regions. This is one of the most neoliberal measures of Agenda Venezuela, implemented by the government of Rafael Caldera in the 1990s, under the recommendations of the International Monetary Fund IMF International Monetary Fund Along with the World Bank, the IMF was founded on the day the Bretton Woods Agreements were signed. Its first mission was to support the new system of standard exchange rates.
When the Bretton Wood fixed rates system came to an end in 1971, the main function of the IMF became that of being both policeman and fireman for global capital: it acts as policeman when it enforces its Structural Adjustment Policies and as fireman when it steps in to help out governments in risk of defaulting on debt repayments.
As for the World Bank, a weighted voting system operates: depending on the amount paid as contribution by each member state. 85% of the votes is required to modify the IMF Charter (which means that the USA with 17,68% % of the votes has a de facto veto on any change).
The institution is dominated by five countries: the United States (16,74%), Japan (6,23%), Germany (5,81%), France (4,29%) and the UK (4,29%). The other 183 member countries are divided into groups led by one country. The most important one (6,57% of the votes) is led by Belgium. The least important group of countries (1,55% of the votes) is led by Gabon and brings together African countries.
Also we should highlight the gradual relaxation of the agreements with foreign corporations in the Orinoco; liberalization of prices of some commodities Commodities The goods exchanged on the commodities market, traditionally raw materials such as metals and fuels, and cereals. ; growing issuance of sovereign bonds; devaluation Devaluation A lowering of the exchange rate of one currency as regards others. of the currency, creating a floating exchange rate (Simadi); acceptance of some trade procedures directly in dollars, for example, in the tourism sector; or the faithful fulfilment of payment of the external debt and its servicing, which implies a reduction in imports and consequent problems of shortages of basic consumer goods.
A renewed and more flexible extractivism is being adopted, aimed mainly at the new frontiers of extraction, such as the mega-project of the Mining Arc of the Orinoco, which proposes to install mega-mining on an unprecedented scale in a territory of an area of 111,800 km2, threatening key resources of life for Venezuelans, especially for indigenous people. These projects add to long-term relations of dependency that are produced by extractivism.
It should be noted that these reforms are combined with the maintenance of some social assistance policies, continuous increase in nominal wages, some concessions to the demands of the popular organizations and the use of a revolutionary and anti-imperialist narrative. This obviously has as one of its main objectives the maintenance of the electoral support that remains.
We are witnessing what we have called a mutant neo-liberalism, to the extent that forms of commodification, financialisation and deregulation are combined with mechanisms of state intervention and social assistance.
Parts of the left have been very focused on preventing conservative governments coming to power so as to avoid the return of neo-liberalism. But they forget to mention how progressive governments have also made progress in a number of measures reflecting a mutant and hybrid neo-liberalism profile, which ultimately have an impact on the people and on nature. 6/ What alternative? The project of the parties of the Mesa de la Unidad Democrtica (MUD) is neo-liberal
The right-wing Mesa de la Unidad Democrtica (MUD Table of Democratic Unity) is the predominant bloc of party-based opposition to the national government, although a left opposition has been growing slowly and is very likely to continue growing. This critical left, at least in its more defined elements, is not identified with the MUD so does not link with it politically.
The MUD is not a homogeneous block, and there are sectors ranging from influential radical groups of the extreme right - which we could call Uribistas - as well as some sectors of moderate conservatism, and elitist liberalism with a certain distributionist tendency. These various groups have a mutually conflictual relationship characterized by possible confrontation and mutual insults.
Despite their differences, the various groups of the MUD agree on at least three key factors: its ideological matrix, the bases of its economic program and its reactionary agenda in relation to the national government and the possibility of a profound transformation of popular emancipation.
We will refer to the first two. Their ideological matrix is deeply determined by neoclassical theory and conservative liberalism, honouring obsessively private property, the end of the ideology on the part of the state and corporate and individual freedoms.
These ideological pillars are clearer in the program of this bloc than in its media discourse, where the rhetoric is simplistic, superficial and full of slogans. The synthesis of its economic model is in the Guidelines for the Program of Government of National Unity (2013-2019). It is a more orthodox neo-liberal version of oil extractivism, in relation to the project of the current Venezuelan government.
In spite of the slogans of change and productive Venezuela, what stands out is its proposal to extract up to six million barrels of oil per day, placing an emphasis on increasing the quotas of the Orinoco Oil Belt. Although they dispute publicly, the oil proposals of Henrique Capriles Radonski (Petrleo para tu Progreso) and Leopoldo Lpez (Petrleo en la Mejor Venezuela) are twins, and accord with the governments Plan de la Patria of 2013-2019. The change demanded is no more than another ratcheting up of extractivism, more profit Profit The positive gain yielded from a companys activity. Net profit is profit after tax. Distributable profit is the part of the net profit which can be distributed to the shareholders. and development oriented, with the economic and socio-environmental consequences and cultural features associated with this model. 7/The fragmentation of the people and the progressive undermining of the social fabric
In all these processes of low-intensity warfare and systemic chaos, working people are the most affected. The powerful socio-political cohesion set up in the early years of the Bolivarian Revolution has suffered not only from erosion but a gradual disintegration. But these effects have reached the very core of the tissues of the community in the country. The difficulty in covering the basic requirements of daily life; incentives for the individual and competitive resolution of the socio-economic problems of the people; the metastasis of corruption; the channelling of social conflicts and disputes by force; the loss of ethical-political references and polarization due to the discredit of the political parties; the direct aggression against strong or important community experiences and community leaders from various political and territorial actors; they are part of this process of erosion of the social fabric that aims to undermine the true pillars of a potential process of popular-emancipatory transformation or of the capacities of resistance of the people to the advancement of regressive forces in the country.
Meanwhile, various grassroots organizations and social movements across the country are building an alternative. Time will tell what their capacity for resistance, adaptation and above all their collective ability to articulate among themselves and to exert greater strength on the course of the national political project will be.
If there is an irreplaceable solidarity that should be promoted from the left in Latin America and the world, it must be with this struggling people, which has historically borne the burden of exploitation and the costs of the crisis. Which has frequently risen up and taken to the streets so that its demands are listened to and met. Which is currently facing the complex dilemmas posed by the current times of reflux and regression. This seems to be the true point of honour of the left. The cost of turning away from these popular counter-hegemonies in the name of a strategy of power conservation could be very high.
Source: Europe Solidaire Sans Frontires->http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spi...]
See the rest here:
Venezuela: Seven keys for understanding the current crisis - CADTM.org
Posted in Socio-economic Collapse
Comments Off on Venezuela: Seven keys for understanding the current crisis – CADTM.org







