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Saturday, April 30, 2005

Red Constantino

Renato Redentor Constantino is a writer and painter based in the Philippines. Constantino writes a weekly column for the Philippine national daily ManilaStandardToday. He is the managing director of the Foundation for Nationalist Studies, a policy research and publication institute which has been publishing progressive literature for almost three decades, including the 15-year old national social journal The FNS Bulletin Board. Constantino is also the Director of the translation and advocacy institute Linangan ng Kamalayang Makabansa.

To know more about him and his work, please visit Red Constantino where you can also find very interesting writings and paintings!!!

Friday, April 29, 2005

Water

UNITED NATIONS, Apr 22 (IPS) - Alarmed by corporate moves to treat water as just another market commodity, leading civil society groups are urging the international community to adopt a new universal treaty to protect the right to water. ”The ratification of such a convention by the U.N. member states would give a legal instrument to all people to defend their right to clean water and sanitation,” former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev, who currently leads Green Cross, an international environmental group, told reporters this week.

Treaty Urged to Protect Human Right to Water
Haider Rizvi
IPS

War, Crimes and Double Standard

A US soldier has been sentenced to death for an attack that killed two of his officers in the opening days of the Iraq invasion. (...) "He is a hate-filled, ideologically driven murderer," chief prosecutor Lt. Col. Michael Mulligan said.

Death sentence for US soldier who killed officers
By Estes Thompson, AP
29 April 2005
The Independent

Thursday, April 28, 2005

BBC (or Goebbels' Children - Part VII)

The BBC claimed today it had received a leaked copy of the attorney general's advice on the war in Iraq but held off reporting it because of doubts about its authenticity. The corporation, which did not run with the story until nearly 45 minutes after it was broken on the Guardian website and Channel 4 News, said it received the leak yesterday afternoon but held off because it "needed to verify its authenticity". The story did not appear on the BBC's website until 7.43pm - when the documents were already in the public domain and the story had already made its way around the world on Google News.

Delays cost BBC Iraq scoop
Jason Deans and John Plunkett
The Guardian


It's not just a question of being brownnose. At the BBC are really frightened. People capable of mass murderers and war crimes don't think twice to fire and ruin your life. Let's remember all the people who have been sacked (or worse...) since this nasty story began.

Read more Goebbels' Children stories

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

The Big Apple

The city's Parks Department wants to limit gatherings on the Great Lawn in Central Park to 50,000 people, a move that would end an era in which hundreds of thousands of people turned to the park as a place to protest, or to see the pope, Pavarotti and Simon and Garfunkel, officials said yesterday. The proposal, which has not been widely disseminated and requires no other approval but the department's, would also cap the number of events on the Great Lawn to six each year, with four of those reserved for the annual performances of the Metropolitan Opera and the New York Philharmonic. Parks officials say those musical programs draw "passive" audiences who go easy on the lawn's Kentucky bluegrass. The other two events would have to be held during a four-week period in August and September. (...) A spokesman for United for Peace and Justice, which lost its fight with the city last August to hold a huge antiwar rally on the Great Lawn during the Republican National Convention, said the proposed rules were aimed squarely at preventing groups like his from holding large political demonstrations in the park. "This would set in stone their institutional attitude about protests," said the spokesman, Bill Dobbs. "In Manhattan, nearly every square foot is covered with buildings, so the park is the town common, where people have assembled for generations. Now the Bloomberg administration is seeking to maintain it as a lawn museum." (...) Mr. Dobbs said it was particularly unfair that so many of the large-scale events on the Great Lawn would be opera and Philharmonic performances. "To give the symphony and opera four of the six - the bulk of them - shows the class of people whose interests are being protected," he said. (...)

Keeping Great Crowds Off Central Park's Great Lawn
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
The New York Times
Published: April 27, 2005

Human Rights Watch

NEW YORK, Apr 25 (IPS) - A leading human rights group demands that the U.S. government launch a sweeping inquiry into the torture of Iraqi and other prisoners by U.S. troops, and that it name a special prosecutor to probe high-ranking officials' possible role in alleged abuses.

Human Rights Watch, in a new report assailing some conclusions of previous investigations, said 'a wall of impunity surrounds the architects of the policies responsible for the larger pattern of abuses.'

'Evidence is mounting that high-ranking US civilian and military leaders -- including Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, former CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) Director George Tenet, Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, formerly the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and Major General Geoffrey Miller, the former commander of the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -- made decisions and issued policies that facilitated serious and widespread violations of the law,' it added.

Watchdog Demands U.S. Torture Inquiry
William Fisher
IPS NEWS

Falluja

In the 1930s the Spanish city of Guernica became a symbol of wanton murder and destruction. In the 1990s Grozny was cruelly flattened by the Russians; it still lies in ruins. This decade's unforgettable monument to brutality and overkill is Falluja, a text-book case of how not to handle an insurgency, and a reminder that unpopular occupations will always degenerate into desperation and atrocity.

This is our Guernica
Ruined, cordoned Falluja is emerging as the decade's monument to brutality
Jonathan Steele and Dahr Jamail
The Guardian

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

The Temples of Knowledge

In recent months, a growing chorus of conservative critics has decried the existence of a liberal orthodoxy on college campuses and called for new measures to safeguard students' free speech. Curiously, however, these critics are silent regarding the free speech rights of graduate student employees, including teaching assistants (TAs) and research assistants (RAs) who have been trying to hold union elections and have been censored by their university employers. In recent years, in fact, Columbia, Tufts, Penn, Brown and other prestigious private colleges have responded to student organizing drives with tactics that can only be described as profoundly illiberal and undemocratic.

Columbia Unbecoming
by Jennifer Washburn
The Nation

Media and Power

Do You Believe? At the beginning of every episode of the long running sci-fi series, The X-Files, viewers were shown the mysterious words "I want to believe." We were to understand that one of the FBI investigators in the show was eager to overcome his scepticism, to be persuaded that aliens, goblins and suchlike really exist. When it comes to the humanity and compassion of leaders like Tony Blair and George Bush, mainstream journalists also "want to believe".

