• Nächster Balkankrieg in Sicht ?
    https://www.telepolis.de/features/Naechster-Balkankrieg-in-Sicht-9278957.html
    Une fois n’est pas coutume, alors pourquoi pas lancer une deuxième guerre chaude en Europe. Avec les soldats étrangers (7000 au Camp Bondsteel) c’est comme avec les autoroutes neuves, il faut leur donner une raison d’être. Une petite guerre du Kosovo ferait du mal à personne, pas vrai ?

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Bondsteel

    27.8.2023 von Christoph Jehle - Seit dem Ukraine-Krieg hat die militärische Lösung neues Gewicht bekommen. Jetzt gibt es Kräfte, die im Kosovo Schluss mit einer Appeasement-Politik machen wollen. Kommentar.

    Solange man im Westen glaubt, von der Vorstellung ausgehen zu dürfen, dass Russland den westlichen Waffenlieferungen nicht standhalten kann und schließlich dem endgültigen Untergang geweiht sein dürfte, scheint man auch andernorts die Entscheidung suchen zu wollen.

    Da greift man gerne das Erbe der Jugoslawienkriege wieder auf, bei welchen es den westlichen Staaten nicht gelungen ist, die Serben auf Linie zu bringen, obwohl man mit Camp Bondsteel nahe Ferizaj im Kosovo einen um die 7.000 Mann starken militärischen Stützpunkt errichtet hat.

    Dieser weckt nicht nur vom Namen und der Infrastruktur her Erinnerungen an die Aktivitäten der US-Armee in Südostasien, sondern stand zudem nach dem Jahr 2000 im Ruf, ein „Guantanamo-ähnliches Gefangenenlager“ zu beherbergen.
    Kyiv Post veröffentlicht Brief an die Balkan-Beauftragten

    Es verwundert nicht wirklich, dass dieser Brief in der Ukraine veröffentlicht wurde, mag er doch aufzeigen, dass auch die Verbündeten Russlands sich nicht mehr der Hoffnung auf Diplomatie hingeben sollen, weil ihnen bei Unbotmäßigkeit gegenüber den westlichen Vorstellungen nur der militärische Weg übrig bleiben könne.

    55 Außenpolitikexperten, darunter auffallend viele von den Britischen Inseln und aus dem Baltikum, warnen vor einer Bedrohung des Friedens auf dem Balkan und fordern ein Ende der Appeasement-Politik gegenüber dem serbischen Präsidenten Aleksandar Vučić.

    „Die jüngsten Entdeckungen von Waffenlagern im Norden des Kosovo und Berichte über anhaltenden Waffenschmuggel über die Grenze zwischen Serbien und dem Kosovo verdeutlichen die Gefahr einer weiteren Eskalation“, heißt es in dem in Kiew veröffentlichten Brief.

    Der Kosovo sei ein souveränes Land und eine funktionierende Demokratie. Serbien müsse dafür zur Rechenschaft gezogen werden, dass es versuche, die demokratischen Wahlen im Kosovo zu stören.

    Die Autoren sind für Abschreckungsdiplomatie, was auch immer das sein soll, um die im Westen erkannte aktuelle Krise zu lösen. Man fordert die Wiederherstellung von Ausgewogenheit und Verhältnismäßigkeit im Umgang mit Kosovo und Serbien, ohne dass man diese näher erläutert.

    Die Verfasser des Briefes glauben in der derzeitigen Politik des Westens einen Mangel an Druck auf Serbien zu erkennen sowie einen Mangel an Unparteilichkeit. Man solle sicherstellen, „dass wir keine auf Belgrad ausgerichtete Politik für den Balkan verfolgen“, hält der Brief ebenso fest.
    Wie nimmt man dem Westen die Scheu vor einer Neuauflage der Balkankriege?

    „Seit Monaten wird bereits das Regime von Vučić vor allem von den US-Diplomaten Christopher Hill, Gabriel Escobar, Dereck Chollet und James O’Brien auf verschiedene Art und Weise unterstützt. Und dies, obwohl die serbische Regierung ein wichtiger Verbündeter des Kreml ist“, stellt der österreichische Standard fest.

    Offensichtlich sei auch, dass die USA nicht mehr an eine Demokratisierung der Region glaubten, weil sie nicht in demokratische Kräfte investierten, die seit Monaten in Serbien auf die Straße gehen, sondern in autoritäre Nationalisten.

    Durch die aktuelle US-Politik werde die Region immer instabiler, weil die völkischen Nationalisten, die ein Großserbien, Großalbanien und Großkroatien schaffen wollen, sich durch die US-Politik bestärkt fühlten.

    Diese Entwicklung laufe auf Kosten der kleineren Länder wie Kosovo, Montenegro, Nordmazedonien und Bosnien-Herzegowina. Dies gehe aktuell sogar so weit, dass Gabriel Escobar, der US-Gesandte für den Balkan, die gleichen Sätze sage wie der russische Botschafter in Bosnien-Herzegowina.

    Als kürzlich die neuen kosovarischen Bürgermeister im von Serben bewohnten Nordkosovo ihre Ämter beziehen wollten, griffen militante serbische Extremisten die Nato-geführten KFOR-Truppen an. Die westliche Seite zog dafür nicht Belgrad zur Verantwortung. Westliche Diplomaten beschuldigten die kosovarische Regierung unter Albin Kurti, daran schuld zu sein, weil sie die Bürgermeister in ihre Ämter geschickt habe.

    Konsequenterweise wurde die kosovarische Regierung auch vom Westen abgestraft. Die Teilnahme des Kosovo an der Nato-Übung Defender Europe 23 wurde abgesagt. Und die EU-Staaten vereinbarten am 14. Juni einstimmig „umkehrbare und vorübergehende Maßnahmen“ gegen die kosovarische Regierung.

    Die Verfasser des in Kiew veröffentlichten Briefes lehnen die aktuelle Entwicklung auf dem Balkan grundsätzlich ab und forcieren militärische Mittel anstelle eines diplomatischen Ausgleichs.

    Immerhin stünde bei einem Zerfall des Kosovo möglicherweise auch die Existenz von Camp Bondsteel auf dem Spiel und damit der mit Abstand größten US-Truppenpräsenz auf dem Balkan.

    #USA #Europe #impérialisme #Balkan #Kosivo #guerre

  • American Holocaust: The Destruction of America’s Native Peoples
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qra6pcn4AOE

    American Holocaust: The Destruction of America’s Native Peoples, a lecture by David Stannard, professor and chair of the American Studies Department at the University of Hawaii. Stannard, author of American Holocaust, asserts that the European and white American destruction of the native peoples of the Americas was the most substantial act of genocide in world history. A combination of atrocities and imported plagues resulted in the death of roughly 95 percent of the native population in the Americas. Stannard argues that the perpetrators of the American Holocaust operated from the same ideological source as the architects of the Nazi Holocaust. That ideology remains alive today in American foreign policy, Stannard avers.

    Le livre
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Holocaust_(book)

    #American_Holocaust #pouvoir #impérialisme #USA #génocide

  • The American Soul Is a Murderous Soul
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2016/08/10/the-american-soul-is-a-murderous-soul-guns-violence-second-amendment-trump/#cookie_message_anchor

    By Patrick Blanchfield - In 1923, the British novelist D. H. Lawrence offered a grim assessment of America and Americans: “All the other stuff, the love, the democracy, the floundering into lust, is a sort of by-play. The essential American soul is hard, isolate, stoic, and a killer. It has never yet melted.”

    Lawrence’s observations of the American character did not draw upon deep wells of direct personal experience. When he wrote those lines, he had only been living in the United States for a bit more than a year and had spent much of that time among artists and the literati. But he was neither the first nor the last to make such an observation. Nearly 50 years ago, surveying both the wreckage of the 1960s and centuries of archives, the brilliant historian Richard Hofstadter acknowledged that “Americans certainly have reason to inquire whether, when compared with other advanced industrial nations, they are not a people of exceptional violence.”

    The allegation that the American character is essentially murderous — or at least more murderous than that of other nations — still strikes a chord today. It’s not just the periodic invitations to violence that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has issued over the course of his campaign, most recently against his Democratic competitor Hillary Clinton. This summer’s headlines have also enumerated trauma after trauma. Eight members of a single family murdered in Ohio. Forty-nine dead in a mass shooting in Florida. Shootings by police claiming the lives of black Americans in Louisiana, Minnesota, and Maryland. Fatal shootings of police in Texas, Louisiana, and California. Breaking reports of horror follow one another fast enough to induce a kind of whiplash.

    Or consider the strenuousness with which each political party now routinely denies that Americans are inherently violent, a refrain that can begin to feel like protesting too much. In his final speech at the Republican National Convention last month, Trump bemoaned the “violence in our streets and the chaos in our communities” but, true to form, laid the blame on hordes of “illegal immigrants … roaming free to threaten peaceful citizens”; “brutal Islamic terrorism”; and the enabling of a Democratic president whom Trump has previously and unsubtly intimated isn’t really American himself.

    Democrats likewise tend to suggest that, for Americans, acts of violence are an aberration. Announcing a gun safety program in the wake of last December’s mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, President Barack Obama declared: “We are not inherently more prone to violence. But we are the only advanced country on Earth that sees this kind of mass violence erupt with this kind of frequency.” From this perspective, violence in America does not indicate anything “inherent” in the American character: It is about the presence of guns, the availability of which is a contingent and remediable matter of policy.

    But what if there’s good reason to believe that being American has always involved a relationship of some kind to violence — whether as its victim, as its perpetrator, as a complicit party, or even as all of these at once. Rather than assuming, in Obama’s words, that Americans are “not inherently more prone to violence,” the country owes it to itself to finally try to consider the question directly.

    How is violence quantified, and what are the benchmarks used to assess whether a given society’s level of violence is high or low, normal or exceptional? The general practice among researchers across numerous disciplines is to present yearly “intentional homicide” rates per 100,000 of a given nation’s population; crucially, these figures do not include deaths directly related to full-blown wars.

    The U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) compiles national figures for its reports, the most recent of which reflects data from 2012 and 2013. Per the UNODC, some 437,000 people were murdered worldwide in 2012, putting the average murder rate at 6.2 victims per 100,000 persons. But beyond that average figure, as you might expect, there is wide variation in terms of both individual nations and continents. Regionally, Central America and southern Africa both clock in at over four times the global average (more than 25 per 100,000), while Western Europe and East Asia are some five times lower than it. Within continents and regions, the variations can be stark. Thus, to take Africa as an example, the rate in Senegal is 2.8; Egypt, 3.4; Sudan, 11.2; and Lesotho, the highest, at 38. In Europe, Switzerland’s rate is 0.6; the U.K., 1; Finland, 1.6; Lithuania, 6.7; and Russia, the highest, at 9.2. The Americas show the widest variation: Canada’s rate is 1.6; Argentina, 5.5; Costa Rica, 8.5; Panama, 17.2; Mexico, 21.5; and Honduras, the highest in the world — at 90.4 per 100,000.

    Against this backdrop, for the period of 2007-2012, the United States has averaged 4.9 homicides per 100,000 persons. America thus stands more or less shoulder to shoulder with Iran (4.1), Cuba (4.2), Latvia (4.7), and Albania (5). So much for the data on homicides tout court. The question then is whether or not to consider America’s standing among countries like these to be an aberration. Such states certainly aren’t in the same class as the United States in terms of development metrics like per capita GDP, and this fact tends to get cited by American politicians and political observers as prima facie evidence that something else (whether “terrorists” or guns) is skewing their country’s violence data, pushing it out of its allegedly more “natural” peer group — places like the Scandinavian states, the U.K., or Japan.

    But while such comparisons may sound rigorous at first blush, they are often naively aspirational (at best) or deliberately deceptive and chauvinistic (at worst). Nowhere is this more blatant than in the context of the debate over guns. For example, many gun control advocates and supposedly objective analysts will condemn violence in the United States as abnormal by invoking comparisons to “developed” nations as defined by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Yet these comparisons will regularly exclude Mexico, which is not only an OECD member but also America’s third-largest trading partner and its unfortunate next-door neighbor. The reason given for this exclusion, as though self-explanatory, is “the drug war.” The annual U.S. market for illegal drugs may be well over $109 billion, and an estimated quarter-million guns may be trafficked to Mexican cartels from the United States in any given year, but inviting the contemplation of such queasy moral entanglements is apparently less politically expedient, and more offensive to patriotic amour-propre, than demanding why America can’t just clean up its act and be more like the places we feel it “should” resemble.

    It’s not just our use of empirical metrics for evaluating violence in America that can be dubious. Opining on the supposedly inherent tendencies of vast groups of people toward violence — Americans, Muslims, the left-handed, anyone — should rightly raise flags. It’s the kind of thing you might expect from a 19th-century phrenologist, someone who would measure skulls for indicators of “destructiveness.” But although the vintage pseudo-scientific quackery underwriting such speculation may have fallen out of fashion, the sentiments themselves haven’t disappeared. Consider Iowa Rep. Steve King, for example, pontificating on the civilizational contributions of whites versus other “subgroups,” or research indicating widespread biases whereby black Americans are perceived to be both “prone to violence” and less susceptible to pain. Passing judgment on “a people” as an abstraction rarely leads anywhere good and frequently reveals more about the observer than the observed.

    But making claims about the inherent relationship “Americans” have with violence is especially dicey. The United States is an extremely heterogeneous country, with vast regional differences, considerable ethnic diversity, marked de facto segregation, and wide income inequality — which Americans would we be talking about?

    This is where considerations of the allegedly violent American national character run aground, though in a telling way. Because like most goods and ills in America — from job opportunities to education to healthy drinking water — violence is not equally distributed among Americans. Indeed, drilling down into the demographics of violence in America reads like an indictment of society’s broader treatment of the poor and marginalized. As analysts have pointedly observed, black Americans are some eight times more likely to be murdered than their white compatriots and, in any given year, will be killed at rates anywhere from 10 to 20 times the benchmark OECD rates. When the homicide rates for individual states rather than the national average are compared, the results are damning: The murder rates in Louisiana (11.93 per 100,000) and Washington, D.C., (13.92) are on par with figures from countries like Nicaragua (11), the Central African Republic (11.8), and Côte d’Ivoire (13.6).

    Those who cast these figures as artifacts of so-called “black-on-black crime” not only often traffic in thinly veiled racism, but don’t even attempt to understand the problem at hand. Most crimes of any sort in any place — not just murders — involve members of the same group targeting one another in close geographic proximity. And in a nation as segregated as the United States remains to this day, the concentration of violence in crowded ghettos and benighted postindustrial areas should be unsurprising. Americans have a history of citing violence as the cause of their racial prejudices. But the reality is that anti-black racism is itself the defining feature of the institutions and social pressures that generate everyday violence in the United States.

    What Americans should reflect on is how deftly their society has contained and distilled the phenomenon into marginalized communities — and how that distribution of violence is something the majority of Americans of either political persuasion tend to deem irrelevant to their periodic national debates about the country’s safety or lack thereof. The Washington-based politician or journalist who sees a headline-grabbing rampage of shootings as a sign that America is descending into barbarity, and as threatening its status as an “advanced” country, exists in a kind of cognitive bubble: Literally only blocks away, bodies regularly drop at rates otherwise only seen in violence-prone corners of the developing world. Taking an even broader view, it is arguable that, but for modern advances in antibiotics and trauma care, murder rates in such parts of the United States would surpass those historically associated with medieval Europe. American “progress,” such as it is, has apparently consisted in merely blunting some deadly outcomes and enabling others.

    Guns are undeniably a central part of this landscape. In environments in which violence is already present, and in which more violence is probable, the presence of guns appears to quicken lethal outcomes. This is true on both the level of households and the level of communities. Research indicates that, over the course of their lifetimes, one-quarter of American women will experience physical or sexual violence from a domestic partner; this rate puts the United States alongside Jordan, Serbia, Nepal, and Guatemala. But when a gun is present in an American home where there is a history of domestic violence, the likelihood that a woman living there will be killed has been credibly estimated to increase some twentyfold. On the community level, homicide rates in cities like Chicago and New York are roughly equivalent — but only for murders that don’t involve guns; gun homicides in the former are easily an order of magnitude higher than the latter.

    But these considerations do not easily translate to the national level. Although in the past year many cities have experienced a sharp and disturbing increase in homicides, with no clear explanation as to why, overall violent crime rates have been dropping for decades, even as Americans have consistently expressed a conviction that crime has been steadily getting “worse” and even as they have accordingly purchased more guns than ever before. From a certain perspective, when considering America’s unprecedented saturation with firearms, observers may be forced to admit that the surprising thing is how much more violent America could be than it currently is.

    If there is any singular feature that characterizes how many Americans understand our national relation to violence, it is our ingenuity at looking the other way, at siloing problems away from one another, and at disavowing, sublimating, or repackaging our complicity in the most easily observable patterns.

    Signs of supposed progress in expressions of American violence often disguise profound continuities. For example: The era of highly visible public lynchings, which is estimated to have claimed some 5,000 lives, has passed. Yet since then we have moved on to an institutionalized death penalty regime, wherein states that previously had the highest numbers of lynchings now have the greatest numbers of black people on death row. Both per capita and in raw numbers, America’s prisons warehouse more human beings than any other country on the planet, and its police demonstrate a clear pattern of racial bias in killing their fellow citizens at a rate stratospherically higher than that of any of its supposed peer nations. U.S. soldiers are deployed in some 135 countries, and the number of troops actually engaged in combat is almost certainly much higher than authorities are willing to admit. Meanwhile, America is far and away the world’s largest exporter of weapons, with the global arms industry’s largest and most profitable players based in the United States and reaping booming markets in conflict zones while being heavily subsidized by federal and state tax dollars.

