• Return of the Neocons | by Stephen Wertheim | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books
    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/01/02/return-of-the-neocons

    Even allowing for Trump’s opportunism and inconsistencies, his election victory appeared to deal a double blow to the neoconservative persuasion. It not only broke the neocons’ hold on the Republican Party, but also, in the same stroke, revealed that they lacked a popular constituency. There they were, free-floating pundits, alone and exposed—neither intellectually credible nor politically representative.

    Why, given this development, would Republican politicians respond by once again seeking out the neocons’ counsel? Why, far less, would Democrats? And why would much of the news media, grappling with historic levels of public distrust, accept neoconservatives and neoconservatism as the baseline for foreign policy analysis?

    Yet exactly this has happened. Today, neoconservatives are riding high once more, in the White House, on Capitol Hill, in the most prominent organs of opinion. The Weekly Standard may have shuttered, but anti-Trump neocons enjoy increasing influence in the center of the Republican and Democratic parties and in publications like The Atlantic and The Washington Post. Others, meanwhile—call them neo-neoconservatives, or post-neoconservatives—are busy making policy in the Trump administration. They’ve gone with Trump for good reason. Although he is repudiating the export of liberal democracy and degrading its practice at home, Trump is also reasserting the American right’s pugnacious antipathy to “globalism.” He is acting as many within the neocon firmament have long favored, positioning the United States against a vicious world and fetishizing brute force in response.

    Beaucoup de blabla.

    Il me semble que la seule conviction authentique des néoconservateurs est celle du recours à la force comme seul moyen de mater les récalcitrants et qu’ils n’ont pas le choix d’une autre méthode parce que leurs objectifs sont absolument inacceptables pour les populations voisines de l’état sioniste.

  • Joshua Landis sur Twitter :

    "The #Hariri family has earned $108 million between 2006 & 2015 from interest on the public debt. Lebanon’s “political #elites control 43% of assets in Lebanon’s commercial banking sector,” JadChaaban of AUB has calculated. Quoted by @ursulind in https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/12/02/the-lebanese-street-asks-which-is-stronger-sect-or-hunger” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/joshua_landis/status/1203736756283170816

    #Liban #mafia

  • The Great Biomass Boondoggle | by Mary S. Booth | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books
    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/10/14/the-great-biomass-boondoggle

    Since all the usual tactics of the nonprofit community had failed, including documentary photos, briefings, and scientific evidence, we felt we had no choice but to sue the EU (with the European Parliament and Council as defendants) over the new rules. My organization [http://www.pfpi.net] thus coordinated a March 2019 lawsuit that challenges inclusion of forest biomass in the new renewable energy directive. We worked with plaintiffs from the EU and the US who demonstrated in their testimony how the biomass industry is causing direct harm to their health and livelihoods, and we are now waiting to hear whether the EU court will accept the case.

    #agrocarburants #biocarburants #mensonges #climat #co2

  • Dans un village d’Arkansas, le souvenir disparu d’une #tuerie #raciste
    http://www.lefigaro.fr/elections-americaines/2016/10/07/01040-20161007ARTFIG00143-dans-un-village-d-arkansas-le-souvenir-disparu-d-

    À #Elaine, peu de traces subsistent du #lynchage de 237 #Noirs perpétré par des #Blancs en 1919. Il s’agit probablement du pire incident racial ayant eu lieu aux #États-Unis

    [...]

    Le #massacre s’est déroulé le 1er octobre 1919. La veille, des paysans noirs avaient consulté un #syndicat après des mois de plaintes concernant les abus de leurs patrons agricoles blancs. Un groupe de Blancs, craignant une révolte noire, tenta de faire échouer la réunion. Des incidents se produisirent à l’extérieur et un agent de sécurité blanc fut tué par balles. Le jour suivant, entre 500 et 1000 hommes blancs armés se rendirent à Elaine pour réprimer « l’insurrection ». Ils laissèrent nombre de morts dans leur sillage. Aucun ne fut condamné, 12 Noirs le seront. Certains Blancs prirent des photographies d’eux-mêmes à côté des corps sans vie en arborant un air suffisant.

    The Ghosts of Elaine, Arkansas, 1919 | by Jerome Karabel | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books
    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/09/30/the-ghosts-of-elaine-arkansas-1919

    Today, three times more black children live in poverty than do white children (46 to 15 percent), black life expectancy is nearly four years lower than that of whites, and median black family wealth is less than one fortieth that of white families ($3,557 versus $146,984). And although labor unions today do not face the kind of mob and state violence inflicted on the PFHUA, they do meet with fierce and sophisticated opposition from employers, who deploy a variety of tactics, both legal and illegal, to block unionization. The costs of labor union weakness have been steep for blacks and whites alike: inequality today is at its highest level since the 1920s, the minimum wage in the United States ranks far behind those of its major allies among the OECD countries, and chief executives at the largest corporations make, on average, 312 times more than the typical worker (up from a factor of twenty in 1965).

  • How the Right Has Tried to Rebrand Anti-Semitism | by Mairav Zonszein | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books
    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/09/04/how-the-right-has-tried-to-rebrand-anti-semitism

    ... the Israeli government and its US supporters have redoubled their efforts to render #BDS politically toxic, even criminally punishable. Their strategy is simple: to declare support for BDS intrinsically anti-Semitic because—the claim goes—the movement denies Israel the right to exist as a Jewish state. This rhetorical maneuver suppresses an essential point for many that BDS is not a denial of Israel’s right to exist as such, but an objection to its right to exist as a state that affords rights based on ethnicity (as opposed to a civic nationalism that grants equal rights to all citizens) . Israel, as a national homeland for Jews, gives Jews a right to a country, but the military and geopolitical power Israel has amassed since gaining independence has emboldened the state to control as much territory as possible while largely denying Palestinians civil rights inside Israel’s 1948 borders and their right to self-determination in areas occupied after 1967.

