Category: Opinion

  • The spectre haunting Europe is the spectre of the European elector. It is a spectre in a strict sense: the electorate simply doesn’t show up anymore, voter participation in European countries has been on a steady decline for decades, and in terms of the EU elections in 2019 turnout just barely passed 50%. The (indeed silent) majority of Europeans never took part in the democratic process since 1999.

    This never marked a win for the Abstention Party of the People, though. It marked the continuous triumph of the ‘Elitist Status Quo Coalition’, and the perpetration of one big lie: the end of history.

    The Batman and Robin of EU elections

    Francis Fukuyama’s overquoted work lied so well on how liberal democracies under their neoliberalism umbrella were the final call (if not solution, for soviets) that socialist and communist parties thought not a second to brave the imaginary rain. Immediately as Berlin’s Wall was falling, self-haunted and hypnotised by the warning that such a market capitalism umbrella could grant their survival on the electoral market with inevitable, if not infallible, tutelage, they unilaterally rescinded the social contract and renounced their identity and ideology.

    The former, both in the western (e.g. in Italy, from Partito Comunista to Partito Democratico della Sinistra) and eastern block (e.g. in Romania, from the Communist Party to the Social Democratic Party); the latter, stalking and mimicking the conservative turbo-liberalism which, as the name suggests, was hard to catch and surpass along the Third Way as people always tend to choose the original over a copy anyway.

    From 1958 to this day, out of the 19 European Commissions, the Party of European Socialists/European Peoples’ Party duo governed together in 19 cases.

    It’s no coincidence that Jacques Delors, in office in 1989 at the helm of the European Commission, was destined to be the last President of the Commission from the Party of European Socialists, making way for the big brother or father master of the seemingly eternal Stockholm partnership: the European People’s Party. Not only electors, but also élites, prefer the original.

    This being a Batman and Robin partnership way less democratic and more dysfunctional than Bill Finger and Bob Kane ever drew, or Altiero Spinelli and Robert Schuman ever dreamed.

    Unlike Dick Grayson, who continues to enjoy the favour of the public to this day, things seemingly went downhill for the unmasked socialists. The performance of social democratic parties has, on average, been marked by a tremendous decline across western European democracies, from a vote share of nearly 40% to below 20%.

    Bad actors

    Hopelessly, even if ever European mainstream social democrats were to – after having turned their back on them – turn to their core constituency, the working class, they would only face another ghost – the result of partially their betrayal – realising that the working class hasn’t lost: it got lost.

    Atomised.

    Algorithmed.

    Wiped away and out.

    Types of jobs in the global market economy having multiplied (post-class inhomogeneity) while at the same time workers’ rights pulverised (leading not just to disaffection, but distrust when not hostility towards the liable center-left).

    Speaking of disillusionment, the sterilised and swept ideology in the ever dominating aforementioned partnership, the undefined political aim or vision of it, is easy to say and see as one of and possibly the main reason of an unshaping European Union, a mainly economic barren “union” locked in a mere bureaucratic technical administration of existence, evoking the sad passions of Miguel Benasayag.

    During this sustained seppuku, the socialist parties on the continent integrally bypassed the horizontal and fundamental precept of equality – abdicating unconditionally in favor of the vertical liberal one of freedom instead. These are, as Norberto Bobbio taught, conflicting concepts. That’s another thing that the old left forgot: conflict, for equality.

    While the socialists were busy sinking along the Third Way from the ridiculous to the sublime – certifying the definitive demobilisation of their raison d’être by venturing into the concept of ‘reforming capitalism’ (something like reshaping cancer) – someone understood that such bad actors of conservation couldn’t be good actors of change.

    Enter the new left

    Syriza, a broad coalition of the Greek radical left founded in January 2004, gained ground when in November 2011 a coalition of New Democracy (EPP) and PASOK (PSE) is formed to face Greece’s perfect debt crisis storm and hostility from a Europe run by… well, the European People’s Party and Party of the European Socialists.

    January 2015: Syriza won the Greek national elections with 36.34% of the vote – mainly at the expense of a bad Chris O’Donnell-PASOK, at an abysmal 4.68%.

    In December of the same year, Podemos stormed Spanish heaven when, having formed only the year prior, in the general elections skyrocketed to over a fifth of the total votes and just 1.3% from the PSOE, led by the socialist Pedro Sánchez who, like a capable cynical chameleon, just shifted political pose from a Third Way centrism to a more radical, leftist approach.

    In 2022, France, Jean-Luc Mélenchon at the presidential elections stormed and stopped only 1.2% short of the runoff, kicking the Socialist Party into a 1.75% dust in the process.

    These are the most commendable examples of the emerging of a new left. However, the less commendable ones that aren’t even mentioned here have generally two characteristics: they flirt with the conservative socialists, and they don’t include ecologist formations in their coalitions. They are limited, and moderates.

    No wonder the unquoted have proven to be as undefined as undesirable for an electorate who too, in this case, would choose the original: the given mainstream socialist party on the ballot.

    Same battle, same ballot. No conflict, no consensus.

    But the zeitgeist is switching more rapidly than ever before, and here comes the new big elephant, bigger than the whole room itself: inequality.

    There is a systemic paradigmatic shift that has been occurring in the dozen years between the subprime crisis and the subsequent Covid pandemic. These shocks left too deep scars and marks: mass realisation.

    Inequalities are finally seen and perceived by the deeper public (not only the middle class, but left and even right of it) as impactful and therefore unacceptable.

    Capitalism is put into question globally for the first time.

    Anticapitalism isn’t anymore seen as the pathetic scarecrow of a residual extremist left embarrassing itself for even grumbling and bringing up such juvenile yet prehistoric (or out, of history) pretense.

    Growing global awareness is an all-out game changer.

    Inequality is the true theme of the new millennium. And it’s here to stay, to be erased.

    It’s a theme so extreme that it naturally requires a radical approach, by radical new actors, in a radically new way; two ways, in fact. These are the two questions that are the parallel track of inequality: the social question and the environmental one.

    While the old adagio of Chico Mendes, “Environmentalism without class struggle is just gardening”, appears more compelling than ever, we add that social struggle without environmentalism risks a Rapa Nui.

    The ‘next left’ and the EU elections

    After 20 years of ‘old left’ and now 15 more years or so with the ‘new left’, both fields seem inadequate or insufficient to reinvent or at least revive socialism and tackle the times. New ground is needed; a Freudian killing of the father on one end while on the other a loose alliance of the two main red and green trajectories.

    This can’t but be addressed on superior, or supranational, level, therefore for this breaking of new ground the playground is next EU elections in June 2024.

    Fun or fascinating fact: from the first such EU elections in 1979, to this day, the ecologist and new left groups (always running separated) never obtained a result that allowed them to be on the “podium” of the most relevant political forces in Europe.

    From another perspective, GUE (Left) and ALE (Greens) have always – with the sole exception of 2004 – had a number of seats that would have given them the role of third political force since their appearance in 1984.

    However, the European Union has always been breathing down the necks of popular-liberals and rosé socialists, not only seriously endangering their power sharing pact, but calling into question the policies on which the impact of a significant united strength, in place of two less significant disjointed weaknesses, would in itself be decidedly more decisive.

    It’s neither rocket science nor electoral engineering. It is ideological strategy.

    To tackle the new theme of the time, inequality, and its toxic offspring, the environmental and social questions, bad actors can’t feature on yet another remake of more of the same box-office/ballot box bomb.

    Instead, in order for the new left to become part of the next left, it has to follow through with the initial intuition of including green in their vision. It must step up the efforts to make tactical alliances locally. It’s at the same time nothing entirely new and completely new.

    The first virtuous examples dates as back as 1989, when the wall was still up, and then GroenLinks were founded. At the latest Dutch general elections in 2023, they came third, their greatest placement in 35 years. In Italy, Alleanza Verdi e Sinistra obtained at the 2022 Italian general elections the best result for a left of the Partito Democratico list in history.

    People recognise bad actors, and electors know their own problems

    The leftists and the greens should form and make critical mass on national and then European level. The numbers have been exposing for decades – and the exploding of inequality has been telling us for years. The red/green is a path forward to break the glass ceiling and burn the paper tiger of the bleak, black, elitist liberal agenda.

    With which, the next left must engage in a conflict, in a threatening way and with a new alphabet too. Like Ernesto Laclau observed, it must dispose of traditional signifiers of leftist identity (a given: next left must be newer than the new) and even adopt a more vernacular language that could speak to a lowly politicised electorate.

    What must be kept by a next left is the very root of the sense of the struggle, which is equality, but without old signs and stigmas that slow down the path and without always accepting to be junior partners-in-crime in national coalitions kissing the frog mainstream party only to float.

    This isn’t an Aesopian fable of a frog and a scorpion, the water level is rising too much anyway and we simply can’t kill us all to save the Third Way frog, which isn’t turning into a prince ever.

    The aim must not be self-indulgent and self-sufficient: temporary tactics are possible, like the GreenLeft did in the Netherlands dwarfing the traditional left in the process, or Mélenchon with NUPES, which included the old socialists, or Podemos in Spain when it agreed to give birth to a transformative government from 2019 to 2023 before being usurped.

    But irrelevance is not tolerable, neither under a capitalistic umbrella nor under a hammer and sickle banner. And these must be fading exceptions, as old socialists must be the next left main targets, competitors, adversaries, in a crucial and radical rupture/departure from the new left’s habits of compromise.

    No compromise with capitalism. No flirting or allying with capitalism. Conflicting with capitalism. Only then you might have socialism next.

    Transideologic anti-class struggle: the new frontier in EU elections

    The process doesn’t necessarily have to be fast or slow, but less than six months from the next EU elections it seems naïve to say at least that it can be completed in time for the occasion: it can start, though. It actually already started, as we saw.

    It won’t be a post-ideological stance, let alone non-ideologic pose, but instead a trans-ideological anti-class struggle.

    After all, paradoxically, the class struggle did exist, but the elites, the 1%, won in a landslide and a landfill.

    The task of the next left will be more radical and more ambitious than ever: embracing the overturning of the historical paradigm and promoting an anti-class struggle, for not even only the 99%, but aiming for the 100, since inequalities are not only less and less tolerable, but more and more unsustainable.

    It must be for everyone on this planet. No-one is safe (and indeed, it’s healthier to feel threatened). We saw this when ‘Fortress Europe’ thought of raising the drawbridge and hoarding the Covid vaccines, but Omicron gained killing force thanks to this, and re-entered Europe not as an illegal immigrant but as a stronger than ever conquistador.

    Fortress Europe and its elitist coalition must be terrified of a new anti-capitalistic spectre haunting not only the next EU elections, but the next Europe for the time being.

    A next left that has to wage a peaceful, but fierce, democratic war on them. To build on their broken bones and bricks and shattered glass ceiling, justice and peace. Which, naturally, only comes after a conflict.

    Featured image via pxhere

    By David Tozzo

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Aotearoa New Zealand must ramp up pressure on Israel to abide by last month’s International Court of Justice ruling, writes John Minto.

    COMMENTARY: By John Minto

    In 2003, the International Court of Justice ruled that Israel’s “apartheid wall” being built through Palestinian territory was a violation of international law and should be dismantled. Israel ignored the ruling and more than 20 years later the wall remains a potent symbol of Israeli policies of segregation based on ethnicity.

    Last December, Israel was taken to the court again, this time by South Africa which argued Israel was committing genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza with genocidal talk from Israeli leaders and indiscriminate killing of civilians — more than 27,000 killed so far including more than 12,000 Palestinian children.

    The charge of genocide against Israel will take years to be heard and decided upon but in the meantime South Africa argued for the court to issue interim orders to require Israel to end its military operation and allow desperately needed humanitarian assistance to flow freely into Gaza.

    Last month, the ICJ gave an interim ruling and although it did not demand an immediate ceasefire, it agreed with South Africa’s case that there was evidence to suggest Israel had breached the Genocide Convention and requiring Israel to report back to the court within a month on the steps it was taking to protect Palestinian lives and their very existence in Gaza.

    Israel is now on probation. What happens in the coming weeks will determine whether Israel ends its killing spree in Gaza or shows the ICJ its middle finger as it did in 2003.

    Commentary on the ICJ decision indicates the huge moral weight the decision carries for Israel and its small coterie of supporters, including New Zealand, which has been complicit through its silence, to end the war on Gaza.

    The only way Israel will follow the ICJ ruling is if it comes under enough pressure from countries such as New Zealand.

    Strong demand or look away?
    Western countries have previously called on other countries to abide by ICJ rulings — such as the ruling which said Russia must end its war in Ukraine. Will we make the same strong demand of Israel or will we look the other way?

    So far New Zealand has been equivocal, Foreign Minister Winston Peters making a few obligatory tweets but nothing more. The contrast with how we dealt with Russia compared with Israel could not be clearer.

    The Foreign Minister’s stance seems more aimed to avoid difficult conversations with US representatives at diplomatic cocktail parties than pressure to end the killing of Palestinian children.

    With Israel’s history of ignoring international law, New Zealand must speak out in a principled, assertive way. The alternative is to be silent and for this country to suffer derision for such cowardly, obsequious behaviour.

    Already New Zealand is swimming against the tide of world opinion. We have refused to criticise the killing of Palestinian civilians by Israel despite loudly condemning the killing of Israeli civilians in the October 7 attack.

    We have also refused to condemn other war crimes such as the “collective punishment” of Palestinians through the withholding of food, water and other necessities of life. We haven’t even made an unequivocal call for an immediate, permanent ceasefire or called for an International Criminal Court investigation into war crimes on and after October 7.

    We did this for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, so why the reticence over the Middle East?

    The lines are drawn . . . “ceasefire now”
    The lines are drawn . . . the “ceasefire now” and “hands off Yemen” protest at Auckland’s Devonport Naval Base last Monday. Image: David Robie/APR

    NZ’s selective morality
    Our embarrassing history is one of selective morality. In 2014 when Israel launched a war on Gaza with similar mass killing of Palestinians, the John Key government called in the Israeli ambassador and made clear New Zealand’s expectations. The Christopher Luxon-led government has failed to take even this most rudimentary measure.

    The time for doing that is well past. We must indicate to Israel that its behaviour is morally and ethically reprehensible.

    The government should immediately close the Israeli embassy until Israel is in full compliance with the ICJ decision as well as the broader provisions of international law such as allowing Palestinian refugees the right to return to their land and homes in Palestine, ending the military occupation and ending Israel’s apartheid policies against Palestinians.

    Wringing our hands is not an option. It might be acceptable for the comfort of the Minister of Foreign Affairs but for Palestinians it means ongoing death and destruction.

    John Minto is the national chairman of Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) and contributes to Asia Pacific Report. This article was first published by the Otago Daily Times and is republished with the author’s permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • ANALYSIS: By Trita Parsi

    The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has ruled against Israel and determined that South Africa successfully argued that Israel’s conduct plausibly could constitute genocide. The court has imposed several injunctions against Israel and reminds Israel that its rulings are binding, according to international law.

    In its order, the court fell short of South Africa’s request for a ceasefire, but this ruling, however, is overwhelmingly in favour of South Africa’s case and will likely increase international pressure for a ceasefire as a result.

    On the question of whether Israel’s war in Gaza is genocide, that will still take more time, but today’s news will have significant political repercussions. Here are a few thoughts.

    This is a devastating blow to Israel’s global standing. To put it in context, Israel has worked ferociously for the last two decades to defeat the BDS movement — Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions — not because it will have a significant economic impact on Israel, but because of how it could delegitimiSe Israel internationally.

    However, the ruling of the ICJ that Israel is plausibly engaged in genocide is far more devastating to Israel’s legitimacy than anything BDS could have achieved.

    Just as much as Israel’s political system has been increasingly — and publicly — associated with apartheid in the past few years, Israel will now be similarly associated with the charge of genocide.

    As a result, those countries that have supported Israel and its military campaign in Gaza, such as the US under President Biden, will be associated with that charge, too.

    Significant implications for US
    The implications for the United States are significant. First because the court does not have the ability to implement its ruling.

    Instead, the matter will go to the UN Security Council, where the Biden administration will once again face the choice of protecting Israel politically by casting a veto, and by that, further isolate the United States, or allowing the Security Council to act and pay a domestic political cost for “not standing by Israel.”

    So far, the Biden administration has refused to say if it will respect ICJ’s decision. Of course, in previous cases in front of the ICJ, such as Myanmar, Ukraine and Syria, the US and Western states stressed that ICJ provisional measures are binding and must be fully implemented.

    The double standards of US foreign policy will hit a new low if, in this case, Biden not only argues against the ICJ, but actively acts to prevent and block the implementation of its ruling.

    It is perhaps not surprising that senior Biden administration officials have largely ceased using the term “rules-based order” since October 7.

    It also raises questions about how Biden’s policy of bear-hugging Israel may have contributed to Israel’s conduct.

    Biden could have offered more measured support and pushed back hard against Israeli excesses — and by that, prevented Israel from engaging in actions that could potentially fall under the category of genocide. But he didn’t.

    Unconditional support, zero criticism
    Instead, Biden offered unconditional support combined with zero public criticism of Israel’s conduct and only limited push-back behind the scenes. A different American approach could have shaped Israel’s war efforts in a manner that arguably would not have been preliminarily ruled by the ICJ as plausibly meeting the standards of genocide.

    This shows that America undermines its own interest as well as that of its partners when it offers them blank checks and complete and unquestionable protection. The absence of checks and balances that such protection offers fuels reckless behavior all around.

    As such, Biden’s unconditional support may have undermined Israel, in the final analysis.

    This ruling may also boost those arguing that all states that are party to the Genocide Convention have a positive obligation to prevent genocide. The Houthis, for instance, have justified their attacks against ships heading to Israeli ports in the Red Sea, citing this positive obligation.

    What legal implications will the court’s ruling have as a result on the US and UK’s military action against the Houthis?

    The implications for Europe will also be considerable. The US is rather accustomed to and comfortable with setting aside international law and ignoring international institutions. Europe is not.

    International law and institutions play a much more central role in European security thinking. The decision will continue to split Europe. But the fact that some key EU states will reject the ICJ’s ruling will profoundly contradict and undermine Europe’s broader security paradigm.

    Moderated war conduct
    One final point: The mere existence of South Africa’s application to the ICJ appears to have moderated Israel’s war conduct.

    Any plans to ethnically cleanse Gaza and send its residents to third countries appear to have been somewhat paused, presumably because of how such actions would boost South Africa’s application.

    If so, it shows that the court, in an era where the force of international law is increasingly questioned, has had a greater impact in terms of deterring unlawful Israeli actions than anything the Biden administration has done.

    Trita Parsi is the co-founder and executive vice-president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. First published at Responsible Statecraft.


    This content originally appeared on Asia Pacific Report and was authored by APR editor.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • If you live with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), know someone who does, or just happen to use social media, you cannot have missed the storm over the Acu Seeds product that appeared on Dragon’s Den. People are rightly furious. So, the Canary is supporting a campaign group to help people complain to Ofcom about the BBC.

    However, this story isn’t as straightforward as that. This is because at its heart, you have a decades-long drama of psychologisation, lies, fraud – and a society that has accepted all of this as truth.

    Acu Seeds x Dragon’s Den: what’s the problem?

    In short, Giselle Boxer was a entrepreneur on Dragon’s Den; the episode which aired on 18 January 2024. She was pitching ear seeds: an acupuncture-style treatment but without the needles. Boxer claimed that these, along with full acupuncture, diet, and Chinese medicine, helped cure her ME. Her story and the pitch ended up securing six dragons making offers. Boxer eventually went with Steven Bartlett.

    The corporate media initially lapped the story up – glamourising Boxer, her story, and her business. However, there was also an immediate backlash from people living with ME. Namely this was because there is no recognised cause, treatment, or cure for the illness.

    Moreover, the severity of ME means that ear seeds are highly unlikely to change it.

    ME: it literally kills people

    At its worst, ME – a a debilitating and poorly-treated chronic, systemic neuroimmune disease that affects every aspect of the patient’s life – has killed people in its severest form. As the Canary previously wrote:

    In 2021, Maeve Boothby O’Neill died from severe ME at the age of 27 after the NHS essentially let her starve to death. Doctors denied her a feeding tube, and later denied total parenteral nutrition, which likely would have saved her life. An inquest into Maeve’s situation is ongoing.

    ME’s main symptom is post-exertional malaise (PEM) – a severe worsening of other symptoms after any form of physical, mental, and/or emotional exertion. This can leave a patient bedbound for days, weeks, months, or sometime permanently worsen their health.

    Plus, people were angry as ear seeds are not a placebo-tested treatment, nor is there any research into their effect on ME. In short, many people said Boxer was selling snake oil.

    Yet despite all this, the BBC reportedly approached Boxer to go on the programme – and then allowed her to pitch without any caveats for the audience about her product or ME. Moreover, it’s now come out that a rival firm allegedly warned Dragon’s Den that Boxer wasn’t a trained acupuncture therapist. If this is true, then producers ignored the individual’s concerns.

    So, before getting into the detail of the story, what can people do right now over this?

    Complain to Ofcom in just a few clicks

    Well, campaign group the Chronic Collaboration is doing what used to be called a Twitter storm, on Wednesday 24 January at 8pm. Using the hashtag #DragonsDenConnedME, it wants people to tweet at @Ofcom, telling it to investigate the Dragon’s Den episode and why it must:

    Now, the Canary has got involved. We are supporting the Chronic Collaboration, and the ME community, to go one step further.

    Below, you can enter your details and send a pre-formatted complaint letter directly to Ofcom via email. There’s more information on this further down the article. Your details are secure, as per usual Canary GDPR practices. You can click in the “Read the Petition” box to read the email. Please make sure you fill in all the details. You will get a copy of the email:

    #DragonsDenConnedME: write to Ofcom to complain about Acu Seeds

    Acu Seeds appearance on Dragon\’s Den must be investigated by Ofcom

    To whom it may concern,

    I wish to formally complain about the episode of Dragon’s Den (series 21, episode 3) first aired on 18 January 2024. This is specifically relating to the pitch from Giselle Boxer and her Acu Seeds product as a treatment for myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome, CFS). I am doing this under Ofcom\’s \”Fairness and Privacy complaints on BBC broadcasting services and BBC on demand programme services\” guidelines, as reinforced by Ofcom’s “fairness code” set under section 107 of the Broadcasting Act 1996, and the BBC Charter and Agreement.

    I believe that the episode breached both the BBC\’s Editorial Guidelines and Ofcom\’s Broadcasting Code – on the latter, specifically around fairness.

    Please find below the following required information as set out in your guidelines (section 1, paragraph 14):

    Dragon\’s Den.

    8pm (2000), Thursday 18 January 2024.

    BBC One.

    I have not submitted a complaint to the BBC.

    The matter I am complaining about is not currently subject to legal proceedings.

    I am the person affected, as I live with the illness (referred to as ME/CFS in this document) discussed, and the programme has had a serious, distressing, and negative impact on me. As per the Broadcasting Act 1996 and your guidelines (section 1, paragraph 24), this means I am \”a person who, whether such a participant or not, had a direct interest in the subject-matter of that [unfair] treatment\”.

    My name, postal address, and email are at the bottom of this document.

    I understand and agree to the terms of your declaration as laid out on your website here.

    Specifically, I believe the programme firstly breached the following parts of the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines.

    One) section 3 “Accuracy”, subsection 3, paragraph 9 (“Reporting Statistics and Risk”). This states:

    The reporting of risk can have an impact on the public’s perception of that risk, particularly with health or crime stories. We should avoid worrying our audiences unduly and contextualise our reports to be clear about the likelihood of the risk occurring. This is particularly true in reporting health stories that may cause individuals to alter their behaviour in ways that could be harmful. We should consider the emotional impact pictures and personal testimony can have, particularly on perceptions of risk”.

    Episode 3 (series 21) of Dragon’s Den, specifically the Acu Seeds’ segment, would fall under these guidelines. The founder’s claims on the programme could encourage people living with ME/CFS to believe that Acu Seeds could treat or cure their illness – which may lead to psychological distress and potential health side effects (due to Acu Seeds not having been medically tested). Moreover, ME/CFS has no known cause, treatment, or cure – therefore Dragon’s Den promoting Acu Seeds as a treatment for it could cause individuals to alter their behaviour etc etc.

    Therefore, I believe this episode of Dragon’s Den breached the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines.

    Two) section 4 “Impartiality”, subsection 3, paragraph 26 (“Drama, Entertainment and Culture”). This states:

    The audience expects artists, writers and entertainers to have scope for individual expression in drama, entertainment and cultural output. The BBC is committed to offering it. Where this covers matters of public policy, political or industrial controversy, or other ‘controversial subjects’, services should consider reflecting a broad range of the available perspectives over time. Consideration should be given to the appropriate timeframe for reflecting those other perspectives and whether or not they need to be included in connected and/or signposted output taking account of the nature of the controversy and the subject matter. We should also consider whether any conflicts of interest may arise”.

    Further, in section 4, subsection 3, paragraph 4 a “controversial subject” is described as being:

    a matter of public policy or political or industrial controversy. It may also be a controversy within religion, science, finance, culture, ethics or any other matter”.

    Episode 3 (series 21) of Dragon’s Den, specifically the Acu Seeds’ segment, would fall under science as a controversial subject – therefore, section 4, subsection 3, paragraph 26 would therefore apply in this instance.

    ME/CFS is a controversial subject in science – as there is no agreed cause, treatment, or cure. The founder’s claims on the programme could lead the audience to believe there was a treatment and/or cure for ME/CFS when one currently does not exist. Dragon’s Den therefore should, as per section 4, subsection3, paragraph 26 of the editorial guidelines, given:

    Consideration… to the appropriate timeframe for reflecting those other perspectives [on ME/CFS] and whether or not they need to be included in connected and/or signposted output taking account of the nature of the controversy and the subject matter”.

    Therefore, I believe this episode of Dragon’s Den again breached the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines.

    Further to this, I also believe this episode of Dragon\’s Den breached Ofcom\’s Broadcasting Code.

    Section seven: Fairness, paragraph 10. This states:

    \”Programmes – such as dramas and factually-based dramas – should not portray facts, events, individuals or organisations in a way which is unfair to an individual or organisation\”.

    Dragon\’s Den, specifically the Acu Seeds segment, was grossly unfair to the majority of people living with ME – including myself, the \”Person Affected\”. It presented the product as a treatment for the illness, without offering any scientific proof, or counter-argument to its claims. Ergo, it is also arguable that Dragon\’s Den breached Section seven: Fairness, paragraph 9 of Ofcom\’s Broadcasting Code – as Acu Seeds was presented with omissions in terms of the lack of scientific and medical evidence surrounding them, therefore leading to unfairness for me, the \”Person Affected\”.