What's So Funny About Peace, Love And Armageddon?
by Dave Edwards
ZNet
April 26, 2005

The shameless Blair

A prominent Labour politician will announce today that he is defecting to the Liberal Democrats in protest at Tony Blair's "lies" over Iraq. The defection of Brian Sedgemore, who is standing down after 27 years as a Labour MP, threatens to upset Mr Blair's apparently unstoppable campaign for a historic third term. Declaring that "enough is enough", Mr Sedgemore also reveals that a small group of unnamed fellow MPs who are standing down are secretly planning to leave the Labour Party in protest at Mr Blair's leadership after the election. (...) Writing in The Independent, Mr Sedgemore says: "I voted against the war on Iraq and it becomes clearer every day that Blair decided to go to war after meeting Bush on his Texas ranch in 2002. After that, he lied to persuade the country to support him. "The stomach-turning lies on Iraq were followed by the attempt to use the politics of fear to drive through Parliament a deeply authoritarian set of law-and-order measures that reminded me of the Star Chamber. The Star Chamber used torture but at least they allowed a proper trial before throwing someone into prison. That is when I decided enough was enough. "For some of us it's not just about the war, it's about top-up fees and privatising the health service. We were going to issue a joint statement. That would have been the easiest thing for me to do but I believe I owe it to voters to speak out now," he says.

Exclusive: Labour MP defects to Lib Dems over Iraq
By Colin Brown, Deputy Political Editor
The Independent
26 April 2005



Brian Sedgemore, a Labour MP of 27 years, has defected to the Liberal Democrats and urged voters to give Tony Blair a "bloody nose" at the general election next week. Mr Sedgemore, who is standing down from parliament and not contesting his Hackney South and Shoreditch seat, said he was leaving Labour after becoming increasingly disillusioned with the government over the Iraq war and "authoritarian" anti-terrorism legislation. He accused the prime minister of telling "stomach-turning lies" over Iraq and using the "politics of fear to drive through parliament a deeply authoritarian set of law and order measures". Making his first appearance as a Lib Dem this morning, he said: "It is against this background I decided I could no longer support the Labour party and would join the Liberal Democrats." "I urge everyone from the centre and the left of British politics to give Tony Blair a bloody nose in the general election."

Labour veteran Brian Sedgemore defects to Lib Dems
Hélène Mulholland
The Guardian
Tuesday April 26, 2005

Monday, April 25, 2005

UN, USA and Human Rights

The UN's top human rights investigator in Afghanistan has been forced out under American pressure just days after he presented a report criticising the US military for detaining suspects without trial and holding them in secret prisons. Cherif Bassiouni had needled the US military since his appointment a year ago, repeatedly trying, without success, to interview alleged Taliban and al-Qa'ida prisoners at the two biggest US bases in Afghanistan, Kandahar and Bagram. Mr Bassiouni's report had highlighted America's policy of detaining prisoners without trial and lambasted coalition officials for barring independent human rights monitors from its bases. (...) The UN eliminated Mr Bassiouni's job last week after Washington had pressed for his mandate to be changed so that it would no longer cover the US military. Just days earlier, the Egyptian-born law professor, now based in Chicago, had presented his criticisms in a 24-page report to the UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva. The report, based on a year spent travelling around Afghanistan interviewing Afghans, international agency staff and the Afghan Human Rights Commission, estimated that around 1,000 Afghans had been detained and accused US troops of breaking into homes, arresting residents and abusing them.

UN investigator who exposed US army abuse forced out of his job
By Nick Meo in Kabul
The Independent
25 April 2005

ECUADOR

After four months of mounting political pressure and constitutional crisis, the people of Ecuador have driven President Lucio Gutierrez from office. In the face of unstoppable mass protest, and growing calls for the dissolution of Congress and establishment of popular assemblies, Ecuador’s right-wing Congress abandoned Gutierrez, leaving vice-president Alfredo Palacio to assume the role.

ECUADOR: People drive out president
by Duroyan Fertl
Green Left Weekly

ULTIMATE SACRIFICE

Many newspapers, magazines and of course the very patriotic TV networks, give the list of the US soldiers died in Iraq. (No mention of the MORE THAN 100,000 IRAQI CIVILIANS KILLED BY THE US MILITARY FORCES of course!). On The Washington Post on line for example there is a section called "US FATALITIES: Faces of the Fallen. Two interactive guides detail those who made the ultimate sacrifice".

Let's take a quick look at the language used here:
- FATALITIES: the word implies "something established by fate". Was the invasion of Iraq wanted by fate, destiny? Or are there people responsible for this war of aggression and its results?
- ULTIMATE SACRIFICE: the phrase here suggests "something offered in sacrifice". The language is full of nobility and recalls high values… It’s the same language used by Hitler and Mussolini. The same language used by colonial powers. The very same language. This is the language of tyrannies, dictatorial regimes. It smells of fascism and death.

These young men and women didn't even start their lives and were sent to kill other people, people who did nothing to them or to their country. They were sent far away from home, through a brain washing process that involves complicity and unity by all the sides of the establishment. It is not just Mr. War Criminal Bush and his gang of murderers and thugs to be responsible for this tragedy. The whole establishment, the entire ruling class that controls the government, the media and the economy must be held accountable.

As Howard Zinn put it very eloquently, "There is no flag big enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people".

If Americans Knew (or Goebbels' Children Part VII)

A little over a week ago, some members of our organization, If Americans Knew, met with New York Times Public Editor Daniel Okrent to discuss the findings of a detailed study we had completed of two years worth of Times news stories on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Okrent was going to be writing a column discussing the paper’s coverage of Israel/Palestine, and we felt our study would be an important resource. (...) We presented these findings, complete with charts, spread-sheets, clear sourcing, and extensive additional documentation, to Okrent and his assistant. We gave him the names and details of 32 Palestinian children who had been killed during the first month of the uprising – none of whom had been the subject of Times’ articles. (28 of these children, it was found, had been killed by gunfire to the head or chest.) Okrent appeared to accept our findings readily – even commenting at one of our findings that he “wasn’t surprised.” His subsequent column, purporting to examine Times coverage of Israel-Palestine, given all of the above, is perplexing. There is no mention whatsoever of our report, no mention of our two-year study, no mention of the 40-some pages of supporting evidence, no mention, even, of our lengthy face-to-face meeting (despite the fact that it appears we were one of the few groups to present our information in person).