    Over time, Israel’s hawkish leadership has construed criticism of its policies as hatred of Jews. The logic has stretched so far that today being pro-Israel appears necessarily to entail being anti-Palestinian. This semantic feat relies on a modern redefinition of anti-Semitism, sometimes called “the New Anti-Semitism,” as primarily a racist hostility toward Israel. The term dates from the last decades of the twentieth century, but it solidified when a 2001 UN conference notoriously drafted a declaration that Zionism was racism. (After the US and Israel withdrew from the meeting in protest, the statement was dropped, but the damage was done.) In the hands of the pro-Israel political right, the New Anti-Semitism effectively flipped the script by declaring that anti-Zionism is racism. In doing so, it added new tropes of “demonization” and “delegitimization” of Israel to the ancient slurs of traditional racism against Jews.

    Proponents of the New Anti-Semitism also seek to identify a specifically left-wing form of anti-Semitism, distinct from the traditional far-right manifestations. As Israeli politics, particularly under the governments of Netanyahu, have moved farther and farther to the right, it was inevitable that the definitions of the New Anti-Semitism would harden into a dogma deployed to silence progressives who criticize Israel and advocate for Palestinian rights.

    #antisémitisme #sionisme #racisme #Palestine

  • Call immigrant detention centers what they really are: concentration camps

    If you were paying close attention last week, you might have spotted a pattern in the news. Peeking out from behind the breathless coverage of the Trump family’s tuxedoed trip to London was a spate of deaths of immigrants in U.S. custody: Johana Medina Léon, a 25-year-old transgender asylum seeker; an unnamed 33-year-old Salvadoran man; and a 40-year-old woman from Honduras.

    Photos from a Border Patrol processing center in El Paso showed people herded so tightly into cells that they had to stand on toilets to breathe. Memos surfaced by journalist Ken Klippenstein revealed that Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s failure to provide medical care was responsible for suicides and other deaths of detainees. These followed another report that showed that thousands of detainees are being brutally held in isolation cells just for being transgender or mentally ill.

    Also last week, the Trump administration cut funding for classes, recreation and legal aid at detention centers holding minors — which were likened to “summer camps” by a senior ICE official last year. And there was the revelation that months after being torn from their parents’ arms, 37 children were locked in vans for up to 39 hours in the parking lot of a detention center outside Port Isabel, Texas. In the last year, at least seven migrant children have died in federal custody.

    Preventing mass outrage at a system like this takes work. Certainly it helps that the news media covers these horrors intermittently rather than as snowballing proof of a racist, lawless administration. But most of all, authorities prevail when the places where people are being tortured and left to die stay hidden, misleadingly named and far from prying eyes.

    There’s a name for that kind of system. They’re called concentration camps. You might balk at my use of the term. That’s good — it’s something to be balked at.

    The goal of concentration camps has always been to be ignored. The German-Jewish political theorist Hannah Arendt, who was imprisoned by the Gestapo and interned in a French camp, wrote a few years afterward about the different levels of concentration camps. Extermination camps were the most extreme; others were just about getting “undesirable elements … out of the way.” All had one thing in common: “The human masses sealed off in them are treated as if they no longer existed, as if what happened to them were no longer of interest to anybody, as if they were already dead.”

    Euphemisms play a big role in that forgetting. The term “concentration camp” is itself a euphemism. It was invented by a Spanish official to paper over his relocation of millions of rural families into squalid garrison towns where they would starve during Cuba’s 1895 independence war. When President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered Japanese Americans into prisons during World War II, he initially called them concentration camps. Americans ended up using more benign names, like “Manzanar Relocation Center.”

    Even the Nazis’ camps started out small, housing criminals, Communists and opponents of the regime. It took five years to begin the mass detention of Jews. It took eight, and the outbreak of a world war, for the first extermination camps to open. Even then, the Nazis had to keep lying to distract attention, claiming Jews were merely being resettled to remote work sites. That’s what the famous signs — Arbeit Macht Frei, or “Work Sets You Free” — were about.

    Subterfuge doesn’t always work. A year ago, Americans accidentally became aware that the Trump administration had adopted (and lied about) a policy of ripping families apart at the border. The flurry of attention was thanks to the viral conflation of two separate but related stories: the family-separation order and bureaucrats’ admission that they’d been unable to locate thousands of migrant children who’d been placed with sponsors after crossing the border alone.

    Trump shoved that easily down the memory hole. He dragged his heels a bit, then agreed to a new policy: throwing whole families into camps together. Political reporters posed irrelevant questions, like whether President Obama had been just as bad, and what it meant for the midterms. Then they moved on.

    It is important to note that Trump’s aides have built this system of racist terror on something that has existed for a long time. Several camps opened under Obama, and as president he deported millions of people.

    But Trump’s game is different. It certainly isn’t about negotiating immigration reform with Congress. Trump has made it clear that he wants to stifle all non-white immigration, period. His mass arrests, iceboxes and dog cages are part of an explicitly nationalist project to put the country under the control of the right kind of white people.

    As a Republican National Committee report noted in 2013: “The nation’s demographic changes add to the urgency of recognizing how precarious our position has become.” The Trump administration’s attempt to put a citizenship question on the 2020 census was also just revealed to have been a plot to disadvantage political opponents and boost “Republicans and Non-Hispanic Whites” all along.

    That’s why this isn’t just a crisis facing immigrants. When a leader puts people in camps to stay in power, history shows that he doesn’t usually stop with the first group he detains.

    There are now at least 48,000 people detained in ICE facilities, which a former official told BuzzFeed News “could swell indefinitely.” Customs and Border Protection officials apprehended more than 144,000 people on the Southwest border last month. (The New York Times dutifully reported this as evidence of a “dramatic surge in border crossings,” rather than what it was: The administration using its own surge of arrests to justify the rest of its policies.)

    If we call them what they are — a growing system of American concentration camps — we will be more likely to give them the attention they deserve. We need to know their names: Port Isabel, Dilley, Adelanto, Hutto and on and on. With constant, unrelenting attention, it is possible we might alleviate the plight of the people inside, and stop the crisis from getting worse. Maybe people won’t be able to disappear so easily into the iceboxes. Maybe it will be harder for authorities to lie about children’s deaths.

    Maybe Trump’s concentration camps will be the first thing we think of when we see him scowling on TV.