    Overall, the BBC should not be platforming untested treatments for a serious chronic illness factually on a light entertainment show. Would the corporation have allowed an entrepreneur to pitch Acu Seeds as a treatment for cancer? It is highly unlikely. Therefore, why did the production team of Dragon’s Den think it acceptable to platform the product for ME/CFS?

    I consider that the BBC must put out an immediate apology for including Acu Seeds in the programme and include within this a statement explaining that ME/CFS has no known cause, treatment, or cure – and therefore it was irresponsible for the show, and Acu Seeds, to give an impression to the contrary.

    %%your signature%%

    35 signatures

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    So, Acu Seeds has caused a storm. Yet it’s not really Boxer who is at fault, here.

    Don’t shoot the Acu Seeds messenger

    We live in a (capitalist) society that encourages the individual to prioritise their own wants and desires over our collective wellbeing as a species. So, on that basis who wouldn’t flog some bits of tat with a five-day shelf life on the internet for a 900% profit margin? Boxer is – buying the Acu Seeds for £3 and selling them for £30.

    Moreover, some of the discourse we’re seeing online about Boxer is uncomfortable, at best.

    A stranger on social media does not have the right to question whether someone’s illness was or is genuine – nor question the decisions they make about their health. To call Boxer a con-artist, for example, lowers yourself to the same level as the psych lobby (Simon Wessely et al) who helped foment the notions of modern-day malingering in the first place.

    Boxer clearly was unwell. We should not be debating that – as we need to do better.

    Moreover, chronically ill people ripping into other chronically ill people without substantial evidence is just playing into the hands of the forces that would seek to divide us – like the aforementioned psych lobby. We’ve seen it before, with the Sickness and Lies documentary. All witch hunting does is end up making everyone witches; all targets for a good dunking or the fiery stake.

    By all means we should question her product, her company/commercial ethics, and her business practices. However, Boxer personally is not the target, here.

    The BBC: in the thick of it, as always

    The blame for this particularly horrific episode lies solely with the BBC.

    It should not have invited nor allowed Boxer on the show at all – given she was selling Acu Seeds under the guise of them “aiding [a person’s] recovery [from ME] in 12 months” (her words). To say that this is irresponsible would be an understatement.

    The BBC‘s Editorial Guidelines state:

    The reporting of risk can have an impact on the public’s perception of that risk, particularly with health or crime stories… This is particularly true in reporting health stories that may cause individuals to alter their behaviour in ways that could be harmful. We should consider the emotional impact pictures and personal testimony can have, particularly on perceptions of risk.

    This is the Dragon’s Den/Acu Seeds debacle in a nutshell. Boxer’s claims on the programme could encourage people living with ME, their friends, and their family, to believe that Acu Seeds could treat or cure their illness. This may lead to severe psychological distress (when Acu Seeds don’t work) and potential health side effects (due to Acu Seeds not having been medically tested).

    It seems unfathomable that the BBC let Boxer and Acu Seeds on. Would it have allowed an entrepreneur to pitch Acu Seeds as a treatment for cancer? For dementia? It is highly unlikely. Yet after the episode, the resulting chaos was equally unfathomable.

    The fallout: round in circles we go

    The fallout from the episode has been predictably painful to watch, as well. It goes something like this:

    1. Corporate media/government/institution betrays, smears, and undermines chronically ill and disabled people.
    2. Corporate media (not involved in point one) fail to spot this.
    3. Chronically ill and disabled people campaign on social media for days to try and control the narrative.
    4. Charities finally stop navel-gazing and issue a half-arsed press release.
    5. Said press release isn’t up to the job, and the corporate media that do pay attention to it flunk the story – calling ME, for example, “extreme tiredness”, failing to say it kills people etc.
    6. Narrative is still out of control.
    7. Chronically ill and disabled people thank said charities, as they know their limp response is as good as it’s going to get.
    8. Chronically ill and disabled people wait for the next scandal.
    9. Go back to point one and start the process again.

    Bored of this yet? You’d be right to be.

    Charities and corporate media: the worst kind of bedfellows

    For example, yes the major ME charities sent out a press release – but it was one that followed a PR/comms template from circa 2015. That is – it clearly left journalists with no knowledge of ME to write the story, with the actual press release being mostly just commentary around the programme and its consequences – hence “extreme tiredness” lifted from the NHS website.

    When ME is systematically misrepresented in the media, charities should be on point when they interact with journalists. Any press release needs to be a ready-to-go article that includes the definition of ME, correct descriptions of symptoms, commentary about severe ME and how it kills people, and so on – all with links to research to back up these claims.

    As journalists, the Canary knows that if we got that kind of press release then we’d print most of it verbatim – ergo the narrative around ME in the article would be correct for the community.

    In 2024, when many journalists are now ‘churnalists’, content is driven by SEO requirements, and AI is infiltrating newsrooms – anything less than a press release that is actually a pre-made, fully formatted article is going to cause problems for the people it’s supposed to represent.

    The charities should know this – if they bothered to get their heads out of the 2010s. Seemingly, they don’t, as one charity admitted on Facebook. Yet still, they beg people for money and patients are supposed to be grateful for their advocacy. It would be hilarious – if it wasn’t so pathetic.

    What to do about Acu Seeds, Dragon’s Den, and the BBC?

    Unfortunately, so far what needs to happen hasn’t. That it, the BBC has not issued an apology, held itself accountable for its dire error of judgement, nor put out a prominent statement explaining that Acu Seeds will in no way work as a treatment for ME.

    There might be a way to force the broadcaster to do that.

    What we can do immediately – after the Chronic Collaboration did some digging in legislation from 1996 – is complain directly to Ofcom. Hand-wringing statements from charities and weak corporate media coverage won’t hold the BBC to account. Only Ofcom can do that.

    Ofcom’s website makes out you can’t complain directly to it about the BBC – you have to complain to it, first, and then got to Ofcom. However, that is not strictly true. The regulator’s rules (buried in guidance) around fairness and privacy complaints about the BBC create a loophole to circumvent this – which is what the Chronic Collaboration has done.

    So, here once again is the email you can send to the broadcasting regulator making a formal complaint about the Acu Seeds episode of Dragon’s Den.

    #DragonsDenConnedME: write to Ofcom to complain about Acu Seeds

    Acu Seeds appearance on Dragon\’s Den must be investigated by Ofcom

    To whom it may concern,

    I wish to formally complain about the episode of Dragon’s Den (series 21, episode 3) first aired on 18 January 2024. This is specifically relating to the pitch from Giselle Boxer and her Acu Seeds product as a treatment for myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome, CFS). I am doing this under Ofcom\’s \”Fairness and Privacy complaints on BBC broadcasting services and BBC on demand programme services\” guidelines, as reinforced by Ofcom’s “fairness code” set under section 107 of the Broadcasting Act 1996, and the BBC Charter and Agreement.

    I believe that the episode breached both the BBC\’s Editorial Guidelines and Ofcom\’s Broadcasting Code – on the latter, specifically around fairness.

    Please find below the following required information as set out in your guidelines (section 1, paragraph 14):

    Dragon\’s Den.

    8pm (2000), Thursday 18 January 2024.

    BBC One.

    I have not submitted a complaint to the BBC.

    The matter I am complaining about is not currently subject to legal proceedings.

    I am the person affected, as I live with the illness (referred to as ME/CFS in this document) discussed, and the programme has had a serious, distressing, and negative impact on me. As per the Broadcasting Act 1996 and your guidelines (section 1, paragraph 24), this means I am \”a person who, whether such a participant or not, had a direct interest in the subject-matter of that [unfair] treatment\”.

    My name, postal address, and email are at the bottom of this document.

    I understand and agree to the terms of your declaration as laid out on your website here.

    Specifically, I believe the programme firstly breached the following parts of the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines.

    One) section 3 “Accuracy”, subsection 3, paragraph 9 (“Reporting Statistics and Risk”). This states:

    The reporting of risk can have an impact on the public’s perception of that risk, particularly with health or crime stories. We should avoid worrying our audiences unduly and contextualise our reports to be clear about the likelihood of the risk occurring. This is particularly true in reporting health stories that may cause individuals to alter their behaviour in ways that could be harmful. We should consider the emotional impact pictures and personal testimony can have, particularly on perceptions of risk”.

    Episode 3 (series 21) of Dragon’s Den, specifically the Acu Seeds’ segment, would fall under these guidelines. The founder’s claims on the programme could encourage people living with ME/CFS to believe that Acu Seeds could treat or cure their illness – which may lead to psychological distress and potential health side effects (due to Acu Seeds not having been medically tested). Moreover, ME/CFS has no known cause, treatment, or cure – therefore Dragon’s Den promoting Acu Seeds as a treatment for it could cause individuals to alter their behaviour etc etc.

    Therefore, I believe this episode of Dragon’s Den breached the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines.

    Two) section 4 “Impartiality”, subsection 3, paragraph 26 (“Drama, Entertainment and Culture”). This states:

    The audience expects artists, writers and entertainers to have scope for individual expression in drama, entertainment and cultural output. The BBC is committed to offering it. Where this covers matters of public policy, political or industrial controversy, or other ‘controversial subjects’, services should consider reflecting a broad range of the available perspectives over time. Consideration should be given to the appropriate timeframe for reflecting those other perspectives and whether or not they need to be included in connected and/or signposted output taking account of the nature of the controversy and the subject matter. We should also consider whether any conflicts of interest may arise”.

    Further, in section 4, subsection 3, paragraph 4 a “controversial subject” is described as being:

    a matter of public policy or political or industrial controversy. It may also be a controversy within religion, science, finance, culture, ethics or any other matter”.

    Episode 3 (series 21) of Dragon’s Den, specifically the Acu Seeds’ segment, would fall under science as a controversial subject – therefore, section 4, subsection 3, paragraph 26 would therefore apply in this instance.

    ME/CFS is a controversial subject in science – as there is no agreed cause, treatment, or cure. The founder’s claims on the programme could lead the audience to believe there was a treatment and/or cure for ME/CFS when one currently does not exist. Dragon’s Den therefore should, as per section 4, subsection3, paragraph 26 of the editorial guidelines, given:

    Consideration… to the appropriate timeframe for reflecting those other perspectives [on ME/CFS] and whether or not they need to be included in connected and/or signposted output taking account of the nature of the controversy and the subject matter”.

    Therefore, I believe this episode of Dragon’s Den again breached the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines.

    Further to this, I also believe this episode of Dragon\’s Den breached Ofcom\’s Broadcasting Code.

    Section seven: Fairness, paragraph 10. This states:

    \”Programmes – such as dramas and factually-based dramas – should not portray facts, events, individuals or organisations in a way which is unfair to an individual or organisation\”.

    Dragon\’s Den, specifically the Acu Seeds segment, was grossly unfair to the majority of people living with ME – including myself, the \”Person Affected\”. It presented the product as a treatment for the illness, without offering any scientific proof, or counter-argument to its claims. Ergo, it is also arguable that Dragon\’s Den breached Section seven: Fairness, paragraph 9 of Ofcom\’s Broadcasting Code – as Acu Seeds was presented with omissions in terms of the lack of scientific and medical evidence surrounding them, therefore leading to unfairness for me, the \”Person Affected\”.

    Overall, the BBC should not be platforming untested treatments for a serious chronic illness factually on a light entertainment show. Would the corporation have allowed an entrepreneur to pitch Acu Seeds as a treatment for cancer? It is highly unlikely. Therefore, why did the production team of Dragon’s Den think it acceptable to platform the product for ME/CFS?

    I consider that the BBC must put out an immediate apology for including Acu Seeds in the programme and include within this a statement explaining that ME/CFS has no known cause, treatment, or cure – and therefore it was irresponsible for the show, and Acu Seeds, to give an impression to the contrary.

    %%your signature%%

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    Blame the organ grinders, not the monkey

    However, none of this gets to the root of the problem either. This is because, ultimately, a group of producers at the BBC knew so little about ME (and therefore by association other illnesses like long Covid), that they didn’t see the problem with Acu Seeds in the first place.

    So, we’re back to that enduring question: who are the real villains in this saga? As with Boris Johnson’s long Covid “bollocks” scandal, it’s the people who have psychologised physical health in the first place.

    As the Canary previously wrote, the idea that a physical illness can actually have a psychological cause (‘all in people’s heads’) has seeped into society’s consciousness. The notorious PACE trial – a fraudulent study which claimed exercise and talking therapy could cure ME (they can’t) – was one part of this. However, the psychologisation of physical illness runs far deeper than just that alone.

    When will ME stop being ‘all in people’s heads’?

    From ME to Gulf War syndrome and now via long Covid, psychiatrists have actively fomented this belief – and the mud has stuck. The Acu Seeds scandal has been another example of just how a falsehood can be fed to society as the truth – and society dutifully believes it.

    The BBC platformed Boxer because producers didn’t even see the problem – because ME is ‘all in people’s heads’. The corporate media initially praised Acu Seeds – because ME is ‘all in people’s heads’. Then, that same media called ME “extreme tiredness” – because… you know what comes next.

    Until the idea that illness can be ‘all in people’s heads’ is consigned to the dustbin of medical history, then we have to keep fighting back every time it rears its ugly head. With Acu Seeds, this is making sure the BBC is held to account – sadly, until the next time ME is stigmatised and delegitimised, and patients are thrown under the bus.

    Featured image via BBC iPlayer

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Israel’s barbaric appetite for killing knows no bounds – its genocidal mission continues to escalate in intensity as its stomach is stretched ever deeper, its pangs of murderous hunger induced by the war mongering of Western imperialism. As Israel’s siege on Gaza is prolonged and intensified, the rate and quantity of their emissions grow too.

    To understand the very real implications of war and militarism on climate, as well as the ways in which militarism, conflict, and conquest are situated at the very core of the climate crisis, then we must turn our gaze to the colonial and post-colonial world.

    Here we must assess the deliberate undoing of the natural world alongside the primitive accumulation and brutality which has ushered in the capitalocene– an era of turmoil, uncertainty and impending doom brought about by the capitalist mode of production and its creation and reproduction of the conditions which threaten the existence of all life on this planet.

    Gaza: a mediaeval siege and the climate catastrophe

    As an enduring project of European settler colonialism and as the front on which Western imperialism, and US imperialism in particular, is showing its ugly teeth at this current moment – it is fitting that we begin this analysis with our gaze locked on Gaza and the rest of occupied Palestine.

    We have all seen the nightmarish brutality of Israel’s mediaeval siege on Gaza – involving the relentless and indiscriminate bombing of the strip, the implementation of a harsh blockade of supplies and aid – including food, water, fuel and medical supplies, and the deployment of thousands of occupation soldiers.

    The human cost of this genocidal onslaught is already unconscionable – it is both nauseating and infuriating. Added to our collective feelings of gloom in this moment is the lasting and widespread environmental cost of Israel’s attack.

    Globally, communities across the Global South are already reeling, and have been for decades, from the climate impacts of militarised imperial aggression. Israel’s contribution to this, both historically and in the current moment, are worthy of condemnation.

    Fuelling emissions via the war machine

    In a recent article published by the Guardian, it is reported that in the first 60 days of the siege alone (now stretching into its fifth month) – the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) emitted over 281,000 metric tons of carbon – which is already far higher than the annual emissions of many countries in the Global South.

    This is a conservative underestimation and does not account for the emissions of the entire industrial supply chain which feeds the Israeli death machine. Many experts place their estimations far higher.

    These figures should shock all of us, especially at a time when the world so desperately needs to reduce emissions and align its priorities with the needs of ordinary people if it is to avoid the worst of the unfolding climate disaster.

    Beyond the emissions of the military apparatus and machinery itself, the actual bombing and destruction of infrastructure, coupled with the ground invasion and displacement of about 85% of the population in Gaza, has resulted in the complete disruption of normal life.

    Destroying life in Gaza

    Where infrastructure has not been destroyed as a direct result of the shelling and bombing, the deliberate unravelling of Gaza’s social fabric has led to the collapse of waste management systems including water treatment, water pumps, sanitation, and desalination facilities. This has resulted in sewage flowing through the streets, seeping into the land and flowing into the sea – spreading water borne illnesses like typhoid, cholera and hepatitis while obviously having a devastating impact on ocean ecosystems.

    Added to this of course, is the destruction of tens of thousands of buildings in Gaza – with the strip levelled almost entirely to a landscape of debris. This, alongside the usage of chemical weapons such as white phosphorus, has been incredibly polluting of both the air and water and has created a toxic environment that all Gazans are unavoidably exposed to. The carbon cost of rebuilding would also be immense.

    To make matters worse, it’s been reported that since 1967 the Israeli occupation forces and settler militias have illegally uprooted more than 800 thousand olive trees across occupied Palestinian territories. These olive trees are not only a sacred part of land-stewardship practices but are also a vital carbon sink.

    Each olive tree plays a role in absorbing CO², in preventing soil erosion, and of course in bolstering food security. This sort of damage to Palestinian land is further compounded by Israeli bans on imports of things like steel pipes – which are vital for wastewater treatment. The lack of this sort of infrastructure has meant that huge amounts of sewerage has been seeping into the Mediterranean for many years already.

    A deliberate manufacturing of frontlines

    There are many many more examples that can be drawn out here – the important point however, is to assert that the environmental crisis which can be observed across occupied Palestine is a crisis that has been deliberately manufactured by the machinery of war. Likewise, the Palestinian people are a people who find themselves incredibly vulnerable to the worsening crisis of climate precisely because of the war that Israel has waged on them.

    Their ability to mitigate and to develop mechanisms to offset the worst impacts of the climate crisis have been completely and deliberately undermined while the resources and infrastructure they would need to meet the crisis have, in very real terms, either been destroyed or stolen – as part of a calculated attempt to eradicate the Palestinian people and erase their culture, their knowledge, their land, and their history.

    Palestinians in Gaza and across the occupied territories have not aimlessly wandered and found themselves, by some act of random chance, to be in what we would call ‘frontline communities’.

    They are not simply living as vulnerable people who stand to face the worst impacts of the climate crisis just because they happen to be on the frontlines.

    No, the frontlines themselves have been manufactured – the Palestinian people have been made to live on the frontlines – their conditions have been imposed onto them by their oppressor.

    This is an important distinction to make when we draw out the links between war, imperialism, conflict, and conquest – and the realities of climate collapse. In many ways, what we have described in Palestine resonates with the reality of the broader colonial and postcolonial world.

    Colonialism and post-colonialism and the climate crisis

    We often talk about how the climate crisis stands to impact the poorest, most vulnerable and most marginalised members of our global society – specifically those in the Global South and in Diaspora communities. Indeed, it is true that those who contributed the least will suffer the most.

    What we must never fail to forget however is the fact that the most vulnerable and marginalised people are not simply the most vulnerable and marginalised by some sort of innate natural phenomenon- they were not destined to be vulnerable. The position that they find themselves in is one that has been imposed onto them by the design, calculated implementation, and methodical reinforcement of oppression.

    The colonial systems and methodologies of exploitation, extraction, oppression, subjugation, and violence which destroyed Indigenous societies, enslaved and murdered millions of people, and entrenched the lasting legacies of inequality, exclusion, poverty, violence, and strife are the very same systems and methodologies which have destroyed ecosystems across the Global South in pursuit of profit through the extraction of fossil fuels and other natural resources which have been used historically, and up until now, to spur the economic and military might of empire.

    The Democratic Republic of the Congo

    Take the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Here you have a stark example of how colonial conquest and extraction has profoundly shaped the historical and contemporary landscape and trajectory of an entire country and people. Under colonial Belgium the Indigenous People of what was then the Belgian Congo were subjected to what is arguably one of the most brutal and deadly systems of oppression that has ever existed.

    This violent oppression at the hands of King Leopold II, which saw up to 10 million people killed, was committed in order to extract the country’s natural wealth and exploit the slave labour of the Indigenous People. It is to this primitive accumulation, which was occurring across the African continent and colonised world, that the relative stability and comfort of many societies across the global north today can be credited. All the while over 25 and a half million people in the DRC are experiencing emergency levels of food insecurity.

    Their hardship and strife in the world today is not merely a lasting legacy of what some (at least those who seek to erase their sins alongside the erasure of history) may describe as a distant colonial past. Nor is it, as liberals love to argue, a result of weak institutions and poor governance. It is an ongoing crisis of colonialism and imperialism which has expressed itself through the deliberate and calculated destabilisation of the post-colonial DRC.

    A calculated destabilisation

    This calculated destabilisation is evidenced in the murder of Patrice Lamumba – which many decolonial and liberation thinkers attribute to Belgium’s desire to protect their mining interests after the collapse of their direct colonial rule and America’s fear that the spread of opposition to their global hegemony would present a challenge to the violent capitalist system in which their dominance is rooted. From the time of his murder, until today, the greedy hand of empire has not let loose its evil grip on the Congo. It remains as violent and unrelenting as ever – no matter how civilised and measured it may opt to present itself.

    It is within this “post-colonial” context that the DRC remains in shackles – a playground for imperial interests – where multinational corporations fund and fuel conflict in order to maintain access and control over resources while ensuring the people remain desperate enough to give their labour to warlords and corporations for a pittance.

    Even the so-called peace-keeping forces deployed to the DRC are there primarily to protect the interests of mining capital. We see the same situation in Mozambique, where the gas interests of Total and others are protected with the might of state militaries and private mercenary armies alike.

    Inseparable issues

    Again, there is a lot more that can be said – and many more examples that can be made from across the African continent and the global south and diaspora communities. Without needing to expound on them all in significant detail, the common feature is found in the fact that militarism and war, and more specifically the violence of oppressive powers, are inseparable from the crisis of climate.

    Not only do they contribute enormously to the worsening of climate collapse through their emissions, but of course increased militarisation is used to protect the interests of fossil fuel corporations. Likewise, wars and conquests – from the colonial period and through to our current moment – are often undertaken with the expressed or hidden intention of securing natural resources and especially fossil fuels. I mean, all you need to do is look at the Iraq war and how it was hugely incentivised by the US’s oil interests.

    What becomes important in our perspectives here then, is to always remind ourselves of the centrality of the military machinery of oppression in any analysis we might make in relation to the disproportionate burdens and impacts of the climate crisis and the manufactured conditions of the frontline communities that we centre in our pursuit of climate justice.

    No climate justice without liberation

    In recognition of this, and with full acknowledgement that the root causes of the climate crisis are intrinsically linked to the historical injustices wrought by colonial powers, we must assert in the clearest possible terms that climate justice, in its truest form, cannot be realised without the comprehensive and radical liberation from the enduring shackles of colonialism and imperialism.

    Achieving climate justice then necessarily requires that we work to dismantle all oppressive structures, systems, and logics. In this current moment, that requires the entirety of the climate justice movement to pledge its undying support to the cause of Palestinian liberation and to further commit itself to the liberation of all oppressed peoples. Only then can we pave the way for a just and sustainable future – one where environmental well-being is inseparable from social and economic justice.

    At its core, our struggle for climate justice is a fight to dismantle all from all forms of exploitation and oppression. It is a banner under which to rally the marginalised and oppressed toward the freedom of all peoples and the construction of a world that is entirely and fundamentally just in every sense of the word.

    Featured image via Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images/Sipa USA

    By Zaki Mamdoo

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • ANALYSIS: By Tess Newton Cain

    As the new year gets underway, now is the time to look ahead to what will be significant in the Pacific islands region. Chances are this part of the world will continue to be a focus for the media and commentariat who will view what happens through their own lenses.

    However, more now than ever, it is imperative to see the events of the Pacific in their context, with the nuance that allows for them to be more fully understood.

    The Pacific will play a small part in the year in which more than half of the global population will go to the polls. We have already seen Dr Hilda Heine sworn in as the 10th President of Marshall Islands following elections late last year.

    Next cab off the rank is Tuvalu, with voting to take place at the end of January. Of particular interest here is how, if at all, a change of government might affect the future of the Falepili Union with Australia that was signed in November 2023.

    Perhaps most closely watched will be the elections in Solomon Islands, scheduled to take place in April. The Sogavare government is now in caretaker mode, but a date for the polls is yet to be announced.

    These are the first general elections since the controversial “switch” in 2019 which saw diplomatic relations between Solomon Islands and Taiwan come to an end and China established as a leading development and security partner for Sogavare’s government.

    It is hard to know how significant this switch will be for voters more than three years down the track. Sogavare can point to last year’s Pacific Games as a stellar achievement for his government and one in which the support of China was key.

    Largely irrelevant outside Honiara
    But this is unlikely to have much resonance for those Solomon Islanders who live outside Honiara and for whom the games were largely irrelevant.

    Other Pacific island countries holding elections this year are Palau (November) and Kiribati (date to be confirmed).

    In addition, Vanuatu is expected to hold its first-ever referendum on proposed constitutional changes intended to address chronic political instability.

    The issue of security will continue to be vexed in 2024 in the Pacific islands region. As we have seen in recent years, narratives around climate change and those centred on “traditional” security concerns will become increasingly enmeshed.

    The apparent acceptance of the significance of climate change as a security threat by partners such as the US is no doubt welcome. However, it is not enough to assuage concern among those who warn against the increased militarisation of the region.

    Preliminary findings from the Rules of Engagement project led by Associate Professor Anna Powles and I show that “defence diplomacy” has become an important aspect of international engagement with Pacific island countries. We can expect this to continue throughout this year.

    We need to understand better the extent to which these engagements add to feelings of security and safety in Pacific communities and how, if at all, they influence how Pacific people feel about the relationships between their countries and their international partners.

    Internal security threats
    As we have seen already this year, internal security threats will be front of mind in Papua New Guinea, and likely elsewhere in the region. Given the mix of cost-of-living pressures, political instability, and a febrile (social) media environment fuelled by rumour and counter-rumour, maintaining social cohesion will become increasingly challenging.

    With globalisation in retreat and geopolitical competition on the rise, there is every reason to expect that the high tempo of international strategic engagement with Pacific policymakers, businesses, civil society leaders, and communities will continue throughout 2024.

    While this provides numerous opportunities to secure resources for development and other initiatives, it can also create a serious burden in terms of transaction costs, particularly for small resource-constrained administrations.

    Last year, the government of Solomon Islands announced that it would have a “block out” period during which senior officials are unavailable to meet with visiting delegations. This is an approach that could be beneficial for other countries to preserve valuable time for budget preparation or key policy work.

    At the regional level, the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) is still in the process of determining how best to manage the increased attention the organisation is receiving from countries that want to become dialogue partners. There are currently six applications awaiting consideration (Denmark, Ecuador, Israel, Portugal, Saudi Arabia and Ukraine).

    Last year at the PIF Leaders Meeting it was made clear that the ongoing review of regional architecture includes a refreshed framework for engagement with dialogue partners — one that is led and driven by Pacific priorities.

