January 13 2024 Victory in Taiwan’s Election

Hope remains for the freedom of the Pacific Rim from the conquest and dominion of the Chinese Communist Party.

     Our historic ally Taiwan has held open a window of possibility for us all in choosing democracy over tyranny in this election; and we all of us must do the same for them when China tests the will of the free world.

     In my world there are very few sacrosanct and inviolable rules; one is never give anyone up, not to the police or other forces of law and order, repression of dissent, enforcement of virtue, normality, membership, or authorized identities.

     Another rule is, we stand with those who stand with us. Beyond good and evil, victory or survival; solidarity before all else. 

        As written by Eric Cheung, Wayne Chang, Nectar Gan and Jerome Taylor in CNN, in an article entitled Taiwan voters dismiss China warnings and hand ruling party a historic third consecutive presidential win; “

Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party pulled off a historic third consecutive presidential victory on Saturday as voters shrugged off warnings by China that their re-election would increase the risk of conflict.

     Lai Ching-te, Taiwan’s current vice president, declared victory on Saturday evening while his two opposition rivals both conceded defeat.

     “This is a night that belongs to Taiwan. We managed to keep Taiwan on the map of the world,” Lai told thousands of jubilant supporters at a rally after his win.

     “The election has shown the world the commitment of the Taiwanese people to democracy, which I hope China can understand,” he added.

     China responded soon after the vote by saying “Taiwan is part of China.” (This is myself in commentary; China is part of Taiwan. But the Chinese Communist Party and its horrific legacies of atrocity and state terror have no place among free peoples of the earth, who as co-owners of the state are guarantors of each other’s universal human rights. The question is, in a society worth striving for, who is to be master, we of ourselves or others of us?).

     Lai’s running mate Hsiao Bi-khim, who recently served as Taiwan’s top envoy to the United States, was elected Vice President.

     The counting of votes has concluded, with Lai – the candidate of Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) – receiving just over 40% of the total votes, according to Taiwan’s Central Election Commission (CEC).

     Taiwan’s opposition Kuomintang (KMT) party candidate Hou Yu-ih garnered 33.49% of the votes, with Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) candidate Ko Wen-je received 26.45%. More than 14 million people took part, meaning that voter turnout came in at just over 71%.

     The boisterous election campaign, an illustration of Taiwan’s vibrant democratic credentials, was fought over a mixture of livelihood issues as well as the thorny question of how to deal with its giant one-party state neighbor, China, which under leader Xi Jinping has grown more powerful and bellicose.

     The result shows voters backing the DPP’s view that Taiwan is a de facto sovereign nation that should bolster defenses against China’s threats and deepen relations with fellow democratic countries, even if that means economic punishment or military intimidation by Beijing.

     It is also a further snub to eight years of increasingly strongarm tactics towards Taiwan under Xi who has vowed that the island’s eventual “reunification” with the mainland is “a historical inevitability”.

     Following Taiwan’s election result, a spokesperson for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said no matter “whatever changes take place in Taiwan, the basic fact that there is only one China in the world and Taiwan is part of China will not change.”

     The spokesperson continued: “The one-China principle is the solid anchor for peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait. We believe that the international community will continue to adhere to the one-China principle and understand and support the Chinese people’s just cause of opposing ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist activities and striving to achieve national reunification.”

     A spokesperson for China’s Taiwan Affairs Office earlier insisted the election result “does not represent the mainstream view on the island.”

     Other world powers have congratulated Lai, with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying the vote demonstrated “the strength of [Taiwan’s] robust democratic system and electoral process.”

     Vote counting got under way on January 13 in Taiwan’s presidential election, held in the shadow of threats from China that choosing the wrong leader could set the stage for war on the self-ruled island.

     Like outgoing president Tsai Ing-wen, who cannot stand again because of term limits, Lai is openly loathed by China’s Communist Party leaders and his victory is unlikely to lead to any improvement in ties between Beijing and Taipei.

     China cut off most communications with Taipei after Tsai took office and ramped up diplomatic, economic and military pressure on the self-ruled island, turning the Taiwan Strait into one of the world’s major geopolitical flash points.

     China’s ruling Communist Party views Taiwan as part of its territory, despite having never controlled it. While successive Chinese Communist leaders have vowed to eventually achieve “reunification,” Xi has repeatedly said the Taiwan issue “should not be passed down generation after generation,” linking the mission to his mid-century goal of “national rejuvenation.”

     The DPP emphasizes that Taiwan is not subordinate to the Chinese Communist Party, and that its future Taiwan must only be decided by its 23.5 million people.

     In the run up to Saturday’s vote, Beijing warned Taiwan’s voters to “make the right choice” and “recognize the extreme danger of Lai Ching-te’s triggering of cross-strait confrontation and conflict.”

     His running mate Hsiao has been sanctioned twice by China for being a “stubborn secessionist.”

     Speaking to the media ahead of his victory speech on Saturday night, Lai called his win a “victory for the community of democracies.”

     “We are telling the international community that between democracy and authoritarianism, we still stand on the side of democracy,” he said.

     “I will act in accordance with our democratic and free constitutional order in a manner that is balanced and maintains the cross-strait status quo,” he added. “At the same time, we are also determined to safeguard Taiwan from continuing threats and intimidation from China”.

     “In the future, we hope that China will recognize the new situation, and understand that only peace benefits both sides of the strait,” he added.

     Blow for Beijing

     Lai’s victory comes as the US is trying to stabilize fraught relations with China and prevent competition from veering into conflict. During Tsai’s administration, Taiwan bolstered ties with the United States, its biggest international backer, which increased support and arms sales to the island.

     US officials have said that Washington will uphold its longstanding policy toward Taiwan no matter who takes on the top job. The Biden administration will dispatch an unofficial delegation – including former senior officials – to Taipei following the election in keeping with past practice, according to senior officials.

     The delegation visit “will be a signal, a very symbolic way of supporting Taiwan,” said T.Y. Wang, a professor at Illinois State University.

     Saturday’s result is another major blow for Taiwan’s Kuomintang, which back warmer relations with Beijing and have not held the presidency since 2016.

     Beijing made little secret of its desire to see the KMT return to power. During campaigning the KMT accused Lai and the DPP of needlessly stoking tensions with China.

     Lev Nachman, a political science professor at Taiwan’s National Chengchi University, said that while Lai has to make some economic adjustments given deep public grievances over low wages and unaffordable housing, on issues like foreign policy and cross-strait relations he is expected to largely follow Tsai’s approach.

     “So much of (Lai’s) campaign has been trying to reassure not just a domestic audience, but international audience that he is Tsai Ing-wen 2.0,” he said.

     That will not be welcome in Beijing.

     Days before the election, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said by following Tsai’s path, Lai is pursuing a path of provocation and confrontation and will bring Taiwan “closer and closer to war and recession.”

     Analysts say China could escalate economic and military pressure on Taiwan to show its displeasure in the coming days and weeks, or save a more forceful response for May, when Lai takes office.

     “There’s multiple times that China could cause a fuss over a DPP victory, either now or later this year,” Nachman said.

     And Beijing has a wide range of coercive measures in its toolbox too.

     In the lead-up to the vote, China ended preferential tariffs for some Taiwanese imports under a free trade agreement. It could broaden the scope of goods targeted, or even suspend the agreement altogether.

     China can also further ramp up its military pressure on Taiwan, sending more    fighter jets and warships close to the island’s skies and waters, a tactic it has deployed with increased frequency in recent years.

     But Taiwan’s security officials said ahead of the vote that they didn’t expect large-scale military actions from China right after the election, citing unsuitable winter weather conditions, troubles in the Chinese economy, and efforts by Beijing and Washington to stabilize ties following a bilateral summit in November.

     And while an escalation of military tension could increase the risks of accidents and miscalculations, it doesn’t necessarily portend an imminent conflict in the Taiwan Strait, analysts noted.

     “Just because the DPP is in power doesn’t mean China’s going to war,” said Nachman.

     “The last eight years have obviously been uncomfortable with the DPP in power, but it hasn’t led to war, they’ve been able to find an uncomfortable middle ground. And the hope is that even with a Lai presidency that we can continue to have this sort of uncomfortable silence without having to go to war.”

     As written before the election in an editorial in The Guardian, in an article entitled The Guardian view on Taiwan’s elections: applaud democracy in action; “Like so many voters around the world, Taiwan’s have put the economy at the top of their agenda. Yet when they go to the polls on 13 January to elect a new president and legislature, those day-to-day concerns will sit alongside the existential question of Taiwan’s future.

     The island has enjoyed de facto independence since the defeated Kuomintang (KMT) fled there at the end of its civil war with the Communist party. But China claims sovereignty over it and has never ruled out using force to bring it into the fold. It has intensified its rhetoric and its economic and military pressure since the incumbent president, Tsai Ing-wen, of the Democratic Progressive party (DPP) won power in 2016. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has sharpened concerns about Taiwan’s fate. In his new year address, Xi Jinping reiterated that “reunification of the motherland is a historical inevitability”.

     Ms Tsai is rare as a female leader in Asia who does not come from a political dynasty. She has steered Taiwan through the troubled waters of US-China relations deftly, as well as overseeing an impressive response to the pandemic. Taiwan also became the first place in Asia to legalise gay marriage on her watch.

     As she steps down at the two-term limit, her vice-president, William Lai, is the frontrunner to replace her – but not by much. He once declared himself a “pragmatic worker for Taiwan independence” and the rival KMT has sought to portray his party as risk-takers who could drag Taiwan into war by provoking Beijing. But Mr Lai has worked hard to reposition himself and reassure the US that he will not upset the status quo. He has adhered to the established DPP line that Taiwan need not declare independence because it is already independent – while suggesting the KMT could make concessions endangering its sovereignty and democracy.

     For many voters, their biggest gripes with the DPP are low wages, high housing costs and poor public services. Mr Lai’s good fortune is that they don’t think much of the alternatives. The KMT’s Hou Yu-ih and third candidate Ko Wen-je of the Taiwan People’s party tried to cut a deal but ended up in a humiliating public spat instead. Mr Ko, who initially attracted people disenchanted with the DPP but unwilling to back the KMT, has proved erratic and unimpressive.

     Whatever the outcome, Taiwan’s election should be applauded. As authoritarianism advances across much of Asia, its vigorous debate and free and fair elections are a beacon for a better way of doing things.

     Beijing has made it clear that it would dish out punishment for a third DPP term, perhaps targeting a cross-straits trade deal as well as stepping up military activity. It would probably throw a KMT government a bone or two. But its determination to control Taiwan’s future would not be lessened; and a political pathway to unification looks still more remote since the crackdown in Hong Kong.

     The next president of Taiwan is likely to shape events less through proactive measures than his response to circumstances he cannot dictate: a crisis such as a military manoeuvre gone wrong, or more broadly, China’s internal politics, its military strength and – critically – its relations with Washington. Ultimately, as voters know, next weekend’s contest is likely to be less consequential in geopolitical terms than this year’s US presidential race and its ultimate winner.”

     What can this election tell us of our future? As written by Amy Hawkins in The Guardian, in an article entitled Taiwan’s ‘cat warrior’: former US envoy Hsiao Bi-khim hopes to be next vice-president: The DPP hopes Hsiao’s contacts in Washington will help to convince voters that it can boost Taipei’s standing on the world stage and tackle China; “The woman hoping to be Taiwan’s next vice-president is a self-proclaimed “cat warrior” who says she will be able to deliver the “global vision” needed to tackle tensions with China.

     The ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) hopes that Hsiao Bi-khim, who until November was the Taiwanese envoy to the US, will be able to convince voters to back the DPP in the high stakes presidential election on 13 January.

     A political veteran, Hsiao, 52, came up with her own nickname when she was sent to Washington – with her four cats – in 2020.

     The moniker was her response to Beijing’s aggressive “wolf warrior” style diplomacy, which was becoming increasingly combative at that time. Like a cat, Taiwan’s diplomacy would be agile, flexible and comfortable in narrow spaces, she said. The animals are lovable but also independent.

     Born in Japan to Taiwanese and American parents, Hsiao’s own life reflects the desire felt by many in Taiwan to forge a distinct Taiwanese identity.

     She grew up in Taiwan speaking Mandarin, English and Taiwanese Hokkien. Her family travelled widely; when she was a teenager, they moved to the US where she went on to study political science at Columbia University; she reportedly successfully fought to have a Taiwan stall at the university’s international festival, against the opposition of students from China.

     She chooses to use the Taiwanese version of her given name, rather than the Mandarin version or her English second name, Louise. In the words of her father, who wrote an article about her in 2020: “She wanted a name that would embody her unique background”.

     Her identity as a mixed-race woman illustrates the gulf between politics in Taiwan and China. She was Taiwan’s first female envoy to the US and, if elected, would be the second female vice-president.

     In Beijing, the Communist party chief Xi Jinping last year revealed an all-male politburo, meaning that for the first time since 1997 there are no women in the party’s leadership committee. And the prospect of a mixed-race politician in China is vanishingly remote in a system that emphasises ethnic purity as central to its idea of nationalism. Some see her as a contrast to the laolünan (old, green, male) style of politics that has traditionally dominated DPP politics (the party’s colour is green).

     Hsiao argues that her extensive contacts in Washington on both sides of the aisle will help Taiwan to preserve its status quo – even if that comes at the cost of dialogue with Beijing. China imposed sanctions on Hsiao in 2022 and 2023, meaning that she and her family members cannot enter mainland China, Hong Kong or Macau.

     All three of the main parties are arguing that their candidate can preserve peace and stability for the self-governing island. For the incumbent DPP, that offer to voters comes in the form of a ticket headed by Lai Ching-te, the current vice-president, and his running mate, Hsiao.

     Although the DPP does not formally support a declaration of independence, it is widely seen as the party that would try to put the most distance between Taipei and Beijing. Lai has previously described himself as a “pragmatic worker for Taiwan independence”.

     The main opposition party, the Kuomintang, argues that more dialogue, as well as economic and trade links with China, will help reduce cross-Strait tensions. And the relative newcomer, the Taiwan People’s Party, claims to offer a middle way for voters, although its candidate Ko Wen-je has supported increased links with China.

     Hsiao, however argues that Taiwan needs to bolster its defences against the “constant pressures” from China. The DPP hopes she will be able to convince the country’s 19.3 million eligible voters it is the party that can boost Taipei’s standing on the world stage.

     “She is very international,” says Bonnie Glaser, the managing director and Taiwan expert at the German Marshall Fund, a thinktank. “That is part of what the DPP wants to portray itself as, as a party that is connected to the world”.

     Soon after graduating in the US, Hsiao returned to Taiwan to join the DPP, becoming the party’s head of international affairs at the age of 26. In 2002, she renounced her US citizenship in accordance with Taiwan’s laws about civil servants.

     Before being appointed to serve in Washington in 2020, she was a member of Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan, and served for a decade in the east-coast county of Hualien, which has a large Indigenous population – an experience which her supporters say boosts her credentials outside the Taipei elite.

     In a televised vice-presidential debate on 1 January, Hsiao said that there were three main issues facing Taiwan: the economy, geopolitical uncertainties and global challenges such as climate change.

     But the question of how to negotiate the relationship between the US and China is dominating the race. In a recent interview with The Economist, Hsiao summed up her, and the DPP’s, approach:“Cats have the ability to tread softly but firmly … You can’t force them to do things they don’t want to. You don’t command cats. You’ve got to be nice to them, and cats will repay your kindness with warmth.”

     As I wrote of the last election in my post of January 11 2020, Taiwan’s election reaffirms independence from Communist China; President Tsai Ing-wen, who campaigned on the slogan “Resist China, Defend Taiwan”, has seized victory yet again in Taiwan’s elections, which reaffirms independence from the rapacious and brutal tyranny of Beijing’s Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party.

     The free people of Taiwan need only look to the repression of democracy in Hong Kong, the racist campaign of sinofication against the Islamic ethnic minority of Xinjiang which is a vast laboratory of state terror, surveillance, and thought control, or the conquest of Tibet and annihilation of its faith and culture to see clearly what the Chinese Communist Party intends for anyone it gobbles up.

     America must reverse course on the policy of recognition, loans, and trading status regarding the balance of power between China and Taiwan; the CCP must become a pariah state with whom no free nation will trade until it renounces its declared goal of capturing Taiwan, and abandons Hong Kong, Xinjiang, and Tibet, to their sovereign independence.

    Taiwan would find common cause with a liberated Hong Kong and perhaps with Singapore as well; Beijing’s long range plans for the conquest of South Asia and the Pacific Rim, and the occupation of the world’s capital cities through military enforcement of its Overseas Chinese policy beginning with the imposition of rule on Chinatowns globally, seems glaringly obvious to me and cannot have escaped the attention of those of its neighbors such as Malaysia and Brunei who would be first to fall in a campaign whose initial objective will be control of the sea lanes of trade.

      The CCP already controls the Panama Canal through commercial fronts, a third of India’s landmass through its enormous Maoist insurgency, and has a belligerent ally in North Korea as well as client states in Nepal and Myanmar as well as others, and many levers of control in SIngapore; if allowed to complete construction of their strategic archipelago of island fortresses they will be able to interdict shipping in the South China Sea and bring enormous pressure against target nations.

     We must help Taiwan keep its freedom, help Hong Kong to seize theirs, and together help the nations of the Pacific Rim to secure their independence from conquest by the Chinese Communist Party.

       As I wrote in my post of August 19 2020, China’s Holocaust: the Genocide of the Uighurs of Xinjiang and the Colonization of Hong Kong; It begins with the Great Wall of Silence and the control of truth, the repression of dissent and silencing of heroes like Joshua Wong, Jimmy Lai, and Cai Xia, but it always ends in concentration camps like those in Xinjiang; the path of tyranny and fascism leads ever downward into degradation and dehumanization.

     What do you call it when a government enacts the erasure and genocide of an ethnic and religious minority, and profits by their slave labor in concentration camps?

    I call it a Holocaust.

     What do you call a government which uses forced sterilizations, mass abductions, torture, murder, sending children to orphanages to be taught only in the official language, the outlawing of religious practice, and all this and more horrors and crimes against humanity targeted against those who do not fit the authorities paradigm of blood, faith, and soil?

    I call it fascism.

    And I say that whatever lies such governments tell about their crimes, what they call themselves or the particulars of their inhumanity, means nothing. All that matters is this; the powerful are inflicting harm on the powerless and the dispossessed.

     Shall we let the vulnerable and those whom Frantz Fanon called the Wretched of the Earth stand alone? Are all humans our brothers and sisters?

     In the conquest and genocide of the Uighur Muslims of Xinjiang the Chinese Communist Party has revealed their true nature as a xenophobic authoritarian state of force and control and a criminal organization of state terror and tyranny. They are a government without legitimacy.

     Shall we be collaborators and profiteers of slave labor, or shall we stand in solidarity to cast down from their thrones all those who would enslave us?

     In the lyrics of the Chinese national anthem, “Arise, ye who refuse to be slaves.”

        As I wrote in my post of February 10 2022, Why I Write: A Manifesto of Art and Revolution At the Dawn of the South Asian Spring;  We are coordinating actions among networks of democracy and liberation organizations throughout South Asia, systems of alliances referred to as the Milk Tea Movement, in Hong Kong, Beijing and other cities in China, Thailand, and Burma, which during the past year have morphed with protean strangeness to include Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, West Papua, the Philippines, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, East Timor, Sri Lanka, India, Kashmir, possibly a whole emerging South Asian Spring, and now has solidarity with democracy movements as well as direct agents of change within Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and Libya in one dominion and within Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen in another.

     There is a saying attributed as a Chinese curse but coined by the father of Prime Minister Chamberlain in a speech of 1898, possibly a paraphrase of the line “Better to be a dog in times of tranquility than a human in times of chaos” in a short story of 1627 by Feng Menglong, “May you live in interesting times.”

     We are now living in interesting times; whether we make of our time a curse or a fulcrum with which to change the balance of power in the world from tyranny to democracy and free societies of equals rests with each of us.

     How shall we write our witness of history and sacred calling to pursue the truth as what Foucault called truthtellers? In this crucial moment wherein the fate of humankind hangs between tyranny and liberty, how are we to perform an ars poetica of revolution?

     As I wrote in my post of October 6 2019, Vendetta Lives: Hong Kong Defies Tyranny and State Terror; I am one man, of limited understanding, though I have worn many masks in many places, and not all of my causes have been lost; through all my Forlorn Hopes and a lifetime of Last Sands I yet remain to defy and defend.

    Of our many possible futures I can only say this; all is not yet lost, nor is anything past redemption when the will to resist and to become better can be found.

     So I leave you with the words of Alan Moore from V for Vendetta; “Since mankind’s dawn, a handful of oppressors have accepted the responsibility over our lives that we should have accepted for ourselves. By doing so, they took our power. By doing nothing, we gave it away. We’ve seen where their way leads, through camps and wars, towards the slaughterhouse.”

The Hunger Games Salute of the Revolution

Taiwan voters dismiss China warnings and hand ruling party a historic third consecutive presidential win

Taiwan elects Lai Ching-te, from incumbent pro-sovereignty party, as president

The Guardian view on Taiwan’s elections: applaud democracy in action

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/05/the-guardian-view-on-taiwans-elections-applaud-democracy-in-action

Taiwan’s ‘cat warrior’: former US envoy Hsiao Bi-khim hopes to be next vice-president: The DPP hopes Hsiao’s contacts in Washington will help to convince voters that it can boost Taipei’s standing on the world stage and tackle China

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/03/taiwans-cat-warrior-former-us-envoy-hsiao-bi-khim-hopes-to-be-next-vice-president

Cognitive warfare and weather balloons: China accused of using ‘all means’ to influence Taiwan vote

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/09/taiwan-presidential-election-china-influence

Taiwan election: who are the candidates and what is at stake?

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/08/taiwan-election-who-candidates-what-stake

On the 2020 election

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jan/09/the-guardian-view-on-taiwans-election-an-extraordinary-comeback-then-what

V for Vendetta 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition Hardcover

V for Vendetta as Cultural Pastiche: A Critical Study of the Graphic Novel and Film, James R. Keller

Chinese

2024 年 1 月 13 日台灣選舉勝利

          環太平洋地區擺脫中國共產黨的征服和統治仍抱持希望。

      我們的歷史盟友台灣為我們所有人在這次選舉中選擇民主而非暴政打開了可能性之窗; 當中國考驗自由世界的意願時,我們所有人都必須為他們做同樣的事情。

      在我的世界裡,很少有神聖不可侵犯的規則; 我們永遠不會放棄任何人,無論是警察或其他法律和秩序力量,或是鎮壓異議、執行美德、常態、會員資格或授權身分。

      另一條規則是,我們與那些與我們站在一起的人站在一起。 超越善與惡,勝利還是生存; 團結高於一切。

正如我在 2020 年 1 月 11 日的貼文中談到上次選舉時所寫的那樣,台灣的選舉重申了台灣獨立於共產主義中國; 以「抗中保台」口號競選的總統蔡英文在台灣選舉中再次取得勝利,再次證明台灣獨立於北京習近平和中國共產黨的貪婪和殘暴暴政。

      台灣的自由人民只需關注香港對民主的鎮壓,針對新疆伊斯蘭少數民族的種族主義中國化運動,新疆是國家恐怖、監視和思想控制的巨大實驗室,或者征服西藏和西藏。消滅其信仰和文化,以清楚了解中國共產黨對其吞併的任何人的意圖。

      美國必須扭轉有關中國與台灣之間權力平衡的承認、貸款和貿易地位政策; 中共必須成為賤民國家,除非它放棄宣稱的佔領台灣的目標,並放棄香港、新疆和西藏的主權獨立,否則任何自由國家都不會與之進行貿易。

     台灣將與解放後的香港找到共同的事業,或許也與新加坡找到共同的事業。 北京征服南亞和環太平洋地區的長期計劃,以及從對全球唐人街實施統治開始,通過軍事執行其華僑政策佔領世界首都的計劃,對我來說似乎是顯而易見的,無法逃避馬來西亞和文萊等鄰國的注意力將首先落入一場旨在控制海上貿易航線的運動。

       中共已經透過商業戰線控制了巴拿馬運河,透過其巨大的毛派叛亂控制了印度三分之一的陸地,並在北韓擁有好戰盟友,在尼泊爾、緬甸等國家擁有附庸國,並在印度擁有許多控製手段。新加坡; 如果允許他們完成其戰略島嶼堡壘的建設,他們將能夠阻斷南海的航運,並對目標國家帶來巨大的壓力。

      我們必須幫助台灣保持自由,幫助香港奪取自由,並共同幫助環太平洋國家確保獨立,免於中國共產黨的征服。

        正如我在 2020 年 8 月 19 日的文章《中國的大屠殺:新疆維吾爾人的種族滅絕和香港的殖民化; 它始於沉默長城和對真相的控制,鎮壓異見和壓制黃之鋒、黎智英、蔡霞等英雄,但總是以新疆那樣的集中營結束; 暴政和法西斯主義的道路永遠導致墮落和非人化。

      當一個政府對少數民族和宗教少數群體進行消滅和種族滅絕,並透過他們在集中營的奴役勞動獲利時,你會怎麼稱呼它?

     我稱之為大屠殺。

      你怎麼稱呼一個政府,它使用強迫絕育、大規模綁架、酷刑、謀殺、將兒童送到孤兒院只用官方語言進行教育、取締宗教活動以及所有這些以及更多針對這些人的恐怖和反人類罪行誰不符合當局的血統、信仰和土壤範式?

     我稱之為法西斯主義。

     我想說的是,無論這些政府對他們的罪行、他們自稱的人或他們不人道的細節所說的任何謊言,都毫無意義。 重要的是這一點; 強者正在傷害弱者和被剝奪者。

      我們是否應該讓弱勢群體和那些被弗朗茨·法農稱為「地球上的不幸者」的人孤立無援? 所有人類都是我們的兄弟姊妹嗎?

      在對新疆維吾爾族穆斯林的征服和種族滅絕中,中國共產黨揭露了他們作為武力和控制的排外獨裁​​國家和國家恐怖和暴政犯罪組織的真實本質。 他們是一個沒有合法性的政府。

      我們應該成為奴隸勞動的合作者和奸商,還是應該團結一致,將所有那些奴役我們的人從他們的寶座上推翻?

      中國國歌的歌詞是:“不願為奴的人起來吧。”

         正如我在 2022 年 2 月 10 日的文章《我為何寫作:南亞之春黎明時的藝術與革命宣言》中所寫; 我們正在協調整個南亞的民主和解放組織網絡之間的行動,這些聯盟系統被稱為“奶茶運動”,在香港、北京以及中國、泰國和緬甸的其他城市,在過去的一年裡,這些網絡已經發生了變化。千變萬化的陌生環境包括台灣、馬來西亞、新加坡、印尼、西巴布亞、菲律賓、汶萊、柬埔寨、寮國、越南、東帝汶、斯里蘭卡、印度、克什米爾,可能還有整個艾默爾

南亞之春,現在與俄羅斯、白俄羅斯、哈薩克、烏克蘭和利比亞以及伊朗、伊拉克、敘利亞、黎巴嫩和也門境內的民主運動以及變革的直接推動者站在一起。

      有句話被認為是中國人的咒語,但卻是英國首相張伯倫的父親在1898 年的一次演講中創造的,可能是對《泰晤士報》中“寧做狗,不做亂時人”這句話的釋義。馮夢龍1627年的短篇小說《願你活在有趣的時代》。

      我們現在生活在一個有趣的時代; 我們是否將我們的時代視為詛咒,還是將世界力量平衡從專制轉向民主和平等的自由社會的支點,取決於我們每個人。

      我們該如何書寫我們的歷史見證和神聖使命,成為傅柯所說的說真話的人? 在人類命運懸於暴政與自由之間的關鍵時刻,我們該如何演繹一場革命詩意藝術?

      正如我在 2019 年 10 月 6 日的文章《仇殺生:香港反抗暴政與國家恐怖; 我是一個人,理解力有限,儘管我在許多地方戴著許多面具,並且並非我所有的事業都失去了; 透過我所有的絕望的希望和最後的沙子的一生,我仍然反抗和捍衛。

     對於我們許多可能的未來,我只能這麼說; 當我們找到抵抗和變得更好的意願時,一切都還沒有失去,也沒有什麼是不可挽回的。       所以我要向你們傳達《V字仇殺隊》中艾倫·摩爾的話; 「自人類誕生以來,一小撮壓迫者就承擔了我們本該承擔的生命責任。 藉由這樣做,他們奪取了我們的權力。 我們什麼都不做,就把它放棄了。 我們已經看到了他們的道路,穿過營地和戰爭,通往屠宰場。

January 12 2024 Victorious Red Sea Campaign Globalizes the Gaza War

     A victorious Red Sea Campaign and counter-blockade of Israel by allies of Palestinian liberation struggle, the Houthi of Yemen, long an arm of the Iranian Dominion in protracted conflict with the Arab-American Alliance in sectarian civil war become a Great Powers proxy war, has with genius and daring in commerce raiding isolated Israel from material support for her war of terror and ethnic cleansing, and globalized the conflict.

     America and Britain have attacked Houthi targets in Yemen in reply, as South Africa brings charges against Israel for genocide and crimes against humanity.

     The counter blockade has been victorious in isolating Israel from support in balance to their war crime of blocking humanitarian aid to Gaza. Now as Israel’s co conspirators in ethnic cleansing America and Britain viciously murder the champions of humanity in Yemen, we must bring the war home and demonstrate that no one may dehumanize another from any safe haven anywhere on earth. And should any such regime of state terror send arms to Israel, those ships must be sunk at sea or destroyed in port throughout the world. 

     Israel has made a killing jar of Gaza, but a bigger one can be placed around it by giving terror no safe haven anywhere. Our amoral and tyrannical President Biden has failed to use the best means of pressure to win an end to Israels campaign of genocide in BDS; by his complicity we are left with only direct action and war to the knife in Resistance.

       What is War to the Knife? A phrase and idea of conflict and struggle which come to us unchanged from Old Norse in the time of the Vikings; Krieg Pa Kniven, fitting for a unifying principle of action of a global pirate brotherhood of liberation struggle such as that of the Free Port of Hodeidah from which I now write.

     All Resistance is war to the knife, for who respects no laws and no limits may hide behind none.

      Who are the Houthis and how did the US and UK strikes on Yemen come about? As written by Archie Bland and Bethan McKernan in The Guardian, in an article of the same title; “The US and UK have launched airstrikes on more than a dozen sites used by the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen, according to US officials.

     The strikes are the most significant military response to the Houthis’ persistent campaign of drone and missile attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea, which began after Israel’s war in Gaza broke out. Here’s how we got here:

     Who are the Houthis?

     The Houthis are a Yemeni militia group named after their founder, Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi, and representing the Zaidi branch of Shia Islam. They emerged in the 1980s in opposition to Saudi Arabia’s religious influence in Yemen. The group, which has an estimated 20,000 fighters and whose official name is Ansar Allah, runs most of the west of the country and is in charge of its Red Sea coastline.

      What is the group’s relationship with Iran and the war in Gaza?

     The Houthis are backed by Iran as part of its longstanding hostility with Saudi Arabia and are supporting Hamas in the war in Gaza. Soon after the Hamas massacre on 7 October, the Houthi leader Abdul Malik Al-Houthi said his forces were “ready to move in the hundreds of thousands to join the Palestinian people and confront the enemy”.

     What has been happening in the Red Sea?

     The Red Sea, one of the world’s most densely packed shipping channels, lies south of the Suez canal, the most significant waterway connecting Europe to Asia and east Africa. Yemen is situated along the sea’s south-east coast, where it meets the Gulf of Aden.

     Shortly after the start of the Gaza war the Houthis began launching missile and drone attacks at vessels in the Red Sea, most of which were intercepted by US and Israeli countermeasures.

     The situation escalated on 19 November, when militants used a helicopter to seize a car carrier chartered by a Japanese company and linked to an Israeli businessman, abducted the crew. The Houthis said all vessels they perceived as linked to Israel or its allies would “become a legitimate target for armed forces”.

     Multiple attacks on vessels followed, mostly without success, but many shipping companies nevertheless decided to bypass the Red Sea route and divert around South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope, significantly adding to journey times and cost.

     How has the US responded?

     On 18 December the US announced the formation of Operation Prosperity Guardian in response to the Houthi attacks.

     The US refrained from direct confrontation until 31 December, when US Navy helicopters fired on a group of small boats attempting to board a container ship that had requested their protection. The deaths of 10 militants marked a new phase in the crisis.

     On 9 January US and British warships shot down 21 drones and missiles fired by the Houthis, in what London called the largest such attack in the area. On 10 January, Antony Blinken, the US secretary of state, said further attacks could prompt a western military response.

     What was happening in Yemen before the Gaza war?

     The Houthis had been gaining support around the turn of the century from Shia Yemenis fed up with the corruption and cruelty of the longtime authoritarian president and Saudi ally, Ali Abdullah Saleh, particularly during the aftermath of 9/11 and the US invasion of Iraq. Popular protests and several assassination attempts forced Saleh to resign in 2012.

    In 2014 the Houthis allied with their former enemy Saleh to seize the capital, Sana’a, and overthrew the new western-backed president, Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, a year later. After Hadi was forced to flee, the exiled Yemeni government asked its allies in Saudi Arabia and the UAE to launch a military campaign, also backed by the west, to drive out the Houthis.

     A catastrophic civil war ensued that the UN estimated led to 377,000 deaths and displaced 4 million people by the end of 2021.

     The Houthis in effect won the war. An April 2022 ceasefire prompted a significant decline in violence, and fighting has largely remained in abeyance despite the official expiry of the truce in October.

     How were the attacks by the Houthis seen in Yemen and Saudi Arabia?

      Some Yemenis see the Houthi operations as a legitimate means of exerting pressure on Israel and its allies in defence of Palestinian civilians, and analysts say the Houthis’ intervention has helped shore up their domestic support. The militants also believe attacks in the Red Sea can make them a more significant global player, synonymous with Yemen as a whole despite the presence of an internationally recognised government in the south of the country.

    Meanwhile, the Saudis are attempting to normalise relations with Iran, and finalise a peace deal that could recognise Houthi control of the north of Yemen. They have been anxious about any response from the US that could complicate its effort to withdraw from the country.

     What does this mean for the future of humankind? As written in an editorial in the World Socialist Web Site, in an article entitled The US/UK attack on Yemen and the global eruption of imperialist war; “The World Socialist Web Site unequivocally condemns Thursday’s attack by the United States and United Kingdom against Yemen. With no popular mandate, with no congressional or parliamentary authorization, without even an attempt at a serious explanation, the Biden administration in the US and the Sunak government in the UK have carried out an illegal act of war against an impoverished nation.

     The attack on Yemen is a major escalation of the developing war in the Middle East. Since the beginning of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, the US and its imperialist allies in NATO have overseen a massive militarization of the region, directly targeting Iran. This is itself part of an expanding global war, including the US-NATO war against Russia and the developing economic and military conflict against China.

     US President Joe Biden did not even see fit to go on national television to explain the launching of a new war, under conditions in which there is overwhelming popular opposition to the expansion of war in the Middle East. As the Pentagon was planning to attack Yemen, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was admitted to the intensive care unit of Walter Reed Hospital, with the knowledge of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff but unbeknownst to the president. This bizarre episode underscored the reality that US war-making is operating on autopilot, increasingly outside the pretense of civilian oversight.

     As always, the rationale provided to justify the war is a pack of lies. Biden declared that the missile strikes were “defensive” and “a direct response to unprecedented Houthi attacks.” The American media, with the same breathless reporting that has accompanied every US military operation, proclaims that a country with a gross domestic product 700 times smaller than the United States is carrying out “intolerable” actions, against which the American military is “forced” to defend itself. Overnight, Yemen’s Houthis have been turned into a new bogeyman, requiring urgent military action without any discussion or explanation.

     In coordination with the Israeli genocide in Gaza, the United States has dispatched to the Middle East a massive military armada, consisting of two aircraft carrier battle groups, multiple guided missile destroyers, an unknown number of submarines and dozens of warplanes. These forces have provided logistics, reconnaissance, and target selection to Israel, in a deliberate effort to provoke retaliation from Iran and its allied forces such as the Houthis.                                                                                                                                                                                                                              

     Yet, supposedly it is Yemen that is the “aggressor,” carrying out “unprecedented attacks” on US military forces deployed in the Red Sea, thousands of miles from the US border. American imperialism, which has a military larger than that of the next 10 countries combined, claims to be waging a “defensive” war on the other side of the world against a small, oppressed and impoverished country.”

     How will this unfold over time?

     As written by Patrick Wintour, Diplomatic editor in The Guardian, in an article entitled Houthis show resolve that western strikes will be hard pushed to shake; “The near-official slogan of the Houthi movement is: “God is the Greatest / Death to America / Death to Israel / A curse upon the Jews.” Crowds of supporters in the group’s northern Yemen strongholds have been chanting it for more than 20 years, ever since the phrase was brought back from Tehran at the turn of the century, when it was first directed at the then Yemeni president, Ali Abdullah Saleh.

     So those who claim the Houthis are not serious in attempting to block Israeli-linked trade in the Red Sea underplay the extent to which the defence of Palestine is a foundational principle of the Houthi movement, and highly popular among Yemeni people. The rebel stance over the past two months has afforded this relatively obscure Shia group a status in recent weeks that even Hezbollah in Lebanon cannot claim. They are deeply authoritarian, but skilled mobilisers of popular opinion.

     And as far back as 2014, Houthi leaders discussed with clerics in Tehran how “the road to Jerusalem” lay through the Red Sea.

     The narrowness of the Bab el-Mandab strait is a gift from geography. In August 2018, the Houthis attacked two Saudi oil tankers to challenge Riyadh. Knowing that a third of Israel’s trade was with the far east, the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, responded by warning Iran and the Houthis not to block the waterways.

     Houthi attacks since then have been marked by elements of bravado – but also sophisticated improvisation.

     Starting in October and early November, Houthi forces launched missile and drone barrages targeting the Israeli port town of Eilat – even downing a US-made MQ-9 drone in the Red Sea region on 9 November. However, as the month progressed, the targets increasingly reverted to international shipping.