    The only other option is to leave it up to those in power to decide what’s next. That’s a calculated risk. As Andrea Pitzer, author of “One Long Night,” one of the most comprehensive books on the history of concentration camps, recently noted: “Every country has said their camps are humane and will be different. Trump is instinctively an authoritarian. He’ll take them as far as he’s allowed to.”

    https://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-katz-immigrant-concentration-camps-20190609-story.html
    #terminologie #vocabulaire #mots #camps #camps_de_concentration #centres_de_détention #détention_administrative #rétention #USA #Etats-Unis
    #cpa_camps

    • ‘Some Suburb of Hell’: America’s New Concentration Camp System

      On Monday, New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez referred to US border detention facilities as “concentration camps,” spurring a backlash in which critics accused her of demeaning the memory of those who died in the Holocaust. Debates raged over a label for what is happening along the southern border and grew louder as the week rolled on. But even this back-and-forth over naming the camps has been a recurrent feature in the mass detention of civilians ever since its inception, a history that long predates the Holocaust.

      At the heart of such policy is a question: What does a country owe desperate people whom it does not consider to be its citizens? The twentieth century posed this question to the world just as the shadow of global conflict threatened for the second time in less than three decades. The dominant response was silence, and the doctrine of absolute national sovereignty meant that what a state did to people under its control, within its borders, was nobody else’s business. After the harrowing toll of the Holocaust with the murder of millions, the world revisited its answer, deciding that perhaps something was owed to those in mortal danger. From the Fourth Geneva Convention protecting civilians in 1949 to the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child, the international community established humanitarian obligations toward the most vulnerable that apply, at least in theory, to all nations.

      The twenty-first century is unraveling that response. Countries are rejecting existing obligations and meeting asylum seekers with walls and fences, from detainees fleeing persecution who were sent by Australia to third-party detention in the brutal offshore camps of Manus and Nauru to razor-wire barriers blocking Syrian refugees from entering Hungary. While some nations, such as Germany, wrestle with how to integrate refugees into their labor force—more and more have become resistant to letting them in at all. The latest location of this unwinding is along the southern border of the United States.

      So far, American citizens have gotten only glimpses of the conditions in the border camps that have been opened in their name. In the month of May, Customs and Border Protection reported a total of 132,887 migrants who were apprehended or turned themselves in between ports of entry along the southwest border, an increase of 34 percent from April alone. Upon apprehension, these migrants are temporarily detained by Border Patrol, and once their claims are processed, they are either released or handed over to ICE for longer-term detention. Yet Border Patrol itself is currently holding about 15,000 people, nearly four times what government officials consider to be this enforcement arm’s detention capacity.

      On June 12, the Department of Health and Human Services announced that Fort Sill, an Army post that hosted a World War II internment camp for detainees of Japanese descent, will now be repurposed to detain migrant children. In total, HHS reports that it is currently holding some 12,000 minors. Current law limits detention of minors to twenty days, though Senator Lindsey Graham has proposed expanding the court-ordered limit to 100 days. Since the post is on federal land, it will be exempt from state child welfare inspections.

      In addition to the total of detainees held by Border Patrol, an even higher number is detained at centers around the country by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency: on a typical day at the beginning of this month, ICE was detaining more than 52,500 migrants. The family separation policy outraged the public in the 2018, but despite legal challenges, it never fully ended. Less publicized have been the deaths of twenty-four adults in ICE custody since the beginning of the Trump administration; in addition, six children between the ages of two and sixteen have died in federal custody over the last several months. It’s not clear whether there have been other deaths that have gone unreported.

      Conditions for detainees have not been improving. At the end of May, a Department of Homeland Security inspector general found nearly 900 migrants at a Texas shelter built for a capacity of 125 people. On June 11, a university professor spotted at least 100 men behind chain-link fences near the Paso del Norte Bridge in El Paso, Texas. Those detainees reported sitting outside for weeks in temperatures that soared above 100 degrees. Taylor Levy, an El Paso immigration lawyer, described going into one facility and finding “a suicidal four-year-old whose face was covered in bloody, self-inflicted scratches… Another young child had to be restrained by his mother because he kept running full-speed into metal lockers. He was covered in bruises.”

      If deciding what to do about the growing numbers of adults and children seeking refuge in the US relies on complex humanitarian policies and international laws, in which most Americans don’t take a deep interest, a simpler question also presents itself: What exactly are these camps that the Trump administration has opened, and where is this program of mass detention headed?

      Even with incomplete information about what’s happening along the border today and what the government plans for these camps, history points to some conclusions about their future. Mass detention without trial earned a new name and a specific identity at the end of the nineteenth century. The labels then adopted for the practice were “reconcentración” and “concentration camps”—places of forced relocation of civilians into detention on the basis of group identity.

      Other kinds of group detention had appeared much earlier in North American history. The US government drove Native Americans from their homelands into prescribed exile, with death and detention in transit camps along the way. Some Spanish mission systems in the Americas had accomplished similar ends by seizing land and pressing indigenous people into forced labor. During the 245 years when slavery was legal in the US, detention was one of its essential features.

      Concentration camps, however, don’t typically result from the theft of land, as happened with Native Americans, or owning human beings in a system of forced labor, as in the slave trade. Exile, theft, and forced labor can come later, but in the beginning, detention itself is usually the point of concentration camps. By the end of the nineteenth century, the mass production of barbed wire and machines guns made this kind of detention possible and practical in ways it never had been before.

      Under Spanish rule in 1896, the governor-general of Cuba instituted camps in order to clear rebel-held regions during an uprising, despite his predecessor’s written refusal “as the representative of a civilized nation, to be the first to give the example of cruelty and intransigence” that such detention would represent. After women and children began dying in vast numbers behind barbed wire because there had been little planning for shelter and even less for food, US President William McKinley made his call to war before Congress. He spoke against the policy of reconcentración, calling it warfare by uncivilized means. “It was extermination,” McKinley said. “The only peace it could beget was that of the wilderness and the grave.” Without full records, the Cuban death toll can only be estimated, but a consensus puts it in the neighborhood of 150,000, more than 10 percent of the island’s prewar population.

      Today, we remember the sinking of the USS Maine as the spark that ignited the Spanish-American War. But war correspondent George Kennan (cousin of the more famous diplomat) believed that “it was the suffering of the reconcentrados, more, perhaps, than any other one thing that brought about the intervention of the United States.” On April 25, 1898, Congress declared war. Two weeks later, US Marines landed at Fisherman’s Point on the windward side of the entrance to Guantánamo Bay in Cuba. After a grim, week-long fight, the Marines took the hill. It became a naval base, and the United States has never left that patch of land.