    Everyday Americans may not be “inherently more prone to violence,” but our way of life is certainly structured around violence and around selectively empowering, quarantining, directing, and monetizing it at home and abroad. The majority of Americans apparently find no cognitive dissonance in this arrangement, if we even perceive it at all. Instead, we express bafflement and outrage that we are not something other than what we are and what we have always been. Plumbing what lurks within the “essential American soul,” a cynic might suggest, is a self-indulgent exercise, a red herring. The better question might be whether we even have one in the first place.

    #USA #violence #racisme #histoire #crime #impérialisme #armes

  • Géographie et #impérialisme. De la Suisse au #Congo entre #exploration géographique et conquête coloniale

    #Gustave_Moynier, cofondateur de la Croix-Rouge, a-t-il également cofondé l’État indépendant du Congo ? Ce régime brutal d’extraction du caoutchouc dirigé par Léopold II voit le jour en 1885 à la suite d’une décennie d’événements exploratoires et conquérants. La Suisse participe à ces événements par le biais des sociétés de géographie dont #Moynier fait partie.
    Loin de se limiter à dévoiler un aspect sombre de la vie de cet homme, l’ouvrage de #Fabio_Rossinelli montre l’intégration – économique, culturelle, voire politique – de la bourgeoisie helvétique à l’#impérialisme_colonial du xIxe siècle. Pour ce faire, l’histoire des associations géographiques en Suisse est analysée en perspective internationale. Jusqu’à la Grande Guerre, ces sociétés représentent, à côté d’autres milieux, des cénacles où se produit un discours raciste accompagné d’actions expansionnistes.

    https://www.alphil.com/livres/1134-1255-geographie-et-imperialisme.html

    #livre
    #colonialisme #Suisse_coloniale #colonialisme_suisse

    pdf en open access :
    https://www.alphil.com/index.php?controller=attachment&id_attachment=261

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur la #Suisse_coloniale :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/868109

    • Book review : Géographie et impérialisme : de la Suisse au Congo entre exploration géographique et conquête coloniale

      What was Switzerland’s role in colonization? If you have ever wondered about this, Rossinelli’s historical account can provide a rich and detailed interpretation of a lesser-known part of the story: the role of Swiss geographic societies and Swiss participation in Belgian King Leopold II’s project to colonize a vast part of central Africa (today’s Democratic Republic of Congo). Rossinelli’s conclusion shows how political the discipline and practice of geography is, bringing geography beyond a technical exercise, showing how expansionist politics by Swiss geography associations were part of a broader dynamic typical of other European geography associations at the time. What makes the Swiss endeavour different is that although Switzerland never formally colonized another country, it supported the efforts of others, benefitting economically from these efforts, while also identifying new places, such as Brazil, for Switzerland’s economic migrants.1 Swiss imperialism, as skilfully demonstrated by Rossinelli, was presented publicly under the guise of a “civilizing” mission of African peoples along with anti-slavery campaigns, led by the Swiss bourgeoisie. But as Rossinelli shows us in great detail, this contradictory mission was often overshadowed by economic and other aspects. How does the author lead us to these conclusions? Rossinelli draws on archival sources to immerse the reader in the national and international meetings in which the imperialistic Swiss projects were discussed and in the texts which these institutions published. The reader often feels as if they have attended a conference in question, knowing the order of events, speakers, and key aspects of their speeches and conclusions.

      The book is divided into four parts. After the introduction, the second part of the book is dedicated to understanding the foundational objectives and operations of eight Swiss geographical associations. Each of these associations held different objectives: some focused on furthering the textile or watch-making markets abroad by using the colonies of other European countries as a place of commerce, other associations were interested in finding places for Swiss to migrate, while yet others focused on collaborating with Swiss missionaries to document local cultures or make natural-history collections. Some of these efforts resulted in Switzerland’s largest collections of ethnographic and natural-history objects. Such collections today contribute to current debates on the restitution of these objects (Sarr and Savoy, 2018), as well as the modern role of these institutions (Vergès, 2023). Rossinelli demonstrates how Switzerland’s geographic associations contributed to imperialistic ideologies and created a pressure from within Switzerland to participate in colonization projects in Africa in particular. The third part of the book reviews and analyses the Swiss production of academic journals, their context, and their influences. Here we see the diffusion of geographic journals throughout Europe and in relation to other European colonization projects.

      In the fourth part of the book, Rossinelli explores how Swiss geographic societies supported one of the largest colonial projects in Africa: that of the former Belgian Congo. The reader finds out how the project was launched internationally through the International African Association, soliciting support of European countries to the king’s private project, including Switzerland. Geographic exploration is seen as a catalyst of colonial expansion in Central Africa. Swiss geographers formed a national chapter to support the initiative and held a series of conferences throughout Switzerland. One of the more interesting roles explored is that of arbitrator. Given that Switzerland had not directly colonized any part of Africa, the country was seen as neutral and able to judge cases of conflict between colonizing countries such as Belgium and Portugal disputing rights to trade at the mouth of the Congo River. During this time, we see Switzerland launch geographic journals as well as the monthly Afrique explorée et civilisée (1879–1894), as part of a communication campaign to the general public. Rossinelli makes connections between Swiss bourgeoisie involvement in both the Red Cross and colonial developments and discusses the role of Swiss banks in the Belgian project.

      I can critique two aspects of this highly engaging and informative work. First, the attention to detail is sometimes to an extreme. The author often opens and closes long detailed parenthetical statements about specific people, events, or places. This sometimes makes reading through parts of the work laborious. But this detail is also at times necessary to make his arguments. Secondly, Rossinelli at times uses the word indigène rather than autochthone to refer to African peoples. This is surprising but perhaps not intentional. In the Francophone literature, especially regarding movements for Indigenous rights and from the United Nations (African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs, 2005; Bellier, 2009), this word is expressly avoided because it links their identity to colonialism. The colonial-era policy of the indigénat, a regime in French colonies which classified Africans as French nationals without citizenship rights, viewed local people as labourers for colonial projects (Tsanga et al., 2022). Even if this book recounts colonial expansion in Africa, the African people affected have histories well beyond their colonial encounters with Europeans: their history does not start or stop with colonialism (Táíwò, 2019), and so the word indigène could have been replaced with autochthone more regularly to strongly signal this issue.

      Throughout the book, Rossinelli interprets the racist history of Swiss geographical associations vis-a-vis Africa, examining why these associations viewed Africa – unlike Asia – as a place without history. The author shows how despite the critical report about the Belgian Congo’s treatment of Congolese people by African-American lawyer George Washington Williams highly reported in European newspapers, the Swiss press defended the Belgian project, insisting that treatment was no worse than that of agricultural workers in Switzerland. Rossinelli also details several racial discourses found in the geographical-society journals, how missionaries were vectors of racism and cultural-superiority exercises, and how cartographic exercises and related reports held a colonial gaze of racial superiority and environmental determinism.

      Rossinelli’s work joins others on the topic of Switzerland and colonization.2 This book situates geographical societies of Switzerland in their colonial roots. And it joins works querying the colonial history of Switzerland (Purtschert and Fischer-Tiné, 2015); racial aspects of colonial history (dos Santos Pinto et al., 2022); and recent efforts focusing on decolonizing it, such as those of the city of Zurich (Brengard et al., 2020), the Musée d’Ethnographie de Genève (de Genève, 2020), requests for removals of colonial-era statues (Fall, 2020), or efforts to decolonize the Zoo Zurich (Sithole et al., 2021). Overall, this work, in all its detail, is a must-read for those who are interested in Switzerland’s imperialist agenda at the time and the various roles it held in Europe’s colonial expansion in Africa.

      https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/78/337/2023

  • Il y a un aspect que je continue à ne pas totalement m’expliquer dans les discours autour du Covid : cet aspect, c’est qu’on arrive à la fois à tenir un discours de banalisation et un discours de négation.

    D’un côté, le discours officiel massivement accepté est que « endémique ça veut dire que c’est pas grave » : maintenant qu’on est vaccinés et que ceux qui devaient en mourir sont déjà morts, c’est bon, on chope le Covid tous les six mois et c’est pas grave. C’est tellement pas grave qu’il ne faut plus s’isoler quand on est positif. Si on ajoute le discours sur la « dette immunitaire », en fait ce serait même mieux de refiler le Covid à tout le monde, parce que comme ça tout le monde est immunisé en le chopant.

    Mais alors même qu’on nage dans cette ambiance de totale banalisation (c’est comme un gros rhume, on l’attrape tous les six mois mais c’est pas grave), dans le même temps on a toujours cette omniprésence du discours niant l’existence du Covid. Ça fait des mois qu’on nage dans « la fin du Covid », « après le Covid », et même tous les articles du moment commencent par prétendre qu’« on avait oublié le Covid » (j’adore comment on est instantanément passés du psychodrame permanent, l’obligation vaccinale terrifiante qui déstablise la société, les classes fermées qui poussent les enfants au suicide, le masque qui serait le signe trop ostensible de la peur… à « non en fait j’avais carrément oublié que ça avait eu lieu »). Ça fait des mois on n’a plus que des « symptômes grippaux », que des équipes de sportifs sont victimes d’une mystérieuse épidémie… On a même ce négationniste du Covid (et du climat ?) qui passe à la télé pour expliquer que comme le temps s’est rafraîchi, hé bien on chope un truc hivernal en plein été…

    Or ça me semble contradictoire : pourquoi occulter la présence du Covid si maintenant c’est totalement banal de l’attraper ? Ou à l’inverse comment on maintient notre immunité (histoire d’éviter de contracter une dette) si on est censés attraper un virus qui ne circule plus ? Si on occulte, c’est que la maladie n’est pas anodine. Et si on banalise, alors évidemment il n’y a pas de raison de masquer la présence de ce bon gros rhume bi-annuel.

    Dans l’ère de la post-vérité, la négation/banalisation du Covid, je trouve ça assez exemplaire : un seul mensonge ne suffit pas, autant en avoir deux, même s’ils se contredisent…

    • Une chose est sûre : L’épidémie a servi pour appliquer encore une fois la shock therapy d’après Naomi Klein.

      Il y en a qui ont profité du COVID (exemple : contrats exclusifs conclus par Frau von der Leyen), on nous a refusé les vaccins cubains et russes, on a introduit et testé à grande échelle l’efficacité de mesures contraignantes utiles dans un futur proche pour bien d’autres développements. On a coupé l’oxygène aux mouvements contestataires et on a radicalisé le discours public officiel en dénonçant toute critique comme sectaire, conspirationniste et débile.

      On reconnaît facilement ce principe dans la communication officielle dans le contexte du conflit qui est en train de tuer les Uktainiens et Russes et de ruiner le pays d’Ukraine pour les générations à venir : Vous êtes ou de notre côté du front et combattez avec nous ou vous êtes notre ennemi et celui du peuple entier.

      Voilà le résultat essentiel de la politique sanitaire de l’épisode historique du COVID que nous sommes toujours en train de vivre. Le virus, c’est nous qu’il rend patraques, l’élite se retirera dans ses demeures néo-zélandaises lors ce qu’ici les choses commenceront à se dégrader sérieusement.

      Notons aussi qu’on n’a toujours pas de statistiques valables sur l’effet des vaccinations pour l’immunité individuelle, puis on ne saura jamais avec certitude comment les mesures anti-covid ont contribué à repousser les vagues d’infection.

      Mettons un masque où il nous le semble nécessaire , respectons les règles générales de’hygiène suivant Semmelweis et espérons que les soins intensifs soient disponibles et efficaces pour nous, c’est tout ce que nous pouvons faire afin de protéger nos proches et nous-mêmes.

      Bref, on aurait pu se passer de la plupart des mesures anti-covid (mais on ne sait pas bien lesquelles ont été utiles, superflues ou néfastes), le résultat général aurait vraisemblablement été le même.

      Vu ces choses évidentes je ne peux pas m’enpêcher de penser que pour la plupart des décideurs au sein des gouvernements et multinationales mon destin, ma santé et les gens simples ne comptent pas du tout. Pour eux le Covid est un business, un phénomène à gerer et à exploiter. Toute la gestion de l’epidémie a suivi cette ligne générale.

      Les attitudes et positions contradictoires qu’on rencontre à propos du COVID sont le résultat de cette perspective. Elles la trahissent et contribuent à la cacher en même temps, car elles détournent l’attention de l’essentiel : la maladie, sans égard du diagnostique particulier, est un instrument de lutte. Les élites s"en servent pour nous exploiter et nous en patissons tant que nous ne prenons pas en mains notre destin.

      Il nous faudra trouver des manières de faire solidaires et pratiques afin de nous protéger mutuellement contre les atteintes à notre vie qui se présenteront tôt ou tard.

      #iatrocratie #racket #capitalisme #impérialisme #it_has_begun

    • mais on ne sait pas bien lesquelles ont été utiles ou superflues

      euh bah si quand même, c’est pas faute d’avoir un sacré paquet de recension de caractère scientifique ici sur Seenthis, avec une belle veille de plusieurs personnes

      on sait avec certitude que les masques de type FFP2 réduisent de 10 voire 100 fois la propagation quand tout le monde les mets

      on sait avec certitude que les vaccins réduisent quasiment totalement les risques de finir avec un truc grave, et on sait très bien que ça ne crée pas de l’immunité permanente, vu que c’est un virus qui mute tout le temps (tout comme la grippe, qui a des vaccins différents suivant les années, ce qui n’a rien à voir avec le vaccin contre le tétanos qui n’est pas un virus, qui ne mute pas)

      ça fait partie du confusionnisme ambiant de pas arrêter de dire depuis trois ans que « on est dans le flou », « on sait pas grand chose », alors que c’est plutôt faux : les connaissances ont immensément avancé en très peu de temps, et vu que c’est sur des millions/milliards de sujets à la fois, elles sont… pas mal précises.

      ce qui a mis du temps c’est la connaissance sur les conséquences non immédiates des infections (càd pas les symptomes graves directes quand on va à l’hopital), tout ce qui est covid long, etc. Ça ils ont mis du temps à faire des études là dessus.

      mais sur les transmissions, les mesures à prendre, les vaccins, etc, on sait plutôt beaucoup de choses.

    • Sinon @arno il me semble que c’est un cas absolument typique de « double bind », qui peut être fortuit, ou volontairement utilisé pour confusionner l’esprit et bloquer la pensée :
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_bind

      The double bind is often misunderstood to be a simple contradictory situation, where the subject is trapped by two conflicting demands. While it is true that the core of the double bind is two conflicting demands, the difference lies in how they are imposed upon the subject, what the subject’s understanding of the situation is, and who (or what) imposes these demands upon the subject. Unlike the usual no-win situation, the subject has difficulty in defining the exact nature of the paradoxical situation in which they are caught. The contradiction may be unexpressed in its immediate context and therefore invisible to external observers, only becoming evident when a prior communication is considered. Typically, a demand is imposed upon the subject by someone whom they respect (such as a parent, teacher, or doctor) but the demand itself is inherently impossible to fulfill because some broader context forbids it. For example, this situation arises when a person in a position of authority imposes two contradictory conditions but there exists an unspoken rule that one must never question authority.

    • D’accord pour le double-bind et merci pour la notion. J’aurais plutôt parlé d"une contradiction dialectique, mais c’est une manière intéressante de qualifier le phénomène.

      Voici quant à la combinaison de statistiques imprécises et forcément manipulées :
      Je mentionne le masque qui n’est pas dépourvu d’effet, et pour les vaccins on a eu des retours qui font croire qu’elles réduisent la mortalité. Oui, et c’est pour ces arguments que j’ai accepté de me faire vacciner.

      Pourtant nous ne savons toujours pas grand chose sur les possibles conséquences néfastes des vaccinations et on nous a empèché d’utiliser les vaccins plus fiables aux mécanismes testés des vaccins contre les épidémies de grippe annuelles.

      Je ne suis pas assez spécialiste de ces questions pour mener un débat autour des questions biologiques et de recherche génétique. Je sais par contre, et j’ai accepté le risquede m’avoir trompé sur l’ampleur du problème, que pour éviter mon exclusion sociale cad de ne pas risquer mon emploi et mon projet principal du moment, j’étais obligé de me faire vacciner alors que les statistiques sur l’ampleur de l’épidémie, le nombre de personnes porteurs du virus et le nombre de personnes atteintes par la maladie du COVID n’avaient et n’ont toujous pas de base statistiques suffisantes parce qu’on n’a simplement pas compté systématiquement.

      La collecte de données a été, au moins dans l’Allemagne fédérale, complètement chaotique. Après trente ans de politique d’austérité et de privatisations dans le secteur social et de santé il n’y avait ni de stratégie pour gérer une épidémie ni le personnel pour collecter et traiter les données nécessaires pour affirmer quoi que ce soit sur le nombre de personnes contagiées ou malades.

