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  • The Tiananmen Square massacre, 30 years on - World Socialist Web Site
    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/06/08/tian-j08.html

    By Peter Symonds, 8 June 2019 - Thirty years have passed since heavily-armed Chinese troops, backed by tanks, moved through the suburbs of Beijing on the night of June 3–4, 1989, killing hundreds, probably thousands, of unarmed civilians. The military forces overwhelmed makeshift barricades with brute force as they made their way to Tiananmen Square—the site of weeks of mass protests by students and workers.

    Those barbaric events, which demonstrated the willingness of the Stalinist Chinese Communist Party (CCP) regime to do anything to stay in power, have gone down in history as the Tiananmen Square massacre. Yet most of deaths during that murderous assault were of workers who courageously tried to halt the progress of troops to central Beijing. Estimates vary, but up to 7,000 were killed and 20,000 wounded.

    Moreover, in the reign of terror that followed throughout China it was the workers who received the harshest penalties, including lengthy jail terms and death sentences. Around 40,000 people were arrested just in June and July, mostly members of Workers Autonomous Federations that had sprung up in the course of the protests.
    Protesters in Tiananmen Square

    What is commonly depicted as the crushing of student protesters was in fact a wave of repression directed overwhelmingly against a mass movement of the working class. What had begun in April as student protests calling for democratic reforms had swelled into the millions as workers joined the demonstrations by mid-May, making their own class demands.

    The Beijing Workers Autonomous Federation was established on April 20 with a handful of workers and rapidly expanded to become a major organising centre by mid-May. On May 17, up to two million people marched through the centre of Beijing, the majority being workers and their families under the banners of their work units or enterprises. Reflecting the impact of events in Beijing, Workers Autonomous Federations were established in a host of major cities, including Changsha, Shaoyang, Xiangtan, Hengyang and Yueyang.

    While moderate student leaders were intent on pressing the CCP bureaucracy for concessions on democratic rights, workers were animated by concerns over deteriorating living standards, soaring inflation and a wave of sackings and closures. The regime’s embrace of the capitalist market since the 1970s had led to widening social inequality and rampant bureaucratic corruption and profiteering. Workers were bitterly hostile to the accumulation of privileges and wealth by the top CCP leaders, such as Deng Xiaoping, Li Peng, Zhao Ziyang, Jiang Zemin, Chen Yun and their family members, and were contemptuous of their claims to be communist and socialist.

    A statement by workers issued on May 25 expressed the rebellious currents in the working class. “Our nation was created by the struggle and labour of we workers and all other mental and manual labourers. We are the rightful masters of this nation. We must be heard in national affairs. We must not allow this small band of degenerate scum of the nation and the working class to usurp our name and suppress the students, murder democracy and trample human rights.” [1]

    Premier Zhao Ziyang had been sympathetic to the demands of student leaders and had counselled making small concessions to calls for basic democratic rights. However, no compromise was possible with the working class, whose unrest threatened the very existence of the regime. As the protest movement rapidly grew in size and confidence, paramount leader Deng Xiaoping removed his ally Zhao as premier, installed hardline Li Peng in his place and ordered the military to violently suppress the protests in Beijing and nationally.
    The crisis of Stalinism

    The resort to such extreme measures was bound up with the profound crisis of Stalinism, not only in China but internationally. In response to deepening economic and social crises, a turn was underway in China, Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union toward the dismantling of centralised bureaucratic planning mechanisms, encouragement of private enterprise and establishment of market mechanisms.

    After assuming the leadership of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev introduced his keynote policies of perestroika (restructuring) and glasnost (openness and transparency) that laid the framework for greater autonomy for enterprises outside the central planning mechanisms and, under the guise of democratic reform, sought to establish a base of social support for the regime among the petty bourgeoisie.

    Gorbachev’s pro-market restructuring also encouraged the Stalinist regimes in Eastern Europe in their plans for capitalist restoration, making desperate bids to resolve their mounting economic and political crises. These processes dramatically accelerated as Gorbachev signaled that the Soviet Union would not intervene militarily to prop up its Soviet bloc allies, as it had done in Hungary in 1956 to crush the workers’ uprising and in Czechoslovakia in 1968 to end liberal reforms. In December 1987, he announced the withdrawal of 500,000 Soviet troops from Eastern Europe.

    In a very short period of time, during 1989–90, the Stalinist bureaucracies in one Eastern European country after another moved to restore capitalism, dismantling what remained of nationalised property relations and centralised planning.

    In Poland, talks between the government and opposition Solidarity leaders resulted in a deal in April 1989 to hold limited elections. This paved the way for the installation in August of Solidarity leader Tadeusz Mazowiecki as prime minister. He unleashed sweeping pro-market restructuring.

    Similar negotiations in Hungary, where the processes of pro-market restructuring were already advanced, led to a new constitution in August 1989. Multi-party elections in May 1990 resulted in a government that junked what remained of centralised planning and carried out wholesale privatisation.

    Amid a mounting economic and political crisis, Gorbachev visited Berlin in October 1989 to urge the East German government to accelerate pro-market reforms. Erich Honecker resigned as leader two weeks later. On November 9, the government announced the end of all border restrictions and Berlin citizens tore down the hated Berlin Wall. Before the end of the month, West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl unveiled a plan to integrate East Germany with capitalist West Germany—a process that was completed by October 1990.

    The collapse of the Stalinist regimes in Czechoslovakia, Romania and Bulgaria quickly followed. By the end of 1990, governments throughout Eastern Europe were giving full rein to the plunder of state-owned property, an influx of foreign capital and the dismantling of social services, leading to a precipitous deterioration in living standards.

    Gorbachev’s policies in the Soviet Union gave rise to intense pressures within the Stalinist bureaucracy and the emerging layer of entrepreneurs for a far speedier dismantling of all fetters on private ownership and market relations. This found expression in the installation of Boris Yeltsin in July 1991 and the implementation of pro-market “shock therapy.” In December 1991, the Soviet Union was formally dissolved.

    The break-up of the Soviet Union and collapse of the Stalinist states in Eastern Europe led to an orgy of triumphalism in the capitalist media proclaiming the end of socialism. Pundits, politicians and academics, who had foreseen nothing and could explain nothing, exulted over the triumph of the market, even going so far as to pronounce the end of history. In other words, capitalism supposedly represented the highest and final stage of human development. A new period of peace, prosperity and democracy would dawn, they all declared.

    The International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI), based on the analysis made by Leon Trotsky of Stalinism, had rejected the universal adulation of Gorbachev and warned that his policies were rapidly leading to the dismantling of the gains of the first workers’ state. Its perspectives resolution entitled “The World Capitalist Crisis and the Tasks of the Fourth International,” published in August 1988, made clear that the breakdown of the Soviet Union was not a product of socialism, but rather of Stalinism and its reactionary autarchic conception of “socialism in one country”:

    The very real crisis of the Soviet economy is rooted in its enforced isolation from the resources of the world market and the international division of labour. There are only two ways this crisis can be tackled. The way proposed by Gorbachev involves the dismantling of state industry, the renunciation of the planning principle, and the abandonment of the state monopoly on foreign trade, i.e., the reintegration of the Soviet Union into the structure of world capitalism. The alternative to this reactionary solution requires the smashing of imperialism’s domination over the world economy by linking up the Soviet and international working class in a revolutionary offensive aimed at extending the planned economy into the European, North American and Asian citadels of capitalism. [2]

    In the aftermath of the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the ICFI identified the root cause of the crisis of Stalinism in the processes of the globalisation of production that had been underway since the late 1970s, which had undermined all programs based on national economic regulation. While the crisis of Stalinism was the most immediate and acute expression, these same processes lay behind the international embrace of pro-market restructuring by Social Democratic and Labour parties, and trade unions, and their abandonment of any defence of the social rights of the working class.
    Capitalist restoration in China

    The events in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union had a profound impact in China, where processes of capitalist restoration had been underway since the 1970s. The CCP’s decision in June 1989 to use the military to brutally suppress the working class was in no small measure conditioned by its longstanding fear of a repetition in China of the mass strike movement in Poland in 1980–81 that led to the formation of the Solidarity trade union.

    China specialist Maurice Meisner explained that the involvement of masses of workers in the protests in Tiananmen Square on May 17 “did much to rekindle the ‘Polish fear’ among Party leaders, their decade-old obsession about the rise of a Solidarity-type alliance between workers and intellectuals in opposition to the Communist state. And that fear, in turn, contributed to their fateful decision to impose martial law.” [3]

    While Deng Xiaoping recognised the affinity of Gorbachev’s perestroika with the policies that he had already enacted, he did not embrace the political liberalisation of glasnost, fearing it would undermine the foundations of the CCP regime. When Gorbachev visited Beijing in mid-May 1989 to cement closer Sino-Soviet ties, the Chinese leadership kept him closeted from public view, anxious that his presence would give further impetus to the protests in Tiananmen Square. The rapid collapse of the Stalinist regimes in Eastern Europe only heightened the determination of the CCP bureaucracy to suppress any opposition.

    The roots of the crisis in China lay in the outcome of the 1949 Chinese revolution. The monumental events that brought the Chinese Communist Party to power ended more than a century of imperialist oppression that had mired the country of more than 500 million in squalor and backwardness. It expressed the aspirations of the vast majority of the population for economic security, basic democratic and social rights, and a decent standard of living. Decades of political upheaval and a war against Japanese imperialism from 1937 to 1945 had ravaged the country and left an estimated 14 million Chinese soldiers and civilians dead.

    Like the Soviet bureaucracy, however, the new CCP apparatus was based on the reactionary nationalist program of “socialism in one country,” which was a repudiation of socialist internationalism and Leon Trotsky’s theory of Permanent Revolution which underpinned the October Revolution in Russia in 1917.

    As a result, the course of the revolution and the subsequent evolution of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) proclaimed by Mao Zedong in 1949 was distorted and deformed by Stalinism, which dominated the CCP in the wake of Stalin’s betrayal of the Second Chinese Revolution of 1925–27. Stalin subordinated the very young CCP to the bourgeois nationalist Kuomintang, resulting in crushing blows to the Chinese Communists and working class in April 1927, and again in May 1927. CCP leaders and members who supported Trotsky’s analysis of the tragedy were expelled.

    In the wake of the 1949 Chinese Revolution, the pragmatic, nationalist ideology of Maoism led China rapidly into a blind alley. Mao’s perspective of a “New Democracy” sought to maintain a bloc with the national bourgeoisie, but the CCP government was driven, under conditions of the Korean War and the internal sabotage by bourgeois and petty bourgeois elements, to go further than intended. By 1956, virtually every aspect of the economy was nationalised and subject to bureaucratic planning along the lines of the Soviet Union, but the working class had no say through its own democratic organs.

    The organic hostility of the Maoist regime to the working class was expressed in its repression of Chinese Trotskyists, all of whom were jailed in 1952 amid the rising resistance by workers. As with the Eastern European states, the Fourth International characterised China as a deformed workers’ state, a highly conditional formula that placed the emphasis on the deformed, bureaucratic character of the regime.

    The national autarky of “socialism in one country” generated worsening economic and social turmoil, and crises for which the CCP bureaucracy had no solution, leading to bitter internal factional warfare. Mao’s fanciful scheme for a peasant socialist society, which underpinned his “Great Leap Forward,” ended in economic catastrophe and mass starvation. His factional opponents, led by Liu Shaoqi, followed the Soviet model of bureaucratic planning with its emphasis on heavy industry, but this provided no alternative.

    The economic crisis was greatly worsened by the 1961–63 split with the Soviet Union and the withdrawal of Soviet aid and advisers, as the two Stalinist regimes advanced their conflicting national interests. In a last desperate bid to oust his rivals, Mao unleashed the Cultural Revolution in 1966, which rapidly span out of his control, leading to confused and convulsive social struggles that threatened the very existence of the regime. Mao turned to the military to suppress workers who had taken literally his edict to “Bombard the Headquarters,” resulting in mass strikes in Shanghai and the formation of an independent Shanghai People’s Commune in 1967.

    Incapable of resolving the immense economic and social problems wracking the country, and facing a military confrontation with the Soviet Union, the CCP bureaucracy forged an anti-Soviet alliance with US imperialism that laid the basis for China’s integration into global capitalism. While Deng Xiaoping is generally credited with initiating market reforms, Mao’s rapprochement with US President Richard Nixon in 1972 was the essential political and diplomatic pre-condition for foreign investment and increased trade with the West.

    The process of “opening and reform” went hand-in-hand with the imposition of strict discipline and emphasis on boosting production in workplaces. Maurice Meissner noted: “Factory managers dismissed during the Cultural Revolution were restored to their former posts, accompanied by calls to strengthen managerial authority, labour discipline, and factory rules and regulations—and to struggle against ‘anarchism’ and ‘ultra-leftism.’ There were dramatic increases in foreign trade and in imports of foreign technology. Veteran party leaders attacked during the Cultural Revolution were ‘rehabilitated’ at an increasingly rapid pace; by 1973, it has been noted, ‘the pre-Cultural Revolution cadres were running the government ministries.” [4]

    From 1969 to 1975, the value of foreign trade increased from $US4 billion to $14 billion per annum. From the end of 1972 until mid-1975, China imported whole industrial plants, valued at $2.8 billion, mainly from Japan and western Europe.

    Deng Xiaoping who had been ostracised during the Cultural Revolution as the “No 2 capitalist roader,” was rehabilitated, appointed a vice premier of the state council under Zhou Enlai. Deng led the Chinese delegation to a special session of the UN in 1974 where he declared that the “socialist bloc” no longer existed and China was part of the Third World. In the factional power struggle that followed Mao’s death in 1976, Deng emerged as the dominant figure in the Stalinist bureaucracy. He embraced US imperialism ever more closely, formalising diplomatic relations in 1979, launching a border war against neighbouring Vietnam, and defending US allies such as the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.

    From 1978, Deng greatly accelerated the “reform and opening” pro-market reforms. Four Special Economic Zones (SEZs) were established in 1979 in Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Shantou and Xiamen, where foreign entrepreneurs and joint ventures produced goods for export and enjoyed tax breaks and other concessions. A similar system was later implemented in key port cities such as Shanghai. In the countryside, the collectivised communes were dismantled and restrictions removed on the operation of private enterprises. Prices for agricultural produce were lifted. In the cities, moves were made to transform thousands of state-owned enterprises into profit-making corporations. Private enterprises were permitted, the market was increasingly allowed to determine prices for consumer goods, and a “labour market” was initiated, allowing the hiring and firing of workers.

    The pro-market reforms led to the rapid rise of social inequality. Millions of former peasants were left landless and forced to seek employment in the cities. In the SEZs, where the capitalist market was given free rein, corruption and criminal activity was rampant, including smuggling, bribery and the theft of state-owned property. The sons and daughters of the top party leaders took full advantage of their political connections to establish their own business empires. With the lifting of price restrictions, inflation rocketed to 18.5 percent in 1988, to which the regime responded by drastically reducing credit and re-imposing import restrictions. Hundreds of thousands of workers lost their jobs, as private enterprises reduced their workforces or closed down altogether. Unemployment, the loss of job security, as well as skyrocketing prices, combined with disgust at the corruption and enrichment of CCP bureaucrats, fueled the social unrest that erupted in the mass protests by workers the following year.
    Capitalist restoration following Tiananmen Square

    In the aftermath of the bloody crackdown in Tiananmen Square and the police dragnet throughout the country, the factional battle inside the CCP leadership sharpened in the next three years over Deng’s program of capitalist restoration. In ordering the troops against workers and students, Deng had removed his chief ally in pro-market restructuring, Zhao Ziyang, as premier. Former Shanghai party leader Jiang Zemin was installed as a compromise choice to the top post of CCP secretary general. The initiative shifted to the so-called hardliners—Li Peng and Chen Yun, who, in criticising Zhao, were also criticising Deng’s policies.

    However, in advocating restrictions on market relations, Li and Chen based their policies on the status quo ante and the nationalist perspective of “socialism in country,” which had already proven to be a dead-end. They were looking toward the Soviet Union, even as the deformed workers’ states in Eastern Europe were collapsing and Gorbachev’s policies were undermining centralised planning and nationalised property relations. Their so-called “Soviet faction” represented sections of the Chinese bureaucracy whose power and privileges resided in their control of key sections of state-owned industry and the central apparatus in Beijing.

    At the Fifth Plenum in November 1989, Li delivered the main report, based on the recommendations of a revived State Planning Commission. The adopted plan called for cutting inflation to 10 percent in 1990 and economic growth to 5 percent by maintaining tight controls on credit and balancing the national budget. Rural industries would not be allowed to compete with state-owned enterprises. While keeping the SEZs and “open door” policy in place, the new restrictions hit rural and provincial industries, particularly in the south of the country.