      As part of the larger victory, the US inherited the Philippines. The world’s newest imperial power also inherited a rebellion. Following a massacre of American troops at Balangiga in September 1901, during the third year of the conflict, the US established its own concentration camp system. Detainees, mostly women and children, were forced into squalid conditions that one American soldier described in a letter to a US senator as “some suburb of hell.” In the space of only four months, more than 11,000 Filipinos are believed to have died in these noxious camps.

      Meanwhile, in southern Africa in 1900, the British had opened their own camps during their battle with descendants of Dutch settlers in the second Boer War. British soldiers filled tent cities with Boer women and children, and the military authorities called them refugee camps. Future Prime Minister David Lloyd George took offense at that name, noting in Parliament: “There is no greater delusion in the mind of any man than to apply the term ‘refugee’ to these camps. They are not refugee camps. They are camps of concentration.” Contemporary observers compared them to the Cuban camps, and criticized their deliberate cruelty. The Bishop of Hereford wrote to The Times of London in 1901, asking: “Are we reduced to such a depth of impotence that our Government can do nothing to stop such a holocaust of child-life?”

      Maggoty meat rations and polluted water supplies joined outbreaks of contagious diseases amid crowded and unhealthy conditions in the Boer camps. More than 27,000 detainees are thought to have died there, nearly 80 percent of them children. The British had opened camps for black Africans as well, in which at least 14,000 detainees died—the real number is probably much higher. Aside from protests made by some missionaries, the deaths of indigenous black Africans did not inspire much public outrage. Much of the history of the suffering in these camps has been lost.

      These early experiments with concentration camps took place on the periphery of imperial power, but accounts of them nevertheless made their way into newspapers and reports in many nations. As a result, the very idea of them came to be seen as barbaric. By the end of the first decade of the twentieth century, the first camp systems had all been closed, and concentration camps had nearly vanished as an institution. Within months of the outbreak of World War I, though, they would be resurrected—this time rising not at the margins but in the centers of power. Between 1914 and 1918, camps were constructed on an unprecedented scale across six continents. In their time, these camps were commonly called concentration camps, though today they are often referred to by the more anodyne term “internment.”

      Those World War I detainees were, for the most part, foreigners—or, in legalese, aliens—and recent anti-immigration legislation in several countries had deliberately limited their rights. The Daily Mail denounced aliens left at liberty once they had registered with their local police department, demanding, “Does signing his name take the malice out of a man?” The Scottish Field was more direct, asking, “Do Germans have souls?” That these civilian detainees were no threat to Britain did not keep them from being demonized, shouted at, and spat upon as they were paraded past hostile crowds in cities like London.

      Though a small number of people were shot in riots in these camps, and hunger became a serious issue as the conflict dragged on, World War I internment would present a new, non-lethal face for the camps, normalizing detention. Even after the war, new camps sprang up from Spain to Hungary and Cuba, providing an improvised “solution” for everything from vagrancy to anxieties over the presence of Jewish foreigners.

      Some of these camps were clearly not safe for those interned. Local camps appeared in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1921, after a white mob burned down a black neighborhood and detained African-American survivors. In Bolshevik Russia, the first concentration camps preceded the formation of the Soviet Union in 1922 and planted seeds for the brutal Gulag system that became official near the end of the USSR’s first decade. While some kinds of camps were understood to be harsher, after World War I their proliferation did not initially disturb public opinion. They had yet to take on their worst incarnations.

      In 1933, barely more than a month after Hitler was appointed chancellor, the Nazis’ first, impromptu camp opened in the town of Nohra in central Germany to hold political opponents. Detainees at Nohra were allowed to vote at a local precinct in the elections of March 5, 1933, resulting in a surge of Communist ballots in the tiny town. Locking up groups of civilians without trial had become accepted. Only the later realization of the horrors of the Nazi death camps would break the default assumption by governments and the public that concentration camps could and should be a simple way to manage populations seen as a threat.

      However, the staggering death toll of the Nazi extermination camp system—which was created mid-war and stood almost entirely separate from the concentration camps in existence since 1933—led to another result: a strange kind of erasure. In the decades that followed World War II, the term “concentration camp” came to stand only for Auschwitz and other extermination camps. It was no longer applied to the kind of extrajudicial detention it had denoted for generations. The many earlier camps that had made the rise of Auschwitz possible largely vanished from public memory.

      It is not necessary, however, to step back a full century in American history to find camps with links to what is happening on the US border today. Detention at Guantánamo began in the 1990s, when Haitian and Cuban immigrants whom the government wanted to keep out of the United States were housed there in waves over a four-year period—years before the “war on terror” and the US policy of rendition of suspected “enemy combatants” made Camps Delta, X-Ray, and Echo notorious. Tens of thousands of Haitians fleeing instability at home were picked up at sea and diverted to the Cuban base, to limit their legal right to apply for asylum. The court cases and battles over the suffering of those detainees ended up setting the stage for what Guantánamo would become after September 11, 2001.

      In one case, a federal court ruled that it did have jurisdiction over the base, but the government agreed to release the Haitians who were part of the lawsuit in exchange for keeping that ruling off the books. A ruling in a second case would assert that the courts did not have jurisdiction. Absent the prior case, the latter stood on its own as precedent. Leaving Guantánamo in this gray area made it an ideal site for extrajudicial detention and torture after the twin towers fell.

      This process of normalization, when a bad camp becomes much more dangerous, is not unusual. Today’s border camps are a crueler reflection of long-term policies—some challenged in court—that earlier presidents had enacted. Prior administrations own a share of the responsibility for today’s harsh practices, but the policies in place today are also accompanied by a shameless willingness to publicly target a vulnerable population in increasingly dangerous ways.

      I visited Guantánamo twice in 2015, sitting in the courtroom for pretrial hearings and touring the medical facility, the library, and all the old abandoned detention sites, as well as newly built ones, open to the media—from the kennel-style cages of Camp X-Ray rotting to ruin in the damp heat to the modern jailhouse facilities of Camp 6. Seeing all this in person made clear to me how vast the architecture of detention had become, how entrenched it was, and how hard it would be to close.