      La qualité des rapports quotidiens et hebdomadaires de l’Institut Robert Koch, la source officielle pour les informations sur les épidémies, était à l’hauteur des prévisions de météo avant l’introduction des ordinateurs en météorologie. On vivait sous le règne de l’alertoire. On nous présentait les rapports de l’université John Hopkins aux État Unis comne source fiable alors que cette institunion n’avait pas de meilleure base statistique que le RKI.

      En somme on peut dire qu’il y a eu et qu’il y a toujours des scientifiques sérieux qui font un travail honorable, mais quant à la gestion de l’épidèmie et quant aux informations disponibles au gens comne toi et moi c’était n’importe quoi.

      Peut-être on en saura davantage en quelques années mais il n’y aura pas de solution pour l’absence de données de base fiables. Les statisticiens trouveront sans doute, si on leur donne les fonds nécessaires, des modèles pour combler des trous, mais la qualité des informations essentielles ne dépassera jamais le niveau d’estimations approximatives car on a négligé de collecter sytématiquement assez de données à la base.

      C’est à cause de ce problème fondamental que j’estime que toutes les conclusions suivantes sont pour le moins imprécises et reflètent plutôt les intérêts des acteurs pricipaux du business et de la politique que le développement précis de l"épidémie du Covid.

      Mais il se peut que la situation en France était meilleure, un peu comme pour le nuage radioactif de Tchernobyl qui s"est miraculeusemenr arrêté à la frontière franco-allemande.

      Mais là n’est pas la question. Je constate qu’in s’est fait avoir et qu’on n’a rien pu faire contre indépendamnent de notre opinion et de notre comportement. Les conséquences de la gestion de l’épidémie ont été désastreuses pour tout ce qu’on avait de liberté et pour les chances d’un développement paisible de la France et de l’Allemagne. On nous a préparé à fermer les rangs, à obéir les ordres du pouvour et à considérer les récalcitrants comme ennemis. Vae victis.

    • la limite des vaccins à arn messager ne tient pas, @sandburg, à des effets secondaires dont la pharmaco-vigilance a montré qu’ils sont rares ou transitoires mais - là où ils ont pu être utilisés... - dans le fait qu’ils empêchent trop peu contamination et contagiosité et je ne comprends pas quel intérêt il y a à ajouter de la confusion là où les politiques gouvernementales et les discours complotistes concourent ensembles à la diffusion d’un nouvel obscurantisme qui hypothèque radicalement tout processus de libération.

    • C’est un vrai travail mais je trouverai bien le temps d’ici la fin de l’année de rassembler quelques sources sur le développement et les stats covid pour l’Allemagne.

      Après il faudra évaluer ce qu’on peut vraiment conclure de ce ramassis. Problème : Qui pose les questions, quels intérêts ont guidé le soulèvement de telles données et qu’est-ce qu’on veut savoir afin de pouvoir agir et se protéger (contre qui et quoi ...).
      Trop de questions pour ma petite tête en ce moment.

      La seule chose que je sais pertinemment est que les questions des toubibs et gouvernement ne sont pas mes questions. Ca complique l’affaire quand on veut développer une position indépendante et émancipatrice.

      Un début :

      – Est-ce qu’une épidémie covid a eu lieu ? Oui.
      – Est-ce qu’elle continue ? Trouvons une définition avant de tenter d’y répondre.
      – Est-ce qu’il y aura d’autres épidémies ? Oui.
      – Comment nos sociétés, nos états et communes, l’économie et la politique et nous-mêmes avec nos amis sont préparés à ces événements prévisibles ?

      Questions auxiliaires :

      – Comment s’est déroulé (exactement) l’épidémie covid ?
      – Qui nous a menti à propos de quel aspect de l’épidémie ?
      – Qui en a profité ?
      – Quelles sont les relations entre politique de santé, d’économie et de sécurité ?
      – Où est notre place dans ce contexte ?

      etc.

      Il faudrais sytématiser l’approche afin de ne pas perdre un temps énorme sans obtenir des résultats utilisables.

      #autonomie #autogestion

    • @klaus ah bé tiens, voilà un fil justement sur le recul qu’on a suivant les années : https://seenthis.net/messages/1013364

      L’infection massive ayant eu lieu majoritairement… en 2022 seulement ! Puisque plus de masques, plus de confinement, etc, ce qui tend à prouver assez clairement l’efficacité (10% d’infection en 2020, 25% en 2021 => bam 90% en 2022 quand on fait plus rien).

      Bref, tout ça pour rappeler que si certains ne considèrent l’impact médical de SARS-CoV-2 que sous l’angle politique ou sociologique ("il ne fait plus peur"), il ne faut cependant pas oublier qu’on a encore très peu de recul sur lui et ses atypies biologiques.

      Tant que la population maintiendra son niveau de consommation et de productivité, malgré une mortalité en hausse, et des indices de morbi-mortalité qui augmentent, je pense que rien de plus ne sera fait puisque le pays sera « stable » (dans la galère mais stable)...

      C’est à mon sens l’objectif des « rassuristes » qui visent justement à détourner l’attention de cette problématique, pour parvenir à ramener l’activité économique à son plus haut niveau, non pas en éliminant la menace covid, mais en éliminant la perception de cette menace.

      Mais comme on dit, on s’habitue à tout, et pour peu que la dégradation soit assez progressive et durable, ça deviendra simplement le « nouveau normal ».

  • The Looming War Against China - Economic Logic has been Replaced by National Security Overrides
    https://braveneweurope.com/michael-hudson-the-looming-war-against-china

    Cet article décrit pourquoi les États Unis ont besoin de provoquer une guerre avec la Chine. C’est une analyse froide et effrayante.

    25.7.2023 by Michael Hudson - The July NATO summit in Vilnius had the feeling of a funeral, as if they had just lost a family member – Ukraine. To clear away NATO’s failure to drive Russia out of Ukraine and move NATO right up to the Russian border, its members tried to revive their spirits by mobilizing support for the next great fight – against China, which is now designated as their ultimate strategic enemy. To prepare for this showdown, NATO announced a commitment to extend their military presence all the way to the Pacific.

    The plan is to carve away China’s military allies and trading partners, above all Russia, starting with the fight in Ukraine. President Biden has said that this war will be global in scope and will take many decades as it expands to ultimately isolate and break up China.

    The U.S.-imposed sanctions against trade with Russia are a dress rehearsal for imposing similar sanctions against China. But only the NATO allies have joined the fight. And instead of wrecking Russia’s economy and “turning the ruble to rubble” as President Biden predicted, NATO’s sanctions have made it more self-reliant, increasing its balance of payments and international monetary reserves, and hence the ruble’s exchange rate.

    To cap matters, despite the failure of trade and financial sanctions to injure Russia – and indeed, despite NATO’s failures in Afghanistan and Libya, NATO countries committed themselves to trying the same tactics against China. The world economy is to be split between US/NATO/Five Eyes on the one hand, and the rest of the world – the Global Majority – on the other. EU Commissioner Joseph Borrell calls this as a split between the US/European Garden (the Golden Billion) and the Jungle threatening to engulf it, like an invasion of its well-manicured lawns by an invasive species.

    From an economic vantage point, NATO’s behavior since its military buildup to attack Ukraine’s Russian-speaking eastern states in February 2022 has been a drastic failure. The U.S. plan was to bleed Russia and leave it so economically destitute that its population would revolt, throw Vladimir Putin out of office and restore a pro-Western neoliberal leader who would pry Russia away from its alliance with China – and then proceed with America’s grand plan to mobilize Europe to impose sanctions on China.

    What makes it so difficult in trying to evaluate where NATO, Europe and the United States are going is that the traditional assumption that nations and classes will act in their economic self-interest is not of help. The traditional logic of geopolitical analysis is to assume that business and financial interests steer almost every nation’s politics. The ancillary assumption is that governing officials have a fairly realistic understanding of the economic and political dynamics at work. Forecasting the future is thus usually an exercise in spelling out these dynamics.

    The US/NATO West has led this global fracture, yet it will be the big loser. NATO members already have seen Ukraine deplete their inventory of guns and bullets, artillery and ammunition, tanks, helicopters weapons and other arms accumulated over five decades. But Europe’s loss has become America’s sales opportunity, creating a vast new market for America’s military-industrial complex to re-supply Europe. To gain support, the United States has sponsored a new way of thinking about international trade and investment. The focus has shifted to “national security,” meaning to secure a U.S.-centered unipolar order.
    The world is dividing into two blocs: a post-industrial US/NATO vs the Global Majority

    U.S. diplomats became increasingly worried as Germany and other European countries came to rely on imported Russian gas, oil, and fertilizer as the basis for its steel, glass-making and other industries. They became even more worried as China had become the “workshop of the world” while the U.S. economy de-industrialized. The fear was that growth by China and its neighboring Eurasian countries benefiting from the Belt and Road expansion threatened to make that part of the world the main growth area, and hence a magnet for European investment. The logical prospect was that politics would follow economic interest at the expense of America’s ability to maintain a unipolar world economy with the dollar at its financial center and trade subject to U.S. protectionist unilateralism.

    By joining America’s crusade to destroy the Russian economy and promote regime change, Germany’s and other European countries’ refusal to trade with Russia has destroyed the basic energy foundation of their industry. Destruction of the Nord Stream pipeline has plunged the German and other European economies into depression involving widespread bankruptcies and unemployment. In place of Russian gas, the NATO countries must now pay up to six times as high a price for U.S. liquified natural gas (LNG), and must build new port facilities to physically import this gas.

    The European leaders sponsored and financed by U.S. election meddling over the past seventy years have done what Boris Yeltsin did in Russia in the 1990s: They have agreed to sacrifice Europe’s industrial economies and end what had been its profitable trade and investment integration with Russia and China.

    The next step is for Europe and the United States to stop trading and investing with China, despite the fact that these NATO countries have benefited from the flowering of this trade, relying on it for a wide range of consumer goods and industrial inputs. That line of prosperous trade is now to be ended. NATO’s leaders have announced that importing Russian gas and other raw materials (including helium and many metals) runs the “risk” of becoming dependent – as if Russia or China might find it in their economic or political interest to abort this trade simply to hurt Europe and to do to it what the United States has been doing to force it into submission.

    But submission to what? The answer is, submission to the logic of mutual gains along lines leaving the U.S. economy behind!

    By trying to prevent other countries from following this logic, U.S. and European NATO diplomacy has brought about exactly what U.S. supremacists most feared. Instead of crippling the Russian economy to create a political crisis and perhaps breakup of Russia itself in order to isolate it from China, the US/NATO sanctions have led Russia to re-orient its trade away from NATO countries to integrate its economy and diplomacy more closely with China and other BRICS members.

    Ironically, the US/NATO policy is forcing Russia, China and their BRICS allies to go their own way, starting with a united Eurasia. This new core of China, Russia and Eurasia with the Global South are creating a mutually beneficial multipolar trade and investment sphere.

    By contrast, European industry has been devastated. Its economies have become thoroughly and abjectly dependent on the United States – at a much higher cost to itself than was the case with its former trade partners. European exporters have lost the Russian market, and are now following U.S. demands that they abandon and indeed reject the Chinese market. Also to be rejected in due course are markets in the BRICS membership, which is expanding to include Near Eastern, African and Latin American countries.

    Instead of isolating Russia and China and making them dependent on U.S. economic control, U.S. unipolar diplomacy has isolated itself and its NATO satellites from the rest of the world – the Global Majority that is growing while NATO economies are rushing ahead along their Road to Deindustrialization. The remarkable thing is that while NATO warns of the “risk” of trade with Russia and China, it does not see its loss of industrial viability and economic sovereignty to the United States as a risk.

    This is not what the “economic interpretation of history” would have forecast. Governments are expected to support their economy’s leading business interests. So we are brought back to the question of whether economic factors will determine the shape of world trade, investment and diplomacy. Is it really possible to create a set of post-economic NATO economies whose members will come to look much like the rapidly depopulating and de-industrializing Baltic states and post-Soviet Ukraine?

    This would be a strange kind of “national security” indeed. In economic terms it seems that the U.S. and European strategy of self-isolation from the rest of the world is so massive and far-reaching an error that its effects are the equivalent of a world war.

    Today’s fighting against Russia on the Ukrainian front can be thought of as the opening campaign in World War III. In many ways it is an outgrowth of World War II and its aftermath that saw the United States establish international economic and political organizations to operate in its own national self-interest. The International Monetary Fund imposes U.S. financial control and helps dollarize the world economy.

    The World Bank lends dollars to governments to build export infrastructure to subsidize US/NATO investors in control of oil, mining and natural resources, and to promote trade dependency on U.S. farm exports while promoting plantation agriculture, instead of domestic food-grain production. The United States insists on having veto power in all international organizations that it joins, including the United Nations and its agencies.

    The creation of NATO is often misunderstood. Ostensibly, it depicted itself as a military alliance, originally to defend against the thought that the Soviet Union might have some reason to conquer Western Europe. But NATO’s most important role was to use “national security” as the excuse to override European domestic and foreign policy and subordinate it to U.S. control. Dependency on NATO was written into the European Union’s constitution. Its objective was to make sure that European party leaders followed U.S. direction and opposed left-wing or anti-American politics, pro-labor policies and governments strong enough to prevent control by a U.S.-client financial oligarchy.

    NATO’s economic program has been one of adherence to neoliberal financialization, privatization, government deregulation and imposing austerity on labor. EU regulations prevent governments from running a budget deficit of more than 3% of GDP. That blocks Keynesian-type policies to spur recovery. Today, higher military arms costs and government subsidy of energy prices is forcing European governments to cut back social spending. Bank policy, trade policy, and domestic lawmaking are following the same U.S. neoliberal model that has deindustrialized the American economy and loaded it down with debt to the financial sector in whose hands most wealth and income is now concentrated.
    Abandoning economic self-interest for “national security” dependence on the US

    The post-Vilnius world treats trade and international relations not as economic, but as “national security.” Any form of trade is the “risk” of being cut off and destabilized. The aim is not to make trade and investment gains, but to become self-reliant and independent. For the West, this means isolating China, Russia, and the BRICS in order to depend fully on the United States. So for the United States, its own security means making other countries dependent on itself, so that U.S. diplomats won’t lose control of their military and political diplomacy.

    Treating trade and investment with other countries than the United States as involving “risk,” ipso facto, is a projection of how U.S. diplomacy has imposed sanctions on countries that resist U.S. domination, privatization and subordination of their economies to U.S. takeover. The fear that trade with Russia and China will lead to political dependency is a fantasy. The aim of the emerging Eurasian, BRICS and Global South alliance is to benefit from foreign trade with each other for mutual gain, with governments strong enough to treat money and banking as public utilities, along with the basic monopolies needed to provide normal human rights, including health care and education, and keeping monopolies such as transportation and communication in the public domain to keep the costs of living and doing business low instead of charging monopoly prices.

    Anti-China hate has come especially from Annalena Baerbock, Germany’s Foreign Minister. NATO is warned to “de-risk” trade with China. The “risks” are that (1) China can cut off key exports, just as the US cut off European access to Russian oil exports; and (2) exports could potentially be used to support China’s military power. Almost any economic export COULD be military, even food to feed a Chinese army.

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s trip to China likewise explained that all trade has a military potential and thus has a national-security element. All trade has a military potential, even selling food to China could be used to feed soldiers.

    The US/NATO demand is that Germany and other European countries should impose an Iron Curtain against trade with China, Russia and their allies in order to “de-risk” trade. Yet only the US has imposed trade sanctions on other countries, not China and other Global South countries. The real risk is not that China will impose trade sanctions to disrupt European economies, but that the United States will impose sanctions on countries breaking the US-sponsored trade boycott.

    This “trade is risk” view treats foreign trade not in economic terms but in “National Security” terms. In practice, “national security” means joining the U.S. attempt to maintain its unipolar control of the entire world’s economy. No risk is acknowledged for re-orienting European gas and energy trade to U.S. companies. The risk is said to be trade with countries that U.S. diplomats deem “autocracies,” meaning nations with active government infrastructure investment and regulation instead of U.S.-style neoliberalism.

    The world is dividing into two blocs – with quite different economic philosophies
    Only the United States has imposed trade sanctions on other countries. And only the United States has rejected international free trade rules as national security threats to US economic and military control. At first glance the resulting global fracture between US/NATO on the one hand and the expanding BRICS alliance of Russia, China, Iran and the Global South might seem to be a conflict between capitalism and socialism (that is, state socialism in a mixed economy with public regulation in labor’s interests).

    But that contrast between capitalism and socialism is not helpful upon closer examination. The problem lies in what the word “capitalism” has come to mean in today’s world. Back in the 19th and early 20th century, industrial capitalism was expected to evolve toward socialism. The U.S. and other industrial economies welcomed and indeed pressed for their governments to subsidize a widening range of basic services at public expense instead of obliging employers to bear the costs of hiring labor that had to pay for basic needs such as health care and education. Monopoly pricing was avoided by keeping natural monopolies such as railroads and other transportation, telephone systems and other communications, parks and other services as public utilities. Having governments instead of business and its employees pay for these services increased the global competitiveness of national industry in the resulting mixed economies.

    China has followed this basic approach of industrial capitalism, with socialist politics to uplift its labor force, not merely the wealth of industrial capitalists – much less bankers and absentee landlords and monopolists. Most important, it has industrialized banking, creating credit to finance tangible investment in means of production, not the kind of predatory and unproductive credit characterized by today’s finance capitalism.