    In conclusion, 2024 holds both challenges and opportunities for the Pacific islands region. With elections, security concerns, and regionalism on the agenda, policymakers, businesses, civil society leaders, and communities must work together to tackle these issues.

    Tess Newton Cain is the project lead for the Pacific Hub at the Griffith Asia Institute and is an associate of the Development Policy Centre. The author’s Pacific Predictions have been produced annually since 2012. Republished under a Creative Commons licence.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • From the outside, it is usually said that Catalonia and Spain should negotiate to find a way to continue together. But from Catalonia we have tried many times, since Spain subjugated Catalonia by force in 1714, and we have come to the conviction that there is no possible understanding and that the only solution is for everyone to go their own way.

    However, now there might be a cataclysmic shift on the horizon – thanks to politician’s desperation for pro-independence votes.

    Catalonia: the independence movement

    After General Franco’s 40 years of dictatorship, the international situation forced a transition to a system that is democratic – as long as the unity of Spain is not questioned. However, that has been translated into the alternation of two parties in government: the Popular Party (PP) founded by seven former Franco ministers, and the PSOE, a social democratic party but as nationalist as the PP.

    In 2004, Catalonia made a last attempt with a new statute to find a way to recognise Catalonia as a nation within the Spanish state. However, the PP, the PSOE, and the Constitutional Court cut back the statute until it became clear that Spain does not want to favour plurinationality or recognise Catalonia, but that its nationalism seeks the opposite path: to dilute Catalonia in order to homogenise Spain.

    That is why, in 2010, a powerful movement for the independence of Catalonia arose. It has organised the largest demonstrations in Europe, year after year, until today – and in the absence of dialogue, a referendum was even self-organised in 2017.

    The reaction, both from the PP government and later from the PSOE government, has been repression with a combined action by judges, the police, the secret services, and the entire political and media network. Very serious things have been done against Catalonia, and we hope that they will now come to light and will not be discredited as in the past.

    Electioneering – but with potential positive results?

    This could become possible – because there has been a big change due to the election result last July. The PP won, but did not have a majority to form a government with the extreme right. So, its adversary the PSOE could form a government if it received the support of the other parties.

    Then, the pro-independence supporters of Junts (Carles Puigdemont’s party) demanded an amnesty for those persecuted by the justice system and negotiations in Geneva, with an international mediator, to address the right to self-determination. Pedro Sánchez’s great lust for power has led the PSOE to accept conditions that are diametrically opposed to what it had defended until now.

    Puigdemont had also set another “small” condition: to create three parliamentary commissions:

    • One to investigate Operation Catalonia – a clandestine operation by the secret services, police, and judges to destroy the Catalan independence movement by inventing false evidence, accusing corruption, bribery and so on.
    • Another one on the jihadist attacks in Barcelona in 2017 – to investigate how the Spanish police had the head of the jihadist group on their payroll, why didn’t they prevent the attack if they were spying on the terrorists’ phones, and why they didn’t warn the Catalan police.
    • A final one on illegal spying with the Israeli software Pegasus. The Canadian university centre Citizen Lab discovered that at least 67 phones of pro-independence politicians, activists, and lawyers had been spied on with this illegal software.

    In order to justify these commissions of enquiry, the PSOE has had to admit that there has been “lawfare” (dirty war using the justice system to destroy political opponents) against Catalan independence – something it had denied until now.

    Spain’s establishment: up in arms

    This has set off alarm bells within the right-wing parties and the judiciary. Until now, the pro-independence movement denounced these lawfare practices, but in Spain it was said that they were lies. So, the pro-independence movement was criminalised by inventing stories that were disseminated with great media power.

    That is why Spanish citizens are reacting with astonishment, disbelief, and anger at the fact that they are making a pact with those they had been told were coup-plotters and terrorists.

    The PSOE has recognised the “lawfare”, because it wants the support of the independence movement. Obviously, it would not have done so if it were not true. Predictably, the General Council of the Judiciary, the judges of the Supreme Court, and the corporate bodies of the judges have come out in a whirlwind to criticise the fact that they want to investigate them and that they are summoned to testify in parliament.

    They have even asked for the disqualification and conviction of the deputy Míriam Nogueras who, in the Spanish Congress, pointed out the magistrates, according to her, most involved in the “lawfare”: Carlos Lesmes, Manuel Marchena, Pablo Llarena, and Carmen Lamela.

    Until now they had had impunity to do and undo in everything that went against Catalonia’s independence. However, now they feel that this impunity could end and they are exposed. They believed that, because they are judges, they could not be prosecuted – and they refuse to be held accountable.

    Catalonia: the truth will come out

    We do not know how far Sanchez will go because of his need for pro-independence votes, but at last there is a juncture that makes the truth of what has happened in Spain emerge.

    Europe should be attentive and not succumb to the temptation to cover it up or justify it to help an EU member. On the contrary – it should help to clarify the truth and press for Catalonia to be able to exercise the right to self-determination that it deserves.

    The truth and a straight and democratic action will also help Europe.

    Featured image via redoxkun – Wikimedia

    By Jordi Oriola Folch

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • ANALYSIS: By Samer Jaber

    For two months now, the United States and other Western countries backing Israel have been talking about “the day after” in Gaza. They have rejected Israeli assertions that the Israeli army will remain in control of the Strip and pointed to the Palestinian Authority (PA) as their preferred political actor to take over governance once the war is over.

    In so doing, the US and its allies have paid little regard to what the Palestinian people want. The current leadership of the PA lost the last democratic elections held in the occupied Palestinian territory in 2006 to Hamas and since then, it has steadily lost popularity.

    In a recent public opinion poll by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PSR), some 90 percent of respondents were in favour of the resignation of PA President Mahmoud Abbas, and 60 percent called for the dismantling of the PA itself.

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas . . . low public trust in the PA, but there is a reason why the US insists on supporting its takeover of Gaza. Image: Al Jazeera

    Washington is undoubtedly aware of the low public trust in the PA, but there is a reason why it insists on supporting its takeover of Gaza: its leadership has been a reliable partner for decades in maintaining a status quo in the interests of Israel.

    The US would like that arrangement to continue, so its backing for the PA may be accompanied by an attempt to revamp it in order to solve its legitimacy problem. But even if this effort succeeds, it is unlikely the new iteration of the PA would be sustainable.

    A reliable partner
    Perhaps one of the main factors that has convinced the US that the PA is a “good choice” for post-war governance in Gaza is its anti-Hamas stance and willingness to conduct security coordination with Israel.

    Since the Israel’s war on Gaza began on October 7, the PA and its leadership have not issued an official statement offering explicit political support for the Palestinian resistance. Their rhetoric has predominantly focused on condemning and disapproving of attacks on civilians on both sides, while also rejecting the expulsion of Palestinians from their homeland.

    In a political address on the ninth day of the war, Abbas criticised Hamas, asserting that their actions did not represent the Palestinian people. He emphasised that the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) is the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and underscored the importance of peaceful resistance as the only legitimate means to oppose Israeli occupation.

    This statement was later retracted by his office.

    In December, Hussein al-Sheikh, a PA official and secretary-general of the executive committee of the PLO, also criticised Hamas in an interview with Reuters. He suggested its armed resistance “method and approach” has failed and led to many casualties among the civilian population.

    The stance of the PA is consistent with its own narrow political and economic interests which have come at the expense of the Palestinian national cause. It has systematically and brutally stamped out any opposition and any support for other factions, including Hamas, in order to maintain its rule over West Bank cities while Israel continues with its brutal occupation and dispossession of the Palestinian people.

    In Israel’s war on Gaza in 2008–2009, the PA leadership hoped to regain administrative control of Gaza with assistance from Israel. During that conflict, the PA prohibited any activities in the West Bank in support of Gaza and threatened to arrest participants.

    I, myself, faced harassment and the threat of arrest for attempting to join a demonstration against the war. Similar positions were adopted by the PA, albeit with less aggressive measures, in subsequent Israeli assaults on Gaza, as its leadership came to recognise that Hamas was unlikely to relinquish its control over the Strip.

    Since October 7, the PA has taken a bolder stance, marked by more aggressive actions. Its security forces have suppressed demonstrations and marches held in support of Gaza, resorting to shooting live ammunition at participants. Additionally, the PA has recently detained individuals expressing support for the Palestinian resistance.

    While cracking down on Palestinian protests, the PA has done nothing to protect its people from attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinian communities, which have resulted in deaths, injuries and the displacement of hundreds of people in the occupied West Bank.

    Additionally, the Israeli army has intensified its raids in the PA-administered areas, leading to the arrest of thousands and the killing of hundreds of Palestinians, with no reaction from the PA.

    The PA’s inability to offer basic protection has added to the deterioration of its legitimacy among Palestinians. Furthermore, by taking a stance against the Palestinian resistance and aligning itself with Israel and the US, the PA is only further undermining its own legitimacy.

    Palestine Authority – PA 1.0
    Washington is aware of the growing unpopularity of the PA and its leadership among Palestinians but it is not giving up on it because it seems to believe that that can be fixed. That is because the US has tried to revamp the authority before as it has always faced problems with legitimacy due to the way it was set up.

    As a governing institution, the PA was established to bring an end to the first Intifada.

    Conceived under the interim peace agreements in Oslo, it was envisioned as an administrative body to oversee civil affairs for Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip and certain parts of the West Bank, excluding occupied East Jerusalem.

    It effectively took on a role as an Israeli security contractor in exchange for certain benefits related to administering Palestinian population centres. The PA faithfully fulfilled its mandate, carrying out routine arrests and surveillance of Palestinian individuals, whether they were involved in actions against Israel or were activists opposing its corrupt practices.

    Thus, Israel strategically benefitted from the establishment of the PA, but the same cannot be said for the Palestinian people, as they continued to experience the ravages of a military occupation.

    Expected independent state
    “Despite this, the PA under Yasser Arafat — or what we can call PA 1.0 — leveraged patronage and corruption to maintain some level of support. Notably, Arafat viewed the Oslo process as an interim measure, expecting a fully independent Palestinian state by 2000.

    He pragmatically engaged in security collaboration with Israel, hoping to build trust and ultimately achieve peaceful coexistence. In 1996, responding to ongoing Palestinian resistance, he even declared a “war on terror” and convened a security summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, involving Israel, Egypt and the US.

    In 2000, the civil and security arrangements overseen by the PA became increasingly fragile and eventually collapsed, triggering the eruption of the second Intifada. This uprising was a response to Israel’s policies of settlement expansion, its firm refusal to accept any form of Palestinian sovereignty between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean, and broader social and economic grievances.

    In 2002, the Bush administration conceived the idea of refurbishing the PA as part of the Road map for peace. While Arafat’s leadership was perceived as a hindering factor, he had already collaborated with the US by implementing structural reforms, including the creation of a prime minister’s position.

    Seeking to reshape the Palestinian leadership, the US engaged with potential alternative leaders, including Mahmoud Abbas, who eventually assumed the presidency of the PA in 2005 after the suspicious death of Arafat.

    The PA took its first blow when Hamas won the elections in 2006 and was able to form a government. The US and EU rejected the results, boycotted the government and suspended financial assistance to the PA, while Israel halted the transfer of tax revenues.

    Meanwhile, the PA security apparatus leadership refused to deal with the Hamas government and continued their work as usual, claiming they reported to the PA president’s office.

    For several months, Hamas struggled to maintain its PA government, while Abbas and his supporters made significant efforts to isolate it.

    In 2007, Hamas took over the PA security apparatus in the Gaza Strip and assumed control of all PA institutions. Abbas declared Hamas an unwanted entity in the West Bank and ordered the expulsion of the Hamas government and the imprisonment of many Hamas operatives.

    After splitting the PA into two entities, one in the Gaza Strip and another in the West Bank, Abbas, along with allies Mohammed Dahlan and Salam Fayyad, led efforts to restructure the PA in the West Bank with full support from the US and the EU.

    Restructuring PA 2.0
    Under what we can call PA 2.0, two major restructuring efforts took place. First, it consolidated the Palestinian security apparatus under a united command. Led by US Army General Keith Dayton, the revamping of the Palestinian security forces aimed at deepening their partnership with the Israeli state and army.

    Additionally, it sought to cultivate a vested interest among PA personnel in maintaining the role of the PA. Second, the restructuring of the PA consolidated its budget, placing all its resources under the Ministry of Finance.

    This restructuring did not result in a “better” PA. It remained a dysfunctional entity, which mismanaged resources and service provision, leading to a severe deterioration in living standards for the majority of Palestinians.

    Its leadership enjoyed certain privileges due to its security coordination with Israel and engaged in widespread corruption practices that have raised concerns even among PA supporters.

    Meanwhile, Israel’s settlement enterprises continued expanding without limits and the violence employed by the Israeli army and settlers against ordinary Palestinians only worsened.

    Restructuring PA 3.0?
    The lack of support for the PA leadership and its dysfunction have raised concerns about whether it can play a role in the upcoming post-Gaza war arrangements that the US administration is trying to put together.

    That is why Washington has signalled it will seek to revamp the PA once again — into PA 3.0 — with the aim of addressing the needs of various parties. The US administration and its allies seek an authority that can provide security to Israel and engage in a peace process without altering the status quo.

    Since the start of the war, several US envoys have visited Ramallah carrying the same message: that the PA needs to be revamped. In December US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan met with Abbas and al-Sheikh (the PLO secretary-general) urging them to “bring new blood” into the government. Al-Sheikh is considered a possible successor to Abbas, who could be part of these efforts to restructure the PA.

    However, after more than 100 days since the start of the Israeli war on Gaza, it looks like Washington does not have a concrete plan and only has some general ideas which the PA has declared a readiness to discuss. More importantly, the US vision does not seem to take into account the will of the Palestinian people.

    The Palestinian public clearly demands a leadership that can head a democratic, national entity capable of fulfilling the Palestinian national aspirations, including creating an independent state and realising the Palestinians’ right of return to their homelands.

    Revamping the PA implies intensifying cooperation with Israel and providing Israeli settlers with more security, which effectively means more insecurity and dispossession for the Palestinians.

    As a result, the Palestinian people will continue to perceive the PA as illegitimate and public anger, upheaval and resistance will continue to grow.

    In this sense, the US vision for revamping the PA would fail because it would not address the core issues of Israeli occupation and apartheid, which successive American administrations have systematically and purposefully ignored.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • It was not surprising that the U.S.’s earsplitting anti-Russian uproar has recently slowed down considerably. Israel’s Zionist genocidal war on the Palestinian people entrapped in Gaza (occupied first in 1967, and then totally blockaded since 2005) stole the limelight. The momentary slowdown gave Russia some breathing time, and the U.S. a possible way out of the mess it had engineered. Irrespective of Russian voices claiming the conflict has “Entered its endgame”, or American declarations talking about a “Negotiated settlement”, the conflict continues unabated.

    Let us assume that Russia would accept withdrawing from Donbass in exchange for Ukraine meeting all or some of its conditions. Would that change U.S. behavior toward Russia? No. Extensive political and military indicators (aid, weapons, statements, effective policy, etc.) enacted by the United States and its allies preclude such possibility—U.S. objectives in Ukraine go beyond Donbass and Crimea. Clues: Several U.S. political quarters and think tanks are now calling for a policy of containment toward Russia.

    It is elementary that spoiling relations among states is easier than repairing them. In the case of the United States, the idea of repairing ties with Russia has been consistently anathema to U.S. imperialists —even before Russia’s intervention in Ukraine. By force of consolidated ideological patterns, U.S. ruling circles systematically seek submission not agreement. Accordingly, their view of conflict resolution is conditioned by (a) the scope of U.S. intervention in Ukrainian politics vis-à-vis Russia’s objectives, (b) historical precedents whereby hegemonic ambitions takes precedence over other matters, and (c) intense enmity toward a Russia that has been proving its resilience to subjugation.

    As a primer to understand deep-seated U.S. political personality disorder, consider the following. In the American imperialistic mentality of coercion, changing foreign policy conduct means retreat, and retreat means loosing. It is known though that changing course for the sake of settlement is not losing. What is happening here is easy to explain: U.S. ideologues of war abhor giving up any of the geopolitical advantages they have obtained so far at the expense of Russia. Reading between the lines: those same ideologues appear to be thinking in terms of opportunity—if they do not succeed at incapacitating Russia now, they never will.

    Still, could Russia impose its conditions whereby Ukraine declares neutrality, forgoes joining NATO, and accepts post-intervention realties? Would the United States accept relinquishing its heavy encroachment in Ukraine thus leading it to (a) erase its established military footprints and political control, and (b) reprise its normal relations with Russia?

    Russia has all means to inflict irreparable military defeat on Ukraine. But after almost two years of war without a decisive solution, such prospect seems out of favor with Russia for reasons it did not disclose. This leaves a diplomatic solution open. But this seems out of Russia’s hand because in the pursuit of maintaining its grip on Ukraine, the U.S. would not allow it. The collective answer to the questions above would be as follows: because U.S. calculations are global in nature, the immovable tenets of U.S. super-militarized capitalism and aggressive hegemonic world outlook will be the determinant factors in deciding future directions. Said otherwise, the ideological superstructure of the U.S. Empire– coupled with the prospect of material profits—is the engine driving its decision-making.

    Consequently, the chance that the United States could reach a compromise with Russia soon is dim. The U.S. ruling establishment would keep the tension going with the expectation that something beneficial to the American imperium could still happen. In retrospect, a compromise could have happened had Russia crushed Ukraine militarily from the very beginning, and had U.S. rulers abstained from putting all their weight to defeat Russia through a protracted multi-actor proxy war. To recap, today, the prospect that Russia could impose its conditions on Ukraine is next to nil for no other reason than the United States is materially in full charge of Ukraine and its policymaking.

    America’s decision for a protracted proxy war comes in varied ways. A mouthpiece of U.S. imperialism, former NATO secretary Anders Fogh Rasmussen, conveyed U.S. thinking about Ukraine joining NATO in the following words:

    The time has come to take the next step and extend an invitation for Ukraine to join Nato. We need a new European security architecture in which Ukraine is in the heart of Nato. . . The absolute credibility of article 5 guarantees would deter Russia from mounting attacks inside the Ukrainian territory inside Nato and so free up Ukrainian forces to go to the frontline. [sic], [Italics added].

    “Free up Ukrainian forces to go to the frontlineare the keywords. Meaning: U.S. war by delegation would continue. But the core meaning is unequivocal:  according to Rasmussen’s formula, the U.S. would continue pursuing its war efforts notwithstanding Russia’s objections. Reminder: one reason why Russia intervened in Ukraine was to stop it from joining NATO. Rasmussen’s intent, therefor, was all too evident: he [actually, the United States] wants to poke Russia right in the eye by admitting Ukraine to NATO. Logically, his call can be interpreted as a blatant provocation to spur Russia into an expanded reaction. Once done, NATO would invoke article 5. Clear purpose: create a pretext for direct war with Russia.

    Another mouthpiece is retired U.S. Navy Admiral James Stavridis. Stavridis thinks of Ukraine in terms of financial opportunities for U.S. economic imperialism and future Ukrainian dependency. He cites, with twisted ideologism, the South Korean example and gives his far-reaching views as follows:

    In terms of advantages for the alliance, Ukraine would have the most battle-tested, innovative and motivated forces in Europe. The Ukrainians have earned a spot on the team, and as I look back on my time as NATO’s military commander, I would have been happy to welcome them into alliance…. If such a deal is reached, here is my prediction: Despite being far smaller in terms of population and land, Ukraine will overtake Russia in a few decades in terms of gross domestic product, overall agrarian output, and certainly in the sense of being a vital, democratic society in which people want to live. I see nothing in the twisted policies of Czar Putin that will change that depressing outcome for Moscow. Let’s hope a Korean-style miracle of reconstruction is on the horizon for Ukraine. [Italics added]

    Discussion

    U.S. imperialism assumes diverse denominations according to circumstances. The following are a few examples. Diplomatic Imperialism: is when the U.S. coerces foreign governments to go along its foreign and domestic policies. Financial Imperialism: through financial institutions (World Bank, SWIFT system, International Monetary Fund, Central banks of targeted countries, currency conversion rates, etc.), the United States exercises its hegemony by denying and/or regulating access by designated adversaries. Management Imperialism: is when American citizens connected to the high echelons of power directly manage the economic assets and political decision-making of foreign nations.

    With regard to Management Imperialism as applied to Ukraine, Mike Pompeo has already started the process proposed by Stavridis. Just like Hunter Biden before him sitting on the Board of Directors of Burisma, Pompeo will be sitting on the Board of Directors of the Ukrainian branch of Veon. Beyond that, Stavridis wants a future Ukraine to continue exercising its proxy military role vs. Russia, which is, per se, what the United States wants: a lasting war with Russia.

    Rasmussen and Stavridis’ opinions follow a coordinated script with two postulations: (1) The United States would not give up its newly found protectorate Ukraine, and (2) it would continue to wage war against Russia regardless of potential global conflagration—with the hopeful gamble that the “endgame” would not come to that.

    As stated, the United States seems not ready to concede its footprints in Ukraine unless by some sort of a war with Russia. Or, a better scenario: the U.S. concludes there is no way out except by compromise.  Overall, abandoning the coveted conquest of Ukraine would mean halting U.S. imperialistic expansions. Explanation: having footprints in Ukraine means that the United States would re-apply its old methods of domination—a process begins with a pretext, followed by intervention, and ends up with entrenched encroachment that political exorcism is incapable of dislodging. Consider the following limited examples:

    Germany: after occupying half of Germany (West) at the end of WWII; after the U.S., Britain, and the USSR slapped it with the Potsdam Agreement; after it and Britain took the lion shares of war reparations; and in spite of Germany’s formal status as an independent country within NATO structures, the U.S. is still occupying it on permanent basis. Today there are 35,221 U.S. troops stationed in Germany. British and French troops still exists in different form. Pay attention.  While the Potsdam Agreement imposed the dismantling of the German military industry, the United States reversed it by absorbing West Germany into NATO in 1955. This means the re-armament of Germany—NATO countries must have a standing military force with budget and with contribution from their Gross National products to the efforts of future wars—with the USSR being the target. The point: once the United States intervened in a country, it remains there until events change the status of occupation.

    Italy: after occupying Italy at the end of WWII, etc., the U.S. is still occupying it through 7 military bases and 12,493 troops. Pay attention: After the defeat of Italy, the U.S. first shackled it with the Paris Conference, and then absorbed it in NATO structures in 1949,      

    [Note: on the case of Germany (before reunification in 1990-1) and Italy, the conversion from vanquished enemies to NATO allies was a planned U.S. strategy to absorb them as occupied countries by other means.]

    Japan: after occupying Japan at the end of WWII, etc., and after shackling it with myriad treaties and the writing of a new constitution serving its interests, the U.S. is still occupying Japan through 5 military bases and 50,000 troops,

    Kuwait: after ending Iraq’s occupation of Kuwait in 1991, the U.S. is now occupying Kuwait through 7 military bases and 13,500 troops

    Philippines: After it conquered the Philippines from Spain consequent to Spain-U.S. war, the U.S. granted independence to that nation in 1946. Pay attention: the United States shackled the Philippines with the Mutual Defense Treaty. U.S. military encroachment or occupation continues today with enhanced treaties and four military bases,

    Saudi Arabia: from so-called Desert shield 1990 forward, the U.S. has been occupying Saudi Arabia through 3 military bases and 2,700 troops,

    Iraq: Iraq is a yardstick to judge the U.S. plan for Ukraine. The United States invaded that country in 2003 and immediately partitioned it in two federated entities—Arab and Kurdish—without having any authority to do so. As per military dot com (connected to the Pentagon) the United States has 12 military bases in Iraq, and as per PBS (connected to U.S. Zionism and the wider imperialist system) the U.S. has 2,500 troops on the ground.  [Note: Iraqi reports speak of 16,000 U.S. troops across the country. Comment: the notion of 2,500 troops is both risible and fake. If divided by 12, each base would have 208 service members. Observation: no military base could function with such a low number of service members].

    Pay attention: before removing the bulk of its invasion force from Iraq, and after building several military bases around the country, U.S. imperialists shackled it with a treaty and called it “U.S.–Iraq Status of Forces Agreement”. With this ruse, the United States has been occupying Iraq for 21 consecutive years. For the record, on May 1, 2020, so-called Iraqi parliament passed a resolution calling for the American forces to leave Iraq. Over three a half years later, U.S. forces are still entrenched on Iraqi soil like a rock stuck inside deep mud.

    What happened before and after the U.S.‑created Iraqi parliament issued that resolution?

    On January 10, 2020, the Washington Post stated, “The Trump administration refused again Friday to recognize Iraq’s call to withdraw all U.S. troops, saying that any discussion with Baghdad would center on whatever force size the United States determines is sufficient to achieve its goals there”. Well. Finally, we know that so-called “Operation Iraqi Freedom” was about “whatever force size the United States determines is sufficient to achieve its goals there”. [Italics added]. (Also, read the statement by Mike Pompeo). “Goals”, they say. What goals are these if not the perpetual occupation of Iraq by any means?

    On January 10, 2024, Iraqi Prime Minister al-Sudani—the U.S. greenlighted his appointment—asked the United States to initiate dialogues for the exit of U.S. forces from Iraq. [Reuter’s: Exclusive: Iraq seeks quick exit of US forces but no deadline set, PM says]. Knowing about his request in advance, the Pentagon stated, “It was not currently planning to withdraw its roughly 2,500 troops from Iraq, despite Baghdad’s announcement last week it would begin the process of removing the U.S.-led military coalition from the country.”  [Italics added]. [January 8, 2024, Reuter’s: Pentagon says not planning a US withdrawal from Iraq].

    Now take a guess: who is ruling over so-called sovereign Iraq today, and who would be ruling over so-called sovereign Ukraine once the conflict is over?

    Kosovo: the United States bombed Serbia, severed Kosovo (a genuine Serbian territory despite its large Albanian ethnicity), and proclaimed it an “independent” State. Remark: soon after it bombed Serbia and after declaring Kosovo’s independence, the United States transformed this historically Serbian province into a U.S.-occupied territory with its Camp Bondsteel. How is this so? Forget that NATO troops are in the camp and disregard its small size (955 acres). But, Bondsteel is a Regional Command under the control of the U.S. Army. As such, it is a plain symbol of U.S. imperialist encroachment, i.e., occupation by other means.

    Taiwan: the U.S. may not object to re-unification; but its intent is apparent. It wants its protégé: the small island of anti-Communist Taiwan (23 million) to rule over great and independent China (1.4 billion)—not the other way around.

    South Korea: After partitioning Korea (with the Soviet Union that successively withdrew) in North and South, the U.S. is still occupying South Korea through 12 military bases and 23,468 troops. (For more info: U.S. military around the world by Aljazeera).