      Without a significant government effort to reverse direction, conditions in every camp system tend to deteriorate over time. Governments rarely make that kind of effort on behalf of people they are willing to lock up without trial in the first place. And history shows that legislatures do not close camps against the will of an executive.

      Just a few years ago there might have been more potential for change spurred by the judicial branch of our democracy, but this Supreme Court is inclined toward deference to executive power, even, it appears, if that power is abused. It seems unlikely this Court will intervene to end the new border camp system; indeed, the justices are far more likely to institutionalize it by half-measures, as happened with Guantánamo. The Korematsu case, in which the Supreme Court upheld Japanese-American internment (a ruling only rescinded last year), relied on the suppression of evidence by the solicitor general. Americans today can have little confidence that this administration would behave any more scrupulously when defending its detention policy.

      What kind of conditions can we expect to develop in these border camps? The longer a camp system stays open, the more likely it is that vital things will go wrong: detainees will contract contagious diseases and suffer from malnutrition and mental illness. We have already seen that current detention practices have resulted in children and adults succumbing to influenza, staph infections, and sepsis. The US is now poised to inflict harm on tens of thousands more, perhaps hundreds of thousands more.

      Along with such inevitable consequences, every significant camp system has introduced new horrors of its own, crises that were unforeseen when that system was opened. We have yet to discover what those will be for these American border camps. But they will happen. Every country thinks it can do detention better when it starts these projects. But no good way to conduct mass indefinite detention has yet been devised; the system always degrades.

      When, in 1940, Margarete Buber-Neumann was transferred from the Soviet Gulag at Karaganda to the camp for women at Ravensbrück (in an exchange enabled by the Nazi–Soviet Pact), she came from near-starvation conditions in the USSR and was amazed at the cleanliness and order of the Nazi camp. New arrivals were issued clothing, bedding, and silverware, and given fresh porridge, fruit, sausage, and jam to eat. Although the Nazi camps were already punitive, order-obsessed monstrosities, the wartime overcrowding that would soon overtake them had not yet made daily life a thing of constant suffering and squalor. The death camps were still two years away.

      The United States now has a vast and growing camp system. It is starting out with gruesome overcrowding and inadequate healthcare, and because of budget restrictions, has already taken steps to cut services to juvenile detainees. The US Office of Refugee Resettlement says that the mounting number of children arriving unaccompanied is forcing it to use military bases and other sites that it prefers to avoid, and that establishing these camps is a temporary measure. But without oversight from state child welfare inspectors, the possibilities for neglect and abuse are alarming. And without any knowledge of how many asylum-seekers are coming in the future, federal administrators are likely to find themselves boxed in to managing detention on military sites permanently.

      President Trump and senior White House adviser Stephen Miller appear to have purged the Department of Homeland Security of most internal opposition to their anti-immigrant policies. In doing so, that have removed even those sympathetic to the general approach taken by the White House, such as former Chief of Staff John Kelly and former Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, in order to escalate the militarization of the border and expand irregular detention in more systematic and punitive ways. This kind of power struggle or purge in the early years of a camp system is typical.

      The disbanding of the Cheka, the Soviet secret police, in February 1922 and the transfer of its commander, Felix Dzerzhinsky, to head up an agency with control over only two prisons offered a hint of an alternate future in which extrajudicial detention would not play a central role in the fledgling Soviet republic. But Dzerzhinsky managed to keep control over the “special camps” in his new position, paving the way for the emergence of a camp-centered police state. In pre-war Germany in the mid-1930s, Himmler’s struggle to consolidate power from rivals eventually led him to make camps central to Nazi strategy. When the hardliners win, as they appear to have in the US, conditions tend to worsen significantly.

      Is it possible this growth in the camp system will be temporary and the improvised border camps will soon close? In theory, yes. But the longer they remain open, the less likely they are to vanish. When I visited the camps for Rohingya Muslims a year before the large-scale campaign of ethnic cleansing began, many observers appeared to be confusing the possible and the probable. It was possible that the party of Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi would sweep into office in free elections and begin making changes. It was possible that full democracy would come to all the residents of Myanmar, even though the government had stripped the Rohingya of the last vestiges of their citizenship. These hopes proved to be misplaced. Once there are concentration camps, it is always probable that things will get worse.

      The Philippines, Japanese-American internment, Guantánamo… we can consider the fine points of how the current border camps evoke past US systems, and we can see how the arc of camp history reveals the likelihood that the suffering we’re currently inflicting will be multiplied exponentially. But we can also simply look at what we’re doing right now, shoving bodies into “dog pound”-style detention pens, “iceboxes,” and standing room-only spaces. We can look at young children in custody who have become suicidal. How much more historical awareness do we really need?

      https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/06/21/some-suburb-of-hell-americas-new-concentration-camp-system

    • #Alexandria_Ocasio-Cortez engage le bras de fer avec la politique migratoire de Donald Trump

      L’élue de New York a qualifié les camps de rétention pour migrants érigés à la frontière sud des Etats-Unis de « camps de concentration ».

      https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/06/19/alexandria-ocasio-cortez-engage-le-bras-de-fer-avec-la-politique-migratoire-

  • ’Orientalism,’ Then and Now | by Adam Shatz | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books

    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/05/20/orientalism-then-and-now

    Un retour sur l’histoire de l’orientalisme et sa « mutation » à l’époque actuelle.

    Edward Said’s Orientalism is one of the most influential works of intellectual history of the postwar era. It is also one of the most misunderstood. Perhaps the most common misunderstanding is that it is “about” the Middle East; on the contrary, it is a study of Western representations of the Arab-Islamic world—of what Said called “mind-forg’d manacles,” after William Blake. The book’s conservative critics misread it as a nativist denunciation of Western scholarship, ignoring its praise for Louis Massignon, Jacques Berque, and Clifford Geertz, while some Islamists praised the book on the basis of the same misunderstanding, overlooking Said’s commitment to secular politics.