New York Times Misrepresents 'If Americans Knew'
By Alison Weir

Founder of If Americans Knew
April 24, 2005

Read the other Goebbels' Children

Sunday, April 24, 2005

Nicola Calipari

Sgrena has told CBS that the car she was in was going 30 mph. At 30 mph, a car is going 15 yards per second. So, according to the U.S. military, they fired warning shots within 2.7 seconds of flashing a warning light, and used "deadly force" 2.3 seconds after that. And actually, if the U.S. military story were true and the car were really travelling at "high speed", let's be generous and call that only 45 mph, that's 22 yards per second, meaning 1.8 seconds between warning lights and warning shots, and 1.6 seconds between warning shots and deadly shots.

A Math Lesson
The Killing of Nicola Calipari
By ELI STEPHENS
CounterPunch

BBC ( or Goebbels' Children - Part VI )

The BBC's Magic Quotes
Or how to make unsubstantiated claims against our official enemies.

by Antony Wright
GlobalEcho


Read the other "Goebbels' Children" stories

Robert Fisk

FISK: I may not be sure about God or the Devil, but I still believe in the United Nations (Read the whole artiocle on GlobalEcho)

Robert Fisk
The Independent

Tony Blair

When Tony Blair published his notorious 2002 "dossier" which falsely claimed that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, Downing Street also produced an Arabic version - which contained significant deletions and changes in text that substantially altered its meaning. (Read the whole article on GlobalEcho)

How Arabic text of WMD dossier was massaged by Downing St
by Robert Fisk
The Independent

Saturday, April 23, 2005

Ratzinger

From 1981, Cardinal Ratzinger ran the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith ; formerly known as the Inquisition . Gaining the nickname "God's Rottweiler", his injunctions included pronouncements that homosexuality is evil, that other religions and versions of Christianity are defective, and that women should not be allowed to sing in choirs or serve at the altar. He also barred Catholic priests from counselling pregnant teenagers on their options. Under Ratzinger's enforcement of doctrine the Vatican continued to forbid the use of condoms, even for health , and went so far as to claim they do not prevent the spread of Aids. This in spite of the fact that between 1981 and the end of 2003 Aids killed 20 million people , and that during 2004 around five million adults and children became infected with HIV. Ratzinger's doctrines leave little room for attempts to improve the lot of humanity, at least not in this world. As he once lamented , "Greenpeace and Amnesty International seem to have taken over mankind's concerns, which formerly would have radiated from the impulses of Raphael, Michelangelo or Bach". In Ratzinger's moral calculus, efforts to alleviate the suffering of the most unfortunate among us rank some way below contemplation of divinity and adherence to papal dogma. This is most clearly demonstrated by his ruthless crusade against Liberation Theology in Latin America.

Blessed are the poor in spirit
The Democrat's Diary

Friday, April 22, 2005

Justice Scalia

Debriefing Scalia - Editors' Note: Justice Antonin Scalia got more than he bargained for when he accepted the NYU Annual Survey of American Law's invitation to engage students in a Q&A session. Randomly selected to attend the limited-seating and closed-to-the-press event, NYU law school student Eric Berndt asked Scalia to explain his dissent in Lawrence v. Texas , the 2003 Supreme Court case that overturned Bowers v. Hardwick and struck down the nation's sodomy laws. Not satisfied with Scalia's answer, Berndt asked the Justice, "Do you sodomize your wife?" Scalia demurred and law school administrators promptly turned off Berndt's microphone. As Berndt explains in his post to fellow law school students, it was an entirely fair question to pose to a Justice whose opinion--had it been in the majority--would have allowed the state to ask that same question to thousands of gays and lesbians, and to punish them if the answer is yes. We reprint Berndt's open letter below.

The Nation
April 18, 2005

Tariq Ali

Blair has led this country into more wars than Thatcher and Major combined. He is responsible for more deaths, and that with fewer popular votes to back him. In 1992, the year Neil Kinnock was defeated by John Major, the Labour vote was 11.5 million. In 2001 New Labour’s indecent majority was based on a popular vote of 10.7 million. Turnout had dropped from 71 per cent in 1997 to 59 per cent in 2001. Gordon Brown provided a hallucinatory explanation: people were so relaxed and happy under New Labour that they couldn’t be bothered to vote. Psephology beckons, Gordon. In reality, it was the collapse of the Tories that distorted the results. New Labour’s massive majorities have been based on mass abstentions and a blatantly undemocratic electoral system. New Labour’s redistribution of wealth has favoured the wealthy. The assault on civil liberties mounted by Blair, Blunkett and Clarke is far more serious than the appalling internment without trial that Edward Heath instituted in Ireland. So, in constituencies where there are MPs belonging to the anti-war faction, we should vote for them – despite disagreements on many other issues. In the warmonger constituencies we should vote tactically. I intend to do so. In my north London constituency the MP is Barbara Roche: pro-war and pro everything else this wretched government has done. I don’t simply want to vote against her. I want her to be defeated. That is why I will vote Lib Dem.

Punish the warmongers: vote Lib Dem
Tariq Ali
The Red Pepper
April 2005

Thursday, April 21, 2005

The "New" Pope

Ratzinger was the late Pope John Paul II's enforcer of stark views on many issues that, for all the church's proclamations of love, fuel disdain. In 2003, Ratzinger issued a proclamation condemning government recognition of same-sex unions saying that instead it was the government's responsibility to "avoid exposing young people to erroneous ideas about sexuality and marriage." Calling civil unions the "legalization of evil," Ratzinger said politicians who vote for them are "gravely immoral." Ratzinger went on to condemn adoption by gay parents, saying, "Allowing children to be adopted by persons living in such unions would actually mean doing violence to the children." This is the same Vatican that had barely a thing to say about the American clergy child sex-abuse scandal. And when it did, Ratzinger downplayed it.

The Catholic Church Steps Backwards
by Derrick Z. Jackson
April 21, 2005
ZNet

THE CLOWN AND THE ABORTION

The fact is, the entire country is trapped. Harry Blackmun and his colleagues suppressed that democratic abortion debate the nation needs to have. The poisons have been building ever since. You can complain about the incivility of politics, but you can't stop the escalation of conflict in the middle. You have to kill it at the root. Unless Roe v. Wade is overturned, politics will never get better.