    But the mixed-economy policy of industrial capitalism is not the way in which capitalism evolved in the West since World War I.

    Rejecting classical political economy and its drive to free markets from the vested rent-extracting classes inherited from feudalism – a hereditary landlord class, a financial banking class and monopolists – the rentier sector has fought back to reassert its privatization of land rent, interest and monopoly gains. It sought to reverse progressive taxation, and indeed to give tax favoritism to financial wealth, landlords and monopolists.

    The Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE) sector has become the dominant interest and economic planner under today’s finance capitalism. That is why economies are often called neofeudal (or euphemized as neoliberal).

    Throughout history the dynamics of financialization have polarized wealth and income between creditors and debtors, leading to oligarchies. As interest-bearing debt grows exponentially, more and more income of labor and business must be paid as debt service. That financial dynamic shrinks the domestic market for goods and services, and the economy suffers from deepening debt-ridden austerity.

    The result is de-industrialization as economies polarize between creditors and debtors. That has occurred most notoriously in Britain in the wake of Margaret Thatcher and the New [Anti-]Labour Party of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown’s “light touch” deregulatory approach to financial manipulation and outright fraud.

    The United States has suffered an equally devastating shift of wealth and income to the Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE) sectors in the wake of Ronald Reagan’s tax cuts for the wealthy, anti-government deregulation, Bill Clinton’s “Third Way” takeover by Wall Street. The “Third Way” was neither industrial capitalism nor socialism, but finance capitalism making its gains both by stripping and indebting industry and labor of income.

    The new Democratic Party ideology of deregulated finance was capped by the massive bank-fraud collapse of 2008 and Barack Obama’s protection of junk-mortgage lenders and wholesale foreclosures on their financial victims. Economic planning and policy was shifted from governments to Wall Street and other financial centers – which had taken control of in government, the central bank and regulatory agencies.

    U.S. and British diplomats are seeking to promote this predatory pro-financial and inherently anti-industrial economic philosophy to the rest of the world. But this ideological evangelism is threatened by the obvious contrast between the US-British failed and de-industrialized economies compared to China’s remarkable economic growth under industrial socialism.

    This contrast between China’s economic success and the NATO West’s “garden” of debt-ridden austerity is the essence of today’s campaign by the West against the “Jungle” countries seeking political independence from U.S. diplomacy so as to uplift their living standards. This ideological and inherently political global war is today’s counterpart to the religious wars that tore European countries apart for many centuries.

    We are witnessing what seems to be an inexorable Decline of the West. U.S. diplomats have been able to tighten their economic, political and military control leadership over their European NATO allies. Their easy success in this aim has led them to imagine that somehow they can conquer the rest of the world despite de-industrializing and loading their economies so deeply in debt that there is no foreseeable way in which they can pay their official debt to foreign countries or indeed have much to offer.
    The traditional imperialism of military conquest and financial conquest is ended

    There has been a sequence of tactics for a lead-nation to carve out an empire. The oldest way is by military conquest. But you can’t occupy and take over a country without an army, and the US has no army large enough. The Vietnam War ended the draft. So it must rely on foreign armies like Al Qaeda, ISIS, and most recently Ukraine and Poland, just as it relies on foreign industrial manufactures. Its armaments are depleted and it cannot mobilize a domestic army to occupy any country. The US has only one weapon: Missiles and bombs can destroy, but cannot occupy and take over a country.

    The second way to create imperial power was by economic power to make other countries dependent on U.S. exports. After World War II the rest of the world was devastated and was bullied into accepting U.S. diplomacy maneuvering to give its economy a monopoly on basic needs. Agriculture became a major weapon to create foreign dependency. The World Bank would not support foreign countries growing their own food, but pressed for plantation export crops, and fought land reform. And for oil and energy trade, U.S. companies and their NATO allies in Britain and Holland (British Petroleum and Shell) controlled the world’s oil trade.
    Control of world oil trade has been a central aim of US trade diplomacy.

    This strategy worked for US assertion of control over Germany and other NATO countries, by blowing up the Nord Stream pipeline and severing Western Europe from access to Russian gas, oil, fertilizer and also crops. Europe has now entered an industrial depression and economic austerity as its steel industry and other leading sectors are invited to emigrate to the United States, along with European skilled labor.

    Today, electronic technology and computer chips have been a focal point of establishing global Economic Dependency on U.S. technology. The United States aims to monopolize “intellectual property” and extract economic rent from charging high prices) for high-technology computer chips, communications, and arms production.

    But the United States has deindustrialized and let itself become dependent on Asian and other countries for its products, instead of making them dependent on the US. This trade dependency is what makes U.S. diplomats feel “insecure,” worrying that other countries might seek to use the same coercive trade and financial diplomacy that the United States has been wielding since 1944-45.

    The United States is left with one remaining tactic to control other countries: trade sanctions, imposed by it and its NATO satellites in an attempt to disrupt economies that do not accept U.S. unipolar economic, political and military dominance. It has persuaded the Netherlands to block sophisticated chip-engraving machinery to China, and other countries to block anything that might contribute to China’s economic development. A new American industrial protectionism is being framed in terms of national security grounds.

    If China’s trade policy were to mirror that of U.S. diplomacy, it would stop supplying NATO countries with mineral and metal exports needed to produce the computer chips and allied inputs that America’s economy needs to wield its global diplomacy.

    The US is so heavily debt-laden, its housing prices are so high and its medical care is so extremely high (18% of GDP) cannot compete. It cannot re-industrialize without taking radical steps to write down debts, to de-privatize health care and education, to break up monopolies and restore progressive taxation. The vested Financial, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE sector) interests are too powerful to permit these reforms. That makes the U.S. economy a failed economy, and America a Failed State.

    In the wake of World War II the United States accumulated 75% of the world’s monetary gold by 1950. That enabled it to impose dollarization on the world. But today, nobody knows whether the U.S. Treasury and New York Federal Reserve have any gold that has not been pledged to private buyers and speculators? The worry is that it has sold European central-bank gold reserves. Germany has asked for its gold reserves to be flown back from New York, but the United States said that it was unavailable, and Germany was too timid to make its worries and complaints public.

    America’s financial quandary is even worse when one tries to imagine how it can ever pay its foreign debt for countries seeking to draw down their dollars. The United States can only print its own currency. It is not willing to sell off its domestic assets, as it demands that other debtor countries do?

    What can other countries accept in place of gold? One form of assets that may be taken as collateral are U.S. investments in Europe and other countries. But if foreign governments seek to do this, U.S. officials may retaliate by seizing their investments in the United States. A mutual grabbing would occur.

    The United States is trying to monopolize electronic technology. The problem is that this requires raw-materials inputs whose production presently is dominated by China, above all rare-earth metals (which are abundant but environmentally destructive to refine), gallium, nickel (China dominates the refining), and Russian helium and other gasses used for engraving computer chips. China recently announced that on August 1 it will start restricting these key exports. It indeed has the ability to cut off supplies of vital materials and technology to the West, to protect itself from the West’s “national-security” sanctions against China. That is the self-fulfilling prophecy that U.S. warnings of a trade fight has created.

    If U.S. diplomacy strongarms its NATO-garden allies to boycott China’s Huawei technology, Europe will be left with a less efficient, more expensive alternative – whose consequences help separate it from China, the BRICS and what has become the World Majority in a self-reliant alignment much broader than was created by Sukarno in 1954.

    –----

    Michael Hudson is President of The Institute for the Study of Long-Term Economic Trends (ISLET), a Wall Street Financial Analyst, Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. He is the author of Killing the Host (published in e-format by CounterPunch Books and in print by Islet). His new book is J is For Junk Economics.

    #USA #Europe #OTAN #Chine #capitalisme #impérialisme #guerre

  • Noble House, film d’après le roman de James Clavell
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L7gAAG-S3x0

    C’est une belle histoire sur l"impérialisme et la création de ses structures pour exploiter le monde. A mi-mots la série télévisée parle de la HongKong and Shanghai Bank qui est toujours vonnue comme partenaire pour toute sorte de #racket douteux.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noble_House_(miniseries)

    Deborah Raffin as Casey Tcholok
    Ben Masters as Linc Bartlett
    John Rhys-Davies as Quillan Gornt
    Julia Nickson as Orlanda Ramos
    Khigh Dhiegh as “Four Finger” Wu
    Gordon Jackson as Supt. Robert Armstrong
    Burt Kwouk as Phillip Chen
    Nancy Kwan as Claudia Chen
    John van Dreelen as Jacques DeVille
    Ping Wu as Paul Choy
    Lim Kay Tong as Brian Kwok
    Lisa Lu as Ah-Tam
    Damien Thomas as Lando Mata
    Dudley Sutton as Commissioner Roger Crosse
    Ric Young as Tsu-Yan
    Tia Carrere as Venus Poon
    Steven Vincent Leigh as John Chen
    Irene Tsu as Dianne Chen
    John Houseman as Sir Geoffrey Allison
    Denholm Elliott as Alastair Struan
    Harris Laskawy as Charles Biltzmann
    Leon Lissek as Christian Toxe
    Keith Bonnard as Tip Tok-Toh
    Edward Petherbridge as Jason Plumm
    Bennett Ohta as Richard Kwang
    Brian Fong as “Goodweather” Poon
    Helen Funai as Mrs. Kwang
    David Shaughnessy as Dr. Dorn
    John Fujioka as “Baldhead” Kin
    Richard Durden as Paul Havergill
    David Henry as Bruce Johnjohn
    George Innes as Alexi Travkin
    Choy-Ling Man as Mary Li
    Pip Miller as Inspector John Smyth
    Michael Siberry as Linbar Struan
    Duncan Preston as Richard Pugmire
    Vincent Wong as Lim Chu
    Galen Yuen as “Smallpox” Kin
    Nicholas Pryor as Seymour Steigler

    #Chine #Royaume_Uni #impérialisme #banques #Hong_Kong

  • Le Chancre du Niger, petit livre de 1939 – jamais réédité
    https://www.cairn.info/revue-roman2050-2006-4-page-17.htm

    Le Chancre du Niger n’a pas eu la fortune du Rôdeur, de L’Âge d’or ou de La Ligne de force. Ce livre de 1939 n’a jamais été réédité. « Ce petit livre », préfacé par Gide, s’inscrit dans une collection, Les Tracts de la NRF, où Gide a publié deux textes retentissants : Retour de l’U.R.S.S. (1936) et Retouches à mon « Retour de l’U.R.S.S. » (1937). Herbart, lui, s’attaque à l’Office du #Niger, un établissement public fondé en 1932 pour irriguer, « coloniser, mettre en valeur et exploiter », aux frais de l’AOF, la vallée du Niger dans ce qui était, à cette époque, le Soudan français et qui s’appelle aujourd’hui le Mali. Fidèle à l’esprit de la collection, #Pierre_Herbart y dénonce en 124 pages « la malfaisance […] d’un système » . Le Chancre du Niger ne se présente pourtant pas comme un pamphlet, mais comme une « étude », une « enquête » qui veut prouver à l’aide de documents et de chiffres. Ce texte tire sa force de la solidité de son information, et aussi, ce que je voudrais montrer, de sa mise en œuvre littéraire. [...]

    #colonisation # exploitation #impérialisme_français #curious_about

  • Indopacifique : l’impérialisme français manœuvre
    https://journal.lutte-ouvriere.org/2023/07/26/indopacifique-limperialisme-francais-manoeuvre_725787.html

    Le 24 juillet, Macron a atterri en Nouvelle-Calédonie, première étape d’une tournée qui devait l’emmener au Vanuatu et en Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée, une tournée qualifiée d’ historique dans cette région du monde appelée maintenant #Indopacifique.

    La présence dans cette région est devenue une priorité stratégique de l’État français. Alors que la tension monte entre les #États-Unis et la #Chine, que les uns et les autres cherchent à enrôler les pays de la région dans des alliances économiques et militaires, l’impérialisme de second rang qu’est la France veut pouvoir jouer son propre jeu. En s’appuyant sur ses #colonies du #Pacifique, en particulier la Nouvelle-Calédonie et la #Polynésie, il se présente comme un acteur régional et une « puissance d’équilibre », à distance des États-Unis et de la Chine.

    Cette posture lui permet d’avoir l’oreille de certains États, comme l’Inde et l’Indonésie, qui ne veulent pas apparaître comme trop inféodés aux États-Unis, ce qui met les Dassault et autres Thales en bonne position pour vendre leurs armes. Ainsi Macron a reçu à l’Élysée le 14 juillet le président indien Modi au moment où son pays annonçait l’achat de 26 Rafale. De son côté, l’#Indonésie a acheté en 2022 des Mirage d’occasion, tout en s’engageant pour 42 Rafale. Au-delà des ventes d’armes, la possession de ces #territoires_d’Outre-mer permet à la France de s’intégrer à différents traités et forums du Pacifique, et d’obliger les États-Unis à lui faire une petite place dans leurs manœuvres militaires et diplomatiques.

    La #Nouvelle-Calédonie est donc pour l’#impérialisme français une pièce majeure. Outre les abondantes réserves de #nickel et sa vaste zone maritime, elle abrite une base militaire sur la route commerciale à destination de l’Australie et de la Nouvelle-Zélande, d’où partent les navires et avions militaires qui participent aux opérations conjointes avec les États-Unis. Ainsi celles du 19 juillet sur l’#île_de_Guam, baptisées #Elephant_Walk, ont rassemblé États-Unis, #Royaume-Uni, Canada, Australie, Japon et France.

    Il n’est donc pas dans les intentions de l’État français de relâcher ses liens avec ce qui lui reste de colonies. La présence de #Sonia_Backès, anti-indépendantiste caldoche, présidente de la province Sud, la plus riche de l’archipel, au gouvernement de Macron comme secrétaire d’État à la Citoyenneté, est plus qu’un symbole. Mardi 25 juillet, plusieurs dizaines de militants #kanaks se sont rassemblés pour dénoncer la colonisation de leur archipel et s’opposer à la modification du corps électoral, qui donnerait encore plus de poids aux #Caldoches, les colons et descendants de colons de métropole.

    Après avoir reçu les uns et les autres et leur avoir fait moultes promesses, Macron s’envolera vers le Vanuatu, un archipel devenu un enjeu entre États-Unis et Chine, où celle-ci construit de nombreuses infrastructures. Pour riposter, les États-Unis ont annoncé début avril l’ouverture d’une ambassade. Tout le #Pacifique_Sud est devenu le théâtre de cette rivalité croissante. En 2022, le ministre chinois des Affaires étrangères y a fait une tournée, proposant aux États insulaires des millions de dollars d’aides, un projet d’accord de libre-échange, des pactes de sécurité, comme celui passé avec les #îles_Salomon. Les États-Unis quant à eux rouvrent des ambassades et négocient des accords militaires.

    La #Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée, ancienne colonie australienne, pays parmi les plus pauvres du monde, était la dernière étape de Macron. En même temps, le secrétaire d’État américain devait se rendre aux Tonga voisines. Le #Pacifique est un nouvel enjeu pour les pays impérialistes. L’#impérialisme_français veut être de la partie.

  • Francis Fukuyama parades Neo-Nazi Azov Battalion at Stanford University
    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2023/07/22/mvxy-j22.html

    Une voix du samizdat états-unien - nos camarades trozkistes sont toujours très forts en matière d’analyse marxiste quand ils ne sont pas en train de se livrer une énième guéguerre idéologique entre eux. Là ils nous font découvrir les relations entre impérialistes et nazis sous leur commande.

    Malheureusement sur le plan de l’info on n’apprend pas de nouveautés, mais l’image dessinée de la rencontre entre les véritables masters of war et leurs porteurs d’eau (héhé, je la connais encore la langue de bois gauchiste !) ne manque pas de perspicacité.

    21.7.2023 by David Benson, Clara Weiss - On June 29, Stanford University, one of the most prestigious schools in the world, provided a platform for the neo-Nazi Ukrainian Azov Battalion in an event sponsored by the Department of Slavic Languages and Literature and the Ukrainian Students Association at Stanford (USAS). Insignia associated with fascism, such as the official logo of the Azov Battalion, which is deliberately modeled after the Nazis’ Wolfsangel symbol, were used to promote the event on campus.
    The poster used to promote the Azov event at Stanford. It includes the official logo of Azov with the Wolfsangel insignia, as well as the insignia used by the Nazi collaborating Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists-Bandera, which the Ukrainian Student Association at Stanford adopted as its official logo. [Photo: Facebook page of the Ukrainian Student Association at Stanford]

    The speakers were Arsenyi Fedosiuk, sergeant in the Azov Battalion; his wife Julia Fedosiuk, co-founder of the Association of Families of Azovstal’ Defenders; and Kateryna Prokopenko, founder and leader of the Association of Families of Azovstal’ Defenders. Prokopenko is the wife of Azov Commander Denys Prokopenko, who led the organization until his capture last year and is known for proudly displaying the SS bearded Totenkopf insignia as well as the Wehrmacht Wolfsangel symbol.

    Before joining Azov in 2014, Denys Prokopenko was a member of the White Boys Club, a neo-Nazi fan club of the Dynamo Kyiv soccer team. Its Facebook posts have included photos of graffiti with their organization’s name alongside the number “88,” the neo-Nazi code for “Heil Hitler.”