     On 14 November, the Houthi military spokesperson, Yahya Sarea, announced that the group would “not hesitate” to target Israeli ships. Five days later, on 19 November, Sarea expanded the threat to any ships in the Red Sea flying the Israeli flag or operated or owned by Israeli companies. He also called on other Red Sea countries to assist in identifying Israeli-affiliated ships, which often sail without flags.

    Within hours, Houthi forces pulled off a PR coup by hijacking the Galaxy Leader, a Japanese-operated cargo ship with links to the Israeli billionaire Abraham Ungar. The group released footage of the assault, in which masked men leapt from helicopters on to the ship and held the crew at gunpoint. The Houthis still have the ship, and their social media influencers suggest it could be a destination for tourists or even wedding parties.

     By 9 December, with weekly big demonstrations stoked in the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, the Houthi leadership announced it would target all ships sailing to Israel regardless of ownership. It has been proud to publish pictures of the joint operations room in Hodeidah, a port that the west now regrets deciding not to try to recapture in 2019.

     The Houthis were also willing to tweak the noses of the Gulf monarchies. As a neo-state actor – unlike Iran-backed militias in Iraq – the Houthis have also been keen to denounce them, especially their enemy Saudi Arabia, for failing to match its solidarity with Palestine.

     For instance, the Houthi leader, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, in a speech on 14 November said: “The scene in Saudi Arabia, while Gazans are murdered, is a form of moral and humanitarian apostasy and contrary even to tribal customs.” He denounced the series of international business conferences and cultural events in the kingdom as “the season of dancing and depravity”.

     This also puts the Houthis’ many internal enemies potentially at a disadvantage, unsure whether to condemn Houthi adventurism or risk the appearance of abandoning the cause of Gaza.

     For the most part, the Houthis’ domestic opponents, such as the increasingly influential president of the Southern Transitional Council, Aidarous al-Zubaidi, have not held back from criticising the group. On 18 December, Zubaidi visited the Bab el-Mandab strait area saying he was “leading defence efforts against Iranian-backed Houthi hostilities” challenging strategic trade routes. Tareq Saleh, a member of the anti-Houthi Presidential Leadership Council, also promised to protect the Bab el-Mandab strait.

     Even after Thursday’s attacks, the deputy head of the department for media at the Yemeni General People’s Congress, Abdel Hafeez al-Nahari, blamed the reckless and adventurous actions of the Houthis.

     One possibility is that the UAE and Saudi Arabia will decide to increase the price the Houthis pay by increasing their support to the forces in the south of Yemen, arguing that advances by land, and not missiles launched from offshore fleets, will eventually dislodge the Houthis.

     At some point, the Houthis may fear they are throwing away too much to help Gaza. The faction is almost entirely reliant on imported foodstuffs and nearing bankruptcy, so throwing away the financial benefits of the potential peace deal with the Saudis – including the payment of outstanding civil service wages – would be a big sacrifice.

     Ultimately, it may be the spoils of peace – rather than the threat of western war – that will persuade the Houthis to hold back.”

   On what stage of history is this morality play performed?

    As I wrote in my post of August 17 2020, Divide and Conquer; A Program For Audiences of the Tragedy of Yemen; Plutocratic oligarchy, water scarcity, diminishment of oil wealth, the disruption and impoverishment of a labor shift due to Western policies and traditional kleptocracy which transformed masses of agricultural workers into an urban precariat with few and uncertain jobs and no social safety net, unwinnable sectarian wars and the legacy of a thousand years of rule by Shia imams which the Houthis were founded to restore; the origins of conflict in Yemen are complex but triggered by a struggle to control dwindling resources between elites and those who do the hard and dirty work for them.

     Ecological disaster and economic collapse, results of our civilization’s dependence on oil and its status as a strategic resource, have in Yemen demonstrated the fate which awaits us all if we cannot abandon fossil fuels. Yemen will be without water in a generation if nothing changes; the wells which sustained agriculture are running out, and with them the food supply. Villages have become ghost towns, cities shantytowns, and the people vulnerable, and that was before the war. Those not waiting to die became angry, and acted to seize their nation and their survival from those who had stolen it.

     Yemen exploded in Revolution during the Arab Spring; the metropolis of Sana’a was in continual social transformation and struggle from 2011 through 2013. The call for democracy and an end to the Saleh regime, corruption, nepotism, plunder by the wealthy which had leveled the labor and middle classes, and the abolishment of sectarian divisions were common throughout the Arab world, and resonate today with the global Reckoning which began in April of 2019 in Sudan.

     In Yemen the Arab Spring lasted years because the military split into factions; Ali Abdullah Saleh’s rival Ali Mohsen al Ahmar joined the Islah quasi-Islamist opposition party as protector of the protestors, at the head of his army. Revolution became a civil war.

     Collapse of a transitional government brokered by America over the terms of its proposed Constitution triggered a realignment in 2014, the Houthis who had fought Saleh, whose government had been overthrown in 2011, for years joining with his supporters. With the Houthi seizure of Sana’a and the north and their army about to capture the transitional government in Aden, its President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi fled to Saudi Arabia and asked for intervention.  A Civil War became a Great Powers Proxy War.

      So began the current war in March of 2015, with the bombing and invasion of Yemen by the Coalition of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, Sudan, and Senegal, with America providing thousands of air strikes, special operations and other direct military support, weapons, diplomatic cover, and underwriting the cost. The UAE and much of the Coalition sees Islah as an arm of the Muslim Brotherhood; Islah sees them as puppets of American imperialism.

     The UAE counters the Houthi regime in the north by using Salafi militias to control the South, including the Southern Transitional Council which seized Aden in 2019 and in April of this year has declared its independence from the UN and Coalition backed government; Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has long been a powerful member of the Southern alliance, and held the large port city of Mukalla for a year from 2015 to April 2016. ISIL has declared the South a caliphate, and all three of these groups fight each other and the Coalition government in exile in Saudi Arabia as well as the Houthis and Iran.

      Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had ruled Yemen from Unification in 1990 til 2012 and north Yemen since 1978,, broke with the Houthis in 2017; he was killed and his army defeated in two days of street fighting in Sana’a, leaving a Houthi pro-Iranian faction in sole control of the North. You may have noticed that I capitalize the terms North and South here; they were two very different nations until unification in 1990, the North a traditional Shia society, the South a Socialist state forged by its liberation struggle from the British Empire, which had been the Crown Colony of Aden from 1839 to 1967, Sunni by faith and ethnically and culturally Arabian rather than Persian. 

     As al-Jazeera observes, “Commentators in the Arab Gulf States often claim that Iran now controls four Arab capitals: Baghdad, Damascus, Beirut and Sana’a.” I regard this as a fact beyond dispute; two Great Powers conflicts of dominion are playing out in the Middle East concurrently, one between Turkey and Russia, the other between Iran and the Arab-American alliance.

     Nor can the costs of this conflict in Yemen be disputed; fifteen thousand civilians killed, eight million hungry from famine, one million cholera victims, twenty two million in need of assistance. In a devastating sectarian war which has totalized the destruction of infrastructure and social institutions, the Sunni Arab Coalition has blockaded Yemen to cut off the Shia Houthi Islah from support by Iran.

     It was not always thus, this litany of woes, this broken mirror of our flaws and image of the failure of our systems, wherein ecological catastrophe has brought economic and political ruin and the horrors of war. Once Yemen was beautiful and wealthy, smelled of frankincense and myrrh, and was a crossroads of global trade. It can be so again.

     Here is a Rashomon Gate dilemma of civilizational scale; from the Arab viewpoint they are engaged in a war of survival against the conquest of the Arabian Peninsula by Iran in a pincer movement from its southern tip in Yemen and from the north in Syria and Lebanon, and from Iran’s viewpoint they are defending a traditional and isolated ally against a merciless Arab conquest aimed directly at their faith and a rapacious American imperialism whose objective is assimilation of their people and exploitation of their resources.

     Yemen is a humanitarian disaster, and it is an American humanitarian failure. Our fingerprints are all over this crime scene. We must reclaim our heart and return to the vision of our founders as guarantors of democracy and the rights of autonomous individuals to freedom of religion, and abandon and foreswear all use of force in matters of conscience and faith. We must stop fueling this destructive war, and let people believe as they choose.

     Who stands between each of us and the Infinite serves neither.

The US/UK attack on Yemen and the global eruption of imperialist war

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2024/01/13/dlzo-j13.html?fbclid=IwAR0fWfcmJykvcC4dftPgSBEDj_z_XAH9dDDw-m9OgbYDPipu6dQpVpW63DI

Houthis show resolve that western strikes will be hard pushed to shake

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/12/houthis-yemen-show-resolve-that-us-uk-western-airstrikes-will-be-hard-pushed-to-shake?CMP=share_btn_link

Red Sea crisis could shatter hopes of global economic recovery

‘Unacceptable’: Biden denounced for bypassing Congress over Yemen strikes

Critics on left and right furious that president failed to seek congressional approval for strikes against Houthi militants

US and UK intent on turning Red Sea into a bloodbath, says Turkey

Strikes against Yemen raise fears of wider escalation and expose tensions between European Union and US

Global trade falls amid Houthi attacks on merchant ships in Red Sea

Who are the Houthis and how did the US and UK strikes on Yemen come about?

How Houthi anger with Israel is reshaping the Middle East conflict

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/13/how-houthi-anger-with-israel-is-reshaping-the-middle-east-conflict?CMP=share_btn_link

South Africa’s genocide case against Israel is imperfect but persuasive. It may win

https://jacobinmag.com/2017/05/yemen-civil-war-houthis-saleh-saudi-arabia-drone-warfare

https://jacobinmag.com/2015/04/yemen-revolution-arab-spring-saudi-arabia

https://jacobinmag.com/2015/05/saudi-arabia-yemen-bombing-houthis

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/06/key-facts-war-yemen-160607112342462.html

Arabic

 12 يناير 2024 اذهب يا فريق الانتفاضة! حملة البحر الأحمر المنتصرة تعولم حرب غزة

      إن حملة البحر الأحمر المنتصرة والحصار المضاد المفروض على إسرائيل من قبل حلفاء النضال من أجل التحرير الفلسطيني، والحوثيين في اليمن، الذراع الطويلة للهيمنة الإيرانية في صراع طويل الأمد مع التحالف العربي الأمريكي في الحرب الأهلية الطائفية، تصبح حربًا بالوكالة بين القوى العظمى، لقد عزلت الغارات التجارية، بعبقرية وجرأة، إسرائيل عن الدعم المادي لحربها الإرهابية والتطهير العرقي، وعولمت الصراع.

      رداً على ذلك، هاجمت أمريكا وبريطانيا أهدافاً للحوثيين في اليمن، بينما وجهت جنوب أفريقيا اتهامات ضد إسرائيل بارتكاب جرائم إبادة جماعية وجرائم ضد الإنسانية.

      لقد انتصر الحصار المضاد في عزل إسرائيل عن الدعم المتوازن لجريمة الحرب المتمثلة في منع وصول المساعدات الإنسانية إلى غزة. الآن، بينما يقوم المتآمرون مع إسرائيل في التطهير العرقي، أمريكا وبريطانيا، بقتل أبطال الإنسانية بشراسة في اليمن، يجب علينا أن نعيد الحرب إلى الوطن ونثبت أنه لا يجوز لأحد تجريد إنسان آخر من أي ملاذ آمن في أي مكان على وجه الأرض. وإذا أرسل أي نظام إرهاب دولة أسلحة إلى إسرائيل، فلابد من إغراق تلك السفن في البحر أو تدميرها في الموانئ في جميع أنحاء العالم.

      لقد صنعت إسرائيل غزة بمثابة وعاء للقتل، ولكن من الممكن وضع وعاء أكبر حولها من خلال عدم منح الإرهاب ملاذاً آمناً في أي مكان. لقد فشل رئيسنا غير الأخلاقي والمستبد بايدن في استخدام أفضل وسائل الضغط لوضع حد لحملة الإبادة الجماعية الإسرائيلية في حركة المقاطعة وسحب الاستثمارات وفرض العقوبات؛ ومن خلال تواطؤه، لم يتبق لنا سوى العمل المباشر والحرب حتى السكين في المقاومة.

        ما هي الحرب بالسكين؟ عبارة وفكرة عن الصراع والصراع تصل إلينا دون تغيير من اللغة الإسكندنافية القديمة في زمن الفايكنج؛ كريج با كنيفن، مناسب لمبدأ العمل الموحد لأخوية القراصنة العالمية للنضال من أجل التحرير مثل ميناء الحديدة الحر الذي أكتب منه الآن.

      كل المقاومة هي حرب بالسكين، فمن لا يحترم أي قوانين ولا حدود لا يجوز له أن يختبئ وراء أي شيء.

Persian

12 ژانویه 2024 برو انتفاضه تیمی! کمپین پیروزمندانه دریای سرخ جنگ غزه را جهانی می کند

      کمپین پیروزمندانه دریای سرخ و محاصره متقابل اسرائیل توسط متحدان مبارزات آزادی‌بخش فلسطین، حوثی‌های یمن، بازوی طولانی سلطه ایران در درگیری طولانی با اتحاد عربی و آمریکایی در جنگ داخلی فرقه‌ای تبدیل به جنگ نیابتی قدرت‌های بزرگ شد. با نبوغ و جسارت در حمله تجاری، اسرائیل را از حمایت مادی از جنگ ترور و پاکسازی قومی منزوی کرده و درگیری را جهانی کرده است.

      آمریکا و بریتانیا در پاسخ به اهداف حوثی ها در یمن حمله کرده اند، زیرا آفریقای جنوبی اسرائیل را به اتهام نسل کشی و جنایت علیه بشریت مطرح می کند.

      محاصره متقابل در انزوای اسرائیل از حمایت در برابر جنایت جنگی آنها در ممانعت از کمک های بشردوستانه به غزه پیروز بوده است. اکنون که توطئه‌گران اسرائیل در پاکسازی قومی آمریکا و بریتانیا قهرمانان بشریت را در یمن وحشیانه به قتل می‌رسانند، ما باید جنگ را به خانه برگردانیم و نشان دهیم که هیچ‌کس نمی‌تواند دیگری را از هیچ پناهگاه امنی در هیچ کجای زمین از انسانیت خارج کند. و اگر چنین رژیم ترور دولتی به اسرائیل اسلحه بفرستد، آن کشتی ها باید در دریا غرق شوند یا در بندرهای سراسر جهان نابود شوند.

      اسرائیل یک کوزه کشتار از غزه ساخته است، اما می‌توان کوزه بزرگ‌تری را در اطراف آن قرار داد و به وحشت پناهگاه امنی نداد. بایدن رئیس جمهور غیراخلاقی و ظالم ما از بهترین ابزار فشار برای پایان دادن به کارزار نسل کشی اسرائیل در BDS استفاده نکرده است. با همدستی او ما تنها با اقدام مستقیم و جنگ به چاقو در مقاومت باقی می‌مانیم.

        جنگ به چاقو چیست؟ عبارت و ایده ای از درگیری و مبارزه که بدون تغییر از نورس قدیم در زمان وایکینگ ها به ما می رسد. کریگ پا نایون، مناسب برای یک اصل متحد کننده عمل یک برادر دزدان دریایی جهانی مبارزه آزادیبخش مانند بندر آزاد حدیده که اکنون از آن می نویسم.

      تمام مقاومت ها جنگی است تا به چاقو، زیرا کسی که به هیچ قانونی و هیچ محدودیتی احترام نمی گذارد، نمی تواند پشت هیچ کدام پنهان شود

January 11 2024 A Bifurcated Lens of Colonialism and Its Legacies: the Indonesian Colony of West Papua and the Fragile Democracy of Papua New Guinea

     The drums are speaking in the jungle; among all of the apologetics of colonialism, state terror, and the politics of identity born of divisions and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil, the racist-colonialist narrative and mythology of liberation struggle as the criminality of barbarians who require the restraining force of a master’s law is possibly the worst and most pervasive of lies by those who would enslave us.

     In the Riven Island of New Guinea and its twin states, the Indonesian colony of West Papua and the fragile democracy of Papua New Guinea, we witness the horrors and atrocities of colonialism and in reverse face the epigenetic harms of its historical legacies from which we must emerge.

     Herein by colonialism I mean not only the vanished empire of the Dutch, but also of our own, for West Papua is held in bondage still, a consequence of the C.I.A.’s Jakarta Model of imperial conquest and dominion which shaped a tyranny in Indonesia, one which today the West refuses to disavow because we need a unified front against China throughout South Asia if we are to avoid the Chinese Communist Party’s conquest of the Pacific Rim.

    To this false dilemma I say; cede nothing to the enemy, accept no terms which will limit our scope of action in Resistance and revolutionary struggle, and never play someone else’s game.

     In the riots which have seized Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea we find proof yet again that a nation held only by force and control is hollow and brittle, that democracies which do not transform the fundamental relations of power and of wealth cannot survive, and that in class war and revolutionary struggle such as this solidarity across lines of division and refusal to submit remain our greatest powers.

    There are, however, many kinds of revolutionary struggle in which transnational factors are irrelevant; how if the two halves of this island, whose fantastic natural resources may become a lever of fracture and transformative change  among the many greedy powers who wish to gobble her up like the big bad wolf, forces of capitalism and imperialism which under the right kinds of pressure will turn on each other and consume themselves, how if West Papua and Papua New Guinea unite as one nation and seize power and independence?

     A United Papua would be a fulcrum of change for the whole region, against both conquest by China and exploitation by capitalism and its proxy regimes of imperial colonialism.

     New Guinea; it is a name which requires decolonization, like the legacies of the African slave trade in the nation it echoes and reflects. Port Moresby now consumes itself in a Bonfire of the Vanities because of economic disparity as a consequence of a government which is a shadow puppet of capitalist interests enforced by repression of dissent, and by the operational problems of organizing resistance on an island of nine million people divided by 839 languages and 900 tribes, some of which historically do not play well with others.   

     The drums are speaking in the jungle, calling us together to act in solidarity as guarantors of each other’s universal human rights, and they say; freedom lies beyond the boundaries of the order others impose on nature and all who live in harmony with her, both the wildness of the earth and the wildness of ourselves, with thunder like the beating of a secret heart which connects us. The voice of the cosmos and the limitless possibilities of becoming human calls us to reclaim our heart, to balance the terror of our nothingness with the joy of total freedom, to abandon authorized identities and claim those truths written in our flesh, and the songs of rapture and terror bear hope and an offer; come dance with us.

     Come dance with us.

     As written by Rebecca Kuku in The Guardian, in an article entitled Papua New Guinea puts capital under state of emergency after deadly riots: Soldiers and police patrolling streets where witnesses say quiet has replaced looting and chaos that reportedly left at least 16 people dead; “Soldiers and police patrolled Port Moresby on Friday a day after Papua New Guinea declared a state of emergency in the capital in response to rioting and other violence in which at least 16 people are reported to have died.

     The prime minister, James Marape, declared a 14-day state of emergency, suspending several officials and putting more than 1,000 soldiers on standby, after a police and public sector protest over pay on Wednesday descended into rioting and looting.

     The city had returned to a “new normal” on Friday morning, with police and soldiers on the streets and long lines at petrol stations, according to Matt Cannon, who heads the local branch of not-for-profit emergency responder service St John Ambulance.

     “We’re expecting the supermarkets that are functioning to reopen today and I’m hearing they have increased security to cater for potentially large numbers of people,” Cannon said.

    Police and other public servants went on strike on Wednesday over a pay cut that officials later blamed on an administrative error.

     Within hours, thousands thronged the streets, looting and rioting against a backdrop of smoke and burning buildings. A mob also tried to break through the gates outside the prime minister’s office.

    On Friday, Marape faced a number of calls to resign, including from former prime minister Peter O’Neill. “I … am still reeling from the shocking scenes of destruction that gripped Port Moresby,” O’Neill said in a statement, calling it the darkest day in the country’s history.

    “There is no shame in taking responsibility, but it is absolutely shameful to continue knowing you have lost command and control,” he added, referring to Marape.

     Nine people were killed in the rioting in capital city and seven were killed in Lae, in the country’s north, the Australian national broadcaster ABC reported on Thursday, citing police. Four of those killed were reportedly shot by a business owner in a suburb of the capital.

    More than 50 people were being treated for injuries at Port Moresby general hospital, according to a statement. Among them were a number of gunshot and knife wounds.

     The finance secretary and police commissioner were among the officials suspended by the prime minister. In a statement, Marape that the decision to suspend them for 14 days “in no way indicates their involvement in matters of concern”.

      Australia’s defence minister, Richard Marles, said on Friday the situation in the country had improved and that the Papua New Guinea government had issued some small requests for assistance from Canberra.

     Things were quiet on Friday when Eddie Allo took the bus to his work at the Port Moresby general hospital. Most vehicles on the roads were government-owned and many people were short on fuel because petrol stations had been closed, he said.

     “Everything is at a standstill now,” Allo said by phone. “Not many people are on the street and the police and army are patrolling around the areas on foot. No looting is going on.”

     As written by John Braddock in the World Socialist Web Site, in an article entitled Social discontent erupts in Papua New Guinea; “On Wednesday simmering social discontent, driven by escalating living costs, erupted into chaos, looting and arson in Papua New Guinea’s (PNG) capital Port Moresby and elsewhere, after police and armed services personnel walked out and protested over persistent shortages in their pay.

     Prime Minister James Marape has declared a 14-day state of emergency in the National Capital District, with 1,000 defence force personnel on standby “wherever necessary to contain any situations that may arise going forward into the future.” PNG Defence Force soldiers and vehicles have been deployed on the streets of the capital.

     The Post Courier, among others, said that the events marked “the darkest day” in Port Moresby’s history. At least 16 people are reported dead and dozens injured after 24 hours of mayhem in the capital and the country’s second city, Lae. Unverified videos have emerged of the bodies of men who were involved in the unrest allegedly shot dead. Women and children were wailing around them.

     Buildings and shops were torched. PNG’s fire chief officer said firefighters were outnumbered when trying to attend to fires. The Port Moresby General Hospital had to close overnight, eventually treating some 60 people for serious injuries. A smaller hospital at the Gerehu suburb evacuated its patients as a nearby shop was set on fire. The airport was closed with all international flights cancelled until further notice. By Thursday the unrest spread to several other provinces, including East New Britain and New Ireland.

     Footage and images from the capital on social media show warehouses engulfed in flames and large crowds of people looting and rioting. The City Pharmacy Limited (CPL) group, which owns one of the biggest supermarket and pharmacy chains in Port Moresby had most of its shops raided and burned overnight. Looters also stole electronic appliances from warehouses and shops owned by the Brian Bell group of companies.

     The Australian High Commission issued a general warning that Australians in Port Moresby should monitor local media and avoid “trouble spots.” It advised to pay close attention to personal security and follow heightened security measures.

     An Australian citizen working in Port Moresby has sent the WSWS a list of premises burned or looted. They include: Stop n Shop (SnS) Harbour city looted into the night, Desh Besh Kone wholesale premise looted and set on fire, EFM container yard at NapaNapa Laba market junction looted, Red Sea housing base Baruni in flames with a Filipino lady trapped inside, Renbo SnS burned and Koki, Badili, Gabutu and Kilakila shops owned by Asians looted with nine looters and several others killed.

     Police reinforcements were flown in from Lae as the unrest continued for much of the day and into the night, defying repeated calls by Police Commissioner David Manning to clear the streets and go home. Manning said security forces would not tolerate “troublemakers” and live rounds could be used. The government also issued a call out for the military to assist police.

      The events began on Wednesday morning local time, after about 200 police and military personnel gathered at the Ungai Oval to protest pay deductions of between $US26-80 from their fortnightly pay—about half the take-home salary for some. A government minister who addressed them could not convince them why the deductions had been made. The tax office said the issue caused by a “glitch” in the accounting system which was being fixed.

     Amid spreading rumours that the pay deduction were either deliberate or even a new tax, the protesters demanded an answer from the government, saying the “glitch” explanation was not satisfactory. They then moved from Unagi Oval to parliament house, opened the gates of parliament where Police Minister Peter Siamali unsuccessfully tried to address them.

     When security personnel withdrew their services, the situation quickly escalated. Marape went into lockdown at Manasupec Haus which houses the Prime Minister’s Department and other central government agencies. The protesters burned the guard house in front of the premises.

     By Thursday calls for nationwide strikes were being raised. The PNG Nurses’ Association issued a circular to its branches calling for urgent meetings to prepare for a national stop-work and sit-ins to protest what it described as an effective hike in public servants’ income tax from 32 to 42 percent. The union declared that the unjustified increase came in the face of rising inflation that had “already put pressure on the basic food stuff sold in our stores and supermarkets.”

     At a press conference on Thursday, Marape claimed the riots had been “organised,” without offering any evidence. He acknowledged that economic times were “tough” while declaring citizens should not take to the streets and “do anything and everything they feel.” Ill-discipline in the police force and defence “will not be tolerated,” he said.

Manning and senior bureaucrats in the finance and treasury departments have since been suspended while the government has promised to sort out the public servants’ pay “anomaly” in the next fortnight.

    Even if the claim of a “glitch” in the payroll system is true, the fact that the issue triggered such a social explosion is testimony to the extreme social tensions wracking the country. Living standards are deteriorating. Consumer price inflation, which averaged 5.1 percent in the ten years to 2022, was forecast by the Asia Development Bank (ADB) last September to continue at the same level through all of 2023 and 2024. GDP is expected to grow by only 2.6 percent in 2024.

     Rich in natural resources, PNG is one of the world’s most unequal countries. According to UNICEF, of an estimated population of 10.3 million, 85.7 percent live in generalised poverty. ADB data shows that 24.4 percent of those employed exist on $US1.90 purchasing power per day.

     With widespread anger over Marape’s handling of the dispute, his government, which took office in September 2022, is facing a major crisis. Six government backbench MPs have already resigned. Two, James Nomane and Kieth Iduhu made their resignations public via social media, blaming Marape for the riots and calling on him to resign.

     A grace period preventing a vote of no confidence in Marape’s leadership is due to expire next month. If a vote is triggered, a new prime minster could be elected from the floor of parliament. Marape has begun warning against ongoing instability, saying: “Our development partners are watching, our international partners are watching, our investors are watching.”

     The attitude of PNG’s former colonial ruler, Australia, was spelled out in a threatening editorial in the Australian yesterday. It called the episode a “tragic lapse” for PNG and “a concern for regional security more broadly.” After a passing reference to “respecting the sovereign wishes of PNG,” it demanded the Albanese government “be ready to step in should we be asked to help maintain law and order.” There is in fact a long history of Canberra interfering in the affairs of PNG, whether or not an “invitation” was issued.

     The Australian further pointed to “worrying similarities” with the Solomon Islands in November 2021, when rioting spiralled into “a bigger security threat for Australia and our allies that stretched well beyond Honiara.” Those events saw China send a police contingent to the Solomons to help restore order. Any repeat of China offering “security and protection” to another Pacific government would be an “unwelcome development” for Canberra. “The growing security ambitions China has regarding PNG are of great concern to the US and Australia,” the warning concluded.

     The social crisis facing the working class finds a particularly acute expression in PNG. The living conditions of the impoverished masses are driven down by the rapacious multi-national corporations, global financial institutions and their local political servants. At the same time, Australia, the US and the imperialist powers that dominate the Pacific are turning it into an arena for geo-strategic confrontation with China, further compounding the social disaster.”

       What of the other half of the island, a colony of Indonesia? As written by Marni Cordell in The Guardian, in an article entitled ‘The kids had all been tortured’: Indonesian military accused of targeting children in West Papua; “The body of 17-year-old Wity Unue was brought back by the Indonesian military in a box, witnesses say. When soldiers couldn’t find his family, they burned the cardboard coffin, with his body inside, in a clearing at the end of a road in the remote highlands of West Papua.

     The high school student – a promising musician and songwriter – had been tortured and burned to death.

     His parents, who had recently fled a military crackdown in fear for their lives, were shocked and devastated when they found out, says Raga Kogeya, a West Papuan human rights activist.

     Kogeya says that days earlier, on 7 April this year, Wity had been interrogated and detained along with three other boys and two young men under suspicion of being part of the troubled region’s rebel army. They were taken by special forces soldiers who rampaged through the West Papuan village of Kuyawage, burning down houses and a church and terrorising locals.

     Transported by helicopter to the regional military headquarters 100km away, the group were beaten and burnt so badly by their captors that they no longer looked human.

     Kogeya says Wity died a painful death in custody. The other five were only released after human rights advocates tipped off the local media.

     “The kids had all been tortured and they’d been tied up and then burned,” says Kogeya, who saw the surviving boys’ injuries first-hand on the day of their release.

     “[The military] had heated up machetes and knives and pressed it against their skin … They didn’t even look like humans. They were burnt from head to toe. They were in a really bad way.”

     Human rights advocates say the incident is one of many in recent years that go beyond a historical crossfire between the Indonesian military and West Papua’s rebel army, which regularly attacks and kills members of the Indonesian military and police.

     Last year UN human rights experts called for urgent and unrestricted humanitarian access to the region over serious concerns about “shocking abuses against Indigenous Papuans, including child killings, disappearances, torture and mass displacement of people”.

     Locals say civilians have increasingly become the target.

     ‘These are just kids’

     When the military detains boys and young men in West Papua, they claim it’s because they are members of the West Papuan Liberation Army, or TPNPB, says Yones Douw, the head of the peace and justice department for the Kingmi church of Papua.

     “They say ‘oh we thought they were guerrillas’. But there’s no way that the guerrillas are walking around looking like schoolkids – that doesn’t happen,” he says. “The guerrillas are not walking around in the streets.”

     “This is happening to ordinary people – we’re being arrested and beaten. And these are just kids often; they’re not even out of high school yet. It’s really dangerous.”

The day before the boys’ detention, in the same region of Nduga, soldiers opened fire on a group of women and children returning with string bags filled with food from shopping in a neighbouring village, locals say.

     Those at the front of the group dropped to the ground in time but a teenage girl at the rear was shot. In a photo seen by Guardian Australia, the girl, whose name is Parina, lies on her side on a mat on the floor. She has a gaping wound in her lower back. Locals say she fled to a remote refugee camp with no electricity or healthcare services soon after – with the bullet still lodged inside her abdomen.

     Nopinanus Kogoya, an uncle of one of the tortured boys, says the attacks are proof that ordinary West Papuans are being deliberately targeted by the Indonesian military – not just caught in crossfire as soldiers wage war against the militants.

     “The military could tell that [the group of women and children] were not combatants,” Kogoya says. “And they still shot them.

    “They know we’re carrying vegetables not guns – so why are they shooting at us and why are they arresting us?

     “They’re hunting us in this inhumane way.”

     What is going on in West Papua?

     The former Dutch colony is just 250km from mainland Australia. It’s a short boat ride from the northern islands of the Torres Strait. But most Australians know little about the war that is raging there.

    The lack of knowledge is partly by design: very little about West Papua reaches the outside world because Indonesia tightly controls access for foreign journalists and human rights monitors.

     The region makes up the western half of the island of New Guinea to Australia’s north – the eastern half is the independent nation of Papua New Guinea.

     The Indonesian government has split the region into various provinces – such as Papua, South Papua and Central Papua – but West Papuans refer to the whole western half of the island of New Guinea as ‘West Papua’.

     When the Netherlands began preparing for withdrawal in the 1950s, West Papuans pushed strongly for independence. As Melanesians, they see themselves as part of the Pacific, not south-east Asia. But their powerful neighbour had other ideas.

     Indonesia put pressure on the Netherlands to hand over the resource-rich region. When that didn’t work, it began to prepare for a full scale invasion.

    A ceasefire was brokered by the United Nations, and a UN-backed ballot was held in 1969, ostensibly to allow West Papuans to have their say on integration with Indonesia.

     But advocates say the “Act of Free Choice” was rigged from the start. Just 1,022 West Papuan leaders were handpicked by Indonesian officials to represent the entire population, and they were coerced and threatened at gunpoint to reject independence.

     In this environment, support for integration was unanimous. The result was rubber-stamped by the UN.

     Indigenous West Papuans continue to demand a real vote on self-determination, mostly through acts of civil disobedience such as raising the banned “Morning Star” flag. They pay a heavy price in police and military brutality, as well as long jail sentences, for their activism.

     “There are two students [currently] on trial for holding a flag,” says Douw, who also works with the investigations division of human rights organisation Elsham. “We have witnesses [in legal cases] being hunted. We have journalists being hunted.”

     But the region is also home to the TPNPB, which regularly launches attacks and engages in skirmishes with the Indonesian security forces.

     Under ‘complete military occupation’

     In a photo that appears to have been taken by the military after Wity’s death, seen by Guardian Australia, his young face looks beaten and bruised. In another, a small group of friends stands in heavy rain at his gravesite.

     The youngest of five siblings, he loved playing traditional guitar and composing songs and was “always entertaining other people”, Kogeya says. He was “a lovely person [who was] always helping others”.

     Before he died, he helped evacuate a group of refugees on foot from an area that was under constant military attack. Kogeya is adamant he was not a member of the TPNPB.

    The regency of Nduga (pronounced: en-doo-ga), where Wity and his friends were from in the West Papuan highlands, is a stronghold of the TPNPB and a hotspot in the conflict. The area is under what locals describe as “complete [Indonesian] military occupation”.

     “We can’t do anything here,” says Nopinanus Kogoya. “People are even dying of hunger in the street because they can’t farm, they can’t go anywhere. We’re just completely, completely under the control of this fierce military occupation.”

     He says the military’s actions go far beyond what is required to contain the security situation and are often not just violent, but cruel. “They’ll kill livestock just for the hell of it – they just go and kill people’s pigs and cows. They’ve also raped women.”

     Human rights groups say the military buildup began in 2018, after the TPNPB killed 17 construction workers building a bridge in Nduga. The militants claimed the dead were military personnel disguised as civilians, but Human Rights Watch disputes this and says at least some of them were in fact ordinary Indonesian workers.

     Locals say the brutality escalated in February this year, when Phillip Mehrtens, a New Zealand pilot working for Indonesian airline Susi Air, was taken hostage and his plane burned by the rebel army at Nduga airport.

     The 37-year-old father and husband is still being held after negotiations broke down between his captors and the New Zealand government and Indonesian rescue missions failed. It is understood he hasn’t been harmed by the militants but he’s in a very remote area with no access to health services.

     In a proof-of-life video released by the militants in April, Mehrtens pleaded with the military to stop dropping bombs on the jungle camp where he’s being held. “Please, there is no need, it is dangerous for me and everybody here,” he said. “Thank you for your support.”

     Dozens of Indonesian soldiers have so far been killed by the TPNPB during the failed operations to rescue Mehrtens – and this in turn has led to more civilian deaths.

     “The military operation to free him included Kopassus, and Kopassus are elite combat troops,” says Douw. “They shoot to kill – and they have killed [ordinary] people in this operation.

     “People are really afraid.”

     Australia seeks closer ties

     In August, Indonesian para raiders dropped from the sky above Shoalwater Bay in Queensland as part of Operation Talisman Sabre, a multi-country war games event.

     It was the first time that Indonesia had fully participated in the biennial exercise, and was a jarring sight for anyone who has followed the chequered history of military ties between the two countries.

     A spokesperson for the defence department told Guardian Australia that “Indonesia is one of Australia’s closest and most important defence partners”. But it hasn’t always been that way, according to Donald Rothwell, a professor of international law at ANU.

     The two countries spectacularly fell out over Australia’s involvement in the intervention in Timor-Leste in 1999, and military cooperation was temporarily suspended. The relationship has been tested numerous times since.

     Now, Australia is seeking to forge closer military ties in negotiations on a “defence cooperation agreement” – a “treaty-level instrument” that will be legally enforceable before an international court, says Rothwell.

     Defence minister Richard Marles has said the agreement will be “ambitious”, with “a high level of cooperation, befitting what should be the security relationship between two friendly countries who are neighbours with each other”.

     “We want to see greater opportunities for our defence forces to work together, to exercise together, to use each other’s facilities,” he said.

     Australia also provides weapons and other tools of war to Indonesia, including a recent shipment of 15 Bushmaster armoured vehicles, intended for use by Indonesian special forces during peacekeeping missions; (here I must amend my own notes; such light armored cavalry is also useful in destroying rebel villages).

     The defence minister and alleged war crimes

     In February, there was another first: a photo of the Indonesian defence minister, Prabowo Subianto, in Canberra’s Parliament House, standing alongside Australian foreign minister Penny Wong and Marles.

     The former commander of the special forces has not always been a welcome guest in Australia because of his alleged involvement in some of the most deadly military-sponsored crimes in Indonesian history.

     In the 1980s and 90s, Prabowo was allegedly involved in the planning and execution of numerous targeted killings of East Timorese civilians, including a 1983 massacre that killed hundreds, mostly men, in Kraras – since known as “the village of widows”.

     Prabowo did not respond to questions from Guardian Australia but has previously called claims about his involvement in Kraras “unproven allegations, innuendoes and third-hand reports”.

     In 1998, he was allegedly involved in the kidnapping and disappearance of more than 20 Indonesian student activists, many of whom remain missing. Soon after he was discharged from the army for his alleged involvement in the abductions. He has never been prosecuted. In January, President Joko Widodo made a rare public apology for a number of historical “gross human rights violations” in Indonesia, including this one.

     For many years Prabowo was reportedly on an unofficial visa blacklist in Australia, and was banned from entering the US. But his first run for president in 2014 – and his subsequent appointment to the ministry by Widodo – changed that. He is now making another tilt for president for when Widodo’s term ends in 2024.

     Andreas Harsono, who is Indonesia researcher for Human Rights Watch, acknowledges foreign governments face a difficult task when engaging with the alleged war criminal.

     “It’s unavoidable because he’s the defence minister but there are many things that governments can do to send a message that they do not approve of his track record,” he says.

     “For instance, they can meet him somewhere other than their headquarters, or decline photo opportunities with him.

     “Whether the Australian government meets with him or not, they should be acknowledging the serious human rights abuses he has been involved in.”

     At a June press conference in Jakarta, Marles waxed lyrical about a recent visit with his counterpart to the Royal Military College, Duntroon, where Prabowo trained as a cadet in 1974. It was a “poignant moment” for Australian officers to “see what happens to officer cadets who do their training at Duntroon”, he said.

     A defence department spokesperson said Marles engaged with Prabowo “as a senior member of a democratically elected government”.

     “The Australian government has regular and open discussions with Indonesia on a range of issues including the Papua provinces and human rights,” the spokesperson said. “Our bilateral defence activities incorporate training on professionalism and the laws of armed conflict.”