    To close, even if the conflict would resolve with compromise, Ukraine would end up being occupied by the United States in multiple ways—whether Russia likes it or not. Similarly, the prospect of the United States would occupy Ukraine somehow and shackle it with bases and treaties—with or without NATO—is potentially possible.

    Generally, U.S. conduct in Ukraine follows an established ideological attitude that has been applied without pause since the end of WWII. Briefly, it rests on the self-serving idea that U.S. status as a military hyperpower (with 12 combatant commands spread in all continents) grants it extraordinary license to supervise, manage, and direct world assets and relations according to its exclusive views and objectives. One such view is the baseless pretension that whatever happens around the world is a matter of U.S. “national security”—recently, the Biden Administration declared, “Security assistance for Ukraine is a smart investment in our national security.” Senator Jack Reed goes beyond exaggerating the investment deception. He stated, “U.S. Aid to Ukraine is Vital to America’s Security & Economic Interests”.

    These are bombastic words. (a) Biden’s White House is lying big—who are benefiting from that investment are weapons manufactures not ordinary Americans, and (b) the argument of the national security stuff is preposterous. To settle this issue without dissertation, suffice it to say there are no functional, structural, or any another artificially implied correlations between the events in Ukraine and so-called national security of super fortress America.

    Statement: U.S. practice of calling anything that does not meet its criteria of acceptance a “threat to its national security” is fraudulent and deceptive. Discussion: the notion of “national security” paradigm of any nation is valid only when its physical existence and conditions for normal living of its people are threatened by external forces. Consider the following limited examples:

    • Egypt continues to oppose Ethiopia “Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam” not for any reason except that the huge reduction of water entering into Egypt is effectively dooming its agricultural lands. When Ethiopia persists in ignoring Egypt’s legitimate concerns on water sharing (governed by stipulated treaties), then it is materially threatening Egypt’s national security and survival.
    • When the CIA overthrew Mohammad Mossadegh’s government to control Iranian oil, it certainly damaged Iran’s national security.
    • Venezuela never threatened the United States in anyway. But when Donald Trump threatened Venezuela with military intervention, his threat was a clear attack against Venezuela’s national security.
    • When Britain and the United States declared war (Opium War) on China to open its ports for trade with the U.S. and the West—that was a flagrant infringement on China’s national security and sovereignty.
    • Britain declared war on China because this prohibited the opium trade—a product Britain needed for its drug industry. But Britain and United States attacked and went to war with China for more reasons. They wanted China to open its ports for trade with the U.S. and the West. I need not debate that these acts were a flagrant infringement on China’s
      national security and sovereignty. [ Read: “How were the Opium Wars an example of imperialism in China?”; “U.S. Department of State: Opium War“).

    Conclusion: whereas themes and theories are invented to support the political concept of “national security”, countless other factors restrict its definition, scope, and applicability. But for the United States to enforce its so-called right to security by deeming any fathomable action taken by foreign nations in defense of their societal development as a threat to its “national security” is a barefaced blackmail on a domestic level, as well as a twisted pretext for confrontation on a foreign level.

    Now, can anyone name one single incident whereby a country—excluding Russia (re: Cuban missile crisis)—has ever posed any threat to the United States? (For the record, the USSR tried to install nuclear missiles in Cuba in response to the US installing similar missiles in Turkey pointing to Soviet territory. Kennedy and Khrushchev resolved the impasse by dismantling the disputed missile systems.)

    Conclusion: U.S. pretension that its security is uniquely important but not that of China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Madagascar, Algeria, Columbia, Togo, India, etc. is a ploy to establish a world order under its tight command. Accusing others of premeditated malfeasance or intention to harm the United States is the easiest way to initiate planned hostilities.

    With regard to Ukraine, the meaning of the preceding could not be terser: U.S. imperialists are manifestly scheming. They pretend to see Ukraine “free” from the “Russian invaders”, while at the same time they are roaming the globe to pacify it with death, destruction, sanctions, and economic strangulation, and while treating Ukraine as an “investment” to deter hypothetical connections to frivolous “security anxieties”. Deduction: U.S. fury over Russia’s intervention in Ukraine is quite readable. Russia interrupted U.S. march for world control.

    Claiming, therefore, that Donbass or the whole of Ukraine is important to European and NATO security is a trite farce. If Donbass were so important, the U.S. should not have staged the Maidan coup, and should have worked to implement the Minsk Agreements. Commenting on how the United States turns things around in the attempt to muddy things à la Donald Trump, Maria Zakharova (Russian Foreign Ministry) responded eloquently to Antony Blinken’s call to revise the Agreements. She said, “It is strange how the US is trying to find a sequence in a document where the entire sequence of steps is spelled out for all parties”.

    Incidentally, I read nowhere that Russia threatened Germany, Finland, or any other European country. But when trained propagandists at the State Department say, “Ukraine is a key regional strategic partner that has undertaken significant efforts to modernize its military and increase its interoperability with NATO,” they imply that this newly-found “strategic partner” is important to the United States because any arrangement with it increases the prospect of added security to NATO and the United States. The propaganda message is transparent: “Russia is threatening Europe”. American Progress dot org goes further. Johan Hassel and Kate Donald explain, “Why the United States Must Stay the Course on Ukraine”, and elaborate by saying, “Because it is essential to America’s national security interests and democratic values. A Ukraine defeat would create a more dangerous and unstable world.” [Italics added]. “Democratic values” they write. Could they intelligently—not stupidly to be precise—explain what values are these, and in which way they interact with the Ukrainian situation?

    Now, imagine how the United States would react to hearing Russia claiming that the Sonora province or Mexico is “essential to Russian security and democratic values”.

    To stay with the events, Russian intervention in Ukraine has led to the formation of two opposing camps. On one camp, stand U.S. super-militarized imperialism and arrays of vassal European States—most of them coerced to follow Washington’s direct orders. On the other, stands Russia alone but with only Belarus openly at its side.

    At this tense stage of world history, there should be no illusion that Ukraine has become a peculiar arena. Russia’s limited intervention has swiftly gone beyond its initial purpose to protect ethnic Russians in Donbass, and beyond U.S. posturing that Russia breached international norms. No need to state that at no time in modern history did the United States ever care to abide by such norms—unless enacted to serve its purpose or to hold others accountable.

    Russia’s Camp: From the time in which Bill Clinton and Zionist neocons (Madelaine Albright [State], Willian Cohen [Defense], Samuel Berger [National Security Advisor] took control of U.S. foreign policy until its intervention in Ukraine, Russia—despite its conversion to capitalism—has gradually but convincingly reached the ineluctable conclusion that its own existence is constantly threatened. With its decision to take action in Donbass, Russia has crossed the Rubicon without looking back. It launched a daring challenge against the fascist-tyrannical world order imposed by the United States.

    With that challenge, Russia transformed itself from protector of ethnic Russians in Donbass to a powerful forerunner in the resistance against U.S. stranglehold on the world. Yet, judging from the myriad statements that Putin, Medvedev, and Lavrov have been making since after the intervention, said transformation appears to be evolutionary rather than planned. That is, although Russia has been criticizing U.S. bent on absolutist domination long before its entry in Ukraine, that entry was not enacted with the slogan to terminate U.S. unipolarism in Ukraine and the world. The successive bold statements denouncing and prospecting the end of U.S. world order came about gradually as Russia realized that the entire Western system of nations was aligned behind the U.S. hegemon.

    To close, Russia of Putin is not an anti-imperialist state. From my readings, Russian political lexicon of the past 34 years never spoke of or referred to imperialism as an issue for Russia’s foreign policy. As a concept and term, it seems that the new Russia treated imperialism as a thing belonging to Leninist Soviet Russia, not new capitalistic Russia. Wrong. U.S. and European imperialisms never disappeared—they are well, alive, and super-fortified with rage and racism. The irony of it: after Russia’s intervention, U.S. mastodontic propaganda started depicting Russia as an imperialist state.

    Now then, considering that all sanctions and threats against Russia have, so far, failed to achieve their objectives, then Russia’s ultimate purpose—focused on terminating U.S. hallucinations for permanent hegemony over the international system of nations—appears highly possible. The fact that many nations are now breaking free from using the dollar in their bilateral exchanges proves the unthinkable: capitalistic Russia is on the right path to rebuild the international order on equitable foundations.

    America’s Camp: The United States has always been a static superpower that thrives on the status quo. When confronted with resolute countries that it cannot bomb, it remedies by repeating tricks that no longer work. In the case of Russia, it tried to replay the card it played on the Iraq of Saddam Hussein—with the complicity of failed Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and traitorous Arab rulers. Sanctions, seizing of assets, name-calling, lies, instigation, congressional resolutions, mobilizing NATO, use of the UN, ruses of all sorts, and threats of war are just a few outmoded means of pressure that worked against Iraq, but cannot work against today’s Russia. In short, the shrewd American illusionist has run out of tricks.

    The show of anti-Russian reactions is not confined to the imperialist camp. Surprisingly, some peace and antiwar activists in the West has joined in the violent bashing of Russia. But if Russia, China, and other counties are for an equitable international system that a) respects all nations and their right for self-determination, and b) is applicable to all equally, then how do we explain all those anti-Russian attacks coming from self-designating peace and antiwar activists?

    Agreed, Russian forces crossed onto the Donbass province of Ukraine. Now, if Washington’s hypocrites consider Russia’s act criminal and contrary to their “rule-based international order”, then we have the right to ask if their repeated crossings into countless countries are innocent and abiding by that order. On this issue, can those who oppose Russia’s intervention explain by whose authority did the United States cross into Syria from U.S.-occupied Iraq? According to what article of the “international law” did the hyperpower settle its occupation force around Syria’s oil fields? Lastly, can they explain why is the United States working frenetically to partition Syria as it did Iraq? (Later in this series, I shall discuss the issue of war and antiwar)

    What we need to do next is to establish a context for the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the reaction to it.

    Next Part 3 of 16

    The post Imperialism and Anti-imperialism Collide in Ukraine (Part 2 of 16) first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • ANALYSIS: By Cassandra Mudgway, University of Canterbury

    The high-stress nature of working in politics is increasingly taking a toll on staff and politicians. But an additional threat to the personal wellbeing and safety of politicians resides outside Parliament, and the threat is ubiquitous: online violence against women MPs.

    Since her election in 2017, Green Party MP Golriz Ghahraman has been subject to persistent online violence.

    Ghahraman’s resignation following allegations of shoplifting exposes the toll sustained online violence can have on a person’s mental health.

    In an interview with Vice in 2018, Ghahraman expressed how the online abuse was overwhelming and questioned how long she would continue in Parliament.

    Resigning in 2024, Ghahraman said in a statement:

    it is clear to me that my mental health is being badly affected by the stresses relating to my work

    and

    the best thing for my mental health is to resign as a Member of Parliament.

    Ghahraman is not alone in receiving torrents of online abuse. Many other New Zealand women MPs have also been targeted, including former Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson, National MP Nicola Willis and Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer.

    Words can not only hurt, but they can seriously endanger a person’s wellbeing.

    Online violence against women MPs, particularly against women of colour, is a concerning global trend. In an Australian study, women MPs were found to be disproportionately targeted by public threats, particularly facing higher rates of online threats involving sexual violence and racist remarks.

    Similar online threats face women MPs in the United Kingdom. Studies show that women of colour receive more intense abuse.

    Male politicians are also subject to online violence. But when directed at women the violence frequently exhibits a misogynistic character, encompassing derogatory gender-specific language and menacing sexualised threats, constituting gender-based violence.


    Our legal framework is not enough
    New Zealand’s current legal framework is not well equipped to respond to the kind of online violence experienced by women MPs like Ghahraman.

    The Harmful Digital Communications Act 2015 is designed to address online harassment by a single known perpetrator. But the most distressing kind of abuse comes from the sheer number of violent commentators, most of whom are unknown to the victim or intentionally anonymous.

    This includes “mob style” attacks, where large numbers of perpetrators coordinate efforts to harass, threaten, or intimidate their target.

    Without legal recourse, women MPs have two options — tolerate the torrent of abuse, or resign. Both of these options endanger representative democracy.

    Putting up with abuse may mean serious impacts on mental health and personal safety. It may also have a chilling effect on what topics women MPs choose to speak about publicly. Resigning means losing important representation of diverse perspectives, especially from minorities.

    Having to tolerate the abuse is a breach of the right to be free from gender-based violence. Being forced to resign because of it also breaches women’s rights to participate in politics. Therefore, the government has duties under international human rights law to prevent, respond and redress online violence against women.

    Steps the government can take
    United Nations human rights bodies provide some guidance for measures the government could implement to fulfil their obligations and safeguard women’s human rights online.

    As one of the drivers of online violence against women MPs is prevailing patriarchal attitudes, the government’s first step should be to correctly label the behaviour: gender-based violence.

    Calling online harassment “trolling” or “cyberbullying” downplays the harm and risks normalising the behaviour. “Gender-based violence” reflects the systemic nature of the abuse.

    Secondly, the government should urgently review the Harmful Digital Communication Act. The legislation is now nine years old and should be updated to reflect the harmful online behaviour of the 2020s, such as targeted mob-style attacks.

    New Zealand is also now out of step with other countries. Australia, the UK and the European Union have all recently strengthened their laws to tackle harmful online content.

    These new laws focus on holding big tech companies accountable and encourage cooperation between the government, online platforms and civil society. Greater collaboration, alongside enforcement mechanisms, is essential to address systemic issues like gender-based violence.

    Thirdly, given the increasing scale of online violence, the government should ensure adequate resourcing for police to investigate serious incidents. Resources should also be made available for social media moderation among all MPs and training in online safety.

    More than ever, words have the power to break people and democracies. It is now the urgent task of the government to fulfil its legal obligations toward women MPs.The Conversation

    Dr Cassandra Mudgway is senior lecturer in law, University of Canterbury. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone

    The Biden administration has officially re-designated Ansarallah – the dominant force in Yemen also known as the Houthis – as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist entity.

    The White House claims the designation is an appropriate response to the group’s attacks on US military vessels and commercial ships in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, saying those attacks “fit the textbook definition of terrorism”.

    Ansarallah claims its actions “adhere to the provisions of Article 1 of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,” since it is only enforcing a blockade geared toward ceasing the ongoing Israeli destruction of Gaza.

    One of the most heinous acts committed by the Trump administration was its designation of Ansarallah as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation (FTO) and as Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGT), both of which imposed sanctions that critics warned would plunge Yemen’s aid-dependent population into even greater levels of starvation than they were already experiencing by restricting the aid that would be allowed in.

    One of the Biden administration’s only decent foreign policy decisions has been the reversal of that sadistic move, and now that reversal is being partially rolled back, though thankfully only with the SDGT listing and not the more deadly and consequential FTO designation.

    In a new article for Antiwar about this latest development, Dave Decamp explains that as much as the Biden White House goes to great lengths insisting that it’s going to issue exemptions to ensure that its sanctions don’t harm the already struggling Yemeni people,

    “history has shown that sanctions scare away international companies and banks from doing business with the targeted nations or entities and cause shortages of medicine, food, and other basic goods.”

    DeCamp also notes that US and British airstrikes on Yemen have already forced some aid groups to suspend services to the country.

    Still trying to recover
    So the US empire is going to be imposing sanctions on a nation that is still trying to recover from the devastation caused by the US-backed Saudi blockade that contributed to hundreds of thousands of deaths between 2015 and 2022. All in response to the de facto government of that very same country imposing its own blockade with the goal of preventing a genocide.

    That’s right: when Yemen sets up a blockade to try and stop an active genocide, that’s terrorism, but when the US empire imposes a blockade to secure its geostrategic interests in the Middle East, why that’s just the rules-based international order in action.

    It just says so much about how the US empire sees itself that it can impose blockades and starvation sanctions at will upon nations like Yemen, Venezuela, Cuba, Iran, Syria and North Korea for refusing to bow to its dictates, but when Yemen imposes a blockade for infinitely more worthy and noble reasons it gets branded an act of terrorism.

    The managers of the globe-spanning empire loosely centralised around Washington literally believe the world is theirs to rule as they will, and that anyone who opposes its rulings is an outlaw.

    Based on power
    “What this shows us is that the “rules-based international order” the US and its allies claim to uphold is not based on rules at all; it’s based on power, which is the ability to control and impose your will on other people.

    The “rules” apply only to the enemies of the empire because they are not rules at all: they are narratives used to justify efforts to bend the global population to its will.

    We are ruled by murderous tyrants. By nuclear-armed thugs who would rather starve civilians to protect the continuation of an active genocide than allow peace to get a word in edgewise.

    Our world can never know health as long as these monsters remain in charge.

    Caitlin Johnstone is an Australian independent journalist and poet. Her articles include The UN Torture Report On Assange Is An Indictment Of Our Entire Society. She publishes a website and Caitlin’s Newsletter. This article is republished with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • It is more than a sad indictment of contemporary economics, it is a perpetual international tragedy that much of global economic production is of negative social value, resulting in wealth destruction. That this is often the most profitable in financial terms is a paradox that can be explained by highlighting the misconceptions and malpractices in the system.

    Economic mechanisms at play

    The disparity of financial and empirical results for countries can be understood by examining the mechanisms at play. There are three main components to this: purpose of human work, evaluation, and outcomes.

    The purpose of human activity is, ostensibly, wealth creation leading to increased social prosperity. How this increase is shared is an important but separate topic for discussion. However, most people would say they work for money.

    The purpose of work – social prosperity – has been supplanted over time, in most people’s minds, by the means of evaluation – money, which is not the same thing at all.

    Evaluation is the way of determining what people and governments are willing to exchange for the goods and services offered on the open market. The exchange is usually done with the metric known as money. Money has no intrinsic worth of its own. It is simply a means of exchange, unit of account, and store of (changeable) value.

    Poor evaluation is the fundamental flaw of orthodox economics: that it doesn’t assess the real value to society of a particular economic activity, only its financialisation. Social value is determined by the market. In other words, it is relegated mainly to consumers, who are easily manipulated by advertising, and sometimes addicted by rent-seeking, vested interests.

    Social value determination is also entrusted to governments that supposedly act in the national interest but not necessarily in the interests of all of their people or, indeed, all humanity. The economics discipline’s usefulness to society is compromised by surrendering its independence and objectivity in this way.

    Finally, there are outcomes: the experienced effects of what people make and do, regardless of how it is valued. One example that illustrates that the purpose of work – social prosperity – is not always the outcome is the arms trade.

    The arms trade: a case in point

    The vast resources: human, material and financial, expended globally in the manufacture and subsequent use of armaments results in harmful outcomes for many people in many countries, and ravages the natural world, on which every person on the planet depends.

    However, the economic system, using the metrics of money and GDP (gross domestic product), evaluates the activity as socially-positive wealth creation. These metrics, and others, are being misused to value what the world does to create adversity in the same way as it does to create prosperity.

    The cardinal reason for this situation is poor evaluation: a problem of economics erroneously deeming all production, which people and governments are willing to buy, to be of positive social value, even when some of it is contrary to the individual or common good, and the furtherance of prosperity for everyone.

    A serious aspect to this practice of incorrectly assessing all production to be of socially positive value is the taxation of harmful goods and services. The tobacco trade is a suitable example.

    Tobacco: a currency conduit

    In accepting the proposition that the production of things which are injurious to people should not be classed as wealth creation and of positive social value because there is no advantage accruing to anyone from the use of the product, and, because there is no worthwhile outcome, the actual process of manufacture destroys existing wealth, it is reasonable to conclude that tobacco products are untaxable – there is nothing of meaningful value to tax (although it is taxed).

    In taxing tobacco, what is really happening is that governments are using the tax revenue from the sale of tobacco as an indirect means – a currency conduit – to tax the real pool of wealth produced by socially-beneficial activities elsewhere.

    Many economists fail to realise that good cannot be garnered from bad: beneficial public services cannot be funded from the taxation of harmful merchandise. Governments do, but it is an illusion.

    Socially-harmful production

    The tobacco and arms trades are only a part of an increasing global economic problem of socially-harmful production, resulting in wealth destruction that adversely impacts on life, cost and standard of living, international currencies, and – not least – the natural world.

    Thence, what should a government do when confronted with conclusive evidence that a product or activity is harmful for people, the economy and the natural world? Should they ban it completely, change the inadequate metrics of evaluation (challenging), or stick with current practices but try to mitigate its harmful effects?

    Mitigation can take many forms from the inconclusive ‘nudge’ behavioural measures of, say, increased taxation to that of industry-contributed voluntary funds that pay for the treatment of gambling-related mental ill-health.

    If governments choose to mitigate with increased taxation, it has to be understood who is paying. On the face of it, some consumers are when they exchange money for harmful things, the tax element being passed to the government. But so is the rest of the population in at least three other ways.

    We could expunge these horrendous costs

    First, the product is harmful, therefore valueless, even if some people are willing to buy it. But the often overlooked aspect is that all the resources consumed in the process of manufacture are wasted. Money, labour, and materials that could otherwise be used for socially-worthwhile purposes are squandered.

    However, in this finance-dominated economic system, wealth destruction is, nevertheless, wrongly measured as positive wealth creation. In so doing, the system is corrupted and the value of money debased.

    Second, there is nothing in harmful products of meaningful value to tax, although it is taxed. Consequently, taxing harmful products makes these products more costly and further devalues the metrics of money and GDP, which, systemically, make socially-beneficial products and activities more expensive than they need to be.

    Third, because medical treatment is provided in some countries by a publicly-funded health service, people have to pay through their taxes, in those countries, to treat the adverse effects of harmful things.

    Additionally, there are other financial and social costs incurred, especially by families having to cope with domestic circumstances affected by the illness or loss of a loved one.

    When you add all these costs together, they amount to a great deal for the world that could be expunged by banning totally the sale of socially-and environmentally-harmful products and activities. This would get countries away from economic outcomes based on misleading and misused metrics towards an economy of the future, realistically assessed for prosperity and wellbeing.

    Featured image via LightFieldStudios – Envato Elements

    By Geoff Naylor

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • EDITORIAL: By Fred Wesley, editor-in-chief of The Fiji Times

    The revelation that police have carried out what is believed to be one of Fiji’s biggest drug busts after a surprise raid in Nadi at the weekend is a wake-up call for us all.

    Acting Police Commissioner Juki Fong Chew yesterday confirmed the raid and that substantial amounts of white drugs were seized.

    The tip off, he said, came from Nausori, subsequently allowing officers to conduct a raid at a warehouse in the West. It is arguably one of the biggest haul in Fiji. As investigations continue, one thing is certain.

    The Fiji Times
    THE FIJI TIMES

    This is a national issue, and it is big. It’s a chilling wake-up call, exposing something we have been seeing glimpses of over the years. It is difficult to shrug aside the fact that the drug trade is a major challenge for us as a nation.

    We have been talking about the consequences, which are far reaching, and threatening the very fabric of life as we know it.

    Addiction is a major challenge we face as well and given the fact that we do not have well equipped rehabilitation centres, we are staring at a blankwall, and that places us in a rather frightening situation.

    The impact of drug addiction on the family structure, on society and our country are not good at all.

    The minds of tourists
    The last thing we want is for our country to lose its shine on the minds of tourists because of a drug challenge. We look up to the powers that be to put in place measures that will assist in the fight against drugs, and addiction.

    That is why we have been pushing for rehabilitation centres and for people to be trained to work in these facilities. In saying that, we are encouraged by this latest revelation.

    There is a glimmer of hope when such events happen because they take a swipe at the illicit trade. While it is a testament to the efforts and the vigilance of the police, we are still reminded about the fact that we have a problem!

    In this instance, awareness is key. Educational campaigns targeted at youth, families, and communities must dispel the myths and expose the brutal reality of drugs.

    We also need to be talking, and assisting Fijians make informed choices.

    We need those rehabilitation centres set up urgently, and equipped by trained professional staff.

    Then there are the social challenges that range from poverty, and unemployment to consider.

    This is not just a matter for the police to deal with. It’s a fight we all must participate in. It is for our future!

    This editorial was published in The Fiji Times today under the title of “Drug challenge”.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • When Julian Assange was disgracefully arrested in 2019, he shouted, as he was dragged out of the Ecuadorean Embassy with his hands shackled to his feet, “RESIST.” His and Wikileaks‘ story is a good illustration of why resistance is so necessary, timely, and urgent.

    Assange and Wikileaks: an existential threat

    Approximately a decade before this 2019 arrest, Assange had become an acclaimed journalist and activist, having successfully pushed knowledge of US war crimes into the mass media and public consciousness. This was largely through his work as editor-in-chief of Wikileaks, the crypto-journalism organisation which managed and published the incriminating data.

    The following months and years were marked by escalating tensions between the US and Assange, with Wikileaks gaining more and more credibility and influence as a media organisation and information source.

    The viciousness of the counter-strategic effort by the US really gained pace after Wikileaks published a mountain of diplomatic cables, effectively shifting the geopolitical balance of power in a way which embarrassed and emasculated the US.

    Assange was from that point an existential threat to the US, to be eliminated by any means necessary.

    The dynamic after ‘cablegate’ was decidedly harsher and more oppressive. It saw the beginning of a ruthless pursuit of Assange with the intention to bring him into a custody which would serve as a smokescreen for extradition to the US.

    Both the UK and US found time, as well as vast resources better invested in schools, libraries, and hospitals, to corner Assange into a trap.

    Ecuador: complicit in the attack

    Having absconded from house arrest to seek asylum in the Ecuadorean Embassy, a huge, expensive surveillance operation was set up in the vicinity to make it impossible for Assange to leave either the building, or the country.

    The period after he was granted sanctuary in the embassy was defined by a concerted attack on the part of the establishment, swamping the discourse around him with trivialities and red herrings intended to bury the most salient fact of the situation, his status as an asylum seeker, protected by international law.

    From January 2018 Assange was an Ecuadorean citizen, until unfortunately being stripped of this status and rendered stateless by way of machinations of an unsympathetic right-wing government in Ecuador, bribed with IMF and Goldman Sachs loans – blood money to trade him. This was made possible by a shady bilateral relationship between the US and Ecuador, which spelled the end for Assange’s asylum bid, completely trashing Ecuador’s hitherto impeccable example on human rights.

    Just one year after being granted citizenship in Ecuador, the hope for a liberated Assange was damned. In the build up to his arrest the Ecuadorean administration initiated a rapid erosion of his living conditions and quality of life, staffing the embassy with subservient diplomats working in the interests of the US.

    He was eventually ejected into the hands of the UK “justice” system, a corruptible power working at the behest of the US dictatorship.

    The 21st century empire

    The US national security regime, which grabbed power in the atmosphere of fear and panic after 9/11, exerts extraterritorial control over seemingly self-determining nations, in spite of their supposed judicial sovereignty.

    There is a clear issue with the proceedings of the longstanding, ongoing extradition case in the UK, insofar as the judge is operating as an adjudicator whilst having a conflict of interest, as her husband’s professional misconduct was reported on by Wikileaks.