    While Deng no longer held any official party or state position, he still retained considerable political clout, especially in the southern provinces where the new profit-making industries were concentrated. Deng had sided with the hardliners in opposing any political liberalisation and, above all, supported the 1989 military crackdown, but he was adamant that the restrictions on private enterprises and foreign investment had to be completely dismantled.

    The snowballing crisis in the Soviet Union brought matters to a head. An attempted Stalinist putsch in August 1991 to oust Gorbachev and Yeltsin and wind back their program of pro-market restructuring ended in dismal failure. China scholar Michael Marti explained: “This one event changed the thinking about the political equation within the Chinese leadership, including that of Deng Xiaoping. The failure of the Soviet Red Army to support the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in its bid to regain control threw the CCP into a panic. The Chinese leadership feared that a precedent had been established.” [5]

    The factional battle lines were drawn. While the “Soviet faction” began to call into question the entire agenda of pro-market reforms, including the establishment of the SEZs, Deng insisted that the levels of economic growth were too low to maintain employment and social stability. “If the economy cannot be boosted over a long time,” he told a meeting of party elders as far back as late 1989, “it [the government] will lose people’s support at home and will be oppressed and bullied by other nations. The continuation of this situation will lead to the collapse of the Communist Party.” [6]

    Deng was also concerned that the crisis in the Soviet Union, following the collapse of Stalinism in Eastern Europe, would greatly change geo-political relations. Not only had Deng’s strategy sought to balance between the US and the Soviet Union, but his economic policies depended on a large influx of foreign investment, which could potentially shift to exploiting new opportunities opening up in the former Soviet republics.

    Along with provincial leaders in the southern provinces, Deng counted on the support of People’s Liberation Army (PLA). The generals had been shocked by the way in which US imperialism and its allies had deployed hi-tech weaponry in the 1990–91 Gulf War to rapidly destroy the Iraqi military. Their conclusion was that China had to invest heavily in modernising the PLA and only Deng’s policies could transform the economy and produce the growth needed to supply that investment.

    Deng set out on his “Southern tour” in January–February 1992, just 20 days after the formal liquidation of the Soviet Union in December 1991, accompanied by top generals, the state security chief Qiao Shi and party elder Bo Yibo. As he visited the SEZs and southern cities, he declared that there would be no reversal of economic policies in the face of the Soviet collapse. Dismissing concerns about growing social inequality, he is said to have declared: “Let some people get rich first.”

    In a showdown with Chen Yun in Shanghai, Deng reportedly shouted: “Any leader who cannot boost the economy should leave office.” Openly backing capitalist restoration, he declared: “We should absorb more foreign capital and more foreign-advanced experiences and technologies, and set up more foreign-invested enterprises. Do not fear when others say we are practicing capitalism. Capitalism in nothing fearsome.” [7]

    Deng prevailed, opening the door for wholesale capitalist restoration that transformed the whole country into a giant free trade zone for the exploitation of cheap Chinese labour. The crocodile tears shed by Western politicians over the Tiananmen Square massacre were rapidly cast aside as foreign investors recognised that the police-state regime in Beijing was willing to use any method, no matter how brutal, to discipline the working class. In 1993, the CCP proclaimed that its objective was a “socialist market economy,” giving a threadbare “socialist” disguise to its embrace of capitalism.

    In 1994, the CCP formally established a “labour market,” by legitimising the sale and purchase of labour power. State-owned enterprises were corporatised into companies run for profit. The unprofitable ones were restructured or shut down. The better equipped, in sectors not designated as strategic, were sold off or converted into subsidiaries of foreign transnationals. A small number were preserved as state-owned “national flagships.”

    Between 1996 and 2005, the number of employees in state- and collective-owned enterprises halved, from 144 million to 73 million workers. Along with guaranteed life-time employment, the “iron rice bowl” of cradle-to-grave services was also dismantled. Essential services that had previously been provided by state-owned enterprises—childcare, education, health care and pensions—were now left to individual workers.
    Chinese capitalism today

    The restoration of capitalism in China over the past 30 years has only exacerbated the underlying social tensions within Chinese society and compounded the political and geo-political dilemmas confronting the CCP apparatus.

    The extraordinary economic expansion of China to become the world’s second largest economy has rested, in the first place, on the immense gains of the 1949 Revolution that unified China for the first time in decades, created an educated and skilled workforce, and developed basic industries and essential infrastructure. The flood of foreign investment into the country transformed China into the sweatshop of the world and produced a massive 11-fold increase in the economy between 1992 and 2010. This rapid growth, however, did not reflect an inherent strength of the Chinese economy, but rather its role in the world economy, dependent on foreign investment and technology.

    The imperialist powers, above all the United States, were more than willing to exploit cheap Chinese labour as long as China’s economic expansion did not challenge their own established geo-political interests. However, the vast quantity of raw materials and energy that Chinese industries require from around the world have increasingly brought it into conflict with the US and other major powers, in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and internationally. Moreover, as China has sought to create its own hi-tech “national champions” such as Huawei and ZTE, the US, under the Trump administration, has declared economic war on Beijing, not just in matters of trade. It has openly opposed Chinese plans to develop and expand hi-tech industries and to more closely link Eurasia to China through massive infrastructure projects under Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.

    The delusion promoted by CCP leaders that China could, through a “peaceful rise,” become a world power on a parity with the US has been shattered. China’s expansion has brought it into conflict with the global imperialist order dominated by the United States. Under Obama and now Trump, the US has begun using all means at its disposal to ensure its continued global hegemony. Trump’s economic war goes hand-in-hand with a military build-up in the Indo-Pacific, escalating naval provocations in the South China Sea, under the guise of “freedom of navigation operations, and more open preparations for a war between the two nuclear-armed powers.

    The CCP leadership has no answer to the mounting danger of war, other than desperately seeking an accommodation with imperialism, while engaging in a frenetic arms race that can only end in catastrophe for the working class in China and internationally. Capitalist restoration, far from strengthening China’s capacity to counter the US, has greatly weakened it. The regime is organically incapable of making any appeal to the international working class, as that would inevitably lead to social struggles by the working class at home.

    Having abandoned even its previous nominal commitment to socialism and internationalism, the CCP has increasing relied on whipping up Chinese nationalism to try to create a social base in layers of the middle class. There is nothing progressive about Chinese chauvinism and patriotism, which divides Chinese workers from their class brothers and sisters internationally, and within China from non-Han Chinese minorities. Its repressive measures against Uighurs, Tibetans and other ethnic groups have provided an opening that the US is seeking to exploit. Under the bogus banner of “human rights,” Washington is promoting separatist groups as part of its ambition to fracture and subordinate China to its interests.

    Thirty years after the Tiananmen Square massacre, the CCP leadership is terrified of a renewal of working-class opposition, the first stirrings of which have been seen in the more numerous reports of workers’ strikes and protests, and, significantly over the past year, in a turn by a layer of university students to assist workers in their struggles. Since 1989, the working class in China has vastly expanded to an estimated 400 million and as a proportion of the population. One indicator is the growth of the country’s urban population from just 26.4 percent of the total in 1990, to 58.5 percent in 2017.

    The CCP leadership boasts of having lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, using the UN’s very austere measures of poverty. Such benchmarks ignore the many factors that are fueling discontent among workers, including the common practice of late or unpaid wages, unhealthy and dangerous factory conditions, harsh corporate disciplinary practices, and the lack of basic social rights for tens of millions of internal migrants in the cities. All of these oppressive conditions are monitored and policed by the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, which functions as an arm of the CCP bureaucracy in workplaces.

    Capitalist restoration has produced a dramatic rise in social inequality: from one of the most equal societies in the world, China has become one of the most unequal countries. It is home to more dollar billionaires than any other country except the United States. While Chinese workers struggle to survive on the minimum wage of $370 a month, the wealthiest individual, Tencent chairman Pony Ma, has a personal fortune of almost $40 billion. These super-rich oligarchs, who in many cases have built their fortunes through naked corruption and the looting of state-owned property, are represented in the Chinese Communist Party and sit on powerful advisory bodies.

    The gulf between the super-rich and the vast majority of the workers and the poor is generating huge social tensions that, sooner rather than later, will explode on a scale that will eclipse the rebellion by workers and students 30 years ago. The lesson drawn by the Stalinist leadership from the 1989 events was that it had to suppress, through all available means, any expression of opposition that could become the focus of a broader movement against the regime. Incapable of meeting the pressing social needs of the majority of the population, the CCP has vastly expanded its police-state apparatus, now spending more each year on its internal security forces than it does on external defence.

    The working class must also draw the necessary political lessons from the defeat of that movement in 1989, which was rapidly assuming revolutionary dimensions. What was lacking was not determination, audacity and courage, nor numbers, which were rapidly swelling across China, but the essential problem facing the international working class in the 20th century—the absence of revolutionary leadership.

    James Cogan summed up the issue in his analysis “Ten years since the Tiananmen Square massacre,” stating:

    Inexperienced politically and lacking a political perspective outside of opposition to the existing regime, the workers’ leaders advanced no alternative to, and deferred to, the student bodies. The workers of China knew in their life experience what they were against—Stalinism and capitalism—but they were not able to articulate any perspective for an alternative social order.

    Decades of domination by Stalinism and the active suppression of genuine Marxism in China meant there was no revolutionary socialist, that is, Trotskyist, tendency in the working class. No organisation within the country could spontaneously advance the program that was implicit in the actions and sentiments of the Chinese working class—a political revolution to overthrow the Stalinist regime and introduce major reforms into the economy for the benefit of the working class. [8]

    The essential political task of building a Trotskyist leadership in the Chinese working class as a section of the International Committee of the Fourth International remains. None of the oppositional tendencies that emerged out of the 1989 protests offer a viable political perspective for the working class. Advocates of independent trade unions such as Han Dongfang, who was prominent in the Beijing Workers Autonomous Federation in 1989, have underscored the political bankruptcy of syndicalism by lurching to the right and into the arms of US trade union apparatus, in other words of US imperialism.

    A layer of youth, intellectuals and workers have turned to Maoism, and its banal “revolutionary” slogans, for answers. Capitalist restoration in China, however, was not a break from Maoism. It flowed organically out of the dead-end of “socialism in one country.” Maoism could aptly be termed Stalinism with Chinese characteristics, with its hostility to the working class, its emphasis on subjective will, and above all its putrid nationalism. It is diametrically opposed to genuine Marxism, that is the perspective of socialist internationalism, which alone was upheld by the Trotskyist movement, including the Chinese Trotskyists.

    The establishment of a genuinely revolutionary party in China, as part of the ICFI, requires the assimilation of the essential strategic experiences of the international working class, of which the Chinese revolutions of the 20th century are a critical component. The CCP leaders are petrified that workers and youth will begin to work over the lessons of history. They attempt to censor and black out any knowledge and discussion of the events of 1989, and continue to perpetrate the lies of Stalinism about the course of the 20th century.

    The crucial political lessons of the protracted struggle of Trotskyism against Stalinism are embedded in the program, perspective and documents of the International Committee of the Fourth International. Workers and youth should make a serious study of the political issues involved, beginning with the documents of the ICFI on the Tiananmen Square massacre, republished this week on the World Socialist Web Site. We urge you to contact the International Committee of the Fourth International, which is the first step toward forging a Trotskyist leadership in the Chinese working class.

    Footnotes:

    [1] Cited in “Workers in the Tiananmen protests: The politics of the Beijing Workers Autonomous Federation,” by Andrew G. Walder and Gong Xiaoxia, first published in the Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, No 29, January 1993.

    [2] The World Capitalist Crisis and the Tasks of the Fourth International: Perspectives Resolution of the International Committee of the Fourth International, August 1988, Labor Publications, pp.30–31.

    [3] Maurice Meisner, Mao’s China and After: A History of the People’s Republic, The Free Press, Third edition, 1999, p.508.

    [4] ibid, p.389.

    [5] Michael Marti, China and the Legacy of Deng Xiaoping: From Communist Revolution to Capitalist Evolution, Brassey’s Inc, 2002, pp.47–48.

    [6] Cited in John Chan, “Twenty years since Deng Xiaoping’s ‘Southern tour’—Part 1”, 26 November 2012.

    [7] Cited in John Chan, “Twenty years since Deng Xiaoping’s ‘Southern tour’—Part 2”, 27 November 2012.

    [8] James Cogan, “Ten years since the Tiananmen Square massacre: Political lessons for the working class,” 4 June 1999.

    #Chine #4689

  • Beyond the Hype of Lab-Grown Diamonds
    https://earther.gizmodo.com/beyond-the-hype-of-lab-grown-diamonds-1834890351

    Billions of years ago when the world was still young, treasure began forming deep underground. As the edges of Earth’s tectonic plates plunged down into the upper mantle, bits of carbon, some likely hailing from long-dead life forms were melted and compressed into rigid lattices. Over millions of years, those lattices grew into the most durable, dazzling gems the planet had ever cooked up. And every so often, for reasons scientists still don’t fully understand, an eruption would send a stash of these stones rocketing to the surface inside a bubbly magma known as kimberlite.

    There, the diamonds would remain, nestled in the kimberlite volcanoes that delivered them from their fiery home, until humans evolved, learned of their existence, and began to dig them up.

    The epic origin of Earth’s diamonds has helped fuel a powerful marketing mythology around them: that they are objects of otherworldly strength and beauty; fitting symbols of eternal love. But while “diamonds are forever” may be the catchiest advertising slogan ever to bear some geologic truth, the supply of these stones in the Earth’s crust, in places we can readily reach them, is far from everlasting. And the scars we’ve inflicted on the land and ourselves in order to mine diamonds has cast a shadow that still lingers over the industry.

    Some diamond seekers, however, say we don’t need to scour the Earth any longer, because science now offers an alternative: diamonds grown in labs. These gems aren’t simulants or synthetic substitutes; they are optically, chemically, and physically identical to their Earth-mined counterparts. They’re also cheaper, and in theory, limitless. The arrival of lab-grown diamonds has rocked the jewelry world to its core and prompted fierce pushback from diamond miners. Claims abound on both sides.

    Growers often say that their diamonds are sustainable and ethical; miners and their industry allies counter that only gems plucked from the Earth can be considered “real” or “precious.” Some of these assertions are subjective, others are supported only by sparse, self-reported, or industry-backed data. But that’s not stopping everyone from making them.

    This is a fight over image, and when it comes to diamonds, image is everything.
    A variety of cut, polished Ada Diamonds created in a lab, including smaller melee stones and large center stones. 22.94 carats total. (2.60 ct. pear, 2.01 ct. asscher, 2.23 ct. cushion, 3.01 ct. radiant, 1.74 ct. princess, 2.11 ct. emerald, 3.11 ct. heart, 3.00 ct. oval, 3.13 ct. round.)
    Image: Sam Cannon (Earther)
    Same, but different

    The dream of lab-grown diamond dates back over a century. In 1911, science fiction author H.G. Wells described what would essentially become one of the key methods for making diamond—recreating the conditions inside Earth’s mantle on its surface—in his short story The Diamond Maker. As the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) notes, there were a handful of dubious attempts to create diamonds in labs in the late 19th and early 20th century, but the first commercial diamond production wouldn’t emerge until the mid-1950s, when scientists with General Electric worked out a method for creating small, brown stones. Others, including De Beers, soon developed their own methods for synthesizing the gems, and use of the lab-created diamond in industrial applications, from cutting tools to high power electronics, took off.

    According to the GIA’s James Shigley, the first experimental production of gem-quality diamond occurred in 1970. Yet by the early 2000s, gem-quality stones were still small, and often tinted yellow with impurities. It was only in the last five or so years that methods for growing diamonds advanced to the point that producers began churning out large, colorless stones consistently. That’s when the jewelry sector began to take a real interest.

    Today, that sector is taking off. The International Grown Diamond Association (IGDA), a trade group formed in 2016 by a dozen lab diamond growers and sellers, now has about 50 members, according to IGDA secretary general Dick Garard. When the IGDA first formed, lab-grown diamonds were estimated to represent about 1 percent of a $14 billion rough diamond market. This year, industry analyst Paul Zimnisky estimates they account for 2-3 percent of the market.

    He expects that share will only continue to grow as factories in China that already produce millions of carats a year for industrial purposes start to see an opportunity in jewelry.
    “I have a real problem with people claiming one is ethical and another is not.”

    “This year some [factories] will come up from 100,000 gem-quality diamonds to one to two million,” Zimnisky said. “They already have the infrastructure and equipment in place” and are in the process of upgrading it. (About 150 million carats of diamonds were mined last year, according to a global analysis of the industry conducted by Bain & Company.)