Roe's Birth, and Death
By DAVID BROOKS
The New York Times
Published: April 21, 2005


Read also COMMISSARS

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

WILLIAM BLUM

The Anti-Empire Report, No. 20 - April 19, 2005
by William Blum

Eastern European "revolutions"
In previous reports I've discussed why I thought that the political uprisings in Eastern Europe of the past 18 months, which have resulted in changes of government in Georgia and Ukraine and the potential for the same elsewhere, have not entirely been phenomena of spontaneous combustion. I've pointed out that in each case all or most of the usual American suspects have been involved -- the National Endowment for Democracy (and two of its wings: the International Republican Institute and the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs), the Agency for International Development (AID), George Soros's Open Society organizations, Freedom House, et al. I've received some criticism for this point of view from those who believe that the people in each of these countries had strong motivations for their demonstrations based on legitimate grievances and didn't need "outside agitators". I don't question at all the existence of their grievances, but I maintain that the demonstrators needed various sparks, tutelage, and financing. Consider what their most commonly stated grievances have been -- unemployment, other economic hardships, questionable elections, and government corruption. Does not each of these apply in full, overflowing measure to the United States? As one example, is there any parliament in the world whose members receive more in bribes ("political contributions") than members of the US Congress? Are there not millions of Americans who hate their leaders every bit as much as the people in Georgia and Ukraine hated theirs? If it's not a majority of Americans who feel this way, neither has it been majorities in Eastern Europe who have been rising up. Why don't we have an uprising here? Why don't we choose a symbolic color and throw the scoundrels out? Perhaps all we need are some wealthy outside agitators. The old joke goes: Why won't there ever be a coup d'état in the United States? Because there's no American embassy in Washington. The phenomenon is not new. The United States made use of paid-for street crowds and chaos for their first post-World War Two regime change, Iran in 1953; neither is it new in Eastern Europe, for the same tactics were employed by the National Endowment for Democracy and Agency for International Development in toppling governments in Bulgaria and Albania in the early 1990s.{1}

Intelligence failure or imperial ambitions?
On March 31 the Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction delivered its report to the president. The Commission concluded that "the Intelligence Community was dead wrong in almost all of its pre-war judgments about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. This was a major intelligence failure. Its principal causes were the Intelligence Community's inability to collect good information about Iraq's WMD programs, serious errors in analyzing what information it could gather, and a failure to make clear just how much of its analysis was based on assumptions, rather than good evidence."{2} Many people, including members of the Commission, likely take the above to mean that if "the intelligence community" [sounds like a small town in New England] had only done its job better it would have learned that Iraq didn't have an arsenal of WMD sufficient to pose any kind of serious threat to the United States and a lot of bloody horror could have been avoided. That, however, is a highly questionable assumption. It presumes that the Bush administration actually went to war because it genuinely believed that Iraq was both dangerously armed and an "imminent" threat to use those arms against the United States. But the Bush administration knew perfectly well that Iraq's military capability was nothing to be particularly concerned about. Here's Colin Powell, speaking in February 2001 of US sanctions on Iraq: "And frankly they have worked. He [Saddam Hussein] has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction. He is unable to project conventional power against his neighbors."{3} And here is Condoleezza Rice, in July of that year, speaking of Saddam Hussein: "We are able to keep arms from him. His military forces have not been rebuilt."{4}

Cuba, the never-ending double standard
The European Union is once again admonishing Cuba to release its "dissidents" from prison. The United States is pressuring the United Nations Human Rights Commission, currently meeting in Geneva, to pursue this same goal. Cuba's critics are particularly upset that many of those arrested are journalists and poets. What they consistently fail to acknowledge is that the arrests of these persons had nothing to do with them being journalists or poets, or even being dissidents per se, but had everything to do with their very close, indeed intimate, political and financial connections to American government officials. The United States is to the Cuban government like al Qaeda is to Washington, only much more powerful and much closer. During the period of the Cuban revolution, the United States and anti-Castro Cuban exiles in the US have inflicted upon Cuba damage greater than what happened in New York and Washington on September 11, 2001. In 1999, Cuba filed a suit against the United States for $181.1 billion in compensation for victims of (at that time) forty years of aggression. The suit accuses Washington policies of being responsible for the death of 3,478 Cubans and wounding or disabling 2,099 others. Cuban officials delivered the papers for the suit to the US Interests Section in Havana, but the Americans refused to accept them. The Cuban government then took its case to the United Nations, where it has been in the hands of the Counter-Terrorism Committee since 2001. This committee is made up of all 15 members of the Security Council, which of course includes the United States, and which may account for the inaction on the matter. Would the US ignore a group of American dissidents receiving funds from al Qaeda and engaging in repeated meetings with known leaders of that organization in the United States? Would it matter if these American dissidents claimed to be journalists or (gasp) poets? In the past few years, the American government has arrested a great many people in the US and abroad on the basis of alleged ties to al Qaeda, with a lot less evidence to go by than Cuba had with its dissidents' ties to the United States. The US has of course also arrested numerous American dissidents at anti-war, anti-globalization, anti-School of the Americas, and other demonstrations, many sentenced up to months in prison with concurrent physical and psychological abuse.

Inflammatory history textbooks
Japanese school textbooks have again come under emotional attack from South Korea and China, both victims of brutal Japanese imperial policy before and during the Second World War. Critics, including North Korea as well, have long complained that Japanese history texts have consistently denied the country's wartime aggression. On April 5, the Japanese Education Ministry approved a new edition of a text already in use, which critics say further distorts the past and portrays imperial Japan as a liberator rather than an occupier of its Asian neighbors. They point out that the text shuns the word "invasion".{5} When, it has to be wondered, will the scores of victims of US imperial aggression begin to complain about American history textbooks? As one example, the last I knew, in the pages of these books, the United States never "invaded" Vietnam. Will future American history texts speak of the US "liberation" of Iraq and Afghanistan? Is there any current textbook that conveys to the minds of young Americans the god-awful consequences of Washington's roles in Indonesia 1965, Greece 1967 or Angola 1975, to name but a few? Frances Fitzgerald, in her study of American history textbooks, observed that "According to these books, the United States had been a kind of Salvation Army to the rest of the world: throughout history, it had done little but dispense benefits to poor, ignorant, and diseased countries. ... the United States always acted in a disinterested fashion, always from the highest of motives; it gave, never took."{6}