     A message for Australia

     The year after Prabowo trained as a young cadet in Australia, Father Dorman Wandikbo, the president of the evangelical church of Indonesia and a veteran of the civil independence struggle, fled military violence in his home town of Wamena.

     He says he spent five years as a refugee in the jungle before joining the priesthood, and later, nine months in jail for a speech in which he urged West Papuans to rise up against injustice.

     In West Papua, Prabowo is “greatly feared and shunned”, Wandikbo tells Guardian Australia from Port Vila, Vanuatu, where he is taking part in a meeting of civil society delegates working on a roadmap for West Papuan independence.

     He has a stark message for the Australian government: “Stop the military aid, stop selling [military] equipment to Indonesia and stop training the special forces and the police from Indonesia.”

     “Australia wants this close relationship [with the Indonesian military] because they think they’re protecting Australia’s security from terrorism,” he says.

     “But those weapons are not being used to protect Australia from terrorism. Those weapons are not supporting Australia’s security. Those bullets, those guns, those military vehicles are ending up in Papua and harming Papuans.”

     Wandikbo says there are two things he asks Australians to do when he talks to them about the conflict. “One: ask that [Indonesia] let foreign journalists into Papua; and two: ask that they allow the UN Human Rights Commission to enter West Papua. Those are the two things we want the solidarity movement to press for.”

     Parina’s condition unknown

     Without access to doctors or medicine, injured teenager Parina is likely to be in a dire condition. No one Guardian Australia spoke to knows whether her bullet wound festered or healed; whether she lived or died.

     Locals say the remote refugee camp she fled to is completely inaccessible because of military checkpoints and snipers.

     Eneko Bahabol, who does advocacy work with refugees in the highlands, says in his visits to similar camps he’s seen children, women and the elderly dying, as well as more than a dozen untreated serious diseases – pneumonia, rheumatic fever and amoebic dysentery among them.

     Between 60,000 and 100,000 people from the West Papuan highlands are displaced, according to the UN. Bahabol says many live in poverty in nearby towns, with no money or access to land to grow food, while others have fled to camps in the jungle.

     “We’re pretty worried about these refugees because as time goes on, their condition is worsening and the longer they are in refugee camps, the worse the outcomes [will be] for them,” he tells Guardian Australia. “Their physical condition is pretty bad.

     “All of the refugees in camps are saying the same two things: we want to go home, and we want the military out,” he says. “They also [say] the TPNPB and the Indonesian army have to come to some kind of agreement about ending the conflict.

     “They’re not going to feel OK to go home unless there is an agreement about [that].”

     In recent weeks, the Indonesian military has launched a new offensive against the militants in the neighbouring regency of Yahukimo. Locals say at least five civilians have been killed.

     The military did not respond to questions from Guardian Australia.

     In Port Vila, Wandikbo says what’s happening in West Papua is a slow-motion genocide. “We feel, as Papuans, if we stay within the nation of Indonesia, we will be finished,” he says.

     “We will be wiped out.”

The Jakarta Method: Washington’s Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World, Vincent Bevins

Indonesia, Etc: Exploring the Improbable Nation, Elizabeth Pisani

                  Papua New Guinea: The Unraveling

Papua New Guinea puts capital under state of emergency after deadly riots

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/12/papua-new-guinea-under-14-day-state-of-emergency-after-deadly-riots?CMP=share_btn_link

Social discontent erupts in Papua New Guinea – World Socialist Web Site

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2024/01/13/meol-j13.html

Papua New Guinea killings: what’s behind the outbreak in tribal fighting?

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/aug/29/papua-new-guinea-killings-whats-behind-the-outbreak-in-tribal-fighting

Violence in the PNG elections is the result of broken systems

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/29/violence-in-the-png-elections-is-the-result-of-broken-systems-that-australia-cannot-ignore

Panguna mine at centre of bloody Bougainville conflict set to reopen after 30 years

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/feb/11/panguna-mine-at-centre-of-bloody-bougainville-conflict-set-to-reopen-after-30-years

                       West Papua: The Horrors of Colonialism and State Terror Under Indonesian Occupation, A Legacy of the CIA’s Jakarta Model of Imperial Dominion  

The kids had all been tortured’: Indonesian military accused of targeting children in West Papua

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/sep/26/indonesian-military-accused-of-targeting-children-west-papua

We are living in a war zone’: violence flares in West Papua as villagers forced to flee

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/may/11/we-are-living-in-a-war-zone-violence-flares-in-west-papua-as-villagers-forced-to-flee

‘Killed like animals’: documents reveal how Australia turned a blind eye to a West Papuan massacre

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/sep/19/killed-like-animals-documents-reveal-how-australia-turned-a-blind-eye-to-a-west-papuan-massacre

‘An earthquake’: racism, rage and rising calls for freedom in Papua

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/aug/31/an-earthquake-racism-rage-and-rising-calls-for-freedom-in-papua

Britain has the chance to bring a brutal colonial occupation to an end

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/nov/21/britain-west-papua-colonial-occupation-geoge-monbiot

                          Papua, a reading list; yes, this is a list of books by outsiders looking in, like Timothy Leary in the Moody Blues song- but they will offer you an idea of those unknown places marked Here Be Dragons on our maps of becoming human, and of ways of being human as shaped by nature rather than a world shaped by humankind’s fear of nature and by the forces of capitalist exploitation and imperial dominion

Poisoned Arrows: An investigative journey to the forbidden territories of West Papua, George Monbiot

Under the Mountain Wall: A Chronicle of Two Seasons in Stone Age New Guinea, Peter Matthiessen

Savage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller’s Tragic Quest for Primitive Art, Carl Hoffman

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18089996-savage-harvest?ref=rae_0

People of the Valley: Life With a Cannibal Tribe in New Guinea,

Wyn Sargent

                 A gallery of Human Diversity in New Guinea

Yali tribe; pygmies of Hebbem Lake, Baliem Valley

Dani tribe, Yetna village in the Baliem Valley

Asaro tribe

Huli tribe, Tari Valley in the western highlands

Kalam tribe, Simba village in the highlands of Medang

Port Moresby; Civilization, such as it is

January 10 2024 Civilizational Collapse From the Mechanical Failures of Its Internal Contradictions: the Case of Ecuador

     Ecuador has exploded with all the spectacle of a New Year’s fireworks show; dazzling moments of light set against endless chasms of darkness.

     Among the few true laws of human nature and of society as a set of choices we make about how to be human together, that we are defined by the chiaroscuro of our light and our darkness remains among them.

     The question is, which of them will win?

     As written by Fareed Zakaria in CNN’s newsletter; “The images shocked the world,” Sebastián Hurtado writes for Americas Quarterly of what unfolded in Ecuador this week. “Gang members invading a TV station, police being kidnapped, university students stampeding to safety. Perhaps not since the days of Pablo Escobar has a Latin American country seen such an audacious assault on central symbols of power.”

      Masked men stormed the set of a public TV station on Tuesday during a live broadcast. On Monday, President Daniel Noboa had declared a 60-day state of emergency after a high-profile gang leader had escaped from prison; on Wednesday, Noboa declared an “internal armed conflict” in the country, ordering security forces to “neutralize” several criminal groups. At the Wilson Center, Benjamin Gedan writes that what’s happening “sounds like Armageddon.”

      “Ecuador is in lockdown,” The Economist wrote Wednesday, examining the country’s deterioration into “Latin America’s deadliest country.” That disturbing trend was seen clearly last August when an anti-corruption, anti-narco presidential candidate was assassinated outside a rally in the capital Quito. Known only a few years ago as an island of peace nestled between the notorious narco-producing countries Colombia and Peru, Ecuador has suffered since its ports became more significant to the international drug trade, The Economist wrote.

      “The roots of this violence start in Colombia,” per the magazine. “Ecuador, and particularly the port at Guayaquil, became a more important hub by which Peruvian and Colombian cocaine is moved to the United States and Europe after Colombian ports tightened their security in 2009. … Ecuadorean gangs have generated cashflow by establishing a lucrative foothold in Europe, where cocaine consumption is expanding. On January 5th the mayor of Amsterdam warned that the Netherlands could become a ‘narco-state’. The busiest cocaine-trafficking route in the world today runs from Guayaquil to the port of Antwerp in Belgium, according to Chris Dalby of World of Crime, an investigative outfit based in the Netherlands.”

     As written by Tom Phillips in The Guardian, in an article entitled Ecuador’s biggest city ‘a desert’ as state tries to restore order after gang violence:

Guayaquil eerily quiet as armed forces patrol in wake of stunning wave of arson, bombings and prison riots that killed as many as 15; “Ecuador’s largest city has been transformed into a virtual ghost town by a stunning wave of criminal violence that prompted the South American country’s recently elected president to declare his country was in “a state of war”.

     On Thursday, the streets of Guayaquil – a normally teeming port city of about 3 million residents – remained eerily quiet after a succession of arson attacks, car bombings, shootings and prison riots in different parts of the country claimed as many as 15 lives.

     Street corners filled with heaps of rubbish after waste collectors – like schools, universities and government offices – suspended their operations. Many of the city’s usually clogged roads were almost free of traffic – and those who did venture out drove at high speed to reduce their exposure. Most shops and businesses remained closed, even outside the nationwide 11pm-5am curfew introduced in response to this week’s violence. After dark on Wednesday hardly a soul was to be seen.

     “Guayaquil is a desert,” said José Luis Calderón, a local television journalist who was held hostage live on air on Tuesday when more than a dozen gunmen stormed his channel’s headquarters in the city.

     Shortly after that audacious assault on the TC Televisión network, Ecuador’s president, Daniel Noboa, declared a state of “internal armed conflict”. “We are in a state of war and we cannot give in to these terrorists,” Noboa said on Wednesday as security forces struggled to regain control of Ecuador’s streets and prisons, where the government said 178 guards and workers were still being held hostage by gangsters with links to Mexican drug cartels.

     During a patrol of Guayaquil’s riverside Caraguay seafood market on Thursday, a navy spokesperson, Marcelo Gutiérrez, insisted authorities were fighting back and would prevail.

     “These delinquents can be certain that we will not hesitate for a single second when it comes to protecting our citizens … If we have to lay down our lives to defend the population we’ll do that,” Gutiérrez, 38, vowed as his troops advanced through the market carrying assault rifles.

     The navy spokesperson claimed the situation in Guayaquil had been brought under control and that gradually the port city was returning to normal, although the Guardian’s reporters saw few signs of security forces on the city’s streets on Wednesday and Thursday.

     Ground zero for this week’s outbreak of violence is La Regional, a high-security prison on Guayaquil’s northern outskirts where one of Ecuador’s most notorious criminals, José Adolfo Macías Villamar, was, until recently, being held.

     Macías, the leader of Los Choneros – a powerful gang connected to Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel – reportedly vanished from his cell over the weekend, with his supposed escape precipitating an astonishing eruption of bloodshed and chaos that has shocked a country long considered one of South America’s most peaceful to its core.

     After Macías, whose nickname is “Fito”, disappeared, inmates took scores of prison guards hostage. Stomach-churning videos of security officials being murdered – some apparently fake – spread like wildfire on social media. On Tuesday, at the peak of the violence, at least eight people were killed and two injured in what one broadsheet called Guayaquil’s “day of terror”.

     “Tuesday was ugly. It was like an earthquake or a tsunami or some kind of natural disaster,” said Marco Flores, a 43-year-old newspaper salesman, as he stood outside the Regional prison on Thursday lunchtime flanked by rifle-toting soldiers.

     The tabloid Flores was hawking, Extra, offered a chilling snapshot of the violence sweeping Ecuador, where the murder rate has soared over the past five years thanks to its increasingly key role in the international cocaine smuggling trade between South America and Europe.

     One story told of a heroic security guard who rushed a bleeding schoolgirl to hospital on Tuesday after she was struck by a stray bullet. Another described how 35 special forces police officers had successfully recaptured TC Televisión’s studios and freed its journalists. A third article claimed vigilante groups armed with machetes and baseball bats were challenging the gangs in the capital, Quito. A fourth told of how shopkeepers in both Guayaquil and Quito had abandoned their businesses to avoid being looted – or worse. “We’re safe but we are fucked,” one frustrated merchant was quoted as saying.

     An editorial in the same newspaper urged Ecuador’s almost 18 million citizens to back Noboa, who was only elected last October, in what he has described as his unflinching quest to defeat more than 20 “terrorist” gangs, whose names include the Wolves, the Latin Kings, the Chone Killers and another called AK47. “Now, more than at any other moment in our history, it is crucial for the whole of Ecuadorian society to unite in order to push ahead with this unprecedented war,” Extra said, concluding: “We have reached breaking point and there is no other way of rescuing our country.”

     Human rights experts and security experts fear Noboa’s campaign to “neutralize” the gangs may cause more carnage, not less. “The short-term response is [going to be] a huge crackdown,” predicted Chris Dalby, the director of World of Crime, an investigative journalism group focused on organized crime. “I think he [Noboa] is going to ratchet up the body count and electorally he has to, [even though] I wouldn’t agree with it.”

     Dalby believed this weeks attacks were a calculated attempt by gang leaders to intimidate Noboa, who is Ecuador’s youngest ever president, after the 36-year-old hinted he would pursue a hardline crackdown inspired by El Salvador’s authoritarian president, Nayib Bukele.

    “I think it was a united feeling of: ‘We’re going to show this guy what we can do and we are going to slap him down,’” Dalby said.”

     But this is far more than story of brutality on both sides of the law, of the dangers of failing to purge our predators and destroyers from among us and of the usefulness to tyrants of law and order in the centralization of power and the subversion of democracy; the international and united action of rival gangs, syndicates, and factions of national identity revealed in the ability to coordinate actions against the state and its broader social and political institutions and to directly challenge police and military forces in open battle and win tells me something else; this is a Revolution of underclasses against hegemonic elites as well as criminal syndicates against governments.

     Forces are in tension here as elsewhere between anticolonial class war and imperialist capitalism trying to throw off its host political system of democracy.

     Which makes me, maker of mischief for tyrants that I am, wonder if the balance between futures of tyranny and liberty might be tipped just a bit, just enough to offer the peoples of Ecuador and the whole of Latin America a fighting chance for a better future.

     Let us bring the Chaos.

     As written in an editorial entitled The Guardian view on Ecuador’s gang violence: a domestic crisis with transnational roots; “All I know is that it’s time to leave this country, and go very far away.” Those words, from a staff member at the TV station attacked by masked gunmen live on air on Tuesday, encapsulate the shock and despair that many in Ecuador now feel. The assault on TC Televisión in Guayaquil, Ecuador’s most dangerous city, was one of multiple spectacular and coordinated attacks by gangs, in which at least 10 people were killed.

     Murderous crime has soared over recent years. But this was not just about gangs running rampant and battling each other with a sense of impunity, while brutalising anyone who got in their way. The invasion of a university and hospitals, the kidnapping and killing of police and prison guards, the torching of cars in residential areas, attacks in the Amazon region and looting in the capital, Quito – all these showed gangs operating well outside their usual fiefdoms, banding together, and turning on national institutions and civilians to try to force political leaders to back off. This strategic brutality, which has been described as “violent lobbying”, has been used elsewhere in Latin America, but is new to Ecuador. For many, it feels as if the fate of the country itself is at stake.

     The explosion of violence was precipitated by the new and inexperienced president Daniel Noboa’s crackdown on organised crime, the escape from prison of the feared gang boss Adolfo Macías, known as Fito, and Mr Noboa’s declaration of a national state of emergency and curfew. The president said Ecuador was in “internal armed conflict”, designated 20 gangs as terrorist groups and said the military should “neutralise” them, albeit “within the bounds of international humanitarian law”.

     His campaign came in response to surging violence in a country once regarded as largely safe and stable. The homicide rate rose more than six-fold between 2018 and 2023, to 40 murders per 100,000. The assassination last August of a presidential candidate, Fernando Villavicencio, who had campaigned on a platform of tackling violence, crime and corruption, rocked the nation. This week marks a new nadir.

     Ecuador’s gangs have been transformed by their dealings with cartels and other transnational crime groups. The country sits between two cocaine-producing neighbours and has a long, porous coastline. The dollarised economy makes it easier to move and launder illicit earnings. Counter-drugs operations in other countries, and the disbanding of armed groups in Colombia, encouraged traffickers to look farther afield. Slashing spending on security in the past, due to IMF budget demands, didn’t help. And the insatiable appetite of consumers for cocaine – particularly in Europe, the most lucrative market – has fuelled the trade.

     Mr Noboa, who faces an election next year, so far has the public on his side. But Tuesday’s events show just how hard a struggle he faces in trying to rein in the gangs. There are also profound questions about his approach. He has announced that he has commissioned new maximum security and supermax prisons modelled on those used in El Salvador by its president, Nayib Bukele. Mr Bukele’s “iron fist” campaign against gangs has been wildly popular but tramples over rights, and is highly unlikely to prove sustainable. A true, long-term solution will be far harder to implement, requiring Ecuador to cooperate internationally on tackling organised crime and to make rigorous, well-planned, lasting efforts to tackle both corruption and poverty at home.”

     As I wrote of Ecuador in my post of August 11 2023, Civilization Begins to Collapse From the Mechanical Failures of its Internal Contradictions As Terminal Stage Capitalism Tries to Free Itself From Its Host Political System; the Case of Ecuador; In Ecuador the assassination of a Presidential candidate by a criminal syndicate, which reflects the failed attempt to assassinate Biden and Harris by overwhelming and capturing their 2020 election campaign motorcade in Texas, like coups, vote suppression, intimidation, gerrymandering and other forms of subversion of democracy and electoral process, signify civilizational collapse from the mechanical failures of its internal contradictions as terminal stage capitalism, here in the form of criminal syndicates as oligarchies, tries to free itself from its host political system.

     This is an inevitable historical process in terms of change in the basis of wealth and forms of exchange and social relations of human beings, but it need not also take democracy down with it, nor result in an age of tyrants, wars of imperial dominion, genocides, universalization of slave labor, and the undoing of us as a free society of equals through systems of falsification, commodification, and dehumanization.

     This Age of Tyrants remains the most probable of the myriads of possible human futures I beheld when I was thrown out of my body by the force wave of a grenade at the age of nine and for a moment stood outside of time, on Bloody Thursday in People’s Park Berkeley 1969, the most massive incident of state terror in America since the Civil War.

     I believe we are facing six to eight hundred years of global tyranny and wars with weapons of unimaginable horror, ending with the extinction of our species. I’ve been trying to give warning to others ever since, and to save something of our humanity against vast and unanswerable power and systems of oppression throughout the world, and I am failing.

     This will not give me pause nor limit my solidarity of action in rolling the boulder back up the hill, endlessly like Sisyphus if necessary. Our lives are Dragon’s Teeth, from which new and better futures may arise.  

    As Lenin said, “I speak and no one listens, I write and no one reads.” Yet as he was to witness later in the Russian Revolution, futures can change, in unforeseen ways, like a tornado born from the flutter of a butterfly’s wings.

     Resistance and revolutionary struggle are never meaningless, and refusal to submit confers victory and freedom as a condition of being.

     As I wrote in my post of May 26 2023, The Art of Revolution: Letter To A Suicide Squad; Darkness and fascist tyranny threaten to engulf our world, yet I will struggle with the darkness and cease not, and so remain unconquered in defiance of unjust authority and in refusal to submit, though I have sometimes forgotten why. At moments of doubt such as this I read again Camus’ The Myth of Sisyphus, Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea, Henley’s Invictus, I.F. Stone’s The Trial of Socrates; myths, stories, poetry, and history of the grandeur of resistance which confers freedom, beyond hope of victory or even survival.

     Refusal to submit is the primary human act. We can be killed, tortured, starved and imprisoned; but we cannot be defeated so long as we refuse to obey. This is our victory, in which we seize ownership of ourselves and create ourselves anew, and nothing can take this from us.  In our refusal to submit, disobedience, and defiance of authority we become unstoppable as the tides, for force fails at the point of disobedience and authority has no power which is not granted to it by those it claims, and once questioned, mocked, exposed, and challenged as illegitimate the illusions with which it seduces us vanish into the nothingness from which they came.

     Always pay attention to the man behind the curtain.

     Pandora’s Box bears a last gift which is also a curse; we cling to it when it is all we have, and because it cannot be taken from us. I have never been able to decide if this is a good thing or not. Why has this strange gift been given to us?

     Maybe it’s only this; that so long as we get back to our feet for yet another Last Stand, there is hope.

     Such is the only possible response to the terror of our nothingness and its weaponization by those who would enslave us; the roar of defiance, as lions who are masterless and free.

     To fascism there can be but one reply; Never Again. And to the tyranny and terror of those who would enslave us, let us give reply with the immortal words of Shakespeare in Julius Caesar, the play which Nelson Mandela used as a codex to unify resistance against Apartheid among the political prisoners of Robben Island; Sic Semper Tyrannis, Ever Thus to Tyrants.

    Known as the Robben Island Bible, this copy of Shakespeare was passed around as the key to a book code for secret messages which referred to page and line; it was also underlined. On December 16th 1977, Nelson Mandela authorized direct action by underlining this passage from Julius Caesar;

“Cowards die many times before their deaths.

The valiant never taste of death but once.

Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,

It seems to me most strange that men should fear,

Seeing that death, a necessary end,

Will come when it will come.”

     Tonight the shadows dance, wild and free, bound by no rules but our own; come and dance with us.

     As I wrote in my post of July 5 2020, Becoming a Fulcrum: Educating Systemic Change; On the first day of Forensics class I always closed my welcoming address with a demonstration in which I placed an object on my desk with the words, “This is a fulcrum.” Then as I placed a pen across it, “It balances a lever. When your parents ask you what you’re learning in Forensics class, tell them you’re learning to become a fulcrum, and change the balance of power in the world.”

       Education is a word that derives from the Greek educatus, meaning to bring out truth rather than to stuff in skills, facts, and a routinized obedience to authority.  Implicit in this term is an understanding of humanity as an unfolding of our truths, a work in progress which is never final while we live. Education and what Foucault called truthtelling are sides of the same coin, which like those placed on the eyes of the dead to buy passage to the other world in classical mythology enact rituals of vision and transformation.

     As the opening moment of that first day of Forensics, which means “to pronounce on the condition of”, I always had my students play a game called The Human Puzzle, a demonstration of the principle of interdependence in communications theory. The directions are simple; stand up, form a circle, and reach across to join hands with two other people so everyone’s hands are in the middle. Now, without letting go of each other’s hands, unwind yourselves so that everyone is standing beside each other to the left or right of the people whose hands you are holding.

     To free ourselves of the knots we are caught in, we must free all of us.

     Be a fulcrum of change.

     As I wrote in my post of February 9 2021, Neoliberalism and Class Struggle in Electoral Politics: the Parallel Cases of Ecuador and America; The situation in Ecuador is instructive for us in America today because it reveals the true causes of the abandonment of Trump in favor of Biden by corporate elites, and places it in the context of global neoliberalism as the stormfront of class struggle and the boundaries of conservative and revolutionary forces.

     I see history and the story of civilization as a game between conserving and revolutionary forces, and each of us play one side of the board or the other as a creator of human being, meaning, and value. It’s a metaphor which first came to me as a primary insight while reading Yasunari Kawabata’s The Master of Go in seventh grade, having just finished Herman Hesse’s The Glass Bead Game, and shaped by my reading of Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy the following year.

      I am on the side of Prometheus; rebellion, chaos, anarchy, resistance, transgression, revolution, and the frightening of the horses.

      A two paragraph definition of our revolutionary and conservative dyadic shaping forces and their functions and operations is provided in my post of October 15 2019, America Redefines Itself: the Democratic Presidential Debates Round Ad Nauseum; All living systems must have both a revolutionary and innovating force of adaptation through which to evolve and meet the challenge of new threats to our survival, and a conserving force which insulates meaning from change and ensures the survival of our values and principles such as those embodied in our Constitution and Bill of Rights, and of those traditions and anchorages which have allowed us to survive thus far. In both natural and cultural evolution, we need both forces working cooperatively to manage change and shape our future.

     The function of conservatism is to buffer order from the shock of the new and withstand stresses and changing conditions without losing ourselves or undergoing morphogenic change, the loss of identity as structural form, or ruptures to our prochronism, the memory and history of our choices, successful adaptations and strategies of survival as expressed in our ideational form, the loss of our culture and traditions. The function of revolution and innovation is to create and harness chaos as adaptive potential and to transform, create, and discover new forms, meanings, and values.

    This principle I framed in the context of the process of individuation in my post of August 20 2019, On Becoming Human; For both nations and persons and regardless of scale, the process of identity formation is the same. We all have one problem in common as we grow up; each of us must reinvent how to be human. This individuation is controlled by a second or historical principle; humans create themselves over time, and a third or social principle; humans create each other through their interdependence, relationships, and connections. And this tertiary principle, which concerns our interconnectedness and social frames, can produce conflicts with the secondary principle of memory and history.

     Here we are vulnerable to falsification, lies, illusions, and the authorization of identities by propaganda and control of our informing and motivating sources, and by the tyranny of other people’s ideas of normality, virtue, and the boundaries of the Forbidden, and exclusionary hierarchies and divisions of belonging and otherness.

     From this primary struggle for meaning and being our dyadic forces of conservativism and revolution are born, negative spaces of each other, and like Escher’s Drawing Hands together forge our identities.

     This is the first revolution in which we all must fight; the struggle for ownership and control of identity or persona, a term derived from the masks of Greek theatre, between the masks that others make for us and the ones we make for ourselves.  

     It is an idea which finds an echo in Gramsci’s theory of passive revolution, relevant to our reading of current history here. As written by Jeffery R. Webber in Jacobin; “Massimo Modonesi’s reading of Antonio Gramsci’s “passive revolution” is useful for making sense of the trajectories of progressive governments in South America over the last ten to fifteen years. In Modonessi’s interpretation of Gramsci, passive revolution encompasses an unequal and dialectical combination of two tendencies simultaneously present in a single epoch — one of restoration of the old order and the other of revolution, one of preservation and the other of transformation.

     The two tendencies coexist in tandem, but it is possible to decipher one tendency that ultimately determines or characterizes the process or cycle of a given epoch. The transformative features of a passive revolution mark a distinct set of changes from the preceding period, but those changes ultimately guarantee the stability of the fundamental relations of domination, even while these assume novel political forms.

     At the same time, the specific class content of passive revolutions can vary within certain limits — that is to say, the different degrees to which particular components of popular demands are incorporated (the transformative tendency) within a matrix that ultimately sustains the fundamental relations of domination (the restorative tendency).

     Passive revolutions involve neither total restoration of the old order, the full reenactment of the status quo, nor radical revolution. Instead, they involve a dialectic of revolution/restoration, transformation/preservation.

     Capacities for social mobilization from below in early stages are contained or coopted — or selectively repressed — while the political initiative of sections of the dominant classes is restored. In the process, a new mode of domination is established that is capable of enacting conservative reforms masked in the language of earlier impulses emerging from below, and thus achieving a passive consensus of the dominated classes.

     Rather than an instantaneous restoration, under passive revolution there is a molecular change in the balance of forces that gradually drains the capacities for self-organization and self-activity from below through cooptation, encouraging demobilization and guaranteeing passive acceptance of the new order.”

     As written in The Guardian editorial, entitled The Guardian view on murder in Ecuador: a tide of violence reaches new heights: The killing of a presidential candidate has highlighted soaring homicide levels, as the cocaine trade booms in Latin America; “The assassination of the Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio on Wednesday marked a frightening new moment, even in a country where homicide levels are rocketing. Rising violence and crime are the central issue of the election in which the former journalist fought. The 59-year-old, shot dead as he left an event in Quito, was a courageous whistleblower who campaigned on the slogan: “It’s time for the brave”.

     While he had reported death threats from a gang leader, and the incumbent president, Guillermo Lasso, has blamed organised crime groups, much remains to be determined. Mr Villavicencio’s outspokenness on corruption and alleged links between organised crime and politics had made him enemies among the political class and in areas such as the oil industry. What is clear is that murder and violence linked to the drugs trade have soared in Ecuador in recent years, a pattern also seen in other Latin American countries previously regarded as relatively safe and stable, such as Chile.

     The homicide rate rose almost fivefold between 2016 and 2022, to 22 people per 100,000. Guayaquil, the most violent city, registered nearly as many violent deaths in the first half of this year – 1,390 – as it did in the whole of last year. The national state of emergency declared by Mr Lasso in the wake of the assassination follows last month’s declaration of a state of emergency in prisons, where hundreds of prisoners have been killed in clashes. Guayaquil has seen multiple successive states of emergency declared after horrific violence, including a bombing.

     Behind all this lies what the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime describes as “a prolonged surge in both the supply of and demand for cocaine” globally. Europe has bolstered demand as more American consumers have turned to fentanyl. Mexican cartels, Balkan gangs and even the ’Ndrangheta mafia have expanded into new territory, including Ecuador, supercharging local criminal groups and increasing both the frequency and the extremity of violence. At the same time, counter-drugs operations in Brazil, Colombia and Peru may have displaced some activity.

     Many fear Ecuador is on the verge of becoming a narco-state. It sits between the world’s two largest cocaine producers, and its porous coastline and large fishing and shipping industries facilitate the trafficking of drugs. Its use of the US dollar also makes moving and laundering money easier. But pandemic-bred social and economic crisis, and political deadlock, have been critical in this slide into violence. The unpopular conservative president has battled an opposition-dominated congress and this spring dissolved it, calling early elections, when it sought to impeach him. Crime has penetrated not only the security forces and the judiciary but politics too. The strength and focus of the drugs gangs appears in inverse relationship to the weakness and distraction of the state and government.

     In the past, some leaders in the region have resorted to brutal crackdowns that trample over rights and only fuel the problems in the longer run – as El Salvador is doing now – or cut quiet deals allowing gangs to continue their trafficking if they keep down the body count. There are no easy fixes, but Ecuador’s 18 million citizens lack confidence that their leaders are determined to solve the crisis. Crime this week wrought havoc on the nation’s politics – but it is political failures that have allowed it to flourish.”

     As written by David Adler and Guillaume Long in The Guardian, in an article entitled We need a new observatory of democracy in the Americas: The Organization of American States is no longer credible. We need a new body if we are to protect democracy; “On 20 October, the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, traveled to Ecuador to set out a vision for democracy in the Americas. Over the past five years, the hemisphere has suffered an assault on its democratic institutions, as political leaders from Donald Trump to Jair Bolsonaro have adopted a new authoritarian playbook: lies, violence, repression, and more lies. Two-thirds of US citizens now believe that democracy is under threat, while a majority of Brazilians fear a military dictatorship will return to the country. “We find ourselves in a moment of democratic reckoning,” announced Blinken.

     But the Biden administration continues to put the US on the wrong side of this reckoning. Consider Blinken’s recent trip. In Quito, he lavished praise on President Guillermo Lasso in the same week that Lasso declared a nationwide state of emergency to intimidate critics of his government and distract from an investigation into alleged tax fraud following his appearance in the Pandora Papers leak. In Bogotá hours later, Blinken applauded the democratic credentials of the Colombian president, Iván Duque – “We have no better ally on the full range of issues that our democracies face in this hemisphere,” Blinken said – while his government stands accused of targeting protesters and allowing an unprecedented number of assassinations of Indigenous, Black, and peasant leaders to take place under his watch.

     The US government is complicit in these attacks on democracy, not only as an “ally” but also as a leading member of the Organization of American States (OAS). Just two days after Blinken’s South America jaunt, the governments of Bolivia, Argentina, and Mexico held their own event at the Washington DC headquarters of the OAS to discuss the organization’s controversial role in the 2019 Bolivian election. The experts’ findings were clear – and damning: while the OAS found no evidence of fraud in the election of President Evo Morales, it lied to the public and manipulated its own findings to help depose him. “It was later reported that the US representative to the OAS actually pressured and steered the observation mission to reach a determination of fraud,” testified Jake Johnston of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

     Bolivia is not an isolated case. In Haiti, for example, the anti-democratic interventions of the OAS stretch over decades. In 2000, the OAS observer mission concluded that the Haitian election had been a “great success” only to change its position under pressure from Washington to claim it was illegitimate. The goal was evident: “to dislodge the Aristide administration”, as Dr Paul Farmer, deputy special envoy for Haiti at the United Nations, testified to Congress. Then, 10 years later, the OAS intervened again to reverse the result of the 2010 presidential election on the basis of faulty statistical methods. It is difficult to overstate the destabilizing consequences of these interventions. Juan Gabriel Valdés, the former head of the UN in Haiti, recently described the 2010 OAS decision as “the origin of the present tragedy” in the country.

     The OAS, then, is no longer a credible observer of democracy in the Americas – particularly under the present leadership of Luis Almagro, which has been described as the “worst in history”. In the eyes of several member states, the institution is too beholden to US interests to provide an effective defense of democratic institutions, leading some to call for “autonomous” organizations to contest it. “The world is currently going through a very worrying moment, where attacks on democratic institutions happen with frightening frequency,” said Brazil’s former foreign minister Celso Amorim. “The creation of an international electoral observatory – popular and non-partisan – will fill an important gap in defense of democracy and human rights.”

     What would such an observatory do? Three capacities are critical. The first would be to organize delegations to countries where democratic institutions are clearly under threat – both by domestic actors and international observers like the OAS. Bringing together data scientists and parliamentary representatives, these delegations would provide independent analysis of the electoral process and a defense against false narratives that threaten to derail it. The goal is not only to observe how votes are cast and counted; it is also to observe the observers.

     The second critical capacity would be to launch investigations of unlawful interventions in the democratic process. Over the course of the last decade, the dominant mechanism of democratic undoing has been legal, namely the weaponization of the judicial system to intimidate, exclude, and even incarcerate political opponents – a tactic known across Latin America as legal warfare, or “lawfare”. Deploying a global network of legal experts, a new observatory could challenge these tactics to help ensure a free and fair democratic process.

     The third and final capacity of the new observatory would be communications. In the technological era, bad information often travels faster than good. Big tech platforms such as Facebook not only serve to disseminate false stories and stir civic conflict; evidence suggests that their executives intervene to favor some candidates and ban others from the platform altogether. In the context of such bias, this new observatory would need to build an autonomous communications infrastructure to ensure that the findings of its delegations and investigations are rapidly spread, widely read, and well understood.

     The call for a new observatory could not be more urgent. Contentious elections lie just on the horizon in 2022. In May, Colombia will head to the polls after a year of roiling protests against government violence, corruption, and a failed pandemic response. Five months later, Jair Bolsonaro will face Lula da Silva after profiting from his flagrant persecution on the road to the presidency in 2018. Bolsonaro and his allies in Congress have already pushed a legislative package to rewrite Brazil’s electoral laws, while parroting lies about potential fraud in the country’s electoral system.

     Meanwhile, back in Washington DC, Secretary Blinken is moving ahead with plans for a Summit for Democracy. Convening leaders from “a diverse group of the world’s democracies” in early December, the summit aims to encourage commitments to fight corruption and respect human rights – an opportunity, as the White House press release suggests, to “speak honestly about the challenges facing democracy so as to collectively strengthen the foundation for democratic renewal”.

     But the crisis of democracy will not be solved by summitry alone. We cannot delegate “democratic renewal” to our presidents, nor to the OAS that claims to represent them. We need an observatory to defend democracy from the bottom up – an institution with the capacity and credibility to fight authoritarian tactics and even the playing field for democracy to flourish. That fight starts now.”

Prometeo Deportado; Ecuador’s great classic film by Fernando Mieles, a tribute to Luis Buñuel

Ecuador’s biggest city ‘a desert’ as state tries to restore order after gang violence

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/11/ecuador-gang-violence-guayaquil-state-of-war-update?CMP=share_btn_link

The Guardian view on Ecuador’s gang violence: a domestic crisis with transnational roots                     

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/10/the-guardian-view-on-ecuadors-gang-violence-a-domestic-crisis-with-transnational-roots

Fareed’s Global Briefing/ CNN

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/WhctKKZPJXJjmvtjgHxMhGVBpMDKTTzlNvmrKtvSZfhgffBkrTMJHpxpmRckXJqpnJNpvPv

Charlie Chaplin in The Factory

The Guardian view on murder in Ecuador: a tide of violence reaches new heights | Editorial

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/aug/11/the-guardian-view-on-in-ecuador-a-tide-of-violence-reaches-new-heights?CMP=share_btn_link

We need a new observatory of democracy in the Americas | David Adler and Guillaume Long

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/15/organization-of-american-states-democracy-observatory?CMP=share_btn_link

                My Kit For Hope:

The Myth of Sisyphus, by Albert Camus

The Old Man and the Sea, by Ernest Hemingway

The Trial of Socrates, by I.F. Stone

Invictus, by William Ernest Henley

References and notes:

Hamlet: Screenplay, Introduction And Film Diary, by Kenneth Branagh (introduction and screenplay), William Shakespeare

Video shows ‘Trump Train’ swarm Biden-Harris campaign bus/ CNN

https://www.cnn.com/videos/politics/2021/06/24/trump-train-swarms-biden-bus-new-video-mh-orig.cnn

Biden backers sue ‘Trump train’ members accused of harassing campaign bus in Texas/ The Hill

Andrea González picked to replace Ecuador’s assassinated presidential candidate

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/aug/12/andrea-gonzalez-picked-to-replace-ecuadors-assassinated-presidential-candidate?CMP=share_btn_link

https://jacobinmag.com/2021/02/ecuador-election-andres-arauz-citizen-revolution-movement?fbclid=IwAR2kwc-YNiHhFAQ0zOB6f3r5li8T4SlxoA6UeJFGLOGJhlhiSU6CBeil5Ko

https://jacobinmag.com/2020/09/andres-arauz-ecuador-citizens-revolution

https://jacobinmag.com/2018/08/ecuador-correa-moreno-alianza-pais

https://jacobinmag.com/2017/07/ecuador-correa-extractivism-pink-tide

https://jacobinmag.com/2016/07/pink-tide-latin-america-chavez-morales-capitalism-socialism

https://jacobinmag.com/2015/08/correa-pink-tide-gramsci-peoples-march

                 Antonio Gramsci, a reading list

Prison Notebooks: Volume I, by Antonio Gramsci, Joseph A. Buttigieg (Translator) Columbia University Press

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/85942.Prison_Notebooks

Prison Notebooks, Volume 2: 1930-1932, by Antonio Gramsci, Joseph A. Buttigieg (Editor)  Columbia University Press

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/85937.Prison_Notebooks_Volume_2

Gramsci’s Common Sense: Inequality and Its Narratives, by Kate Crehan

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28592468-gramsci-s-common-sense

The Gramscian Moment: Philosophy, Hegemony and Marxism, by Peter D. Thomas

Gramsci and the History of Dialectical Thought, by Maurice A. Finocchiaro

Gramsci’s Politics of Language: Engaging the Bakhtin Circle and the Frankfurt School, by Peter Ives

Gramsci and Foucault: A Reassessment, by David M. Kreps

Spanish

10 de enero de 2024 Colapso de la civilización por las fallas mecánicas de sus contradicciones internas: el caso de Ecuador

      Ecuador ha estallado con todo el espectáculo de un espectáculo de fuegos artificiales de Año Nuevo; Momentos deslumbrantes de luz frente a interminables abismos de oscuridad.