    Production ramp-up aside, 2018 saw some other major developments across the industry. In the summer, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reversed decades of guidance when it expanded the definition of a diamond to include those created in labs and dropped ‘synthetic’ as a recommended descriptor for lab-grown stones. The decision came on the heels of the world’s top diamond producer, De Beers, announcing the launch of its own lab-grown diamond line, Lightbox, after having once vowed never to sell man-made stones as jewelry.

    “I would say shock,” Lightbox Chief Marketing Officer Sally Morrison told Earther when asked how the jewelry world responded to the company’s launch.

    While the majority of lab-grown diamonds on the market today are what’s known as melee (less than 0.18 carats), the tech for producing the biggest, most dazzling diamonds continues to improve. In 2016, lab-grown diamond company MiaDonna announced its partners had grown a 6.28 carat gem-quality diamond, claimed to be the largest created in the U.S. to that point. In 2017, a lab in Augsburg University, Germany that grows diamonds for industrial and scientific research applications produced what is thought to be the largest lab-grown diamond ever—a 155 carat behemoth that stretches nearly 4 inches across. Not gem quality, perhaps, but still impressive.

    “If you compare it with the Queen’s diamond, hers is four times heavier, it’s clearer” physicist Matthias Schreck, who leads the group that grew that beast of a jewel, told me. “But in area, our diamond is bigger. We were very proud of this.”

    Diamonds can be created in one of two ways: Similar to how they form inside the Earth, or similar to how scientists speculate they might form in outer space.

    The older, Earth-inspired method is known as “high temperature high pressure” (HPHT), and that’s exactly what it sounds like. A carbon source, like graphite, is placed in a giant, mechanical press where, in the presence of a catalyst, it’s subjected to temperatures of around 1,600 degrees Celsius and pressures of 5-6 Gigapascals in order to form diamond. (If you’re curious what that sort of pressure feels like, the GIA describes it as similar to the force exerted if you tried to balance a commercial jet on your fingertip.)

    The newer method, called chemical vapor deposition (CVD), is more akin to how diamonds might form in interstellar gas clouds (for which we have indirect, spectroscopic evidence, according to Shigley). A hydrocarbon gas, like methane, is pumped into a low-pressure reactor vessel alongside hydrogen. While maintaining near-vacuum conditions, the gases are heated very hot—typically 3,000 to 4,000 degrees Celsius, according to Lightbox CEO Steve Coe—causing carbon atoms to break free of their molecular bonds. Under the right conditions, those liberated bits of carbon will settle out onto a substrate—typically a flat, square plate of a synthetic diamond produced with the HPHT method—forming layer upon layer of diamond.

    “It’s like snow falling on a table on your back porch,” Jason Payne, the founder and CEO of lab-grown diamond jewelry company Ada Diamonds, told me.

    Scientists have been forging gem-quality diamonds with HPHT for longer, but today, CVD has become the method of choice for those selling larger bridal stones. That’s in part because it’s easier to control impurities and make diamonds with very high clarity, according to Coe. Still, each method has its advantages—Payne said that HPHT is faster and the diamonds typically have better color (which is to say, less of it)—and some companies, like Ada, purchase stones grown in both ways.

    However they’re made, lab-grown diamonds have the same exceptional hardness, stiffness, and thermal conductivity as their Earth-mined counterparts. Cut, they can dazzle with the same brilliance and fire—a technical term to describe how well the diamond scatters light like a prism. The GIA even grades them according to the same 4Cs—cut, clarity, color, and carat—that gemologists use to assess diamonds formed in the Earth, although it uses a slightly different terminology to report the color and clarity grades for lab-grown stones.

    They’re so similar, in fact, that lab-grown diamond entering the larger diamond supply without any disclosures has become a major concern across the jewelry industry, particularly when it comes to melee stones from Asia. It’s something major retailers are now investing thousands of dollars in sophisticated detection equipment to suss out by searching for minute differences in, say, their crystal shape or for impurities like nitrogen (much less common in lab-grown diamond, according to Shigley).

    Those differences may be a lifeline for retailers hoping to weed out lab-grown diamonds, but for companies focused on them, they can become another selling point. The lack of nitrogen in diamonds produced with the CVD method, for instance, gives them an exceptional chemical purity that allows them to be classified as type IIa; a rare and coveted breed that accounts for just 2 percent of those found in nature. Meanwhile, the ability to control everything about the growth process allows companies like Lightbox to adjust the formula and produce incredibly rare blue and pink diamonds as part of their standard product line. (In fact, these colored gemstones have made up over half of the company’s sales since launch, according to Coe.)

    And while lab-grown diamonds boast the same sparkle as their Earthly counterparts, they do so at a significant discount. Zimnisky said that today, your typical one carat, medium quality diamond grown in a lab will sell for about $3,600, compared with $6,100 for its Earth-mined counterpart—a discount of about 40 percent. Two years ago, that discount was only 18 percent. And while the price drop has “slightly tapered off” as Zimnisky put it, he expects it will fall further thanks in part to the aforementioned ramp up in Chinese production, as well as technological improvements. (The market is also shifting in response to Lightbox, which De Beers is using to position lab-grown diamonds as mass produced items for fashion jewelry, and which is selling its stones, ungraded, at the controversial low price of $800 per carat—a discount of nearly 90 percent.)

    Zimnisky said that if the price falls too fast, it could devalue lab-grown diamonds in the eyes of consumers. But for now, at least, paying less seems to be a selling point. A 2018 consumer research survey by MVI Marketing found that most of those polled would choose a larger lab-grown diamond over a smaller mined diamond of the same price.

    “The thing [consumers] seem most compelled by is the ability to trade up in size and quality at the same price,” Garard of IGDA said.

    Still, for buyers and sellers alike, price is only part of the story. Many in the lab-grown diamond world market their product as an ethical or eco-friendly alternative to mined diamonds.

    But those sales pitches aren’t without controversy.
    A variety of lab-grown diamond products arrayed on a desk at Ada Diamonds showroom in Manhattan. The stone in the upper left gets its blue color from boron. Diamonds tinted yellow (top center) usually get their color from small amounts of nitrogen.
    Photo: Sam Cannon (Earther)
    Dazzling promises

    As Anna-Mieke Anderson tells it, she didn’t enter the diamond world to become a corporate tycoon. She did it to try and fix a mistake.

    In 1999, Anderson purchased herself a diamond. Some years later, in 2005, her father asked her where it came from. Nonplussed, she told him it came from the jewelry store. But that wasn’t what he was asking: He wanted to know where it really came from.

    “I actually had no idea,” Anderson told Earther. “That led me to do a mountain of research.”

    That research eventually led Anderson to conclude that she had likely bought a diamond mined under horrific conditions. She couldn’t be sure, because the certificate of purchase included no place of origin. But around the time of her purchase, civil wars funded by diamond mining were raging across Angola, Sierra Leone, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Liberia, fueling “widespread devastation” as Global Witness put it in 2006. At the height of the diamond wars in the late ‘90s, the watchdog group estimates that as many as 15 percent of diamonds entering the market were conflict diamonds. Even those that weren’t actively fueling a war were often being mined in dirty, hazardous conditions; sometimes by children.

    “I couldn’t believe I’d bought into this,” Anderson said.

    To try and set things right, Anderson began sponsoring a boy living in a Liberian community impacted by the blood diamond trade. The experience was so eye-opening, she says, that she eventually felt compelled to sponsor more children. Selling conflict-free jewelry seemed like a fitting way to raise money to do so, but after a great deal more research, Anderson decided she couldn’t in good faith consider any diamond pulled from the Earth to be truly conflict-free in either the humanitarian or environmental sense. While diamond miners were, by the early 2000s, getting their gems certified “conflict free” according to the UN-backed Kimberley Process, the certification scheme’s definition of a conflict diamond—one sold by rebel groups to finance armed conflicts against governments—felt far too narrow.

    “That [conflict definition] eliminates anything to do with the environment, or eliminates a child mining it, or someone who was a slave, or beaten, or raped,” Anderson said.

    And so she started looking into science, and in 2007, launching MiaDonna as one of the world’s first lab-grown diamond jewelry companies. The business has been activism-oriented from the get-go, with at least five percent of its annual earnings—and more than 20 percent for the last three years—going into The Greener Diamond, Anderson’s charity foundation which has funded a wide range of projects, from training former child soldiers in Sierra Leone to grow food to sponsoring kids orphaned by the West African Ebola outbreak.

    MiaDonna isn’t the only company that positions itself as an ethical alternative to the traditional diamond industry. Brilliant Earth, which sells what it says are carefully-sourced mined and lab-created diamonds, also donates a small portion of its profits to supporting mining communities. Other lab-grown diamond companies market themselves as “ethical,” “conflict-free,” or “world positive.” Payne of Ada Diamonds sees, in lab-grown diamonds, not just shiny baubles, but a potential to improve medicine, clean up pollution, and advance society in countless other ways—and he thinks the growing interest in lab-grown diamond jewelry will help propel us toward that future.

    Others, however, say black-and-white characterizations when it comes to social impact of mined diamonds versus lab-grown stones are unfair. “I have a real problem with people claiming one is ethical and another is not,” Estelle Levin-Nally, founder and CEO of Levin Sources, which advocates for better governance in the mining sector, told Earther. “I think it’s always about your politics. And ethics are subjective.”

    Saleem Ali, an environmental researcher at the University of Delaware who serves on the board of the Diamonds and Development Initiative, agrees. He says the mining industry has, on the whole, worked hard to turn itself around since the height of the diamond wars and that governance is “much better today” than it used to be. Human rights watchdog Global Witness also says that “significant progress” has been made to curb the conflict diamond trade, although as Alice Harle, Senior Campaigner with Global Witness told Earther via email, diamonds do still fuel conflict, particularly in the Central African Republic and Zimbabwe.

    Most industry observers seems to agree that the Kimberley Process is outdated and inadequate, and that more work is needed to stamp out other abuses, including child labor and forced labor, in the artisanal and small-scale diamond mining sector. Today, large-scale mining operations don’t tend to see these kinds of problems, according to Julianne Kippenberg, associate director for children’s rights at Human Rights Watch, but she notes that there may be other community impacts surrounding land rights and forced resettlement.

    The flip side, Ali and Levin-Nally say, is that well-regulated mining operations can be an important source of economic development and livelihood. Ali cites Botswana and Russia as prime examples of places where large-scale mining operations have become “major contributors to the economy.” Dmitry Amelkin, head of strategic projects and analytics for Russian diamond mining giant Alrosa, echoed that sentiment in an email to Earther, noting that diamonds transformed Botswana “from one of the poorest [countries] in the world to a middle-income country” with revenues from mining representing almost a third of its GDP.

    In May, a report commissioned by the Diamond Producers Association (DPA), a trade organization representing the world’s largest diamond mining companies, estimated that worldwide, its members generate nearly $4 billion in direct revenue for employees and contractors, along with another $6.8 billion in benefits via “local procurement of goods and services.” DPA CEO Jean-Marc Lieberherr said this was a story diamond miners need to do a better job telling.

    “The industry has undergone such changes since the Blood Diamond movie,” he said, referring to the blockbuster 2006 film starring Leonardo DiCaprio that drew global attention to the problem of conflict diamonds. “And yet people’s’ perceptions haven’t evolved. I think the main reason is we have not had a voice, we haven’t communicated.”

    But conflict and human rights abuses aren’t the only issues that have plagued the diamond industry. There’s also the lasting environmental impact of the mining itself. In the case of large-scale commercial mines, this typically entails using heavy machinery and explosives to bore deep into those kimberlite tubes in search of precious stones.

    Some, like Maya Koplyova, a geologist at the University of British Columbia who studies diamonds and the rocks they’re found in, see this as far better than many other forms of mining. “The environmental footprint is the fThere’s also the question of just how representative the report’s energy consumption estimates for lab-grown diamonds are. While he wouldn’t offer a specific number, Coe said that De Beers’ Group diamond manufacturer Element Six—arguably the most advanced laboratory-grown diamond company in the world—has “substantially lower” per carat energy requirements than the headline figures found inside the new report. When asked why this was not included, Rick Lord, ESG analyst at Trucost, the S&P global group that conducted the analysis, said it chose to focus on energy estimates in the public record, but that after private consultation with Element Six it did not believe their data would “materially alter” the emissions estimates in the study.

    Finally, it’s important to consider the source of the carbon emissions. While the new report states that about 40 percent of the emissions associated with mining a diamond come from fossil fuel-powered vehicles and equipment, emissions associated with growing a diamond come mainly from electric power. Today, about 68 percent of lab-grown diamonds hail from China, Singapore, and India combined according to Zimnisky, where the power is drawn from largely fossil fuel-powered grids. But there is, at least, an opportunity to switch to renewables and drive that carbon footprint way down.
    “The reality is both mining and manufacturing consume energy and probably the best thing we could do is focus on reducing energy consumption.”

    And some companies do seem to be trying to do that. Anderson of MiaDonna says the company only sources its diamonds from facilities in the U.S., and that it’s increasingly trying to work with producers that use renewable energy. Lab-grown diamond company Diamond Foundry grows its stones inside plasma reactors running “as hot as the outer layer of the sun,” per its website, and while it wouldn’t offer any specific numbers, that presumably uses more energy than your typical operation running at lower temperatures. However, company spokesperson Ye-Hui Goldenson said its Washington State ‘megacarat factory’ was cited near a well-maintained hydropower source so that the diamonds could be produced with renewable energy. The company offsets other fossil fuel-driven parts of its operation by purchasing carbon credits.

    Lightbox’s diamonds currently come from Element Six’s UK-based facilities. The company is, however, building a $94-million facility near Portland, Oregon, that’s expected to come online by 2020. Coe said he estimates about 45 percent of its power will come from renewable sources.

    “The reality is both mining and manufacturing consume energy and probably the best thing we could do is focus on reducing energy consumption,” Coe said. “That’s something we’re focused on in Lightbox.”

    In spite of that, Lightbox is somewhat notable among lab-grown diamond jewelry brands in that, in the words of Morrison, it is “not claiming this to be an eco-friendly product.”

    “While it is true that we don’t dig holes in the ground, the energy consumption is not insignificant,” Morrison told Earther. “And I think we felt very uncomfortable promoting on that.”
    Various diamonds created in a lab, as seen at the Ada Diamonds showroom in Manhattan.
    Photo: Sam Cannon (Earther)
    The real real

    The fight over how lab-grown diamonds can and should market themselves is still heating up.

    On March 26, the FTC sent letters to eight lab-grown and diamond simulant companies warning them against making unsubstantiated assertions about the environmental benefits of their products—its first real enforcement action after updating its jewelry guides last year. The letters, first obtained by JCK news director Rob Bates under a Freedom of Information Act request, also warned companies that their advertising could falsely imply the products are mined diamonds, illustrating that, even though the agency now says a lab-grown diamond is a diamond, the specific origin remains critically important. A letter to Diamond Foundry, for instance, notes that the company has at times advertised its stones as “above-ground real” without the qualification of “laboratory-made.” It’s easy to see how a consumer might miss the implication.

    But in a sense, that’s what all of this is: A fight over what’s real.
    “It’s a nuanced reality that we’re in. They are a type of diamond.”

    Another letter, sent to FTC attorney Reenah Kim by the nonprofit trade organization Jewelers Vigilance Committee on April 2, makes it clear that many in the industry still believe that’s a term that should be reserved exclusively for gems formed inside the Earth. The letter, obtained by Earther under FOIA, urges the agency to continue restricting the use of the terms “real,” “genuine,” “natural,” “precious,” and “semi-precious” to Earth-mined diamonds and gemstones. Even the use of such terms in conjunction with “laboratory grown,” the letter argues, “will create even more confusion in an already confused and evolving marketplace.”

    JVC President Tiffany Stevens told Earther that the letter was a response to a footnote in an explanatory document about the FTC’s recent jewelry guide changes, which suggested the agency was considering removing a clause about real, precious, natural and genuine only being acceptable modifiers for gems mined from the Earth.

    “We felt that given the current commercial environment, that we didn’t think it was a good time to take that next step,” Stevens told Earther. As Stevens put it, the changes the FTC recently made, including expanding the definition of diamond and tweaking the descriptors companies can use to label laboratory-grown diamonds as such, have already been “wildly misinterpreted” by some lab-grown diamond sellers that are no longer making the “necessary disclosures.”

    Asked whether the JVC thinks lab-grown diamonds are, in fact, real diamonds, Stevens demurred.

    “It’s a nuanced reality that we’re in,” she said. “They are a type of diamond.”

    Change is afoot in the diamond world. Mined diamond production may have already peaked, according to the 2018 Bain & Company report. Lab diamonds are here to stay, although where they’re going isn’t entirely clear. Zimnisky expects that in a few years—as Lightbox’s new facility comes online and mass production of lab diamonds continues to ramp up overseas—the price industry-wide will fall to about 80 percent less than a mined diamond. At that point, he wonders whether lab-grown diamonds will start to lose their sparkle.