Economics 101 revisited
When California had its "energy crisis" in 2000-2001, very little of what I read about it made much sense to me; the articles just didn't explain in one understandable step after another exactly what was happening and why. The reason for this, I later concluded, was that the writers were largely analyzing the situation in textbook fashion, Economics 101 cause-and-effect stuff, the scientific method. It was only after the criminal, manipulative role of Enron and other corporations was revealed that the picture began to come into focus for me. This is but one example of why, over the years, I've come to the conclusion that the underlying reasons for economic phenomena and/or the explanations presented for them derive from the following: 50% of them are political or ideological in nature, 20% fraud and "legal" manipulation, 20% psychological, 10% scientific; the percentages are of course rough estimates. The current campaign for social security reform, though presented in economic terms, is actually motivated by political and ideological considerations. The rise or fall of the stock market from day to day is an example of the psychological factor, though each day Wall Street issues an official explanation in economic terms. We're told that the recent great rise in the cost of oil is a classic example of the law of supply and demand, as immutable as the law of gravity. I, however, remain skeptical. For here and there in various cities of the Middle East and Europe and North America, a relative handful of men, some of them oil company executives, have seen that the time was right to make decisions to satisfy a particular desire of theirs: to become even richer.

Primitive emotions
A sad tale about Ahmad and Mazari Ayubi, a married couple in Afghanistan. They're first cousins. "There is a saying in our country that a marriage between cousins is the most righteous because the engagement was made in heaven," says a prominent Afghan doctor. Ahmad and Mazari have had eight children. All but one of them are paralyzed from the neck down and mentally retarded or have already died from the same brain disorder. Ahmad has now agreed to Mazari's request to stop having children. A remaining source of tension between them is whether to agree to the marriage of their healthy son, age 13, to his first cousin, the 10-year-old daughter of Ahmad's brother. This match was arranged by Ahmad's mother before her death and is pushed by Ahmad's brother, who keeps insisting that "even if all our grandchildren come out sick, I will not make my mother unhappy in her grave."{7} My first reaction upon reading the brother's remark was to think: "Oh the hell with all of them, they're too hopelessly primitive to get upset about, it's better this way, maybe the whole damn breed will die out. My second thought was this: There are probably lots of American soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq, part of military machines that have killed well over a hundred thousand people and disabled yet more in those two woeful lands, soldiers who know that what they're part of is maddeningly stupid and cruel, but who reason -- "even if we kill everyone and destroy everything, I will not make my mother country unhappy in its time of need; I will not betray the confidence she placed in me."

Another entry into the Hypocrisy Hall of Fame
According to a US Senate report, from 1985 through 1989, the United States provided "Iraq with 'dual use' licensed materials which assisted in the development of Iraqi chemical, biological, and missile-system programs, including: chemical warfare agent precursors; chemical warfare agent production facility plans and technical drawings ... [and] chemical warhead filling equipment."{8} None of the American businessmen who exported these materials has ever been prosecuted. But it turns out that in 1989 the United States asked the Netherlands to extradite Frans van Anraat, a Dutch businessman, for exporting chemicals to Iraq which were allegedly used by the Iraqi government to produce some of the poison gas used against Kurds and Iranians. This is now in the news because van Anraat -- who had lived in Iraq from 1989 to 2003, when the US invasion began -- is currently being prosecuted in the Netherlands. The case is seen as a landmark because it would be the first time a businessman has been prosecuted for war crimes by a national court. Mr. van Anraat may have made some mistakes, but none so foolish as to not be living in the United States when he was a chemical exporter.

Some questions for God
Word from Rome was that the favorite to become the new pope had been Cardinal Giusseppe Sicola of Italy. But his candidacy failed because other cardinals were reluctant to have a Pope Sicola. I would love to have been in heaven to see the pope's face when he discovered that there was no God. As some people would love to see my face in heaven as I was confronted by God. The difference is that John Paul would be terribly shocked, while I would be thrilled, although I'd have a number of questions to ask the Lord:
1) Who do you admire more -- the believer who goes to church and does good deeds because he hopes to be rewarded by you or at least not be punished by you, or the atheist who works to enhance human rights because that's the kind of society he wants to live in and not because he'll be judged in some future life by you?
2) Do you recognize al Qaeda as a faith-based initiative?
3) Why did you allow John Paul to work against liberation theology in Latin America?
4) How did this world become so unbearably cruel, corrupt, unjust, and stupid? Did it reach this stage by chance, by -- you'll pardon the expression -- evolution, or did you plan it this way? Or did the devil make you do it?
5) Is it true that if you wanted us to go naked, we wouldn't have been born with clothing on?

NOTES
{1} See Killing Hope (below), chapter 51
{2} www.wmd.gov/report/transmittal_letter.html
{3} State Department press release, February 24, 2001
{4} CNN Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, July 29, 2001
{5} Washington Post, April 6, 2005
{6} Frances Fitzgerald, "America Revised" (1980), pp.129, 139
{7} Washington Post, April 17, 2005
{8} "U.S. Chemical and Biological Warfare-Related Dual Use Exports to Iraq and their Possible Impact on the Health Consequences of the Persian Gulf War, Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs with Respect to Export Administration", report of May 25, 1994, p.11 in stand-alone report or p.239 in Senate publication S. Hrg. 103-900

William Blum is the author of:
- Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2
- Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower
- West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir
- Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire

To know more please visit William Blum's website

Monday, April 18, 2005

Aiden Delgado

Delgado says he observed mutilation of the dead, trophy photos of dead Iraqis, mass roundups of innocent noncombatants, positioning of prisoners in the line of fire – all violations of the Geneva conventions. His own buddies – decent, Christian men, as he describes them – shot unarmed prisoners. In one government class for seniors, Delgado presented graphic images, his own photos of a soldier playing with a skull, the charred remains of children, kids riddled with bullets, a soldier from his unit scooping out the brains of a prisoner. Some students were squeamish, like myself, and turned their heads. Others rubbed tears from their eyes. But at the end of the question period, many expressed appreciation for opening a subject that is almost taboo. “If you are old enough to go to war,” Delgado said, “you are old enough to know what really goes on.”

New Revelations about Racism in the Military
Aiden Delgado interviewed by Paul Rockwell
The Black Commentator

BBC ( or Goebbels' Children - Part V )

Adam Curtis, who won the factual series award for BBC2's The Power of Nightmares, used his speech to question newspaper and broadcast reports of last week's ricin trial, which he said had sensationalised the threat of a poison terror attack. The acceptance speech was removed from BBC1's Bafta coverage when it aired two hours later. Mr Curtis said he suspected his comments had been cut because they "touched a nerve".