    The bulwark imperial states, of which the UK and US are the poster boys, have long been committed to augmenting their partnership. Unfortunately they are not a force for good, despite their shallow rhetoric. They have coordinated in a way that decidedly undermines and renders obsolete basic constitutional principles, human rights norms, and fundamental civil liberties.

    This sickening agenda is one aspect of an agenda for world domination, based on US supremacy, a historical trend oft left undiscussed due to the negative perception of “conspiracy theories.” There are, however, peer reviewed studies and academic texts that study the political mechanics of what can be called a “new world order.”

    This development has been followed by a nascent, burgeoning political consciousness and sense of resistance amongst some citizens, harbouring bold aspirations to disestablish the institutions of empire.

    Resistance is a must when democracy is a fugitive

    Perceiving that neither political parties, nor elections, nor mainstream media serve the public interest, rather working together to rig the system and augment the status quo, these digital denizens share their dissent online and educate themselves through peer-to-peer dissemination of knowledge and information.

    Beginning its life as a vibrant democratic community based on a lively exchange of ideas, the internet has sadly transformed into an empire, dominated by shadowy Silicon Valley corporations who police the parameters of legitimate opinion and operate with an interface fusing it with government and military agencies.

    Unfortunately this is the socially acceptable model of internet publishing and all the worst tech companies have metastasized into a digital leviathan. An example of how they are rendered legitimate is how Facebook successfully launched the “publisher” defence in court, a legal refuge denied to Wikileaks.

    Facebook, with near total impunity, was complicit in its use as a tool for perception management during elections and plebiscites by agencies such as Cambridge Analytica, deleterious to democracy and tantamount to treason.

    Wikileaks on the other hand is a benevolent and politically impartial repository of information, with an unassailable reputation for 100% accuracy. It empowers citizens to transform society for the better by helping them to establish informed judgments and thus make them more likely to make rational decisions. If this is the enemy, the fifth column, and harbinger of terror and social decay, then there must be a powerful feat of optics being perpetrated by the true criminals in this saga.

    Democracy is a fugitive whose redemption is overdue, repressed precisely because of its power.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Megan Sherman

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone

    The US has carried out another air raid on Yemen, with targets reportedly including the international airport in the capital city of Sanaa. This comes a day after US and UK airstrikes on Yemen in retaliation for Houthi attacks on Red Sea commercial vessels.

    For weeks Yemen’s Houthi forces have been greatly inconveniencing commercial shipping with their blockade, with reports last month saying Israel’s Eilat Port has seen an 85 percent drop in activity since the attacks began.

    This entirely bloodless inconvenience was all it took for Washington to attack Yemen, the war-ravaged nation in which the US and its allies have spent recent years helping Saudi Arabia murder hundreds of thousands of people with its own maritime blockades.

    Yemen has issued defiant statements in response to these attacks, saying they will not go “unanswered or unpunished”.

    The Biden administration’s dramatic escalation toward yet another horrific war in the Middle East has been hotly criticised by lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, who argue that the attacks were illicit because they took place without congressional approval.

    This impotent congressional whining will never go anywhere, since, as Glenn Greenwald has observed, the US Congress never actually does anything to hold presidents to account for carrying out acts of war without their approval.

    But there are some worthwhile ideas going around.

    After the second round of strikes, a Democratic representative from Georgia named Hank Johnson tweeted the following:

    “I have what some may consider a dumb idea, but here it is: stop the bombing of Gaza, then the attacks on commercial shipping will end. Why not try that approach?”

    By golly, that’s just crazy enough to work. In fact, anti-interventionists have been screaming it at the top of their lungs since the standoff with Yemen began.

    All the way back in mid-October Responsible Statecraft’s Trita Parsi was already writing urgently about the need for a ceasefire in Gaza to prevent it from exploding into a wider war in the region, a position Parsi has continued pushing ever since.

    As we discussed previously, Israel’s US-backed assault on Gaza is threatening to bleed over into conflicts with the Houthis in Yemen, with Hezbollah in Lebanon, with Iran-aligned militias in Iraq and Syria, and even potentially with Iran itself – any of which could easily see the US and its allies committing themselves to a full-scale war.

    Peace in Gaza takes these completely unnecessary gambles off the table.

    And it is absolutely within Washington’s power to force a ceasefire in Gaza. Biden could end all this with one phone call, as US presidents have done in the past. As Parsi wrote for The Nation earlier this month:

    “In 1982, President Ronald Reagan was ‘disgusted’ by Israeli bombardment of Lebanon. He stopped the transfer of cluster munitions to Israel and told Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin in a phone call that ‘this is a holocaust.’ Reagan demanded that Israel withdraw its troops from Lebanon. Begin caved. Twenty minutes after their phone call, Begin ordered a halt on attacks.

    “Indeed, it is absurd to claim that Biden has no leverage, particularly given the massive amounts of arms he has shipped to Israel. In fact, Israeli officials openly admit it. ‘All of our missiles, the ammunition, the precision-guided bombs, all the airplanes and bombs, it’s all from the US,’ retired Israeli Maj. Gen. Yitzhak Brick conceded in November of last year. ‘The minute they turn off the tap, you can’t keep fighting. You have no capability.… Everyone understands that we can’t fight this war without the United States. Period.’ ”

    In the end, you get peace by pursuing peace. That’s how it happens. You don’t get it by pursuing impossible imaginary ideals like the total elimination of Hamas while butchering tens of thousands of innocent Palestinians.

    You don’t get it by trying to bludgeon the Middle East into passively accepting an active genocide. You get it by negotiation, de-escalation, diplomacy and detente.

    The path to peace is right there. The door’s not locked. It’s not even closed. The fact that they don’t take it tells you what these imperialist bastards are really interested in.

    Caitlin Johnstone is an Australian independent journalist and poet. Her articles include The UN Torture Report On Assange Is An Indictment Of Our Entire Society. She publishes a website and Caitlin’s Newsletter. This article is republished with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone

    How is anyone still talking about October 7? What Israel has done since October 7 is many times worse than what happened on that day by any conceivable metric; the only way to feel otherwise is to believe Israeli lives are worth many times more than Palestinian lives.

    How is Israeli suffering still being centered over vastly less significant acts of violence three months ago while exponentially worse violence and suffering is being inflicted by Israelis right this very moment?

    If your nation is attacked, and you respond to that attack by immediately murdering thousands of children with incredible savagery, then you forfeit any right to expect anyone to give a shit that your nation was attacked.

    Israel responded to the Hamas attack by doing something much, much worse than anything Hamas has ever done, and in so doing completely delegitimizing itself as a state and completely validating everything the Palestinian resistance has been saying about the state of Israel since day one.


    Video: Visualising Palestine.

    This genocide is being live-streamed. We can’t say we didn’t know. For as long as we live we’ll never be able to say we didn’t know.

    [Oral submissions on South Africa’s genocide case against Israel start in the International Court of Justice The Hague today.]

    Biden is everything people feared Trump would be. A genocidal monster facilitating racially motivated murder and ethnic cleansing while rapidly accelerating toward a nuclear-age world war. Nothing Trump did was as evil as what Biden has been doing. Biden is the real Trump.

    Israel is in a nonstop state of conflict largely because it is such an artificial creation. Most states emerge in a more organic way out of the geographical, political and cultural circumstances of the land and the people in their unique slice of spacetime. Israel emerged because some people who didn’t live anywhere near the land of Palestine got some narratives in their heads involving an ancient religion and its adherents, and dropped a newly created country on top of a civilization that already existed there which had emerged organically out of the circumstances of the region.

    People came in from other nations all over the world, resurrected a dead language which had until then only remained used in religious rituals and called it their native tongue, and slapped together a 20th century nation and started LARPing that it was their native land. This caused massive shockwaves throughout the region because it didn’t happen in accordance with the organic geopolitical and cultural circumstances of the land and its people. It was an alien artificial construct from top to bottom, thrust upon a region for which it had no natural context or receptivity.

    Because it was such an unnatural foreign imposition, the political circumstances of the middle east have ever since been rejecting it like a body rejecting an ill-matched organ transplant. This natural response is treated as unnatural unprovoked hostility from the people of the invading artificial construct, which invents more narratives to justify its violent actions against the inhabitants of the region.

    The West’s cultural obsession with World War II has made everyone dumber, because now everyone we want to fight is always Hitler and we’re always the Brave Good Guys who are fighting Hitler.

    Nothing about Israel’s US-backed assault on Gaza is comparable to the Allied offensive against Nazi Germany. They’re raining military explosives onto a trapped and besieged population in a giant concentration camp with the stated goal of eliminating a small militant group who poses exactly zero existential threat to the state of Israel, in response to an attack which was 100 percent provoked by the abuses of the apartheid Israeli regime.

    Comparing the Gaza assault to the war against Hitler is like comparing a mass shooting to the war against Hitler, and saying the shooter is the Allied forces. It’s a completely foam-brained talking point that’s espoused solely by idiots and warmongers.

    It’s not too late to get involved in opposing Israel’s assault on Gaza.

    It doesn’t matter if you haven’t been talking about it until now. It doesn’t matter if you haven’t understood or paid attention to the Israel-Palestine issue before. It doesn’t matter if you’ve been supportive of Israel in the past, or if you’ve expressed opinions on this subject that you now know were misguided, or if you’ve never engaged in any kind of activism before.

    If that’s the case for you, you need to understand that millions of people are on the exact same boat as you right now. Millions. The actions of the state of Israel over the last three months have caused huge numbers of people not previously aware of its depravity to open their eyes to what’s going on, do some research, and change their position.

    There is absolutely nothing wrong with joining in with the opposition now. You can safely dismiss anything in you that feels self-conscious about not getting this until now, or feels like it would be inauthentic to join an activist cause after it has gained popularity. Changing your position and taking a stand now makes you more authentic, because it shows you are living a life guided by truth and compassion rather than sleepwalking through life guided by blind habit and partisan tribalism.

    I guarantee you the people in Gaza would much rather have you than not have you, and losing your support over self-consciousness about joining in later than others did would be a very silly and unfortunate thing to happen.

    Moreover, you would definitely not be the last to join in this cause; millions more will be joining in after you as the Israeli regime loses support around the world and everyone starts waking up to what’s happening in Gaza.

    Please disregard anything in you that has been holding back from helping to facilitate that awakening in whatever small way you can, whether that might be due to shame for not getting involved sooner or due to any kind of cringe around activism and political engagement you may have had before.

    This thing is so much more important than any of us, and it’s so much more important than any little feelings of self-consciousness we’d have about getting involved in ways we never would have imagined before. This matter is much too urgent for you to pay any attention to those misguided forces within you that are resistant to taking a stand here.

    Take your stand. It will be welcomed, and you will be glad that you did for the rest of your life.

    Caitlin Johnstone is an Australian independent journalist and poet. Her articles include The UN Torture Report On Assange Is An Indictment Of Our Entire Society. She publishes a website and Caitlin’s Newsletter. This article from her Notes From The Edge Of The Narrative Matrix is republished with permission.

    The genocidal actions of the state of Israel
    “The actions of the state of Israel over the last three months have caused huge numbers of people not previously aware of its depravity to open their eyes to what’s going on, do some research, and change their position.” Image: Caitlin’s Newsletter

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • By David Robie, editor of Asia Pacific Report

    Reporting Israel’s war on Gaza has become the greatest credibility challenge for journalists and media of our times. The latest targeted killing of an Al Jazeera photojournalist yesterday while documenting atrocities has prompted a leading analyst to appeal to global journalists to “take a stand” to protect the profession.

    The killing of Hamza Dahdoud, the 27-year-old eldest son of Al Jazeera Gaza bureau chief Wael Dahdouh, along with freelancer Mustafa Thuraya, has taken the death toll of Palestinian journalists to 109 (according to Al Jazeera sources while global media freedom watchdogs report slightly lower figures).

    Emotional responses and a wave of condemnation has thrown the spotlight on the toll faced by reporters and their families.

    Wael Dahdouh, 52, lost his wife, daughter, grandson and 15-year-old son on October 25 in an earlier Israeli air raid that hit the house they were sheltering in. After mourning for several hours, Dahdouh senior was back on the job documenting the war.

    Just under 20 months ago, Al Jazeera’s best known correspondent, Shireen Abu Akleh, was fatally shot by an Israeli sniper while reporting on the Occupied West Bank on 11 May 2022 in what Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) condemned by saying this “systematic Israeli impunity is outrageous.”

    The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists protested about the killing of Hamza Dahdoud and Thuraya, saying it “must be independently investigated, and those behind their deaths must be held accountable”.

    Al Jazeera reports 109 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Gaza
    Al Jazeera reports 109 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Gaza . . . Israel is accused of “trying to kill messenger and silence the story”. Image: AJ screenshot APR

    But few journalists would accept that this is anything other a targeted killing, as most of the deaths of Palestinian journalists in the latest Gaza war have been – a war on Palestinian journalism in an attempt to suppress the truth.

    ‘Nowhere safe in Gaza’
    Certainly, Al Jazeera’s Palestinian-Israeli political affairs analyst and Marwan Bishara, who was born in Nazareth, has no doubts.

    Speaking on the 24-hour Qatari world news channel, with at least 22,835 people killed in Gaza – 70 percent of them women and children — he said: “Nowhere is safe in Gaza and no journalists are safe . . . That tells us something.


    “Killing the messenger”: Marwan Bishara’s interview with Al Jazeera — more tampering over the message? There is nothing “sensitive” in this clip.

    “It is understood they are war journalists. But still the fact that more than 100 journalists were killed within three months is breaking yet another record in terms of killing children, and destruction of hospitals and schools, and the killing of United Nations staff.

    “And now with 109 journalists killed this definitely requires a certain stand on the part of our colleagues around the world. Not just in a higher up institution.

    “I am talking about journalists around the world – those who came to cover the World Cup in Doha for labour rights, or whatever. Those who are shedding tears in the Ukraine, those who are trying to cover Xinjiang in China [persecution of the Uyghur people], those who are claiming there are genocides happening right, left and centre – from China to Ukraine, to elsewhere.

    “The same journalists who see in plain sight what is happening in Gaza should – regardless if we disagree on Israel’s motives, or Israel’s objectives in this war – must agree that the protection of journalists and their families is indispensable for our profession. And for their profession,” Bishara said.

    “Journalists, and journalism associations and syndicates around the world – especially in those countries with influence on Israel, as in Europe, or the United States; journalists need to take a stand on what is going on in Gaza.

    ‘Cannot go unanswered’
    “This cannot continue and go on unanswered. What about them?

    “They’re going to be from various media outlets deploying journalists in war-stricken areas. They will have to call for the defence of journalists and their lives and their protection.

    “This cannot go on like this unabated in Gaza,” Bishara added, as Israeli defence officials have warned the fighting could go on for another year.

    The South African genocide case filed against Israel in the International Court of Justice seeking an interim injunction for a ceasefire and due for a hearing later this week could pose the best chance for an end to the war.

    Bishara has partially blamed Western news networks for failing to report the war on Gaza accurately and fairly, a criticism he has made in the past and his articles about Israel are insightful and damning.

    Al Jazeera analyst Marwan Bishara
    Al Jazeera analyst Marwan Bishara . . . “The same journalists who see in plain sight what is happening in Gaza . . . must agree that the protection of journalists and their families is indispensable.” Image: AJ screenshot APR

    His call for a stand by journalists has in fact been echoed in some quarters where “media bias” has been challenged, opening divisions among media groups about fairness and balance that have become the most bitter since the climate change and covid pandemic debates when media “deniers” and “bothsideism” threatened to undermine science.

    In November, more than 1500 journalists from scores of US media organisations signed an open letter calling for integrity in Western media’s coverage of “Israeli atrocities against Palestinians”.

    Israel has blocked foreign press entry, heavily restricted telecommunications and bombed press offices. Some 50 media headquarters in Gaza have been hit in the past month.

    Israeli forces explicitly warned newsrooms they “cannot guarantee” the safety of their employees from airstrikes. Taken with a decades-long pattern of lethally targeting journalists, Israel’s actions show wide scale suppression of speech.

    In the United Kingdom, eight BBC journalists wrote an open letter in late November to Al Jazeera accusing the British broadcaster of bias in its coverage of Gaza.

    A 2300-word letter claimed that the BBC had a “double standard” and was failing to tell the Israel-Palestine conflict accurately, “investing greater effort in humanising Israeli victims compared with Palestinians, and omitting key historical context in coverage”.

    In Australia, another open letter by scores of journalists and the national media union MEAA called for “integrity, transparency and rigour” in the coverage of the war and joined the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), RSF and others condemning the Israeli attacks on journalists and journalism.

    Leading Australian newspaper editors of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age and the Nine network hit back by banning staff who had signed the letter. According to the independent Crikey, a senior Nine staff journalist resigned and readers were angrily cancelling their newspaper subscriptions over the ban.

    Crikey later exposed many editors and journalists who had made junket trips to Israel and is currently keeping an inventory of these “influenced” media people — at least 77 have been named so far.

    Crikey's running checklist on Australian journalists
    Crikey’s running checklist on Australian journalists who have been to Israel.

    In The Daily Blog, editor Martyn Bradbury has also questioned how many New Zealand journalists have also been influenced by Israeli media massaging. Bradbury wrote:

    “If Israel has sunk that much time and resource charming Australian journalists and politicians, the question has to be asked, [has] the pro-Israel lobby sent NZ journalists and politicians on these junkets and if they have, who are they?”

    He wrote to the NZ Press Gallery, the “journalist union” and media companies requesting a list of names.

    Pacific journalists ought to be also added to the list.

    I have just returned from a two-month trip in the Mediterranean, Red Sea and Australia. After a steady diet of comprehensive and well backgrounded reporting from global news channels such as TRT World News and Al Jazeera (which contrasted sharply in quality, depth and fairness with stereotypical Western coverage such as from BBC and CNN), I was stunned by the blatant bias of much of the Australian news media, particularly News Corp titles such as The Australian and The Advertiser in Adelaide.

    Some examples of the bias and my commentaries can be seen here, here, here, here, here and here.

    A pithy indictment of much of the Western reporting — including in New Zealand — can be read in the Middle East Eye and other publications.

    Exposing much of the Israeli propaganda and fabricated claims since October 7 (and even from time of The Nakba in 1948), award-winning columnist Peter Osborne wrote:

    “I am haunted by one other consideration. It is not just that Western commentators, columnists and chat show hosts often don’t know what they are talking about. It’s not even that they pretend they do.

    “It’s the comfort of their lives. They sit in warm, pleasant studios where they earn six-figure sums for their opinions. They take no risks and convey no truths.”

    A polar opposite from the Gaza carnage and the risks that courageous Palestinian journalists face daily to bear witness. They are an inspiration to the rest of us.

    Dr David Robie is editor and publisher of Asia Pacific Report and Café Pacific.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • COMMENTARY: By John Minto

    Two years ago New Zealand joined 22 other countries in supporting the Ukrainian case against Russia at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for its invasion of Ukraine.

    We sent a legal team to The Hague where the ICJ is based and our representatives spoke directly to the court on New Zealand’s behalf. We used international law to argue the Russian invasion was illegal and warranted sanction by the ICJ.

    Successive New Zealand governments for as long as I can remember have said we believe in an “international rules-based order” of which the ICJ and the ICC are an important part.

    This makes sense because we are a small country without the economic or military clout to take unilateral action to protect our interests. Like other small countries we rely on international rules to provide a measure of protection when bigger countries, like Russia in this case, break the rules.

    We have used such rules ourselves by making applications to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) when our trade interests have been threatened. Without such rules the biggest bully will win every time.

    Last week South Africa filed papers at the ICJ alleging Israel’s actions in Gaza over the past 12 weeks amount to genocide.

    South Africa said it “is gravely concerned with the plight of civilians caught in the present Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip due to the indiscriminate use of force and forcible removal of inhabitants”.

    It described its case saying “acts and omissions by Israel . . .  are genocidal in character, as they are committed with the requisite specific intent . . .  to destroy Palestinians in Gaza as a part of the broader Palestinian national, racial and ethnical group”.

    Their court papers go on to claim that, “the conduct of Israel — through its state organs, state agents, and other persons and entities acting on its instructions or under its direction, control or influence — in relation to Palestinians in Gaza, is in violation of its obligations under the Genocide Convention”.

    Australian protesters against Israel's genocide in Gaza
    Australian protesters against Israel’s genocide in Gaza in Rundle Mall, Adelaide. Image: David Robie/APR

    This case is important because Israel, the Palestinian Authority (PA), and South Africa are all signatories of the Genocide Convention and are bound to abide by any decision made by the court.

    The most important part of South Africa’s case is its application for an interim injunction to stop Israel’s indiscriminate killing immediately. If this interim injunction is successful it could put in place an immediate ceasefire to end the war and Israel’s indiscriminate killing of Palestinians.

    It would allow unfettered humanitarian aid to enter Gaza where the need for food, water, fuel, medicine and vaccinations is desperate.

    This is the outcome the majority of people in New Zealand, and across the world, want to see. New Zealand should back up the South African case which is most likely to get a first hearing on January 11.

    Those who have been paying attention will not be surprised at claims of genocide.

    Genocide always begins with words and there is a wealth of reporting on the dehumanising language being used by Israel’s political and military leaders to set the scene for what has followed.

    For example, Israel’s President Isaac Herzog said “it is an entire nation out there that is responsible”, and two days after the attack Israeli Minister of Defence Yoav Gallant spelt out genocidal intentions saying:

    “We are imposing a complete siege on Gaza. No electricity, no food, no water, no fuel. Everything is closed. We are fighting human animals, and we will act accordingly.”

    Israelis more generally have taken up this talk across social media with calls for Gaza to be “flattened,” “erased” or “destroyed”. More tragic is a social media post showing Israeli children singing “we will annihilate everyone” in Gaza.

    Israel’s Defence Minister’s statement matches the UN Convention closely to the point where Israeli scholar of the Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Raz Segal, has described Israel’s rhetoric and actions as “a textbook case of genocide”.

    It is clear Israel’s political and military leaders have a case to answer before the International Court of Justice, just as Russia does for its invasion of Ukraine.

    As well as backing South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice we should also call for a swift, well-resourced International Criminal Court investigation into war crimes committed in the October 7 attack on Israel and the Israeli response.

    This investigation should include examining the crimes of genocide and apartheid.

    Palestinians deserve our support as much as the people of Ukraine.

    John Minto is the national chair of the Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) and a contributor to Asia Pacific Report. This article was first published by The Post and is republished with the author’s permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • COMMENTARY: By John Minto

    Two years ago New Zealand joined 22 other countries in supporting the Ukrainian case against Russia at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for its invasion of Ukraine.

    We sent a legal team to The Hague where the ICJ is based and our representatives spoke directly to the court on New Zealand’s behalf. We used international law to argue the Russian invasion was illegal and warranted sanction by the ICJ.

    Successive New Zealand governments for as long as I can remember have said we believe in an “international rules-based order” of which the ICJ and the ICC are an important part.

    This makes sense because we are a small country without the economic or military clout to take unilateral action to protect our interests. Like other small countries we rely on international rules to provide a measure of protection when bigger countries, like Russia in this case, break the rules.

    We have used such rules ourselves by making applications to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) when our trade interests have been threatened. Without such rules the biggest bully will win every time.

    Last week South Africa filed papers at the ICJ alleging Israel’s actions in Gaza over the past 12 weeks amount to genocide.

    South Africa said it “is gravely concerned with the plight of civilians caught in the present Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip due to the indiscriminate use of force and forcible removal of inhabitants”.

    It described its case saying “acts and omissions by Israel . . .  are genocidal in character, as they are committed with the requisite specific intent . . .  to destroy Palestinians in Gaza as a part of the broader Palestinian national, racial and ethnical group”.

    Their court papers go on to claim that, “the conduct of Israel — through its state organs, state agents, and other persons and entities acting on its instructions or under its direction, control or influence — in relation to Palestinians in Gaza, is in violation of its obligations under the Genocide Convention”.

    Australian protesters against Israel's genocide in Gaza
    Australian protesters against Israel’s genocide in Gaza in Rundle Mall, Adelaide. Image: David Robie/APR

    This case is important because Israel, the Palestinian Authority (PA), and South Africa are all signatories of the Genocide Convention and are bound to abide by any decision made by the court.

    The most important part of South Africa’s case is its application for an interim injunction to stop Israel’s indiscriminate killing immediately. If this interim injunction is successful it could put in place an immediate ceasefire to end the war and Israel’s indiscriminate killing of Palestinians.

    It would allow unfettered humanitarian aid to enter Gaza where the need for food, water, fuel, medicine and vaccinations is desperate.

    This is the outcome the majority of people in New Zealand, and across the world, want to see. New Zealand should back up the South African case which is most likely to get a first hearing on January 11.

    Those who have been paying attention will not be surprised at claims of genocide.

    Genocide always begins with words and there is a wealth of reporting on the dehumanising language being used by Israel’s political and military leaders to set the scene for what has followed.

    For example, Israel’s President Isaac Herzog said “it is an entire nation out there that is responsible”, and two days after the attack Israeli Minister of Defence Yoav Gallant spelt out genocidal intentions saying:

    “We are imposing a complete siege on Gaza. No electricity, no food, no water, no fuel. Everything is closed. We are fighting human animals, and we will act accordingly.”

    Israelis more generally have taken up this talk across social media with calls for Gaza to be “flattened,” “erased” or “destroyed”. More tragic is a social media post showing Israeli children singing “we will annihilate everyone” in Gaza.

    Israel’s Defence Minister’s statement matches the UN Convention closely to the point where Israeli scholar of the Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Raz Segal, has described Israel’s rhetoric and actions as “a textbook case of genocide”.

    It is clear Israel’s political and military leaders have a case to answer before the International Court of Justice, just as Russia does for its invasion of Ukraine.

    As well as backing South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice we should also call for a swift, well-resourced International Criminal Court investigation into war crimes committed in the October 7 attack on Israel and the Israeli response.

    This investigation should include examining the crimes of genocide and apartheid.

    Palestinians deserve our support as much as the people of Ukraine.

    John Minto is the national chair of the Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) and a contributor to Asia Pacific Report. This article was first published by The Post and is republished with the author’s permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • In this guest article, Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) groups in Wales explore Wales’s proud history in opposing apartheid in South Africa. They consider whether Wales can still feel proud considering that we have collectively buried our heads in the desert sands when in comes to the ongoing apartheid Israel has imposed upon Palestinian people.

    Wales: calling for a ceasefire in Gaza

    Yes we can feel proud that on 8 November 2023 the Welsh Senedd joined the majority of the world’s countries in calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza. These calls, however, were not led by Welsh government itself – but by Plaid Cymru, supported by 11 Labour backbenchers and the only Liberal Democrat.