    Payne isn’t too worried about a price slide, which he says is happening across the diamond industry and which he expects will be “linear, not exponential” on the lab-grown side. He points out that lab-grown diamond market is still limited by supply, and that the largest lab-grown gems remain quite rare. Payne and Zimnisky both see the lab-grown diamond market bifurcating into cheaper, mass-produced gems and premium-quality stones sold by those that can maintain a strong brand. A sense that they’re selling something authentic and, well, real.

    “So much has to do with consumer psychology,” Zimnisky said.

    Some will only ever see diamonds as authentic if they formed inside the Earth. They’re drawn, as Kathryn Money, vice president of strategy and merchandising at Brilliant Earth put it, to “the history and romanticism” of diamonds; to a feeling that’s sparked by holding a piece of our ancient world. To an essence more than a function.

    Others, like Anderson, see lab-grown diamonds as the natural (to use a loaded word) evolution of diamond. “We’re actually running out of [mined] diamonds,” she said. “There is an end in sight.” Payne agreed, describing what he sees as a “looming death spiral” for diamond mining.

    Mined diamonds will never go away. We’ve been digging them up since antiquity, and they never seem to lose their sparkle. But most major mines are being exhausted. And with technology making it easier to grow diamonds just as they are getting more difficult to extract from the Earth, the lab-grown diamond industry’s grandstanding about its future doesn’t feel entirely unreasonable.

    There’s a reason why, as Payne said, “the mining industry as a whole is still quite scared of this product.” ootprint of digging the hole in the ground and crushing [the rock],” Koplyova said, noting that there’s no need to add strong acids or heavy metals like arsenic (used in gold mining) to liberate the gems.

    Still, those holes can be enormous. The Mir Mine, a now-abandoned open pit mine in Eastern Siberia, is so large—reportedly stretching 3,900 feet across and 1,700 feet deep—that the Russian government has declared it a no-fly zone owing to the pit’s ability to create dangerous air currents. It’s visible from space.

    While companies will often rehabilitate other land to offset the impact of mines, kimberlite mining itself typically leaves “a permanent dent in the earth’s surface,” as a 2014 report by market research company Frost & Sullivan put it.

    “It’s a huge impact as far as I’m concerned,” said Kevin Krajick, senior editor for science news at Columbia University’s Earth Institute who wrote a book on the discovery of diamonds in far northern Canada. Krajick noted that in remote mines, like those of the far north, it’s not just the physical hole to consider, but all the development required to reach a previously-untouched area, including roads and airstrips, roaring jets and diesel-powered trucks.

    Diamonds grown in factories clearly have a smaller physical footprint. According to the Frost & Sullivan report, they also use less water and create less waste. It’s for these reasons that Ali thinks diamond mining “will never be able to compete” with lab-grown diamonds from an environmental perspective.

    “The mining industry should not even by trying to do that,” he said.

    Of course, this is capitalism, so try to compete is exactly what the DPA is now doing. That same recent report that touted the mining industry’s economic benefits also asserts that mined diamonds have a carbon footprint three times lower than that of lab-grown diamonds, on average. The numbers behind that conclusion, however, don’t tell the full story.

    Growing diamonds does take considerable energy. The exact amount can vary greatly, however, depending on the specific nature of the growth process. These are details manufacturers are typically loathe to disclose, but Payne of Ada Diamonds says he estimates the most efficient players in the game today use about 250 kilowatt hour (kWh) of electricity per cut, polished carat of diamond; roughly what a U.S. household consumes in 9 days. Other estimates run higher. Citing unnamed sources, industry publication JCK Online reported that a modern HPHT run can use up to 700 kWh per carat, while CVD production can clock in north of 1,000 kWh per carat.

    Pulling these and several other public-record estimates, along with information on where in the world today’s lab diamonds are being grown and the energy mix powering the producer nations’ electric grids, the DPA-commissioned study estimated that your typical lab-grown diamond results in some 511 kg of carbon emissions per cut, polished carat. Using information provided by mining companies on fuel and electricity consumption, along with other greenhouse gas sources on the mine site, it found that the average mined carat was responsible for just 160 kg of carbon emissions.

    One limitation here is that the carbon footprint estimate for mining focused only on diamond production, not the years of work entailed in developing a mine. As Ali noted, developing a mine can take a lot of energy, particularly for those sited in remote locales where equipment needs to be hauled long distances by trucks or aircraft.

    There’s also the question of just how representative the report’s energy consumption estimates for lab-grown diamonds are. While he wouldn’t offer a specific number, Coe said that De Beers’ Group diamond manufacturer Element Six—arguably the most advanced laboratory-grown diamond company in the world—has “substantially lower” per carat energy requirements than the headline figures found inside the new report. When asked why this was not included, Rick Lord, ESG analyst at Trucost, the S&P global group that conducted the analysis, said it chose to focus on energy estimates in the public record, but that after private consultation with Element Six it did not believe their data would “materially alter” the emissions estimates in the study.

    Finally, it’s important to consider the source of the carbon emissions. While the new report states that about 40 percent of the emissions associated with mining a diamond come from fossil fuel-powered vehicles and equipment, emissions associated with growing a diamond come mainly from electric power. Today, about 68 percent of lab-grown diamonds hail from China, Singapore, and India combined according to Zimnisky, where the power is drawn from largely fossil fuel-powered grids. But there is, at least, an opportunity to switch to renewables and drive that carbon footprint way down.
    “The reality is both mining and manufacturing consume energy and probably the best thing we could do is focus on reducing energy consumption.”

    And some companies do seem to be trying to do that. Anderson of MiaDonna says the company only sources its diamonds from facilities in the U.S., and that it’s increasingly trying to work with producers that use renewable energy. Lab-grown diamond company Diamond Foundry grows its stones inside plasma reactors running “as hot as the outer layer of the sun,” per its website, and while it wouldn’t offer any specific numbers, that presumably uses more energy than your typical operation running at lower temperatures. However, company spokesperson Ye-Hui Goldenson said its Washington State ‘megacarat factory’ was cited near a well-maintained hydropower source so that the diamonds could be produced with renewable energy. The company offsets other fossil fuel-driven parts of its operation by purchasing carbon credits.

    Lightbox’s diamonds currently come from Element Six’s UK-based facilities. The company is, however, building a $94-million facility near Portland, Oregon, that’s expected to come online by 2020. Coe said he estimates about 45 percent of its power will come from renewable sources.

    “The reality is both mining and manufacturing consume energy and probably the best thing we could do is focus on reducing energy consumption,” Coe said. “That’s something we’re focused on in Lightbox.”

    In spite of that, Lightbox is somewhat notable among lab-grown diamond jewelry brands in that, in the words of Morrison, it is “not claiming this to be an eco-friendly product.”

    “While it is true that we don’t dig holes in the ground, the energy consumption is not insignificant,” Morrison told Earther. “And I think we felt very uncomfortable promoting on that.”
    Various diamonds created in a lab, as seen at the Ada Diamonds showroom in Manhattan.
    Photo: Sam Cannon (Earther)
    The real real

    The fight over how lab-grown diamonds can and should market themselves is still heating up.

    On March 26, the FTC sent letters to eight lab-grown and diamond simulant companies warning them against making unsubstantiated assertions about the environmental benefits of their products—its first real enforcement action after updating its jewelry guides last year. The letters, first obtained by JCK news director Rob Bates under a Freedom of Information Act request, also warned companies that their advertising could falsely imply the products are mined diamonds, illustrating that, even though the agency now says a lab-grown diamond is a diamond, the specific origin remains critically important. A letter to Diamond Foundry, for instance, notes that the company has at times advertised its stones as “above-ground real” without the qualification of “laboratory-made.” It’s easy to see how a consumer might miss the implication.

    But in a sense, that’s what all of this is: A fight over what’s real.
    “It’s a nuanced reality that we’re in. They are a type of diamond.”

    Another letter, sent to FTC attorney Reenah Kim by the nonprofit trade organization Jewelers Vigilance Committee on April 2, makes it clear that many in the industry still believe that’s a term that should be reserved exclusively for gems formed inside the Earth. The letter, obtained by Earther under FOIA, urges the agency to continue restricting the use of the terms “real,” “genuine,” “natural,” “precious,” and “semi-precious” to Earth-mined diamonds and gemstones. Even the use of such terms in conjunction with “laboratory grown,” the letter argues, “will create even more confusion in an already confused and evolving marketplace.”

    JVC President Tiffany Stevens told Earther that the letter was a response to a footnote in an explanatory document about the FTC’s recent jewelry guide changes, which suggested the agency was considering removing a clause about real, precious, natural and genuine only being acceptable modifiers for gems mined from the Earth.

    “We felt that given the current commercial environment, that we didn’t think it was a good time to take that next step,” Stevens told Earther. As Stevens put it, the changes the FTC recently made, including expanding the definition of diamond and tweaking the descriptors companies can use to label laboratory-grown diamonds as such, have already been “wildly misinterpreted” by some lab-grown diamond sellers that are no longer making the “necessary disclosures.”

    Asked whether the JVC thinks lab-grown diamonds are, in fact, real diamonds, Stevens demurred.

    “It’s a nuanced reality that we’re in,” she said. “They are a type of diamond.”

    Change is afoot in the diamond world. Mined diamond production may have already peaked, according to the 2018 Bain & Company report. Lab diamonds are here to stay, although where they’re going isn’t entirely clear. Zimnisky expects that in a few years—as Lightbox’s new facility comes online and mass production of lab diamonds continues to ramp up overseas—the price industry-wide will fall to about 80 percent less than a mined diamond. At that point, he wonders whether lab-grown diamonds will start to lose their sparkle.

    Payne isn’t too worried about a price slide, which he says is happening across the diamond industry and which he expects will be “linear, not exponential” on the lab-grown side. He points out that lab-grown diamond market is still limited by supply, and that the largest lab-grown gems remain quite rare. Payne and Zimnisky both see the lab-grown diamond market bifurcating into cheaper, mass-produced gems and premium-quality stones sold by those that can maintain a strong brand. A sense that they’re selling something authentic and, well, real.

    “So much has to do with consumer psychology,” Zimnisky said.

    Some will only ever see diamonds as authentic if they formed inside the Earth. They’re drawn, as Kathryn Money, vice president of strategy and merchandising at Brilliant Earth put it, to “the history and romanticism” of diamonds; to a feeling that’s sparked by holding a piece of our ancient world. To an essence more than a function.

    Others, like Anderson, see lab-grown diamonds as the natural (to use a loaded word) evolution of diamond. “We’re actually running out of [mined] diamonds,” she said. “There is an end in sight.” Payne agreed, describing what he sees as a “looming death spiral” for diamond mining.

    Mined diamonds will never go away. We’ve been digging them up since antiquity, and they never seem to lose their sparkle. But most major mines are being exhausted. And with technology making it easier to grow diamonds just as they are getting more difficult to extract from the Earth, the lab-grown diamond industry’s grandstanding about its future doesn’t feel entirely unreasonable.

    There’s a reason why, as Payne said, “the mining industry as a whole is still quite scared of this product.”

    #dimants #Afrique #technologie #capitalisme

  • Léonard de Vinci, superstar et figure gay méconnue | Slate.fr
    http://www.slate.fr/story/178893/leonard-de-vinci-florence-vie-intime-orientation-sexuelle-gay

    Le visage d’un vieillard grandiose, une longue chevelure se confondant avec son abondante barbe, le regard mélancolique. Sage antique ou prophète biblique, telle est la représentation que l’on se fait de Léonard de Vinci. Une image véhiculée par son autoportrait tracé à la sanguine au crépuscule de sa vie.

    Sous cette figure de sage patriarche, il a passé ses derniers jours dans la France angevine sur l’invitation du roi François Ier. Cette image d’Épinal qui s’est inscrite dans nos imaginaires masque la nature profonde de Léonard : celle d’un homme qui dévorait la vie avec avidité et d’un séducteur libre qui aimait les hommes.

  • La pellicule invisible d’Alice Guy
    https://www.liberation.fr/debats/2019/06/05/la-pellicule-invisible-d-alice-guy_1731901

    Bien qu’Alice Guy-Blaché soit française et la réalisatrice d’une œuvre protéiforme, il y a peu de chances pour que Be Natural : The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché, le documentaire de Pamela B. Green sorti depuis peu aux Etats-Unis, soit montré en France. Il n’a trouvé, pour l’heure, aucun distributeur dans l’Hexagone, quand l’Australie, la Nouvelle-Zélande, la Suède, la Norvège, le Danemark, la Finlande, l’Estonie, la Lettonie, la Lituanie et l’Espagne ont acheté les droits. Doit-on s’en étonner ? Non, à en croire la réalisatrice, dont le film dénonce l’indifférence têtue de la France vis-à-vis d’une pionnière du cinéma. A ce titre, il n’est pas exagéré de dire que le véritable sujet de Be Natural, enquête cinématographique et making of de cette enquête, porte sur la façon dont l’histoire se fait, puis s’écrit - ou pas - et se réécrit.

    Née en 1873, Alice Guy commence sa carrière en 1894, à 21 ans, comme sténodactylographe d’un certain Léon Gaumont. L’année suivante, elle assiste avec son patron à la première projection organisée par les frères Lumières. Gaumont saisit tout de suite l’importance du procédé, qu’il entend développer. Alice Guy se propose aussitôt de participer à l’aventure en créant des petits films courts. Gaumont accepte, au motif que « c’est un métier pour jeunes filles (sic) ». Loin d’être un art, le cinématographe n’est pas encore une profession, tout au plus une occupation d’amateurs - idéale pour une femme, donc.

    Alice Guy a trouvé sa vocation. Dès 1896, elle réalise ce qui peut être considéré comme le premier film de fiction, la Fée aux choux, soit moins d’une minute où l’on voit une plantureuse fée sortir des nourrissons de choux en cartons, artistiquement dessinés. Suivront près de mille films, sur dix-sept ans de carrière où Alice Guy, désormais directrice de production chez Gaumont, assure souvent tous les rôles - réalisatrice, scénariste, habilleuse… Elle touche à tous les genres, le comique, le drame sentimental, le western, le « clip » musical avec des chansonniers comme Mayol ou Dranem, et même le péplum avec son « chef-d’œuvre », la Vie du Christ (1906), film en vingt-cinq tableaux, d’une longueur totale de trente-cinq minutes, très inhabituelle pour l’époque. Elle participe à toutes les innovations comme la colorisation et, surtout, le chronophone, ancêtre du parlant, qu’elle part introduire aux Etats-Unis en 1907. C’est le deuxième volet de sa carrière, qui la voit s’épanouir à New York, où elle est partie avec son mari, le réalisateur Herbert Blaché. Bien que jeune mère, elle ne renonce pas à sa passion, bien au contraire, et ce malgré la difficulté qu’elle éprouvera toujours à maîtriser l’anglais. Elle parvient même à fonder sa propre compagnie, Solax, implantée à Fort Lee (New Jersey) et considérée comme le studio le plus important aux Etats-Unis de l’ère pré-Hollywood. Mais en 1921, en instance de divorce, alors que Solax a été en partie endommagé par un incendie, elle décide de rentrer en France.

    Commence alors une période sombre, qui s’étirera jusqu’à la fin de sa vie, en 1968. Sombre car Alice Guy, avec deux enfants à charge, ne parvient pas à trouver de travail. On ne l’a pas seulement oubliée : alors que paraissent les premières histoires du cinéma, son œuvre est effacée ou attribuée à d’autres, acteurs ou assistants qu’elle a employés, comme Feuillade. Même Gaumont, qui publie l’histoire de sa maison, la passe sous silence. Il promet des corrections pour la seconde édition - et des brouillons prouvent qu’il entendait tenir sa promesse - mais il meurt en 1946, avant la parution prévue du volume, qui ne verra jamais le jour.