Row as BBC cuts Bafta speech
John Plunkett
The Guardian
Monday April 18, 2005


Read the other "Goebbels' Children" stories

Sunday, April 17, 2005

Liberation Theology

When John Paul was elected to the papacy in 1978, he “became alarmed by what he said were similarities between some elements of liberation theology and Marxism. He saw links between the groups and the participation of some Latin American clergy” in anti-government insurgency. American policy makers found similar connections. In 1962, the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff broadly defined insurgency as “illegal opposition to any existing government.” The definition was intentionally broad, so as to equate passive resistance, student strikes, general activism, trade unions, peasant organizations, religious catechists, guerilla operations or any other challenges to the status quo with Communism or “evil.” After 1978, “Vatican commissions visited Romero two times demanding that he explain his outspoken criticism of El Salvador’s military rulers.” After his murder, the pope appointed Fernando Saenz Lacalle as archbishop, a member of Opus Dei and a starch opponent of liberation theology. The appointment came as a slap in the face to hundreds of peasant church members and religious workers in Latin America. Progressive advancements were reversed and old inequalities were restored. The pope’s inability to distinguish between so-called militant Communism and an indigenous movement for justice produced deadly consequences.

Papal Shortcomings
by Igor Volsky
ZNet


Read also The Inquisition Pope, The Death of a Reactonary, War Criminals at St. Peter's Square and John Paul II

Saturday, April 16, 2005

Immigration

"Every time Mr Howard opens his mouth and talks about foreigners who are invading this country in the words that he does ... he is making life impossible for us," said Mr Mazandarani. "Every time Michael Howard speaks about immigration, I get abused on the streets by the general public. This issue has absolutely been the bane of my life in this country for 32 years. I'm sick and tired of having politicians inflating this issue." (...) Hannah Ward, a spokes-woman for the Refugee Council, said: "Anecdotally, it does appear that the more politicians talk about immigration issues the more hostility there is towards immigrants. It also seems that the general public's fears about immigrants goes up. It is important the issue is debated. But there is relentless hostility against immigrants. The debate must be balanced."

The day Michael Howard met his match
By Colin Brown, Deputy Political Editor and Arifa Akbar
The Independent
16 April 2005

Friday, April 15, 2005

Tax Resistance

By April 15, the Internal Revenue Service estimates that 132 million individual income tax returns will be filed and that two trillion dollars will be collected for the US Treasury. But in protest of the federal government’s military expenditures, an estimated ten thousand people will not file their taxes or will deliberately withhold money from the IRS this year.

Anti-War Activists Promote ‘Tax Resistance’ As Direct Protest
by Martha Baskin
The New Standard

Thursday, April 14, 2005

COMMISSARS

In this article by DAVID BROOKS of The New York Times, the clown with a brown nose once again shows contempt for democracy, human rights and the rule of law. He is just one of the commissars, those intellectuals whose role is to serve power by 'explaining' and justifying it to other intellectuals and to the rest of us. Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin could have never had the power they had without commissars who would sing the greatness of the leader. Today these servants of the master keep working to ‘explain’ the angelic virtues of ‘our’ system: Democracy & Freedom. Two items our elites know so well and love so much to export all over the world. Their role is paramount. How could we otherwise understand that attacking a defenceless country that didn’t do anything to us is actually “exporting Freedom & Democracy” and “making the world more safe”? How could we possibly understand that murdering hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians is simply “self defence” and “collateral damages”? Without these commissars with such fine a mind we could never get that capitalism is the answer to all the problems, the god to pray and obey, the virgin system without sins. They know. We are just too ignorant or too stupid or too naïve or too liberal or simply radical, socialist, communist, anarchist. Plainly, wrong. We should now know that Freedom, Democracy and Justice are whatever they say they are. As simple as that. Thank you!
----------------------------

'Loudly, With a Big Stick' by DAVID BROOKS, The New York Times

I don't like John Bolton's management style. Nor am I a big fan of his foreign policy views. He doesn't really believe in using U.S. power to end genocide or promote democracy. But it is ridiculous to say he doesn't believe in the United Nations. This is a canard spread by journalists who haven't bothered to read his stuff and by crafty politicians who aren't willing to say what the Bolton debate is really about. The Bolton controversy isn't about whether we believe in the U.N. mission. It's about which U.N. mission we believe in. From the start, the U.N. has had two rival missions. Some people saw it as a place where sovereign nations could work together to solve problems. But other people saw it as the beginnings of a world government. This world government dream crashed on the rocks of reality, but as Jeremy Rabkin of Cornell has observed, the federalist idea has been replaced by a squishier but equally pervasive concept: the dream of "global governance." The people who talk about global governance begin with the same premises as the world government types: the belief that a world of separate nations, living by the law of the jungle, will inevitably be a violent world. Instead, these people believe, some supranational authority should be set up to settle international disputes by rule of law. They know we're not close to a global version of the European superstate. So they are content to champion creeping institutions like the International Criminal Court. They treat U.N. General Assembly resolutions as an emerging body of international law. They seek to foment a social atmosphere in which positions taken by multilateral organizations are deemed to have more "legitimacy" than positions taken by democratic nations. John Bolton is just the guy to explain why this vaporous global-governance notion is a dangerous illusion, and that we Americans, like most other peoples, will never accept it. We'll never accept it, first, because it is undemocratic. It is impossible to set up legitimate global authorities because there is no global democracy, no sense of common peoplehood and trust. So multilateral organizations can never look like legislatures, with open debate, up or down votes and the losers accepting majority decisions. Instead, they look like meetings of unelected elites, of technocrats who make decisions in secret and who rely upon intentionally impenetrable language, who settle differences through arcane fudges. Americans, like most peoples, will never surrender even a bit of their national democracy for the sake of multilateral technocracy. Second, we will never accept global governance because it inevitably devolves into corruption. The panoply of U.N. scandals flows from a single source: the lack of democratic accountability. These supranational organizations exist in their own insular, self-indulgent aerie. We will never accept global governance, third, because we love our Constitution and will never grant any other law supremacy over it. Like most peoples (Europeans are the exception), we will never allow transnational organizations to overrule our own laws, regulations and precedents. We think our Constitution is superior to the sloppy authority granted to, say, the International Criminal Court. Fourth, we understand that these mushy international organizations liberate the barbaric and handcuff the civilized. Bodies like the U.N. can toss hapless resolutions at the Milosevics, the Saddams or the butchers of Darfur, but they can do nothing to restrain them. Meanwhile, the forces of decency can be paralyzed as they wait for "the international community." Fifth, we know that when push comes to shove, all the grand talk about international norms is often just a cover for opposing the global elite's bêtes noires of the moment - usually the U.S. or Israel. We will never grant legitimacy to forums that are so often manipulated for partisan ends. John Bolton is in a good position to make these and other points. He helped reverse the U.N.'s Zionism-is-racism resolution. He led the U.S. rejection of the International Criminal Court. Time and time again, he has pointed out that the U.N. can be an effective forum where nations can go to work together, but it can never be a legitimate supranational authority in its own right. Sometimes it takes sharp elbows to assert independence. But this is certain: We will never be so seduced by vapid pieties about global cooperation that we'll join a system that is both unworkable and undemocratic.