    Out of 60 Senedd members just 24 voted in support of a ceasefire. Several put forward an amendment calling for a humanitarian pause, and 19 voted against, including the entire Welsh Conservative group. The 13 Welsh Labour government ministers abstained as the ‘Welsh government has no jurisdiction over international affairs.

    In March 2022, in an admirable display of solidarity the Welsh Government voted in support of humanitarian aid to Ukraine. And public bodies in Wales followed suit, engaging in a boycott of goods and services and divesting investments and pensions from Russian companies, and those with Russian ties.

    At the time, first minister Mark Drakeford stated that:

    The people of Wales are appalled at the invasion of Ukraine.

    Though when it came to calls for an immediate ceasefire amidst the appalling bombardment of Gaza, Drakeford attended but did not take part or comment. And in a way, perhaps that is understandable.

    As the result of the debate was announced, cheering and shouts of “free Palestine” could be heard coming from the public gallery. And it is this cry for freedom, rather than the calls for a ceasefire, which are at the heart of the wider issue of apartheid.

    Israel: practising apartheid

    In March 2022 Michael Lynk, the then-UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, released a statement which said that:

    apartheid is being practiced by Israel in the occupied Palestinian territory.

    This echoed findings by Palestinian, Israeli, and international human rights organisations.

    The statement speaks of a:

    deeply discriminatory dual legal and political system… [of] the walls, checkpoints, roads and an entrenched military presence… [separating] more than three million Palestinians, who are without rights, living under an oppressive rule of institutional discrimination and without a path to a genuine Palestinian state that the world has long promised is their right.

    The statement described Gaza as an “open-air prison which even before the “siege on Gazawas:

    without adequate access to power, water or health, with a collapsing economy and with no ability to freely travel to the rest of Palestine or the outside world.

    Lynk concluded that:

    a political regime which so intentionally and clearly prioritizes fundamental political, legal and social rights to one group over another within the same geographic unit on the basis of one’s racial-national-ethnic identity satisfies the international legal definition of apartheid.

    The UN rapporteur’s remit covers only the occupied Palestinian territories and not Israel itself. Other human rights groups have referred to Israel practising apartheid against Palestinian citizens of Israel as well. For example, a 2022 Amnesty International report states that Israel imposes a system of oppression and domination against Palestinians “wherever it has control over their rights”.

    Nelson Mandela’s visit to Wales

    We have learned that Wales has a proud history of opposing apartheid. When president Nelson Mandela made his only visit to Wales in 1998, four years after the ANC had been swept to power in South Africa’s first democratic elections, he praised Wales’s contribution in the fight to end apartheid.

    The man, who had been labelled and imprisoned as a terrorist by the apartheid regime, was introduced by the then-Cardiff city council leader Russell Goodway as:

    a beacon of light during the dark days of apartheid and oppression… a symbol of hope in the new world order.

    After meeting with the queen and thanking those in Wales who had campaigned for apartheid’s end, he told the crowds at a Freedom of the City Ceremony in Cardiff Castle that he asked the people of Wales to:

    accept our heartfelt thanks on behalf of the people of South Africa for your solidarity. When the call for the international isolation of apartheid went out to the world, the people of Wales responded magnificently.

    So how did this Wales come to have the proud history of opposing apartheid?

    A proud history of opposition and solidarity

    The archives held by the National Library of Wales record that The Welsh Committee of the British Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) was established in 1981″ as the Wales Anti-Apartheid Movement (WAAM) bringing together numerous local branches “as a national movement in Wales, with a clear Welsh identity”.

    According to these records its aims and objectives included informing the people of Wales and elsewhere about apartheid and campaigning for international action to bring about an end to apartheid.

    From the 1960s to the 1990s, the government of the UK traded with and openly supported the Apartheid regime of South Africa, despite the open knowledge that South Africa was an apartheid regime. This included the sale of weapons and other apartheid equipment.

    And today we make similar public shows of unconditional support for an apartheid regime, and actively encourage trade and investments in arms and other equipment used to enforce apartheid. This includes companies based in Wales.

    The archives state that WAAM’s campaigning work:

    covered a wide range of areas including sports, cultural and consumer boycotts, and campaigns against investment in South Africa by British and international companies and banks, against nuclear and military collaboration, loans to South Africa and oil sanctions.

    There are huge similarities then between WAAM and the PSC and other groups in Wales who are working to end apartheid and liberate the Palestinian people through calling for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS).

    Similarities across the decades

    As the apartheid regime of South Africa was a key Cold War ally then, Israel is a key strategic ally of the UK today. Then – as now – apartheid is an inconvenient truth best ignored, or even suppressed – to the extent that heavy pressure (which included spying) was put on activists campaigning to end apartheid.

    And then – as now – expressing solidarity with an oppressed people is an incredibly brave thing for people to do. In Wales such outspoken activists included Peter Hain, who went on to become MP for Neath and the Welsh Office minister, and Mick Antoniw who became the AS/MS for Pontypridd and counsel general for Wales.

    And their valued contribution, and that of Wales, was celebrated by Mandela when he stated that:

    The knowledge that local authorities all over Wales were banning apartheid products from canteens and schools – and that the universities, the Welsh Rugby Union, and the choirs had cut their links – was a great inspiration to us in our struggle.

    So, how does Wales fare when it comes to opposing apartheid today?

    Opposing Israel’s apartheid in the 21st century

    We’ve heard about how groups small local groups are coming together to campaign for BDS in Wales. And in a piece for the IWA called Protecting the Right to Boycott in Wales, the author examined the Economic Activity of Public Bodies (Overseas Matters) Bill (UK) and its likely impact on the right of public bodies to BDS here in Wales.

    The article outlined how the UK government is attempting to undermine devolution and the powers of public bodies to take part in BDS, and how worryingly the bill passed its second reading in the House of Commons with ease on 3 July 2023, after many Labour MP’s followed the party whip and abstained. It passed through both committee and report stages unamended.

    Yet on 15 November 2023, following the terrible events of 7 October and the brutal bombardment of Gaza which followed, when asked to vote on the SNP amendment to the king’s speech calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, 56 Labour MPs rebelled and voted in favour of the amendment.

    The rebellion, however, was largely confined to Labour MPs from England. Out of 40 MPs from Wales only five voted for a ceasefire: three Plaid Cymru MPs, one Labour, and one independent. One Labour MP was unavailable to vote as they were in the US. In the UK parliament the Welsh record on opposing apartheid isn’t looking great.

    Standing against international law is not conditional

    According to Lynk:

    The 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court came into law after the collapse of the old South Africa. It is a forward-looking legal instrument which prohibits apartheid as a crime against humanity today and into the future, wherever it may exist.

    Standing against apartheid then is therefore a matter of international law which Welsh politicians cannot pick and choose to ignore.

    Thankfully, on 8 September 2023 Rebecca Evans, MS and minister for finance and local government, laid a legislative consent memorandum before the Senedd which stated that it would not be appropriate to adopt the Economic Activity of Public Bodies (Overseas Matters) Bill (UK) for Wales. She stated:

    I cannot recommend consent is given whilst questions remain as to the compatibility of this Bill with convention rights and international law.

    Then on 22 November 2023, the Legislation, Justice, and Constitution Committee laid its final report on the proposed bill before the Senedd noting that:

    The devolution settlement requires the Welsh Ministers to comply with both international obligations and the rights contained in the European Convention on Human Rights (the Convention rights).

    The committee also shared the ministers’ concerns that:

    A decision by the Senedd to consent to the Bill could contribute to a breach of international law and would mean the Senedd acting incompatibly with international obligations, which would be in contrast to the spirit of the devolution settlement.

    When this report comes up for debate in the Senedd chamber, it looks highly likely that any motion to oppose consent for the bill as it stands will gain the support of the majority, but not all, of the Senedd’s members. Like the vote for a ceasefire, this will stand as a signal of solidarity between the people of Wales, as represented by the Senedd, and the Palestinian people in their ongoing struggle against apartheid.

    But such a signal of solidarity still falls far short of the actions needed.

    BDS and more

    Significant areas of concern remain with regards to Wales’s ongoing relationship with the apartheid state of Israel. If the campaign to end apartheid is to be successful once more, then civil society will need to organise around the anti-apartheid banner, and bring concerted pressure to bear on the public sector so that it can play its part in boycotting goods and services, divesting finance, and engaging in sanctions.

    Are we comfortable with Wales being a place where the Israeli arms industry does business? With Wales being a place where the Welsh public sector provides public sector inward investment support to cyber security, aerospace, and other firms with links to an apartheid regime? With Wales as a place where public sector pensions profit from apartheid? As the people of Wales, are we okay with this?

    Friends of the Earth Cymru, People & Planet, and Palestine solidarity groups have been calling for the divestment and decarbonisation of public sector pension funds for several years. In July 2023 several Welsh PSC groups wrote to their local authorities to express their concerns about the continuing investments of over £4.6bn of funds. Yet little progress on divesting has been made.

    Wales must oppose apartheid once again

    In his opening speech on the Ceasefire debate, Rhun ap Iorwerth said:

    There cannot be justification for the collective punishment of an entire population.

    As the UN and other human rights organisations makes clear, apartheid is collective punishment. 

    Palestine solidarity groups in Wales are calling on civil society to join in the campaign for BDS. The groups are, for example, calling on everyone in Wales to boycott Israeli goods and companies that profit from Israel’s occupation of Palestine.

    Yes, Wales has a proud history of opposing apartheid. But apartheid isn’t history. Let us work together to maintain Wales’s proud history of opposing apartheid whenever and wherever it arises.

    Let us come together and oppose apartheid once again.

    Featured image supplied

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • On December 21, Piers Morgan hosted a debate on Palestine between British neoconservative and anti-immigrant activist  Douglas Murray and The Young Turks founder Cenk Uygur. Morgan has been hosting several debates and one on one discussions on Israel/Palestine. He’s had great guests such as Norman Finkelstein, Cornel West, and Dr Gabor Mate arguing against the current genocide in Gaza and for a ceasefire.

    Murray would appear to have done well in this debate to anyone who does not know the issue. He was substantive, he is smart, but he was there as a “journalist”, the kind of journalist wearing a blue Israeli “press” vest while posing for pictures with Jerry Seinfeld and Debra Messing, also brought into the country. Murray preens in the debate for having his Bruno Maglis on the ground and reminds Cenk of where he is repeatedly, despite the fact that this excursion looks more like a vacation for him than an actual journalistic assignment. Murray also makes no indication about fearing for his safety in these dangerous conditions while reporting, as any actual reporter would be expected to do. Odd, considering that at least 65 journalists have been killed in Gaza since this conflict began. All of this is to say that Murray is hosted by the State of Israel and he is there to be its mouthpiece.

    He brags that he likes to go to wars and report, but there is no way he would be able to do so, at least in this case, without the dominant government’s protection. And unless Murray knows how to speak Palestinian Arabic, Hebrew, or any of the many other languages spoken by Palestinians, Israel is possibly providing him with interpreters if no interviewees speak English. That is if he is even speaking to anyone over there at all and not just getting narration from the IDF and/or his government-appointed tour guide as the bullet-proof vehicle rolls along. Any other coverage is likely to be from his Tel Aviv hotel room. A laptop in the lounge. Did Murray eat the triple olives out of his empty martini glass? Was the tree from which those olives came uprooted by settlers?

    Nothing written here about Murray’s stint is new or revealing. It’s how settler colonialism works and as we have seen in US wars, how imperialism works. “Journalists” are integral to Israel’s hasbara, especially during a mass slaughter. Detailing Murray’s stint just allows us to see where each side is in this debate.

    Murray looked like a stellar debater because his opponent, Cenk Uygur was so, so horrible, and for the most part, was so lacking in substance that he had no business being there in the first place. This debate was like the Tyson/McNeeley fight of 1995: Mike Tyson, who was in his prime from 1985-1989 had gone downhill, but he still crushed Peter McNeeley because McNeeley, despite his youth and the admirable heart that he put into the fight, was even weaker.

    Cenk rightfully brings up the 20,000 deaths and the 8,000 dead children; this is pretty much the crux of his argument, which is strong, but it’s not enough for a 30 minute debate to cut through the Israeli talking points that Murray is putting out. Cenk idiotically comes in and calls for a two state solution and says that he would never want Hamas in charge of Gaza: “I don’t trust them.” Read the arrogance in that statement. This isn’t his call, he is not Palestinian. This isn’t his home. He also calls for the Palestinian Authority from the West Bank to lead Gaza in the two state solution and that the PA “would drive out Hamas from Gaza”. This is typical Cenk Uygur arrogance for him to think that it is Israel’s right to displace Gaza’s democratically elected government (2006) and that the PA and others are lifeless pieces on a chessboard for him to move. Elbowing out Hamas over lack of trust also gives credence to the idea that we are supposed to trust Israel, the source of all of this and the most untrustworthy actor by far at every turn. (Cenk went into none of the history of the conflict, likely because he does not know it). While Hamas’s actions on October 7 were indeed war crimes, the ones that they and not the IDF committed and we’re still not completely clear on that, no one can expect anything pretty to bloom out of an open air prison that has rightfully been described as a concentration camp. Israel is the source of all of this and has been since 1948. As Tariq Ali has said “When an occupation is ugly, the resistance cannot be beautiful, except in a Hollywood movie or an Italian comedy.”

    Murray is able to come in and bring up the fact that if Gaza were to have elections tomorrow, Hamas would win. He also says that no one thinks that a two state solution is viable (this is true and not just in Israel or Palestine, all over the world, Cenk should have also known this). He also states that the PA supported the Hamas attack on October 7. Cenk’s wanting Hamas deposed by the Palestinian Authority painted him into a corner when Douglas Murray brought up the PA’s stance on October 7 as well as Gaza’s continuing support for Hamas.

    If Cenk would have just joined the global call for a ceasefire, this would have been a much stronger argument. A ceasefire entails stopping the fighting and sitting down to negotiate. For anyone who said that Hamas should not be in negotiations, we remind them of the old adage that one of does negotiate with his friends, but with his enemies. Each side can call in the International Criminal Court to press charges. That’s it. The genocide ends and we Westerners are out of it. We are all Palestinians, but this is not our home and none of this is our call.

    Despite Murray’s horrible politics, Cenk’s arrogance makes one not unhappy that Douglas Murray corrects him. It does seem odd that Douglas Murray, who said that he found out all of the above on his journalism assignment in the West Bank, did not know any of this beforehand. He didn’t have to fly to Israel and go to the West Bank to find out that the PA would support October 7, or that there was no will to work for a two state solution. Or that Hamas would easily win any elections that were held at the present time.

    If Cenk was the type of political commentator that did this show for the right reasons, then one could forgive his lacklustre performance and look to the next debater on Morgan’s show advocating for Gaza. However, this is hard to do considering the horrible record that both Cenk and those on his show have analyzing foreign policy.

    What can we expect from someone who supported both the US wars in Libya and Syria (“I don’t want ground troops” Cenk said)? Or someone who had a correspondent from his show who interviewed Madeline Albright, Secretary of State under Bill Clinton at a NATO Convention. The Young Turks interviewer fawned over Albright and asked her softball questions, knowing that years before, Albright was asked if the US sanctions in Iraq that killed over 500,000 children was worth it. Albright said that the killing of 500,000 Iraqi children by Clinton administration sanctions was “worth it”.

    Murray was right when he faults Cenk for never having been to Palestine or Israel. It would not be reasonable to expect him to go now as it is dangerous and there is no way that he could get the thickly padded Israeli protection of Murray. However, Cenk is well off and he rubs shoulders with wealthy and powerful people. TYT is funded by billionaires. There is no reason why TYT reporters should not have been dispatched to Gaza months or even years before this latest conflict began. Independent journalist Aaron Mate went to Syria with a peace group. He doesn’t have the money or connections that Cenk possesses, but he still was able to go and do award-winning work with scant resources. Cenk and TYT viciously attacked Mate for this despite not sending anyone over themselves to challenge Aaron Mate’s findings.

    And do Palestinians need someone to come into the public discussion who says this:

    “Israelis and Palestinians kill each other over which Sky God they pretend to speak to and it’s politically incorrect to point out there is no human God, let alone that favours Jews or Muslims. All of this violence over the equivalent of which character they like better in the MCU [Marvel Character Universe]”.

     

    Cenk needs to trade in one condescending Brit (Douglas Murray) for another (Simon Cowell) so that he could get out of politics and go to Hollywood and get a show biz career, but then again, The Young Turks is more like reality television than it is journalism or even serious political commentary. In fact, it’s barely political. As Aaron Mate has said, “Imagine being a TV host who never goes anywhere and never does any real journalism, constantly gets everything wrong, and espouses establishment propaganda.”

    Cenk doesn’t analyze, he rants. There is no substance, only bluster, and his show was built on a foundation of union busting, pro-war hackery, and blatant misogyny.

    Say what one will about Douglas Murray: to the best of anyone’s knowledge, he has never posted revenge porn.

    Everything that Cenk does, including this debate, he centers himself and cannot get his ego out of the way to do an effective job. What is written here about Cenk Uygur or The Young Turks is not news, so why write it?

    Because in this current crisis in Gaza, informed voices for justice are desperately needed. This is not the time for self-aggrandizers and narcissists.

    Cenk needed to put his ego away for once and step aside and allow someone like Norman Finkelstein, Aaron Mate, Ilan Pappe, Glenn Greenwald, or Yves Engler to debate on the Gaza genocide.

    The Palestinian people deserve better.

    The post Cenk Uyger: Stop Talking About Gaza first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • NATO’s having won Finland as a member is the worst blow to Russia’s national security in decades, and it wouldn’t have happened if Putin had played his cards right. This fact will be explained here:

    No one is perfect; and, as I’ve explained elsewhere (such as here) I believe that Putin’s track-record during his now nearly 23 years of being the leader of Russia is vastly superior to that of any leader of any U.S.-and-allied country during any portion of that 23-year period. However, I shall explain here why I believe that Putin’s public-relations errors regarding his handling of Ukraine constitute a major flaw in his leadership-record and produced Finland’s becoming a NATO member — and potentially the most dangerous one to Russia in all of Europe.

    The most crucial thing to understand is why did Russia actually need to invade Ukraine? The answer is very simple (far simpler than Putin’s many and confusing statements about that). Putin’s many explanations never made clear the core reason: The U.S. Government has been planning to win a WW III by blitz-nuking The Kremlin so fast that Russia’s central command wouldn’t have enough time to press the button to launch its retaliatory missiles and bombers; and therefore immediately after that blitz-nuclear first-strike decapitation of Russia, the U.S. regime would be able entirely on its own schedule to then knock out virtually all of Russia’s retaliatory weaponry and so to win WW III with perhaps only a few million dead on its side and thus, finally, at long last, possessing (at a small enough cost in American lives so as to be attractive to the few individuals who actually control the U.S. Government) full control over Russia, which is the world’s most-natural-resources-rich country — which is why the U.S. regime was so set, for so long a time, on winning Ukraine as a NATO member. And this is also the reason why Obama finally grabbed Ukraine in 2014.

    The ideal place from which to launch that blitz attack against Russia would be Ukraine, because it has the nearest border to Russia’s central command in The Kremlin, which is only 317 miles (511 km) away from Ukraine — a mere five minutes of missile-flying time away — from Shostka in Ukraine, to Moscow in Russia. A mere five minutes away from decapitating Russia’s central command. That is the real answer to the crucial question of why did Russia actually need to invade Ukraine? Putin never clearly stated it, and never focused on it; and, so, in both Finland and Sweden (and throughout Europe), Russia’s essential defensive invasion of Ukraine was instead widely viewed as being aggressive not defensive: aggression against Ukraine, instead of defensive against America (which has controlled Ukraine ever since America’s February 2014 coup there). Thus, both Finland and Sweden (on the basis of that false impression) joined NATO, and American troops and weapons will be pouring into Finland even closer to The Kremlin than had previously been the case — almost as close as-if Ukraine DID join NATO. Maybe Ukraine will be kept out of NATO, but Finland, which is around 500 miles from The Kremlin, joined NATO largely because of Putin’s PR failure regarding his invasion of Ukraine.

    Just like in chess, the way to win the game is to capture the king, in war-strategy the way to win is to decapitate the opposite side’s leadership by capturing or disabling its Commander-in-Chief. The U.S. regime had started by no later than 2006 to plan for winning a WW III instead of to use its nuclear weapons only in order to work alongside Russia to PREVENT there being any WW III. During the George W. Bush Administration, neoconservatism became — and has remained since — bipartisan in both of America’s two political Parties. The only way that this “Nuclear Primacy” strategy can even conceivably be achieved would be via a blitz-nuclear attack beheading ’the enemy’.

    Russia has in place a “dead-hand” system to release, automatically-and-instantaneously after being beheaded, its entire arsenal against the U.S. and its colonies (‘allies’), but the system can’t be tested before it’s used; and, so, whether it would function (which would require all parts of the system to function as planned) can only be a huge question-mark. Moreover: even if it would work, Russia’s central command would already have been eliminated; and, so, the dead-hand system is a dooms-day system in any case: it wouldn’t protect Russia. At best, it will result in M.A.D.: Mutually Assured Destruction. And if it fails, then Russia would lose WW III.

    America’s capturing Ukraine, which it did in 2014 by Obama’s brilliantly successful coup that he hid behind anti-corruption demonstrations on Kiev’s Maidan Square, was intended to make it possible for America to checkmate Russia by positioning a missile in or near Shostka. This was why Putin had established as being a red line that America must not cross, Ukraine’s possibly becoming a NATO member.

    On 17 December 2021, Putin buried in two proposed treaties — one delivered to Biden and the other to NATO — his demand for America and its colonies never to allow Ukraine into NATO, and he did this as quietly as possible and failed to explain to the public why Russia could never tolerate a possibility that Ukraine would join NATO. His proposed two treaties buried the entire matter of Ukraine, and mentioned “Ukraine” only once, in the propsal to NATO, by saying, “All member States of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization commit themselves to refrain from any further enlargement of NATO, including the accession of Ukraine as well as other States.” He gave no hint of why Ukraine was the only nation that was singled-out to be named. Both of the proposed treaties were intended to be understood only by the recipients, not by any nation’s public. They weren’t written so as to make clear to the public what the motivation behind them was — though both of them could have been. Neither Biden nor NATO were willing to negotiate about anything in those two documents. There was just silence for three weeks, and neither of the two documents was published or discussed in the ‘news’-media. The Kremlin did nothing to facilitate access to the documents even to the press. Putin himself wanted it that way; he handled this as strictly a matter of private diplomacy, not at all of public relations, much less of helping the public to understand the Russian Government’s motivation behind the documents.

    Then, suddenly, and little reported or commented upon, on 7 January 2022, the AP headlined “US, NATO rule out halt to expansion, reject Russian demands” — every one of his demands. Putin now had no other option than to invade Ukraine to take it militarily so as to prevent any U.S. nuclear missile possibly becoming placed there — to do it BEFORE Ukraine would be already seriously on the road to NATO membership, because if he were to wait any longer, then it might already be too late — and there would then be zero chance once Ukraine would already be a NATO member.

    He invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022.

    He had done no public relations in order to help the publics in The West to understand WHY he invaded. His explanations seemed to have been intended to resonate ONLY to his fellow-Russians, NOT to any international audience.

    This was tragic because not only was Ukraine the MOST dangerous nation to be admitted into NATO, but the second-most dangerous nation to become a NATO member is Finland, which at Kotka is only 507 miles or 815 km. away from blitz-nuking Moscow (and that would be a 7-minute missile-flight-time away); and whereas Putin had done nothing in order to explain to their public that Ukraine was a unique and special case and that Russia at that time actually had no national-security worries about Finland, Finland’s public couldn’t see why he wouldn’t want to take their country too, now that Russia had invaded ‘democratic Ukraine’.

    As is normal for the U.S. regime and its agents, they had long been working upon the Finnish public in order to stir them to fear Russia; and polling is always one of the tools that it uses in order to manipulate public opinion in such a target-country. On 28 January 2022, Helsinki’s MTV News headlined (as autotranslated) “MTV Uutisten survey: Support for NATO membership has risen to 30 percent, opposition has clearly decreased – ‘It would be safer with the West’,” and reported:

    Opposition to NATO membership has decreased, while the position of more and more people is uncertain, according to a recent survey by MTV Uutisten. If Finland’s top management supported joining NATO, half of the Finns would already be on the side of NATO membership.

    Based on a survey conducted by MTV Uutisten, 30 percent of Finns support Finland’s application for NATO membership. 43 percent of those who responded to the survey oppose applying for membership, and 27 percent are unsure of their position. …

    The National Defense Information Planning Board (MTS) analyzed the support for NATO membership at the end of 2021. At that time, 24 percent of respondents supported applying for membership. More than half, or 51 percent, opposed applying for NATO membership.

    Since then, Russia has presented a list of demands to the West, which included, among other things, NATO’s commitment not to expand to the east. The concern for Europe’s security has been increased by the heavy military equipment that Russia has moved near the Ukrainian border.

    According to everyone, Russia’s actions are not yet so burdensome that they should apply to NATO. …

    In recent years, in NATO polls, support has typically been close to 20 percent and opposition over 50 percent.

    Based on the survey conducted now, the opposition is no longer as strong as before. In addition to the supporters of NATO membership, the number of undecideds has also increased. The difficulty of forming an accurate opinion is also evident in the comments. …

    In addition to the current NATO position, the respondents were asked whether Finland should apply for NATO membership if the top government was in favor of it.

    In this case, support for NATO membership rose from 30 percent to as much as  [NO — TO EXACTLY] 50 percent [saying that on this question they’d trust that the Government’s leaders would make the best decision on this matter]. 33 percent of the respondents chose not to answer, and 18 percent could not form their opinion.

    The majority of respondents would follow the government if it decided to join NATO.

    That was before Russia invaded Ukraine — a country that Finnish ‘news’-media had already long presented favorably against Russia and as being a victim of Russia’s opposing Ukraine’s ‘democratic revolution’ at the Maidan Square in February 2014. No Finnish news-medium existed that indicated this ‘democratic revolution’ to have been actually a U.S. coup. Finnish ‘news’-media had censored-out all of that actual history. When Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022, Finns were therefore terrified, and the Finnish Government — right along with Sweden’s, which had similarly been worked on for decades by U.S. and its NATO agents — promptly requested NATO membership. On 16 September 2022, Gallup’s polling reported that 81% of Finns and 74% of Swedes approved of their country’s joining the NATO anti-Russian military alliance. Prior to the invasion of Ukraine, the figures had been almost the exact reverse.