    Comprenant que le cinéma lui a désormais fermé ses portes, Alice Guy entreprend de se faire elle-même justice. Elle corrige les premières histoire(s) du cinéma qui paraissent, tente de récupérer ses œuvres, perdues, oubliées, éparpillées chez les premiers collectionneurs. Non signés, dépourvus de génériques, sans crédits ni copyrights, les films d’Alice Guy semblent ne plus exister que dans la mémoire de leur créatrice. En désespoir de cause, elle écrit ses souvenirs. Aucun éditeur n’en voudra. L’Autobiographie d’une pionnière du cinéma paraîtra à titre posthume chez Denoël, en 1976. Une préface de Nicole-Lise Bernheim ouvre le livre par ces mots : « Si j’étais née en 1873 […]. / Si j’avais travaillé chez Gaumont pendant onze ans / […]. Si j’avais été la seule femme metteur en scène du monde entier pendant dix-sept ans, / Qui serais-je ? / Je serais connue, / Je serais célèbre, / Je serais fêtée, / Je serais reconnue. / […]. Qui suis-je ? / Méliès, Lumière, Gaumont ? / Non. / Je suis une femme. »

    Encouragée par Léon Gaumont, qui sut lui confier d’importantes responsabilités, objet d’hommages appuyés signés - excusez du peu - Eisenstein ou Hitchcock, Alice Guy n’a pas tant été victime « des hommes » que des historiens du cinéma. Son effacement est l’exemplification même d’un déni d’histoire. Une femme peut réussir - et Alice Guy l’a prouvé avec éclat - mais à partir du moment où une pratique amateur devient une profession, un art et un enjeu commercial, elle n’a plus sa place dans la légende. Prenez Méliès. Lui aussi a été oublié, son œuvre effacée, tandis qu’il tombait dans la misère et survivait en vendant des bonbons devant la gare Montparnasse. Mais dès 1925, l’Histoire du cinématographe de ses origines à nos jours, par Georges-Michel Coissac lui redonnait sa place, qui ne fera dès lors que grandir. Le nom d’Alice Guy n’y est même pas mentionné. Georges Sadoul a attribué ses films à d’autres, Langlois l’a négligée, Toscan du Plantier, directeur de la Gaumont de 1975 à 1985, ne savait même pas qui elle était. Et la France, aujourd’hui, rechigne à diffuser Be Natural, documentaire passionnant et presque trop dense, tant le nombre d’informations, glanées pendant dix ans, peine à rentrer dans les 103 minutes du film. On se consolera avec les quelques films d’Alice Guy disponibles sur YouTube (1), dont l’hilarant les Résultats du féminisme (1906), qui inverse les rôles de genre. Edifiant.

    (1) On trouvera aussi sur YouTube le Jardin oublié : la vie et l’œuvre d’Alice Guy-Blaché (1995), documentaire de Marquise Lepage. A mentionner également, le prix Alice-Guy, qui a récompensé cette année Un amour impossible, de Catherine Corsini.

    #invisibilisation #historicisation #femmes #cinema

    Quand est-ce qu’on efface les historiens du cinéma ?

  • #Neurofeedback can zap your fears – without you even knowing | Aeon Essays
    https://aeon.co/essays/neurofeedback-can-zap-your-fears-without-you-even-knowing

    The problem with neurofeedback is in fact as old as #placebo itself. In double-blinded, placebo-controlled neurofeedback studies, neither the researcher nor the participant is aware of whether they are receiving a true intervention. When no one knows who is supposed to experience the clinical effect, the behavioural differences between placebo and neurofeedback intervention often disappear.

    Even more impressively (or disturbingly), it seems that the mind can change the brain by just thinking it might be undergoing an intervention . New studies showed that giving people ‘sham’ neurofeedback could have the same effect as the real thing. When people believed they were undergoing an intervention, they usually reported feeling that it had a noticeable effect. Sometimes, the brain activity in these individuals also began to show the brain being retrained as intended: not only would participants of sham-neurofeedback experiments report reduced chronic pain, for example, but their insulas (the region of the brain directly tied to the experience of pain) would show a reduction of activity.

    Since the early 2010s, neurofeedback has been fraught with this additional controversy. Researchers began to wonder whether all neurofeedback simply pertains to some deep, powerful capacity of the brain to change itself – and it needs no real technology to do it.

    The placebo studies raise the question of whether you can really disentangle the mind from the brain. The Hollywood blockbuster Inception (2010) plays with a similar idea: in the film, the hero (played by Leonardo DiCaprio) alters people’s thoughts by jumping into their minds as they dream.

    A new wave of research is focused on a brain imaging technique so similar that its advocates have called it ‘incepted neurofeedback’. These studies show it’s possible to implant thoughts into people’s brains without them being aware of it. In one case, researchers scanned participants to get a ‘baseline’ reading of their brain activity, and then subjected them to several days of neurofeedback training. When subjects saw black stripes on the screen, they were instructed to ‘somehow regulate [their] brain activity’ to make a grey circle in the centre of the screen get as large as possible. At the end, they got paid money depending on how successful they were. What they weren’t told is that the size of the circle was related to patterns of brain activation that corresponded to seeing the colour red.

    After doing this hundreds of times, people were asked what helped them get high scores. No one mentioned colours; some mentioned zebras, violent acts or performing in gymnastics tournaments. In subsequent tests, though, the participants were more likely to see the colour red when presented with an image than those who didn’t receive neurofeedback. Without even knowing it, the visual mark of ‘red’ had been implanted in their minds.

    #cerveau #mental

    • Using fMRI, researchers can create a map of an individual’s neural activity while thinking of a particular concept, such as ‘a spider’; by finding this brain pattern for people with phobias, researchers are then able to reduce the need for exposure during treatment.

      How? Armed with a trace of an individual’s pattern for ‘spider’, it’s now possible to give patients positive reinforcement when they manage to reduce activity in the areas of the brain that correspond to the experience of overwhelming fear of spiders. Crucially, we can do this without ever showing them any eight-legged nasties. Instead, using the cue of a circle or a pleasant tone, and the reward of watching it change shape or pitch, the person themselves finds alternative means of subduing neural activity in these regions. In this way, the brain begins to modify its own internal states, and the phobia will subside as if by magic.

      Not only is neurofeedback non-invasive; a number of high-profile research projects have also shown that it can be effective even when participants aren’t aware of the goal of the procedure. This new, unconscious reprogramming has far-reaching implications for research on human cognition, tapping into the crux of the mind-body connection, and opening up many new opportunities for novel clinical treatments. But it also has a potential dark side: the risk that neurofeedback could become a back-door for manipulating our brain states, without us even realising it.

  • Soviet Milk by Nora Ikstena review – a blistering Latvian bestseller | Books | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/aug/31/soviet-milk-by-nora-ikstena-review

    Outre le fait que le livre a l’air d’être très intéressant, cette écrivaine nous fait l’honneur d’une visite sur notre île au milieu du fjord, nous pourrons discuter de cette œuvre.

    A century has passed since the Baltic state of Latvia officially became a nation, and for half that time it was part of the Soviet Union. It’s a bitter history and there’s a sense in Nora Ikstena’s bestselling novel, about women versus the state, of a hard-won creative reckoning.

    Running from the end of the second world war to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the novel – Ikstena’s 20th – is narrated in alternating sections by an unnamed mother and daughter. “My milk was bitter: the milk of incomprehension, of extinction. I protected my child from it,” says the mother, a fertility specialist whose medical career is blighted after she turns on the abusive husband of a childless woman who seeks her help during a research trip to Leningrad.

    #Littérature #soviétisme #ex-urss #nora_ikstena

    • Nora Ikstena’s ‘Soviet Milk’ - The White Review
      http://www.thewhitereview.org/reviews/nora-ikstenas-soviet-milk

      Soviet Milk by Nora Ikstena opens with two women who cannot remember. ‘I don’t remember 15 October 1969,’ says the first. ‘I don’t remember 22 October 1944,’ says the second, ‘but I can reconstruct it.’ They can only reconstruct what happened because these are the days on which they were born. Birth reminds us that we are always dependent upon another to know the truth of who we are, something few of us ever come to terms with. These two women are never named: the first, born in Riga in 1969 in the early years of Leonid Brezhnev’s rule over the Soviet Union, is the daughter of the second, born when Riga was liberated from the Nazis at the end of the Second World War. This mother is also a daughter, born to a woman who resolved to forget the independent Latvia of her youth, and a father who refused to forget that Latvia condemned him to the gulag. Soviet Milk consists of these two women telling their stories in short alternating sections, manifesting in its form the intimacy and distance of what the daughter calls their ‘two parallel worlds’.

  • Recension de COÏTS dans la revue féministe #AXELLE : Rapport sexuel, rapport de domination ?
    http://tradfem.wordpress.com/2019/05/08/rapport-sexuel-rapport-de-domination

    Sorti début février aux Éditions Syllepse et aux Éditions du remue-ménage, Coïts commence par passer au crible des personnages de la littérature ou historiques, en neuf chapitres comme autant de clés de lecture et de compréhension. Exemple ? « Répugnance ». Porte d’entrée : « La sonate à Kreutzer » de l’écrivain russe Léon Tolstoï, terrifiante histoire d’un mari qui confie les raisons pour lesquelles il a fini par assassiner sa femme. L’autrice souligne l’angoisse, la douleur de l’assassin devant la possibilité de perdre l’objet de sa haine.
    (...) Le rapport sexuel subit une déconstruction systématique : il ne reste rien de caché d’un acte considéré par la société comme « normal », voire « naturel », mais en réalité régi par un nombre incalculable de règles et de lois implicites et explicites. Dworkin livre au passage une comparaison de la haine des femmes et du racisme : comme les hommes avec les femmes, les Blanc·hes, pour inférioriser les Noir·es, se coupent de leur capacité à ressentir. en société patriarcale, le coït décrit un homme qui « possède » la femme en la pénétrant, la possède par la baise. en société patriarcale, l’homme manifeste sa puissance, montre sa virilité par le coït.

    la revue Axelle : https://www.axellemag.be
    #andrea_dworkin #sexualité #domination_masculine

  • Équateur : victoire des indiens Waorani contre l’exploitation de pétrole - Amériques - RFI
    http://www.rfi.fr/ameriques/20190427-equateur-victoire-waoranis-indiens-petrole-exploitation-amazone

    En 2012, une consultation a eu lieu selon le gouvernement, mais les indigènes affirment qu’ils ont été trompés. Ils parlent de fonctionnaires arrivés en avion avec de fausses promesses, de la nourriture et des boissons afin de les convaincre.

    Le Défenseur du peuple et 16 communautés Waoranis ont donc porté plainte et la justice vient de leur donner raison, tout au moins en première instance. En habits typiques et lances à la main, les Waoranis ont réaffirmé à la sortie du tribunal leur opposition à la présence de compagnies pétrolières sur leur territoire.

    Alors que les « koworis » (les « étrangers ») sont rarement favorables aux Waoranis, cette décision de la justice est considérée comme une victoire historique, célébrée par les écologistes en Équateur comme à l’étranger et jusqu’à l’acteur Leonardo DiCaprio.

    #écologie #peuples_autochtones #équateur #waoranis

  • Comment se passer du code du patrimoine ? Emmanuel Macron en stage à Amboise ! Didier Rykner - 30 avril 2019 - La Tribune de l’Art
    Ou bien, comment massacrer, détruire le patrimoine historique français
    https://www.latribunedelart.com/comment-se-passer-du-code-du-patrimoine-emmanuel-macron-en-stage-a-

    Emmanuel Macron a prévu de visiter jeudi, et d’y déjeuner, le manoir du Clos-Lucé, un monument historique qui vient d’être gravement vandalisé par ses propriétaires, avec des travaux réalisés sans autorisation. Les dégâts sont si importants que la Direction régionale des affaires culturelles du Centre Val-de-Loire a même porté plainte en 2017 auprès du procureur de la République de Tours [Erratum : il ne s’agit pas d’une plainte, mais d’un signalement comme l’a signalé le procureur à l’AFP http://www.lefigaro.fr/culture/leonard-de-vinci-les-travaux-du-clos-luce-a-amboise-dans-le-viseur-des-enqu . Ce qui ne change absolument rien sur le fond.]. Nous avons interrogé celui-ci, qui nous a fait la réponse suivante : « Une enquête de police judiciaire, confiée à la Compagnie de gendarmerie d’Amboise, est en cours s’agissant des faits que vous évoquez. De ce fait, aucune information, qu’elle soit relative aux faits concernés ou aux éventuelles suites judiciaires à venir, ne saurait être actuellement communiquée. » Parfois, des refus de répondre équivalent à une réponse.


    1. Salon XVIII au Clos-Lucé dans son état antérieur, aujourd’hui détruit Photo : Ceridwen CC BY SA 3.0


    2. Ancien Salon XVIIIe (ill. 1) transformé en « atelier de Léonard ». La cheminée du XVIIIe a également été remplacée Photo : Didier Rykner

    Cette affaire est donc entre les mains de la justice. Il faut espérer que le procureur de la République ne classera pas l’affaire sans suite, ce qui serait particulièrement choquant tant les faits sont avérés. Les travaux ont eu lieu avant 2017, et ont porté sur trois pièces du rez-de-chaussée et deux pièces de l’étage. Les atteintes les plus graves au monument classé ont eu lieu sur le niveau bas, puisque trois salons possédant des boiseries du XVIIIe siècle ont été entièrement détruits : les boiseries ont été arrachées, ainsi qu’au moins une cheminée d’époque, le niveau des sols a été changé, et ils ont été refaits, et les plafonds ont été modifiés, tandis que des fenêtres ont été bouchées et que de nouvelles baies ont été percées. À l’étage, où il n’y avait pas de boiseries du XVIIIe, les travaux ont néanmoins été également importants touchant les plafonds et les sols.

    Cette bâtisse du XVe siècle a eu la chance - ou plutôt la malchance - d’abriter Léonard de Vinci les trois dernières années de sa vie, de 1516 à 1519, alors qu’il était l’hôte en France de François Ier. La famille Saint-Bris, qui en est propriétaire, n’a eu de cesse ces dernières années de la transformer en un décor à la gloire de l’artiste et inventeur italien. L’objectif de ces travaux était bien entendu de rendre leur pureté « léonardienne » à ce manoir. On est ici dans une problématique de parc d’attraction : un atelier de Léonard totalement fantaisiste a même été « reconstitué » dans un des anciens salons du XVIIIe siècle. Inutile de dire qu’on n’a pas la moindre idée où était exactement l’atelier de Léonard, ni à quoi il ressemblait. Ce qui est certain en revanche, c’est que ce n’était pas à ça.


    3. Anciens salons du XVIIIe siècle. Au fond, celui que l’on voit ill. 1 Photo : Hervé Grandsart


    4. Ancien salon du XVIIIe siècle (celui que l’on voit au premier plan ill. 3) transformé en « cabinet de curiosité de Léonard » Photo : Didier Rykner

    Il suffit de comparer les photographies avant-après pour comprendre l’étendue du désastre. Celui-ci est tel qu’il n’y a aucune possibilité de remettre les lieux dans leur état d’origine. Ces trois pièces comptaient parmi les rares éléments authentiques, mais elles avaient le mauvais goût de dater du XVIIIe siècle. Elles étaient classées monument historique, avec l’ensemble du bâtiment, depuis 1862. Elles sont désormais remplacées par l’ « atelier » donc (ill. 1 et 2), mais aussi par le « cabinet scientifique » (ill. 3 et 4) [1] et enfin la « bibliothèque » de Léonard de Vinci dont nous n’avons pas de photos mais qui a été traitée exactement comme les deux pièces précédentes ! On peut lire sur le site du Clos-Lucé que « 2 ans de recherche et de travaux et 15 corps de métier ont été nécessaires pour [les] restituer » . En réalité tout est faux, tout est en toc.

    Il faut saluer l’action de la Direction régionale des affaires culturelles, et donc du ministère de la Culture dont elle est un service déconcentré, qui a porté l’affaire devant la justice. Mais comment ceux-ci ont-ils pu laisser l’Élysée organiser un déjeuner d’Emmanuel Macron au Clos-Lucé, alors qu’une plainte [un signalement donc, pas une plainte]  pour travaux sur monument historique sans autorisation et destruction de monument historique a été déposée ? On imagine difficilement que la présidence de la République n’était pas au courant (en tout cas elle l’est depuis aujourd’hui puisque nous l’avons interrogée sans recevoir d’ailleurs aucune réponse [2]).

    Sans doute le chef de l’État, qui souhaite faire passer une loi d’exception pour « reconstruire Notre-Dame, plus belle qu’avant » (voir notre article https://www.latribunedelart.com/notre-dame-un-projet-de-loi-scelerat ), veut-il prendre des cours auprès de celui qui vient de piétiner allègrement du code du patrimoine pour rendre le Clos-Lucé « plus beau qu’avant »  ? On aurait aimé qu’un meilleur signal soit envoyé par lui aux 1170 scientifiques et professionnels qui lui demandent, justement, de respecter les lois de protection des monuments historiques.

    #Léonard_de_Vinci #Clos-Lucé #vandalisme #Amboise #emmanuel_macron & la La famille #Saint-Bris porte bien son nom, comme le disait valérie giscard d’estaing #attraction #DRAC #monument_historique #Toc #bidonnage #Élysée #destruction #enMarche vers #notre_dame_de_paris

  • Amboise : sécurité maximale pour la venue des présidents français et italien jeudi 2 mai
    Publié le 29/04/2019
    https://www.lanouvellerepublique.fr/indre-et-loire/amboise-securite-maximale-pour-la-venue-des-presidents-francais

    Amboise se prépare à accueillir Emmanuel Macron et son homologue italien Sergio Mattarella, jeudi 2 mai, jour anniversaire de la mort de Léonard de Vinci, qui visiteront le château royal à 11 h 30, puis le Clos Lucé.