    The same members and family supporters of Azov have also been meeting with members of Congress of both parties as well as representatives of the Green Party in Germany.
    A 2019 graffiti of the Kiyv Dynamo “White Boys” fan club with the neo-Nazi code for “Heil Hitler” [Photo: Facebook page of the White Boys Club]

    Francis Fukuyama, a professor at Stanford and a fellow with Stanford’s “Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law,” introduced the neo-Nazis. Even after the event had created a public backlash, Fukuyama defended Azov, falsely claiming, “They originated among Ukrainian nationalists, but to call them neo-Nazis is to accept Russia’s framing of what they represent today. By the time they defended Mariopol they were fully integrated into the [Armed Forces of Ukraine] and are heroes that I’m proud to support.”
    Francis Fukuyama (left) with Arsenyi Fedosiuk, Julia Fedosiuk and Kateryna Prokopenko. [Photo: Facebook page of the Ukrainian Student Association at Stanford]

    This is a blatant lie. Even Stanford’s own Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), acknowledges, in a profile that was last updated in 2022, “The Azov Movement is a far-right nationalist network of military, paramilitary, and political organizations based in Ukraine.”

    The Azov Battalion was founded in 2014 by white supremacist Andriy Biletsky who advocated a “crusade of the white nations of the world against the Semitic-led subhumans.” The organization is teeming with fascists and racists who idolize Stepan Bandera, whose Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN-B) collaborated with the Nazis during World War II in carrying out the Holocaust in Ukraine. Bandera’s forces also engaged in an ethnic mass murder of tens of thousands of Poles. Today, monuments to him have been erected throughout Ukraine, and the fascist slogan “Slava Ukraini” (Glory to Ukraine) is regularly used by Western politicians. The Ukrainian Student Association at Stanford has adopted as its official logo the OUN-B emblem, which was also used to designate officers of the Ukrainian Hilfspolizei under the Nazis.

    The role played by Francis Fukuyama in promoting these neo-Nazis is revealing. A former adviser to the Reagan administration and later a supporter of Barack Obama, Fukuyama has long been a leading ideologist of the US ruling class. He is best known for proclaiming the collapse of Stalinism in 1989-1991 to be the “end of history.” In an article for Foreign Affairs in 1989, Fukuyama declared that “the end point of mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy” had been reached.

    At the time, the International Committee of the Fourth International insisted, that, far from marking “the end of history,” the collapse of the Stalinist regimes in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union marked a new stage in the crisis of world imperialism and a new period of imperialist wars and revolutions. The fundamental contradictions of world capitalism that had given rise to two world wars, fascism, and the 1917 October Revolution remained in full force, and the 20th century, far from being over, remained “unfinished.”

    This assessment has been confirmed in spades. The 30 years that followed the destruction of the USSR were a period of unending imperialist wars and skyrocketing social inequality. The US, presumably the beacon of capitalist democracy, has undergone a fascist coup attempt. The imperialist powers are now waging an undeclared war against Russia in Ukraine while preparing for war against China in an emerging new imperialist redivision of the world. In proudly sharing a platform with Ukrainian neo-Nazis who are fighting a war on behalf of US imperialism, Fukuyama, the erstwhile prophet of the triumph of “liberal democracy,” has become the embodiment of the bankruptcy of his own theory.

    But there is another element to this event that deserves analysis.

    Held during summer break and sparsely attended by students, the meeting with Azov was organized by and for far-right forces and elements within the American state apparatus and those who want to become part of it. Previously, the Ukrainian Student Association at Stanford has hosted Ukrainian President Zelensky as well as Michael McFaul, a professor at Stanford and former US ambassador to Russia who has played an important role in US imperialist operations in Eastern Europe for decades.

    Yet while the event was clearly not held to attract a large audience, it also did not evoke any serious opposition. The faculty of Stanford or, for that matter, other universities, met the appearance of Ukrainian neo-Nazis and fascist insignia with a collective shrug. Stanford has not even bothered to respond to repeated inquiries about the university’s position regarding the Azov event prominently displaying the Wolfsangel.

    This is a particularly stark manifestation of a far broader phenomenon. One and a half years into the war in Ukraine, which has cost hundreds of thousands of lives, there has not been a single serious discussion organized on campus by faculty on the historical and political origins of the war, much less any meeting in opposition to the war. Instead, NATO officials and warmongers, as well as officials of the Ukrainian administration of Volodymyr Zelensky, have been paraded on US campuses. An international anti-war meeting series by the IYSSE in the spring was met with systematic attempts at censorship by Ukrainian far-right nationalists and the state apparatus.

    Such a development can only be explained based on an analysis of the class forces on campus and the foul intellectual climate that has been created by decades of anti-Marxism and the promotion of postmodernist thought.

    The last thirty years of uninterrupted imperialist wars abroad and social counter-revolution at home that followed the end of the USSR also saw the ever closer integration of academic institutions, especially the so called “elite” universities, into the state and military apparatus and Wall Street.

    Stanford University is a primary example. The university’s Board of Trustees is largely composed of hedge fund managers and Wall Street executives, including Gene T. Sykes, the managing director of Goldman Sachs. The university has also long been notorious for the right-wing Hoover Institution, which is currently led by war criminal Condoleezza Rice, a key figure in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

    The Hoover Institution has historically been a central hub for the promotion of right-wing historical revisionism and falsifications. Most notably, it has hosted workshops with far-right academics like Jörg Baberowski from Berlin’s Humboldt University, who has since emerged as a central figure in the international effort by academics to minimize the crimes of Nazism. Another attendee of Hoover’s workshops was Robert Service, the author of a hack biography of Leon Trotsky which systematically falsifies the life and work of the revolutionary and makes unabashed use of old Stalinist and antisemitic slanders.

    The ICFI and the WSWS have conducted a systematic campaign for decades to expose and refute these historical falsifications. Yet even before the war began, with very important exceptions, neither these blatantly politically motivated lies about the role of Leon Trotsky and the history of the October revolution, nor the pro-Nazi falsifications of Jörg Baberowski and the systematic legitimization of the crimes of German and Eastern European fascism by Yale University’s Timothy Snyder, met any serious opposition among academics.

    The postmodernist rejection of an objective and scientific study of history and the promotion of various irrational and subjectivist conceptions has significantly contributed to an intellectual and political climate that has allowed for this flourishing of unabashed far-right historical revisionism and fascist thought. But underlying these shifts in significant sections of the academic intelligentsia have been real material interests.

    The same socio-political developments that meant war and social destitution for millions of workers over the past decades were accompanied by a significant elevation in the social status of layers of the middle class, including the upper echelons of academia. Compromising the top 10 or even top 5 percent of the income bracket, these layers see their social privileges bound up with the preservation of capitalism and, more specifically, the advancement of the interests of US imperialism.

    These social processes were the material basis for the immense shift to the right of sections of the middle class that dominated the anti-war movements of the past. Along with their opposition to imperialist war, as limited as it may have been, they have dropped not only any form of critical thought but also any meaningful opposition to fascism.

    Since the beginning of the war, there has been an almost complete intellectual collapse in this layer, which has lined up shamelessly behind the war aims and propaganda of US imperialism. In the war propaganda by the pro-NATO media, the historical falsifications, concocted by academics, have been used systematically to whitewash the “new old friends” of US imperialism in the war against Russia: the Ukrainian fascists. The New York Times regularly quotes Azov commanders as primary sources in its lying “coverage” of the war. It has also effectively adopted the far-right revisionist narrative of history, going so far as to claim that the Soviet Union’s Red Army launched World War II.

    The fact that neo-Nazis are now paraded on campuses of leading academic institutions in the US must be seen as an alarming sign of the extent of the rightward shift of both the bourgeoisie and significant sections of the middle class and academia. Serious intellectuals, students and young people must draw far-reaching conclusions from this development. The fight against imperialist war and fascism can only be developed based on the working class, and a determined struggle against all forms of historical falsification. This requires a return to the traditions of Marxism, which are today embodied in the Trotskyist movement, the International Committee of the Fourth International, and its youth organization, the IYSSE.

    #Ukraine #USA #nazis #impérialisme

  • Algérie, 5 juillet 1830 : le corps expéditionnaire envoyé par Charles X prend Alger
    – Le premier quart d’heure
    – Et ainsi débuta l’œuvre civilisatrice de le France
    #archiveLO (14 juillet 1964) #colonisation

    5 juillet 1962 : l’indépendance pour l’Algérie mais pas l’émancipation sociale des travailleurs
    https://journal.lutte-ouvriere.org/2012/07/04/il-y-50-ans-le-5-juillet-1962-lindependance-pour-lalgerie-ma | #archiveLO (6 juillet 2012)

    Le peuple algérien avait obtenu l’indépendance, mais il n’obtint pas au bout du compte la liberté, et encore moins son émancipation sociale. Pourtant, il constituait une force, qui aurait été d’autant plus puissante si elle s’était alliée à la classe ouvrière française. De part et d’autre de la Méditerranée, les travailleurs algériens et français étaient liés depuis des décennies par mille liens, pour avoir souvent travaillé dans les mêmes usines et s’être retrouvés côte à côte dans les mêmes combats. Mais les travailleurs français avaient laissé parler en leur nom les dirigeants socialistes, ceux-là mêmes qui généralisèrent la guerre d’Algérie, tandis que les travailleurs algériens de leur côté restaient derrière une direction nationaliste. Il aurait fallu qu’existent, de part et d’autres, des partis qui proposent aux travailleurs des deux pays d’intervenir avec une politique de classe, les unifiant en une même force, afin d’offrir une perspective d’émancipation sociale et internationale.

    #Algérie #impérialisme #colonisation #indépendance #guerre #nationalisme

  • 🔴 Le fasciste et le tyran : que ce passe-t-il en Russie ? - Contre Attaque

    Au troisième siècle avant notre ère, la grande puissance militaire qui fait face à Rome est la Cité de Carthage, en Afrique. L’armée de Carthage est composée de mercenaires. Après une défaite militaire, ces derniers se révoltent contre leurs employeurs car ils n’ont pas été payés. Une guerre civile atroce dévaste la ville, très affaiblie, qui subira deux autres défaites contre Rome et finira entièrement rasée. Au Moyen-Âge, des troupes de mercenaires réunies au sein de « grandes compagnies » vendent leur violence aux Princes les plus offrants et dévastent les territoires lorsqu’ils n’ont plus d’employeurs. Durant la Renaissance, les Condottieres sont des mercenaires en quête de fortune et de titres, qui découpent lorsqu’ils peuvent leurs propres fiefs au détriment des pouvoirs qui les avaient embauchés. La condition même du mercenaire, c’est-à-dire du chien de guerre qui se bat sous contrat, est par définition de se retourner contre ses maîtres.
    En Russie, c’est un épisode aussi sidérant que soudain qui a eu lieu ces derniers jours. Une mutinerie spectaculaire du groupe Wagner qui a fait route vers Moscou, avant de se rétracter. Quelques mots pour y voir plus clair (...)

    #Russie #Prigojine #Wagner #Poutine #militarisme #nationalisme #guerre #impérialisme #despotisme #fascisme...

    ⏩ Lire l’article complet…

    ▶️ https://contre-attaque.net/2023/06/26/le-fasciste-et-le-tyran-que-ce-passe-t-il-en-russie

  • Commémoration du 6 juin 1944 : non à l’union sacrée !
    https://journal.lutte-ouvriere.org/2023/06/07/commemoration-du-6-juin-1944-non-lunion-sacree_699576.html

    [...] La raison de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale a été l’évolution des rapports de force entre impérialistes et l’impasse économique générale, pas la volonté ou la folie individuelle de tel ou tel dictateur. La liberté que les Alliés se vantent d’avoir défendue était avant tout la liberté des esclavagistes britannique et français de conserver leurs empires coloniaux convoités par l’Allemagne et le Japon. Elle n’était ni pour les Algériens, ni pour les Indiens, ni pour tant d’autres qui ont été tout juste bons à servir de chair à canon et à qui la fin de la guerre n’a apporté que la prolongation de leur servitude. Elle n’était pas non plus pour les ouvriers et les petites gens allemands ou japonais, ceux des nœuds ferroviaires en France, ceux de Lorient ou du Havre, condamnés à périr sous les bombes. Ce n’est pas pour cet enjeu que des dizaines de millions de personnes sont mortes, sous tous les uniformes ou sans uniforme et sous toutes les latitudes.

    La liberté a été, en revanche, pleine, entière et rentable pour les capitaux américains qui, après toutes ces horreurs, ont pu dominer le monde sans partage. La fin des combats fut évidemment un soulagement, comme le fut la libération des prisonniers et des survivants des camps de la mort. Mais ce fut pour ouvrir une période où la poursuite de la domination de l’impérialisme allait sans cesse produire de nouvelles guerres.

    Le combat pour la liberté est tout aussi faussement invoqué, par les mêmes et pour les mêmes raisons, à propos de l’Ukraine. Là encore, la liberté pour laquelle les armées s’affrontent dans l’Est de l’Europe est celle de l’impérialisme exploiteur, américain en premier lieu, des oligarques voleurs ukrainiens contre celle de leurs homologues russes. Pour les peuples, des deux côtés du front, il n’est question que de dictature et de sacrifices.

    Les historiens du futur diront peut-être que le troisième conflit mondial a débuté avec la guerre d’Ukraine et pour une raison similaire aux deux premiers, l’impasse du système de domination capitaliste. Manifestement, les gouvernements et les états-majors des pays impérialistes s’y préparent. Les budgets militaires explosent, la préparation politique, militariste et patriotique est en cours et les #commémorations_du_débarquement s’inscrivent dans ce contexte.

    Sous quelque forme qu’elle se déroule, quels que soient les camps en présence et les prétextes invoqués, cette guerre sera une guerre contre les travailleurs. Écarter tout danger de guerre nécessiterait de mettre à bas le #capitalisme. Ce n’est certes pas un combat facile, mais s’y préparer nécessite de refuser toute union sacrée derrière la bourgeoisie, pour le passé en dénonçant ses mensonges, pour le présent en refusant de marcher au pas, pour le futur en se préparant à retourner contre elle les armes qu’elles aura distribuées.

    #Deuxième_Guerre_mondiale #Troisième_Guerre_mondiale #impérialisme #guerre_en_Ukraine #propagande #union_sacrée

  • La Chine depuis Mao : face aux pressions impérialistes et aux menaces de guerre

    Texte : https://www.lutte-ouvriere.org/publications/brochures/la-chine-depuis-mao-face-aux-pressions-imperialistes-et-aux-menaces-

    Vidéo 1/2 https://www.lutte-ouvriere.org/multimedia/exposes-du-cercle-leon-trotsky/la-chine-depuis-mao-face-aux-pressions-imperialistes-et-aux-menaces-

    https://videos.lutte-ouvriere.org/download/video/20230310-clt-chine-partie-1-sd.mp4

    Vidéo 2/2 https://www.lutte-ouvriere.org/multimedia/exposes-du-cercle-leon-trotsky/la-chine-depuis-mao-face-aux-pressions-imperialistes-et-aux-menaces-

    https://videos.lutte-ouvriere.org/download/video/20230310-clt-chine-partie-2-sd.mp4

    Sommaire

    1949 – 1971, la #Chine sous embargo
    - Un siècle d’humiliation
    - La guerre fait changer les maîtres

    La révolution de 1949
    - #Taïwan, une créature de l’impérialisme
    - L’impérialisme met la Chine sous embargo
    - Une aide soviétique… limitée

    1971 – 2011, l’engagement américain
    - 1971, le tournant de la politique américaine
    - La grande amitié sino-américaine
    - Le marché du milliard
    - #Tiananmen, mais les affaires continuent
    - L’État chinois contre la #classe_ouvrière
    - L’atelier du monde impérialiste
    - Un engagement sous pression
    - L’État chinois cherche à garder la main

    2011 à nos jours, le retour de la canonnière
    - Le pivot impérialiste vers l’Asie
    - Les points de friction régionaux
    - Une pression américaine de plus en plus forte
    - La Chine, poussée par ses contradictions internes
    - Puissance militaire et #impérialisme
    - La dynamique à l’œuvre

    #capitalisme

  • Kein Bündnis mit dem Hauptfeind – Fünf Thesen zur Konferenz „Was tun ?! DIE LINKE in Zeiten des Krieges“
    https://www.nachdenkseiten.de/?p=97359

    Le parti Die Linke change de cap et abandonne sa position fondamentale contre la guerre au profit d’une politique otaniste. C’est assez inquiétamt parce que nous sommes en train de perdre la dernière voix contre les illusions suicidaires dans les parlements de la république.

    8.5.2023 Ein Artikel von Sevim Dagdelen

    Zum Hintergrund: Wir geben die Rede wieder, die die Bundestagsabgeordnete Sevim Dagdelen in Hannover auf dem Auftaktpodium des Kongresses „Was tun? Die Linke in Zeiten des Krieges“ gehalten hat. Das ist interessant im Kontext der im linken Lager aktuell geführten Debatte. Von Sevim Dagdelen.