    Since the book’s first publication in 1978, “Orientalism” has become one of those words that shuts down conversation on liberal campuses, where no one wants to be accused of being “Orientalist” any more than they want to be called racist, sexist, homophobic, or transphobic. That “Orientalist” is now a commonly applied epithet is a tribute to the power of Said’s account, but also to its vulgarization. With Orientalism, Said wanted to open a discussion about the way the Arab-Islamic world had been imagined by the West—not to prevent a clear-eyed reckoning with the region’s problems, of which he was all too painfully aware.

  • One Year of Gaza Protests. A New Era of Palestinian Struggle? | Tareq Baconi
    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/03/29/one-year-of-gaza-protests-a-new-era-of-palestinian-struggle

    As I was driving from Jericho to Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank, in early March, I noticed a large sign that Palestinians had set up in preparation for Land Day, on the thirtieth of the month. The sign showed the now ubiquitous Banksy print of a protester, with his nose and mouth covered, hurtling a bouquet of flowers—presumably in place of a Molotov cocktail—at an invisible oppressor. The drawing had been printed under one of the best-known lines by the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish: On this Land, there is what makes life worth living. Source: The New York Review of Books

  • The Impact of #MeToo in France: An Interview with Lénaïg Bredoux | Aida Alami
    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/03/13/the-impact-of-metoo-in-france-an-interview-with-lenaig-bredoux

    In 2011, when Dominique Strauss-Kahn, then the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, was arrested in a Manhattan hotel on rape charges, Lénaïg Bredoux, a Paris-based reporter, watched the reporting in dismay. At the time, the French media largely devoted itself to criticizing the American judicial system instead of investigating allegations that had dogged Strauss-Kahn for years. Moved to action, she contacted the French journalist Tristane Banon, who, in 2007, publicly accused him of sexually assaulting her in 2003 and that is how Bredoux uncovered a culture of silence inside the French Socialist Party. Source: The New York Review of (...)

  • Waiting with Immigrants

    To be an immigrant in America is to wait. This goes double for the millions of immigrants who have found themselves at the sour end of the Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) bureaucracy—and triple in the age of Trump. If you are an immigrant in the process of deportation proceedings, you must wait for your Master Calendar, on which a bureaucrat will assign you to a check-in date several months into the future. At this check-in, you may win several more months of anxious waiting—or disappear into a detention center, where you will wait for a one-way plane ride to a country you may no longer know. And if, for instance, your paperwork is straight but, twenty years ago, you jumped a turnstile or got into a barfight, then ICE has a mandate to hunt you down. Once snatched, you, too, will wait in a detention center, losing your job, your apartment, and possibly your health, while the months pass until a judge grants you a bond hearing. Then, you will appear in court—in chains or via video link—and learn how many thousands of dollars your family must pay for you to have the privilege of waiting outside a cage.


    https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/01/29/waiting-with-immigrants
    #attente #migrations #réfugiés #USA #Etats-Unis #asile #bureaucratie

  • Poétique politique, une histoire des chansons de luttes francophones.

    Pendant une semaine, Rocé explique sa recherche de plusieurs années sur l’histoire des musiques de luttes francophones, par les damnés elleux-mêmes, les colonisés, les ouvriers. Avec pas mal de femmes aussi dedans. Une redécouverte de slam et spoken word en français, depuis longtemps avant que le rap n’arrive de ce côté de l’océan. C’est un énorme projet ! Qui sort en septembre.

    Rocé, aux origines de la recherche
    http://nova.fr/podcast/nova-stories/roce-aux-origines-de-la-recherche

    (Je ne sais pas comment trouver les mp3 de l’émission comme sur radio france depuis les RSS ping @intempestive)

    Le rappeur Rocé livre les coulisses de son projet Par les damnés de la terre, qui va faire l’objet d’une compilation à la rentrée de septembre. Une recherche de plusieurs années, de rencontres de hasard en flair attentif, il est parti à l’origine du spoken word à la française, via les « chansons de luttes » depuis la fin des années 1960. On part dans le XIXe arrondissement de Paris, au Cameroun, au Burkina, à Haïti, à New York... « C’est important de réunir avec cohérence cette énergie du passé si présent dans nos quotidiens, ces voix qui résonnent aujourd’hui dans le rap et ailleurs, les voix des vaincus, des subalternes, des damnés de la terre », nous dit Rocé.

    Des morceaux qui servaient pour les luttes sociales ou anticoloniales. Une quête subjective, qui l’a mené de rencontres en rencontres. Selon lui, on trouve là une des sources d’un spoken word francophone, qui a nourri plus ou moins directement le slam et le hip-hop français. Comme une branche de l’arbre pas encore totalement découverte.

    2ème : L’esthétique et la politique
    http://nova.fr/podcast/nova-stories/lesthetique-et-la-politique

    Parti du free jazz, conseillé par un ami disquaire, mais passé aussi par un underground sans œillère et l’écoute de francs-tireurs multiples, le projet de Rocé se nourrit de multiples racines. Ce qui lui parle : le mélange d’une teneur politique, mais esthétique forte : funk, blues... « Je cherche les Last poets à la française », dit Rocé. « Le proto-rap, le rap avant le rap ». La playlist du jour va de Francis Bebey aux chants de luttes sociales de la Régie Renault à la fin des années 1960.

    3ème : Un nom en entraîne un autre
    http://nova.fr/podcast/nova-stories/un-nom-en-entraine-un-autre

    En partant d’une pochette de disque, Rocé trouve des noms de labels, puis des figures comme François Tusques, pièce maîtresse du free jazz français, et enfin des noms qui restent clandestins et compliqués à trouver. À l’écoute, notamment : « Déménagement », par Salah Sadaoui, « Le Mal du pays », par Manno Charlemagne...

    4ème : Dane Belany, l’aventure américaine
    http://nova.fr/podcast/nova-stories/dane-belany-laventure-americaine

    Le projet a permis à Rocé de retrouver des artistes oubliés. Dane Belany en faire partie. Chanteuse noire d’origine turque et sénégalaise, qui chantait dans les cabarets de Pigalle, elle côtoyait du beau monde parisien, avant de partir à New York. Là-bas elle a rencontré Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, croisé James Baldwin. Une maladie lui fait perdre sa voix. Elle s’est mise à clamer des textes en français, de David Diop, Aimé Césaire... Ce qui donne un disque dédicacé à Frantz Fanon. Rocé l’a retrouvée...