    Le dispositif de sécurité mis en place, très conséquent, a été inspiré par le contexte, fait « d’un risque terroriste réel et d’un climat social dégradé », et « par un enjeu d’image » très important, a expliqué la préfète d’Indre-et-Loire, Corinne Orzechowski, lors d’une conférence de presse qui s’est tenue à la mi-journée.

    Le périmètre de sécurité a été divisé en deux zones : dans la zone située tout près du château et du Clos Lucé, même les piétons ne pourront pas circuler, de 7 h à 13 h, sauf les riverains qui devront être munis de leur pièce d’identité.
    La circulation des voitures interdite de 7 h à 17 heures. (...)

    Un arrêté municipal interdira aux gens d’être à leurs fenêtres, dans les habitations de l’hyper centre-ville qui donnent sur la place Michel-Debré, et rue de la Concorde.

    Un arrêté préfectoral suspend également le survol de la ville, ce qui est valable pour les drones, et interdit toute navigation sur la Loire.

    Environ 300 gendarmes de la région vont être mobilisés et ces effectifs seront renforcés par des forces venues des autres départements.

  • Ukraine : Volodymyr Zelensky remporte la présidentielle, le pays fait un saut dans l’inconnu
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/04/21/en-elisant-volodymyr-zelensky-president-l-ukraine-fait-un-saut-dans-l-inconn

    Elu à 73% des voix selon les premières estimations, l’ancien humoriste incarne un changement profond, mais son arrivée au pouvoir est assortie de multiples incertitudes.

    Cinq ans après avoir mené la révolution dans la rue, les Ukrainiens ont à nouveau renversé la table, dimanche 21 avril, sans violence ni fracas, en portant au pouvoir un néophyte complet, Volodymyr Zelensky. Cet humoriste et producteur à succès dénué de la moindre expérience politique, réalise le hold-up électoral parfait, en récoltant, selon les premiers sondages de sortie des urnes, un score raz-de-marée de 73 % des voix, loin devant le sortant Petro Porochenko. Jamais président ukrainien n’avait obtenu un soutien aussi massif, et ce n’est là que l’un des records engrangés par M. Zelensky, qui devient à 41 ans le plus jeune président qu’ait connu le pays.

    • Quand la réalité rattrape la fiction (ou lycée de Versailles…)

      Le comédien Volodimir Zelenski remporte haut la main la présidentielle en Ukraine
      https://www.latribune.fr/economie/international/le-comedien-volodimir-zelenski-remporte-haut-la-main-la-presidentielle-en-

      Moins de quatre mois après être entré en politique par une déclaration de candidature aux airs de farce en plein réveillon du 31 décembre, cet acteur et humoriste a imposé une #cuisante_défaite au président sortant Petro Porochenko.
      […]
      Volodimir Zelenski doit une bonne part de sa popularité à la série télévisée à succès « Serviteur du peuple » [Слуга народу], dans laquelle il incarne un professeur d’histoire devenu chef de l’Etat, qui se joue des bassesses de politiciens corrompus et d’hommes d’affaires véreux.

    • vu intégralement… pas compris grand chose aux dialogues, mais assez facile à suivre avec les images.

      1. Vassili Petrovitch Goloborodko (Volodimir Zelensky) entre en prison alors que son successeur (genre Leonid Kravtchouk) entre en fonction. Corruption (scènes répétées avec gâteau), …, nouveau Maïdan à la suite de quoi

      2. Olga Youchenko Michenko (sosie de Ioulia Timochenko) prend le pouvoir, mais laisse V. P. Goloborodko en prison. Sa présidence s’achève par un coup d’état des extrémistes galiciens.

      3. L’Europe (avec la Chine ?) sort V. P. Goloborodko de sa prison et le replace à la présidence. Il découvre une Ukraine éclatée en une multitude d’états (d’une principauté galicienne à une URSS (si, si !) à l’est en passant par un émirat de Crimée, un Monaco chinois (si, si !) et une zone autonome juive. Où se sont recasés les anciens dirigeants de tous les régimes précédents.

      Sous son mandat (1919-1923) et sans qu’il y soit pour grand chose, l’Ukraine redevient une puissance économique, lance des satellites et après la poursuite de la désintégration des micro-états, et par la magie du Saint-Esprit, s’unifie progressivement. Il ne reste plus que les deux extrêmes (extrémistes galiciens et soviétiques de l’autre) qui s’unissent lorsque les mineurs du Donbass viennent au secours de leurs camarades galiciens lors d’une catastrophe dans une mine de charbon (Golobordko et son gouvernement sont totalement spectateurs des événements…)

      Pendant tout le film, Golobordko est en permanence sous la coupe de son (ancien (et futur)) premier ministre Iouri Ivanovitch Tchouïko.

      Le tout raconté par un professeur d’université à sa classe (les élèves disposent chacun d’un iPad et rien d’autre sur les tables…) 40 ans plus tard.

      Beaucoup, mais vraiment beaucoup, d’allusions explicites (y compris un général qui tape avec sa chaussure sur la table des négociations lors d’une empoignade entre dirigeants des micro-états. Beaucoup de scènes comiques : la visite de la représentante européenne à Goloborodko dans sa prison, la découverte de la carte du nouveau découpage du pays suivie du défilé des chefs des différents micro-états, l’explication d’une délégation de la famille de Goloborodko à la Commission européenne des liens entre l’ancienne équipe (Kravtchouk), la nouvelle (Timochenko) et les oligarques.

      Une énorme partie du rôle de Zelensky est muet, il subit en permanence et on ne saisit absolument pas quels sont les leviers de son action.

      À noter pour finir que, IRL, le nom du parti de Zelensky #Serviteur_du_Peuple, créé en mars 2018 est celui de la série dont il est acteur…

      En France, la totalité du coût de la série aurait été intégrée aux dépenses de campagne de l’élection présidentielle. Du moins, normalement… Attendons de voir le traitement du coût du #Grand_Débat_National et le décompte de son temps médiatique par la CNCCFP…

      pour les personnages, WP[uk]
      https://uk.wikipedia.org/wiki/Слуга_народу_(серіал,_2015)

  • Record High #Remittances Sent Globally in #2018

    Remittances to low- and middle-income countries reached a record high in 2018, according to the World Bank’s latest Migration and Development Brief.

    The Bank estimates that officially recorded annual remittance flows to low- and middle-income countries reached $529 billion in 2018, an increase of 9.6 percent over the previous record high of $483 billion in 2017. Global remittances, which include flows to high-income countries, reached $689 billion in 2018, up from $633 billion in 2017.

    Regionally, growth in remittance inflows ranged from almost 7 percent in East Asia and the Pacific to 12 percent in South Asia. The overall increase was driven by a stronger economy and employment situation in the United States and a rebound in outward flows from some Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and the Russian Federation. Excluding China, remittances to low- and middle-income countries ($462 billion) were significantly larger than foreign direct investment flows in 2018 ($344 billion).

    Among countries, the top remittance recipients were India with $79 billion, followed by China ($67 billion), Mexico ($36 billion), the Philippines ($34 billion), and Egypt ($29 billion).

    In 2019, remittance flows to low- and middle-income countries are expected to reach $550 billion, to become their largest source of external financing.

    The global average cost of sending $200 remained high, at around 7 percent in the first quarter of 2019, according to the World Bank’s Remittance Prices Worldwide database. Reducing remittance costs to 3 percent by 2030 is a global target under Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 10.7. Remittance costs across many African corridors and small islands in the Pacific remain above 10 percent.

    Banks were the most expensive remittance channels, charging an average fee of 11 percent in the first quarter of 2019. Post offices were the next most expensive, at over 7 percent. Remittance fees tend to include a premium where national post offices have an exclusive partnership with a money transfer operator. This premium was on average 1.5 percent worldwide and as high as 4 percent in some countries in the last quarter of 2018.

    On ways to lower remittance costs, Dilip Ratha, lead author of the Brief and head of KNOMAD, said, “Remittances are on track to become the largest source of external financing in developing countries. The high costs of money transfers reduce the benefits of migration. Renegotiating exclusive partnerships and letting new players operate through national post offices, banks, and telecommunications companies will increase competition and lower remittance prices.”

    The Brief notes that banks’ ongoing de-risking practices, which have involved the closure of the bank accounts of some remittance service providers, are driving up remittance costs.

    The Brief also reports progress toward the SDG target of reducing the recruitment costs paid by migrant workers, which tend to be high, especially for lower-skilled migrants.

    “Millions of low-skilled migrant workers are vulnerable to recruitment malpractices, including exorbitant recruitment costs. We need to boost efforts to create jobs in developing countries and to monitor and reduce recruitment costs paid by these workers,” said Michal Rutkowski, Senior Director of the Social Protection and Jobs Global Practice at the World Bank. The World Bank and the International Labour Organization are collaborating to develop indicators for worker-paid recruitment costs, to support the SDG of promoting safe, orderly, and regular migration.

    Regional Remittance Trends

    Remittances to the East Asia and Pacific region grew almost 7 percent to $143 billion in 2018, faster than the 5 percent growth in 2017. Remittances to the Philippines rose to $34 billion, but growth in remittances was slower due to a drop in private transfers from the GCC countries. Flows to Indonesia increased by 25 percent in 2018, after a muted performance in 2017.

    After posting 22 percent growth in 2017, remittances to Europe and Central Asia grew an estimated 11 percent to $59 billion in 2018. Continued growth in economic activity increased outbound remittances from Poland, Russia, Spain, and the United States, major sources of remittances to the region. Smaller remittance-dependent countries in the region, such as the Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, benefited from the sustained rebound of economic activity in Russia. Ukraine, the region’s largest remittance recipient, received a new record of more than $14 billion in 2018, up about 19 percent over 2017. This surge in Ukraine also reflects a revised methodology for estimating incoming remittances, as well as growth in neighboring countries’ demand for migrant workers.

    Remittances flows into Latin America and the Caribbean grew 10 percent to $88 billion in 2018, supported by the strong U.S. economy. Mexico continued to receive the most remittances in the region, posting about $36 billion in 2018, up 11 percent over the previous year. Colombia and Ecuador, which have migrants in Spain, posted 16 percent and 8 percent growth, respectively. Three other countries in the region posted double-digit growth: Guatemala (13 percent) as well as Dominican Republic and Honduras (both 10 percent), reflecting robust outbound remittances from the United States.

    Remittances to the Middle East and North Africa grew 9 percent to $62 billion in 2018. The growth was driven by Egypt’s rapid remittance growth of around 17 percent. Beyond 2018, the growth of remittances to the region is expected to continue, albeit at a slower pace of around 3 percent in 2019 due to moderating growth in the Euro Area.

    Remittances to South Asia grew 12 percent to $131 billion in 2018, outpacing the 6 percent growth in 2017. The upsurge was driven by stronger economic conditions in the United States and a pick-up in oil prices, which had a positive impact on outward remittances from some GCC countries. Remittances grew by more than 14 percent in India, where a flooding disaster in Kerala likely boosted the financial help that migrants sent to families. In Pakistan, remittance growth was moderate (7 percent), due to significant declines in inflows from Saudi Arabia, its largest remittance source. In Bangladesh, remittances showed a brisk uptick in 2018 (15 percent).

    Remittances to Sub-Saharan Africa grew almost 10 percent to $46 billion in 2018, supported by strong economic conditions in high-income economies. Looking at remittances as a share of GDP, Comoros has the largest share, followed by the Gambia , Lesotho, Cabo Verde, Liberia, Zimbabwe, Senegal, Togo, Ghana, and Nigeria.

    The Migration and Development Brief and the latest migration and remittances data are available at www.knomad.org. Interact with migration experts at http://blogs.worldbank.org/peoplemove

    http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2019/04/08/record-high-remittances-sent-globally-in-2018?cid=ECR_TT_worldbank_EN_EXT
    #remittances #statistiques #chiffres #migrations #diaspora

    #Rapport ici :


    https://www.knomad.org/sites/default/files/2019-04/MigrationandDevelopmentBrief_31_0.pdf

    ping @reka

    • Immigrati, boom di rimesse: più di 6 miliardi all’estero. Lo strano caso dei cinesi «spariti»

      Bangladesh, Romania, Filippine: ecco il podio delle rimesse degli immigrati che vivono e lavorano in Italia. Il trend è in forte aumento: nel 2018 sono stati inviati all’estero 6,2 miliardi di euro, con una crescita annua del 20, 7 per cento.
      A registrarlo è uno studio della Fondazione Leone Moressa su dati Banca d’Italia, dopo il crollo del 2013 e alcuni anni di sostanziale stabilizzazione, oggi il volume di rimesse rappresenta lo 0,35% del Pil.

      Il primato del Bangladesh
      Per la prima volta, nel 2018 il Bangladesh è il primo Paese di destinazione delle rimesse, con oltre 730 milioni di euro complessivi (11,8% delle rimesse totali).
      Il Bangladesh nell’ultimo anno ha registrato un +35,7%, mentre negli ultimi sei anni ha più che triplicato il volume.

      Il secondo Paese di destinazione è la Romania, con un andamento stabile: +0,3% nell’ultimo anno e -14,3% negli ultimi sei.
      Da notare come tra i primi sei Paesi ben quattro siano asiatici: oltre al Bangladesh, anche Filippine, Pakistan e India. Proprio i Paesi dell’Asia meridionale sono quelli che negli ultimi anni hanno registrato il maggiore incremento di rimesse inviate. Il Pakistan ha registrato un aumento del +73,9% nell’ultimo anno. Anche India e Sri Lanka sono in forte espansione.

      Praticamente scomparsa la Cina, che fino a pochi anni fa rappresentava il primo Paese di destinazione e oggi non è nemmeno tra i primi 15 Paesi per destinazione delle rimesse.
      Mediamente, ciascun immigrato in Italia ha inviato in patria poco più di 1.200 euro nel corso del 2018 (circa 100 euro al mese). Valore che scende sotto la media per le due nazionalità più numerose: Romania (50,29 euro mensili) e Marocco (66,14 euro). Tra le comunità più numerose il valore più alto è quello del Bangladesh: ciascun cittadino ha inviato oltre 460 euro al mese. Anche i senegalesi hanno inviato mediamente oltre 300 euro mensili.

      https://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/notizie/2019-04-17/immigrati-boom-rimesse-piu-6-miliardi-all-estero-strano-caso-cinesi-spa
      #Italie #Chine #Bangladesh #Roumanie #Philippines

  • Polémique Le Corbusier : « Juger les attitudes d’un artiste d’hier dans le climat d’aujourd’hui est bien de notre époque »
    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2019/04/05/polemique-le-corbusier-juger-les-attitudes-d-un-artiste-dans-le-climat-d-auj

    Chronique. La descente aux enfers se poursuit pour Le Corbusier (1887-1965). L’architecte suisse devenu français en 1930 était considéré comme le dieu de la modernité des années 1920 et 1930 – grands ensembles rationnels pour les masses et maisons pures, blanches et élégantes pour les riches. Mais au fil des ans et des publications, ce Picasso du béton fut qualifié de réactionnaire, vichyste, fasciste, stalinien, antisémite et pro-Hitler. Ce qui donne un millefeuille nauséabond et un personnage qui, même mort, n’est pas fréquentable. Tout cela figure dans une tribune collective, publiée le 2 avril sur le site du Monde.
    Article réservé à nos abonnés Lire aussi « L’antisémite Le Corbusier ne doit plus bénéficier d’aucun soutien public »

    Ce portrait a déjà été brossé dans trois livres sortis en 2015 à l’occasion d’une exposition Le Corbusier au Centre Pompidou. Le contraste était vertigineux : le musée mettait en lumière un génie des formes ; les livres dénonçaient sa face noire. Entre les deux camps, ce fut rude. Mais la tribune est d’abord inédite par le profil des neuf signataires : on y trouve des anti-corbuséens de longue date, mais aussi, et c’est une surprise, le cinéaste Jean-Louis Comolli et l’historienne Michelle Perrot, voix du féminisme, du mouvement ouvrier et aussi de l’univers carcéral, un sujet que les « anti-Corbu » associent aux bâtiments du maître.