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Civil Rights Movement

For Korematsu, however, it was deja vu all over again in April 2004, when the question before the Supreme Court was whether US courts could review challenges to the imprisonment of "enemy combatants" held at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station in Cuba after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Korematsu, then 84, filed a friend-of-the-court brief saying, "The extreme nature of the government's position is all too familiar." In the end, the Supreme Court ruled that the Bush administration's policy of detaining foreign nationals without legal process at Guantanamo Bay was unconstitutional. "There are Arab Americans today who are going through what Japanese-Americans experienced years ago, and we can't let that happen again," said Korematsu. Dorothy Ehrlich, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, told IPS, "If it had not been for Fred Korematsu, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II -- this most shameful chapter in America's history -- would have been just a footnote in our history books." "His actions have served to open the hearts and minds of an entire generation. In the aftermath of September 11, our ability to protect civil liberties has been strengthened immeasurably by the courageous actions of this one man, who some 60 years ago, quietly stood up for his constitutional rights."

A Japanese-American Internment Icon's Legacy and the Civil Rights Movement
by William Fisher
April 13, 2005
ZNet

Amira Hass

(...) Every now and then we hear an American official, an American president, saying something about the outposts and about their illegality and Israeli obligations and -- but the core of the issue is not the outposts. The core of the issue is the settlements themselves. The core of the issue is what kind of a future we want in our region. Do we want a future where third world villages will -- maybe will be termed a Palestinian state, but still they will be third world condition -- in third world conditions, live next to a first world Israeli settlements and towns? And they are third world because these Israeli settlements and Israeli cities took all their land and all their resources from them all over the years. This is about our future. It is not about Bush's concern with one comma or another comma in the Roadmap. (...)

Amira Hass, the only Israeli journalist living in the Occupied Territories, joins us in our firehouse studio to discuss the current withdrawal from Gaza and expansion of settlements in the West Bank, the "apartheid system" in Israel and life in the "prison" of the Occupied Territories. [includes rush transcript]
Israeli Journalist Amira Hass Reflects on Reporting Under Occupation
Democracy Now!

The Best Democracy Money Can Buy

Special interest groups and lobbyists in Washington spent a whopping 13 billion dollars to influence decisions made by the White House, Congress and other U.S. federal agencies over the past eight years, a watchdog group said Thursday. The Washington-based Centre for Public Integrity said in a report that the money spent by lobbyists to entertain lawmakers at posh restaurants and throw fancy parties, among other tactics, had exceeded total financing for political campaigning. ”Our report reveals that each year since 1998 the amount spent to influence federal lawmakers is double the amount of money spent to elect them,” Roberta Baskin, executive director of the Center for Public Integrity, told reporters on Thursday. ”Today, federal lobbying is an industry in its own right,” she said.

The Best Democracy Money Can Buy
by Emad Mekay
WASHINGTON, Apr 7 (IPS)

Female Genital Mutilation

Hawa Aden Mohamed was only eight when she experienced the brutal pain of circumcision. Performed in a small Somali village, the operation was carried out without anesthesia, using only basic cutting tools and thorns. The practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) cost her sister's life and nearly took Hawa's own as her wounds did not heal properly. Today, she is at the front line of a decade-long and bitter fight for women's rights in Somalia.

On a Mission Against Tradition
by Jeppe Hirslund Wohlert
NEW YORK, Apr 8 (IPS)