      Entre las pocas leyes verdaderas de la naturaleza humana y de la sociedad como un conjunto de elecciones que hacemos sobre cómo ser humanos juntos, está la de que estamos definidos por el claroscuro de nuestra luz y nuestra oscuridad permanece entre ellas.

      La pregunta es ¿cuál de ellos ganará?

     Pero esto es mucho más que una historia de brutalidad en ambos lados de la ley, de los peligros de no purgar a nuestros depredadores y destructores de entre nosotros y de la utilidad para los tiranos de la ley y el orden en la centralización del poder y la subversión de la democracia; la acción internacional y unida de pandillas, sindicatos y facciones rivales de identidad nacional revelada en la capacidad de coordinar acciones contra el Estado y sus instituciones sociales y políticas más amplias y de desafiar directamente a las fuerzas policiales y militares en una batalla abierta y ganar me dice algo más.  Esta es una revolución de clases bajas contra élites hegemónicas, así como de sindicatos criminales contra gobiernos.

      Aquí, como en otros lugares, hay fuerzas en tensión entre la guerra de clases y el capitalismo que intenta deshacerse de su sistema político anfitrión, la democracia.

      Lo que me hace, que soy un creador de travesuras para los tiranos, preguntarme si el equilibrio entre los futuros de tiranía y libertad podría inclinarse un poco, lo suficiente para ofrecer a los pueblos de Ecuador y de toda América Latina una oportunidad de luchar por una vida mejor futuro.

      Traigamos el Caos.

11 de agosto de 2023 La civilización comienza a colapsar debido a las fallas mecánicas de sus contradicciones internas mientras el capitalismo en etapa terminal intenta liberarse de su sistema político anfitrión; el caso de ecuador

        En Ecuador, el asesinato de un candidato presidencial por parte de un sindicato criminal, que refleja el intento fallido de asesinar a Biden y Harris abrumando y capturando su caravana de campaña electoral de 2020 en Texas, como golpes de estado, supresión de votos, intimidación, manipulación y otras formas de subversión de la democracia y el proceso electoral, significan el colapso de la civilización debido a las fallas mecánicas de sus contradicciones internas a medida que el capitalismo en etapa terminal, aquí en forma de sindicatos criminales como oligarquías, intenta liberarse de su sistema político anfitrión.

      Este es un proceso histórico inevitable en términos de cambio en las bases de la riqueza y las formas de intercambio y relaciones sociales de los seres humanos, pero no tiene por qué derribar consigo la democracia ni dar como resultado una era de tiranos, guerras de dominio imperial, genocidios, la universalización del trabajo esclavo y la ruina de nosotros como sociedad libre de iguales a través de sistemas de falsificación, mercantilización y deshumanización.

      Esta Era de los Tiranos sigue siendo la más probable de las miríadas de posibles futuros humanos que contemplé cuando fui expulsado de mi cuerpo por la onda de fuerza de una granada a la edad de nueve años y por un momento estuve fuera del tiempo, el Jueves Sangriento en People’s Park Berkeley 1969, el incidente de terrorismo de estado más masivo en Estados Unidos desde la Guerra Civil.

      Creo que nos enfrentamos entre seiscientos y ochocientos años de tiranía global y guerras con armas de horror inimaginable, que terminarán con la extinción de nuestra especie. He estado tratando de advertir a otros desde entonces y de salvar algo de nuestra humanidad contra un poder y sistemas de opresión vastos e incontestables en todo el mundo, y estoy fallando.

      Esto no me dará pausa ni limitará mi solidaridad de acción al hacer rodar la roca colina arriba, infinitamente como Sísifo si es necesario. Nuestras vidas son los Dientes del Dragón, de los cuales pueden surgir nuevos y mejores futuros.

     Como dijo Lenin: “Hablo y nadie escucha, escribo y nadie lee”. Sin embargo, como fue testigo más adelante en la Revolución Rusa, el futuro puede cambiar, de maneras imprevistas, como un tornado nacido del aleteo de las alas de una mariposa.

      La resistencia y la lucha revolucionaria nunca carecen de sentido, y negarse a someterse confiere victoria y libertad como condición de existencia.

      Como escribí en mi publicación del 26 de mayo de 2023, El arte de la revolución: carta a un escuadrón suicida; La oscuridad y la tiranía fascista amenazan con hundir nuestro mundo; sin embargo, lucharé con la oscuridad y no cesaré, y así permaneceré invicto desafiando la autoridad injusta y negándome a someterme, aunque a veces he olvidado por qué. En momentos de duda como éste vuelvo a leer El mito de Sísifo de Camus, El viejo y el mar de Hemingway, Invictus de Henley, I.F. El proceso de Sócrates, de Stone; mitos, cuentos, poesía e historia de la grandeza de la resistencia que confiere libertad, más allá de la esperanza de victoria o incluso de supervivencia.

      Negarse a someterse es el acto humano primario. Nos pueden matar, torturar, matar de hambre y encarcelar; pero no podemos ser derrotados mientras nos neguemos a obedecer. Esta es nuestra victoria, en la que tomamos posesión de nosotros mismos y nos creamos de nuevo, y nada nos lo puede quitar. En nuestra negativa a someternos, en la desobediencia y en el desafío a la autoridad nos volvemos imparables como las mareas, porque la fuerza falla en el momento de la desobediencia y la autoridad no tiene poder que no le sea concedido por aquellos a quienes reclama, y una vez cuestionados, burlados, expuestos. , y cuestionó como ilegítimas las ilusiones con las que nos seduce desvanecerse en la nada de la que surgieron.

      Siempre presta atención al hombre detrás de la cortina.

      La Caja de Pandora guarda un último regalo que también es una maldición; nos aferramos a él cuando es todo lo que tenemos y porque no nos lo pueden quitar. Nunca he podido decidir si esto es algo bueno o no. ¿Por qué se nos ha dado este extraño regalo?

      Quizás sea sólo esto; que mientras nos volvamos a poner de pie para otra Última Batalla, hay esperanza.

      Ésa es la única respuesta posible al terror de nuestra nada y su uso como arma por parte de quienes quieren esclavizarnos; el rugido del desafío, como leones libres y sin amo.

      Al fascismo sólo puede haber una respuesta; Nunca más. Y a la tiranía y al terror de quienes quieren esclavizarnos, respondamos con las inmortales palabras de Shakespeare en Julio César, la obra que Nelson Mandela utilizó como códice para unificar la resistencia contra el Apartheid entre los prisioneros políticos de Robben Island; Sic Semper Tyrannis, Siempre así a los tiranos.

     Conocida como la Biblia de Robben Island, esta copia de Shakespeare se difundió como la clave de un libro que codificaba mensajes secretos que hacían referencia a páginas y líneas; también fue subrayado. El 16 de diciembre de 1977, Nelson Mandela autorizó la acción directa subrayando este pasaje de Julio César;

“Los cobardes mueren muchas veces antes de morir.

Los valientes nunca prueban la muerte más que una vez.

De todas las maravillas que todavía he oído,

Me parece muy extraño que los hombres teman,

Viendo que la muerte, un fin necesario,

Vendrá cuando llegue”.

      Esta noche las sombras bailan, salvajes y libres, sin más reglas que las nuestras; ven y baila con nosotros.

      Como escribí en mi publicación del 5 de julio de 2020, Convertirse en un punto de apoyo: educar el cambio sistémico; El primer día de clase de Ciencias Forenses siempre cerraba mi discurso de bienvenida con una demostración en la que colocaba un objeto sobre mi escritorio con las palabras: “Esto es un punto de apoyo”. Luego, cuando coloqué un bolígrafo sobre él, “Equilibra una palanca. Cuando tus padres te pregunten qué estás aprendiendo en la clase de Ciencias Forenses, diles que estás aprendiendo a convertirte en un punto de apoyo y cambiar el equilibrio de poder en el mundo”.

        Educación es una palabra que deriva del griego educatus, que significa sacar a relucir la verdad en lugar de acumular habilidades, hechos y una obediencia rutinaria a la autoridad. Implícito en este término está una comprensión de la humanidad como un desarrollo de nuestras verdades, un trabajo en progreso que nunca es definitivo mientras vivimos. La educación y lo que Foucault llamó decir la verdad son caras de la misma moneda, que, como las que se colocan en los ojos de los muertos para comprar el paso al otro mundo en la mitología clásica, representan rituales de visión y transformación.

      Como momento inicial de ese primer día de Ciencias Forenses, que significa “pronunciarse sobre la condición de”, siempre hacía que mis alumnos jugaran un juego llamado El rompecabezas humano, una demostración del principio de interdependencia en la teoría de las comunicaciones. Las instrucciones son simples; párese, forme un círculo y extiéndase para tomar las manos de otras dos personas de modo que las manos de todos queden en el medio. Ahora, sin soltarse de las manos, relájense de modo que todos estén uno al lado del otro, a la izquierda o a la derecha de las personas cuyas manos están cogidas.

      Para liberarnos de los nudos en los que estamos atrapados, debemos liberarnos todos.

      Sea un punto de apoyo del cambio.

      Como escribí en mi post del 9 de febrero de 2021, Neoliberalismo y lucha de clases en la política electoral: los casos paralelos de Ecuador y América; La situación en Ecuador es hoy instructiva para nosotros en Estados Unidos porque revela las verdaderas causas del abandono de Trump en favor de Biden por parte de las elites corporativas, y lo ubica en el contexto del neoliberalismo global como el frente de tormenta de la lucha de clases y los límites de la ideología conservadora. y fuerzas revolucionarias.

      Veo la historia y la historia de la civilización como un juego entre fuerzas conservadoras y revolucionarias, y cada uno de nosotros juega en un lado o en el otro del tablero como creador del ser humano, su significado y su valor. Es una metáfora que se me ocurrió por primera vez como una idea primaria mientras leía El maestro del go de Yasunari Kawabata en séptimo grado, después de terminar El juego de cuentas de cristal de Herman Hesse, y que fue moldeada por mi lectura de El nacimiento de la tragedia de Friedrich Nietzsche el año siguiente.

       Estoy del lado de Prometeo; rebelión, caos, anarquía, resistencia, transgresión, revolución y el espanto de los caballos.

       En mi publicación del 15 de octubre de 2019, Estados Unidos se redefine: la ronda de debates presidenciales demócratas hasta la saciedad; Todos los sistemas vivos deben tener una fuerza de adaptación revolucionaria e innovadora a través de la cual evolucionar y enfrentar el desafío de nuevas amenazas a nuestra supervivencia, y una fuerza conservadora que aísle el significado del cambio y asegure la supervivencia de nuestros valores y principios como los que encarnamos. en nuestra Constitución y Declaración de Derechos, y de aquellas tradiciones y anclajes que nos han permitido sobrevivir hasta ahora. Tanto en la evolución natural como en la cultural, necesitamos que ambas fuerzas trabajen cooperativamente para gestionar el cambio y dar forma a nuestro futuro.

      La función del conservadurismo es amortiguar el orden del impacto de lo nuevo y resistir tensiones y condiciones cambiantes sin perdernos a nosotros mismos ni sufrir cambios morfogénicos, la pérdida de identidad como forma estructural o rupturas de nuestro procronismo, la memoria y la historia de nuestras elecciones. adaptaciones exitosas y estrategias de supervivencia expresadas en nuestra forma ideacional, la pérdida de nuestra cultura y tradiciones. La función de la revolución y la innovación es crear y aprovechar el caos como potencial adaptativo y transformar, crear y descubrir nuevas formas, significados y valores.

     Este principio lo enmarqué en el contexto del proceso de individuación en mi publicación del 20 de agosto de 2019, Sobre convertirse en humano; Tanto para las naciones como para las personas, e independientemente de su escala, el proceso de formación de la identidad es el mismo. Todos tenemos un problema en común a medida que crecemos; Cada uno de nosotros debe reinventar cómo ser humano. Esta individuación está controlada por un segundo principio o principio histórico; los humanos se crean a si mismos es en el tiempo, y un tercero o principio social; los humanos se crean unos a otros a través de su interdependencia, relaciones y conexiones. Y este principio terciario, que concierne a nuestra interconexión y marcos sociales, puede producir conflictos con el principio secundario de la memoria y la historia.

      Aquí somos vulnerables a la falsificación, las mentiras, las ilusiones y la autorización de identidades por la propaganda y el control de nuestras fuentes de información y motivación, y por la tiranía de las ideas de otras personas sobre la normalidad, la virtud y los límites de lo prohibido y las jerarquías excluyentes. y divisiones de pertenencia y alteridad.

      De esta lucha primaria por el significado y el ser nacen nuestras fuerzas diádicas de conservadurismo y revolución, espacios negativos unos de otros, y como en Drawing Hands de Escher, juntos forjamos nuestras identidades.

      Esta es la primera revolución en la que todos debemos luchar; la lucha por la propiedad y el control de la identidad o persona, término derivado de las máscaras del teatro griego, entre las máscaras que otros hacen para nosotros y las que nosotros hacemos para nosotros mismos.

      Es una idea que encuentra un eco en la teoría de la revolución pasiva de Gramsci, relevante para nuestra lectura de la historia actual. Según lo escrito por Jeffery R. Webber en Jacobin; “La lectura que hace Massimo Modonesi de la “revolución pasiva” de Antonio Gramsci es útil para dar sentido a las trayectorias de los gobiernos progresistas en América del Sur durante los últimos diez a quince años. En la interpretación que Modonessi hace de Gramsci, la revolución pasiva abarca una combinación desigual y dialéctica de dos tendencias presentes simultáneamente en una sola época: una de restauración del antiguo orden y la otra de revolución, una de preservación y la otra de transformación.

      Las dos tendencias coexisten en tándem, pero es posible descifrar una tendencia que en última instancia determina o caracteriza el proceso o ciclo de una época determinada. Las características transformadoras de una revolución pasiva marcan un conjunto distinto de cambios con respecto al período anterior, pero esos cambios en última instancia garantizan la estabilidad de las relaciones fundamentales de dominación, incluso cuando éstas asumen formas políticas novedosas.

      Al mismo tiempo, el contenido de clase específico de las revoluciones pasivas puede variar dentro de ciertos límites, es decir, los diferentes grados en que se incorporan componentes particulares de las demandas populares (la tendencia transformadora) dentro de una matriz que, en última instancia, sostiene las relaciones fundamentales de igualdad. dominación (la tendencia restaurativa).

      Las revoluciones pasivas no implican ni la restauración total del antiguo orden, ni la plena recreación del status quo, ni una revolución radical. Más bien, implican una dialéctica de revolución/restauración, transformación/preservación.

      Las capacidades de movilización social desde abajo en las primeras etapas son contenidas o cooptadas –o reprimidas selectivamente– mientras se restablece la iniciativa política de sectores de las clases dominantes. En el proceso, se establece un nuevo modo de dominación que es capaz de implementar reformas conservadoras enmascaradas en el lenguaje de impulsos anteriores que surgieron desde abajo y lograr así un consenso pasivo de las clases dominadas.

      En lugar de una restauración instantánea, bajo una revolución pasiva hay un cambio molecular en el equilibrio de fuerzas que gradualmente drena las capacidades de autoorganización y autoactividad desde abajo a través de la cooptación, fomentando la desmovilización y garantizando la aceptación pasiva del nuevo orden”.

      Como está escrito en el editorial de The Guardian, titulado La visión de The Guardian sobre el asesinato en Ecuador: una marea de violencia alcanza nuevas alturas: El asesinato de un candidato presidencial ha puesto de relieve los crecientes niveles de homicidio, mientras el comercio de cocaína aumenta en América Latina; “El asesinato del candidato presidencial ecuatoriano Fernando Villavicencio el miércoles marcó un nuevo momento aterrador, incluso en un país donde los niveles de homicidio se están disparando. El aumento de la violencia y la criminalidad son el tema central de las elecciones en las que luchó el ex periodista. El hombre de 59 años, asesinado a tiros cuando salía de un evento en Quito, era un valiente denunciante que hizo campaña con el lema: “Es hora de los valientes”.

      Si bien había denunciado amenazas de muerte por parte del líder de una pandilla y el presidente en ejercicio, Guillermo Lasso, ha culpado a grupos del crimen organizado, aún queda mucho por determinar. La franqueza de Villavicencio sobre la corrupción y los supuestos vínculos entre el crimen organizado y la política le habían granjeado enemigos entre la clase política y en áreas como la industria petrolera. Lo que está claro es que los asesinatos y la violencia vinculados al tráfico de drogas se han disparado en Ecuador en los últimos años, un patrón que también se observa en otros países latinoamericanos anteriormente considerados relativamente seguros y estables, como Chile.

      La tasa de homicidios casi se quintuplicó entre 2016 y 2022, a 22 personas por 100.000. Guayaquil, la ciudad más violenta, registró casi la misma cantidad de muertes violentas en el primer semestre de este año: 1.390

      – como lo hizo durante todo el año pasado. El estado de emergencia nacional declarado por Lasso a raíz del asesinato sigue a la declaración del estado de emergencia el mes pasado en las cárceles, donde cientos de prisioneros han muerto en enfrentamientos. Guayaquil ha sido testigo de múltiples estados de emergencia declarados sucesivos después de terribles actos de violencia, incluido un bombardeo.

      Detrás de todo esto se esconde lo que la Oficina de las Naciones Unidas contra la Droga y el Delito describe como “un aumento prolongado tanto de la oferta como de la demanda de cocaína” a nivel mundial. Europa ha impulsado la demanda a medida que más consumidores estadounidenses han recurrido al fentanilo. Los cárteles mexicanos, las pandillas balcánicas e incluso la mafia ‘Ndrangheta se han expandido a nuevos territorios, incluido Ecuador, sobrecargando a los grupos criminales locales y aumentando tanto la frecuencia como la extremidad de la violencia. Al mismo tiempo, las operaciones antidrogas en Brasil, Colombia y Perú pueden haber desplazado alguna actividad.

      Muchos temen que Ecuador esté a punto de convertirse en un narcoestado. Se encuentra entre los dos mayores productores de cocaína del mundo, y su porosa costa y sus grandes industrias pesqueras y navieras facilitan el tráfico de drogas. Su uso del dólar estadounidense también facilita el movimiento y el lavado de dinero. Pero la crisis social y económica generada por la pandemia y el estancamiento político han sido fundamentales en este deslizamiento hacia la violencia. El impopular presidente conservador ha luchado contra un congreso dominado por la oposición y esta primavera lo disolvió, convocando elecciones anticipadas, cuando buscaba destituirlo. El crimen ha penetrado no sólo en las fuerzas de seguridad y el poder judicial sino también en la política. La fuerza y la concentración de las bandas de narcotraficantes aparecen en relación inversa con la debilidad y distracción del Estado y el gobierno.

      En el pasado, algunos líderes de la región han recurrido a brutales medidas represivas que pisotean los derechos y sólo alimentan los problemas a largo plazo –como lo está haciendo El Salvador ahora– o han llegado a acuerdos silenciosos que permiten a las pandillas continuar con su tráfico si mantienen bajo control el tráfico. número de muertos. No hay soluciones fáciles, pero los 18 millones de ciudadanos de Ecuador no confían en que sus líderes estén decididos a resolver la crisis. Esta semana el crimen causó estragos en la política de la nación, pero son los fracasos políticos los que le han permitido florecer”.

      Como escriben David Adler y Guillaume Long en The Guardian, en un artículo titulado Necesitamos un nuevo observatorio de la democracia en las Américas: La Organización de Estados Americanos ya no es creíble. Necesitamos un nuevo organismo si queremos proteger la democracia; “El 20 de octubre, el secretario de Estado de Estados Unidos, Antony Blinken, viajó a Ecuador para exponer una visión de la democracia en las Américas. En los últimos cinco años, el hemisferio ha sufrido un ataque a sus instituciones democráticas, a medida que líderes políticos, desde Donald Trump hasta Jair Bolsonaro, han adoptado un nuevo manual autoritario: mentiras, violencia, represión y más mentiras. Dos tercios de los ciudadanos estadounidenses creen ahora que la democracia está amenazada, mientras que la mayoría de los brasileños temen que una dictadura militar regrese al país. “Nos encontramos en un momento de ajuste de cuentas democrático”, anunció Blinken.

      Pero la administración Biden sigue colocando a Estados Unidos en el lado equivocado de este cálculo. Considere el reciente viaje de Blinken. En Quito, prodigó elogios al presidente Guillermo Lasso la misma semana en que Lasso declaró un estado de emergencia en todo el país para intimidar a los críticos de su gobierno y distraer la atención de una investigación sobre presunto fraude fiscal tras su aparición en la filtración de los Papeles de Pandora. Horas más tarde, en Bogotá, Blinken aplaudió las credenciales democráticas del presidente colombiano, Iván Duque – “No tenemos mejor aliado en toda la gama de cuestiones que enfrentan nuestras democracias en este hemisferio”, dijo Blinken – mientras su gobierno es acusado de atacar a los manifestantes. y permitir que bajo su dirección se produjeran un número sin precedentes de asesinatos de líderes indígenas, negros y campesinos.

      El gobierno de Estados Unidos es cómplice de estos ataques a la democracia, no sólo como “aliado” sino también como miembro destacado de la Organización de Estados Americanos (OEA). Apenas dos días después de la gira de Blinken por Sudamérica, los gobiernos de Bolivia, Argentina y México celebraron su propio evento en la sede de la OEA en Washington DC para discutir el controvertido papel de la organización en las elecciones bolivianas de 2019. Las conclusiones de los expertos fueron claras y condenatorias: si bien la OEA no encontró pruebas de fraude en la elección del presidente Evo Morales, mintió al público y manipuló sus propias conclusiones para ayudar a deponerlo. “Más tarde se informó que el representante de Estados Unidos ante la OEA en realidad presionó y dirigió la misión de observación para llegar a una determinación de fraude”, testificó Jake Johnston del Centro de Investigación Económica y Política.

      Bolivia no es un caso aislado. En Haití, por ejemplo, las intervenciones antidemocráticas de la OEA se prolongan durante décadas. En 2000, la misión de observación de la OEA concluyó que las elecciones haitianas habían sido un “gran “Éxito” sólo para cambiar su posición bajo la presión de Washington para afirmar que era ilegítima. El objetivo era evidente: “desalojar a la administración de Aristide”, como testificó ante el Congreso el Dr. Paul Farmer, enviado especial adjunto para Haití ante las Naciones Unidas. Luego, diez años después, la OEA volvió a intervenir para revertir el resultado de las elecciones presidenciales de 2010 basándose en métodos estadísticos defectuosos. Es difícil exagerar las consecuencias desestabilizadoras de estas intervenciones. Juan Gabriel Valdés, exjefe de la ONU en Haití, describió recientemente la decisión de la OEA de 2010 como “el origen de la tragedia actual” en el país.

      La OEA, entonces, ya no es un observador creíble de la democracia en las Américas, particularmente bajo el actual liderazgo de Luis Almagro, que ha sido descrito como el “peor de la historia”. A los ojos de varios Estados miembros, la institución está demasiado comprometida con los intereses estadounidenses como para ofrecer una defensa eficaz de las instituciones democráticas, lo que lleva a algunos a pedir que organizaciones “autónomas” la impugnen. “El mundo atraviesa actualmente un momento muy preocupante, en el que los ataques a las instituciones democráticas ocurren con una frecuencia alarmante”, dijo el ex ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Brasil, Celso Amorim. “La creación de un observatorio electoral internacional –popular y no partidista– llenará un vacío importante en la defensa de la democracia y los derechos humanos”.

      ¿Qué haría un observatorio así? Tres capacidades son críticas. La primera sería organizar delegaciones a países donde las instituciones democráticas están claramente amenazadas, tanto por parte de actores nacionales como de observadores internacionales como la OEA. Al reunir a científicos de datos y representantes parlamentarios, estas delegaciones proporcionarían un análisis independiente del proceso electoral y una defensa contra narrativas falsas que amenazan con descarrilarlo. El objetivo no es sólo observar cómo se emiten y cuentan los votos; es también observar a los observadores.

      La segunda capacidad crítica sería iniciar investigaciones sobre intervenciones ilegales en el proceso democrático. En el transcurso de la última década, el mecanismo dominante de destrucción democrática ha sido legal, es decir, la utilización del sistema judicial como arma para intimidar, excluir e incluso encarcelar a opositores políticos, una táctica conocida en toda América Latina como guerra legal o “lawfare”. . Al desplegar una red global de expertos legales, un nuevo observatorio podría desafiar estas tácticas para ayudar a garantizar un proceso democrático libre y justo.

      La tercera y última capacidad del nuevo observatorio serían las comunicaciones. En la era tecnológica, la mala información suele viajar más rápido que la buena. Las grandes plataformas tecnológicas como Facebook no sólo sirven para difundir historias falsas y provocar conflictos cívicos; La evidencia sugiere que sus ejecutivos intervienen para favorecer a algunos candidatos y prohibir por completo la participación de otros en la plataforma. En el contexto de tal sesgo, este nuevo observatorio necesitaría construir una infraestructura de comunicaciones autónoma para garantizar que los hallazgos de sus delegaciones e investigaciones se difundan rápidamente, se lean ampliamente y se comprendan bien.

      La convocatoria de un nuevo observatorio no podría ser más urgente. Se vislumbran elecciones polémicas en el horizonte de 2022. En mayo, Colombia acudirá a las urnas después de un año de agitadas protestas contra la violencia gubernamental, la corrupción y una respuesta fallida a la pandemia. Cinco meses después, Jair Bolsonaro se enfrentará a Lula da Silva después de beneficiarse de su flagrante persecución en el camino hacia la presidencia en 2018. Bolsonaro y sus aliados en el Congreso ya han impulsado un paquete legislativo para reescribir las leyes electorales de Brasil, mientras repiten como loros mentiras sobre un posible fraude. en el sistema electoral del país.

      Mientras tanto, de vuelta en Washington DC, el secretario Blinken sigue adelante con los planes para una Cumbre por la Democracia. La cumbre, que convocará a líderes de “un grupo diverso de democracias del mundo” a principios de diciembre, tiene como objetivo fomentar compromisos para luchar contra la corrupción y respetar los derechos humanos: una oportunidad, como sugiere el comunicado de prensa de la Casa Blanca, para “hablar honestamente sobre los desafíos que enfrenta la democracia”. para fortalecer colectivamente las bases de la renovación democrática”.

      Pero la crisis de la democracia no se resolverá únicamente con cumbres. No podemos delegar la “renovación democrática” a nuestros presidentes, ni a la OEA que dice representarlos. Necesitamos un observatorio para defender la democracia desde abajo hacia arriba: una institución con la capacidad y credibilidad para luchar contra las tácticas autoritarias e incluso crear las condiciones necesarias para que la democracia florezca. Esa lucha comienza ahora”.

January 9 2024 Black in America: The State as Embodied Violence, White Supremacist Terror, and the Institutionalization of Slavecatching as Police

     Many are the causes of the Fall of America and the failure of the Restoration of Democracy under the Biden regime which I regret as missed opportunities to save ourselves from the collapse of civilization and the extinction of humankind, things lost now we could have redeemed and horrific futures we could have changed; among them our failure to disarm the police as the primary instrument of white supremacist terror.

     Yes, this remains part of larger issues of gun violence and the state as embodied violence and psychopathy, but this is gun violence and racism institutionalized as state terror which our taxes pay for, and as such is unlike any other form of white supremacist terror and the enforcement of unequal power.

     All we need do is to disarm the police; the abolishment of police and their replacement by institutions of humanitarian aid and the equalization of systems of justice and social power will follow.

     As written by Sam Levin in The Guardian, in an article entitled 2023 saw record killings by US police. Who is most affected? Officers killed at least 1,232 people last year – the deadliest year for homicides by law enforcement in over a decade, data shows; “Police in the US killed at least 1,232 people last year, making 2023 the deadliest year for homicides committed by law enforcement in more than a decade, according to newly released data.

     Mapping Police Violence, a non-profit research group, catalogs deaths at the hands of police and last year recorded the highest number of killings since its national tracking began in 2013. The data suggests a systemic crisis and a remarkably consistent pattern, with an average of roughly three people killed by officers each day, with slight upticks in recent years.

     The group recorded 30 more deaths in 2023 than the previous year, with 1,202 people killed in 2022; 1,148 in 2021; 1,160 in 2020; and 1,098 in 2019. The numbers include shooting victims, as well as people fatally shocked by a stun gun, beaten or restrained. The 2023 count is preliminary, and cases could be added as the database is updated.

     High-profile 2023 cases included the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols in Memphis; the tasing of Keenan Anderson in Los Angeles; and the shooting in Lancaster, California, of Niani Finlayson, who had called 911 for help over domestic violence. There were hundreds more who garnered little attention, including Ricky Cobb, shot by a Minnesota trooper after he was pulled over for a tail light violation; Tahmon Kenneth Wilson, unarmed and shot outside a Bay Area cannabis dispensary; and Isidra Clara Castillo, killed when police in Amarillo, Texas, fired at someone else in the same car as her.

     Here are some key takeaways from the data and experts’ insight into why US police continue to kill civilians at a rate an order of magnitude higher than comparable nations.

     Police violence is increasing as murders are falling

     The record number of police killings happened in a year that saw a significant decrease in homicides, according to preliminary reports of 2023 murder rates; one analyst said the roughly 13% decrease in homicides last year appears to be the largest year-to-year drop on record, and reports have also signaled drops in other violent and property crimes.

     “Violence is trending downwards at an unprecedented rate, but the exception to that seems to be the police, who are engaging in more violence each year,” said Samuel Sinyangwe, a policy analyst and data scientist who founded Mapping Police Violence. “It hits home that many of the promises and actions made after the murder of George Floyd don’t appear to have reduced police violence on a nationwide level.”

     Some advocates say the lack of systemic reforms and continued expansion of police forces have helped sustain the high rates. Polls show most Americans believe crime is rising, and amid voter concerns about safety and violence, municipalities have continued to increase police budgets.

     Monifa Bandele, an activist on the leadership team for the Movement for Black Lives, said that while state and local governments continue to rely on police to address mental health crises, domestic disputes and other social problems, killings will continue: “The more police you put on the streets to interact with members of my community, the greater the risk of harm, abuse and death.”

     Many people were killed while trying to flee police

     The circumstances behind the 2023 killings mirrored past trends. Last year, 445 people killed by police had been fleeing, representing 36% of all cases. There have been efforts across the country to prevent police from shooting at fleeing cars and people, recognizing the danger to the public. But the rates have been steady in recent years, with one in three killings involving people fleeing.

     The underlying reasons for the encounters were also consistent. In 2023, 139 killings (11%) involved claims a person was seen with a weapon; 107 (9%) began as traffic violations; 100 (8%) were mental health or welfare checks; 79 (6%) were domestic disturbances; 73 (6%) were cases where no offenses were alleged; 265 (22%) involved other alleged nonviolent offenses; and 469 (38%) involved claims of violent offenses or more serious crimes.

      “The majority of cases have not originated from reported violent crimes. The police are routinely called into situations where there was no violence until police arrived and the situation escalated,” Sinyangwe said.

     Sheriffs’ departments and rural regions are driving the increase

     In 2023, there were more killings by police in rural zip codes (319 cases, or 26% of killings) than in urban ones (292 cases, or 24%); the remainder of killings were in suburban areas, with a handful of cases undetermined. This marks a shift from previous years when the number of killings in cities outpaced rural deaths.

     County sheriff’s departments, which tend to have jurisdiction over more rural and suburban areas and face less oversight, were responsible for 32% of killings last year; 10 years prior, sheriffs were involved in only 26% of killings.

     Black Americans were killed at much higher rates

     In 2023, Black people were killed at a rate 2.6 times higher than white people, Mapping Police Violence found. Last year, 290 people killed by police were Black, making up 23.5% of victims, while Black Americans make up roughly 14% of the total population. Native Americans were killed at a rate 2.2 times greater than white people, and Latinos were killed at a rate 1.3 times greater.

     Black and brown people have also consistently been more likely to be killed while fleeing. From 2013 to 2023, 39% of Black people who were killed by police had been fleeing, typically either running or driving away. That figure is 35% for Latinos, 33% for Native Americans, 29% for white people and 22% for Asian Americans.

     Albuquerque and New Mexico had the deadliest rates

     Police in New Mexico killed 23 people last year, making it the state with the highest number of fatalities per capita, with a rate of 10.9 killings per 1 million residents, Mapping Police Violence found.

     In one New Mexico case in April, Farmington officers showed up to the wrong house and killed the resident, Robert Dotson, when he opened the door with a handgun. In November, an officer in Las Cruces near the border fatally shot Teresa Gomez after he questioned why she was parked outside a public housing complex.

     Albuquerque, New Mexico’s most populous city, also ranked highest in killings per capita among the country’s 50 largest cities. Albuquerque police killed six people in 2023, while many cities with substantially larger populations, including San Jose and Honolulu, each killed only one civilian last year. Some advocates have said gun culture in the state, particularly in rural areas, could be a factor in the high rates of police violence.

     A spokesperson for the New Mexico governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, said in an email that she was “committed to promoting professional and constitutional policing”, and noted the governor signed a bill into law last year “aimed at increased accountability for those in this critical profession”. SB19 established a duty to intervene when officers witness certain unlawful uses of force; prohibited neck restraints and firing at fleeing vehicles; and required the establishment of a public police misconduct database.

     Spokespeople for Albuquerque police did not respond to an inquiry on Friday.

     Few officers face accountability

     From 2013 to 2022, 98% of police killings have not resulted in officers facing charges, Mapping Police Violence reported.

     This contributes to the steady rate of violence, said Joanna Schwartz, University of California, Los Angeles law professor and expert on how officers evade accountability for misconduct: “Even with public attention to police killings in recent years and unprecedented community engagement, it’s really business as usual. That means tremendous discretion given to police to use force whenever they believe it’s appropriate, very limited federal and state oversight of policing, and union agreements across the country that make it very difficult to effectively investigate, discipline or fire officers.”

     Problem officers with repeated brutality incidents or killings frequently remain on the force or get jobs in other departments, she noted.

     Some cities experienced decreases in lethal force

     Some cities with histories of police brutality had notably few killings in 2023. St Louis police killed one person last year, and there were no killings recorded by Minneapolis, Seattle or Boston police.

     “It suggests that even places with longstanding issues can see improvement. It’s not fixed that they always have to be this way,” Sinyangwe said.

     Bandele noted that community violence prevention programs have helped reduce reliance on police and limit vulnerable people’s exposure to potentially lethal encounters. Denver has received national attention for its program sending civilian responders to mental health calls instead of police. A Brooklyn neighborhood last year experimented with civilian responders to 911 calls.

     “Every week, someone who needs mental health care ends up killed by police,” Bandele said. “But there are alternative ways to respond.”

     There are many alternate ways to respond to the idea of repression and the social use of force as police terror in service to power and the enforcement of authorized identities, constructions of virtue and the public good, and normalities which maintain sanctioned order, elite hegemonies of wealth, power and privilege, hierarchies of belonging and exclusionary otherness, and divisions of gender, race, and faith as nationalism, fascism, and identity politics. Here follows some of my ideas about such possibilities of becoming human, free of such forces of oppression and imposed conditions of struggle.  

     As I wrote in my post of October 13 2021, Abolish Prisons, Police, and the Carceral State of Tyranny and Terror, Force and Control; I write today to amplify the voices of the imprisoned and those who place their lives in the balance with them in solidarity, and to support the work of the Prison Abolition Initiative and Black Lives Matter.

     Such ideas bear the weight of our historical legacies of slavery, racism, and the interdependent purposes of the carceral state to re-enslave Black Americans as prison labor, and to centralize power and authority, both political strategies designed to reinforce the wealth, power, and privilege of elites and to subvert democracy and a free society of equals through divisions of exclusionary otherness and hierarchies of exclusivity and membership.

     As you may know, I tend to think in terms of literature, and to me this issue constructs and presents itself in the contexts of Kafka’s The Trial, Dostoevsky’s autobiographical novel The Idiot and his prison journal The House of the Dead, Elie Wiesel’s Night, and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago.

     America, we can do better than this; the Czar, the Nazis, Stalin. They are not, and must not become, our teachers. We must be better, and if we cannot escape the legacies of our history and the Wagnerian Ring of fear, power, and force and its systems and institutions of dehumanization and commodification we must seize our power and our Liberty in refusal to submit to authority, by any means necessary.

      Let us abolish the police and the instruments of repression of dissent; let us throw open the gates of our prisons, and be free.

    As I wrote in my post of January 29 2023, Why Are Police Evil? Police Are Evil When States Are Evil, and States Are Inherently Evil: the Case of Tyre Nichols;

       Why are police evil?

      Why does the state use police to enforce its authority and laws, and train and arm them not to render aid but to kill, not to redress unequal power and injustices but to perpetrate them as institutional hate crime?

      Such questions thunder through the streets of Memphis, America, and the world as brutal repression and state terror is met with mass protests and resistance, as it did during the historic Black Lives Matter protests for racial justice.

     We Americans overthrew a tyrant and his Fourth Reich regime of white supremacist terror and elected a government to begin the Restoration of America, yet we still have armed police to enforce our subjugation. Why have we not abandoned the use of state terror and abolished the police?

     Is it because in creating terror and learned helplessness through the random murders of nonwhite citizens the police are doing exactly what they are chosen and trained to do? 