    La tribune demande aussi au ministre de la culture, Franck Riester, de se désengager du projet de musée Le Corbusier, à Poissy (Yvelines). De se retirer de la Fondation Le Corbusier, dans le 16e arrondissement de Paris. Et d’agir pour que soit déboulonnée la statue de l’architecte inaugurée il y a quelques semaines à Poissy. Puisque, selon les signataires, Le Corbusier « ne doit plus bénéficier d’aucun soutien public », ils auraient pu demander que nos écoles d’architecture, financées par l’Etat, suppriment l’artiste des enseignements, que ses bâtiments soient fermés à la visite, que les plaques à son nom soient retirées, et que ses œuvres soient expulsées des musées.
    Faire vaciller la statue de l’homme

    Le ministère de la culture nous a fait savoir qu’il ne fera rien de tout cela et qu’il appartient aux historiens de se prononcer. Pas simple car deux camps s’invectivent. Le Corbusier a voulu travailler pour Philippe Pétain et Benito Mussolini. Oui, mais aussi pour Léon Blum, en 1936. Il écrit des mots louangeurs sur Adolf Hitler, mais aussi d’autres de mépris sur l’Allemagne nazie.

    #grand_homme

  • À définir dans un futur proche — spectacle-lecture de “Sorcières” de Mona Chollet
    http://www.ventscontraires.net/article.cfm/16219_a_definir_dans_un_futur_proche__leonie_pernet_barbara_carlott

    A définir dans un futur proche - « Nos périphéries », une soirée imaginée par : Elodie Demey, Mélissa Phulpin, Géraldine Sarratia, avec par ordre d’apparition Léonie Pernet, Victoire du Bois, Barbara Carlotti, Flèche Love, Ariane Ascaride. D’après « Sorcières » de Mona Chollet, adaptation Géraldine Sarratia. Aide à la mise en scène Charles Templon. Source : Ventscontraires

  • Bas salaires, logement trop cher, stop à la misère !
    https://grenoble.indymedia.org/articles-4/locaux/article/bas-salaires-logement-trop-cher-stop-a-la-misere

    Locaux | Logement / Squats, Révoltes / Luttes sociales Communiqué de presse du Dal 38 Aujourd’hui, pendant l’acte XX des gilets jaunes et à deux jours de la fin de la trêve hivernale, plus de 500 personnes ont défilé à Grenoble contre les expulsions, les coupures et le logement cher, pour le droit au logement. De la tour Perret au quartier de l’Arlequin, en passant par l’Abbaye, Léon Jouhaux, Malherbe et Teisseire, des slogans ont dénoncé les loyers trop chers pour des revenus trop bas, les logements vacants, les démolitions de logements sociaux et (...)

    #Locaux #Logement_/_Squats #Révoltes_/_Luttes_sociales

  • Hollywood Froze Out the Founding Mother of Cinema | JSTOR Daily
    https://daily.jstor.org/hollywood-froze-out-the-founding-mother-of-cinema

    Alice Guy (1873-1968) was the first woman film director. She worked for French film pioneer Leon Gaumont as a secretary in 1896 before she moved into production. Guy was bored, however, by Gaumont’s films, essentially very short documentaries expressing the novelty of the moving image: street scenes, marching troops, trains arriving at stations.

    As historian Susan Hayward tells it, Gaumont was more interested in the technology than what it could produce. “Guy found the repetitiveness [of his films] irksome and decided she could do something better. She submitted a couple of short comedies to Gaumont and he gave her the go-ahead (almost absent-mindedly, according to Guy),” writes Hayward.

    Guy may very well have been the only female movie-maker for the next decade, during which she directed or produced hundreds of films ranging from one to thirty minutes in length. As “film-maker, artistic director and studio and location sets manager all rolled into one” in the days before the multi-reel feature length film, Guy was a key figure in the birth of the fiction film, the form that eventually trumped documentaries the world over. Hayward lists Guy’s innovations: using scripts; having rehearsals; stressing “natural” performances; deploying trick photography; shooting in studio and on location; and, beginning in 1900, experimenting with sound (Gaumont’s Chronophone synchronized phonograph and film).
    Lobby card for the silent film The Pit and the Pendulum directed by Alice Guy-Blaché, 1913
    Lobby card for the silent film The Pit and the Pendulum directed by Alice Guy-Blaché, 1913 via Wikimedia Commons

    In 1907, Guy resigned from Gaumont’s production company and married fellow Gaumont employee Herbert Blaché. Generally known afterwards as Alice Guy-Blaché, she journeyed with her husband to New York City. In 1910 the Blachés started their own company, Solax, with Alice as director general. They did well enough to have a new studio built in Fort Lee, New Jersey in 1911.

    Solax had two strong years, then both Blachés worked for hire into the teens. In 1914, Guy-Blaché wrote, “it has long been a source of wonder to me that many women have not seized upon the wonderful opportunity offered to them by the motion picture art… Of all the arts there is probably none in which they can make such splendid use of talents so much more natural to a woman than to a man and so necessary to its perfection.” And yet, when the couple arrived in Hollywood in 1918, they found few opportunities for women behind the camera.

    Karen Ward Mahar, in her analysis of the “rise and fall of the woman filmmaker” between 1896 and 1928, argues that the consolidating industry forced women out of behind-the-camera jobs because it gendered those occupations as male. Sex-typing of work in Hollywood would end up allowing for woman screenwriters and continuity workers (a.k.a. “script girls”), but little else—besides, obviously, the women on-screen.

    Understanding how filmmaking became masculinized is particularly important with regard to Hollywood, because those who create American movies wield immense cultural power. Once women were excluded from that power in the 1920s, they did not reappear in significant numbers until the 1970s.

    Mahar notes that Guy-Blaché had been “regularly singled out between 1910 and 1913 as one of the guiding lights of the industry.” Hollywood, however, was not interested in Madame Blaché’s light. Mahar also writes, “women needed male partners to gain access to all the necessary segments of the industry.” She notes that Guy-Blaché had experienced this while running Solax with her husband—despite being in a position of leadership, she was not welcome at distributor’s meetings, “because, as her husband alleged, her presence would embarrass the men.

    Alice Guy-Blaché split up with her husband in 1920 and returned to France in 1922. She never made another movie.

    #historicisation #cinéma #femmes

  • The Killing of America
    https://www.nova-cinema.org/prog/2019/171-offscreen-12th-edition/death-on-film/article/the-killing-of-america

    Sheldon Renan & Leonard Schrader, 1981, US, dcp, VO 90’

    Ce documentaire percutant sur la mutation du rêve américain en dystopie répugnante est gavé d’images non censurées d’émeutes, de cadavres et d’exécutions – dont l’assassinat de JFK – et des images d’archive de tueurs en série comme Ed Kemper, Ted Bundy et la Manson family. « The Killing of America » est un film massue qui préserve encore aujourd’hui toute sa pertinence à l’heure où le port d’armes et la fascination pour le meurtre demeurent des éléments incontournables d’une certaine culture américaine. Porté par le coréalisateur Leonard Schrader, grand frère de Paul (et coscénariste sur des films comme « The Yakuza », « Blue Collar » et « Mishima »), ce film était à l’origine destiné à la télévision japonaise et a (...)

    • Deux métiers. A l’image de la plupart des artistes plasticiens, les auteurs doivent souvent exercer une seconde profession pour compléter les recettes issues de leurs écrits. Afin de mener une existence plus décente, ils se résignent à assumer un autre travail, comme enseignant, journaliste, lecteur, illustrateur, voire violoniste, avocat ou agriculteur…

      Cela était déjà vrai du temps d’Edgar Allan Poe, qui enseigna aussi l’anglais, de James Joyce, qui occupa le poste d’employé de banque, de Julien Gracq, qui fut professeur agrégé d’histoire, ou de Franz Kafka, qui travailla dans le secteur des assurances… Mais le nombre, déjà réduit, de romanciers qui vivent uniquement de leur plume s’amenuise au fil des années.

      Selon la Ligue des auteurs professionnels, entre 41 % et 53 % d’entre eux perçoivent moins que le smic

      Même les auteurs à succès attendus à Livre Paris, qui ouvre ses portes vendredi 15 mars, conservent parfois un autre métier. Michel Bussi – le deuxième plus gros vendeur de livres en France, après Guillaume Musso – n’a mis fin à sa carrière de géographe et de directeur au CNRS qu’il y a deux ans.

      Selon la Ligue des auteurs professionnels, entre 41 % et 53 % d’entre eux perçoivent moins que le smic et seuls 1 600 gagnent plus de 4 500 euros par mois grâce à leur seule plume. Acteurs centraux de l’univers littéraire, ils restent les maillons les plus faibles de la filière sur le plan économique.

      S’il se destinait à l’écriture dès l’enfance, Mathieu Simonet s’est organisé pour être à l’abri du besoin. Il a choisi le métier d’avocat spécialisé en droits d’auteur et droit des affaires. « J’avais besoin de quinze heures par semaine pour écrire, ce que je négociais en entrant dans les cabinets où je travaillais », raconte-t-il. « En 2003, je gagnais suffisamment ma vie, et je me suis mis à mon compte, pour me libérer du temps, quitte à ne pas augmenter mes revenus. »
      Article réservé à nos abonnés Lire aussi Les auteurs se mobilisent contre la précarité de leur situation économique

      Après cinq romans non publiés, il a signé – sans le lire ! – son premier contrat au Seuil pour Les Carnets blancs (2010). « A l’époque, être publié, c’était une fierté, pas une histoire financière », souligne-t-il. Aujourd’hui, il perçoit 3 000 euros d’à-valoir pour chacun de ses romans, ce qui représente trois ans de travail (son sixième, Anne-Sarah K., a été publié en février, toujours au Seuil). « Cela génère à peine 100 euros par mois », calcule ce quadragénaire, qui grignote sur « son temps d’avocat », grâce à des invitations par des institutions et des résidences d’écrivain.

      Il perçoit aussi d’autres revenus de l’agence Gibraltar, qu’il a cofondée, et propose des sessions d’écriture dans les entreprises. « Cette organisation me permet de faire ce que je veux. Et de ne pas subir la pression de mon éditeur…Je reste un écrivain confidentiel qui vend ses romans entre 800 et 1 000 exemplaires », se félicite-t-il. Il estime malgré tout que « le système actuel n’aide pas suffisamment les écrivains, qui occupent pourtant une dimension politique et citoyenne dans la société ».
      « Personnages héroïques »

      Les enquêtes sur le sujet sont rarissimes. Le sociologue Bernard Lahire, professeur à l’Ecole normale supérieure de Lyon, a publié en 2006 La Condition littéraire. La double vie des écrivains, à La Découverte. Il a analysé 503 réponses d’auteurs exerçant une autre activité, essentiellement dans l’enseignement et le journalisme.

      « Dans cet univers littéraire très faiblement rémunérateur », il dresse le portrait de « personnages héroïques », qui, sans attendre de leur travail une importante rémunération, écrivent vaille que vaille. La difficulté de concilier deux métiers vient, selon lui, « d’un temps haché », de la nécessité d’écrire dans des interstices d’agenda. Il cite l’exemple d’André Buchet, un agriculteur bio qui profite de la mauvaise saison, l’hiver, pour se livrer à ses travaux d’écriture.
      Lire aussi Entre les auteurs et leurs éditeurs, la situation reste tendue

      Les seconds métiers sont légion. Sous le pseudo de Miya, l’auteure de mangas (la trilogie Vis-à-vis, puis Alchimia chez Pika) scinde son temps entre les commandes de son éditeur et des travaux d’illustration. « Ces missions pour des agences de communication visuelle, des marques ou encore la création de motifs de tissu sont plus rapides à effectuer et plus rémunératrices », note-t-elle.

      A la naissance de sa fille, elle a préféré terminer un manga, quitte à refuser les autres commandes. Mais cette jeune femme lyonnaise a ensuite peiné pour relancer ses clients. « J’ai même posé mon CV dans un salon de thé », témoigne-t-elle. « Quand j’avais vingt-cinq ans, j’aurais accepté d’être éditée gratuitement », ­confie Miya, qui, dix ans plus tard, redoute que les éditeurs ne tirent encore vers le bas les à-valoir des plus jeunes auteurs.

      La question est récurrente. Avec sa casquette d’administratrice de la Société des gens de lettres (SGDL), la romancière Léonor de Récondo souhaiterait que les éditeurs homogénéisent les droits d’auteur pour proposer, comme en Allemagne, un minimum de 10 % sur le prix du livre. Une hausse qui, à ses yeux, permettrait d’endiguer quelque peu « la paupérisation des écrivains, qui s’explique aussi par une surproduction des titres [200 livres sortent chaque jour en France] ».

      Avant d’écrire, Léonor de Récondo a embrassé la carrière de violoniste. Elle travaille avec les plus prestigieux ensembles baroques et publie, en 2010, son premier roman, La Grâce du cyprès blanc (Le Temps qu’il fait). Ses cinq romans suivants, dont Amours, Point cardinal ou Manifesto sont édités par Sabine Wespieser. « Je ne suis plus intermittente du spectacle depuis 2015 », explique-t-elle. « Depuis cette date, je vis de mes droits d’auteur. Mes revenus issus de la musique viennent de surcroît. »

      Elle est bien placée pour savoir à quel point « les écrivains sont particulièrement peu aidés. Ils n’ont pas, comme les intermittents, accès au chômage après 507 heures de travail ». Ils « doivent même payer leur entrée à la BNF pour faire leurs recherches et n’ont pas la moindre réduction pour aller au théâtre ou dans les musées… », regrette-t-elle.
      Un système inadapté

      Dans Les artistes ont-ils vraiment besoin de manger ? de Coline Pierré et Martin Page (édition Monstrograph, 2018), nombre d’écrivains affirment tenter de réduire autant que possible leur travail alimentaire, quitte à revoir leur train de vie à la baisse et à habiter à la campagne, par exemple, à l’instar d’Eric Pessan (Dans la forêt de Hokkaido, Ecole des loisirs, 2017). Pour sa part, Julia Kerninon (Ma dévotion, Le Rouergue, 2018) améliore ses revenus grâce à des travaux proches de l’écriture, comme lectrice, traductrice ou en donnant des cours de littérature.

      Un autre romancier qui souhaite rester anonyme dit travailler six mois par an « dans un job qui ne lui prend pas la tête : des rapports financiers assez techniques ou de l’écriture sous pseudonyme dans la collection Harlequin ». Une activité qui doit être assez rémunératrice pour lui permettre d’écrire les six autres mois de l’année.
      Lire aussi Les organisateurs du salon Livre Paris ouvrent le tiroir caisse aux auteurs

      Fondateur et directeur de Teaminside, une société de 250 salariés destinée à faciliter la vie numérique des entreprises, Jean-Sébastien Hongre, qui a publié Un amour au long cours chez Anne Carrière, en 2017, écrit trois heures les samedis, dimanches matin et pendant ses vacances. « C’est un deal avec ma famille. Je suis 100 % avec eux le reste du temps. »

      Erik L’Homme, lui, affirme avoir eu « la chance de pouvoir vivre de [sa] plume dès [son] premier roman destiné à la jeunesse, en 2002 ». Depuis, il en a signé une trentaine chez Gallimard. « Longtemps, un roman par an m’assurait de quoi vivre », se remémore celui qui habite à côté de Dieulefit (Drôme), dans la ferme héritée de son grand-père. « Je n’ai pas de famille à charge, pas de loyer et j’ai besoin de très peu pour vivre. »

      Après l’âge d’or de la littérature jeunesse incarné par Harry Potter jusqu’en 2010, ses revenus ont chuté progressivement. Surtout quand il a choisi d’écrire des romans plus personnels, moins vendeurs. « Depuis trois ans, je dois écrire deux romans par an pour vivre et un quart de mes revenus provient des rencontres scolaires que j’anime », détaille M. L’Homme.

      D’après une étude professionnelle, 60 % des auteurs doivent réclamer leurs droits d’auteur à leurs maisons d’édition

      Il fustige l’incompréhension des pouvoirs publics vis-à-vis des auteurs, en citant l’obligation de cotiser à la retraite à hauteur de 8 % des revenus annuels bruts, qui a remplacé le forfait de 400 euros par an. « Mes impôts sont prélevés mi-janvier, alors que mes revenus peuvent varier du simple au double selon les années », déplore-t-il.

      Un système d’autant moins adapté que les auteurs touchent leurs droits une seule fois par an. Contrairement au cinéma, où l’on connaît chaque jour le nombre d’entrées, la vente des livres reste archaïque. En effet, les libraires ne fournissent aucune information sur les ventes d’ouvrages. Seules les plates-formes d’autoédition paient les auteurs une fois par mois et leur donnent quotidiennement leurs chiffres de vente.

      « L’éditeur n’achète ni le temps passé » à écrire un roman « ni un contenu exclusif à leurs justes prix », se lamente Samantha Bailly, vice-présidente de la Charte des auteurs et illustrateurs. Sans compter que 60 % des auteurs doivent, d’après la dernière étude professionnelle menée à ce sujet, réclamer leurs droits d’auteur à leurs maisons d’édition.