    5ème : Un chapitre africain
    http://nova.fr/podcast/nova-stories/un-chapitre-africain

    On termine cette Nova Story par un zoom sur la partie africaine des recherches de Rocé. Qui commence par un morceau d’Abdoulaye Cissé, figure de la musique burkinabè, mandaté par le président Thomas Sankara, créateur à sa demande de deux groupes : Les chanteurs au poing levé et Les Colombes de la Révolution. Rocé retrouve Abdoulaye Cissé, qui l’aide aujourd’hui dans ses travaux.

    #musique #Rocé #Histoire #luttes_sociales #damnés_de_la_terre #colonisation #chanson #spoken_word #slam #radio #audio #Radio_Nova #historicisation

    et cc @intempestive @sinehebdo @mad_meg @odilon @touti

    • les urls sont des redirections du proxy google, il faut donc cliquer sur celles que tu as données pour les retrouver ! (ce qui permet à google d’enregistrer qui va écouter quoi avant de te laisser l’accès)

    • L’album arrive ! Premier extrait ! (et on peut le commander)
      https://horscadres.bandcamp.com/album/par-les-damn-e-s-de-la-terre

      Je fais partie de cette génération qui a vu naître le rap français, et avec lui l’énorme engouement pour cette musique des enfants de la deuxième et troisième génération d’immigrés. J’ai voulu creuser au-delà du rap, fouiller les artistes de la langue française qui véhiculent la poésie de l’urgence, la poésie à fleur de peau, engagée malgré elle parce que le contexte ne lui donne pas le choix. La poésie des « damné.e.s de la terre ». Dans l’ombre des chanteurs à texte médiatisés existent des femmes et des hommes devenus artistes juste le temps d’un disque.
      Inutile de chercher dans ce recueil le morceau « exotique et funky », extrait du folklore destiné à la métropole. Rythmes et textes sont vêtus de leur propre « blues » dur et sincère. La langue française réunit des régions du monde qui portent des fardeaux communs. Géopolitique et sentiments se mêlent. Les paroles des anciens résonnent jusque dans les oreilles des enfants d’aujourd’hui, ceux des diasporas. Un bon nombre des artistes présent.e.s dans ce recueil n’a pas eu la chance de croiser son public à l’époque, je pense que le contexte actuel des migrations et des questionnements identitaires donnera une résonance toute particulière à ces textes et à ces musiques.

      Deux historiens, Naïma Yahi et Amzat Boukari-Yabara, écrivent le livret du disque, ils décrivent les contextes de l’époque et des pays dont proviennent les morceaux.

      Ce projet, musical et de patrimoine, répond à un besoin : (re)donner la voix aux nouvelles générations qui évoluent en France avec une absence d’identification, un oubli de l’histoire de leurs parents dans le paysage politique et culturel qu’elles traversent en grandissant. Il écrit une autre histoire de la musique en français. A la jonction des luttes de libération des pays d’origines, des luttes ouvrières, des exils, il cristallise une époque où les luttes bâtissaient des fraternités, des affirmations, de la dignité, des liens entre les peuples opprimés et des convergences que l’Histoire des livres scolaires ne dit pas. Il est important à mes yeux de transmettre ces moments de tous les possibles afin d’en imprégner la morosité dans laquelle grandissent les nouvelles générations.

      Les enfants des diasporas et ceux des travailleur.euse.s ouvrier.ère.s ont besoin d’avoir des espaces de transmission de l’histoire de leurs parents. Ces parents qui ont sacrifié des années dans des luttes ou dans l’exil et qui ont choisi pour leurs enfants une intégration dans la discrétion et pointée vers un futur sans le poids d’une lourde mémoire. Le passé ne se transmet pas facilement lorsqu’il est emprunt de tabous et qu’on pense ses enfants libres, sauvés, car nés en France. Mais les combats de nos aînés, à la vue des luttes actuelles, sont précieux et utiles. Le présent se débrouille mieux lorsqu’il a de la mémoire.

      Ce disque est donc un constat, un bout de mémoire qui montre que le champ des possibles était ouvert un court moment, avant d’être refermé, nous plongeant dans l’individualisme, le court terme, l’absence de projets de société. L’absence des ces histoires dans l’Histoire nous prive de l’espoir, des notions de fraternité, de résistance, de modes d’emplois d’autodéfense. L’époque actuelle nous impose ses fictions dystopiques, des histoires d’échecs et d’impasses.

      Le sillon fossilisé dans le disque m’a permis de découvrir des artistes et intellectuels qui ont transmis des solutions multiples. On connaît trop peu le personnage de Frantz Fanon, ce Martiniquais qui a épousé la cause algérienne, on connaît trop peu le grand Franklin Boukaka, artiste congolais qui rend hommage dans une chanson à Mehdi Ben Barka, homme politique marocain. Il a existé un soutien entre étudiants guadeloupéens pour l’indépendance de la Guadeloupe et un militant corse du FLNC qui a décidé d’héberger sur son label leur musique.
      Nous pouvons être tous d’accord, ça ne sert à rien s’il n’y a pas de projet commun. Je ne sais pas comment sera demain, ce que je sais c’est qu’avec la mémoire nous pouvons additionner la force et l’union des peuples d’hier aux diasporas et subalternes d’aujourd’hui. Nous placer au centre de l’histoire que l’on nous conte afin de rompre avec la logique impérialiste.


      « Voir ce qui n’avait pas lieu d’être vu, faire entendre comme discours ce qui n’était entendu que comme un bruit. » Jacques Rancière

      Rocé

    • Yes ! et vendredi 2 novembre, à l’occasion de la sortie du projet tant attendu, grand entretien avec Rocé sur www.jefklak.org ! Le livret, le projet et les sons/chansons sont plus qu’indispensables !