      Police are evil because they enforce unjust systems of white supremacist terror and patriarchal sexual terror; police forces are designed and intended as enforcers of unequal power and overseers of carceral states of force and control, states whose purpose is to institutionalize elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege and the hierarchies of belonging and exclusionary otherness through which caste systems are perpetuated, citizenship made conditional, and those who create the wealth of elites commodified and dehumanized as de facto slaves. Police began as slavecatchers and overseers, and remain so today.

      In the murder of Tyre Nichols we have a special unit of overseers who beat a fellow Black man to death simply because they could, but this obscures the central fact of the case that this horrific crime is fully aligned with the purpose of the special unit of which they were members and of the institution of policing in general; to criminalize Black identity and act as a force of state terror in the repression of dissent and the theft of citizenship.

       Police are evil when states are evil, and all states are inherently evil.

     Law serves power, order appropriates, and there is no just authority.

     In the words of Lenin which began the Russian Revolution, What is to be done? As I wrote in my post of April 12 2021, Cry Havoc: Seize the Streets to Disarm the Police;  While the world reels in stupefaction as the true nature of justice in America is revealed in the spectacle of the George Floyd trial, US Army medic Lt Caron Nazario is tortured and terrorized by police, and Daunte Wright in another nonsensical harassment because of a disorderly air freshener impudently dangling from his rearview mirror, is murdered without cause by a twenty seven year veteran of the police force who claims to have mistaken a gun for a taser. And the streets are once again consumed with unruly and uppity protests.

     This is what happens when police are permitted to carry guns. No one should be authorized by the state to use deadly force against their fellow citizens. It is an insane idea, which we must abandon.

      Where are our leaders and representatives who should be rallying the masses and championing the cry for equality and racial justice at the head of these protests?

      In response to the racist murders, torture, and white supremacist terror perpetrated by the police against our Black citizens, President Biden mumbles some boilerplate apologetics of state force and control and asks us nicely not to riot, loot, burn, or otherwise enact public grief, rage, and despair at our abandonment by the government and victimization by its forces of repression.

     We must clarify and prioritize this situation for our representatives.

     Seize the streets to disarm the police.

     Take the streets until we are free of the state terror and racial violence of police. Disarm and abolish police. Hold our representatives accountable for the white supremacist terror of our government, for the carceral state and the institutionalized re-enslavement of Black Americans as prison labor, for the subversion of liberty and equality and the divisions of racist elitism which police and our corrupt justice system enforce.

     Liberate America from this horrific and depraved regime of racist patriarchs and their hired thugs. Abandon our endemic and pervasive surveillance and repression of dissent. Abolish the counterinsurgency model of policing. Renounce force and control and the substitution of order for justice.

  Law serves power, authority, hierarchy, and hegemonies of elite wealth and privilege; and law must never be allowed to replace morality. Law and order are instruments of subjugation and enslavement, commodification, dehumanization, and falsification; choose Liberty instead.

     Order appropriates; Chaos autonomizes.

     Let us demonstrate the failure of law and order through disobedience, resistance, and refusal to submit to authority. For authoritarian force and control is powerless against resistance, and we who refuse to submit and obey become Unconquered and free.

     Who cannot be compelled is free.

     We must free ourselves from the Empire of Fear and work toward the liberation of America and the world from inequality and injustice.

     As written by William Shakespeare in Julius Caesar, Act 3 Scene 1, lines spoken by Marc Anthony which can be said by us of all the victims of police violence and white supremacist terror, whose names are an endless litany of wrongs;

“O, pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth,

That I am meek and gentle with these butchers!

Thou art the ruins of the noblest man

That ever livèd in the tide of times.

Woe to the hand that shed this costly blood!

Over thy wounds now do I prophesy—

Which, like dumb mouths, do ope their ruby lips

To beg the voice and utterance of my tongue—

A curse shall light upon the limbs of men.

Domestic fury and fierce civil strife

Shall cumber all the parts of Italy.

Blood and destruction shall be so in use,

And dreadful objects so familiar,

That mothers shall but smile when they behold

Their infants quartered with the hands of war,

All pity choked with custom of fell deeds,

And Caesar’s spirit, ranging for revenge,

With Ate by his side come hot from hell,

Shall in these confines with a monarch’s voice

Cry “Havoc!” and let slip the dogs of war,

That this foul deed shall smell above the earth

With carrion men, groaning for burial.

2023 saw record killings by US police. Who is most affected?

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/08/2023-us-police-violence-increase-record-deadliest-year-decade?CMP=share_btn_link

Reverend Al Sharpton’s Eulogy for Amir Locke and All Black Americans, Who Are Nameless Suspects Awaiting Murder By Police, Each and Every One

January 8 2024 We Descend Into the Maelstrom of World War Three, Having Abandoned Our Historic Misson As a Guarantor of Democracy and Our Universal Human Rights

     Here we are in the final year of the Biden Presidency which was intended to enact the Restoration of America after its fall to Russian propaganda influence and subversion by the Fourth Reich in the capture of the state by the Stolen Election of 2016, yet what has been changed?

      We have abandoned our historic role as a guarantor of democracy and our universal human rights throughout the world, of our allies and of the victims of atrocities and crimes against humanity which define the limits of the human; in Afghanistan, Ukraine, and Gaza, and countless other betrayals of the solidarity of all who hunger to be free and who resist death and dehumanization, imperial conquest and slavery by tyrants,

     World War Three swirls invisible all around us, interpenetrating and poisoning everything our society holds just and true, on multiple fronts both here at home in America and in Russia which has unleashed this nightmare upon the world in her mad dreams of empire, on the battlefields of Syria and Libya, Belarus and Kazakhstan, Nagorno-Karabakh and West Africa, and now since October 7 possibly Gaza as Israel’s brutal war crimes engulf the whole of the region in a war of survival against Israeli ethnic cleansing and imperial conquest of her neighbors, and the dark gravity of Russia’s mass pulls her ally Iran and the whole of the Iranian Dominion of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen into orbit.

     Yet we have failed to confront our destroyers beyond our borders just as we have failed to purge them from among us here, the fascists who lurk behind the legal fiction of the Republican Party and their brownshirts of the January 6 Insurrection, Putin who threatens us with nuclear annihilation and world conquest and dominion, and Netanyahu whose war crimes in which we are complicit as his sponsors of state terror, whose crimes we have sanctioned and authorized in sending warships to serve his power in place of ships of mercy and humanitarian aid to his many victims, and who together with Biden has delegitimized both our states and exposed our nations siren songs of democracy and human rights as the lies and illusions they may have always been.

     This year begins like no other in our history, for we are beset by enemies both within and without, and our leaders have betrayed us.

     Under such imposed conditions of struggle, and with civilizational collapse and the end of all possibilities of victory in achieving a free society of equals and a United Humankind as we enter the Age of Tyrants and centuries of total war which will consume us all and end with the extinction of humankind, I ask the question once again which was answered so differently by Tolstoy and Lenin; what is to be done?

     As I answered the great and strange friend who set me on my life’s path in Beirut 1982, Jean Genet; I will not surrender.

     So I offer all of you the Oath of the Resistance he offered me; We swear our loyalty to each other, to resist and yield not, and abandon not our fellows.

     Join us.

February 28 2023 First General History of the Third World War

      As I wrote in my post of June 3 2022, One Hundred Days of the Invasion of Ukraine; For one hundred days now, a great struggle between democracy and  tyranny, love and hate, hope and fear has been raging in Ukraine, where the fate of humankind hangs in the balance and our future possibilities of becoming human are being chosen in the great game of chance that is war.

     Here, as in far too many times and places, a few unconquerable heroes and those who stand with them in solidarity as a band of brothers against the darkness of barbarian atavisms of brute fear and force and a nihilistic regime wherein only power has meaning and fear is the only means of exchange, die in the forlorn hope of buying with their lives time for civilization to awaken to the threat of fascist tyranny and imperial conquest.

      How will we answer the test of our humanity in this moment of existential threat? Who do we want to become, we humans? A free society of equals or a world of masters and slaves?

     For these are the stakes of this game in which we now play, the Third World War; liberty or tyranny.

     When those who would enslave us come for us, as they always do, let them find not a people subjugated by learned helplessness nor divided by hierarchies of belonging and exclusionary otherness, but a United Humankind unconquerable in solidarity and refusal to submit.

     To tyranny and fascism there can be but one reply; Never Again!

    Herein is my witness of history and truth telling in this, the First General History of World War Three. As with all things human, it is also fiction except when it is not, myth when it can be, poetic vision and the reimagination and transformation of human being, meaning, and value and of our limitless future possibilities of becoming human.

    Are we not the stories we tell about ourselves, to ourselves and to others?

     Always there remains the struggle between the masks we make for ourselves and those made for us by others.

     This is the first revolution in which we all must fight; the struggle for ownership of ourselves.

      Herein I offer apology for my digressive ars poetica; once in Srinagar I sailed on the Lake of Dreams, was wooed by Beauty but claimed by Vision; and in such visions I fell into a sea of words, images, songs, histories, layered and interconnected with one another like a web of reflections and the echoes of voices lost in time, a Wilderness of Mirrors which capture and distort and extend ourselves infinitely in all directions.

     Here is a shadow self of our histories which we drag around behind ourselves like an invisible reptilian tail, legacies from which we must emerge to create ourselves anew and those which we cannot abandon without losing who we are.

     Of the legacies of our histories and the many versions of our pasts I have often said; there are those which must be kept and those we must escape, and if we are very lucky they are not always the same.

     Here my intertexts are manifest, seize and shake me with tumultuous voices and untrustworthy purposes, for where do our histories end and we begin?

     We cannot escape each other, my shadows and I.

      War transforms the question of our authorship of ourselves with existential primacy; where do we ourselves end, and others begin? How may we negotiate this boundary of the Forbidden and interface with alien realms of human being, meaning, and value, with division and hierarchies of belonging and exclusionary otherness or with solidarity, diversity, and inclusion, with fear or with love?

     In the end all that matters is what we do with our fear, and how we use our power.

      There are no Ukrainians, no Russians, no Israelis and no Palestinians; only people like ourselves, and the choices they make about how to be human together.

Schindler’s List: What The Girl In The Red Coat Represents, Explained

https://screenrant.com/schindlers-list-girl-red-coat-meaning-explained/#When%20The%20Girl%20in%20The%20Red%20Coat%20Is%20Seen

March 14 2022 Origins of the Third World War, Part 1: the Syrian Theatre in the Russian-Turkish Conflict for Dominion of the Middle East

March 15 2022 Origins of the Third World War, Part 2: The Russian-Turkish Conflict for Imperial Dominion of the Mediterranean in the Libyan Theatre

March 23 2022 A History of the Third World War and Russia’s Imperial Wars of Dominion Since 2020, Part Three: the Belarus Theatre of War

March 25 2022 World War Three, Part Four: the Russian Theatre of War

March 26 2022 A History of the Third World War, Part Five: the Kazakhstan Theatre of War

April 15 2022 A History of the Third World War and Russia’s Imperial Wars of Dominion Since 2020, Part Six: the Nagorno-Karabakh Theatre of War

May 27 2022 A History of the Third World War, Part Seven: the West Africa, Sahel, and Lake Chad Theatre of War

 A History of the Third World War, Part Eight: the American Theatre of War

February 9 2022 Let Us Escape the Legacies of Our History: Origins of the Fourth Reich and the Republican Party’s Unanimous Declaration of Treason

March 12 2022 Crimes of a Russian Spy: A History of the American Fourth Reich’s Coup Attempts in Trump’s War Against America

A History of the Third World War, Part Nine: the Ukraine Theatre of War

     This chapter you are reading now, and now are also writing, for it is each of us who will together choose a future for humankind. The nature of that choice is become unambiguous and simple with the invasion of Ukraine and the dawn of World War Three; tyranny or liberty?

     In one of these choices and one only, we may win a future where something resembling ourselves looks back centuries from now on this moment of civilizational collapse or rebirth, with questioning, hope, and wonder.

     “God Bless Us, every one” as Dickens wrote in A Christmas Carol, the story which founded the modern holiday and originated Liberation Theology in wedding Marx to the Sermon on the Mount. In this time of darkness, we must answer division with solidarity, fear with love, despair with hope, fascism and tyranny with resistance, and the terror of our nothingness with the joy of total freedom.

     Here follows a three act play, being some of my journals of Mariupol

April 10 2022 Crimes Against Humanity in the City of Ghosts, Mariupol: A Witness of History

April 18 2022 Last Stand at Mariupol: Fight at the Steel Works

April 20 2022 What is the Meaning of Mariupol? Address to the Volunteers in Warsaw

January 7 2024 Anniversary of the Burning of Rosewood

On this day the Black town of Rosewood was put to the torch, erased utterly as the final atrocity and crime against humanity of an orgiastic episode of rape, murder, and white supremacist terror.

    It was not an isolated incident, though it bears similarities to the total destruction of the Black Wall Street of Tulsa; it is important to remember the names and the particulars of this national trauma and shame, but also important to realize that it was not unique, but merely one episode among countless others, erased and silenced as the witness of history.

     Here is the world the Republicans and Donald Trump would resurrect and consign us all to as a Fourth Reich, on a national and global scale.

    This is an invisible reptilian tail which we drag behind ourselves, we Americans: and as Ta-Nehisi Coates teaches us we will not emerge from the legacies of our history until we bring a Reckoning for slavery and its myriad covert forms, and until we have made reparations as a nation to the victims of our depravity and evil. 

   “Those who forget history are condemned to repeat it” as George Santayana teaches us; and in Rosewood we have a horrific example of the world which the Freedom Caucus intends to damn us to.

    Our history in the annihilation of Rosewood and the January 6 Insurrection has today reached out from the bottomless chasms of the abyss to seize and shake us with a reminder of the stakes in this game called America, both for us here and now and for all humankind in whatever future we may choose.

    May it shake us all awake.

    As written by Jessica Glenza in The Guardian, in an article entitled Rosewood massacre a harrowing tale of racism and the road toward reparations: On New Year’s Day 1923 a white woman was beaten and residents of Sumner, Florida, claimed her assailant was black – which sparked race riots where the casualties were mostly black and hate wiped out a prosperous town; “Four black schoolchildren raced home along a dirt road in Archer, Florida, in 1944, kicking up a dust cloud wake as they ran. They were under strict orders from their mother to run – not lollygag or walk or jog, but run – directly home after hitting the road’s curve.

     The littlest, six-year-old Lizzie Robinson (now Jenkins), led the pack with a brother on each side and her sister behind carrying her books.

     “And I would be [running], my feet barely touching the ground,” Jenkins, now 77, said at her home in Archer.

     Despite strict adherence to their mother’s orders, the siblings weren’t told why they should race home. To the children, it was one of several mysterious dictates issued during childhood in the Jim Crow south.

     As Jenkins tells it, the children didn’t know why Amos ’n’ Andy was often interrupted by revving engines and calls from her father to “Go upstairs now!”, or why aunt Mahulda Carrier, a schoolteacher, fled to the bedroom each time a car drove down their rural road.

     Explanations for demands to hide came later, when Jenkins’s mother, Theresa Brown Robinson, whispered to her daughter the story of violence that befell the settlement of Rosewood in 1923.

     The town was 37 miles south-west of Archer on the main road to the Gulf. Carrier worked there as the schoolteacher, while living with her husband Aaron Carrier. On New Year’s Day 1923, a white woman told her husband “a nigger” assaulted her, a false claim that precipitated a week of mob violence that wiped the prosperous black hamlet off the map, and led to the near lynching of Aaron Carrier.

     Jenkins now believes that all of it – the running, calls to go upstairs, her aunt fleeing to the bedroom – was a reaction to a message her parents received loud and clear: don’t talk about Rosewood, ever, to anyone.

     But after Jim Crow laws lifted, and lynch mob justice was no longer a mortal threat, survivors did begin to talk. So egregious were the stories of rape, murder, looting, arson and neglect by elected officials, that Florida investigated the claims in a 1993 report.

     That led to a law that eventually compensated then elderly victims $150,000 each, and created a scholarship fund. The law, which provided $2.1m total for the survivors, improbably made Florida one of the only states to create a reparations program for the survivors of racialized violence, placing it among federal programs that provided payments to Holocaust survivors and interned Japanese Americans.

     News of Florida’s reparations program ran nationwide when it was passed in 1994, on the front page of the Wall Street Journal among others. Hollywood picked up the tale. Don Cheadle starred in a 1997 film about the pogrom. Several books were written about Rosewood.

     Though the legislation was never called such, the program now represents one of just a handful of reparations cases in the United States, as calls to compensate victims of racialized violence have grown louder in the last two years.

     2015 brought renewed calls to compensate victims of race-related violence from college students, theologians and criminal justice advocates. The city of Chicago started a $5.5m reparations fund for the more than 100 victims tortured at the hands of police commander Jon Burge.

     Last month, students at Georgetown University demanded that the administration set aside an endowment to recruit black professors equal to the profit from an 1838 slave sale that paid off university debt. The 272 slaves were sold for $400 each, the equivalent of about $2.7m today. One day after protests began, students successfully renamed a residence hall named after Thomas Mulledy, the university president who oversaw the sale (it was renamed Freedom Hall).

     At least one progressive Christian theologian is pushing Protestants to reckon their own history with slavery with reparations. In 2014, Atlantic writer Ta-Nehisi Coates breathed fresh life into the debate in his widely lauded article The Case for Reparations.

     Rosewood burning

     Where Rosewood once stood is now little more than a rural scrubland along state road 24, a lonely highway in central Florida bordered by swamp, slash pine and palmetto. A placard on the side of the road describes the horror visited upon the hamlet.

     But in 1923, the settlement was a small and prosperous predominantly black town, with its own baseball team, a masonic temple and a few hundred residents. It was just three miles from the predominantly white town of Sumner, and 48 miles from Gainesville.

     On New Year’s Day 1923, white Sumner resident Fannie Taylor was bruised and beaten when her husband returned home. The Taylors were white, and the residents of Sumner were in near universal agreement that Fannie’s assailant was black.

     A crowd swelled in Sumner to find the “fugitive”, some from as far away as Gainesville, where the same day the Klu Klux Klan held a high-profile parade. Over the next seven days gangs of hundreds delivered lynch mob justice to the once-affluent town of Rosewood.

     “I blame the deputy sheriff,” Robie Mortin, a Rosewood survivor, told the Seminole Tribune in 1999. “Because that lady never dropped a name as to who did what to her. Just said a negro, black man. But when the sheriff came along with his posse and everything, he put a name to the person: Jesse Hunter.”

     Mortin died in 2010 at age 94 in Riviera Beach, Florida. She was believed to be one of the last survivors of the New Year’s riots in 1923. After years of silence she became one of the most vocal. Though Florida completed an investigation into the events that took place in Rosewood, some narratives remain disputed.

     “They didn’t find Jesse Hunter, but noticed that here’s a bunch of niggers living better than us white folks. That disturbed these people,” Mortin said. Her uncle, Sam Carter, is believed to have taken the man who beat Taylor, a fellow Mason, to safety in Gulf Hammock, a few miles away. When Carter returned he was tortured, shot and lynched by the mob looking for Taylor’s assailant.

     “My grandma didn’t know what my uncle Sammy had done to anybody to cause him to be lynched like that,” Mortin told the Tribune. “They took his fingers and his ears, and they just cut souvenirs away from him. That was the type of people they were.”

     Carter is believed to be the first of eight documented deaths associated with the riots that would worsen over the next three days.

     The settlement itself was wiped off the map. Several buildings were set on fire just a few days after New Year’s, and the mob wiped out the remainder of the town a few days later, torching 12 houses one by one. At the time, the Gainesvile Sun reported a crowd of up to 150 people watched the dozen homes and a church set ablaze. Even the dogs were burned.

     “The burning of the houses was carried out deliberately and although the crowd was present all the time, no one could be found who would say he saw the houses fired,” a Sun report said, describing the scene.

     At least two white men died, including CP “Poly” Wilkerson of Sumner and Henry Andrews of Otter Creek, when they attempted to storm a house Rosewood residents had barricaded themselves in.

     A state report on the violence identifies murdered black Rosewood residents as Sam Carter, matriarch Sarah Carrier, James Carrier, Sylvester Carrier and Lexie Gordon. Mingo Williams, a black man who lived nearby, was also killed by the mob.

     Aaron Carrier, Mahulda’s husband and Jenkins’s uncle, was nearly killed when he was dragged behind a truck and tortured on the first night of the riots. At death’s door, Carrier was spirited away by the Levy county sheriff, Bob Walker, she said, and placed in jail in Bronson as a favor to the lawman.

     Mahulda was captured later the same night by the mob, Jenkins said, and tortured before Walker eventually found her.

     “They got Gussie, that was my aunt’s name, they tied a rope around her neck, however they didn’t drag her, they put her in the car and took her to Sumner. Don’t know if you know – a southern tradition is to build a fire … and to stand around the fire and drink liquor and talk trash,” Jenkins said.

     “So they had her there, like she was the [accused], and they were the jury, and they were trying to force her into admitting a lie. ‘Where was your husband last night?’ ‘He was at home in bed with me.’ They asked her that so many times so she got indignant with them … And they said, ‘She’s a bold bitch – let’s rape the bitch.’ And they did. Gang style.”

     Another Rosewood resident, James Carrier, was shot over the fresh graves of his brother and mother after several men captured and interrogated him. He was first told to dig his own grave, but couldn’t because two strokes had paralyzed one arm. The men left his body splayed over the graves of his family members.

     But despite widespread coverage of the incident – the governor was even notified via telegram – the state did nothing.

     Not for one month, when it appears a feeble attempt to indict locals was made by a grand jury, after all the residents of Rosewood had long fled into the nearby swamps and settlements of central Florida.

     The oral history of Rosewood was a secret, passed through several families with each recipient sworn to silence, as black Americans endured decades of terror in Florida. When Jenkins was six her parents would have had fresh memories of lynchings.

     From 1877 to 1950, the county where the Robinsons lived, Alachua, had among the largest sheer volume of lynchings of any community in the nation, according to the Equal Justice Initiative. Per capita, Florida lynched more people than any other state. And counties surrounding Alachua were not friendlier.

     Hernando, Citrus, Lafayette and Taylor counties had some of the highest per capita rates of lynchings in the country. By volume, nearby Marion and Polk counties had among the most in the US.

     Legislation, reparations and state reckons with ugly past

     The story only came to light in 1982, after a reporter at the then St Petersburg Times exposed the forgotten riot. The reporter, Gary Moore, had traveled to Cedar Key, 10 miles south-west of Rosewood on the coast, to explore a Sunday feature on the rural Gulf town.

     “Like the public at large, I personally had never heard of Rosewood,” Moore wrote in a synopsis of research published in the 1993 report that was submitted to the Florida Board of Regents. “I held dim assumptions that any such incident would long ago have been thoroughly researched and publicized by historians, sociologists, anthropologists, advocacy organizations, or others.”

     “There were many things thought better left unquestioned,” Moore reasoned.

     By 1993, before the report was issued, Moore’s story had made a wide impact, becoming a 60 Minutes documentary and earning follow-ups by other news outlets. Moore, however, recounted in detail his struggle for academic and political acceptance of the narrative, and said even 11 years after his story appeared many attempted to deny the massacre occurred.

     One of Moore’s sources, Arnett Doctor, would later devote much of his life to lobbying for Rosewood reparations. Doctor, a descendant of survivors, spent untold hours eliciting detailed narratives of the event from survivors. He is often cited as the “driving force” behind the reparations bill, as the man who brought his findings to high-powered attorneys at Holland & Knight, who helped lobby the legislature for reparations.

     Doctor died at the age of 72 in March 2015, in Spring Hill, Florida, a few hours south of Rosewood.

    “We deliberately avoided anything but compensation for the losses they incurred,” said Martha Barnett, an attorney at Holland & Knight who helped lobby the Florida legislature on behalf of the survivors of Rosewood. Barnett said the term “reparations” can’t be found in the law passed in Florida.

     Instead, attorneys focused on private property rights. She said she and other attorneys needed “to make it something legislators could find palatable in the deep south some 20-some years ago”.

     Barnett said the then Democratic governor, Lawton Chiles, promised his support from the beginning. By April 1994, the House passed a bill to compensate victims of the attack with a 71-40 vote. Four days later, on 9 April 1994, the Senate passed a matching bill with a vote of 26-14, to cries of “Praise the lord!” from those Rosewood descendants present.

     “It’s time for us to send an example, a shining example, that we’re going to do what’s right – for once,” Democratic senator Matthew Meadows said at the time. Chiles died less than four years after signing the bill.

     Now, near Rosewood, Rebel flags are common. Businesses bear the name, and some locals would be as happy to again forget the incident.

     Information on the pogrom is notably muted in some local historical societies.

     “What it takes to make someone whole, what it takes to repair the past, is probably different for every person, and some things are more effective than others,” said Barnett.

     Many of the survivors invested the money they received into their homes. Willie Evans, 87 when he received the $150,000 payment in 1995, put a new roof, windows and doors on his home. Mortin considered traveling to Greece. Jenkins’s mother, who received $3,333.33 from the fund, placed ledgers on the graves of her sister, three brothers and parents.

     “The thing that mattered most to [survivors] was that the state of Florida said, ‘We had an obligation to you as our citizens, we failed to live up to it then, we are going to live up to it today, and we are sorry,’” Barnett said.

     For Doctor, whose own identity seemed wrapped up in the Rosewood story (the license plate on his truck read “ROSEWOOD”), even the unique success of the legislation was not enough. He dreamed of rebuilding the town.

     “The last leg of the [healing process] is the redevelopment and revitalization of a township called Rosewood,” Doctor told the Tampa Bay Times in 2004, as the plaque along State Road 24 was dedicated by then governor Jeb Bush. “If we could get $2bn, $3bn of that we could effect some major changes in Levy County.”

     As written by Ta-Nehisi Coates in an article entitled THE CASE FOR REPARATIONS: Two hundred fifty years of slavery. Ninety years of Jim Crow. Sixty years of separate but equal. Thirty-five years of racist housing policy. Until we reckon with our compounding moral debts, America will never be whole; “

And if thy brother, a Hebrew man, or a Hebrew woman, be sold unto thee, and serve thee six years; then in the seventh year thou shalt let him go free from thee. And when thou sendest him out free from thee, thou shalt not let him go away empty: thou shalt furnish him liberally out of thy flock, and out of thy floor, and out of thy winepress: of that wherewith the LORD thy God hath blessed thee thou shalt give unto him. And thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in the land of Egypt, and the LORD thy God redeemed thee: therefore I command thee this thing today. — deuteronomy 15: 12–15

      Besides the crime which consists in violating the law, and varying from the right rule of reason, whereby a man so far becomes degenerate, and declares himself to quit the principles of human nature, and to be a noxious creature, there is commonly injury done to some person or other, and some other man receives damage by his transgression: in which case he who hath received any damage, has, besides the right of punishment common to him with other men, a particular right to seek reparation.  — john locke, “second treatise”

     By our unpaid labor and suffering, we have earned the right to the soil, many times over and over, and now we are determined to have it. — anonymous, 1861

     I. “So That’s Just One Of My Losses”

     Clyde ross was born in 1923, the seventh of 13 children, near Clarksdale, Mississippi, the home of the blues. Ross’s parents owned and farmed a 40-acre tract of land, flush with cows, hogs, and mules. Ross’s mother would drive to Clarksdale to do her shopping in a horse and buggy, in which she invested all the pride one might place in a Cadillac. The family owned another horse, with a red coat, which they gave to Clyde. The Ross family wanted for little, save that which all black families in the Deep South then desperately desired—the protection of the law.

     Clyde Ross, photographed in November 2013 in his home in the North Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago, where he has lived for more than 50 years. When he first tried to get a legitimate mortgage, he was denied; mortgages were effectively not available to black people. (Carlos Javier Ortiz)

In the 1920s, Jim Crow Mississippi was, in all facets of society, a kleptocracy. The majority of the people in the state were perpetually robbed of the vote—a hijacking engineered through the trickery of the poll tax and the muscle of the lynch mob. Between 1882 and 1968, more black people were lynched in Mississippi than in any other state. “You and I know what’s the best way to keep the nigger from voting,” blustered Theodore Bilbo, a Mississippi senator and a proud Klansman. “You do it the night before the election.”

     The state’s regime partnered robbery of the franchise with robbery of the purse. Many of Mississippi’s black farmers lived in debt peonage, under the sway of cotton kings who were at once their landlords, their employers, and their primary merchants. Tools and necessities were advanced against the return on the crop, which was determined by the employer. When farmers were deemed to be in debt—and they often were—the negative balance was then carried over to the next season. A man or woman who protested this arrangement did so at the risk of grave injury or death. Refusing to work meant arrest under vagrancy laws and forced labor under the state’s penal system.

     Well into the 20th century, black people spoke of their flight from Mississippi in much the same manner as their runagate ancestors had. In her 2010 book, The Warmth of Other Suns, Isabel Wilkerson tells the story of Eddie Earvin, a spinach picker who fled Mississippi in 1963, after being made to work at gunpoint. “You didn’t talk about it or tell nobody,” Earvin said. “You had to sneak away.”

     “Some of the land taken from black families has become a country club in Virginia,” the AP reported.

     When Clyde Ross was still a child, Mississippi authorities claimed his father owed $3,000 in back taxes. The elder Ross could not read. He did not have a lawyer. He did not know anyone at the local courthouse. He could not expect the police to be impartial. Effectively, the Ross family had no way to contest the claim and no protection under the law. The authorities seized the land. They seized the buggy. They took the cows, hogs, and mules. And so for the upkeep of separate but equal, the entire Ross family was reduced to sharecropping.

     This was hardly unusual. In 2001, the Associated Press published a three-part investigation into the theft of black-owned land stretching back to the antebellum period. The series documented some 406 victims and 24,000 acres of land valued at tens of millions of dollars. The land was taken through means ranging from legal chicanery to terrorism. “Some of the land taken from black families has become a country club in Virginia,” the AP reported, as well as “oil fields in Mississippi” and “a baseball spring training facility in Florida.”

     Clyde Ross was a smart child. His teacher thought he should attend a more challenging school. There was very little support for educating black people in Mississippi. But Julius Rosenwald, a part owner of Sears, Roebuck, had begun an ambitious effort to build schools for black children throughout the South. Ross’s teacher believed he should attend the local Rosenwald school. It was too far for Ross to walk and get back in time to work in the fields. Local white children had a school bus. Clyde Ross did not, and thus lost the chance to better his education.

     Then, when Ross was 10 years old, a group of white men demanded his only childhood possession—the horse with the red coat. “You can’t have this horse. We want it,” one of the white men said. They gave Ross’s father $17.

     “I did everything for that horse,” Ross told me. “Everything. And they took him. Put him on the racetrack. I never did know what happened to him after that, but I know they didn’t bring him back. So that’s just one of my losses.”

     The losses mounted. As sharecroppers, the Ross family saw their wages treated as the landlord’s slush fund. Landowners were supposed to split the profits from the cotton fields with sharecroppers. But bales would often disappear during the count, or the split might be altered on a whim. If cotton was selling for 50 cents a pound, the Ross family might get 15 cents, or only five. One year Ross’s mother promised to buy him a $7 suit for a summer program at their church. She ordered the suit by mail. But that year Ross’s family was paid only five cents a pound for cotton. The mailman arrived with the suit. The Rosses could not pay. The suit was sent back. Clyde Ross did not go to the church program.

     It was in these early years that Ross began to understand himself as an American—he did not live under the blind decree of justice, but under the heel of a regime that elevated armed robbery to a governing principle. He thought about fighting. “Just be quiet,” his father told him. “Because they’ll come and kill us all.”

     Clyde Ross grew. He was drafted into the Army. The draft officials offered him an exemption if he stayed home and worked. He preferred to take his chances with war. He was stationed in California. He found that he could go into stores without being bothered. He could walk the streets without being harassed. He could go into a restaurant and receive service.

     Ross was shipped off to Guam. He fought in World War II to save the world from tyranny. But when he returned to Clarksdale, he found that tyranny had followed him home. This was 1947, eight years before Mississippi lynched Emmett Till and tossed his broken body into the Tallahatchie River. The Great Migration, a mass exodus of 6 million African Americans that spanned most of the 20th century, was now in its second wave. The black pilgrims did not journey north simply seeking better wages and work, or bright lights and big adventures. They were fleeing the acquisitive warlords of the South. They were seeking the protection of the law.

     Clyde Ross was among them. He came to Chicago in 1947 and took a job as a taster at Campbell’s Soup. He made a stable wage. He married. He had children. His paycheck was his own. No Klansmen stripped him of the vote. When he walked down the street, he did not have to move because a white man was walking past. He did not have to take off his hat or avert his gaze. His journey from peonage to full citizenship seemed near-complete. Only one item was missing—a home, that final badge of entry into the sacred order of the American middle class of the Eisenhower years.

     In 1961, Ross and his wife bought a house in North Lawndale, a bustling community on Chicago’s West Side. North Lawndale had long been a predominantly Jewish neighborhood, but a handful of middle-class African Americans had lived there starting in the ’40s. The community was anchored by the sprawling Sears, Roebuck headquarters. North Lawndale’s Jewish People’s Institute actively encouraged blacks to move into the neighborhood, seeking to make it a “pilot community for interracial living.” In the battle for integration then being fought around the country, North Lawndale seemed to offer promising terrain. But out in the tall grass, highwaymen, nefarious as any Clarksdale kleptocrat, were lying in wait.

     From the 1930s through the 1960s, black people across the country were largely cut out of the legitimate home-mortgage market.

     Three months after Clyde Ross moved into his house, the boiler blew out. This would normally be a homeowner’s responsibility, but in fact, Ross was not really a homeowner. His payments were made to the seller, not the bank. And Ross had not signed a normal mortgage. He’d bought “on contract”: a predatory agreement that combined all the responsibilities of homeownership with all the disadvantages of renting—while offering the benefits of neither. Ross had bought his house for $27,500. The seller, not the previous homeowner but a new kind of middleman, had bought it for only $12,000 six months before selling it to Ross. In a contract sale, the seller kept the deed until the contract was paid in full—and, unlike with a normal mortgage, Ross would acquire no equity in the meantime. If he missed a single payment, he would immediately forfeit his $1,000 down payment, all his monthly payments, and the property itself.

     The men who peddled contracts in North Lawndale would sell homes at inflated prices and then evict families who could not pay—taking their down payment and their monthly installments as profit. Then they’d bring in another black family, rinse, and repeat. “He loads them up with payments they can’t meet,” an office secretary told The Chicago Daily News of her boss, the speculator Lou Fushanis, in 1963. “Then he takes the property away from them. He’s sold some of the buildings three or four times.”

     Ross had tried to get a legitimate mortgage in another neighborhood, but was told by a loan officer that there was no financing available. The truth was that there was no financing for people like Clyde Ross. From the 1930s through the 1960s, black people across the country were largely cut out of the legitimate home-mortgage market through means both legal and extralegal. Chicago whites employed every measure, from “restrictive covenants” to bombings, to keep their neighborhoods segregated.

     Their efforts were buttressed by the federal government. In 1934, Congress created the Federal Housing Administration. The FHA insured private mortgages, causing a drop in interest rates and a decline in the size of the down payment required to buy a house. But an insured mortgage was not a possibility for Clyde Ross. The FHA had adopted a system of maps that rated neighborhoods according to their perceived stability. On the maps, green areas, rated “A,” indicated “in demand” neighborhoods that, as one appraiser put it, lacked “a single foreigner or Negro.” These neighborhoods were considered excellent prospects for insurance. Neighborhoods where black people lived were rated “D” and were usually considered ineligible for FHA backing. They were colored in red. Neither the percentage of black people living there nor their social class mattered. Black people were viewed as a contagion. Redlining went beyond FHA-backed loans and spread to the entire mortgage industry, which was already rife with racism, excluding black people from most legitimate means of obtaining a mortgage.

     Explore Redlining in Chicago

     A 1939 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation “Residential Security Map” of Chicago shows discrimination against low-income and minority neighborhoods. The residents of the areas marked in red (representing “hazardous” real-estate markets) were denied FHA-backed mortgages. (Map development by Frankie Dintino)

     “A government offering such bounty to builders and lenders could have required compliance with a nondiscrimination policy,” Charles Abrams, the urban-studies expert who helped create the New York City Housing Authority, wrote in 1955. “Instead, the FHA adopted a racial policy that could well have been culled from the Nuremberg laws.”

     The devastating effects are cogently outlined by Melvin L. Oliver and Thomas M. Shapiro in their 1995 book, Black Wealth/White Wealth:

     Locked out of the greatest mass-based opportunity for wealth accumulation in American history, African Americans who desired and were able to afford home ownership found themselves consigned to central-city communities where their investments were affected by the “self-fulfilling prophecies” of the FHA appraisers: cut off from sources of new investment[,] their homes and communities deteriorated and lost value in comparison to those homes and communities that FHA appraisers deemed desirable.

In Chicago and across the country, whites looking to achieve the American dream could rely on a legitimate credit system backed by the government. Blacks were herded into the sights of unscrupulous lenders who took them for money and for sport. “It was like people who like to go out and shoot lions in Africa. It was the same thrill,” a housing attorney told the historian Beryl Satter in her 2009 book, Family Properties. “The thrill of the chase and the kill.”

     The kill was profitable. At the time of his death, Lou Fushanis owned more than 600 properties, many of them in North Lawndale, and his estate was estimated to be worth $3 million. He’d made much of this money by exploiting the frustrated hopes of black migrants like Clyde Ross. During this period, according to one estimate, 85 percent of all black home buyers who bought in Chicago bought on contract. “If anybody who is well established in this business in Chicago doesn’t earn $100,000 a year,” a contract seller told The Saturday Evening Post in 1962, “he is loafing.”

     Contract sellers became rich. North Lawndale became a ghetto.

     Clyde Ross still lives there. He still owns his home. He is 91, and the emblems of survival are all around him—awards for service in his community, pictures of his children in cap and gown. But when I asked him about his home in North Lawndale, I heard only anarchy.

     “We were ashamed. We did not want anyone to know that we were that ignorant,” Ross told me. He was sitting at his dining-room table. His glasses were as thick as his Clarksdale drawl. “I’d come out of Mississippi where there was one mess, and come up here and got in another mess. So how dumb am I? I didn’t want anyone to know how dumb I was.