    Fünf Thesen zur Konferenz „Was tun?! DIE LINKE in Zeiten des Krieges“

    Erstens:

    Im Zuge des Krieges in der Ukraine hat sich die Tendenz beschleunigt, dass DIE LINKE von Führungspersönlichkeiten aus von einer Friedens- in eine Kriegspartei verwandelt werden soll. DIE LINKE vollzieht im Zeitraffer eine Entwicklung der SPD und der Grünen hin zu einer Akzeptanz und Einforderung einer militarisierten deutschen Außenpolitik. Wie bei den Grünen ist zu beobachten, dass man sich in der Tradition von Konvertiten des Krieges an die Spitze der Kriegsparteien in Deutschland zu setzen versucht. Stichworte: Wirtschaftskrieg gegen Russland, Waffenlieferungen in Kriegsgebiete, die Heiligung der NATO und zuletzt ein JA zu Auslandseinsätzen, zu robusten Kampfeinsätzen der Bundeswehr.

    Die Entwicklung der SPD und der Grünen beobachtend, hatten wir in der Vergangenheit immer vor „Türöffnern“ und „Rutschbahnen“ gewarnt. Bei der Linken kann man die Türen fast nicht mehr zählen, die geöffnet wurden, und wie gesagt, man hat den Eindruck, dass die Geschwindigkeit auf der Rutschbahn fast täglich erhöht wird.

    Ganz konkret: Wer in der Vergangenheit im Vorfeld des 1. Mai im Ticker der Agenturmeldungen nach der LINKEN suchte, fand Forderungen nach höheren Löhnen, sicheren Renten und einer friedlichen Außenpolitik. In diesem Jahr 2023 war das zum ersten Mal anders. Die Schlagzeilen beherrschte die Forderung einer ehemaligen Vorsitzenden der Linken nach Waffenlieferungen in ein Kriegsgebiet, ganz konkret in die Ukraine.

    Zweitens:

    Dieser Bruch mit dem friedenspolitischen Grundkonsens der LINKEN blieb – wie auch die vielen vorangegangenen Brüche ganzer Landesverbände etwa in Bremen oder Thüringen mit ihren Forderungen nach Rüstungsexporten – unwidersprochen von der so genannten Führung der Partei. Im Gegenteil befeuert die stellvertretende Parteivorsitzende Schubert, die geistig längst bei der FDP-Rüstungslobbyistin Strack-Zimmermann und dem Panzer-Toni Hofreiter von den Grünen angekommen ist, mit ihrem Ruf nach Waffenlieferungen den Programmbruch.

    Mit diesem Ruf nach Waffenlieferungen gleicht die Linke sich an den Mainstream der Kriegsparteien im Land an. Sie ruft neben ihrer Forderung, den selbstzerstörerischen Wirtschaftskrieg gegen Russland zu intensivieren, Stichwort des Parteivorsitzenden: ‚Sanktionen besser durchsetzen‘, zu einer Beteiligung Deutschlands über die Waffenlieferungen am NATO-Stellvertreterkrieg unter US-Führung gegen Russland auf.

    Um mit Karl Liebknecht zu sprechen. Diese LINKE sucht das Bündnis mit dem Hauptfeind, der im eigenen Land steht.

    Drittens:

    Bei ihrem Akkommodieren mit herrschenden Positionen ist diese LINKE bereit, ein Surplus zu liefern. Und der Überschrift in seinem FAZ-Interview „Putin hat vollzogen, was Hitler nicht geschafft hat“ redet Bodo Ramelow einem ehernen Geschichtsrevisionismus das Wort, gegen den selbst Ernst Nolte als Waisenknabe dasteht. [Bodo Ramelow im Interview mit der FAZ: „Putin hat vollzogen, was Hitler nicht geschafft hat“ (nachdenkseiten.de) ]

    Die Botschaft: Putin ist nicht nur Hitler, nein, Putin ist schlimmer als Hitler. Während zur Legitimation der NATO- und US-Kriege in der Vergangenheit wenigstens noch das Gleichheitszeichen stand: Milosevic ist Hitler, Saddam Hussein ist Hitler und Gaddafi ist Hitler, um die eigenen Regime-Change-Kriege zu legitimieren von Bush zu Obama, sieht sich Ramelow, offenbar um den Mehrwert dieser Linken beweisen zu wollen, zu einem Überbietungswettbewerb veranlasst. Wie gesagt, Putin ist nicht gleich Hitler, sondern er hat sogar vollzogen, was Hitler nicht geschafft hat.

    Diese Kriegslegitimation wurde selbstverständlich gierig aufgesogen. Sie taugt in ihrem pseudo-antifaschistischen Duktus natürlich auch hervorragend als Kriegslegitimation. Am Ende muss dieser Diskurs in der Vergöttlichung der deutschen Rüstungsindustrie münden, die die vielen schönen Waffen für den antifaschistischen Kampf herstellt. Dem Fall nach unten, was die Programmatik angeht, sind damit keine Grenzen mehr gesetzt.

    Viertens:

    Am Ende wirkt der Ukraine-Krieg nur wie der Brandbeschleuniger, was die friedenspolitischen Positionen angeht. Lange vorbereitet ist der Bruch – sowohl durch das permanente Drängen, die Verbrechen der USA und der NATO nicht zu deutlich zu kritisieren, aber auch durch das ständige Drängen als gouvernementalen Präventivschlag, die Kritik der Linken an der NATO abzuräumen.

    Programmatisch vorbereitet auch durch eine Äquidistanz zu Russland und der NATO, um dann zu einer Position überzugehen, wo man die Kritik nur noch auf Russland kaprizierte, aber fortan vom Hauptfeind schwieg. Dieselben Leute, die einem jahrelang erklärten, es gäbe keinen Imperialismus mehr, der Begriff sei überholt, entdeckten ihn wieder im Fahrwasser von Olaf Scholz, aber ausschließlich als russischen Imperialismus. [Olaf Scholz betont Widerstand gegen russischen »Großmachtwahn und Imperialismus« – DER SPIEGEL]

    Und so wie die SPD-Linke sich der Bauernfängerei für den Ersten Weltkrieg und eine linke Zustimmung anschloss, indem sie ihn zum Krieg gegen den Zarismus verklärte, so findet der Imperialismus-Begriff seine Verwendung von Links auf Russland. Zitat Ramelow von 2016: „Wir müssen ja keine begeisterten Nato-Anhänger werden“, wenn wir regieren. Sprache kann verräterisch sein. [Bodo Ramelow: “Wir müssen ja keine begeisterten Nato-Anhänger werden” | ZEIT ONLINE]

    Man muss es Katja Kipping lassen, dass sie hier am weitesten fortgeschritten ist. DIE NATO, die nicht nur entgegen aller Zusagen die Ostexpansion unter der Führung der USA organsiert hat, die in Afghanistan einen 20-jährigen mörderischen Krieg geführt und Länder wie Jugoslawien und Libyen völkerrechtswidrig überfallen hat, wird nur für diese LINKE zu einer regelrechten Friedensallianz. Marx hatte noch davor gewarnt, dass das Selbstbild einer Person oder auch einer Organisation nicht zwingend mit der Wirklichkeit übereinstimmen müsse, aber bei der Kipping-Linken, die würdige Nachfolger gefunden hat, ist es so.

    Folgerichtig wird die Revision des Programms gefordert, die Positionen zur NATO müssten weg, denn eine „generelle Ablehnung sei überholt“, so Kipping. [Generelle Ablehnung überholt: Kipping: Linke muss NATO-Position überdenken – n-tv.de]

    Fünftens:

    Eine Rückkehr zum friedenspolitischen Grundkonsens ist mit dieser LINKEN-Führung nicht zu machen. Die LINKEN-Führung steht eben auch nicht nur für das Stillhalten bei den Forderungen nach Waffenlieferungen, nein, viel schlimmer setzt sie auf einen Wirtschaftskrieg an der Seite des US-Imperialismus, der vor allem die eigene Bevölkerung trifft. Wer aber den sozialen Krieg gegen die eigene Bevölkerung mit einfordert, der macht sich natürlich auch völlig unglaubwürdig im Hinblick auf eigene soziale Forderungen und wird von der Bevölkerung zunehmend als Teil des Problems wahrgenommen. Es braucht aber eine glaubwürdige soziale und friedliche Kraft in diesem Land, die kein Bündnis mit dem Hauptfeind im eigenen Land eingeht. Es ist unsere historische Verantwortung, am Ende einer Partei, die zur Kriegspartei mutiert, nicht auch noch Legitimität zu verleihen.

    Unsere historische Verantwortung ist es, uns gegen Wirtschaftskriege und Waffenexporte zu stellen und gegen einen Militärpakt, der auf Aufrüstung, Eskalation, Expansion und Überfälle setzt. Es braucht eine Kraft, die auf einen sofortigen Waffenstillstand, unkonditionierte Verhandlungen und ein Ende des Wirtschaftskrieges setzt. Es braucht eine Kraft, die glaubwürdig für Frieden, Freiheit und soziale Gerechtigkeit eintritt.

    #gauche #Allemagne #impérialisme #OTAN

  • Die Politik der Rackets - Zur Praxis der herrschenden Klassen
    https://www.dampfboot-verlag.de/shop/artikel/die-politik-der-rackets

    Kai Lindemann, ISBN : 978-3-89691-067-7, 155 Seiten, Preis : 16,00 € Erschienen : 2021

    Daniel Bratanovic, Wir sind hier nicht in Chicago, Max
    https://www.ca-ira.net/verlag/rezensionen/daniel-bratanovic-wir-sind-hier-nicht-in-chicago-max

    Bandenherrschaft. Über Brauchbarkeit und Grenzen der Fragment gebliebenen Racket-Theorie Horkheimers

    Die Rackets und die Souveränität
    https://antideutsch.org/2018/10/19/die-rackets-und-die-souveraenitaet/?amp=1

    2018, Vortrag und Diskussion mit Thorsten Fuchshuber und Gerhard Scheit an der Universität Göttingen

    Verwaltete Welt
    https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verwaltete_Welt

    von Theodor W. Adorno 1950 geprägter Begriff der Kritischen Theorie, das die Gesellschaft nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg beschreibt

    Der Begriff verwaltete Welt wird auf Theodor W. Adorno zurückgeführt. Er benutzte ihn unter anderem im Untertitel Musik in der verwalteten Welt seines Werks Dissonanzen (Erstausgabe 1956).[1][2] Adorno gebrauchte den Begriff als eine synonyme Bezeichnung für die spätkapitalistische, genauer: nachliberale und nachfaschistische Gesellschaft, in der die „Allherrschaft des Tauschprinzips“ von der „Allherrschaft des Organisationsprinzips“ überlagert werde.[3] Karl Korn hat ihn dann wenige Jahre später für den Buchtitel seiner kritischen Sprachanalysen – Sprache in der verwalteten Welt (Erstausgabe 1959) – aufgegriffen.

    Grundform der Herrschaft
    https://www.nd-aktuell.de/artikel/1169915.kritische-theorie-der-rackets-grundform-der-herrschaft.html

    In kriselnden Staaten tritt die Gewalt hervor, aus der diese entstanden sind. »Rackets« machen daraus ein Geschäftsmodell, erklärt Thorsten Fuchshuber

    Interview: Peter Nowak 06.01.2023

    Überall Rackets
    https://taz.de/Ueberall-Rackets/!5628167

    5.10.2019 - Max Horkheimer wollte mit dem Racket-Begriff einst Herrschaft analysieren. Thorsten Fuchshuber versucht den Ansatz zu systematisieren

    Thorsten Fuchshuber: „Rackets. Kritische Theorie der Bandenherrschaft“, Ca Ira Verlag, Freiburg 2019, 674 Seiten, 29 Euro

    Von Jakob Hayner

    Racket (Herrschaftskritik), Begriff der Kritischen Theorie
    https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racket_(Herrschaftskritik)

    Geld regiert die Welt
    https://www.ipg-journal.de/rubriken/demokratie-und-gesellschaft/artikel/geld-regiert-die-welt-5664

    20.01.2022 | Kai Lindemann
    Skandale wie der Cum-Ex-Betrug sind keine Einzelfälle. Hinter ihnen verbirgt sich eine strukturelle Bedrohung durch privilegierte Beutegemeinschaften.

    #impérialisme #criminalité #racket #Horkheimer #Adorno #Uber #internet #Taxi #mondialisation

  • US Imperialism Alone Can’t Explain the Triumph of the Right in Latin America
    https://jacobin.com/2023/05/us-imperialism-far-right-latin-america-dictatorships-homegrown-book-review

    Embrassez les fascistes (Küsst die Faschisten ... Tucholsky)

    2.5.2023 by Hilary Goodfriend - Histories of the Cold War in Latin America often center the United States’ bloody footprint in the region. And with good reason: US crimes in the region committed in the name of anticommunism included propping up dictatorships, overthrowing democratic governments, and enabling genocide.

    A new book by historian Vanni Pettinà takes a different approach. His recently translated A Compact History of Latin America’s Cold War shines a light on the role of Latin American nations on both sides of the region’s bitter conflicts. Rather than reducing these struggles to mere proxy wars between the United States and the Soviet Union (USSR), he advocates for recognizing “peripheries as active historical agents” in the revolutionary and counterrevolutionary struggles that rocked Latin America between 1947 and 1989.

    Readers looking for a history of US imperialism can find them in works like Eduardo Galeano’s classic Open Veins of Latin America or anything by historian Greg Grandin. But Pettinà’s nuanced interpretation has something to offer even the most ardent anti-imperialists.

    Just as the region’s revolutionaries were far from Soviet stooges, Latin America’s antidemocratic forces were not created wholesale by Cold Warriors in Washington. To fight the far right, it’s important to understand how historical conditions create organic social bases and material motives for homegrown reaction — then and today, in Latin America and around the world.
    Framing the Conflict

    The author calls for greater attention to the relations within and between Latin American nations, but he does not discount the weight of foreign interventions — most significantly, the innumerable military, economic, and diplomatic interventions of the United States. Rather, Pettinà identifies both an “external fracture” and an “internal fracture” provoked by the onset of the Cold War in Latin America.

    The external fracture comes from the United States’ abdication of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Good Neighbor Policy in 1946, which had paused the parade of US military invasions and occupations that characterized US relations with Latin America prior to 1933. One result of the return to overt military interventions, Pettinà argues, was a conflation of US anti-communism with anti-nationalism, as Latin American nationalist reformers often sought Communist support in their coalitions. This led to US support for reactionary actors in the region, as in the emblematic case of US alignment against Jacobo Árbenz in Guatemala. There, a CIA plot saw a democratically elected liberal reformer overthrown in favor of a genocidal military regime that plunged the country into decades of civil war.

    The internal fracture refers to the strengthening of conservative elements at the national scale. The Great Depression and World War II created the conditions for Latin American governments to try and overcome their dependency on commodity exports and develop more autonomous, diversified, and industrialized economies. Renewed postwar international trade, however, favored a backlash from traditional agricultural-exporting elites, in alignment with US free-trade dogmas that demanded the unequal international division of labor according to market-based comparative advantages.

    In the wake of the 1959 Cuban Revolution, Latin American militaries and the reactionary ruling class correctly saw that developmentalism, as the state-led programs to reshape the economy and expand social welfare were known, had created a material base for more radical and inclusive politics. With US support, they dismantled these nationalist policies in favor of outward-facing economic strategies that privileged foreign capital.

    Rather than an “episodic” historical analysis that hinges on spectacular events like coups d’état, Pettinà advances a “structural” one. He divides the conflict in different stages, beginning with an early period of democratic reversals from 1946 to 1954, when Communist Parties were banned across Latin America and purged from governing coalitions and labor unions.

    Three case studies show how this played out. In Costa Rica, democratization and social reforms advanced despite opposition from landowning elites and the US monopoly United Fruit Company. This was, in part, thanks to President José María Figueres’s “skill at using his anticommunist credentials to limit US intervention,” Pettinà writes.

    Mexico’s success was more ambiguous, with authoritarian consolidation under the governing Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) even as the party’s nationalist developmentalist agenda prevailed. The author credits the social welfare gains of this period to the fact that, unlike elsewhere in Latin America, the landowning oligarchy’s monopoly power had been weakened by land reform after the country’s 1910 revolution. He also notes the PRI’s internal legitimacy and stability, and the regime’s “discreetly anticommunist approach” even as it maintained an autonomous foreign policy that ran against the bipolar pro- or anti-communist paradigm insisted upon by the United States.

    Guatemala sits at the losing end of this continuum. Pettinà describes how Árbenz survived an earlier CIA-backed plot driven by neighboring Central American dictators thanks to the State Department’s opposition to violating the Good Neighbor Policy under Harry S. Truman, only to fall in 1954 when the new Dwight D. Eisenhower administration took a harder line. Together, these examples show how internal factors interacted with exogenous ones to determine the fate of distinct Latin American projects for reform.
    Cuba’s Breakthrough

    If the coup in Guatemala brought the Cold War home to Latin America, the 1959 Cuban Revolution took it to another level. In power, the nationalist guerrillas allied with Cuba’s Communists, who brought much-needed “experience, qualifications, ability to mobilize, and foreign connections” to the young revolutionary government. An economic and political alliance with the Soviet Union soon followed, as the United States’ initial cautious tolerance gave way to open hostility.

    The Cuban Revolution coincided with a renewal of the Latin American left. The new generation embraced counterculture and heterodox strategies that challenged the Communist Party’s insistence on working within electoral systems with allied nationalist reformers, a critique that was fueled in part by the Sino-Soviet split and confirmed by Cuba’s unorthodox success.