Sunday, April 10, 2005

GORE VIDAL

(...) If we don't have class interests officially, then therefore we have no political parties. What is the Republican Party? Well, it used to be the party of the small-town businessman, generally in the Middle West, generally sort of out of the mainstream. Very conservative. It now represents nothing but the gas and oil business. They own it. And the people who go to Congress are simply bought. They are lawyers who are paid to represent Halliburton, big oil, big banking. So the very rich corporate America has a party for itself, the Republican Party. The Democrats don't have much of anything but a kind of wistful style. They just want everyone to be happy, and politically correct at all times. Do not hurt other people's feelings. They spend so much time on political correctness that they haven't thought of what to do politically about anything. Like say "no" to these preemptive wars, which are against not only the whole world's take on war and peace, but against United States history. This is something new under the sun--that a president, just because he feels like it, can declare war on anybody. And Congress will go along with him, and the courts will support him. The founding fathers would be mortified if they saw what had happened to their handiwork, which wasn't very great to begin with but is now done for. When you have preemptive wars, and you have ambitious companies like Bechtel who will build up what, let us say, General Electric has helped to destroy with its weaponry--these interests are well-represented. There is no people's party, and you can't even use the word. "Liberal" has been demonized. A liberal is a commie who's also a pedophile. Being a communist and a pedophile, he's so busy that he hasn't got time to win an election and is odious to boot. So there is no Democratic Party. We hope that something might happen with the governor of Vermont, and maybe something will or maybe it won't. But we are totally censored, and the press just follows this. It observes what those in power want it to observe, and turns the other way when things get dark. Then, when it's too late sometimes, you get some very good reporting. But by then, somebody's playing taps. (...) Well, they (the citizens) have been transformed, by design, by corporate America, aided by the media, which belongs to corporate America. They are no longer citizens. They are hardly voters. They are consumers, and they consume those things which are advertised on television. They are made to sound like happy consumers. Listen to TV advertising: This one says, "I had this terrible pain, but when I put on Kool-Aid, I found relief overnight. You must try it too." All we do is hear about little cures for little pains. Nothing important gets said. There used to be all those talk shows back in the '50s and '60s, when I was on television a great deal. People would talk about many important things, and you had some very good talkers. They're not allowed on now. Or they're set loose in the Fox Zoo, in which you have a number of people who pretend to be journalists but are really like animals. Each one has his own noise--there's the donkey who brays, there's the pig who squeals. Each one is a different animal in a zoo, making a characteristic noise. The result is chaos, which is what is intended. They don't want the people to know anything, and the people don't. (...) Well, the Congress has ceded--which it cannot do--but it has ceded its power to declare war. That is written in the Constitution. It's the most important thing in the Constitution, ultimately. And having ceded that to the Executive Branch, he can declare war whenever he finds terrorism. Now, terrorism is a wonderful invention because it doesn't mean anything. It's an abstract noun. You can't have a war against an abstract noun; it's like having a war against dandruff. It's meaningless. But you can terrify people. The art of government now, the art of control as practiced by the current junta, is: Keep the people frightened. It's exactly what Adolf Hitler and his gang did. Keep them frightened: The Russians are coming. The Poles are killing Germans who live within the borders of Poland. The Czechs are doing the same thing in the Sudetenland. These are evil people. We must go after them. We must save our kin. Keep everybody frightened, tell them lies--and the bigger the lie, the more they'll believe it. There's nothing the average American now believes (because he's been told it 10,000 times a day) that is true. Now how do you undo so much disinformation? Well, you have to have truth squads at work 24 hours a day every day. And we don't have them. (...) ... and then you have the enormous cost of campaigning, which means every politician who wants to buy TV time has got to sell his ass to somebody. And corporate America is ready to buy. (...) Ohio was stolen. The Republican Congress will never have a hearing on it. But I think attempts are being made to publish the details of what was done there, and elsewhere too in America. In other words, I put the case that Bush was never elected--not in 2000, and not in 2004. This is a new game in the world. Through the magic of electronic voting, particularly through Mr. Diebold and friends, you can take a non-president and make him president. But how to keep the people, including the opposition who should know better, so silent, this introduces us to a vast landscape of corruption which I dare not enter. (...) All we were doing at Abu Ghraib was export what we do to our own people in our own prisons, you know. (...)

The Undoing of America. Gore Vidal on war for oil, politics-free elections, and the late, great U.S. Constitution
by Steve Perry
City Pages

Iraq

Tens of thousands of supporters of Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr have marched in Baghdad to denounce the US presence in Iraq and call for a speedy trial of Saddam Hussein on the second anniversary of his overthrow.

Chanting "No, no to the occupiers", tens of thousands of young and old men gathered in the poor Shia district of Sadr City on Saturday to begin a planned peaceful march to al- Firdos Square , the central Baghdad spot where Saddam's statue was torn down two years ago. Crowds of al-Sadr's supporters from across the country were gathered at the square by mid-morning, waving Iraqi flags and calling out: "No America ! No Saddam! Yes to Islam!" Sunni Muslims were urged by the Association of Muslim Scholars in Iraq, an influential Sunni group, to demonstrate to mark the fall of Saddam and to demand US forces leave Iraq.

Shia protest over US presence in Iraq
Aljazeera
Saturday 09 April 2005

The Inquisition Pope

Visiting a synagogue and a mosque, issuing a few statements about Iraq and Palestine, opposition to capital punishment as an isolated issue--Sorry, but these and some other (mainly symbolic) "proofs" of John Paul's "humanity" and his "apostolate of peace" ring very, very hollow to this American Catholic who has had his tradition and his Church wrenched from him by an Eastern European rightwing fanatic in Pope's clothes.

The Pope Who Revived the Office of the Inquisition
An American Catholic Reflects on Papacy of John Paul II
by Jim Connolly
ZNet

The death of a reactionary

Karl Marx wrote that religion is “the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions.” For most followers, Christianity and Catholicism offer comfort in an unjust world. Church figures like the pope are associated with a system of ideas that helps people cope in the here and now, and gives them hope of a better world in the afterlife. That’s why so many Catholics can claim to be believers, even while living lives that are wholly opposed to the church’s musty dogma on issues like sexuality. Likewise, some social activists take inspiration from their Catholicism--with its Biblical injunctions to stand up for the downtrodden--in organizing against war and for social justice. But as an institution, the Catholic Church has always been on the side of the exploiters and oppressors--as probably the richest and most powerful institution throughout the last millennium, and a chief prop of an unjust system to this day. From the Crusades to conquer Muslim lands, to the Inquisition that tortured Jews and dissenters, to collaborating with Nazis during the Holocaust, the Catholic Church hierarchy has maintained itself by accommodating to the ruling class of the day. John Paul II stood squarely in that tradition. He doesn’t deserve to be remembered as a hero who opposed tyranny, but as a reactionary who did his utmost to preserve an institution built on bigotry, intolerance and injustice.

John Paul II, the Death of a Reactionary
By ALAN MAASS
Socialist Worker
April 8, 2005

USA, Israel and Liberal Education

(...) Liberal education is premised on certain fundamental principles: questioning received truths, valuing critical consciousness and independent thought, and working to overcome the silences and exclusions of ruling interests. So, for example, critiquing oppressive social norms is considered educationally valuable, as is promoting the pursuit of truth, freedom, and democratic participation. At its best, therefore, liberal education has always involved helping students to explain the real world (by determining the roots and causes of phenomena). But doing that for a very specific purpose: and that is in order to empower students to participate in changing the world for the better, i.e. to empower them to become agents of social transformation. A liberal education at its best should be committed to no less. (...) Let me begin with the US: The strategy of "ttacking, expanding, and becoming more powerful in the name of defense"is deeply entrenched in US nationalism. From the wars on Native Americans to the War on Terrorism, the US has always dubbed aggressive expansion as defensive action. (...) This same imperial principle of "expansion-by-defense" also applies to Israel's behavior since inception. (...) Such aggressive nationalism has another casualty, and this will bring me back to my opening remarks about liberal education. To achieve their expansionist objectives Israel and the US require conformity from intellectuals: independent thought and questioning have to be silenced. This has never been made clearer to me than in the encounter between Ben Gurion and the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber in 1949. Confronted with the ful