     “When I found myself caught up in it, I said, ‘How? I just left this mess. I just left no laws. And no regard. And then I come here and get cheated wide open.’ I would probably want to do some harm to some people, you know, if I had been violent like some of us. I thought, ‘Man, I got caught up in this stuff. I can’t even take care of my kids.’ I didn’t have enough for my kids. You could fall through the cracks easy fighting these white people. And no law.”

     Blacks were herded into the sights of unscrupulous lenders who took them for money and for sport.

     But fight Clyde Ross did. In 1968 he joined the newly formed Contract Buyers League—a collection of black homeowners on Chicago’s South and West Sides, all of whom had been locked into the same system of predation. There was Howell Collins, whose contract called for him to pay $25,500 for a house that a speculator had bought for $14,500. There was Ruth Wells, who’d managed to pay out half her contract, expecting a mortgage, only to suddenly see an insurance bill materialize out of thin air—a requirement the seller had added without Wells’s knowledge. Contract sellers used every tool at their disposal to pilfer from their clients. They scared white residents into selling low. They lied about properties’ compliance with building codes, then left the buyer responsible when city inspectors arrived. They presented themselves as real-estate brokers, when in fact they were the owners. They guided their clients to lawyers who were in on the scheme.

     The Contract Buyers League fought back. Members—who would eventually number more than 500—went out to the posh suburbs where the speculators lived and embarrassed them by knocking on their neighbors’ doors and informing them of the details of the contract-lending trade. They refused to pay their installments, instead holding monthly payments in an escrow account. Then they brought a suit against the contract sellers, accusing them of buying properties and reselling in such a manner “to reap from members of the Negro race large and unjust profits.”

     In return for the “deprivations of their rights and privileges under the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments,” the league demanded “prayers for relief”—payback of all moneys paid on contracts and all moneys paid for structural improvement of properties, at 6 percent interest minus a “fair, non-discriminatory” rental price for time of occupation. Moreover, the league asked the court to adjudge that the defendants had “acted willfully and maliciously and that malice is the gist of this action.”

     Ross and the Contract Buyers League were no longer appealing to the government simply for equality. They were no longer fleeing in hopes of a better deal elsewhere. They were charging society with a crime against their community. They wanted the crime publicly ruled as such. They wanted the crime’s executors declared to be offensive to society. And they wanted restitution for the great injury brought upon them by said offenders. In 1968, Clyde Ross and the Contract Buyers League were no longer simply seeking the protection of the law. They were seeking reparations.

     II. “A Difference of Kind, Not Degree”

     According to the most-recent statistics, North Lawndale is now on the wrong end of virtually every socioeconomic indicator. In 1930 its population was 112,000. Today it is 36,000. The halcyon talk of “interracial living” is dead. The neighborhood is 92 percent black. Its homicide rate is 45 per 100,000—triple the rate of the city as a whole. The infant-mortality rate is 14 per 1,000—more than twice the national average. Forty-three percent of the people in North Lawndale live below the poverty line—double Chicago’s overall rate. Forty-five percent of all households are on food stamps—nearly three times the rate of the city at large. Sears, Roebuck left the neighborhood in 1987, taking 1,800 jobs with it. Kids in North Lawndale need not be confused about their prospects: Cook County’s Juvenile Temporary Detention Center sits directly adjacent to the neighborhood.

     North Lawndale is an extreme portrait of the trends that ail black Chicago. Such is the magnitude of these ailments that it can be said that blacks and whites do not inhabit the same city. The average per capita income of Chicago’s white neighborhoods is almost three times that of its black neighborhoods. When the Harvard sociologist Robert J. Sampson examined incarceration rates in Chicago in his 2012 book, Great American City, he found that a black neighborhood with one of the highest incarceration rates (West Garfield Park) had a rate more than 40 times as high as the white neighborhood with the highest rate (Clearing). “This is a staggering differential, even for community-level comparisons,” Sampson writes. “A difference of kind, not degree.”

     In other words, Chicago’s impoverished black neighborhoods—characterized by high unemployment and households headed by single parents—are not simply poor; they are “ecologically distinct.” This “is not simply the same thing as low economic status,” writes Sampson. “In this pattern Chicago is not alone.”

     The lives of black Americans are better than they were half a century ago. The humiliation of whites only signs are gone. Rates of black poverty have decreased. Black teen-pregnancy rates are at record lows—and the gap between black and white teen-pregnancy rates has shrunk significantly. But such progress rests on a shaky foundation, and fault lines are everywhere. The income gap between black and white households is roughly the same today as it was in 1970. Patrick Sharkey, a sociologist at New York University, studied children born from 1955 through 1970 and found that 4 percent of whites and 62 percent of blacks across America had been raised in poor neighborhoods. A generation later, the same study showed, virtually nothing had changed. And whereas whites born into affluent neighborhoods tended to remain in affluent neighborhoods, blacks tended to fall out of them.

     This is not surprising. Black families, regardless of income, are significantly less wealthy than white families. The Pew Research Center estimates that white households are worth roughly 20 times as much as black households, and that whereas only 15 percent of whites have zero or negative wealth, more than a third of blacks do. Effectively, the black family in America is working without a safety net. When financial calamity strikes—a medical emergency, divorce, job loss—the fall is precipitous.

     And just as black families of all incomes remain handicapped by a lack of wealth, so too do they remain handicapped by their restricted choice of neighborhood. Black people with upper-middle-class incomes do not generally live in upper-middle-class neighborhoods. Sharkey’s research shows that black families making $100,000 typically live in the kinds of neighborhoods inhabited by white families making $30,000. “Blacks and whites inhabit such different neighborhoods,” Sharkey writes, “that it is not possible to compare the economic outcomes of black and white children.”

     A national real-estate association advised not to sell to “a colored man of means who was giving his children a college education.”

The implications are chilling. As a rule, poor black people do not work their way out of the ghetto—and those who do often face the horror of watching their children and grandchildren tumble back.

     Even seeming evidence of progress withers under harsh light. In 2012, the Manhattan Institute cheerily noted that segregation had declined since the 1960s. And yet African Americans still remained—by far—the most segregated ethnic group in the country.

     With segregation, with the isolation of the injured and the robbed, comes the concentration of disadvantage. An unsegregated America might see poverty, and all its effects, spread across the country with no particular bias toward skin color. Instead, the concentration of poverty has been paired with a concentration of melanin. The resulting conflagration has been devastating.

     One thread of thinking in the African American community holds that these depressing numbers partially stem from cultural pathologies that can be altered through individual grit and exceptionally good behavior. (In 2011, Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, responding to violence among young black males, put the blame on the family: “Too many men making too many babies they don’t want to take care of, and then we end up dealing with your children.” Nutter turned to those presumably fatherless babies: “Pull your pants up and buy a belt, because no one wants to see your underwear or the crack of your butt.”) The thread is as old as black politics itself. It is also wrong. The kind of trenchant racism to which black people have persistently been subjected can never be defeated by making its victims more respectable. The essence of American racism is disrespect. And in the wake of the grim numbers, we see the grim inheritance.

     The Contract Buyers League’s suit brought by Clyde Ross and his allies took direct aim at this inheritance. The suit was rooted in Chicago’s long history of segregation, which had created two housing markets—one legitimate and backed by the government, the other lawless and patrolled by predators. The suit dragged on until 1976, when the league lost a jury trial. Securing the equal protection of the law proved hard; securing reparations proved impossible. If there were any doubts about the mood of the jury, the foreman removed them by saying, when asked about the verdict, that he hoped it would help end “the mess Earl Warren made with Brown v. Board of Education and all that nonsense.”

     The Supreme Court seems to share that sentiment. The past two decades have witnessed a rollback of the progressive legislation of the 1960s. Liberals have found themselves on the defensive. In 2008, when Barack Obama was a candidate for president, he was asked whether his daughters—Malia and Sasha—should benefit from affirmative action. He answered in the negative.

     The exchange rested upon an erroneous comparison of the average American white family and the exceptional first family. In the contest of upward mobility, Barack and Michelle Obama have won. But they’ve won by being twice as good—and enduring twice as much. Malia and Sasha Obama enjoy privileges beyond the average white child’s dreams. But that comparison is incomplete. The more telling question is how they compare with Jenna and Barbara Bush—the products of many generations of privilege, not just one. Whatever the Obama children achieve, it will be evidence of their family’s singular perseverance, not of broad equality.

     III. “We Inherit Our Ample Patrimony”

     In 1783, the freedwoman Belinda Royall petitioned the commonwealth of Massachusetts for reparations. Belinda had been born in modern-day Ghana. She was kidnapped as a child and sold into slavery. She endured the Middle Passage and 50 years of enslavement at the hands of Isaac Royall and his son. But the junior Royall, a British loyalist, fled the country during the Revolution. Belinda, now free after half a century of labor, beseeched the nascent Massachusetts legislature:

     The face of your Petitioner, is now marked with the furrows of time, and her frame bending under the oppression of years, while she, by the Laws of the Land, is denied the employment of one morsel of that immense wealth, apart whereof hath been accumilated by her own industry, and the whole augmented by her servitude.

     WHEREFORE, casting herself at your feet if your honours, as to a body of men, formed for the extirpation of vassalage, for the reward of Virtue, and the just return of honest industry—she prays, that such allowance may be made her out of the Estate of Colonel Royall, as will prevent her, and her more infirm daughter, from misery in the greatest extreme, and scatter comfort over the short and downward path of their lives.

     Belinda Royall was granted a pension of 15 pounds and 12 shillings, to be paid out of the estate of Isaac Royall—one of the earliest successful attempts to petition for reparations. At the time, black people in America had endured more than 150 years of enslavement, and the idea that they might be owed something in return was, if not the national consensus, at least not outrageous.

     “A heavy account lies against us as a civil society for oppressions committed against people who did not injure us,” wrote the Quaker John Woolman in 1769, “and that if the particular case of many individuals were fairly stated, it would appear that there was considerable due to them.”

     As the historian Roy E. Finkenbine has documented, at the dawn of this country, black reparations were actively considered and often effected. Quakers in New York, New England, and Baltimore went so far as to make “membership contingent upon compensating one’s former slaves.” In 1782, the Quaker Robert Pleasants emancipated his 78 slaves, granted them 350 acres, and later built a school on their property and provided for their education. “The doing of this justice to the injured Africans,” wrote Pleasants, “would be an acceptable offering to him who ‘Rules in the kingdom of men.’ ”

     Edward Coles, a protégé of Thomas Jefferson who became a slaveholder through inheritance, took many of his slaves north and granted them a plot of land in Illinois. John Randolph, a cousin of Jefferson’s, willed that all his slaves be emancipated upon his death, and that all those older than 40 be given 10 acres of land. “I give and bequeath to all my slaves their freedom,” Randolph wrote, “heartily regretting that I have been the owner of one.”

     In his book Forever Free, Eric Foner recounts the story of a disgruntled planter reprimanding a freedman loafing on the job:

     Planter: “You lazy nigger, I am losing a whole day’s labor by you.”

     Freedman: “Massa, how many days’ labor have I lost by you?”

     In the 20th century, the cause of reparations was taken up by a diverse cast that included the Confederate veteran Walter R. Vaughan, who believed that reparations would be a stimulus for the South; the black activist Callie House; black-nationalist leaders like “Queen Mother” Audley Moore; and the civil-rights activist James Forman. The movement coalesced in 1987 under an umbrella organization called the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (n’cobra). The NAACP endorsed reparations in 1993. Charles J. Ogletree Jr., a professor at Harvard Law School, has pursued reparations claims in court.

     But while the people advocating reparations have changed over time, the response from the country has remained virtually the same. “They have been taught to labor,” the Chicago Tribune editorialized in 1891. “They have been taught Christian civilization, and to speak the noble English language instead of some African gibberish. The account is square with the ex‑slaves.”

     Not exactly. Having been enslaved for 250 years, black people were not left to their own devices. They were terrorized. In the Deep South, a second slavery ruled. In the North, legislatures, mayors, civic associations, banks, and citizens all colluded to pin black people into ghettos, where they were overcrowded, overcharged, and undereducated. Businesses discriminated against them, awarding them the worst jobs and the worst wages. Police brutalized them in the streets. And the notion that black lives, black bodies, and black wealth were rightful targets remained deeply rooted in the broader society. Now we have half-stepped away from our long centuries of despoilment, promising, “Never again.” But still we are haunted. It is as though we have run up a credit-card bill and, having pledged to charge no more, remain befuddled that the balance does not disappear. The effects of that balance, interest accruing daily, are all around us.

     Broach the topic of reparations today and a barrage of questions inevitably follows: Who will be paid? How much will they be paid? Who will pay? But if the practicalities, not the justice, of reparations are the true sticking point, there has for some time been the beginnings of a solution. For the past 25 years, Congressman John Conyers Jr., who represents the Detroit area, has marked every session of Congress by introducing a bill calling for a congressional study of slavery and its lingering effects as well as recommendations for “appropriate remedies.”

     A country curious about how reparations might actually work has an easy solution in Conyers’s bill, now called HR 40, the Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African Americans Act. We would support this bill, submit the question to study, and then assess the possible solutions. But we are not interested.

     What We Should Be Asking About Reparations

     “Any contemplation of compensated emancipation must grapple with how several counties, and some states in the South, would react to finding themselves suddenly outnumbered by free black people.”

     “It’s because it’s black folks making the claim,” Nkechi Taifa, who helped found n’cobra, says. “People who talk about reparations are considered left lunatics. But all we are talking about is studying [reparations]. As John Conyers has said, we study everything. We study the water, the air. We can’t even study the issue? This bill does not authorize one red cent to anyone.”

     That HR 40 has never—under either Democrats or Republicans—made it to the House floor suggests our concerns are rooted not in the impracticality of reparations but in something more existential. If we conclude that the conditions in North Lawndale and black America are not inexplicable but are instead precisely what you’d expect of a community that for centuries has lived in America’s crosshairs, then what are we to make of the world’s oldest democracy?

     One cannot escape the question by hand-waving at the past, disavowing the acts of one’s ancestors, nor by citing a recent date of ancestral immigration. The last slaveholder has been dead for a very long time. The last soldier to endure Valley Forge has been dead much longer. To proudly claim the veteran and disown the slaveholder is patriotism à la carte. A nation outlives its generations. We were not there when Washington crossed the Delaware, but Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze’s rendering has meaning to us. We were not there when Woodrow Wilson took us into World War I, but we are still paying out the pensions. If Thomas Jefferson’s genius matters, then so does his taking of Sally Hemings’s body. If George Washington crossing the Delaware matters, so must his ruthless pursuit of the runagate Oney Judge.

     Black families making $100,000 typically live in the kinds of neighborhoods inhabited by white families making $30,000.

     In 1909, President William Howard Taft told the country that “intelligent” white southerners were ready to see blacks as “useful members of the community.” A week later Joseph Gordon, a black man, was lynched outside Greenwood, Mississippi. The high point of the lynching era has passed. But the memories of those robbed of their lives still live on in the lingering effects. Indeed, in America there is a strange and powerful belief that if you stab a black person 10 times, the bleeding stops and the healing begins the moment the assailant drops the knife. We believe white dominance to be a fact of the inert past, a delinquent debt that can be made to disappear if only we don’t look.

     There has always been another way. “It is in vain to alledge, that our ancestors brought them hither, and not we,” Yale President Timothy Dwight said in 1810.

     We inherit our ample patrimony with all its incumbrances; and are bound to pay the debts of our ancestors. This debt, particularly, we are bound to discharge: and, when the righteous Judge of the Universe comes to reckon with his servants, he will rigidly exact the payment at our hands. To give them liberty, and stop here, is to entail upon them a curse.

     IV. “The Ills That Slavery Frees Us From”

     America begins in black plunder and white democracy, two features that are not contradictory but complementary. “The men who came together to found the independent United States, dedicated to freedom and equality, either held slaves or were willing to join hands with those who did,” the historian Edmund S. Morgan wrote. “None of them felt entirely comfortable about the fact, but neither did they feel responsible for it. Most of them had inherited both their slaves and their attachment to freedom from an earlier generation, and they knew the two were not unconnected.”

     When enslaved Africans, plundered of their bodies, plundered of their families, and plundered of their labor, were brought to the colony of Virginia in 1619, they did not initially endure the naked racism that would engulf their progeny. Some of them were freed. Some of them intermarried. Still others escaped with the white indentured servants who had suffered as they had. Some even rebelled together, allying under Nathaniel Bacon to torch Jamestown in 1676.

     One hundred years later, the idea of slaves and poor whites joining forces would shock the senses, but in the early days of the English colonies, the two groups had much in common. English visitors to Virginia found that its masters “abuse their servantes with intollerable oppression and hard usage.” White servants were flogged, tricked into serving beyond their contracts, and traded in much the same manner as slaves.

     This “hard usage” originated in a simple fact of the New World—land was boundless but cheap labor was limited. As life spans increased in the colony, the Virginia planters found in the enslaved Africans an even more efficient source of cheap labor. Whereas indentured servants were still legal subjects of the English crown and thus entitled to certain protections, African slaves entered the colonies as aliens. Exempted from the protections of the crown, they became early America’s indispensable working class—fit for maximum exploitation, capable of only minimal resistance.

     For the next 250 years, American law worked to reduce black people to a class of untouchables and raise all white men to the level of citizens. In 1650, Virginia mandated that “all persons except Negroes” were to carry arms. In 1664, Maryland mandated that any Englishwoman who married a slave must live as a slave of her husband’s master. In 1705, the Virginia assembly passed a law allowing for the dismemberment of unruly slaves—but forbidding masters from whipping “a Christian white servant naked, without an order from a justice of the peace.” In that same law, the colony mandated that “all horses, cattle, and hogs, now belonging, or that hereafter shall belong to any slave” be seized and sold off by the local church, the profits used to support “the poor of the said parish.” At that time, there would have still been people alive who could remember blacks and whites joining to burn down Jamestown only 29 years before. But at the beginning of the 18th century, two primary classes were enshrined in America.

     “The two great divisions of society are not the rich and poor, but white and black,” John C. Calhoun, South Carolina’s senior senator, declared on the Senate floor in 1848. “And all the former, the poor as well as the rich, belong to the upper class, and are respected and treated as equals.”

     In 1860, the majority of people living in South Carolina and Mississippi, almost half of those living in Georgia, and about one-third of all Southerners were on the wrong side of Calhoun’s line. The state with the largest number of enslaved Americans was Virginia, where in certain counties some 70 percent of all people labored in chains. Nearly one-fourth of all white Southerners owned slaves, and upon their backs the economic basis of America—and much of the Atlantic world—was erected. In the seven cotton states, one-third of all white income was derived from slavery. By 1840, cotton produced by slave labor constituted 59 percent of the country’s exports. The web of this slave society extended north to the looms of New England, and across the Atlantic to Great Britain, where it powered a great economic transformation and altered the trajectory of world history. “Whoever says Industrial Revolution,” wrote the historian Eric J. Hobsbawm, “says cotton.”

     The wealth accorded America by slavery was not just in what the slaves pulled from the land but in the slaves themselves. “In 1860, slaves as an asset were worth more than all of America’s manufacturing, all of the railroads, all of the productive capacity of the United States put together,” the Yale historian David W. Blight has noted. “Slaves were the single largest, by far, financial asset of property in the entire American economy.” The sale of these slaves—“in whose bodies that money congealed,” writes Walter Johnson, a Harvard historian—generated even more ancillary wealth. Loans were taken out for purchase, to be repaid with interest. Insurance policies were drafted against the untimely death of a slave and the loss of potential profits. Slave sales were taxed and notarized. The vending of the black body and the sundering of the black family became an economy unto themselves, estimated to have brought in tens of millions of dollars to antebellum America. In 1860 there were more millionaires per capita in the Mississippi Valley than anywhere else in the country.

     Beneath the cold numbers lay lives divided. “I had a constant dread that Mrs. Moore, her mistress, would be in want of money and sell my dear wife,” a freedman wrote, reflecting on his time in slavery. “We constantly dreaded a final separation. Our affection for each was very strong, and this made us always apprehensive of a cruel parting.”

     Forced partings were common in the antebellum South. A slave in some parts of the region stood a 30 percent chance of being sold in his or her lifetime. Twenty-five percent of interstate trades destroyed a first marriage and half of them destroyed a nuclear family.

     When the wife and children of Henry Brown, a slave in Richmond, Virginia, were to be sold away, Brown searched for a white master who might buy his wife and children to keep the family together. He failed:

     The next day, I stationed myself by the side of the road, along which the slaves, amounting to three hundred and fifty, were to pass. The purchaser of my wife was a Methodist minister, who was about starting for North Carolina. Pretty soon five waggon-loads of little children passed, and looking at the foremost one, what should I see but a little child, pointing its tiny hand towards me, exclaiming, “There’s my father; I knew he would come and bid me good-bye.” It was my eldest child! Soon the gang approached in which my wife was chained. I looked, and beheld her familiar face; but O, reader, that glance of agony! may God spare me ever again enduring the excruciating horror of that moment! She passed, and came near to where I stood. I seized hold of her hand, intending to bid her farewell; but words failed me; the gift of utterance had fled, and I remained speechless. I followed her for some distance, with her hand grasped in mine, as if to save her from her fate, but I could not speak, and I was obliged to turn away in silence.

     In a time when telecommunications were primitive and blacks lacked freedom of movement, the parting of black families was a kind of murder. Here we find the roots of American wealth and democracy—in the for-profit destruction of the most important asset available to any people, the family. The destruction was not incidental to America’s rise; it facilitated that rise. By erecting a slave society, America created the economic foundation for its great experiment in democracy. The labor strife that seeded Bacon’s rebellion was suppressed. America’s indispensable working class existed as property beyond the realm of politics, leaving white Americans free to trumpet their love of freedom and democratic values. Assessing antebellum democracy in Virginia, a visitor from England observed that the state’s natives “can profess an unbounded love of liberty and of democracy in consequence of the mass of the people, who in other countries might become mobs, being there nearly altogether composed of their own Negro slaves.”

     V. The Quiet Plunder

     The consequences of 250 years of enslavement, of war upon black families and black people, were profound. Like homeownership today, slave ownership was aspirational, attracting not just those who owned slaves but those who wished to. Much as homeowners today might discuss the addition of a patio or the painting of a living room, slaveholders traded tips on the best methods for breeding workers, exacting labor, and doling out punishment. Just as a homeowner today might subscribe to a magazine like This Old House, slaveholders had journals such as De Bow’s Review, which recommended the best practices for wringing profits from slaves. By the dawn of the Civil War, the enslavement of black America was thought to be so foundational to the country that those who sought to end it were branded heretics worthy of death. Imagine what would happen if a president today came out in favor of taking all American homes from their owners: the reaction might well be violent.

     “This country was formed for the white, not for the black man,” John Wilkes Booth wrote, before killing Abraham Lincoln. “And looking upon African slavery from the same standpoint held by those noble framers of our Constitution, I for one have ever considered it one of the greatest blessings (both for themselves and us) that God ever bestowed upon a favored nation.”

     In the aftermath of the Civil War, Radical Republicans attempted to reconstruct the country upon something resembling universal equality—but they were beaten back by a campaign of “Redemption,” led by White Liners, Red Shirts, and Klansmen bent on upholding a society “formed for the white, not for the black man.” A wave of terrorism roiled the South. In his massive history Reconstruction, Eric Foner recounts incidents of black people being attacked for not removing their hats; for refusing to hand over a whiskey flask; for disobeying church procedures; for “using insolent language”; for disputing labor contracts; for refusing to be “tied like a slave.” Sometimes the attacks were intended simply to “thin out the niggers a little.”

     Terrorism carried the day. Federal troops withdrew from the South in 1877. The dream of Reconstruction died. For the next century, political violence was visited upon blacks wantonly, with special treatment meted out toward black people of ambition. Black schools and churches were burned to the ground. Black voters and the political candidates who attempted to rally them were intimidated, and some were murdered. At the end of World War I, black veterans returning to their homes were assaulted for daring to wear the American uniform. The demobilization of soldiers after the war, which put white and black veterans into competition for scarce jobs, produced the Red Summer of 1919: a succession of racist pogroms against dozens of cities ranging from Longview, Texas, to Chicago to Washington, D.C. Organized white violence against blacks continued into the 1920s—in 1921 a white mob leveled Tulsa’s “Black Wall Street,” and in 1923 another one razed the black town of Rosewood, Florida—and virtually no one was punished.

     A postcard dated August 3, 1920, depicts the aftermath of a lynching in Center, Texas, near the Louisiana border. According to the text on the other side, the victim was a 16-year-old boy.

     The work of mobs was a rabid and violent rendition of prejudices that extended even into the upper reaches of American government. The New Deal is today remembered as a model for what progressive government should do—cast a broad social safety net that protects the poor and the afflicted while building the middle class. When progressives wish to express their disappointment with Barack Obama, they point to the accomplishments of Franklin Roosevelt. But these progressives rarely note that Roosevelt’s New Deal, much like the democracy that produced it, rested on the foundation of Jim Crow.

     “The Jim Crow South,” writes Ira Katznelson, a history and political-science professor at Columbia, “was the one collaborator America’s democracy could not do without.” The marks of that collaboration are all over the New Deal. The omnibus programs passed under the Social Security Act in 1935 were crafted in such a way as to protect the southern way of life. Old-age insurance (Social Security proper) and unemployment insurance excluded farmworkers and domestics—jobs heavily occupied by blacks. When President Roosevelt signed Social Security into law in 1935, 65 percent of African Americans nationally and between 70 and 80 percent in the South were ineligible. The NAACP protested, calling the new American safety net “a sieve with holes just big enough for the majority of Negroes to fall through.”

     The oft-celebrated G.I. Bill similarly failed black Americans, by mirroring the broader country’s insistence on a racist housing policy. Though ostensibly color-blind, Title III of the bill, which aimed to give veterans access to low-interest home loans, left black veterans to tangle with white officials at their local Veterans Administration as well as with the same banks that had, for years, refused to grant mortgages to blacks. The historian Kathleen J. Frydl observes in her 2009 book, The GI Bill, that so many blacks were disqualified from receiving Title III benefits “that it is more accurate simply to say that blacks could not use this particular title.”

     In Cold War America, homeownership was seen as a means of instilling patriotism, and as a civilizing and anti-radical force. “No man who owns his own house and lot can be a Communist,” claimed William Levitt, who pioneered the modern suburb with the development of the various Levittowns, his famous planned communities. “He has too much to do.”

     But the Levittowns were, with Levitt’s willing acquiescence, segregated throughout their early years. Daisy and Bill Myers, the first black family to move into Levittown, Pennsylvania, were greeted with protests and a burning cross. A neighbor who opposed the family said that Bill Myers was “probably a nice guy, but every time I look at him I see $2,000 drop off the value of my house.”

     The neighbor had good reason to be afraid. Bill and Daisy Myers were from the other side of John C. Calhoun’s dual society. If they moved next door, housing policy almost guaranteed that their neighbors’ property values would decline.

     Whereas shortly before the New Deal, a typical mortgage required a large down payment and full repayment within about 10 years, the creation of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation in 1933 and then the Federal Housing Administration the following year allowed banks to offer loans requiring no more than 10 percent down, amortized over 20 to 30 years. “Without federal intervention in the housing market, massive suburbanization would have been impossible,” writes Thomas J. Sugrue, a historian at the University of Pennsylvania. “In 1930, only 30 percent of Americans owned their own homes; by 1960, more than 60 percent were home owners. Home ownership became an emblem of American citizenship.”

     That emblem was not to be awarded to blacks. The American real-estate industry believed segregation to be a moral principle. As late as 1950, the National Association of Real Estate Boards’ code of ethics warned that “a Realtor should never be instrumental in introducing into a neighborhood … any race or nationality, or any individuals whose presence will clearly be detrimental to property values.” A 1943 brochure specified that such potential undesirables might include madams, bootleggers, gangsters—and “a colored man of means who was giving his children a college education and thought they were entitled to live among whites.”

     The federal government concurred. It was the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, not a private trade association, that pioneered the practice of redlining, selectively granting loans and insisting that any property it insured be covered by a restrictive covenant—a clause in the deed forbidding the sale of the property to anyone other than whites. Millions of dollars flowed from tax coffers into segregated white neighborhoods.

     One man said his black neighbor was “probably a nice guy, but every time I look at him I see $2,000 drop off the value of my house.”

     “For perhaps the first time, the federal government embraced the discriminatory attitudes of the marketplace,” the historian Kenneth T. Jackson wrote in his 1985 book, Crabgrass Frontier, a history of suburbanization. “Previously, prejudices were personalized and individualized; FHA exhorted segregation and enshrined it as public policy. Whole areas of cities were declared ineligible for loan guarantees.” Redlining was not officially outlawed until 1968, by the Fair Housing Act. By then the damage was done—and reports of redlining by banks have continued.

     The federal government is premised on equal fealty from all its citizens, who in return are to receive equal treatment. But as late as the mid-20th century, this bargain was not granted to black people, who repeatedly paid a higher price for citizenship and received less in return. Plunder had been the essential feature of slavery, of the society described by Calhoun. But practically a full century after the end of the Civil War and the abolition of slavery, the plunder—quiet, systemic, submerged—continued even amidst the aims and achievements of New Deal liberals.

     VI. Making The Second Ghetto

Today chicago is one of the most segregated cities in the country, a fact that reflects assiduous planning. In the effort to uphold white supremacy at every level down to the neighborhood, Chicago—a city founded by the black fur trader Jean Baptiste Point du Sable—has long been a pioneer. The efforts began in earnest in 1917, when the Chicago Real Estate Board, horrified by the influx of southern blacks, lobbied to zone the entire city by race. But after the Supreme Court ruled against explicit racial zoning that year, the city was forced to pursue its agenda by more-discreet means.

     Like the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, the Federal Housing Administration initially insisted on restrictive covenants, which helped bar blacks and other ethnic undesirables from receiving federally backed home loans. By the 1940s, Chicago led the nation in the use of these restrictive covenants, and about half of all residential neighborhoods in the city were effectively off-limits to blacks.

     It is common today to become misty-eyed about the old black ghetto, where doctors and lawyers lived next door to meatpackers and steelworkers, who themselves lived next door to prostitutes and the unemployed. This segregationist nostalgia ignores the actual conditions endured by the people living there—vermin and arson, for instance—and ignores the fact that the old ghetto was premised on denying black people privileges enjoyed by white Americans.

     In 1948, when the Supreme Court ruled that restrictive covenants, while permissible, were not enforceable by judicial action, Chicago had other weapons at the ready. The Illinois state legislature had already given Chicago’s city council the right to approve—and thus to veto—any public housing in the city’s wards. This came in handy in 1949, when a new federal housing act sent millions of tax dollars into Chicago and other cities around the country. Beginning in 1950, site selection for public housing proceeded entirely on the grounds of segregation. By the 1960s, the city had created with its vast housing projects what the historian Arnold R. Hirsch calls a “second ghetto,” one larger than the old Black Belt but just as impermeable. More than 98 percent of all the family public-housing units built in Chicago between 1950 and the mid‑1960s were built in all-black neighborhoods.

     Governmental embrace of segregation was driven by the virulent racism of Chicago’s white citizens. White neighborhoods vulnerable to black encroachment formed block associations for the sole purpose of enforcing segregation. They lobbied fellow whites not to sell. They lobbied those blacks who did manage to buy to sell back. In 1949, a group of Englewood Catholics formed block associations intended to “keep up the neighborhood.” Translation: keep black people out. And when civic engagement was not enough, when government failed, when private banks could no longer hold the line, Chicago turned to an old tool in the American repertoire—racial violence. “The pattern of terrorism is easily discernible,” concluded a Chicago civic group in the 1940s.                     

    “It is at the seams of the black ghetto in all directions.” On July 1 and 2 of 1946, a mob of thousands assembled in Chicago’s Park Manor neighborhood, hoping to eject a black doctor who’d recently moved in. The mob pelted the house with rocks and set the garage on fire. The doctor moved away.

     In 1947, after a few black veterans moved into the Fernwood section of Chicago, three nights of rioting broke out; gangs of whites yanked blacks off streetcars and beat them. Two years later, when a union meeting attended by blacks in Englewood triggered rumors that a home was being “sold to niggers,” blacks (and whites thought to be sympathetic to them) were beaten in the streets. In 1951, thousands of whites in Cicero, 20 minutes or so west of downtown Chicago, attacked an apartment building that housed a single black family, throwing bricks and firebombs through the windows and setting the apartment on fire. A Cook County grand jury declined to charge the rioters—and instead indicted the family’s NAACP attorney, the apartment’s white owner, and the owner’s attorney and rental agent, charging them with conspiring to lower property values. Two years after that, whites picketed and planted explosives in South Deering, about 30 minutes from downtown Chicago, to force blacks out.

     When terrorism ultimately failed, white homeowners simply fled the neighborhood. The traditional terminology, white flight, implies a kind of natural expression of preference. In fact, white flight was a triumph of social engineering, orchestrated by the shared racist presumptions of America’s public and private sectors. For should any nonracist white families decide that integration might not be so bad as a matter of principle or practicality, they still had to contend with the hard facts of American housing policy: When the mid-20th-century white homeowner claimed that the presence of a Bill and Daisy Myers decreased his property value, he was not merely engaging in racist dogma—he was accurately observing the impact of federal policy on market prices. Redlining destroyed the possibility of investment wherever black people lived.

     VII. “A Lot Of People Fell By The Way”

     Speculators in north lawndale, and at the edge of the black ghettos, knew there was money to be made off white panic. They resorted to “block-busting”—spooking whites into selling cheap before the neighborhood became black. They would hire a black woman to walk up and down the street with a stroller. Or they’d hire someone to call a number in the neighborhood looking for “Johnny Mae.” Then they’d cajole whites into selling at low prices, informing them that the more blacks who moved in, the more the value of their homes would decline, so better to sell now. With these white-fled homes in hand, speculators then turned to the masses of black people who had streamed northward as part of the Great Migration, or who were desperate to escape the ghettos: the speculators would take the houses they’d just bought cheap through block-busting and sell them to blacks on contract.

     To keep up with his payments and keep his heat on, Clyde Ross took a second job at the post office and then a third job delivering pizza. His wife took a job working at Marshall Field. He had to take some of his children out of private school. He was not able to be at home to supervise his children or help them with their homework. Money and time that Ross wanted to give his children went instead to enrich white speculators.

     “The problem was the money,” Ross told me. “Without the money, you can’t move. You can’t educate your kids. You can’t give them the right kind of food. Can’t make the house look good. They think this neighborhood is where they supposed to be. It changes their outlook. My kids were going to the best schools in this neighborhood, and I couldn’t keep them in there.”

     Mattie Lewis came to Chicago from her native Alabama in the mid-’40s, when she was 21, persuaded by a friend who told her she could get a job as a hairdresser. Instead she was hired by Western Electric, where she worked for 41 years. I met Lewis in the home of her neighbor Ethel Weatherspoon. Both had owned homes in North Lawndale for more than 50 years. Both had bought their houses on contract. Both had been active with Clyde Ross in the Contract Buyers League’s effort to garner restitution from contract sellers who’d operated in North Lawndale, banks who’d backed the scheme, and even the Federal Housing Administration. We were joined by Jack Macnamara, who’d been an organizing force in the Contract Buyers League when it was founded, in 1968. Our gathering had the feel of a reunion, because the writer James Alan McPherson had profiled the Contract Buyers League for The Atlantic back in 1972.

     Weatherspoon bought her home in 1957. “Most of the whites started moving out,” she told me. “‘The blacks are coming. The blacks are coming.’ They actually said that. They had signs up: don’t sell to blacks.”

     Before moving to North Lawndale, Lewis and her husband tried moving to Cicero after seeing a house advertised for sale there. “Sorry, I just sold it today,” the Realtor told Lewis’s husband. “I told him, ‘You know they don’t want you in Cicero,’ ” Lewis recalls. “ ‘They ain’t going to let nobody black in Cicero.’ ”

     In 1958, the couple bought a home in North Lawndale on contract. They were not blind to the unfairness. But Lewis, born in the teeth of Jim Crow, considered American piracy—black people keep on making it, white people keep on taking it—a fact of nature. “All I wanted was a house. And that was the only way I could get it. They weren’t giving black people loans at that time,” she said. “We thought, ‘This is the way it is. We going to do it till we die, and they ain’t never going to accept us. That’s just the way it is.’

     “The only way you were going to buy a home was to do it the way they wanted,” she continued. “And I was determined to get me a house. If everybody else can have one, I want one too. I had worked for white people in the South. And I saw how these white people were living in the North and I thought, ‘One day I’m going to live just like them.’ I wanted cabinets and all these things these other people have.”

     White flight was not an accident—it was a triumph of racist social engineering.

     Whenever she visited white co-workers at their homes, she saw the difference. “I could see we were just getting ripped off,” she said. “I would see things and I would say, ‘I’d like to do this at my house.’ And they would say, ‘Do it,’ but I would think, ‘I can’t, because it costs us so much more.’ ”

     I asked Lewis and Weatherspoon how they kept up on payments.

     “You paid it and kept working,” Lewis said of the contract. “When that payment came up, you knew you had to pay it.”

     “You cut down on the light bill. Cut down on your food bill,” Weatherspoon interjected.

     Ethel Weatherspoon at her home in North Lawndale. After she bought it in 1957, she says, “most of the whites started moving out.” (Carlos Javier Ortiz)

“You cut down on things for your child, that was the main thing,” said Lewis. “My oldest wanted to be an artist and my other wanted to be a dancer and my other wanted to take music.”

     Lewis and Weatherspoon, like Ross, were able to keep their homes. The suit did not win them any remuneration. But it forced contract sellers to the table, where they allowed some members of the Contract Buyers League to move into regular mortgages or simply take over their houses outright. By then they’d been bilked for thousands. In talking with Lewis and Weatherspoon, I was seeing only part of the picture—the tiny minority who’d managed to hold on to their homes. But for all our exceptional ones, for every Barack and Michelle Obama, for every Ethel Weatherspoon or Clyde Ross, for every black survivor, there are so many thousands gone.