    Presidential elections are expected to be held in Finland on Sunday, 28 January 2024, with a possible second round on Sunday, 11 February 2024. The leading candidate now is Alexander Stubb, who is one of Finland’s top CIA assets. In a 28 October 2023 campaign speech he said, “If I am elected president of the republic, I promise that Finland will support Ukraine as long as necessary. Ukraine is fighting for the whole civilized and free world – against oppression and tyranny. And that war it will win, has already won. Slava Ukraine! … Fortunately, Finland has now chosen its place. We are part of the alliance of Western democracies. The next president of the republic will literally be the international NATO president. … Our NATO path began to open with the Russian war of aggression. … I consider Russia’s attack on Ukraine to be the time of a new turning point in world politics.” (Actually, Obama’s 2014 coup in Ukraine was that.)

    But already, on 18 December 2023, Finland and the U.S. signed a Defense Cooperation Agreement (DCA) enabling Washington to send troops there and store weapons and ammunition, up to and including nuclear weapons, at 15 locations in Finland. Drago Bosnik at South Front headlined “FINLAND’S NEW ‘DEFENSE’ DEAL WITH US EERILY REMINDS OF SIMILAR ONE WITH NAZI GERMANY”, and he wrote: “For Russia, this is particularly concerning, as Finland and Estonia, now both NATO members, are in close proximity to St. Petersburg, its second most important city.” However, St. Petersburgh isn’t actually a concern here any more than Miami was a concern when America in the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis wouldn’t allow Soviet missiles to be posted in Cuba — Washington DC was the concern, and it was nearly a thousand miles farther away from Cuba than Moscow is from Ukraine. Similarly to JFK then, Russia’s worry now is how close Finland is to Moscow — not to St. Petersberg. And whereas Cuba was 1,131 miles away from DC, Finland is only 507 miles from Moscow. Putin never made clear that his concern regarding American nukes in Ukraine was the same as JFK’s was regarding Soviet nukes in Cuba — but twice as much so. If Putin had made that point clearly and often, then demagogues such as Stubb wouldn’t have been able to get the impact they did from phrases such as “Our NATO path began to open with the Russian war of aggression. … I consider Russia’s attack on Ukraine to be the time of a new turning point in world politics.” America has been the aggressor here — against Russia; Russia was by then forced, by America and by its NATO, to respond militarily, since all diplomatic efforts by Russia had been ignored by the aggressors. Just like JFK was not the aggressor in 1962, Putin was not the aggressor in 2022. Putin could easily have made that point, but he never did — he buried it in with a mess that in Western countries seemed like merely a blur. He handed the Russia-the-aggressor argument to America’s agents in Finland, and they ran with it and thereby easily succeeded to present Russia as the bogeyman, against which NATO represented safety. This was a major blunder by Putin — not just in Finland, but throughout The West.

    One might blame the Finnish (and Swedish) people for having fallen for what was actually the U.S. empire’s narrative on the Ukraine situation; but to do so would confuse the liars with their victims — the deceived public. For example: I personally submitted to all of Finland’s major ‘news’-media right after Finland’s Government expressed the intention to seek admission into NATO, arguing that to enter NATO would increase — NOT decrease — the danger to Finland’s national security, by causing Finland to thereby become targeted by Russia’s missiles (which had previously NOT been aimed at them); and all of those media refused even to reply — no questions or editorial suggestions, but simply refused to respond to or contemplate presenting a counter-argument. The Finnish public were never presented such an argument. Is that a ‘democracy’?

    Moreover: the same situation, of a widely deceived public falling into the grip of the U.S. empire and believing its lies, is widespread, not only within this or that nation. For example, on December 19th, the Danish peace-researcher and professor at Sweden’s Lund University, Jan Oberg, headlined at Dissident Voice, “How Much Longer Can Danes Snore While Their Security and Democracy are Being Stripped away and Danish Politics Increase the Risk of World War III?,” and he reported the very same trap being fallen-into by the Danes that Finns are falling into. Blaming this phenomenon on the victims, the public, instead of on the billionaires who have engineered and provided the trap (and who enormously profit from it), is simply more of the standard blame-the-victim morality.

    By this time, Putin ought to be well aware that it was a huge blunder. As I noted with concern on 28 October 2022, “NATO Wants To Place Nuclear Missiles On Finland’s Russian Border — Finland Says Yes”. His blunder was blatantly clear by that time. And I already had outlined, on 13 May 2022, “Russia’s Weak Response to Finland’s Joining NATO” and presented there a strategy to replace that weak response with a much stronger and entirely diplomatic strategy for Russia to terminate the NATO alliance. I am surprised that Putin still, even to the present day, has failed to initiate some such policy. His passivity in that regard is stunning.

    However, on 5 April 2023, since that proposed strategy wasn’t being even mentioned in the press by anyone but myself, I concluded that the time had come to lay out an alternative strategy, “Russia’s only safe response to Finland in NATO is to move Russia’s capital to Novosibirsk.” Whereas Finland (Kotka) is only 507 miles or 816 kilometers from Moscow, it is 2,032 miles or 3,271 kilometers from Novosibirsk.

    Furthermore: Novosibirsk is 2,716 miles or 4,372 kilometers from Japan (Hokkaido). And it is 2,371 miles or 3,815 kilometers from South Korea (Seoul). Placing Russia’s central command in Novosibirsk would eliminate the danger from the U.S. regime and its colonies.

    Obviously, if Russia’s capital city becomes relocated to Novosibirsk, then the Cold War (the danger that the U.S. empire poses to Russia) will effectively be ended. But Putin has initiated no new approach to addressing the problem that his own continuing blunder has largely assisted to cause to Russia’s national security.

    The post How Putin’s Explanation of Why Russia Invaded Ukraine Facilitated or Even Caused NATO to Win 2 New Members: Finland and Sweden first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • These days you’d be hard-pressed to find a left-leaning Labour Party member who’s happy with the direction their party is taking. Keir Starmer’s leadership campaign pitched him as Corbyn-lite, but three years on he’s positioned himself to the right of the Conservatives. Long gone are the pledges of nationalised utilities, freedom of movement and a foreign policy based on peace and justice. Instead, Starmer’s Labour is a party of big business, harsh immigration rules, and war in the middle east. So, what about the Green Party?

    Abandoning Labour – but where to?

    Understandably many left-wing activists have abandoned Labour and cancelled their memberships, while others choose to stay inside the party machine and criticise Starmer from the sidelines. In both camps we see great swathes of disaffected but passionate activists promising to boycott the next election entirely, resigned to five more years of misery.

    These people have more power than they think. They’re still following politics, tweeting tweets, writing letters, signing petitions, and attending protests. Under Corbyn they were the whirlwind force of door knockers and leaflet posters who delivered the stunning upset of the 2017 general election.

    If all of that energy could be channelled into a focused political movement, a truly left-wing party with progressive policies and grassroots decision-making at its core, Rishi Sunak and Starmer could face their own shock at the ballot box next year. This movement, this fantasy political party already exists: the Green Party.

    Overlapping policies

    The overlap between Corbyn’s Manifesto – even Starmer’s ten broken pledges – and Green Party policy is immense. Economic justice through higher taxes on the rich, abolishing tuition fees, promoting peace instead of war, public ownership of utilities, defending migrants’ rights, strengthening trade unions, and of course bold action on climate change. These are all staples of Green Party policy.

    Not only do they exist and share the Labour left’s top priorities, the Green Party are clearly capable of winning enough votes to break the Labour/Tory duopoly. Currently polling at an average of 6%, the Greens peaked at 12% in a national election as recently as 2019, convincing nearly two million voters to back them at the European Parliament elections. All this with a mere fraction of the funding and membership numbers of Labour or the Conservatives.

    With the addition of thousands of former Labour members, the Greens could see a surge in voting intention similar to the leftward shift we saw in the summer of 2017. What the Greens lack in balanced media coverage, a problem Corbyn’s Labour also faced, can always be overcome with people power.

    And it’s not like this new influx of members would be outsiders working for a rival party. They would have agency and ownership within the party. Unlike Labour or the Conservatives, the Green Party’s policies are made by the membership, local parties choose their own MPs and leadership elections happen automatically every two years. If a Starmer-style Thatcherite ever lied their way to the Green leadership, they would not be able to purge the left, overhaul party policy, or impose right-wing MPs on local parties.

    Leftists should embrace the Green Party

    With a strong Green Party as a left-wing option on the ballot paper, with the right number of passionate activists to make them a viable force in British politics, this country doesn’t have to face five more years of Red or Blue Conservative government. We can have real, meaningful change for the better.

    Leftists should embrace the Green Party with open arms and set off the political earthquake this country desperately needs.

    Featured image via the Green Party

    By Daniel Johnston

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • In response to the final draft of the agreement approved at COP28 in Dubai, the global movement Scientist Rebellion has released the following scathing statement of criticism, continuing their call for a global “climate revolution.” 

    COP28: hijacked by the fossil fuel cartel to gift a blank cheque

    The UN climate summit, hijacked by the fossil fuel cartel, has gifted a blank cheque to rich countries and Big Oil to kill one billion people and force billions more to flee their homes by 2100.

    The so-called ‘historic’ outcome of COP28 fails to deliver the most basic and necessary measures which would have prevented societal and earth systems collapse, as outlined by the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC): eliminate fossil fuel subsidies and halt all new gas and oil projects.

    Instead, the new resolution includes numerous loopholes which will allow polluters to greenwash emissions through fictional carbon capture, meaningless carbon credits, and the re-classification of methane (“natural gas”) as a transition fuel. But to remain under 2°C of warming, we cannot afford to burn the fossil fuels we already have in reserve, let alone drill for more.

    COP28 has taken a few tentative steps in the right direction, but only thanks to the blood and sweat of many people on the frontline of our climate crisis. The summit’s overall trend to support “business as usual” will result in further delays in meaningful climate action and condemn us to miss what the IPCC calls:

    the brief and rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a livable and sustainable future for all.

    Wealthy countries have once again manipulated the climate summit in order to advance their ecocidal colonialism.

    The Global North: pillaging the planet

    Rich nations have been pillaging the natural resources of poorer ones for centuries and have used their fuels to emit far more than their share of CO². They bear the lion’s share of responsibility to decarbonise first and fastest and provide much-needed funding to poorer nations, which are already heavily impacted by the escalating climate crisis.

    Instead, rich countries are racing in the opposite direction: the US, Canada, and just three other countries are responsible for more than half of planned oil and gas expansion. UN governance failure is also to blame here, however, and urgently needs addressing.

    Even if COP28 had succeeded in a commitment to phase out fossil fuels, it could not be implemented without a binding treaty and enforcement mechanisms. Additionally, future COPs must demand reporting of any conflicts of interest and ban fossil fuel executives and lobbyists from tainting any more climate summits.

    The Loss & Damage Fund could be an important first step, but without proper financing, it is condemned to fail. Loss and damage already costs more than $400bn annually, but COP28 has only pledged $429m in initial funding – a mere 0.1% of what is needed just for this year.

    By contrast, governments are using $7 trillion of our money every year to subsidise fossil fuels (despite the one in five deaths12 million people annually – caused by air pollution alone) while the oil industry rakes in obscene profits

    Capitalism at the root of it all

    That said, even a fully-financed Loss and Damage Fund can never fix a dysfunctional economic system which is fundamentally flawed, is based on endless growth, overconsumption, and extractivism, and is guaranteed to accelerate the global crisis. Studies have demonstrated that greenhouse gas emissions are firmly linked to resource exploitation and GDP growth.

    We have no choice but to create an economic system which aligns with the goals of a fair and equal transition, because the current one has failed both humans and all other 10 million life forms on this planet. Implementing a low-carbon economy is cheaper than sustaining the catastrophic costs of climate change, but the need to maintain and grow profit is preventing any progress. Profit will never fix what profit has created.

    1.5°C is dead, and 2°C will be dead by 2050, if not earlier, if we continue down this path.

    2023 was the hottest year on record; we passed 2.0°C warming for the first time in history, and 2024 is projected to be even hotter. Human behaviors inflict massive planetary stress beyond the burning of fossil fuels. 20 of the 35 planetary vital signs are now showing record extremes.

    COP28: we’re on to the lies

    We cannot entrust the fight for all life to the very politicians, companies, and markets that forced us into this existential crisis in the first place and who are right now brutally marching us off the cliff.

    This disastrous COP28 marks the end of vague political promises. The people of Earth are on to the lies. It is time to listen to the scientists, hundreds of whom have been driven out of their labs and into the streets to engage in civil disobedience.

    If we want to avoid condemning both this generation and all that follow to the worst outcomes of the climate crisis, we must all rise together in order to keep fossil fuels in the ground. The time is now.

    Featured image via Scientist Rebellion

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Another year, another failed climate summit. Running into overtime – the United Nations Conference of Parties 28 (COP28) finally came to a deeply disappointing close on Wednesday 13 December.

    Yet, even COP28’s most ambitious options for a fossil fuel phase-out would still have flopped. The UN conference was never going to be the route to climate justice.

    COP28 – another cop out

    Firstly, the good news. After 28 consecutive climate summits, and global governments’ abject failure to stymie the climate crisis, surely we can finally dispense with the notion that the corporate-captured political class will save us.

    Then, buckle up for the bad news: governments utterly failed to get the world out of the emergency room. Predictably – after almost three decades of derailed decisions – they fell far short of negotiating anything like a concrete agreement. The final text reads like a wrap sheet of weasel words designed to evade real action on tackling climate breakdown.

    Crucially, the headline failure lies in what it misses out. Climate campaigners were calling for a:

    a full, fast, fair and funded fossil fuel phase-out

    However, the final agreement fudged even the barest mention of this “phase-out”, dropping the framing entirely.

    In other words, it was the biggest cop out since – well – the last climate conference in November 2022. And yet, this is hardly surprising. Bad faith governments have scuppered every COP since COPs began. It’s why, from their inception in 1995 to now, global greenhouse gas emissions have skyrocketed, the Earth has warmed to 1.3°c, and climate supercharged disasters have struck apace.

    Who could have guessed that a climate conference led by the head of the host country’s oil and gas company would crash and burn? Certainly not the countless climate activists, organisations, and communities that voiced their (now sadly vindicated) concerns from the very start of his appointment. It’s the kind of “I told you so” moment you wished would never materialise – but inevitably did, just to spite you; to spite all of us. As it stands then: the world is well and truly fucked.

    Phase-out fudge

    By Friday 8 December, negotiators were floating a number of phase out options in the draft text.

    At this point, there was a no frills fossil fuel phase-out statement on the table, proposing this “in line with the best available science”. The Republic of the Marshall Islands-led High Ambition Coalition (HAC) and New Zealand purportedly backed this approach. The HAC includes some Global North nations such as France and Spain, a few African states, and a number of Pacific Island nations. A similar option mooted this phase out in the context of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) “pathways” to 1.5°c.

    Wordier, weaker versions hedged the phase-out with some predictably slippery caveats. Not least among these was “unabated” – a favourite Global North get-out clause. It would permit fossil fuels, so long as operators utilise unproven technologies like carbon capture and storage (CCS) to syphon off emissions.

    Meanwhile, some made reference to ‘net zero’, offering another convenient loophole. As the Canary’s Tracy Keeling has previously pointed out in advance of COP26:

    Net Zero doesn’t mean real zero carbon emissions. It’s essentially a plan to ensure the amount of carbon emitted by a country or organisation isn’t more than the amount of carbon they ensure is removed from the atmosphere. 2050 is the year most Net Zero ambitions centre on.

    But Net Zero calculations generally include unrealistic claims about nature’s carbon-storing capacityuncertain technologies, and highly contested energy ‘solutions’. What they often lack, meanwhile, is a plan to dramatically lower emissions by reducing and ultimately ending fossil fuel use.

    Invariably, the text cycled through different iterations to finally land on an altogether different statement:

    Transitioning away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner, accelerating action in this critical decade, so as to achieve net zero by 2050 in keeping with the science

    Like many climate campaigners and frontline communities, executive director of 350.org May Boeve was understandably frustrated at this outcome. She lamented that the fossil fuel transition statement:

    is surrounded by so many loopholes that it has been rendered weak and ineffectual

    Fossil fuel friends in the room

    Of course, it was the usual suspects stifling this key commitment to meaningful climate action.

    For one, fossil fuel companies stacked the summit full to the rafters with lobbyists. It’s nothing new, but the scale surpassed previous summits by some margin. COP26 in Glasgow welcomed 503 fossil fuel lobbyists into the fray. Then, at COP27, the number shot up to 636. This time, COP28 officials granted 2,456 corporate fossil fuel lobbyists access to the conference. The fact that fossil fuel company presence has been a long-time feature of these climate deliberations should send alarm bells ringing.

    Meanwhile, leading oil-producing nations were the obvious malign actors who put their fossil fuel filibustering on full display at this year’s COP. As Damian Carrington picked up for the Guardian, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) lobbied its member nations to:

    proactively reject any text or formula that targets energy, ie fossil fuels, rather than emissions

    So, it seems the fossil fuel majors’ government lackeys brought talk of a phase-out to a grinding halt. Former US vice president and environmentalist Al Gore called out OPEC nations for their role in wrecking the agreement:

    Looking on high from greenhouse gas-gilded towers

    Yet this is not to let other fossil fuel-powered economies off the hook either. Some highlighted the hypocrisy of Gore playing the blame game coming from the US – with its long tradition of jeopardising climate negotiations:

    Additionally, as 350.org highlighted, while some large oil producing nations like the US seemed to back the more ambitious agreement:

    the text they are proposing could actually hinder climate goals by obscuring the meaning of “phaseout” and enshrining dangerous distractions like carbon capture and storage (CCS), hydrogen, and nuclear in the phaseout text.

    Ostensibly, the US and other fossil fuel-based economies hold up the pretence of backing climate action. In reality however, they push proposals riddled with loopholes that throw the industry a lifeline. Evidently, they’re content to hide behind countries frank enough to wear their climate betrayal on their sleeve.

    Moreover, quite how the US – the largest historic emitter of greenhouse gas emissions with plans to expand oil and gas infrastructure – can credibly lecture the world on phasing out fossil fuels is anyone’s guess. Of course, the same goes for other large fossil fuel economies burgeoning their already outsized emissions.

    Words into action

    What’s more, for all their phase-out bluff these fossil fuel industrialised states persistently fail to actually walk the walk.

    This is the crux. Even supposing the parties had agreed to phase-out fossil fuels – using whatever qualifiers – implementation is where it really counts. And when it comes to this, governments the world over are falling well short.

    According to Climate Action Tracker (CAT) – a scientific project that measures countries’ progress against the legally binding Paris Agreement goals – no nation is currently on course to meet these targets. Moreover, CAT has calculated that global government’s current 2030 targets will:

    lead to 2.5°C of warming by the end of the century: 0.1°C higher than last year.

    Effectively, countries aren’t living up to their Paris promises. Now, the corporate media are publishing article after article parroting COP28 president sultan Al Jaber’s praise for the latest “historic” agreement. Paris too was lauded as “historic”, but when push has come to shove, governments aren’t actually meeting their warm words with concerted action.

    Global North failing the just transition

    Ultimately, the options on the table were already a low bar. Head of global political strategy at Climate Action Network (CAN) International Harjeet Singh highlighted the vital wording COP28 negotiators missed out from the very start:

    In short, without the necessary transfer of climate finance from the Global North to the Global South, a just transition for poorer nations will not be possible.

    As I’ve pointed out before, historic polluters have a particular responsibility to phase-out fossil fuels, while financing the green transition of poorer nations. It’s what the UN process calls “common, but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR), but rich countries have bent over backwards to avoid them.

    Notably for instance, they failed to fork out the $100bn in climate finance by 2020 that they had pledged to poorer nations at COP15 in 2009.

    According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), countries may have finally delivered this in 2022. However, governments provided over two-thirds of the public finance through loans. What’s more, the costs of adaptation to the climate crisis and mitigation from its impacts has spiralled. A 2022 study estimated poorer nations would need $2tn in funding by 2030.

    To add insult to injury, as the Global North nations and institutions saddle poorer countries with unjust debt, they regularly force them into servicing it through fossil fuels – locking them into climate-wrecking infrastructure.

    At the end of the day, COP28 was always set to be another climate farce. COP28 negotiations could only ever lead to an entirely non-binding wish-list for climate. Fossil fuel phase-out or not, with this new agreement we might hold the receipts, but there’ll be no replacement for a habitable planet.

    Feature image via COP28 UAE/Youtube screengrab.

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • What does it mean to bring a feminist lens to governance? A comprehensive new publication edited by Marian Sawer, Lee Ann Banaszak, Jacqui True, and Johanna Kantola has brought together contributions to explore this question. Written in the middle of our first Covid winter, the process of co-authoring a chapter on feminist governance in the context of advocacy and service delivery was a source of joy.

    Our chapter drew together Srilatha Batilwala, Michelle Deshong, Jess Horn, Tanja Kovac, Naomi Woyengu, and myself and evolved through a series of conversations that enabled us to develop personal rapport and intellectual curiosity as we mined our myriad experiences of working in feminist movements for a collective 170 years among us.

    At the Melbourne launch of the book this year, I was asked to kick off a panel discussion with the question, “What are the common threads facing feminist organisations grappling with feminist governance?” It’s a question I’ve been grappling with in the context of my own board work recently, and before I turned to the question of the threads, I realised it was important to root my comments in an ethos of care.

    And to encourage individuals and organisations to embark on their exploration of feminist governance with kindness. Organisations are individuals in collective form and so the journey requires kindness to self, the others that are with you, and the others that are yet to be convinced that there is such a thing as feminist governance (or that, even if it does exist, that it is a good thing).

    Feminist governance, like feminist leadership, is grounded in the recognition that the personal is political. That how you are in the world and how you are perceived in the world is as much a part of a feminist governance practice as the systems and mechanisms that let you explore feminist governance.

    So, how you turn up, and how you meet others as they turn up, and how you bring compassion for the journeys we all are on is a critical component. There are very few of us in the world that have not been affected by trauma – which we may or may not have processed. And it comes out in all sorts of ways – often unconscious.

    So kindness – it is important as a baseline for how we meet ourselves and others in conversations and actions. I think one of my biggest failures as a leader has been to fail to meet people – myself included – where they are, rather than where I hoped I or they might be. It’s taken time and therapy to get to that realisation.

    Woman hands holding pink heart.

    Caroline believes kindness is essential in leadership. Picture: Adobe Stock 

    And I can only hold on to it firmly because I hold both myself and the folks I failed with a form of compassion that has firm edges – not ones that bleed all over you, but slightly harder edges that enable us to bring radical self-responsibility and accountability – to self and others – into the frame as well.

    Kindness is also important because, even if the organisation we are engaged in has solid roots in social justice and feminist movements, we operate in a world that is still dominated by a particular form of power – the power of white, straight, able bodied, cis-gendered, male, educated humans. Efforts to transform our own practices are fundamentally informed by the legal and regulatory systems that authorise particular organisational structures, and by “social norms” that simultaneously authorise and de-authorise the stories we tell about which gender is competent to hold power and what their leadership can look like.

    In our chapter we argued that feminist governance needs to expand ideas of the who, what and how of leadership – which is hard, because the money that makes organisations work comes with strings of increasingly mono-cultural forms of governance: a board, a CEO, staff on the rungs below – old-school patriarchal hierarchies.

    It becomes important to consciously name and acknowledge the power dynamics – particularly the “power over” dynamic of mainstream governance – and move towards “power with” through, for example, models of co-leadership. To grapple with who is at the heart of our accountability models and expand from a focus on the funders and regulators to center the communities we serve.

    We need to reframe risk: in a period of perma-crisis we need to reframe risk as a matter of course, but in feminist organisations where we exist to challenge the status quo, our understanding of risk must inherently be different – because to exist and persist is a risk. We suggested that our reframing of risk collectivise responses – grounding in what the Urgent Action Fund Asia and Pacific call webs of safety and care: evolving practices that enable you to get savvy with risk, and get the supports in place ahead of time.

    We asserted the importance of reframing time – of pausing to unpack difficulties and to learn from failure as much as success (to adapt the words of Adrienne Maree Brown, to work at the pace of trust). And finally, we talked about valuing and incorporating an ethic of care – to engage politically and practically in what it means to bring both productive (paid) and reproductive (unpaid) labour to the world – and to recognise, as the UN Women’s Treaty asks us to, that reproductive labour is not just about caring for children or family members, but its also about caring for community.

    A final point, and perhaps the most important point, this question exists beyond feminist organisations. Indeed, I think the harder work is how to bring principles of feminist governance into organisations that either have embraced the mainstreaming of feminism but are still inherently patriarchal (and just an aside, that can be the case for so-called feminist organisations as well) or to bring principles of feminist governance into an organisation that goes “what” to feminism?

    • Picture at top: Adobe Stock 

    The post How do we bring a feminist lens to governance? appeared first on BroadAgenda.

    This post was originally published on BroadAgenda.

  • During the past three years, the country has seen a dramatic increase in book bans at public and K-12 school libraries and in rightwing pro-censorship activism, usually targeting books that address race, gender identity, or sexuality.

    In Texas, Suzette Baker was fired from her job as director of a rural public library for refusing to withdraw books about racial justice and the lives of LGBTQ people from circulation. A mob of neo-fascist Proud Boys descended on a Downers Grove, Illinois, school board meeting to demand that school libraries under the district’s control remove Gender Queer, Maia Kobabe’s graphic novel that explores non-binary gender identity. In Florida, a member of Moms For Liberty, the group behind many recent book challenges, actually reported a school librarian to the police for distributing a popular young adult novel the Moms for Liberty activist claimed was “child pornography.” Meanwhile, in Virginia, one woman, Jennifer Peterson, has filed challenges against some 71 books held by her school district’s school libraries on the grounds that they contain “sexually explicit” passages; Peterson has succeeded in getting 36 titles removed, including Toni Morrison’s classic Beloved and Andre Aciman’s Call Me By Your Name. And all over the country, school librarians have received death threats and school libraries have been shut down by bomb threats over books deemed objectionable by conservative fanatics.

    According to PEN America’s September 2023 report, School Book Bans: The Mounting Pressure to Censor, during the 2022-23 school year there were 3,362 reported instances of book censorship in K-12 schools impacting 1,557 different titles. As PEN America noted, this represents a 33 percent increase over the 2021-22 school year and a dramatic increase from the last time the organization issued a comprehensive report on school book bans in 2016. (The American Library Association, which also tracks challenges to books at public and school libraries, says that library book challenges this year have risen to the highest level since the organization began tracking them more than twenty years ago.) Books that featured LGBTQ+ characters or themes related to gender identity or queer sexuality—including Fun Home, Gender Queer, All Boys Aren’t Blue, And Tango Makes Three, and I Am Jazz—were singled out as the target of some 36 percent of the book bans from 2021-2023 investigated by PEN America. Roughly 37 percent of the challenges targeted books that “discussed race and racism.”