    By then, the USSR was promoting “peaceful coexistence” with the West, trying to win over the newly decolonized peripheral nations by demonstrating the superiority of its economic and social organization through development aid. Cuba, in contrast, took an active role backing armed insurgencies in the continent. Havana became a haven and diplomatic headquarters for Latin America’s revolutionary movements. Pettinà describes Cuban support for armed groups in Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Peru, and Bolivia in the 1960s, including the provision of weapons, combat training, and logistical support.

    This aid diminished in the 1970s as Latin America’s guerrilla movements suffered severe setbacks and the island’s economic situation worsened, making it more dependent on Soviet support. Instead, Cuba turned to Africa, winning important victories in Angola. It would resume its active role in the following decade, when renewed revolutionary gains put Central America in the Cold War crosshairs.

    Pettinà also shows how regional elites responded to events in Cuba, mostly with repression. Governments in Mexico, Brazil, Venezuela, and Argentina embraced modernization and redistribution programs to counter Cuba’s revolutionary appeal, but the reformist efforts failed to fundamentally restructure these unequal, export-dependent economies, descending instead into counterinsurgent violence.

    This crackdown was bolstered by the United States. Washington’s vision for Latin America took shape under John F. Kennedy’s Alliance for Progress, which provided technical advisors and aid for countries in the region that instituted market-friendly policies, accompanied by robust military support. US recipes for economic development came to little. The counterinsurgent violence unleashed on the region, however, left a devastating legacy that the region is still reckoning with to this day.
    The Counterrevolution

    Pettinà calls the 1970s the “decade of terror.” Tensions may have eased between the United States and the USSR in this period, but conflict raged across the Third World, with the Yom Kippur War of 1973 between Israel and a coalition of Arab states, Cuban interventions in West Africa, and brutal authoritarian repression in Latin America.

    “Under the aegis of the National Security Doctrine (NSD),” Pettinà writes, “the reaction of state and military institutions in countries such as Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Brazil, Uruguay, and Paraguay turned citizens into enemies and targets of repressive acts, which included torture and forced disappearances” of victims numbering in the tens of thousands.

    A series of military coups, starting with Brazil in 1964, brought the militarist NSD into power across the region. Pettinà traces the NSD’s roots to long-standing Latin American military traditions, the French counterinsurgency strategy deployed against the Algerian national liberation movement, and US counterinsurgency paradigms. The latter spread throughout the region via institutions like the US Army’s School of the Americas, then located in Panama, and the Special Warfare School at Fort Bragg, as well as the widespread deployment of US trainers and advisors.

    US involvement ranged from relatively minor interference in Mexico to decisive intervention with the overthrow of President Salvador Allende in Chile. Even there, Pettinà highlights the role of multiple foreign actors. The Soviets declined to provide Allende the degree of support that his government had expected. Instead, Allende developed a close relationship with Fidel Castro, who advised him to defend his constitutional mandate with Cuban-backed armed revolutionary groups. Allende, however, was optimistically — perhaps naively — committed to legality. Accepting Cuba’s offer to support armed resistance, Pettinà writes, “might have saved his life.”

    From the other side, the US spent millions on destabilization before backing the 1973 coup. The radically anti-communist Brazilian military dictatorship also had a part in undermining and defeating Allende, after playing an instrumental role in the 1971 coup in Bolivia and the defeat of progressives in Uruguay.

    The author stresses that repression in this period found support among conservative sectors of the middle class in countries like Mexico and Argentina. Out of both fear and tacit approval, Pettinà argues that “the silence of broad sectors of Latin American societies enabled military juntas across the region to suppress public protests almost unchecked during the 1970s.”

    The author insists that “the NSD and the juntas’ acts of repression in no way represented any external or planned imposition by Washington in the region.” Local fascists had their own momentum, and the military regimes had an “independent streak” that often clashed with the United States. While they received active US support, he argues that “the juntas and their plans to overhaul the country’s politics, economy, and society were genuinely homegrown projects” that were influenced, but not invented by Washington.
    The Central American Finale

    The Cold War–charged backlash would come to a “dramatic climax” in Central America in the 1980s, where US-backed counterrevolutionary violence cost hundreds of thousands of lives. Again, Pettinà cautions against reducing this bloodshed to “a story of binary, proxy confrontation.”

    Pettinà’s account of the Sandinista Revolution is illustrative. US president Jimmy Carter directed the State Department to condition aid to countries like Nicaragua on their respect for human rights, but his resolve in this regard was far from steadfast. Washington’s pressure had little effect on the notorious Somoza dynasty, which continued to run the country like a personal plantation and suppress democratic movements with violence.

    In the face of Somoza’s intransigence and the United States’ “wavering,” Costa Rica, Panama, and Venezuela threw their weight behind the Sandinista insurgency, which had developed a sophisticated diplomatic operation. Argentina, in turn, actively backed Somoza, and Israel supplied weapons to the regime after Carter began to cut off military aid.

    Cuba was decisive, mediating the reunification of three opposing Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) factions in March 1979 and providing reinforcements to the newly united guerrillas. Havana would play a similar role in El Salvador, helping to broker the unification of that country’s leftist coalition the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front the following year. Around this time, Mexico joined Nicaragua’s southern neighbors in cutting off diplomatic relations with Somoza. Internationalist fighters from across the continent joined the guerrillas, who overcame the regime in July 1979.

    The Ronald Reagan administration reinvigorated relations with South American dictatorships and made Central America the center of its anti-communist crusade. Reagan’s infamous Contra scheme involved moving aid to anti-Sandinista paramilitaries through a dizzying network of agents and countries that ran from Brunei, Saudi Arabia, Israel, and Taiwan to Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Panama.

    Mexico also played a key role, materially supporting the Sandinistas and seeking to broker a multilateral diplomatic resolution to the broader Central American crisis. Mexico was key in convening the “Grupo Contadora” with Colombia, Panama, and Venezuela, which sought negotiated solutions for Central America throughout 1980s. Against heavy opposition from Washington, these efforts finally led to Costa Rica’s peace plan, which helped draw down the Contra War at the end of the decade.

    As this history shows, Central America’s national liberation struggles had diplomatic and even military allies across Latin America. So did their opponents. While US intervention is unmistakably responsible for prolonging these conflicts and dramatically inflating their scale, regional actors on both sides had interests in influencing their outcomes and took action to do so.
    Giving the Bad Guys Their Due

    In emphasizing Latin American agency, Pettinà sometimes downplays the extent of US meddling. For example, the author refers to Washington’s “tolerance” for left-wing governments in Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia in the 2000s as evidence for how the Cold War “distorted” US policy in the region. He does not mention the failed US-backed coup against Hugo Chávez in 2002, to say nothing of the subsequent successful ones in Honduras (2009), Bolivia (2019), and the frustrated attempt in Venezuela again in 2020. Readers can certainly add to this list.

    Nevertheless, the point that Latin America has its own homegrown fascism is well taken. As Luis Herrán Ávila writes in the NACLA Report, “Subordinating the Latin American Right to northern designs can result in underestimating these forces’ capacity to articulate, deploy, and implement their own intolerant and authoritarian visions.”

    As the geopolitical landscape takes an increasingly multipolar form, anti-imperialists on the US left should remember that not all forces of reaction are Washington puppets. Recent events in El Salvador, where an authoritarian far-right president has occasionally butted heads with Joe Biden’s administration, are an example of these complexities.

    Analysis of the far right in this context demands a sophisticated critique that takes Latin American societies’ internal contradictions seriously. Imperialism should never be underestimated, but it does not explain everything.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CG6EYL5xsfA&pp=ygUacm9zZW4gYXVmIGRlbiB3ZWcgZ2VzdHJldXQ%3D

    Rosen auf den Weg gestreut
    https://www.textlog.de/tucholsky/gedichte-lieder/rosen-auf-den-weg-gestreut

    Ihr müßt sie lieb und nett behandeln,
    erschreckt sie nicht – sie sind so zart!
    Ihr müßt mit Palmen sie umwandeln,
    getreulich ihrer Eigenart!
    Pfeift euerm Hunde, wenn er kläfft –:
    Küßt die Faschisten, wo ihr sie trefft!

    Wenn sie in ihren Sälen hetzen,
    sagt: »Ja und Amen – aber gern!
    Hier habt ihr mich – schlagt mich in Fetzen!«
    Und prügeln sie, so lobt den Herrn.
    Denn Prügeln ist doch ihr Geschäft!
    Küßt die Faschisten, wo ihr sie trefft.

    Und schießen sie –: du lieber Himmel,
    schätzt ihr das Leben so hoch ein?
    Das ist ein Pazifisten-Fimmel!
    Wer möchte nicht gern Opfer sein?
    Nennt sie: die süßen Schnuckerchen,
    gebt ihnen Bonbons und Zuckerchen …
    Und verspürt ihr auch
    in euerm Bauch
    den Hitler-Dolch, tief, bis zum Heft –:
    Küßt die Faschisten, küßt die Faschisten,
    küßt die Faschisten, wo ihr sie trefft –!

    Theobald Tiger
    Die Weltbühne, 31.03.1931, Nr. 13, S. 452.

    #USA #impérialisme #fascisme #nationalisme #amérique_latine

  • Peter Pan & Wendy Is Another Lifeless Disney Remake
    https://jacobin.com/2023/05/peter-pan-wendy-disney-remake-pop-feminism-film-review
    Je n’ai pas su développer un sentiment d’attachement pour les personnages de Peter Pan avant d’atteindre l’age adulte alors que je lisais les histoires de J. M. Barrie pendant ma jeunesse. Pour moi il leur manquais la cruauté et l’esprit humain des contes Grimm comme le degré d’abstraction froide d’Andersen ou la grandeur romantique de Wilhelm Hauff. La machine de transformation d’histoires inventée par les businessmen de nos temps modernes a resolu mon problème de jeunesse en confondant ces récits dans une sauce du type ketchup qui peut accompagner tous les plats culturels.

    Là les entreprises Disney se lancent dans une énième tentative d’incorporer les histoires pour enfants paradigmatiques des époques passées en convertissant Peter Pan et Wendy dans de la barbe à papa-maman-diverse-toutes-couleurs-confendues et trop sucrée. Plus les médias mutinationals avancent dans l’art du storytelling adapté aux besoins de l’impérialisme culturel anglo-saxon moins de contradictions humaines éternelles entre riches et pauvres, enfants et exploiteurs adultes survivent le grand filtre de leurs machines de commercialisation.

    Il est temps de lancer une campagne de retour au sources pour faire face à la castration des contes du royaume de l’magination.

    2.5.2023 By Eileen Jones - These insipid Disney live-action remakes of their own animated films are now a blight on civilization. Especially considering that Walt Disney himself built his empire by taking bloody-minded old European fairy tales and making them blander and more sanitized for a wimpier generation. People used to complain about how defanged they all were — imagine that! Now old Disney animated classics like Pinocchio, Bambi, Dumbo, and Sleeping Beauty seem daring, almost ferocious. Such tragic sorrows! Such scary villains! So much death and evildoing!

    But with the new live-action retreads of recent years, where does that put us on the bland-wimp scale? Off the charts, I’d say.

    I thought the latest one turning up on Disney+, Peter Pan & Wendy, might be better than the usual run — after all, the much-respected auteur David Lowery (The Green Knight, Ain’t Them Bodies Saints) cowrote and directed this one. And, with Lowery’s touch, it features perhaps a slightly richer color scheme and prettier images overall.

    But I should’ve known nobody could take on Disney. (Look out, Ron DeSantis!) Building a monstrous capitalist conglomerate doesn’t make you nice and respectful of individual filmmakers. You work for Disney, so you’ll do it the Disney way.

    So Peter Pan & Wendy is a big toothless bore, with gestures toward contemporary mores in the forms of a highly diverse cast plus girls playing Lost Boys. Wendy (Ever Anderson) protests upon meeting them, “But you’re not all boys!” and gets the stroppy answer, “So what?”

    And since this is the 2020s, Wendy herself has to be imbued with action-packed girl power and do sword-fighting and rescue the others instead of waiting to be rescued. Tiger Lily (Alyssa Wapanatahk, a member of the Bigstone Cree Nation) is now treated with what is presumably greater respect as a vaguely Native American character who appears to be a member of some unnamed American Plains tribe, which makes no sense — there’s no dodging the way Scottish-born writer J. M. Barrie treated “Indians” as fantasy figures for British children on a continuum with pirates and mermaids and fairies. Why not cut out Barrie’s Tiger Lily and her tribe altogether, but keep the mermaids, instead of the other way around in this mermaid-free adaptation? Who knows?
    Yara Shahidi as Tinkerbell. (Disney+)

    Anyway, Tiger Lilly also has to be portrayed as assertive and independent, rescuing Peter Pan (Alexander Molony) instead of the other way around. As for the other major female characters of the triumvirate surrounding Peter, Tinkerbell is played by a black actor (Yara Shahidi of Black-ish and Grown-ish), but more importantly, she’s entirely reconceived as a character. The miniature minx of the Barrie original as well as Disney’s first adaptation, who adores Peter and hates Wendy for usurping Peter’s attentions — even doing her best to murder Wendy as soon as she arrives — is now a sweet, helpful, pathetic little simp who befriends Wendy. Why? Because Wendy realizes that Tinkerbell has been denied her voice. Her voice is so tiny no one can hear it, actually. But Peter asserts that he knows what she’s saying and speaks for her, inaccurately. Only Wendy learns to hear Tinkerbell speak.

    Okay, so can we now drop forevermore the whole exhausted she’s-been-denied-her-voice narrative trope in films seeking feminist cred?

    It would be nice, too, if this were the last ever attempt to revive old material by doing Psych 101 backstories explaining how well-known characters got to be the way they are. Peter Pan and Captain Hook (Jude Law) are given the most lugubrious intertwined histories possible, because how could we possibly understand why they fight all the time, if we don’t know about their past traumas?

    Easy. By imagining vivid characters in all their details and contradictions, and not coming up with pat, reductive explanations for everything they do.

    Law, the only name actor in the cast, is talented but too contained to play the flamboyant, slashing Captain Hook, who’s also comically self-pitying, needy, and reliant on his motherly first mate, Smee (Jim Gaffigan). If you recall, Smee’s first duty is to protect the terrified Captain from the endless pursuit of the enormous crocodile that hungers for the Captain after eating Hook’s hand (cut off by Peter Pan in one of their many fights). Luckily the crocodile also swallowed an alarm clock, and the ticking sound always announces his approach. Lowery does almost nothing with that lovely plot detail.

    But you know how these kinds of movies go. Endless lesson learning, like the worst of Victorian kids’ literature. Peter has to learn he needs his friends to help him and to apologize when he’s hurt someone. Wendy has to learn that she’s actually ready to grow up and go to boarding school or whatever horrible thing her upper-class Brit parents (played by Molly Parker and Alan Tudyk) have in store for her. Hook has to learn why he hates Peter Pan, even if he can’t ever get past it. Everybody’s learning and affirming and casting loving looks at everyone else all over the Neverland map.

    It’s dreary as hell.

    Too bad, because there were real possibilities in imagining a new Peter Pan film. In the versions I’ve seen, nobody’s ever really gone for the weirder, creepier, colder-hearted Pan envisioned by Barrie. Here’s a description from his 1911 novel Peter and Wendy, which was based on his hit 1904 play, Peter Pan, or the Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up:

    He was a lovely boy, clad in skeleton leaves and the juices that ooze out of trees but the most entrancing thing about him was that he had all his first teeth. When he saw she was a grownup, he gnashed the little pearls at her.

    The famed “androgyny” of the character we know, from the tradition of having slight, diminutive adult female actors such as Maude Adams, Jean Arthur, and Mary Martin play Peter Pan on the stage. But the feral qualities Barrie described, in combination with the physical beauty — the pearly-teeth snarl — never seem to get portrayed. Generally, since the squeaky-clean Disney animated Peter Pan (1953), live-action versions feature an ordinary boy, perhaps with slightly elfin facial features, stuck into a green tunic and green hat with a scarlet feather. The same thing happens in Peter Pan & Wendy.

    In these adaptations, Peter is shown to be, at worst, a bit of a jerk. But his real strangeness, the result of his perpetual childhood, living outside of time, is his amnesia and his cold selfishness. Once Wendy leaves Neverland, he forgets her, and of course he repudiates her entirely once she’s a grown-up. When he returns to her house, it’s to take her daughter Jane to Neverland to live with him and the Lost Boys as their temporary “mother.” And then a generation later, he comes to take Jane’s daughter Margaret.

    But then, Barrie’s whole attitude toward children was not like ours, and obviously his attitudes toward gender roles are bizarre as hell to us. He wrote, in the final line of the original Peter and Wendy novel describing this cycle:

    When Margaret grows up she will have a daughter, who is to be Peter’s mother in turn; and thus it will go on, so long as children are gay and innocent and heartless.

    Heartless is a word that really stops you, as one that’s never applied to children now. But portraying it in Peter Pan’s case, as part of the essence of childhood, would at least have made for a bold and interesting change. Instead, we get another pointless remake so Disney can grub up a few more bucks repurposing its vast holdings.