     “A lot of people fell by the way,” Lewis told me. “One woman asked me if I would keep all her china. She said, ‘They ain’t going to set you out.’ ”

     VIII. “Negro Poverty is not White Poverty”

     On a recent spring afternoon in North Lawndale, I visited Billy Lamar Brooks Sr. Brooks has been an activist since his youth in the Black Panther Party, when he aided the Contract Buyers League. I met him in his office at the Better Boys Foundation, a staple of North Lawndale whose mission is to direct local kids off the streets and into jobs and college. Brooks’s work is personal. On June 14, 1991, his 19-year-old son, Billy Jr., was shot and killed. “These guys tried to stick him up,” Brooks told me. “I suspect he could have been involved in some things … He’s always on my mind. Every day.”

     Brooks was not raised in the streets, though in such a neighborhood it is impossible to avoid the influence. “I was in church three or four times a week. That’s where the girls were,” he said, laughing. “The stark reality is still there. There’s no shield from life. You got to go to school. I lived here. I went to Marshall High School. Over here were the Egyptian Cobras. Over there were the Vice Lords.”

     Brooks has since moved away from Chicago’s West Side. But he is still working in North Lawndale. If “you got a nice house, you live in a nice neighborhood, then you are less prone to violence, because your space is not deprived,” Brooks said. “You got a security point. You don’t need no protection.” But if “you grow up in a place like this, housing sucks. When they tore down the projects here, they left the high-rises and came to the neighborhood with that gang mentality. You don’t have nothing, so you going to take something, even if it’s not real. You don’t have no street, but in your mind it’s yours.”

      We walked over to a window behind his desk. A group of young black men were hanging out in front of a giant mural memorializing two black men: in lovin memory quentin aka “q,” july 18, 1974 ❤ march 2, 2012. The name and face of the other man had been spray-painted over by a rival group. The men drank beer. Occasionally a car would cruise past, slow to a crawl, then stop. One of the men would approach the car and make an exchange, then the car would drive off. Brooks had known all of these young men as boys.

     “That’s their corner,” he said.

     We watched another car roll through, pause briefly, then drive off. “No respect, no shame,” Brooks said. “That’s what they do. From that alley to that corner. They don’t go no farther than that. See the big brother there? He almost died a couple of years ago. The one drinking the beer back there … I know all of them. And the reason they feel safe here is cause of this building, and because they too chickenshit to go anywhere. But that’s their mentality. That’s their block.”

     Brooks showed me a picture of a Little League team he had coached. He went down the row of kids, pointing out which ones were in jail, which ones were dead, and which ones were doing all right. And then he pointed out his son—“That’s my boy, Billy,” Brooks said. Then he wondered aloud if keeping his son with him while working in North Lawndale had hastened his death. “It’s a definite connection, because he was part of what I did here. And I think maybe I shouldn’t have exposed him. But then, I had to,” he said, “because I wanted him with me.”

     From the White House on down, the myth holds that fatherhood is the great antidote to all that ails black people. But Billy Brooks Jr. had a father. Trayvon Martin had a father. Jordan Davis had a father. Adhering to middle-class norms has never shielded black people from plunder. Adhering to middle-class norms is what made Ethel Weatherspoon a lucrative target for rapacious speculators. Contract sellers did not target the very poor. They targeted black people who had worked hard enough to save a down payment and dreamed of the emblem of American citizenship—homeownership. It was not a tangle of pathology that put a target on Clyde Ross’s back. It was not a culture of poverty that singled out Mattie Lewis for “the thrill of the chase and the kill.” Some black people always will be twice as good. But they generally find white predation to be thrice as fast.

     Is affirmative action meant to increase “diversity”? If so, it only tangentially relates to the specific problems of black people.

     Liberals today mostly view racism not as an active, distinct evil but as a relative of white poverty and inequality. They ignore the long tradition of this country actively punishing black success—and the elevation of that punishment, in the mid-20th century, to federal policy. President Lyndon Johnson may have noted in his historic civil-rights speech at Howard University in 1965 that “Negro poverty is not white poverty.” But his advisers and their successors were, and still are, loath to craft any policy that recognizes the difference.

     After his speech, Johnson convened a group of civil-rights leaders, including the esteemed A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin, to address the “ancient brutality.” In a strategy paper, they agreed with the president that “Negro poverty is a special, and particularly destructive, form of American poverty.” But when it came to specifically addressing the “particularly destructive,” Rustin’s group demurred, preferring to advance programs that addressed “all the poor, black and white.”

     The urge to use the moral force of the black struggle to address broader inequalities originates in both compassion and pragmatism. But it makes for ambiguous policy. Affirmative action’s precise aims, for instance, have always proved elusive. Is it meant to make amends for the crimes heaped upon black people? Not according to the Supreme Court. In its 1978 ruling in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, the Court rejected “societal discrimination” as “an amorphous concept of injury that may be ageless in its reach into the past.” Is affirmative action meant to increase “diversity”? If so, it only tangentially relates to the specific problems of black people—the problem of what America has taken from them over several centuries.

     This confusion about affirmative action’s aims, along with our inability to face up to the particular history of white-imposed black disadvantage, dates back to the policy’s origins. “There is no fixed and firm definition of affirmative action,” an appointee in Johnson’s Department of Labor declared. “Affirmative action is anything that you have to do to get results. But this does not necessarily include preferential treatment.”

     Yet America was built on the preferential treatment of white people—395 years of it. Vaguely endorsing a cuddly, feel-good diversity does very little to redress this.

     Today, progressives are loath to invoke white supremacy as an explanation for anything. On a practical level, the hesitation comes from the dim view the Supreme Court has taken of the reforms of the 1960s. The Voting Rights Act has been gutted. The Fair Housing Act might well be next. Affirmative action is on its last legs. In substituting a broad class struggle for an anti-racist struggle, progressives hope to assemble a coalition by changing the subject.

     The politics of racial evasion are seductive. But the record is mixed. Aid to Families With Dependent Children was originally written largely to exclude blacks—yet by the 1990s it was perceived as a giveaway to blacks. The Affordable Care Act makes no mention of race, but this did not keep Rush Limbaugh from denouncing it as reparations. Moreover, the act’s expansion of Medicaid was effectively made optional, meaning that many poor blacks in the former Confederate states do not benefit from it. The Affordable Care Act, like Social Security, will eventually expand its reach to those left out; in the meantime, black people will be injured.

     Billy Brooks, who assisted the Contract Buyers League, still works in the neighborhood, helping kids escape poverty and violence.

    “All that it would take to sink a new WPA program would be some skillfully packaged footage of black men leaning on shovels smoking cigarettes,” the sociologist Douglas S. Massey writes. “Papering over the issue of race makes for bad social theory, bad research, and bad public policy.” To ignore the fact that one of the oldest republics in the world was erected on a foundation of white supremacy, to pretend that the problems of a dual society are the same as the problems of unregulated capitalism, is to cover the sin of national plunder with the sin of national lying. The lie ignores the fact that reducing American poverty and ending white supremacy are not the same. The lie ignores the fact that closing the “achievement gap” will do nothing to close the “injury gap,” in which black college graduates still suffer higher unemployment rates than white college graduates, and black job applicants without criminal records enjoy roughly the same chance of getting hired as white applicants with criminal records.

     Chicago, like the country at large, embraced policies that placed black America’s most energetic, ambitious, and thrifty countrymen beyond the pale of society and marked them as rightful targets for legal theft. The effects reverberate beyond the families who were robbed to the community that beholds the spectacle. Don’t just picture Clyde Ross working three jobs so he could hold on to his home. Think of his North Lawndale neighbors—their children, their nephews and nieces—and consider how watching this affects them. Imagine yourself as a young black child watching your elders play by all the rules only to have their possessions tossed out in the street and to have their most sacred possession—their home—taken from them.

     The message the young black boy receives from his country, Billy Brooks says, is “ ‘You ain’t shit. You not no good. The only thing you are worth is working for us. You will never own anything. You not going to get an education. We are sending your ass to the penitentiary.’ They’re telling you no matter how hard you struggle, no matter what you put down, you ain’t shit. ‘We’re going to take what you got. You will never own anything, nigger.’ ”

     IX. Toward A New Country

     When Clyde Ross was a child, his older brother Winter had a seizure. He was picked up by the authorities and delivered to Parchman Farm, a 20,000-acre state prison in the Mississippi Delta region.

     “He was a gentle person,” Clyde Ross says of his brother. “You know, he was good to everybody. And he started having spells, and he couldn’t control himself. And they had him picked up, because they thought he was dangerous.”

     Built at the turn of the century, Parchman was supposed to be a progressive and reformist response to the problem of “Negro crime.” In fact it was the gulag of Mississippi, an object of terror to African Americans in the Delta. In the early years of the 20th century, Mississippi Governor James K. Vardaman used to amuse himself by releasing black convicts into the surrounding wilderness and hunting them down with bloodhounds. “Throughout the American South,” writes David M. Oshinsky in his book Worse Than Slavery, “Parchman Farm is synonymous with punishment and brutality, as well it should be … Parchman is the quintessential penal farm, the closest thing to slavery that survived the Civil War.”

     When the Ross family went to retrieve Winter, the authorities told them that Winter had died. When the Ross family asked for his body, the authorities at Parchman said they had buried him. The family never saw Winter’s body.

     And this was just one of their losses.

     Scholars have long discussed methods by which America might make reparations to those on whose labor and exclusion the country was built. In the 1970s, the Yale Law professor Boris Bittker argued in The Case for Black Reparations that a rough price tag for reparations could be determined by multiplying the number of African Americans in the population by the difference in white and black per capita income. That number—$34 billion in 1973, when Bittker wrote his book—could be added to a reparations program each year for a decade or two. Today Charles Ogletree, the Harvard Law School professor, argues for something broader: a program of job training and public works that takes racial justice as its mission but includes the poor of all races.

     To celebrate freedom and democracy while forgetting America’s origins in a slavery economy is patriotism à la carte.

     Perhaps no statistic better illustrates the enduring legacy of our country’s shameful history of treating black people as sub-citizens, sub-Americans, and sub-humans than the wealth gap. Reparations would seek to close this chasm. But as surely as the creation of the wealth gap required the cooperation of every aspect of the society, bridging it will require the same.

     When we think of white supremacy, we picture Colored Only signs, but we should picture pirate flags.

     Perhaps after a serious discussion and debate—the kind that HR 40 proposes—we may find that the country can never fully repay African Americans. But we stand to discover much about ourselves in such a discussion—and that is perhaps what scares us. The idea of reparations is frightening not simply because we might lack the ability to pay. The idea of reparations threatens something much deeper—America’s heritage, history, and standing in the world.

     The early American economy was built on slave labor. The Capitol and the White House were built by slaves. President James K. Polk traded slaves from the Oval Office. The laments about “black pathology,” the criticism of black family structures by pundits and intellectuals, ring hollow in a country whose existence was predicated on the torture of black fathers, on the rape of black mothers, on the sale of black children. An honest assessment of America’s relationship to the black family reveals the country to be not its nurturer but its destroyer.

     And this destruction did not end with slavery. Discriminatory laws joined the equal burden of citizenship to unequal distribution of its bounty. These laws reached their apex in the mid-20th century, when the federal government—through housing policies—engineered the wealth gap, which remains with us to this day. When we think of white supremacy, we picture colored only signs, but we should picture pirate flags.

     On some level, we have always grasped this.

     “Negro poverty is not white poverty,” President Johnson said in his historic civil-rights speech.

     Many of its causes and many of its cures are the same. But there are differences—deep, corrosive, obstinate differences—radiating painful roots into the community and into the family, and the nature of the individual. These differences are not racial differences. They are solely and simply the consequence of ancient brutality, past injustice, and present prejudice.

We invoke the words of Jefferson and Lincoln because they say something about our legacy and our traditions. We do this because we recognize our links to the past—at least when they flatter us. But black history does not flatter American democracy; it chastens it. The popular mocking of reparations as a harebrained scheme authored by wild-eyed lefties and intellectually unserious black nationalists is fear masquerading as laughter. Black nationalists have always perceived something unmentionable about America that integrationists dare not acknowledge—that white supremacy is not merely the work of hotheaded demagogues, or a matter of false consciousness, but a force so fundamental to America that it is difficult to imagine the country without it.

     And so we must imagine a new country. Reparations—by which I mean the full acceptance of our collective biography and its consequences—is the price we must pay to see ourselves squarely. The recovering alcoholic may well have to live with his illness for the rest of his life. But at least he is not living a drunken lie. Reparations beckons us to reject the intoxication of hubris and see America as it is—the work of fallible humans.

     Won’t reparations divide us? Not any more than we are already divided. The wealth gap merely puts a number on something we feel but cannot say—that American prosperity was ill-gotten and selective in its distribution. What is needed is an airing of family secrets, a settling with old ghosts. What is needed is a healing of the American psyche and the banishment of white guilt.

     What I’m talking about is more than recompense for past injustices—more than a handout, a payoff, hush money, or a reluctant bribe. What I’m talking about is a national reckoning that would lead to spiritual renewal. Reparations would mean the end of scarfing hot dogs on the Fourth of July while denying the facts of our heritage. Reparations would mean the end of yelling “patriotism” while waving a Confederate flag. Reparations would mean a revolution of the American consciousness, a reconciling of our self-image as the great democratizer with the facts of our history.

     X. “There Will Be No ‘Reparations’ From Germany”

     We are not the first to be summoned to such a challenge.

     In 1952, when West Germany began the process of making amends for the Holocaust, it did so under conditions that should be instructive to us. Resistance was violent. Very few Germans believed that Jews were entitled to anything. Only 5 percent of West Germans surveyed reported feeling guilty about the Holocaust, and only 29 percent believed that Jews were owed restitution from the German people.

     The Auschwitz All Around Us

     “It’s very hard to accept white supremacy as a structure erected by actual people, as a choice, as an interest, as opposed to a momentary bout of insanity.”

     “The rest,” the historian Tony Judt wrote in his 2005 book, Postwar, “were divided between those (some two-fifths of respondents) who thought that only people ‘who really committed something’ were responsible and should pay, and those (21 percent) who thought ‘that the Jews themselves were partly responsible for what happened to them during the Third Reich.’ ”

     Germany’s unwillingness to squarely face its history went beyond polls. Movies that suggested a societal responsibility for the Holocaust beyond Hitler were banned. “The German soldier fought bravely and honorably for his homeland,” claimed President Eisenhower, endorsing the Teutonic national myth. Judt wrote, “Throughout the fifties West German officialdom encouraged a comfortable view of the German past in which the Wehrmacht was heroic, while Nazis were in a minority and properly punished.”

     Konrad Adenauer, the postwar German chancellor, was in favor of reparations, but his own party was divided, and he was able to get an agreement passed only with the votes of the Social Democratic opposition.

    “If I could take German property without sitting down with them for even a minute but go in with jeeps and machine guns,” said David Ben-Gurion, “I would do that.”

     Among the Jews of Israel, reparations provoked violent and venomous reactions ranging from denunciation to assassination plots. On January 7, 1952, as the Knesset—the Israeli parliament—convened to discuss the prospect of a reparations agreement with West Germany, Menachem Begin, the future prime minister of Israel, stood in front of a large crowd, inveighing against the country that had plundered the lives, labor, and property of his people. Begin claimed that all Germans were Nazis and guilty of murder. His condemnations then spread to his own young state. He urged the crowd to stop paying taxes and claimed that the nascent Israeli nation characterized the fight over whether or not to accept reparations as a “war to the death.” When alerted that the police watching the gathering were carrying tear gas, allegedly of German manufacture, Begin yelled, “The same gases that asphyxiated our parents!”

     Begin then led the crowd in an oath to never forget the victims of the Shoah, lest “my right hand lose its cunning” and “my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth.” He took the crowd through the streets toward the Knesset. From the rooftops, police repelled the crowd with tear gas and smoke bombs. But the wind shifted, and the gas blew back toward the Knesset, billowing through windows shattered by rocks. In the chaos, Begin and Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion exchanged insults. Two hundred civilians and 140 police officers were wounded. Nearly 400 people were arrested. Knesset business was halted.

     Begin then addressed the chamber with a fiery speech condemning the actions the legislature was about to take. “Today you arrested hundreds,” he said. “Tomorrow you may arrest thousands. No matter, they will go, they will sit in prison. We will sit there with them. If necessary, we will be killed with them. But there will be no ‘reparations’ from Germany.”

    Survivors of the Holocaust feared laundering the reputation of Germany with money, and mortgaging the memory of their dead. Beyond that, there was a taste for revenge. “My soul would be at rest if I knew there would be 6 million German dead to match the 6 million Jews,” said Meir Dworzecki, who’d survived the concentration camps of Estonia.

     Ben-Gurion countered this sentiment, not by repudiating vengeance but with cold calculation: “If I could take German property without sitting down with them for even a minute but go in with jeeps and machine guns to the warehouses and take it, I would do that—if, for instance, we had the ability to send a hundred divisions and tell them, ‘Take it.’ But we can’t do that.”

     The reparations conversation set off a wave of bomb attempts by Israeli militants. One was aimed at the foreign ministry in Tel Aviv. Another was aimed at Chancellor Adenauer himself. And one was aimed at the port of Haifa, where the goods bought with reparations money were arriving. West Germany ultimately agreed to pay Israel 3.45 billion deutsche marks, or more than $7 billion in today’s dollars. Individual reparations claims followed—for psychological trauma, for offense to Jewish honor, for halting law careers, for life insurance, for time spent in concentration camps. Seventeen percent of funds went toward purchasing ships. “By the end of 1961, these reparations vessels constituted two-thirds of the Israeli merchant fleet,” writes the Israeli historian Tom Segev in his book The Seventh Million. “From 1953 to 1963, the reparations money funded about a third of the total investment in Israel’s electrical system, which tripled its capacity, and nearly half the total investment in the railways.”

     Israel’s GNP tripled during the 12 years of the agreement. The Bank of Israel attributed 15 percent of this growth, along with 45,000 jobs, to investments made with reparations money. But Segev argues that the impact went far beyond that. Reparations “had indisputable psychological and political importance,” he writes.

    Reparations could not make up for the murder perpetrated by the Nazis. But they did launch Germany’s reckoning with itself, and perhaps provided a road map for how a great civilization might make itself worthy of the name.

      Assessing the reparations agreement, David Ben-Gurion said:

     For the first time in the history of relations between people, a precedent has been created by which a great State, as a result of moral pressure alone, takes it upon itself to pay compensation to the victims of the government that preceded it. For the first time in the history of a people that has been persecuted, oppressed, plundered and despoiled for hundreds of years in the countries of Europe, a persecutor and despoiler has been obliged to return part of his spoils and has even undertaken to make collective reparation as partial compensation for material losses.

     Something more than moral pressure calls America to reparations. We cannot escape our history. All of our solutions to the great problems of health care, education, housing, and economic inequality are troubled by what must go unspoken. “The reason black people are so far behind now is not because of now,” Clyde Ross told me. “It’s because of then.” In the early 2000s, Charles Ogletree went to Tulsa, Oklahoma, to meet with the survivors of the 1921 race riot that had devastated “Black Wall Street.” The past was not the past to them. “It was amazing seeing these black women and men who were crippled, blind, in wheelchairs,” Ogletree told me. “I had no idea who they were and why they wanted to see me. They said, ‘We want you to represent us in this lawsuit.’ ”

     A commission authorized by the Oklahoma legislature produced a report affirming that the riot, the knowledge of which had been suppressed for years, had happened. But the lawsuit ultimately failed, in 2004. Similar suits pushed against corporations such as Aetna (which insured slaves) and Lehman Brothers (whose co-founding partner owned them) also have thus far failed. These results are dispiriting, but the crime with which reparations activists charge the country implicates more than just a few towns or corporations. The crime indicts the American people themselves, at every level, and in nearly every configuration. A crime that implicates the entire American people deserves its hearing in the legislative body that represents them.

     John Conyers’s HR 40 is the vehicle for that hearing. No one can know what would come out of such a debate. Perhaps no number can fully capture the multi-century plunder of black people in America. Perhaps the number is so large that it can’t be imagined, let alone calculated and dispensed. But I believe that wrestling publicly with these questions matters as much as—if not more than—the specific answers that might be produced. An America that asks what it owes its most vulnerable citizens is improved and humane. An America that looks away is ignoring not just the sins of the past but the sins of the present and the certain sins of the future. More important than any single check cut to any African American, the payment of reparations would represent America’s maturation out of the childhood myth of its innocence into a wisdom worthy of its founders.

     In 2010, jacob s. rugh, then a doctoral candidate at Princeton, and the sociologist Douglas S. Massey published a study of the recent foreclosure crisis. Among its drivers, they found an old foe: segregation. Black home buyers—even after controlling for factors like creditworthiness—were still more likely than white home buyers to be steered toward subprime loans. Decades of racist housing policies by the American government, along with decades of racist housing practices by American businesses, had conspired to concentrate African Americans in the same neighborhoods. As in North Lawndale half a century earlier, these neighborhoods were filled with people who had been cut off from mainstream financial institutions. When subprime lenders went looking for prey, they found black people waiting like ducks in a pen.

     “High levels of segregation create a natural market for subprime lending,” Rugh and Massey write, “and cause riskier mortgages, and thus foreclosures, to accumulate disproportionately in racially segregated cities’ minority neighborhoods.”

     Plunder in the past made plunder in the present efficient. The banks of America understood this. In 2005, Wells Fargo promoted a series of Wealth Building Strategies seminars. Dubbing itself “the nation’s leading originator of home loans to ethnic minority customers,” the bank enrolled black public figures in an ostensible effort to educate blacks on building “generational wealth.” But the “wealth building” seminars were a front for wealth theft. In 2010, the Justice Department filed a discrimination suit against Wells Fargo alleging that the bank had shunted blacks into predatory loans regardless of their creditworthiness. This was not magic or coincidence or misfortune. It was racism reifying itself. According to The New York Times, affidavits found loan officers referring to their black customers as “mud people” and to their subprime products as “ghetto loans.”

       “We just went right after them,” Beth Jacobson, a former Wells Fargo loan officer, told The Times. “Wells Fargo mortgage had an emerging-markets unit that specifically targeted black churches because it figured church leaders had a lot of influence and could convince congregants to take out subprime loans.”

     In 2011, Bank of America agreed to pay $355 million to settle charges of discrimination against its Countrywide unit. The following year, Wells Fargo settled its discrimination suit for more than $175 million. But the damage had been done. In 2009, half the properties in Baltimore whose owners had been granted loans by Wells Fargo between 2005 and 2008 were vacant; 71 percent of these properties were in predominantly black neighborhoods.”

Rosewood (1997) Official Film Trailer

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jan/03/rosewood-florida-massacre-racial-violence-reparations?CMP=share_btn_link

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/how-history-forgot-rosewood-a-black-town-razed-by-a-white-mob-180981385/

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/06/the-case-for-reparations/361631/

Like Judgement Day, Michael D’Orso

http://www.mikedorso.com/books/BK-LikeJudgementday.phtml

January 6 2024 A Day That Will Live in Infamy

     Three years have passed since Our Clown of Terror, Traitor Trump, attempted a coup as the figurehead of the Fourth Reich in the January 6 Insurrection. It is a crime equal to Pearl Harbor and 9-11, but far more terrible and insidious than any foreign conquest or terrorism could ever be, for this assault on democracy and America as a guarantor of liberty, equality, truth, and justice and a beacon of hope to the world was a palace coup led by a fascist cabal at the apex of social and political power in our nation, their infiltration and subversion agents within our police, armed forces, and security services, and deniable assets of white supremacist terror like the Oathkeepers and Proud Boys.

     Three years have passed, and what have we done to purge our destroyers from among us? The largest manhunt in our nation’s history has identified and brought to trial many of the perpetrators who stormed our capitol with gallows and guillotine at the ready for the mass murder of members of Congress, mainly Trump’s brownshirts reinacting the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch, but has thus far left the apparatus of treason and terror, the leaders in Congress and elsewhere, paymasters, influencers, the entire logistics, communications, and command structure untouched.

     The January 6 Insurrection very nearly succeeded in decapitating the state because they had agents within the government, the police, and the military who provided intelligence to the mob and prevented help from reaching Congress during the assault, very like the redirection of security services to the port in the internal plot which enabled the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

      And the Fourth Reich was able to recruit, indoctrinate, train, arm, direct, and concentrate their deniable assets at the capitol and in other actions throughout our nation and the world because a few oligarchic families funded and coordinated treason and terror through a byzantine network of shell organizations first established by the Koch brothers to weaponize academic legitimacy to the cause of privatization and the theft of public wealth, which became a total war waged by the elite against democracy and which has become a dominant force in American politics since the Gideonite fundamentalist patriarchs captured the Republican Party in 1980 using Christian Identity and white supremacist propaganda and put Reagan into power.

     How shall we answer those who would enslave us?

     As I wrote in my post of July 6 2021, Recalling the Turning of the Tides: the Failed Coup of the Fourth Reich Against America Six Months Ago Today;    Today we recall a decisive moment of our history, the failure of the Fourth Reich’s coup against America in the January 6 Insurrection led by Our Clown of Terror, Traitor Trump.

     At this point of fracture and bifurcation in history we have taken a path toward the Restoration of America and not our Fall; but the danger of fascist infiltration and subversion of our institutions of democracy is not yet passed, and we must be vigilant and forge a total mobilization of our society to uphold our universal human rights and our parallel rights as citizens in a free society of equals, built on free and fair elections, and anchored in our values of liberty, equality, truth, and justice.

     To fascism, tyranny, and white supremacist terror and treason there can be but one reply; Never Again.

     As I wrote in my post of January 7 2021, Treason and Terror: Trump’s Brownshirts Attack Congress;  We are all by now familiar with the images of terror and treason as Trump’s brownshirts stormed Congress in an act of armed insurrection against the United States, the first time such an act has been perpetrated since Britain burned our capitol in 1814.

     This is the sixth attempted coup by Trump, and betrayal of his oath of office to the Constitution, which should long ago have resulted in his impeachment and trial for treason and sedition, but for the political cover provided by his fellow conspirators and Republican collaborators.

     This time is different; his deniable forces of white supremacist terror are no longer deniable, and his operational command and control of terrorist cadre and operatives has been exposed to the world.

     Who are the lunatic comic book villains who have desecrated our seat of power and violated our laws and principles of democracy, in our nation’s capitol and in coordinated actions throughout America, including the mob assault on the Governor’s Mansion here in Washington State? As it happens, many of them are very familiar, and a massive identification campaign is in progress to expose the others. After the events of yesterday, I believe its time to declare the groups which participated in the coup attempt as organizations of terror and treason, and to bring their members to justice.

     As written by Casey Tolan, Rob Kuznia and Bob Ortega for CNN, with CNN contibutors Blake Ellis, Melanie Hicken, Curt Devine, Scott Glover and Yahya Abou-Ghazala; “The mob of Trump supporters who stormed the US Capitol on Wednesday included conspiracy theorists linked to QAnon and the Proud Boys — two right-wing extremist factions that President Donald Trump repeatedly refused to condemn during his election campaign last year.

     The insurrection at the heart of America’s democracy, egged on by Trump’s rhetoric, represented a stunning show of force for the fringe movements and their adherents. Four people were left dead during the mayhem, according to the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police Department, including one woman shot by a U.S. Capitol Police officer and three other people who had medical emergencies.

     One of the most recognizable figures in the videos and photos of the chaos on Capitol Hill was a man in his 30s with a painted face, fur hat and a helmet with horns.

     The protester, Jake Angeli — known by followers as the QAnon Shaman — quickly became a symbol of the bizarre and frightening spectacle as photos circulated of him roaming the Capitol halls holding an American flag affixed to a spear in one hand and a bullhorn in the other, and even standing shirtless atop the Senate dais.

     Angeli, who lives in Arizona, couldn’t be reached for comment, but his cousin, Adam Angeli, confirmed that the man in the horns was his relative in a brief call with CNN Wednesday. Adam Angeli said he thought his cousin might be between jobs and that “he’s a patriot, he’s a very big United States of America type of a person.”

       Jake Angeli’s Facebook page is filled with posts evoking the conspiracy theories of QAnon, whose adherents believe in a ludicrous theory that there is a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles who have infiltrated the highest reaches of American government and are being opposed by President Trump.

     Some of Angeli’s Facebook posts have a violent edge, such as a meme declaring “we shall have no real hope to survive the enemies arranged against us until we hang the traitors lurking among us.” One photo on Angeli’s Facebook page depicts him adorned in the fur and horns, taking aim towards the camera with a rifle.

     In recent months, Angeli has been a regular presence at pro-Trump protests in Arizona, including demonstrations outside the Maricopa County vote-counting center.

     Other rioters photographed at the Capitol wore clothing with QAnon icons and held signs with slogans associated with the bizarre movement.

     The rioters who filled the Capitol also included Nick Ochs, the founder of Proud Boys Hawaii, a chapter of the far-right group. “Hello from the Capital lol,” Ochs tweeted Wednesday, with a selfie of himself smoking a cigarette in the building.

     “We didn’t have to break in, I just walked in and filmed,” Ochs told CNN in an interview Wednesday night. “There were thousands of people in there — they had no control of the situation. I didn’t get stopped or questioned.”

     Ochs ran an unsuccessful campaign for the state legislature last year, winning an endorsement from Trump confidant Roger Stone, who recorded a video with him. He claimed in the interview with CNN that he was working as a professional journalist when he entered the Capitol, and that he didn’t go into any congressional offices or the chambers.

     A far-right activist who was at the Capitol Wednesday was Tim Gionet, who livestreamed video of himself inside the building for more than 25 minutes, according to multiple screenshots of the recording shared on Twitter.

Gionet, a prominent extremist voice who goes by the pseudonym “Baked Alaska” online, attended the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, said Hannah Gais, a senior researcher with the nonprofit Southern Poverty Law Center. Gais said she monitored the livestream as it was airing.

Gionet has been suspended or barred from various online platforms. He could not be reached for comment.”

     This leaves the ringleader and chief conspirator of treason, sedition, insurrection, and terror to be removed from power and denied a platform from which to spread madness and violence like a plague; our Clown of Terror, Traitor Trump. I believe we must remove, impeach, deplatform, and prosecute him for his many crimes against America; Trump must be exiled from public life and isolated from his power to destroy us.

     Roman law called this damnatio memoriae, the erasure of public forgetting, and coupled with the Amish practice of shunning provides a useful model of minimum use of social force in safeguarding ourselves from threats, without the brutality of torture and prison to which we have become addicted. An article by the classical scholar Alexander Meddings examines its use in the cases of Trumps nearest Imperial parallels, Caligula and Nero.

     As written in the New York Times by David Landau and Rosalind Dixon; “The threat the president poses to our democracy is not short-lived and must be cut off urgently and decisively — before it leads to even greater degradation to American democratic processes and traditions. It will need to happen quickly, even with other demands pressing on our country’s leadership like certifying the election results, rolling out the coronavirus vaccine and calming a nation in crisis.

     To do this, the cabinet and Congress must deploy the 25th Amendment and impeachment in sequence.

     First, Vice President Pence and a majority of the cabinet should invoke Section 4 of the 25th Amendment in order to make a declaration that Mr. Trump is “unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.” This would immediately suspend, but not remove, Mr. Trump from the exercise of his presidential duties and appoint Mr. Pence as acting president. The 25th Amendment would not and should not be used as a lasting solution in a case of this kind, but rather as a temporary measure to sideline a demonstrably unfit and dangerous actor who is fueling anti-democratic action.

     Second, the House should quickly draw up and pass articles of impeachment. And then the Senate should hold a fair — but immediate and efficient — trial both to remove President Trump from office and, as important, to disqualify him from serving in public office in the future. Precedent suggests that the Senate would likely need to hold two separate votes on removal and disqualification, although the disqualification vote may require only a simple majority to be approved, as opposed to the two-thirds vote necessary for removal from office.

     Disqualification is necessary given Mr. Trump’s anti-democratic response to the 2020 election and the continuing danger that he will pose to constitutional norms if allowed to flirt with a return to power in 2024. Indeed, the importance of disqualification in this case is such that the Congress should proceed with impeachment even if Mr. Trump’s term in office has already concluded.

     A public vote and rapid trial in the Senate would give much-needed legitimacy to actions to remove Mr. Trump from office. By forcing Republicans to stand up for democracy and against the president’s actions, it would also reaffirm bipartisan support for the fundamental principles of American democracy. Further, while the 25th Amendment is intended mainly for illness or other objective incapacities, impeachment offers an appropriate moral response to the president’s conduct, including incitement to violence and attacks on basic democratic norms.

     Why do this with only about two weeks left in President Trump’s term? Because we must defend our democracy for all Americans, now. And we must preserve our democracy for future Americans. We must ensure a field of potential Republican presidential hopefuls in 2024 who have integrity. And we must reassure the world, and especially would-be authoritarian regimes, about what United States policy will be on questions of freedom and self-rule now and in the future.”

     As I wrote in my post of January 8 2021, Anatomy of a Failure: Trumps January Coup; The criminal collaboration of the police in white supremacist terror, and now in treason and sedition, the impunity of elites behind the mask of the rule of law, the mass hysteria and cult of conspiracy theories and alternate realities created by an unaccountable social media and sophisticated methods of propaganda driven by weaponized big data and pervasive and endemic surveillance, the collaboration of the Republican Party and plutocratic elites in the subversion of our democracy, and the fear and hate shaped by submission to authority of those seduced by the lies and illusions of those who would enslave us; all of these are among the causes of the spectacular failure we have witnessed yesterday, Trump’s January Coup.

     This morass of interdependent causes have acted on each other in a recursive process and evolved into a horrific new religion, QAnon, which reimagines the anti-Jewish ideology of the Inquisition, and narratives of victimization and patriarchal and identitarian racist nationalism which have fueled the fascist revival of the Fourth Reich.

     A friend has posted a clever commentary which lampoons the Trump enablers who are now disavowing him; of rats abandoning a sinking ship of fools, this is performative and self serving, but still better than public alliance with Trump.

     One of the comments was brilliantly satirical; ”Be kind. Who hasn’t helped instigate a fascist insurrection and then regretted it the next day.”

      Actually, I once did exactly that; we seized Nepal’s Congress in a revolution against the monarchy, and while we issued proclamations and debated the nuances and praxis of theory and ideology, a scene very much like the situation faced by the victorious Arab forces after the capture of Damascus in the great film Lawrence of Arabia, the Gurkha regiment, which I had relied on as my principal allies, declared the Himalayas Gorkhaland and invaded Bhutan, where my monastic order the Kagyu Buddhists were based, having been an active political force as were the Buddhists during the Vietnam War or the Liberation Theology Catholic orders in Latin America, and then the military simultaneously declared war on India and China. Things became more confused from there.

     Seizures of power are sacred acts of Chaos and Transformation, and as such are inherently beyond control. When there are multiple conflicted interests and powers involved, opening the door to change means riding the whirlwind, abandoning control and welcoming the unknown.

     Chaos is a natural limit of power, and of the use of social force and control; another such limiting factor being that force and control become meaningless when met with disobedience.

     Compulsion by force and violence also sacrifices legitimacy on the part of its perpetrator and the loyalty of those it seeks to subjugate. This is why authoritarian states couple force with control; surveillance, disinformation, and the falsification of their subjects with the lies and illusions of an alternate reality created through propaganda. The January 6 Insurrection is a splendid example of its operations, a false religion and a politics of atavistic barbarism which seized a mob of its true believers in mass hysteria at the command of a mad tyrant.

     The parallels of Trumps regime and coup attempts with Nepal are manifold; the origins of the Revolution in Nepal included ethnic Nepalese-Indian and   sectarian Hindu versus Buddhist nationalist conflicts, poverty, by which I mean the majority of people lived in the streets and scavenged garbage but for the few who survived by ruthlessness and guile in the vast criminal underworld of heroin and human trafficking, alongside aristocratic wealth and power, by which I mean that all property was ultimately owned by some two thousand members of the royal family, and a horrible famine and plagues including typhus and cholera.

     The crisis of transformation originated in natural disaster leveraged by flawed social and political decisions and historical inequalities and injustices; sixty percent of India’s rice harvest having been lost to drought and hordes of rats in a nation which has inheritable debt to the third generation and produced legions of suddenly landless farmers who crossed the border into Nepal to escape debt slavery for their families, to a feudal nation of archaic tribes with no export products beyond wool rugs and other village handcrafts and no jobs available, limited social services, and which had already deforested and burned all the firewood in the midst of a brutal winter and were cooking over dried goat dung.

     There are differences of scale; our streets are not ankle deep in blood and feces, nor littered with the dead; we have no open battle between landowners and waves of migrants, nor are we wedged between hungry empires and defended by a few thousand former British colonial soldiers whose independence from civil authority stems from their awareness of that power and hovers at becoming military rule. But the conditions are broadly similar to those which gave rise to fascism here in America.

    Here too there was poverty, plague, a kleptocracy of elites and a hegemony of power and privilege, a militarized police regime of brutal force and control, prison labor as a legal form of chattel slavery and the legacies and epigenetic harms of historical slavery, and divisions of exclusionary otherness including those of race, gender, and class created through propaganda, especially the demonization of migrants, and its expression as fascisms of blood, faith, and soil.

    In the figureheads of the government and the hegemonic elites which entertain us by making them dance and posture upon the public stage as the puppets of our distraction while behind the curtain they subjugate and enslave us as instruments of their power, here too we are similar; we have Trump, Giuliani, and a host of buffoons for our amusement, Nepal had a crown prince who was a notorious heroin addict and gun nut, and who one day got hopped up and shot the rest of the royal family; not a promising beginning for a reign of stability and public trust.

    And Nepal? Today it is a model communist state rather than a military dictatorship or a feudal monarchy, a liberation which I am proud to have participated in. That this takes the form of Maoism and that Nepal is a de facto proxy of the Chinese Communist Party, which also now controls a third of India, not so much.

     When you open the door to Chaos and Transformation, be prepared to reap the whirlwind. That the forces which are our allies obey no master is the great hope of the powerless; it is also what makes them dangerous to unleash and to wield.

    And as I wrote in the final essay of my trilogy on this pathetic and outrageous crime, January 9 2021, Who Are the Puppetmasters of the Fourth Reich and Trumps January 6 Insurrection?; As the world staggers in horror and America mobilizes in reaction to the bizarre and shameful assault and desecration of Congress by Trump and his private army of hooligans and lunatics, a massive identification campaign and manhunt for the dishonorable and treasonous cop killers, fascists, patriarchs of  sexual terror, and white supremacist terrorists involved in this coup and armed insurrection leaves an enormous question unanswered; who funded and organized it?