    • Pour celles et ceux qui ont aimé Par les damné·es de la terre collecté par monsieur @Roce, on pourra continuer le chemin avec

      MOBILISATION GENERALE/ Protest and Spirit Jazz from France 1970-1976

      Commande & écoute ici : http://www.bornbadrecords.net/releases/bb057-va-mobilisation-generale-protest-and-spirit-jazz-from-france-1

      1968. France société anonyme. L’incendie est déclaré et tout l’immeuble est entrain de s’effondrer. On ne sauvera rien. Des décombres du vieux monde les enfants de Marx et de Coca Cola surgissent pour arracher le bleu et le blanc au drapeau tricolore. Le fond de l’air est rouge et la musique n’adoucira plus les mœurs. Le chantier peut commencer.

      Si les Stones, les Who, les Kinks ou le MC5 composent la bande son de la revolution à coups de singles Molotov, ce sont des noirs américains qui ont fait sauter les digues durant les sixties. Contre le jazz à papa et la tradition occidentale Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, Eric Dolphy, Albert Ayler ou Archie Shepp libèrent alors la note, explosent les formats, se lancent dans des improvisations furieuses qui redessinent un territoire sans frontières, aussi spirituel que politique. Avec le free jazz, le saxo devient lui aussi une machine à détruire l’ordre établi.

      L’Art Ensemble of Chicago qui atterrit à Paris en 1969 au Théâtre du Vieux Colombier allume une nouvelle mèche. Le quintette intègre au linup traditionnel une multiplicité de « petits instruments » dénichés un peu partout (de la sonnette de bicyclette aux wind chimes en passant par le steel drum, le djimbe ou le vibraphone : rien ne leur échappe) dont ils usent en fonction de leur inspiration. Sur scène le groupe détonne en arborant boubous et peintures de guerre afin de célébrer les pouvoirs d’une musique libre et hypnotique, en connexion directe avec ses racines africaines. La rencontre avec le label Saravah (fondé en 1965 par Pierre Barouh), alors aux avant postes d’une world music qui ne porte pas encore de nom, est évidente. L’album Comme à la radio de Brigitte Fontaine enregistré en 1970 à l’issue d’une série de concerts donnés au Théâtre du Vieux Colombier scelle l’union de cette héritière d’une chanson française, poétique et engagée (Magny, Ferré, Barbara) avec le jazz voodoo de l’Art Ensemble of Chicago et la tradition arabe perpétuée par son compagnon Areski Belkacem.

      Un ovni vient de se poser sur les platines des ados français qui découvrent la culture underground via Actuel, Libération, Charlie Hebdo, Rock’n Folk et une free press en pleine ébullition. Une jeunesse qui est de tous les combats : aux cotés des paysans sur le plateau du Larzac, des ouvriers de l’usine Lip, contre le nucléaire à Creys-Malville, la guerre du Vietnam, la peine de mort, les discriminations subies par les femmes, les homosexuels et les immigrés. Faire de la musique quand on a 20 ans au début des années 70, c’est faire de la politique. On ne prend pas un micro pour devenir une rock star mais pour faire avancer ses idées. Tandis que le prix du baril s’enflamme et que Pompidou bétonne à tout va en développant les grands ensembles et en « adaptant la ville à l’automobile », on prend la route pour se réfugier à la campagne. Des communautés qui se forment aux quatre coins de l’hexagone naissent des groupes (ou plutôt des collectifs) à géométrie variable qui mélangent allégrement musique, happening théâtral et agit prop sous une bonne dose d’acide. Le grand n’importe quoi est souvent de mise (le prog rock est la tarte à la crème de l’époque), mais ceux qui empruntent le sentier dessiné par le spiritual jazz planent vers d’autres cieux. La véhémence (voir la grandiloquence) des propos est alors portée et transcendée par la finesse et l’inspiration du jeu. La France de Claude François n’a jamais entendu ça. À la fois spatiaux, pastoraux et tribaux, les morceaux réunis ici font la jonction parfaite entre un certain héritage psychédélique, le space jazz de Sun Ra et l’Afro Beat qui se met alors en place à Lagos avec Fela, ils sont autant des incantations (l’usage du spoken word est récurrent), des cris de guerre, des poèmes que des tracts.

      1978. Giscard est à la barre. Le punk et la disco décapitent les derniers hippies. Si le sang bout toujours, il est déjà trop tard. La guerre est finie, elle a été perdue sans que personne ne s’en aperçoive, et l’on a beau se battre encore contre des moulins à vent, faire parfois parler la poudre et le plomb dans des luttes sans issues (du rêve au cauchemar il n’y a qu’un pas), on sait que la parenthèse enchantée vient de se refermer, que les lendemains qui chantent sont désormais derrière nous et qu’on ne laissera que quelques disques à nos enfants. Le spectre d’un single prophétique peut alors ressurgir des speakers. Brigitte Fontaine y interroge Areski : « Hey mais je pense à un truc, on ne va pas mourir dans une minute ? »

    • Très bonne interview : http://dialna.fr/interview-par-les-damne-e-s-de-la-terre-lhommage-aux-luttes-du-passe-de-roce

      Évocation de #archivage_militant (mais au final tout le projet en est question)

      Cet album est aussi possible car ces luttes ont été gravées sur vinyles, ou sur bandes. D’après toi, que garderons-nous de nos luttes actuelles ?
      Rocé : Je pense que c’est un peu le problème de notre époque. Tu peux le voir avec notre consommation de la musique, des photos, etc .. Aujourd’hui tu changes de téléphone, tu perds tes photos. Avant tu avais moins ce problème. On a beaucoup plus de choses aujourd’hui, mais on les transporte beaucoup moins longtemps avec nous. Je ne sais pas ce qu’il advient des albums photos de famille, plus personne n’en a. C’est tout con, mais on fait une confiance aveugle en la technologie mais l’obsolescence fait qu’on peut tout perdre du jour au lendemain. Il y a des morceaux qui cartonnent grâce à des plateformes de téléchargement, mais tout ne tient qu’à ces plateformes. J’ai réédité mon premier album qui date de 2001. Le graphiste de l’époque avait gardé un disque dur avec les morceaux, la pochette, etc. Le disque dur ne démarrait pas quand on l’a branché. On a dû reprendre la pochette vinyle et allait la faire une reproduction de la photo. Encore une fois, le vinyle a sauvé l’affaire, c’est du sillon gravé. Le numérique, c’est limité. Que va-t-il advenir de nos luttes d’aujourd’hui ? On va y arriver mais ça va être moins simple.