    #enfants #culture #contes #impérialisme #commercialisation

  • Is Holocaust Education Making Anti-Semitism Worse ? | Dara Horn
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/05/holocaust-student-education-jewish-anti-semitism/673488
    L’article est une critique de la façon dont l’extermination des juifs est enseignée (dans pas mal d’endroits aux Etats-Unis, du moins). L’écrivaine pointe un paradoxe. Une des façons privilégiée de répondre aux actes, paroles, théories du complot antisémites actuels est de se mettre à enseigner le génocide (ce n’est pas obligatoire aux Etats-Unis) et à créer des musées dédiés. Mais cette façon de faire est privilégiée justement parce qu’elle permet de ne pas répondre à l’antisémitisme actuel et de se concentrer plus facilement sur un événement du passé, dont les Etats-Unis ne sont pas responsables, le tout sans risquer de trop grandes tensions en classe ou avec les politiciens anti-woke (c’est moi qui résume à la hache) qui s’exciteraient si on osait parler du sort fait à d’autres minorités. Le génocide, comme il y est enseigné, est un sujet aseptisé qui n’est qu’un support à des leçons de morales universelles (favoriser l’empathie, dénoncer le racisme, donner envie de se battre pour une cause). L’antisémitisme des nazis est complètement anhistorique, ceux-ci sont comme des extraterrestres venus avec en 33 et disparus avec en 45. Les Juifs quant à eux n’existent que morts et toute spécificité juive est gommée pour que ne reste que le symbole de victimes absolues. On peut alors facilement se féliciter de ne pas être un nazi vu qu’on n’a pas commis de massacre de masse, et sentir de l’empathie pour une population dont on ignore tout et qu’on pense même disparue, maintenue vivante dans certains musées par des hologrammes animés par une intelligence artificielle.

    Talking with Kennedy, I realized, with a jolt of unexpected horror, that there was an entirely unplanned pattern in my Holocaust tour across America. Almost every city where I spoke with Holocaust-museum educators, whether by phone or in person, had also been the site of a violent anti-Semitic attack in the years since these museums had opened: a murdered museum guard in Washington, D.C.; a synagogue hostage-taking in a Dallas-area suburb; young children shot at a Jewish summer camp in Los Angeles. I was struck by how minimally these attacks were discussed in the educational materials shared by the museums.

    The Skokie museum was built because of a Nazi march that never happened. But this more recent, actual anti-Semitic violence, which happened near or even inside these museums, rarely came up in my conversations with educators about the Holocaust’s contemporary relevance. In fact, with the exception of Kennedy and Regelbrugge, no one I spoke with mentioned these anti-Semitic attacks at all.

    The failure to address contemporary anti-Semitism in most of American Holocaust education is, in a sense, by design. In his article “The Origins of Holocaust Education in American Public Schools,” the education historian Thomas D. Fallace recounts the story of the (mostly non-Jewish) teachers in Massachusetts and New Jersey who created the country’s first Holocaust curricula, in the ’70s. The point was to teach morality in a secular society. “Everyone in education, regardless of ethnicity, could agree that Nazism was evil and that the Jews were innocent victims,” Fallace wrote, explaining the topic’s appeal. “Thus, teachers used the Holocaust to activate the moral reasoning of their students”—to teach them to be good people.

    The idea that Holocaust education can somehow serve as a stand-in for public moral education has not left us. And because of its obviously laudable goals, objecting to it feels like clubbing a baby seal. Who wouldn’t want to teach kids to be empathetic? And by this logic, shouldn’t Holocaust education, because of its moral content alone, automatically inoculate people against anti-Semitism?

    Apparently not.

    https://justpaste.it/bacxg

    • Prétendre que les #USA cad ses capitalistes et politiciens au pouvoir ne portent pas leur part de responsabilité pour l’holocauste est une belle histoire mais loin de la réalité.

      On est au courant de l’apport financier de la famille Bush pour les nazis, Henry Ford est connu pour son antisemitisme (je ne sais pas à quel point il a activement soutenu les nazis allemands), IBM fournissait à la SS les machines pour organiser l’extermination, on refusait de mettre fin à l’holocauste par un raid aérien contre Auschwitz et on s’entendait dans des entretiens infomels et secrets en Suisse avec des émissaires de Göring sur la progression des troupes américaines dans les dernières phases de la guerre.

      Ne parlons pas de la non-dénazification en Allemagne de l’Ouest et de la fondation des services secrets allemands actuels et de la Bundeswehr par des anciens nazis commandités par leurs contreparts états-uniens. L’amitié entre les nantis d’Allemagne et des États Unis est plus jeune que celle entre la turquie génocidaire et l’Allemagne militariste, mais en différence avec celle-là elle est totale y compris ses crimes de guerre et actes de génocide.

      Le grand mensonge de l’innocence américaine rend futiles la commémoration des morts et les accusations contre les nazis allemands.

      #impérialisme #nazis #shoa

  • Le 1er Mai, manifestons pour nos retraites, nos salaires, et l’unité des travailleurs contre le nationalisme et la xénophobie !
    https://www.lutte-ouvriere.org/editoriaux/le-1er-mai-manifestons-pour-nos-retraites-nos-salaires-et-lunite-des | Éditorial de Lutte Ouvrière (24 avril 2023)

    Alors que le combat contre la retraite à 64 ans n’est pas terminé, le gouvernement allume un contre-feu sur l’#immigration, pour diviser le monde du travail. #Mayotte, le 101e département français, située dans l’océan Indien, est au cœur de cette #campagne_anti-immigrés.

    Darmanin vient d’y lancer l’opération de police #Wuambushu, qui se veut spectaculaire. Il a déployé 1800 policiers et gendarmes, des #CRS, des membres du #Raid et du #GIGN, des magistrats et installé un centre de rétention provisoire. L’objectif est de démanteler les #bidonvilles habités par les immigrés en situation irrégulière et d’en expulser 10 000, essentiellement vers #les_Comores.

    Autrement dit, à Mayotte, la #chasse_aux_pauvres est ouverte !

    Darmanin peut raconter ce qu’il veut, parler de délinquants et inventer de potentiels terroristes islamistes, il a ordonné la démolition de ce qui est le seul refuge pour des milliers de familles pauvres, comoriennes comme mahoraises. Ce sont des pauvres, avec ou sans papiers, qu’il va faire arrêter et peut-être expulser. Ce sont des familles pauvres qu’il va séparer et déchirer.

    À Mayotte, les hôpitaux, les écoles et toutes les infrastructures sont sous-dimensionnées pour une population croissante qui vit à plus de 70 % sous le seuil de pauvreté. Une partie de la jeunesse est la proie de bandes armées violentes vivant du racket et du vol. Mais le responsable de cette situation invivable, et d’abord pour les pauvres de Mayotte, toutes origines confondues, est l’État français qui ne met pas les moyens pour juguler cette pauvreté.

    Comme de bien entendu, la droite et l’#extrême_droite accusent l’immigration venue des Comores. Il n’y a rien de plus écœurant ! C’est la France qui a colonisé les Comores. Puis, au moment de leur indépendance, elle a détaché Mayotte de l’archipel avec un #référendum arrangé. Il y a 50 ans, les habitants des autres îles des Comores ont donc été transformés en étrangers, et la France, avec sa métropole à 8000 km, a gardé le pouvoir à Mayotte.

    Cette fois, les défenseurs de la « nation française » ne peuvent pas utiliser des différences de couleur de peau, de religion ou de culture pour dresser les Français de Mayotte contre les immigrés : ils font partie du même peuple ! Alors, cette opération n’est rien d’autre qu’une campagne infecte orchestrée par un gouvernement en mal de démagogie nationaliste et raciste.

    La politique de la France aux Comores est à l’image de la politique impérialiste qu’elle a imposée à toutes ses ex-colonies en Afrique et au Maghreb.

    Sur tous les continents, pour piller des régions entières et exploiter leur main-d’œuvre, les grandes puissances ont découpé les États dans la chair des peuples. Elles ont ainsi concentré les richesses et le progrès humain entre les mains de la bourgeoisie impérialiste et plongé le reste du monde dans un océan de misère et dans des conflits incessants entre les peuples. Ce sont ces fauteurs de misère et de guerres qu’il faut empêcher de nuire !

    Nos dirigeants et nos exploiteurs nous mettent en concurrence entre travailleurs, entre femmes et hommes, entre nationaux et immigrés. Ils voudraient nous voir nous déchirer pour les miettes qu’ils nous laissent. Ne les laissons pas nous diviser pour mieux écraser nos sœurs et nos frères d’exploitation ! Beaucoup de travailleurs ont besoin de circuler pour gagner leur pain, eh bien, cette revendication doit être celle de tous !

    Il faut répondre à la #lutte_de_classe menée par le #grand_patronat avec la conscience que nous faisons partie d’une seule et même classe ouvrière internationale. Le 1er Mai incarne cette perspective car il a été choisi par les travailleurs des différents pays pour être une journée de luttes communes.

    C’est aussi, cette année, la date que les organisations syndicales ont choisie pour continuer d’exprimer notre opposition à la retraite à 64 ans. À nous de faire que le 1er Mai 2023 sorte de l’ordinaire, avec des cortèges plus massifs que d’habitude ! Soyons nombreux, aussi, à affirmer que les travailleurs n’ont pas de patrie et qu’ils constituent par-delà les frontières une même classe sociale.

    Avant nous, dans tous les pays, des générations de travailleurs ont fait grève et ont, bien souvent, été en butte à la répression, le 1er Mai. Ils se sont battus pour les revendications ouvrières mais aussi contre le capitalisme, sa mise en concurrence des peuples, ses ravages sur la planète, son nationalisme, ses guerres.

    Ils affirmaient que les travailleurs ont intérêt à en finir avec l’#exploitation et l’#oppression des pays pauvres par les pays riches et qu’ils en ont la force. Ils affirmaient la nécessité de la révolution sociale à l’échelle internationale. Montrons que cette perspective est toujours vivante !

    #impérialisme #politique_criminelle #internationalisme #conscience_de_classe

    • 1er mai : contester le pouvoir du capital
      https://journal.lutte-ouvriere.org/2023/04/26/1er-mai-contester-le-pouvoir-du-capital_634260.html

      L’intersyndicale a appelé les travailleurs à faire du 1er Mai un nouveau temps fort du mouvement contre la réforme des retraites, promulguée le 15 avril et qui, selon Macron, devrait prendre effet le 1er septembre.

      La lutte contre la réforme des retraites doit en effet continuer le 1er Mai et au-delà, non seulement parce que c’est une attaque directe mais parce qu’elle en prépare d’autres. L’inflation réduit chaque jour le pouvoir d’achat des salaires et des pensions, l’État sabre tous les budgets utiles à la population, le patronat fait pression sur l’emploi et les conditions de travail, le gouvernement multiplie les tentatives de division entre travailleurs en calomniant chômeurs, immigrés, sans-papiers, fonctionnaires, etc. Plus sombre encore, la situation internationale, l’augmentation parallèle des budgets militaires et des discours guerriers, la crise économique où s’enfonce le système capitaliste préparent de nouvelles catastrophes.

      C’est précisément parce que tout se résume et se résout par la lutte entre exploiteurs et exploités, capitalistes et prolétaires, que le mouvement ouvrier international a proposé, en 1890, de faire du 1er Mai la journée de lutte internationale des travailleurs. Il s’agissait d’affirmer ce jour-là dans les rues, partout dans le monde, qu’il n’y qu’une seule classe ouvrière et qu’elle représente le seul avenir possible pour l’humanité, sans exploiteurs et donc sans frontières et sans guerre. Cela est plus que jamais d’actualité.

      Au-delà de la question des retraites, c’est aussi cette perspective que Lutte ouvrière affirmera dans les cortèges du 1er Mai avec tous ceux qui voudront la rejoindre.

  • Tribune des généraux (21 avril 2021) : l’État, « une bande d’hommes armés » | Le mensuel
    https://mensuel.lutte-ouvriere.org/2021/05/09/tribune-des-generaux-letat-une-bande-dhommes-armes_158764.ht

    La gauche et le mythe de l’armée républicaine

    Les dirigeants du PS, du PC, de La France insoumise ou de la CGT, poussent des cris effarouchés face à la présence de l’extrême droite dans l’armée en prétendant, comme #Jean-Luc_Mélenchon, que cette tribune «  salit l’honneur de l’armée française  ». L’«  honneur de l’armée française  » s’est pourtant exprimé depuis des dizaines d’années en Afrique pour sauvegarder les intérêts de l’#impérialisme_français. L’armée française a couvert et protégé les génocideurs au Rwanda, sauvé la peau de dizaines de dictateurs et d’assassins en Afrique, sans parler de ses sales guerres plus anciennes en Indochine ou en Algérie. Elle a écrasé la Commune de Paris, assassiné des ouvriers à Fourmies en 1891, envahi avec ses chars les carreaux de mine du Nord en grève en 1948… et la liste est longue. En parlant ainsi, en expliquant qu’il faut «  rappeler aux soldats leur devoir d’obéissance due  », Mélenchon montre qu’il est un défenseur de l’armée, c’est-à-dire de l’ordre bourgeois. Les révolutionnaires ne sont pas, eux, pour le respect de «  l’obéissance due  », mais pour les révoltes des soldats contre leurs officiers – et pour la dissolution de l’armée permanente.

    La CGT a publié le 26 avril un communiqué de presse du même tonneau, expliquant que «  la neutralité de l’armée est un principe républicain avec lequel il ne peut être question de transiger  ». Entretenir le mythe d’une «  #armée_républicaine  » qui serait neutre, c’est-à-dire qui ne choisirait pas son camp entre les classes sociales, en faisant semblant d’ignorer que la caste des officiers forme et formera toujours les chiens de garde de l’#ordre_bourgeois, c’est non seulement un mensonge conscient, mais c’est une trahison vis-à-vis de la classe ouvrière. C’est ce genre de propagande qui a conduit, la gauche chilienne il y cinquante ans, à laisser la classe ouvrière désarmée face au général Pinochet, en assurant que l’armée était par nature trop républicaine, trop neutre pour renverser un gouvernement démocratiquement élu.[1]

    Dans son communiqué, la CGT regrette que le «  Conseil supérieur de la réserve militaire, au sein duquel elle siège, n’est plus réuni à la fréquence prévue par les textes  »  ! Autrement dit, il n’y a pas de danger, il y a un bureaucrate de la #CGT au sein du Conseil supérieur de la réserve militaire, et la démocratie est bien protégée.

    La gauche, du #PS au #PCF en passant par la France insoumise, n’a rien su dire d’autre qu’en appeler à Macron et au gouvernement. «  Toujours pas de réaction d’#Emmanuel_Macron et du gouvernement  !  », twittait #Fabien_Roussel, le patron du #PCF, le 24 avril. «  Nous appelons la ministre des Armées à prendre des sanctions exemplaires à l’encontre des signataires de cette tribune qui portent atteinte à l’honneur de l’armée française et aux militaires engagés pour servir la République  », a écrit quant à lui le Parti socialiste dans une résolution votée le 27 avril. Ces partis jouent leur rôle  : prétendre que l’armée a pour fonction de défendre la #République et non les intérêts de la bourgeoisie, et camoufler le fait que Macron, comme n’importe lequel de ses prédécesseurs de gauche comme de droite à la tête de l’État, n’hésiterait pas à mobiliser l’armée contre une explosion sociale si le pouvoir de la #bourgeoisie en dépendait.

    #armée #armée_française #impérialisme #nationalisme #LFI

  • États-Unis : l’engagement dans la guerre
    https://journal.lutte-ouvriere.org/2023/04/19/etats-unis-lengagement-dans-la-guerre_622633.html

    Le 13 avril, un jeune militaire américain a été arrêté, accusé de la divulgation de documents sensibles de l’#armée_américaine.

    Les fuites montrent notamment que l’offensive de printemps envisagée par l’armée ukrainienne est conçue avec les états-majors de l’#Otan. En effet l’engagement occidental dans la guerre entre la #Russie et l’#Ukraine ne se limite pas à la livraison de matériel. Des brigades ukrainiennes, comptant au total 100 000 soldats, sont entraînées par les armées américaine et européenne, loin du front : la fin de leur formation, et donc leur disponibilité pour une offensive, a été planifiée en commun. Cela signifie qu’un grand nombre d’instructeurs militaires occidentaux sont mobilisés dans cette guerre. Ils ne sont certes pas au contact de l’armée russe, mais il n’en reste pas moins que leur activité vise la défaite de celle-ci.

    Depuis un an, ce soutien a pris des formes diverses. Les images produites par les satellites militaires américains permettent à l’#armée_ukrainienne de connaître les positions russes. Des frappes précises sont effectuées : l’artillerie ukrainienne, elle aussi en partie fournie par l’Occident, tue des soldats russes massés dans des bâtiments ou dans des colonnes de véhicules, des drones visent aussi des cibles choisies, dont des généraux russes.

    Les forces armées américaines, mais aussi françaises, se forment elles-mêmes au combat en pilotant les troupes ukrainiennes qui meurent au front. Ainsi, sans que les #États-Unis perdent de soldats, comme c’était le cas en Irak ou en Afghanistan, le pays impérialiste le plus puissant travaille à affaiblir l’armée russe.

    Cette préparation militaire des impérialistes est un pas vers un conflit qui ne serait plus circonscrit à cette région de l’Europe, mais qui serait un conflit mondial.

    #guerre_en_ukraine #impérialisme