     Who are the puppetmasters of the Fourth Reich, the subversion of democracy, and Trump’s January 6 Insurrection?

    Until we have followed the money and communications trails like Ariadne’s Thread to the lair of the beast, and the monstrous fascist conspiracy which threatens to consume us has been destroyed, we will never know peace, neither here in America nor throughout the world. We must identify, expose, and bring to justice the predators who move among us, wherever they may be and in whatever guise they may be hidden.

    This we must resolve to do, on the lives of our sacred dead and for the hope of our future, that liberty shall not perish utterly from the earth. There can be but one reply to fascism; Never Again.

     Let the forces of fascism find not an America abject in learned helplessness and submission to authority, crippled and dehumanized by the legacies of historical inequalities and injustices and divided by hierarchies of exclusionary otherness, but united in solidarity and refusal to submit to force and control; for in resistance we become unconquerable and free.

    And so I offer to you the Oath of the Resistance as it was given to me by my breakfast companion, Jean Genet, in Beirut 1982, in a burning house about to be overrun by the soldiers which filled the streets, in what I believed to be the final moments of a last stand; “We swear our loyalty to each other, to resist and yield not, and surrender not our fellows.”

    This is the oath which Genet repurposed from that of the French Foreign Legion, in which he had briefly served, during the Occupation of Paris in 1940, and given to friends who shared it with others, multiplied in numbers, and became an unstoppable tide of Resistance. He said it was the finest thing he ever stole.

    These are words filled with history, which bear a great power, that of hope. Beyond even hope of victory or survival, there remains our trust and faith in each other and our hope for the future and the possibilities of becoming human. Hope enough that we may today, as then, claw our way out of the ruins to make yet another last stand.

     Join us.

    As written by Bill Moyers; “This was not a demonstration; it was a desecration of our sacred democracy, a violent insurrection, aided and abetted by Trump and certain of his enablers.  Five people died as a result of the assault.

     This was a well-planned enterprise. Who financed these people? Was it Trump’s “Stop the Steal” PAC? Who paid their travel expenses, their hotel expense, their sustenance? Who were the organizers? Who assembled the small group that would storm the building, scale its hallowed walls and invade its chambers where the laws that rule us are made? Who instructed the trespassers on how to do it, and where to go? Many carried or wore Trump or QAnon paraphernalia. “Trump 2020” banners  or MAGA hats, the uniforms of their seditious enterprise. Few of the male rioters were clean shaven. Was this planned also to make identification more difficult?

     There is more to this than Trump’s incendiary innuendo in front of the White House exhorting the mob: “You will never take our country with weakness.” There is more to it than Trump saying to the mob of criminals, “We love you, you’re very special.”

     Or Donald Trump, Jr. warning Republican members of Congress who were deserting the ship, “We’re coming for you.” Or Rudy Giuliani demanding of the same crowd “trial by combat” to settle the election.

     True, Trump Jr., Giuliani, and Ivanka Trump, who had previously tweeted that the mob were  “patriots,” denounced the violence. But all that was too little too late. It was moving a log after they had poured gasoline on the fire.

     Who put up the crusty Congressman from Texas, Louie Gohmert, to start the frivolous and almost unimaginable lawsuit against Mike Pence seeking to empower him to throw the election Trump’s way? Who crafted the wild Ted Cruz scenario to advocate a special commission to investigate an election where countless lawsuits, recounts and challenges had unearthed no evidence of the “massive fraud” Trump falsely claimed had vitiated the election? The enablers like Cruz and Josh Hawley, the pallid senator from Missouri who wants to be president, know it is not true. Joe Biden won in a fair election. The American people rejected Donald Trump. How long do they intend to perpetuate this falsehood?

     And what of our security forces? Why was the National Guard so late to the party? The DC and Capitol police were no match for the rioters. One of their number posed for a selfie with the mob; another escorted an intruder down the steps of the Capitol; a third ran from them, not even ordering them to leave the building. And these are but a few egregious examples. Thugs bearing flagpoles, and undoubtedly concealed weapons, breached the security of the building without serious challenge. The officers involved from the top down who were derelict in their duty must be held fully accountable.

     Someone must investigate the riots and find out who was behind it, who organized and financed it and who plotted to launch this shameful attack on the institutions of our democracy—perhaps more fragile than anyone ever thought.

     Is this the end? Are we to assume that the buffoons and domestic terrorists looking more like Visigoths than civilized human beings have had their fun and will now go home from their all-expense paid trip to Washington? Or will they be back?

     Something like this happened not too long ago, in 1923 in Munich. It was called the “Beer Hall Putsch,” an attempted coup d’état by Hitler and his followers, which was calculated to seize the power of the Bavarian state government (and thereby launch a larger “national revolution” against the democratically elected Weimar Republic). The attempted coup failed after four police officers and 16 nazis were killed. Hitler was sentenced to five years in prison for “high treason,” but was out with a pardon after less than a year. In jail, he wrote Mein Kampf. The next time round, Hitler sought election to the chancellorship. He lost, but became chancellor anyway, and the rest is history.

     So what have we here? Another Beer Hall Putsch? To paraphrase Churchill, is this end of the beginning of the hooliganism and thuggery we saw in Washington, or are we in the twilight of our democracy — the beginning of the end?  

     We have a rule of law in this country on which we pride ourselves. Serious crimes were committed here, and they merit vigorous investigation and prosecution. Title 18 United States Code §1752, among other things, makes criminal disorderly or disruptive conduct with intent to impede or disrupt the orderly conduct of Government business in any building where a person entitled top Secret Service protection is visiting…when or so that such conduct, in fact, impedes or disrupts the orderly conduct of Government business or official functions. The penalty is severe, up to 10 years imprisonment. There are other more draconian criminal statutes that may be applicable as well.

     But so far, relatively few of the putschists have been arrested. The new Attorney General, the distinguished jurist Merrick Garland, has vast experience prosecuting domestic terrorism cases. When he was in the Justice Department years ago, he supervised the prosecution of Timothy McVeigh in the Oklahoma City bombing case.

     There must be full accountability for all those responsible for this day, like another in American history, “which will live in infamy.”

Live From the Insurrection: Historical Archive

The Other Jan. 6 Tapes: Newly Obtained Videos Show Trauma Of Attack

Biden attacks Trump as grave threat to democracy in rousing 2024 speech

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/05/biden-attacks-trump-january-6-anniversary-speech-election?CMP=share_btn_link

Five truths about what happened three years ago that Trump wants you to forget | Robert Reich

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/06/what-happened-january-6-trump-democracy-election?CMP=share_btn_link

On Biden’s 2022 Speech

On Jimmy Carter’s Essay

https://www.cnn.com/2022/01/05/politics/jimmy-carter-democracy-jan-6-oped/index.html

‘January 6 never ended’: alarm at Trump pardon pledge for Capitol insurrectionists

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/06/trump-pardon-january-6-rioters-if-elected-president?CMP=share_btn_link

https://www.brookings.edu/blog/fixgov/2022/01/05/around-the-halls-one-year-since-the-january-6-insurrection/?utm_campaign=Brookings%20Brief&utm_medium=email&utm_content=200092536&utm_source=hs_email

https://www.thenation.com/article/society/annelien-de-dijn-freedom-history/?fbclid=IwAR1XycHFiz-vwR_RgVehrK8xvXxECDckmj8wJRPRA8gBza4dqRcjDUPoXN8

https://alexandermeddings.com/history/ancient-history/damnatio-memoriae-people-the-romans-tried-to-erase-from-history/

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/06/donald-trump-hitler-michael-bender-book

https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/07/politics/capitol-riot-bible-study-group-fbi-virginia/index.html

January 5 2024 Exposing Authority: Case of the Epstein Blackmail Files

Secret power is among the most terrible of all forms of unequal power, for it silences the witness of history by the powerless because they will not be believed. This is the true test of democracy and equality in any society; who has authority to bear witness?

    And now a Pandora’s Box of evils and the hungry ghosts of the silenced and erased return to give us warning; a monster who defines the limits of the human has been exposed and his head mounted on our wall, but the systems of unequal power as Patriarchy and sexual terror of which he was a figure and apex predator remain to be deconstructed and transformed, and until that day of liberation we must unite in seizures of power and revolutionary struggle.

     The first benefit of an open society is the right to be heard. Without this and other rights of freedom of information, there is no freedom for anyone, for we are all captives of power and authority.

     This is the true crime of Epstein and of all such monsters; theft of the soul.

     If we consider the principle that Silence Is Complicity together with its interdependent forces of falsification as kinds of unequal power, which include denial by forces of repression of the sacred calling to pursue the truth, of the right of witness as autonomy, of the Four Primary Duties of a Citizen to Question, Expose, Mock, and Challenge Authority, and of the dangers of division and the modern pathology of disconnectedness in isolating dissent, we see that regardless of the enormity and atrocities of gender unequality itself, it is part of a larger system of dehumanization by elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege.

      Herein we wander lost in a Wilderness of Mirrors; a phrase from T.S. Eliot’s Gerontin, which I use to describe the pathology of falsification of ourselves through propaganda, lies and illusions, rewritten histories, state secrets, alternate realities, authoritarian faith which devours truths. This I contrast with its opposite, journalism and the witness of history as the sacred quest to pursue the truth. We are made counterfeits of ourselves by systems of elite hegemonic power such as patriarchy, and by those who would enslave us, through capture of our stories as theft of the soul.

     James Angleton, evil genius of the C.I.A.’s Counterintelligence Service on whom John Le Carre based his character of George Smiley, infamously used the phrase in this sense as well, and it has become universalized throughout the intelligence community he shaped and influenced during the Second World War and its aftermath the Cold War. Writing in reference to David Martin’s biography of himself entitled Wilderness of Mirrors, Angleton described it as a “myriad of stratagems, deceptions, artifices, and all the other devices of disinformation which the Soviet bloc and its coordinated intelligence services use to confuse and split the West … an ever fluid landscape where fact and illusion merge.” And of course, everything he ascribed to the Soviets was also true of himself, his own agency, and America as well, and of all states, for all are houses of illusion.

     How does this help us understand the horrors, violence, and sexual terror of the Epstein Blackmail Files as examples of systemic oppression?

      Secret power; secrets which can destroy a target or win leverage over him as a strategy of power, and which can be manufactured from trivial or spurious sources; Epstein used simple association with and compromise of the wealthy and powerful to create enormous wealth and power for himself. In this he was not simply the crime lord of a human trafficking syndicate, like his buddy Traitor Trump’s modeling agency-beauty pageant organized crime network, which both exploited teenage girls, but also had the services of Ghislaine Maxwell who succeeded her father in masterminding honeytrap operations for the KGB and Mossad among other customers. Epstein was a blackmailer who modeled his business on intelligence services, and this made him a very special kind of monster, a pedophile and sadist who had refined sexual terror to a science.

     And all of that wealth and power, stolen from the lives of impoverished and vulnerable young girls, reveals to us the inherent unequal power of the system he typified; falsification in service to power and the patriarchal subjugation of women.

      As I wrote in my post of September 6 2019, #metoo: the Crimes of Secret Power Require Broad and Systemic Collusion; Three interesting events which provide motivating and informing sources for the #metoo cultural and social transformation which is reshaping our civilization and ourselves are happening at about the same time; the start of a series of podcasts investigating the Jeffrey Epstein case, the release of Margaret Atwood’s new novel The Testaments, sequel to her visionary classic The Handmaid’s Tale, and the publication of a memoir by Chanel Miller, whose victim impact statement, read out in Congress and in a 60 minutes interview which will be broadcast on the 22nd of this month, was among the initial testimonies that broke the silence of sexual terror and opened the door for others to seek justice.

    Power asymmetry alone cannot account for the regime of sexual terror which has enabled the patriarchy to hold a hegemony of power and privilege for most of human history; for this we must look to the inversion of moral values perpetrated by traditional religion as a tool of control. Shame, shunning, and the force of authorized public will, of the social ownership of identities of sex and gender; we have never really left the world of Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter.

     Secrecy is the key precondition of abuse of power, and the crimes of secret power require broad and systemic collusion. This is especially true of sexual violence against women, which is only a crime under the rules of Patriarchy when it trespasses another man’s power of control, ownership, and territory, and is otherwise regarded as a means of control which maintains existing hierarchies of power. It is among a class of crimes which exist only when the values context of our social system is abrogated and at risk; and its meaning can change with shifting contexts from diversionary illusion to lynch mob rallying cry with serpentine swiftness. As with so many inequalities, the truth will set us free.

     Set us free; I imagine we can spend a lot of time parsing that phrase. By the term us I do include both men and women, for the equality of relationships liberates both masters and slaves- and we must be clear that this is precisely the social order which the Patriarchy authorizes and maintains- from their former categories of being. Democracy requires equality of its citizens; how else can we function as co-owners of our government than as a free society of equals? How can we be free in our personal lives to forge authentic relationships if we do not possess the autonomy to choose our own identity and be whatever we discover to be our own best selves?

       Men have been changed into swine not by the spell of Circe, whose magic revealed truths, but by the same disfigurement of the soul which has caught and dehumanized women; it is the system as social force and structural inequality which has robbed us of our humanity, and must be resisted. We are beasts, we humans, but we need not remain wholly so.  

    And herein lies the special magic and liberation of #metoo as a seizure of power; it confers the casting aside of masks others have made for us, and the claiming of those we choose for ourselves.

     #metoo is a global coming out party for humankind.

      As I wrote of the feminine reverse face of this issue, the dynamics of unequal power as Patriarchy, in my post of January 3 2022, Patriarchy and Sexual Terror: Case of the Ghislaine Maxwell Trial; Patriarchy and sexual terror are about power as expressed in the most atavistic way as subjugation and dehumanization of others; the power to turn people into things you can use. Patriarchy is about the theft of the soul.

    Like the freaks in a carnival show, monsters define the limits of the human and help us establish normality and the tyranny of other people’s ideas of virtue. But this othering also grants immunity and permission as well as vilification and dehumanization of that which is different, for it allows us to ignore systemic evils and inequalities through constructions of personal responsibility derived from the doctrine of original sin and its basis in law as the innate depravity of man; here be monsters, not ourselves.

     In the case of Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein, serial predators whose crimes against humanity defy comprehension in the way that the Holocaust does as intrusive forces and atrocities beyond our frames of reference, the astounding scale and baroque abominations and perversions of their crimes offered concealment even as they were performed before a global audience of the wealthy and famous due to their manipulation of elite privilege and making their peers complicit as a strategy of blackmail. 

     This is how fascism operates, and its components patriarchy and racism; by making those who could bring them to justice complicit in their crimes. As Peter Carey said in regard to his novel A Long Way From Home; “You can’t be a white Australian writer and spend your whole life ignoring the greatest, most important aspect of our history, and that is that we – I – have been the beneficiaries of a genocide.”

     If we are to challenge and bring a reckoning to patriarchy as systemic unequal power and as sexual terror, we must avoid othering its agents and perpetrators, for this enables the restoration not of balance but of our comfort with our own privilege.

     There is a line spoken by the villain in the series The Magicians, a survivor of childhood abuse and tyrant known as The Beast for his horrific crimes, once the powerless and terrified boy Martin Chatwin and now a monstrous god; “You know, when I was a boy, a man who was meant to care for me bent me over his desk and had me over and over every time I was alone with him. It helps me understand a truth. You’re powerful or you’re weak. “

      Here is the original lie of the tyrant and the fascist in the apologetics and self-justification of power; the lie that only power has meaning, that there is no good or evil. How we use power is of equal importance as who holds it. Fear and force are a primary means of human exchange, but not the only means; love, membership, and belonging are as important.

      It’s a line which captures perfectly the inherent contradictions of the  Wagnerian Ring of fear, power, and force as an origin of evil; for the use of social force is subversive of its own values. Yet the imposed conditions of revolutionary struggle often require violence, and until the gods of law and order have been cast down from their thrones I must agree with the famous dictum of Sartre in his 1948 play Dirty Hands, quoted by Frantz Fanon in his 1960 speech Why We Use Violence, and made immortal by Malcolm X; “by any means necessary.”

     As written by Walter Rodney in The Groundings with my Brothers; “We were told that violence in itself is evil, and that, whatever the cause, it is unjustified morally. By what standard of morality can the violence used by a slave to break his chains be considered the same as the violence of a slave master? By what standards can we equate the violence of blacks who have been oppressed, suppressed, depressed and repressed for four centuries with the violence of white fascists. Violence aimed at the recovery of human dignity and at equality cannot be judged by the same yardstick as violence aimed at maintenance of discrimination and oppression.”

     And here is the passage he references from Leon Trotsky in Their Morals and Ours: The Class Foundations of Moral Practice; “A slave-owner who through cunning and violence shackles a slave in chains, and a slave who through cunning or violence breaks the chains – let not the contemptible eunuchs tell us that they are equals before a court of morality!”

     Yet in reflection I think of those great figures who have been both heroes of liberation and villains of tyranny; Napoleon, Washington, Stalin, Mao, the list is a near endless litany of woes and failures of vision wherein Brave New Worlds became hells and carceral states. In evidence I offer the Soviet Union, the Chinese Communist Party, the American and Napoleonic Empires, and above all the state of Israel, a dream of refuge forged in the terror of the Holocaust whose victims learned the wrong lessons from the Nazis and assumed their role in the Occupation of Palestine. The dangers of Idealism are very real, as Thomas Mann taught us in Death in Venice and Vladimir Nabokov in his reimagination of it as Lolita; but so are the dangers of submission to authority and the complicity of silence in the face of evil.

     I am a hunter of fascists, and mine is a hunter’s morality. For me there is a simple test for the use of force; who holds power?

      All those who hunt monsters must remember always Nietzsche’s warning in Beyond Good and Evil; “He who fights monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss gazes back into thee.”    

      The trials of Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein, like those of their fellow sexual terrorists Harvey Weinstein and Larry Nassar, are seizures of power as revolutionary struggle in which the victims refusal to be silenced has triumphed over the immunity of hegemonic elite wealth, power, and privilege; the Scarlet Letter has no power to shame women into submission through victim blaming in our society any longer, for in refusing to be silenced these courageous women have seized it as an instrument with which to dismantle the Patriarchy.

      Force is brutal, terrible, but also fragile, for it fails at the point of defiance and disobedience. Enacting the role of the Jester of King Lear and the girl who cried “The king has no clothes”, parrhesia or what Foucault called truth telling, the witnesses of these iconic trials and of the historic turning of the tides of the #metoo movement have shown us all how to wage liberation and revolutionary struggle.

     As Max Stirner wrote; “Freedom cannot be granted; it must be seized.”

      As I wrote in my post of July 21 2020, How Patriarchy Works: Unequal Power, Identities of Sex and Gender, Autonomy Versus Authorization, Complicity and Responsibility, and the Social Use of Force;  Here I began thinking about the murder of Vanessa Guillen, toxic masculinity and violence, and the military as an atavism of rape culture in tidy categories of Hegelian-Marxist history and the dialectics of revolutionary struggle, when I quickly realized that patriarchy is a spectrum disease which corrupts and subverts its victims and its perpetrators alike, and this is its true terror.

     At the intersection of power asymmetries and identities of sex and gender lie issues of authorization versus autonomy, with crucial consequences for complicity and responsibility in our legal system which arbitrates the social use of force.

     In her now classic work Ring of Power, Jean Shinoda Bolen interprets Wagner’s great opera in terms of patriarchal forces which dehumanize us because they cripple and steal our capacity to love. Of particular interest here is the figure of Brunhild as Daddy’s Avenger and victim of internalized oppression.

     So I looked again, but this time not at the primary struggle for power and ownership between male perpetrator and female victim, but at two female monsters who are parallel figures as enablers and accomplices of sexual terror, Melania Trump and Ghislaine Maxwell.

     Moreover they are characters embedded in fairytale narratives with which we are all familiar; the etiology of their disfigurement and monstrosity lies in the malign effects of inequality as a moral debasement and leprosy of the soul. For the study of such things I return to Margaret Atwood’s masterpiece Cat’s Eye, her novels Interlunar and Life Before Man, to the thematic companion volumes The Handmaid’s Tale and The Edible Woman, and to the foundational critical work by Sharon Rose Wilson, The Fairytale Sexual Politics of Margaret Atwood.

     A study of Margaret Atwood is illuminating and instrumental to understanding the elements of patriarchy and the operations of its systems, especially in the context of female on female violence in secondary order power relations. Allow me to elaborate.

     Cat’s Eye presents a narrator, Elaine Risley, who is a trapped Rapunzel in a world of ghosts, witches, cruel stepsisters, vanishing princes, and a merciful fairy godmother. The story draws ideas mainly from Anderson’s Snow Queen and Grimm’s Rapunzel, secondarily from Anderson’s Ice Maiden and Grimm’s Girl Without Hands.

     Fearful door images echo Grimm’s Fitcher’s Bird; Risley’s dreams and visions are filled with images from medieval art, paintings of the Annunciation, Ascension, and the Virgin. The Hobgoblin’s fragmented mirror in The Snow Queen provides a metaphor of Atwood’s vision; mirrors, cameras, things that reflect but also capture and distort.

     Of her characters, Cordelia from Shakespeare’s King Lear is among her finest; Mrs. Sneath is a cannibal goddess who resembles Baba Yaga and is linked to the figure of cat-headed Maat in this story.

     Thematically Cat’s Eye is an investigation of the Rapunzel Syndrome; the wicked witch who imprisons her, the tower she is trapped in, a rescuer. Margaret Atwood’s driving conflicts are female-female, though her plots foreground sexual power and its political reflections.

     Life Before Man offers The Wizard of Oz, The Nutcracker ballet, Anderson’s Snow Queen, a host of tales from Grimm including The Girl Without Hands, Rapunzel, Cinderella, Little Red Cap, Fitcher’s Bird, and The Robber Bridegroom. Secondary intertexts include Wilde’s Salome, Dante’s Inferno, Ovid’s Metamorphosis, Coleridge’s Kublai Khan, Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, Irving’s Sleepy Hollow, and Mother Goose rhymes, mainly Little Miss Muffet. It’s a sort of Grand Tour of our civilization and the history of our private inner space and the disastrous and grotesque ways we collide with each other. Also, wonderful and illuminating reading.

     Interlunar reimagines Cocteau’s Orphee, the ballet Giselle, both the Grimm and Anne Sexton version of The White Snake, and the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch. Motifs include death, pestilence, filth, eating, power, the journey, healing, hands, blindness and vision. Themes of guilt and shame, love, destruction, sacredness, creation, fertility, and metamorphosis are to be found in this richly imagined novel.

     The Edible Woman is a linked text with The Handmaid’s Tale; do read both together. Herein the main embedded stories are Hansel & Gretel, The Gingerbread Boy, Goldilocks, Alice in Wonderland, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, and Rapunzel, and her protagonist Marion plays all of these roles as well as those of Little Red Cap, the Robber Bride, and Fitcher’s bride.

     The Handmaid’s Tale gives a voice to Bilhah, the Biblical Handmaid, revisions Little Red Riding Hood as an extension of Angela Carter’s The Company of Wolves, and tells the story of the Christian disempowerment of the Goddess as presented in the great film The Red Shoes.

     Margaret Atwood’s parodies of Grimm operate on three levels; thematic, images and motifs, and narrative structure. In The Handmaid’s Tale, we have themes of family and especially female-female conflict, gender and sexual power asymmetries, and the initiation and heroic journey. Motifs and images include dismemberment, cannibalism, fertility, labyrinths and paths, and all manner of disturbing sexual violence. Plot devices include a variety of character foils, doppelgangers, disguises and trickery of stolen and falsified identity.

     Among Margaret Atwood’s Great Books, The Handmaid’s Tale is a universally known reference both because it has been taught for over a generation in every high school in America as a standard text and because of the extraordinary television series, arguably the most important series ever filmed. We teach it for the same reasons the show is popular; a visceral and gripping drama with unforgettable characters, a mesmerizing plot, and an immediate and accessible story which empowers and illuminates.

     It depicts the brooding evil and vicious misogyny of Christianity and Fascism as two sides of the dynamic malaise of patriarchy and authority, as drawn directly from Arthur Miller’s The Crucible and Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter, but also from contemporary culture as it contains satires of identifiable public figures, organizations, and events. Serena is based on Phyllis Schlafly, and Gideon is the nation of Pat Robertson and the fundamentalists who seized control of the Republican Party around the time of the novel’s writing; Margaret Atwood’s motive in part was to sound an alarm at the dawn of the Fourth Reich and its threat to global democracy.

     It remains to be seen whether the forces of tyranny or of liberty will prevail in the end. Each of our lives is a contest between these forces, our private struggles reflected in the society and human civilization we share.

     And this is the great lesson and insight of Margaret Atwood; each of us is both a Handmaid and a Serena, trapped within the skin of the other. She locates the primary conflict within ourselves, and transposes the Jungian conflict between Anima and Animus with that of the Shadow in terms of sex, gender, and power.

     So we return to our Brunhilds and twin monsters Melania Trump and Ghislaine Maxwell, who Janus-faced represent corruption and perversion, the dual spheres of action of feminine power turned against itself by the forces of patriarchy and shaped to the uses of predation and misogyny.

     Melania’s message on the coat she wore to tour a migrant concentration camp, “I really don’t care. Do U?’ and Ghislaine’s self-description in Vanity Fair, “‘I do it the way Nazis did it with the Jews,” reflect the disease of power in its political and sexual contexts, and as a First Cause of both racist hate crimes and crimes of sexual terror. Unequal power is a precondition of them both.

     And these are direct quotes from enablers and accomplices of crimes against humanity which define the limits of the human, and who are not marginal figures whose malign violations of our values and dehumanization of others occurred in a trailer park brothel or secret sweatshop of slave labor but   at the pinnacle of our society’s ruling class. Their existence is an indictment of the flaws of our nation and of our civilization, and a measure of the distance we have yet to travel in the realization of a true free society of equals.

    As Margaret Atwood said in her 2015 lecture to West Point cadets; “Nothing makes me more nervous than people who say, ‘It can’t happen here.’ Anything can happen anywhere, given the right circumstances.”

     As written by Jonathan Freedland in his article in The Guardian entitled, The Ghislaine Maxwell case raises a question some may think naive: why?; “The Ghislaine Maxwell case raises so many questions, and yet scarcely discussed is the one that perhaps matters most. Naturally, there’s huge interest in whether Maxwell, convicted this week of recruiting and grooming teenage girls for sex with her one-time boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein, will seek to reduce her sentence by naming names – opening up the pair’s notorious little black book and telling prosecutors who else among the rich and powerful abused the vulnerable minors Maxwell trafficked for sex.

     In Britain, much of that interest focuses on Epstein’s longtime pal, Prince Andrew, who was so close to the couple he invited them on visits to Balmoral, Sandringham and Windsor: it’s lucky the prince doesn’t sweat, because if he did, he might be drenched now. So far he has refused to answer US investigators’ questions – not for his own sake, you understand, but according to multiple reports, to save the Queen from embarrassment. Because a 61-year-old man hiding behind his 95-year-old mother would not be in the least bit mortifying.

     There are other questions, such as: how many others enabled the travelling child abuse ring that Epstein and Maxwell operated, turning a blind eye to what was surely obvious? Or: when else would the BBC respond to the conviction of a child sex offender by interviewing a brother of the offender who refused to accept the verdict of the court? And how come that Today programme interview with Ian Maxwell came so soon after the BBC had given a platform to one of Epstein’s lawyers, presenting him as if he were merely a neutral expert?

     All those questions matter, and yet the one that preys on my mind is more timeless. It’s the question that arises in all such cases of human cruelty yet which one hesitates to ask, lest the inquiry seem naive: why?

     The coverage of Maxwell has probed that a bit, suggesting for example that Ghislaine Maxwell was conditioned, as the daughter of the publishing magnate Robert Maxwell, to cater to the whims of a monstrous man, and simply transferred her allegiance, and her service, from one monster to another. Growing up surrounded by wealth and power, where the deference of officialdom was taken for granted, would have had its effect too. Ghislaine Maxwell may well have assumed that people like her and Epstein were granted a special kind of impunity, that they could break the laws that restrained the appetites of lesser mortals, because for most of her life that had indeed been the case.

     And yet, both those answers are unsatisfying as explanations. There are plenty of abusers who did not grow up with either a Maxwell-style father or Maxwell-level wealth and, conversely, there are people whose upbringings were comparable to Ghislaine Maxwell’s but who did not go on to commit terrible crimes.

     So the why question lingers, just as it did in sharper and more horrific form at least twice in the last month alone. December 2021 began with convictions for the father and stepmother of Arthur Labinjo-Hughes in a case so appalling, I confess at the time I could barely read accounts of it. The six-year-old was subjected to a regime of sustained torture which was, incredibly, filmed by those who inflicted it. The little boy was made to stand in isolation for up to 14 hours at a time, without anything to eat or drink. He was beaten. To punish him, his father took the football shirts he loved and cut them to shreds in front of him. Perhaps most unbearable of all, the jury was shown footage of a weak and frail Arthur shortly before his death saying: “No one loves me. No one is going to feed me.”

     When the man and woman guilty of destroying Arthur’s brief life were found guilty, there was revulsion, of course – and on Friday their sentences were referred to the court of appeal for being too lenient – but the public conversation moved without pause for breath to the policy implications. There was intense debate about the state of children’s services, about the damage done by austerity, about target-driven culture, about the recruitment and retention of social workers and so on. But what was missing was a much less sophisticated question. Why would two people do such terrible things to a defenceless child? How could a father cause such pain to his own flesh and blood?

     There was a similar reflex 11 days later, following the verdicts in the equally soul-draining case of Star Hobson, a child, a baby really, who died at just 16 months, having been punched to death by her mother’s partner as her mother did nothing to save her. Once again, the pair filmed their months of cruelty against the little girl, apparently finding the videos amusing enough to send to friends. And yet the immediate talk was not of how two people could do such a thing, but of a local “child safeguarding practice review” and whether control of children’s services should belong with the local council or the Department for Education.

     I understand the impulse to concentrate on these institutional, bureaucratic issues. The assumption is that there will always be people capable of horrendous brutality, that that fact will never change, and so the sensible focus of our attention should be on prevention. I get that. And yet the sheer speed with which we move to technocratic answers, barely even asking the harder human questions, begins to look like displacement activity. It’s as if we can’t bring ourselves to contemplate the puzzle of what humans are capable of, because we have no idea what we’d say.

     Earlier, God-fearing generations did not find this so difficult. Nor do those who still have traditional faith. They have recourse to a vocabulary that includes the notion of evil and wickedness and that allows them to talk about it. But those words don’t trip so easily off the secular tongue.

       Instead, we look for explanations in psychology or economics, assuming, to adapt Stephen Sondheim’s lyric, that if people are depraved it’s because they’re deprived, whether of love or money. That view persists. There was an echo of it in the closing argument from Maxwell’s defence lawyer, when she asked “why an Oxford-educated, proper English woman would suddenly agree to facilitate sex abuse of minors”. Only the poor or poorly educated behave badly.

     We can see the flaw in such reasoning, even before you get to the insult it delivers to all those who endured great privation, emotional or material, without becoming abusers. And yet, the absence of easy answers does not give us a licence to stop asking hard questions. We need to be able to stare wicked acts and evil deeds in the face, rather than to comfort ourselves that they exist solely as functions of failed systems, errors that could be eliminated given the right policy tweak.

     This need not be a bleak endeavour. I think of Julie K Brown, the Miami Herald reporter without whose fearless pursuit of Epstein’s crimes this week’s reckoning might never have come. I think of the courage of the victims, who kept up the fight for justice at great cost. Unfathomable evil is part of the human story, but so too is unimaginable good.”

Who was Jeffrey Epstein and what are the court documents about?

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/03/who-is-jeffrey-epstein-list-court-documents-explained

A-list names in Epstein documents cache but what prospect of charges?

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/05/jeffrey-epstein-list-documents-will-there-be-new-charges

Prince Andrew, Clinton, Hawking: what do the Epstein documents say about key people?

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/05/prince-andrew-clinton-hawking-what-do-the-epstein-documents-say-about-key-people

Jeffrey Epstein’s elite circle was huge. What do the documents show about his lifestyle and $580m fortune?

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/03/jeffrey-epstein-sex-trafficking-unsealed-documents?CMP=share_btn_link

Unsealed Jeffrey Epstein court papers – read document in full

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/03/jeffrey-epstein-documents-list-pdf

Margaret Atwood on the true history that inspired The Handmaid’s Tale

Gerontin, by T.S. Eliot

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47254/gerontion

Wilderness of Mirrors: Intrigue, Deception, and the Secrets that Destroyed Two of the Cold War’s Most Important Agents, by David C. Martin

The Magicians Netflix telenovella

https://themagicians.fandom.com/wiki/The_Beast

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/jan/15/a-long-way-from-home-peter-carey-review

January 4 2024 On America’s Complicity In Ethnic Cleansing and War Crimes In Gaza

      Biden has made us all complicit in ethnic cleansing in Gaza, war crimes our taxes pay for. America has abandoned the idea of our universal human rights. Our nation has fallen, and with it global civilization based on humanist values and democracy.

     Nothing remains to be saved; maybe the Rights of Man and America as a free society of equals was always a performance, lies and illusions designed to distract us from the fact that we are all slaves of elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege, and the state merely institutions of force and control.

      Joe Biden has betrayed us, failed to place his life and ours in the balance with those of the powerless and the dispossessed, the silenced and the erased, and instead enabled and conspired in crimes against humanity with Netanyahu and the theocratic fascist settler regime and imperial conquest and dominion of the state of Israel, which learned the wrong lessons from the Nazis.

     And this we must resist, beyond hope of victory or survival, in solidarity as guarantors of each others humanity. To fascism of blood, faith, and soil and to state tyranny and terror regardless of where it surfaces or in whose interest it is perpetrated, we must give the only reply it merits; Never Again!                    

     To this my unfiltered reaction to a Joe Biden campaign fundraising post timed to leverage the despair and torment of others in service to power, a comment has articulated one of the primary arguments in the apologetics of power; that we cannot control our proxy state, and secondarily that the crimes against humanity of Israel have the mandate of popular support here in America which place us all with Biden in the fork of a dilemma.

     Here is the comment in question; “oh, come on. Dramatic much? Netanyahu is the criminal, Biden doesn’t control him, and cannot abandon our strongest ally in the region. Half the country wants to see Hamas wiped out, so what should Biden do? Listen just to this side? Get real.”

     To this I replied; Yes, Netanyahu is a war criminal, but Biden has not only refused to stop funding ethnic cleansing, but has sent military aid to Israel and made us all complicit. We have abandoned the idea of universal human rights in funding the random mass murders of civilians with our taxes, voting to block the UN from bringing Netanyahu to trial for war crimes, and refusal to use our powers of Boycott, Divest, and Sanction to stop the Gaza War and bring democracy to Israel with regime change and the reimagination and transformation of systems of unequal power and state tyranny and terror.

    Our nation has chosen to send warships to the perpetrator, and not humanitarian aid the victims, when we could easily have broken the Israeli blockade of food, water, and medical relief with our immense Navy, and silenced the bombs. It is not only the humanity of the Palestinians which has been abrogated here, but of our own as well.

     In fact America does control Israel as a client state through our taxes and military support, but to what ends? Do we advance the cause of secular democracy or theocratic tyranny, of peace or war, liberty or submission to force and control, of our universal human rights or hierarchies of elite membership and exclusionary otherness based on divisions of race and faith?

     In a region of one people divided by history and in our own nation, are we building bridges or walls?

     Biden was elected to lead the Restoration of America after the loathsome regime of Traitor Trump, and has betrayed us. There is nothing left of us to save.

     America has fallen, both as a democracy due to the capture of the Republican Party by a fascist-theocratic Fourth Reich and the subversions of our institutions and ideals by the Trump regime of patriarchal sexual terror and white supremacist terror, and because of the Democratic Party’s refusal to confront evil and purge our destroyers from among us, both in our client state of Israel and here in America in the wake of the January 6 Insurrection. All of this generates from the Wagnerian Ring of fear, power, and force; fear weaponized in service to power by those who would enslave us as divisions of belonging and exclusionary otherness, and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil.

     In Gaza we see the inevitable results of this process of dehumanization, for to make an idea about a kind of people is an act of violence, and no matter where one begins with othering we always end up at the gates of Auschwitz. And this we must Resist.

      Why must we be each other’s jailors, and not each other’s liberators?

     Who do we want to become, we humans; masters and slaves, or a free society of equals?

    Get real, ends the apologetics of power, referencing the Realpolitik of Henry Kissinger used so infamously to authorize our imperial wars in Vietnam and Central America including the Mayan Genocide in Guatemala, the assassination of Salvador Allende in Chile, and the massacres of the Suharto regime of Indonesia. A foreign policy modeled on Hitler’s dictum; “Who now remembers the extermination of the Armenians? The world respects only power” does not lead to a more humane future, nor to a United Humankind and a free society of equals.

     In this injunction to get real and its legacies of history bearing horrors, atrocities, and crimes against humanity as state policy and fear become an engine of destruction, there are embedded issues and forces central to the questions of our humanity and how we choose to be human together; what is truth, who is authorized to question it, and how can we engage in the sacred calling to pursue the truth without falsification by the lies and illusions of propaganda? We wander in a Wilderness of Mirrors, wherein all claims must be questioned, especially those of authorities who claim to speak and act for us as a strategy of subjugation and the manufacture of consent. To this I can but say, democracy requires an electorate able to perform the Four Primary Duties of a Citizen; Question Authority, Expose Authority, Mock Authority, and Challenge Authority.

    As Alan Moore teaches us in his film V for Vendetta; “Since mankind’s dawn, a handful of oppressors have accepted the responsibility over our lives that we should have accepted for ourselves. By doing so, they took our power. By doing nothing, we gave it away. We’ve seen where their way leads, through camps and wars, towards the slaughterhouse.”

    Get real, we are exhorted by those who wish to steal our power. In Gaza, real people are dying because we are willing to sacrifice their lives to our power.

Fundraising post I am writing in reply to

Stakes high as South Africa brings claim of genocidal intent against Israel

Israel and its allies must face facts: peace talks are the only way forward, and they will have to include Hamashttps://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/02/israel-allies-peace-talks-include-hamas-palestinians?CMP=share_btn_link

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