    The majority of these bans have occurred in Republican-controlled states—like Florida, Oklahoma, and Texas—which have passed laws that restrict teaching about race, gender, and sexuality or that empower parents to challenge school library books about such topics. This, in turn, has encouraged school districts to often preemptively purge their libraries of books and other materials that might be seen as controversial. Indeed, PEN America reports that more than 40 percent of all book bans last year occurred in GOP-dominated Florida, with 1406 bans, followed by Texas with 625 and Missouri with 333.

    Florida: A Gulag for Young Minds

    Because Florida is by far the worst offender against K-12 students’ freedom to read, it is worth examining the legislation the state has adopted that facilitates this censorship. Although Florida governor Ron DeSantis dismisses news about book bans in his state as “a nasty hoax,” he has signed several pieces of legislation that directly contribute to censorship in his state.

    In March 2022, DeSantis famously signed HB 1557, the Parental Rights in Education Act, popularly known as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, that bans instruction about sexual orientation and gender from kindergarten through third grade. The Act requires that any teaching about these topics in older grades be “age appropriate” and in accordance with state standards. It also specifies that any teacher found to have violated the Act will have their teaching license revoked. Confusion about whether this legislation applied to school libraries led districts across the state to purge books addressing sexual orientation or gender from their collections simply as a precaution.

    Just one month later, DeSantis signed the Stop W.O.K.E. Act, HB 7, which among other things bans teaching in schools about what it calls “divisive concepts”—principally related to race and the history of race relations in the United States—that might make a student feel “guilt, anguish or any form of psychological distress” because of their race, gender, sex, or national origin. The law specifically bans the teaching of so-called “critical race theory.” Tellingly, since HB 7 became law, one Florida school district banned a graphic novel, The Little Rock Nine, which details a well-known episode in the civil rights movement’s struggle against segregation, on the grounds that “its subject matter is ‘difficult for elementary school students to comprehend.’”

    In July 2022, DeSantis signed HB 1467 into law. This legislation requires every elementary school in the state to “publish on its website, in a searchable format… a list of all materials maintained in the school library media center or required as part of a school or grade-level reading list.” It orders school librarians to  certify that books in their collections do not “contain pornography or material deemed harmful to minors” without spelling out clear standards for what exactly counts as “harmful to minors.” It orders districts to develop a policy and a process for resolving any “objection by a parent or a resident of the county” to any library material and mandates that schools report all objections to the Department of Education. The law mandates that all meetings “convened for the purpose of ranking, eliminating, or selecting instructional materials for recommendation to the district school board must be noticed and open to the public,” and that “any committees convened for such purpose must include parents.”

    Finally, just this past May, DeSantis ratified HB 1069, a law that makes it even easier to ban books in Florida schools. The law extends the prohibition on instruction about sexuality and gender established by HB 1557 to eighth grade. It would prevent students below the ninth grade from accessing any books through school libraries that contain “sexual conduct.” It also modifies HB 1467 by specifying that “parents shall have the right to read [out loud] passages from any material that is subject to an objection” at a school board meeting and requires that if a school board denies someone the right to read a passage due to its indecent or inappropriate content, “the school district shall discontinue the use of the material.”

    This recent law has many librarians, educators, and opponents of censorship particularly concerned. It could, conceivably, be used to ban from K-8 school libraries the works of William Shakespeare or Toni Morrison. The notion of “sexual conduct” as articulated in the law is so extremely vague and broad that commonly assigned middle school books like The Diary of Anne Frank could be prohibited under its auspices. HB 1069 certainly has had an oppressive impact on the Sunshine State’s school librarians, forcing them to meticulously screen as many as a million books for any material that might be objectionable to a parent or resident.

    Moms For Liberty

    In Florida and elsewhere, ultraconservative “parent groups,” such as Moms for Liberty, have exploited these laws to force school boards and individual school administrators to remove hundreds of books that conservative censors frame as divisive or obscene. Founded in Florida in 2021 by a former school board member, Tina Descovich, Tiffany Justice, and Bridget Ziegler, wife of the Florida GOP chairman Christian Ziegler, the organization was originally formed to protest school and library mask mandates and other public health regulations affecting K-12 education during the COVID crisis. Since then, the group has turned its focus to fighting inclusive curriculum and allegedly “inappropriate” library materials. They claim to have 285 chapters in 45 states and over 100,000 members. The Southern Poverty Law Center has labeled Moms for Liberty an extremist hate group and noted its many ties with fascist and white supremacist groups,  including the Proud Boys.

    Moms for Liberty has been training its members to bombard school boards and administrations with complaints about lengthy lists of books. Unlike in the past, when most complaints fielded by schools concerned individual titles or series (such as the Harry Potter or Twilight series), today conservative activists turn up at meetings and demand that lists of a hundred or more titles be expunged. In fact, according to the ALA, last year eleven states recorded complaints about a hundred or more titles, up from six in 2022 and zero in 2021. The explosion of mass challenges to school library books is best understood as a direct result of the rise of Moms for Liberty and other such groups.

    Lawsuits, Anti-Book-Banning Laws, Book Sanctuaries, and Other Signs of Resistance

    The good news is that defenders of intellectual freedom are fighting back.

    Earlier this year PEN America, Penguin Random House, five authors of banned books, and two parents with children affected by school book bans in Florida’s Escambia County brought a federal lawsuit claiming that by removing several books from school libraries—including young adult books with LGBTQ characters, such as The Perks of Being a Wallflower—the country’s schools were attempting to ”prescribe an orthodoxy of opinion that violates the First Amendment and Fourteenth Amendments.” In Lake County, Florida, the authors of And Tango Makes Three, a children’s book about two male penguins who adopt and raise a chick, brought a suit contesting the county school board’s ban on the book for kindergarten through third-grade students, charging that the board’s actions were unconstitutional viewpoint and content discrimination.

    Beyond these isolated legal actions, state legislatures across the country have begun passing laws designed to make the sort of mass book challenges promoted by Moms for Liberty impossible. Illinois has led the way with a law signed in June by Governor J. B. Pritzker that withholds funding for any public library that restricts or bans materials for “partisan or doctrinal” reasons. It also mandates that Illinois public libraries adhere to the American Library Association’s Library Bill of Rights, which requires that they “challenge censorship” and resist the exclusion of materials because of the “origin, background, or views of those contributing to their creation.” In September, California followed suit, with a law that imposes fines on schools that “block textbooks and school library books for discriminatory reasons.”

    Libraries and librarians are resisting the right’s current clampdown on the right to read. In September 2022, the Chicago Public Library system declared itself a “book sanctuary” to make heavily censored books available to the public at all 81 of their branch libraries. There are now similar sanctuary libraries across the country, including in “red” states such as Florida, Texas, Virginia, and Ohio.

    Educators and teachers unions have staged mass rallies to protest book bans in states like Florida. Civic groups have also battled book bans in often creative ways. For instance, in the summer of 2023, progressive activist group MoveOn launched a “banned bookmobile” that visited states across the South and the Midwest where bans have been enacted or attempted, distributing copies of some of the most frequently challenged books. In July 2023, the Digital Public Library of America launched the Banned Book Club, an app that allows users to freely access books that have been banned in their area. In November 2023, the popular singer Pink distributed thousands of banned or challenged books at concerts she performed in Miami and Sunrise, Florida.

    But perhaps the most inspiring sign of resistance to the assault on young people’s right to read has been the activism of young people themselves. Students are taking the lead in organizing against restrictions on books about race, the LGBTQ+ community, and other subjects abhorred by conservatives. In Texas, for example, Da’Taeveyon Daniels and other high school students led the battle against censorship of school books as part of a new organization Students Engaged in Advancing Texas (SEAT). (For more on teens’ role in the battle against censorship, see Da’Taeveyon Daniels’s Project Censored Dispatch, The Rising Political Battle over Censorship). Across the country, students have formed “banned book” reading groups in one high school after another.

    The efforts of groups like SEAT, the ALA, PEN America, and other champions of intellectual freedom like the National Coalition Against Censorship and the American Civil Liberties Union deserve our support. The culture warriors of the right know that their toxic strain of hate-filled politics thrives on ignorance, bigotry, and cultural chauvinism. To defeat them, we should do all we can to promote critical thinking, deep cross-cultural knowledge, and tolerance that is best cultivated through the reading of exactly the sorts of books they seek to suppress.

    First published at Project Censored.

    The post The Attack Against the Freedom to Read and What to Do About It first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • Boris ‘the liar’ Johnson’s non-apology to people living with long Covid at the Covid Inquiry has angered many people. The former PM’s dismissal of the disease as “bollocks” arguably led to the epidemic of debilitating chronic illness we’re now witnessing. However, is he solely to blame? Or was he a victim of psychiatric propaganda of the highest order that we now need to consign to the dustbin of medical history?

    Johnson: sorry/not sorry

    As the Canary previously reported, on his first day at the Covid Inquiry, Johnson couldn’t apologise properly to long Covid patients for calling their disease ‘bollocks’. Instead, the inference was that he was sorry that he got caught doing it. Johnson said:

    I regret very much using that language and I should have thought about the possibility of future publication.

    ‘Thought about the possibility of future publication’? Translate that from ‘Johnson doublespeak’, and you get ‘I should have thought about whether I’d get caught‘.

    However, while Johnson is undoubtedly a nasty, arrogant, and condescending piece of work – is he really solely to blame for the stigma around long Covid? Not really. We need to think of Johnson more as the monkey – because there are organ grinders who have directed him to this point of view in the first place.

    ME: ground zero of ‘all in your head’

    Myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) is one of the ‘ground zeros’ when it comes to the ‘all in your head’ slander around chronic illness. Some people refer to ME as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). It is a debilitating and poorly-treated chronic, systemic neuroimmune disease that affects every aspect of the patient’s lives. You can read more about ME symptoms here.

    The disease has been at the centre of various scandals for decades. These include medical professionals saying it was a psychological illness – that is, that it’s ‘all in people’s heads’. Spoiler alert: ME is in no way psychological. You can read the endless articles I’ve written showing this fact here.

    However, these narrative have stuck – and entered the psyche of people like Johnson. This is partly because the idea of psychomatic illness is entrenched in the medical profession. However, it is also because of just who is pushing the ‘all in your head’ junk science. I say junk science because the fraudulent PACE Trial, which cemented the idea that ME was psychosomatic, was a near textbook case of it; that is:

    faulty scientific information or research, especially when used to advance special interests.

    PACE Trial: a hotbed of scientific crooks

    In the case of PACE Trial, the Canary has reported extensively on how:

    Overall, patients, advocates, politicians, and many medical professionals believe the PACE Trial was a con to keep ME as a psychological illness, and to deny people benefits and private health insurance. However, it is who is behind PACE Trial that is key to understanding just why people like Johnson lap up the ‘all in your head’ agenda for post-viral illness.

    The people at the centre of PACE Trial were:

    • Michael Sharpe – emeritus professor of psychological medicine at Oxford University.
    • Trudi Chalder – professor of Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapy at King’s College, London.
    • Peter White – former professor of psychological medicine at Queen Mary University of London, adviser to the Ministry of Defence and the government’s Chief Medical Officer.

    Elitism versus hysterical patients

    These three have been virulent in their defence of their junk science – even after it was widely debunked. Yet still, they get away with it in some circles like the Guardian. Why? It’s elitism. Sharpe, Chalder, and White have positions at some of the best universities in the UK; in the case of White, they’ve had the ear of government at times, and in the case of Sharpe their peers have repeatedly awarded them for their endeavours.

    So, if it came down to the junk science of esteemed professors versus ‘hysterical’ patients – the junk scientists will always win. PACE Trial has directly and indirectly instructed the thinking of countless medical professionals, from consultants to local GPs – to the severe detriment of chronically ill patients whose symptoms they perceive as ‘medically unexplained’. This include ME, but also countless other conditions where a part-psychiatric approach is now considered normal.

    However, there are plenty of respected medical professionals who don’t believe ME (and long Covid for that matter) are ‘all in people’s heads’. Therefore, this still doesn’t entirely explain Johnson’s views. So, how is it that the former PM has lapped up this narrative hook, line, and sinker?

    Wessely: the high priest of junk science

    Enter Simon Wessely. Now, him and Johnson don’t appear to be acquainted. However, Wessely is one of the highest-profile medical professionals in the UK. He reviewed the Mental Health Act for Theresa May’s Tory government; the NHS recently appointed him to its board, and David Cameron’s coalition government awarded him his ‘sir’ for services to military healthcare. It is that last point which is crucial.

    Johnson’s ‘Gulf War syndrome stuff’ comment about long Covid didn’t come from his Eton-addled brain by itself. Wessely is of course the person who (with Chalder, no less) perpetuated the myth that Gulf War syndrome was somehow psychomatic – in the same way the pair helped ME to become ‘all in people’s heads’. As he said himself:

    the transmission of rumour was a significant part of the very construction of the condition itself.

    We now know this is – to coin a phrase – ‘bollocks’. Gulf War syndrome was caused by the release of Sarin gas, as researchers concluded in May 2022. Yet for over 30 years, high priest Wessely and his junk science acolytes perpetuated the falsehood that the disease was ‘all in people’s heads’ – and it stuck in Johnson’s, too. Again, we have to ask the question why?

    Elitism pervades the establishment – both political and medical

    It’s elitism, once more. Wessely is a world-renowned psychiatrist who has had a glittering career for decades. Gulf War syndrome has been one of the most highly-publicised yet unexplained diseases in living memory, making repeated newspaper headlines. Wessely gave the military, governments, veterans, and the wider public, revelatory answers – and hope.

    Combine these things, and mud sticks. It would seem impossible that a man like Wessely could have built a career off the back of demonstrable nonsense. Therefore, his opinions must be correct.

    Ironically, it is the phrase that Wessely used himself to describe Gulf War syndrome that, when adjusted, best describes his affect on the medical profession, and wider society’s, opinion of chronic illnesses that have no known cause:

    the transmission of rumour was a significant part of the very construction of the… [falsehood] itself.

    As a society, we are conditioned to believe that those who have reached the pinnacle of education and careers are somehow better than us mere mortals. We’re supposed to celebrate them and their alleged achievements. However, in the case of Wessely – and Johnson (and arguably many other leaders in their respective fields) – these people should not be revered.

    Misplaced beliefs leaving the rest of us screwed

    Their self-serving self-importance, coupled with a misplaced yet arrogant belief in their own abilities and ideas, make them dangerous to the rest of us. ME and Gulf War syndrome patients can testify to this – and sadly now, long Covid patients can, too.

    However, Johnson is really only the monkey of the long Covid ‘bollocks’ trickery. Wessely was one of the most instrumental organ grinders of the now-failing notion of psychomatic illness – and clearly, even former PMs were dancing to the tune.

    That’s not to say Johnson isn’t guilty of leaving millions of people disabled by long Covid through inaction, lies, and prejudice. However, his views are just another symptom of an illness that crooked psychiatrists have spent years fomenting. If one things comes out of the Covid Inquiry, it’s that the idea that illness can be ‘all in people’s heads’ is consigned to the dustbin of medical history.

    Featured image via the Telegraph – YouTube

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Boris Johnson’s first day at the Covid Inquiry was underscored by his inability to apologise to long Covid patients properly – summing up his arrogance and contempt for most of the public.

    ‘Gulf War syndrome’ ‘bollocks’ says Johnson

    As the Canary previously reported, earlier in the Covid Inquiry a lawyer for some Long Covid groups revealed that Johnson had written that the disease was “bollocks”. He also noted the former PM wrote it was “Gulf War Syndrome stuff”.

    Now, we know that Johnson didn’t really believe this – but only if you believe him in the first place. This is because on Wednesday 6 December lawyers questioned him again on long Covid. As Press Association (PA) reported, Hugo Keith KC asked Johnson if it was “fair” that he’d been “less than sympathetic” to people living with long Covid, and whether or not it was fair he “questioned” the existence of the illness. Johnson said:

    [It’s] not really [fair], no.

    The words that I scribbled in the margins of submissions about long Covid have obviously been now publicised and I’m sure that they have caused hurt and offence to the huge numbers of people who do indeed suffer from that syndrome.

    And I regret very much using that language and I should have thought about the possibility of future publication.

    ‘Thought about the possibility of future publication’? Translate that from ‘Johnson doublespeak’, and you get ‘I should have thought about whether I’d get caught‘.

    Johnson also claimed the ‘Gulf War syndrome/bollocks’ comments were him trying to “get to the truth of the matter” of what long Covid was. He also said advisors only gave him a “proper” paper on the disease in summer 2021. This is despite former health secretary Matt Hancock claiming to the Covid Inquiry that the government began a “messaging campaign” in October 2020.

    Long Covid: hedge your bets, apparently

    Despite this, PA reported that:

    Johnson “continued to make disparaging references to whether or not this is Gulf War syndrome stuff” in February 2021, and again in June 2021.

    The former PM also sent a WhatsApp message in February 2021, saying:

    Do we really believe in long Covid? Why can’t we hedge it more? I bet it’s complete Gulf War Syndrome stuff.

    So, we know that Johnson is not really sorry about his comments – but we don’t know if he’s any closer to accepting that long Covid is actually a real, physical disease (just like Gulf War syndrome is). Typical Johnson, really – no one is any the wiser even after listening to him.

    Only apologising because he got caught

    PA reported that chief executive of Long Covid Kids Sammie McFarland said of Johnson’s testimony:

    Boris Johnson didn’t apologise for using the language because it was wrong; he only apologised because he got found out and his actions have caused years of bullying and stigma for people suffering from Long Covid. We need a sincere apology.

    But more than that we need action and the inquiry to create meaningful and impactful recommendations going forward.

    Johnson also said that people think they are unwell. He needs to recognise that this is a real disease and a consequence of the pandemic alongside the unfortunate deaths and hospitalisations.

    McFarland is correct: Johnson is only sorry he got caught. What other non-apologies (or in his words, ‘bollocks’) he’ll spout on his second day of evidence to the Covid Inquiry is anyone’s guess – but it’s unlikely to be any comfort to the millions of people affected.

    Featured image via the Daily Mail – YouTube

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The contested events of 7 October are purported to be an act of provocation by Hamas against Israel. In all truth the evidence is increasingly showing this is part-fiction, forming the pretext to escalation of violence against Palestine by a viciously hostile ruling class in Israel. Moreover, the political will to sustain this injustice against the peaceable people of Palestine is strong, binding together political malefactors around the world – especially Keir Starmer‘s administration in the context of UK politics.

    Israel: advancing geopolitical hegemony

    Israel is deliberately endangering national, regional, and global security in pursuit of geopolitical dominance in the Middle East, increasing the risk to civilian lives on both sides of the apartheid divide in the process and desecrating the spirit of human rights legislation.

    Ultimately the motive for erasing Palestine is to establish total regional dominance for the Israeli state, administered by a government completely invested in the advancement of geopolitical hegemony. This is not world domination waged because of belief in the supremacy of a discrete, distinct, singular ethnic or religious demographic.

    This is the work of a covert, clandestine, and unaccountable band of transnational elites whose bind transcends the illusory boundaries of nation, language or religion deployed to pacify civilians.

    The only interest Israeli elites have in the fate of the Jewish diaspora is in how serviceable Jews can be for legitimising its diabolical agenda. Israel sustains a large proportion of its support through a reckless and insidious appropriation of the legacy of the Holocaust, in order to inoculate itself from legitimate, righteous criticism. At the same time, the Israeli ruling class projects an image of itself as a righteous victim through means of tightly controlled propaganda.

    The technological capabilities of tools of combat, as well power for narrative management are slanted seemingly to the disadvantage of Palestine, but despite this asymmetry of strategic capabilities the consensus globally is decidedly at odds with Israel and its plan.

    Despite the abject horror of the massive loss of life in the Middle East right now, the mood of the global community as a whole is in favour of peaceful multilateralism, condemning imperial unilateral interventionism technically illegal under international law.

    The effect on the Labour Party

    The tragic, cynically calculated decline of Corbynism, as well as the subsequent ascendancy of the neo-Blairite Starmer project, have made the Labour Party a lot less free and was the direct result of massive conspiracy to prevent the election of a pro-Palestinian prime minister.

    When Starmer’s great power games started – after being elected on an ultimately insincere manifesto of party unity – firm censorship and propaganda was introduced to neutralise the threat the Labour Party’s democratic socialist faction posed to the status quo, which views free thinking and true democracy as an existential threat.

    One particularly vicious manifestation of this campaign is in the alliance between Zionist diplomacy and the Starmer administration, who ideologically converge.

    It’s usually condemned as antisemitism when people speculate about possible infiltration of Labour by Mossad and it certainly does have overtones of racist theories about the Jewish “cabal.”

    However my interest is not in asking if the global Jewish diaspora is a monolith with malicious intent; it evidently is not.

    My interest is in analysing and examining the political machinery of imperialism and any reasonable explanation of the shifting balance of power in geopolitics after WW2 would acknowledge the rapid escalation of the Israeli secret service, Mossad. It is not antisemitism to criticise intervention in the politics of another country by an intelligence agency.

    It’s standard procedure of intelligence cabals to interfere in foreign affairs and it is as true of Mossad as it is of MI6, the CIA, and other agencies. It is the modus operandi which bothers me, not the ethnic identity of its employees.

    Neutralising pro-Palestinian voices

    There is obviously influence for Zionist diplomacy over the Starmer administration, an alliance which created the necessity for Labour’s bureaucrats to embark upon a McCarthyist pursuit of its political enemies, and in the process controlling and narrowing the spectrum of acceptable opinion within the party to ostracise pro-Palestinian sentiment.

    This is a post-democratic era, characterised by escalated warfare against the left, locally, nationally, and globally, effectively ending free and fair elections.

    The Labour leadership’s list of enemies has grown to embrace, beyond Jeremy Corbyn, a large amount of the party membership he’s allied with. The Israeli ruling class and its perverse ethno-nationalist ideology fuelling genocide of Palestinians is perhaps the preeminent enemy of Corbynism and the main focus of its ire.

    Thus the regime has a strong motivation to eliminate and neutralise the influence of a pro-Palestinian, anti-imperial possible future prime minister. Once you understand characteristic imperial tactics and Machiavellian rubric, the true state of affairs becomes clear.

    Starmer, not content with kicking out Corbyn, is even making enemies of grassroots activists, people of integrity keen for a civic-minded debate on his controversial decision to suspend and remove the whip from Corbyn.

    It is certainly wrong to penalise free discussion of policy within the confines of the law of this country. Starmer is an adversary to Labour socialism because of his agenda to capitulate policy to the needs of big business donors. Most of his positions are the same as the Tory government’s, making it possible to see Starmer’s Labour and the Tories as one entity, the same power, despite surface differences and a very, very slightly more hospitable environment for social justice movements in the event of a Starmer government.

    Intersecting with the Tory hard-right

    An example of the intersection between the hard right Tory government and Starmer is the Parliamentary Labour Party’s (PLP’s) support for a surge in war spending, favouring bombs over investment in public services. It is not a delusional adherence to a 1960s political fantasy to suggest that taxpayer money could be better invested in schools, libraries, and hospitals, it is simply common sense and pragmatic utilitarianism (maximise positive outcomes for the maximum number of people).

    During moments like the coronavirus crisis, Starmer has been hesitant to present an alternative opposition to government policy, erring on the side of praise. His biggest commitment to the agenda of the right, however, comes from his rehearsal of pro-Zionist propaganda, with “antisemitism” being cynically used as a political tool behind the bludgeoning of apologist arguments for Israeli war crimes into public discourse.

    This repellent, opportunistic abuse of antisemitism was repeated throughout the media’s attempts to discredit Corbyn, so much so that they were able to destroy his reputation as a principled, veteran anti-racist. At one point, former US secretary of state Mike Pompeo, another ally of Zionist extremism, claimed that he would use his power to prevent Corbyn’s election when in fact that decision lies squarely with the sovereign UK electorate, or at least ought to.

    Such blatant Zionist interference in the internal democracy of the Labour Party was not acknowledged by the political mainstream, because these truthful, accurate narratives are portrayed as the antisemitic enemy to Israeli self-determination. The tale the establishment tells is one of widespread, aggressive chauvinism against Jews, against which their allies must be eternally vigilant.

    This story is disinformation, and the Labour left has collapsed under pressure from the political agents perpetuating this falsehood.

    The new McCarthyism

    The happenings of recent politics have proven that this information war and narrative control mission is focused not just on Corbyn, but on the entire alliance he galvanised.

    In response to internal party debate about the suspension and removal of the whip, party bureaucrats have suspended dozens of innocent members conscientiously questioning the leadership. The reporting on this development by the progressive, independent left media, which has rightly criticised Starmer’s nascent dictatorship, might be right, but it is not the view of the political establishment, largely sympathetic to the persecution of Corbynism.

    So far the media has ignored that Starmer crosses a line far more dangerous than what’s represented by Corbyn.

    The examples never end of the political policing of supporters of the Labour left, representing the agenda of a totalitarian regime that’s emerged during the new McCarthyism. To enforce this regime, the establishment has needed to reconcile the public to their own suppression. To rationalise its persecution of Corbynism, elites have treated it as a form of ideological extremism, with the implicit assumption that Blairite centrism is the only agenda deserving of time, attention, and respect.

    Policies crafted in the public interest generate outrage, while the cronyism and corruption of the centre is viewed as a standard.

    The leader of the opposition isn’t allowed to advocate policies that will resonate with the electorate, while the government is able to spin its self-serving policies in the media. And the narrow agenda of corporatocracy is protected by the media-politico complex, whilst the accurate criticisms levelled against it by independent media analysts is censored on social media.

    Resistance that precedes change

    This commitment to capitalist totalitarianism among elites – and therefore to the type of fascist reaction the West has so long thought itself immune from – is rationalised through the logic that it is a radical, progressive resistance to left fundamentalism. The monolithic ideology of capitalist realism has conquered heterogeneous, pluralist social democracy, making the superiority of the neoliberal regime the default assumption of the dominant political centre.

    Buoyant radical hope for a Corbynite restoration of the UK’s neoliberal political economy to its former glory as a world-leading social democracy has been betrayed by a violent crackdown. Reactionary in nature, the censorship and propaganda that’s occurring is imposed by authoritarianism, because it’s built upon hierarchical, elitist power. And authoritarian hierarchical, elitist power is a system that’s evolved to efficiently exploit the weaknesses of the people.

    The thought police of the ascendant Labour right yield authority from the aggressive Zionist psyops the elite class is happy to rehearse, and from the logic that Corbyn represents a fundamentalist threat to political virtues.

    Until we can next reelect a socialist to the leadership of the Labour Party, the best we can do to resist these cynical, opportunistic attacks on democracy is to insist on fearlessly having the debate that Starmer so fears.

    Featured image via Sky News – YouTube

    By Megan Sherman

    This post was originally published on Canary.