      Nicole Vulser

  • Serial playlist
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/no-fade-out/musique-en-serie

    No Fade Out, Épisode 2 Saison 1 : Nos explorateurs musicaux scrutent vos écrans et zooment sur la relation de plus en plus forte entre #musique et #séries ! Leonard Cohen, Nick Cave, Dr.John, Bill Withers et d’autres personnages emblématiques jalonneront leur parcours entre Sex Education et Twin peaks. Ils y rencontreront aussi le “dealer” de films le plus célèbre de Bruxelles.

    Cliffhanger et suspense assurés !

    #cinéma #cinéma,musique,séries
    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/no-fade-out/musique-en-serie_06370__1.mp3

  • Netflix’s Trotsky: A toxic combination of historical fabrication and blatant anti-Semitism - World Socialist Web Site

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/03/08/per-m08.html

    Netflix’s Trotsky: A toxic combination of historical fabrication and blatant anti-Semitism
    8 March 2019

    Netflix is currently presenting to its worldwide audience the virulently anti-Semitic television series, Trotsky, which was originally produced by the Russian state in 2017.

    Esteban Volkov, Trotsky’s 93-year old grandson, has recently denounced the series as “a political assault, masked as historical drama” and “a justification of the murder of the ‘monster’ called Trotsky.” The Latin American edition of the Spanish newspaper El Pais has described the series as the “second assassination of Leon Trotsky” and rejected its portrayal of the revolutionary “as a sadist, a complete traitor, and as a puppet.”

    #fiction #trotsky #antisémitisme

  • Hard Brexit Means Hard Times on the Toilet – Foreign Policy
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/03/05/hard-brexit-means-hard-times-on-the-toilet


    A woman dressed in a flag leaves a portable toilet in Windsor, England, on May 19, 2018.
    Leon Neal/Getty Images

    The Brexit secretary has warned of food shortages. The defense secretary has warned of soldiers on the streets. The Bank of England has warned of a financial crisis. The Taoiseach of Ireland has warned of violence at the border. And the queen, it has been reported, will be evacuated. With Britain inching ever closer to the edge of a no-deal Brexit, however, these dire warnings are increasingly falling short. In a January column in the Telegraph, Boris Johnson observed of his fellow Brexiteers: “[T]he grimmer the warnings, and the more systematic the efforts to make their flesh creep, the greater has been their indifference and their resolve.

    But new rumblings from Britain’s beleaguered paper importers may finally make clear what’s at stake. In conversations with industry experts, Foreign Policy has learned, a no-deal Brexit may leave Britain without an adequate supply of toilet paper.

    #papier_toilette #papier_hygiénique

  • Complaisance avec un violeur au sein du Parti Communiste
    Un thread de Léa Tytéca
    https://twitter.com/LeaTyteca/status/1101957836832194564

    Il y maintenant plus de 2 ans et demi, Alexis Bouchou m’a violé. Il était mon camarade, et même si j’ose dire mon ami. Je lui faisais confiance. J’ai longtemps culpabilisé à ce sujet d’ailleurs. Avant de comprendre que je n’avais pas à culpabiliser. Car je n’ai rien fais de mal.

    Je m’excuse d’avance pour - je pense - l’extrême longueur de ce thread. Je tiens à dire deux choses avant de commencer. D’abord, je ne vais dire que des faits DONT JE SUIS SURE. Et rien d’autre. Malheureusement, je n’ai pas toutes les informations en ma possession

    car cette affaire a fini par dépasser ma simple personne - je vais aussi faire part de faits que je n’ai pas vécu personnellement mais j’ai entièrement confiance en ceux et celles qui m’ont rapporté ces informations, et je n’en démordrai jamais. Je préciserai quand ce sera le cas

    Ensuite, je tiens à dire que je suis farouchement communiste. Que je suis farouchement féministe. Je n’ai pas d’oppositions politiques avec la personne qui m’a violé (oui je suis obligée de me justifier au sujet de cette prétendue instrumentalisation politique dont on m’accuse).

    Même si j’accuse le mouvement communiste, je considère que j’en fais toujours partie aux dernières nouvelles et ce que je fais de manière individuelle c’est aussi ça, le mouvement communiste. Je vais tâcher par ailleurs de ne pas verser dans le pathos, parce que

    je me donne l’exigence politique de ne pas le faire. Pour autant, ce que j’ai vécu est terriblement grave et vraiment horrible. Je tremble en l’écrivant. Désolée. Je considère que cette mise en garde est un TW.

    Alexis Bouchou, alors membre du CN de la JC et élu municipal PCF de Blois, m’a violé autour du Bal de l’UEC en 2016, en m’accompagnant dans un hôtel, alors qu’il était ivre. Je ne vais pas raconter tous les détails à ce sujet, j’ai eu à le faire à de trop nombreuses reprises déjà

    (aux flics, à mes camarades...) et ça n’apportera pas grand chose au propos. Je veux simplement dire que j’ai énoncé à plusieurs reprises mon refus, que je n’étais pas consentante, et j’ajoute qu’il y a eu contrainte et violence. Tout au long de la soirée avant qu’Alexis me viole

    il était VRAIMENT très lourd. Le lendemain, il m’envoyait d’ailleurs un message en me disant je cite "j’ai pas été trop chiant j’espère ?" puis "ça ne m’arrive jamais de perdre le contrôle comme ça". Si besoin, j’ai des screens.

    J’ai confronté une première fois Alexis au camp d’été de la JC en 2016, où il admet les faits. Il dit que c’est surement vrai mais qu’il ne se souvient de rien en raison de son ivresse (ce sera sa version jusqu’au bout semble-t-il).

    Je passe ensuite, à la rentrée, par une très longue phase de dépression (autodiagnostiquée comme telle malheureusement), pendant laquelle j’ai de graves problèmes alimentaires, de grosses pensées suicidaires,

    des cauchemars terribles mettant en scène des violences sexuelles abjectes, des crises d’angoisse, de grosses périodes de solitude, mais aussi, lorsque je bois, des réminiscences et des révélations involontaires aux personnes qui m’entourent sur ce qu’il s’est passé

    alors que je tentais en vain de mettre tout ça de côté. Je n’ai compris que très tardivement de ce qu’il s’agissait, c’est à dire d’une réponse traumatique à un événement traumatique. A ce moment là, je me sentais étrangère à moi même.

    En janvier 2017, je remplis un questionnaire sur les violences sexuelles et sexistes à la JC qui circule en interne, questionnaire qui (je l’ai appris récemment) a été remit à Camille Lainé, dans lequel elle apprend donc les violences dont j’ai été victime sans pour autant agir.

    Au camp d’été 2017 de la JC, je craque. Alors qu’Alexis est présent et présente des formations aux camarades comme dirigeant national de la JC, je décide de parler à Marie Jay le dernier jour, qui relaiera l’information à Guénolé Fournet pour qu’Alexis soit a minima démis du CN

    puis de l’organisation, car sa présence m’est psychologiquement insupportable. Guénolé ne donne visiblement aucune suite à cet appel pendant plusieurs mois, prétextant qu’il est difficile d’agir et de parler à Alexis - il ne me contacte à aucun moment pendant cette période.

    Il ne l’a d’ailleurs jamais fait. Pendant ce temps, Alexis continue de venir en CN et en événement national où manque de bol je me trouve aussi (puisque je reste militante communiste je rappelle), contrainte à le croiser (université d’été du PCF, fête de l’humanité…)

    Après plusieurs interpellations à la coordination nationale de la JC de la part de Marie Jay, Camille Lainé demande à ce que je la contacte. Je lui téléphone donc fin octobre 2017, et Camille me demande : “qu’attends-tu de nous ?”.

    J’avoue être restée sur le cul. Je ne m’attendait pas à une telle ingérence, et j’ai donc simplement répondu que je ne voulais plus jamais avoir à croiser la personne qui m’a violé.

    Je n’ai appris que cet été que Julien Gaboriau, alors responsable Vie Des Départements, le rencontre à Blois pour lui demander de démissionner volontairement du CN de la JC à l’Assemblée Nationale des Animateurs suivante. La raison qui est donnée aux camarades qui demandent est

    qu’il souhaite “passer à autre chose”, au parti, à ses études... La direction du Parti est mise au courant des actes d’Alexis, sachant qu’il est alors élu municipal (il l’est toujours). Alexis continue d’être adhérent au PCF et à la JC dans sa fédération, et de se déplacer

    dans plusieurs fédérations publiquement (à la fête de l’humanité Normandie en 2017 par ex). Je me sens alors obligée d’appeler moi-même un certain nombre de camarades que je considère alors dignes de confiance pour les mettre au courant qu’il n’a pas quitté le CN par envie de

    passer au parti mais pour avoir commis un crime, qu’il m’a violé. J’ai eu tout un tas de réactions différentes. Certaines dont je suis encore reconnaissantes aujourd’hui, d’autres en revanche qui m’ont mise très mal et qui aujourd’hui me mette très en colère.

    Mathilde Moulin, coordinatrice de la JC et faisant partie des camarades en question, m’a par exemple dit au téléphone qu’elle comprend pourquoi, ayant croisé Alexis plus tôt dans la journée, “il avait l’air triste”, et me demande si je serai d’accord pour accepter une lettre

    d’excuses permettant à Alexis de ne pas avoir à quitter le mouvement communiste. Elle ne m’apporte par ailleurs aucun mot de soutien. La direction du Parti refuse d’exclure Alexis, mettant en avant qu’il “souffre psychologiquement”, qu’il n’a commis qu’un seul viol,

    qu’aucune plainte n’a été déposée bien qu’il ait admis les faits, qu’une exclusion “briserait sa vie” et qu’il risque de se suicider, mais aussi que s’il n’est plus élu municipal, lui succéderait une socialiste.

    A la fête de l’Humanité Sologne, fin juin 2018, on me rapporte qu’il est présent et fait l’Accueil Sécurité, chantant et discutant fraternellement avec des camarades ayant connaissance de ses actes. Benjamin Kerserho, camarade du 72 présent à la fête et en connaissance des faits

    car je lui avais confié, interpelle Léonard Lema, alors présent et fraîchement élu coordinateur national. Léonard répond qu’il est d’accord avec le fond mais ne fait rien. Il me dira plus tard (en janvier de cette année) qu’il est allé voir Alexis, lui disant “bonjour” et

    expliquant simplement qu’il ne lui parlera pas pendant la fête en raison des faits de viol. Mathilde Moulin également présente n’a rien fait non plus. Adrian Courtier explique à Benjamin que “l’UEC serait présent pour espionner” en refusant d’expliquer la raison de l’espionnage.

    Les autres ne voient pas le problème. Benjamin interpelle aussi Alexis sur sa présence et sur ses actes, qui répond qu’il s’occupe de l’organisation parce qu’on lui a demandé et que personne d’autre n’était disponible. Il ne nie pas le crime devant Benjamin.

    Benjamin décide de téléphoner à Jean Louis Lemoing, ex-secrétaire du Loir-et-Cher, désormais trésorier du parti, car celui ci avait défendu Alexis lors d’un conseil exécutif de la fédération de Benjamin (Sarthe), prétextant sa fragilité mentale et assurant qu’Alexis n’a jamais

    avoué les faits de viol. Il a alors assuré “C’est mon devoir de communiste de faire remonter l’affaire”. Pourtant, il n’a pas tardé à téléphoner à la coordination de la JC pour souligner le fait que Benjamin s’est immiscé dans cette histoire. La semaine suivante, Marie Jay

    est convoquée par les responsables à la Vie des Départements de la JC dans leur bureau pour lui reprocher que les suivis de l’UEC se “mêlent de ce qui ne les regardent pas” et “essaient de foutre la merde dans les fédérations”, en menaçant que ce genre d’actes

    pousseraient les camarades à “vouloir supprimer l’UEC”. Ils lui demandent de recadrer Benjamin et de lui retirer le soutien de l’UEC. Elle refuse, le soutient et ils l’appellent eux-mêmes pour lui dire que ses actes (à Benjamin) seraient inadmissibles, répétant inlassablement

    qu’il faut passer par les cadres démocratiques dans ce genre d’affaire, et refusant de discuter du problème de base, à savoir : la présence d’Alexis sur la fête, son implication dans l’organisation, et la complaisance des camarades sur place pourtant au courant

    (Adrian Courtier, Ander Courtier, Mathilde Moulin, Léonard Lema, Camélia Khasarouzo, Olivier Morin entre autres, pour ceux que je connais). Benjamin n’accepte pas leur recadrage. Au camp d’été 2018, je tente en vain de parler à des camarades que je sais être au courant

    de l’histoire et qui semble m’éviter. Je tâche d’interpeller Léonard Lema et Mathilde Moulin, sans succès, ces derniers disant qu’ils sont occupé-e-s. Je parviens à discuter avec Adrian Courtier, qui, bien que dans l’ensemble bienveillant, mentionne le fait que dans sa fédération

    c’était très difficile d’avoir à réagir par rapport à ça étant donné qu’Alexis a formé tout le monde, mais aussi qu’il a fait une tentative de suicide, et que quelque part “j’ai de la chance qu’Alexis ne nie pas les faits”. L’argument de la difficulté du traitement

    de ce genre d’affaire par la direction me sera ressortie un nombre incalculable de fois. Je me rappelle particulièrement qu’à l’ANA 2017 (la fameuse ANA pendant laquelle Alexis a démissionné volontairement), à un atelier sur les violences sexuelles et sexistes,

    Camille Lainé et Gwenn Herbin ont passé la plupart du temps de l’atelier à dire qu’il est horrible d’avoir à gérer ce genre de cas. Camille a dit sans sourciller devant moi qu’en entrant à la coord elle n’imaginait pas avoir à gérer des cas de viol.

    Je tiens à rappeler que personnellement je ne pensais pas m’exposer au viol en prenant ma carte, que j’ai beaucoup souffert de ce que je pensais alors être la naïveté générale, que j’ai beaucoup pleuré après avoir entendu ces mots là.

    pour citer un passage du texte du 42ème congrès que j’ai moi même rédigé "L’adhésion au MJCF est traversée par une contradiction insupportable : une personne qui vient ici pour en finir avec l’exploitation et toutes les violences qu’elle suppose peut s’exposer

    à subir elle-même des violences." - voilà mon ressenti et mon positionnement politique à ce sujet depuis le début, depuis qu’on m’a volé ma naïveté et mon corps. A l’automne, je décide contre toute attente d’aller porter plainte contre Alexis

    Je ne ferai jamais l’injonction abjecte à personne de le faire, car je sais la douleur que c’est d’être incomprise, qu’on ne te croit pas. Je sais la honte et la culpabilité. Je ne cacherai à personne que porter plainte ajoute de la violence à la violence -

    cependant, je proposerai toujours mon aide aux personnes qui en ressentent le besoin comme j’ai pu le ressentir. Et j’aimerais ajouter qu’il était beaucoup moins difficile, contre toute attente, d’avoir à porter plainte que d’avoir à entendre raison au sein

    du mouvement communiste à ce sujet. Comme je l’ai déjà dis, je ne suis plus naïve et n’y suis pas allée avec l’espoir de "gagner". Je suis marxiste alors j’analyse l’état actuel des choses. Force est de constater que la justice est bourgeoise et patriarcale.

    Cherchez par vous même les chiffres qui l’atteste si vous ne les connaissez pas déjà. Pourquoi et à quoi bon porter plainte alors ? Je n’ai pas toutes les réponses. Pour moi, dans l’ordre des faits, j’ai dû témoigner pour une amie ayant vécu un cas de violence similaire.

    J’ai dû rassembler mes forces, mon courage pour me rendre disponible pour elle et affronter la police. Une fois au commissariat, je me suis dis que moi aussi je voulais franchir cette étape, purement et simplement. Je m’en suis sentie capable. C’est tout.

    C’est à la fois la fin et le début de quelque chose. Je voudrais remercier Marie Jay et Anaïs Fley qui m’ont accompagné dans cette étape.

    J’ai appris ensuite que la commission contre les violences sexistes et sexuelles n’accepte pas se saisir de l’affaire tant que je ne les contacte pas moi-même - et j’avoue qu’à cette étape, ça commence à faire vraiment beaucoup pour moi.

    Beaucoup de gens au courant, beaucoup de personnes, mes camarades, qui ne me parle plus alors que nous avions de bons contacts (Pourquoi ? Par incompétence ? Par honte ? Par peur ? Par mépris ? Je ne saurais jamais et c’est inacceptable dans tous les cas).

    Beaucoup de silences donc. Mais aussi beaucoup de peines, de douleurs, de souffrances. Parmi tout ça, quelques sourires, quelques paroles bienveillantes. Quelques confidences qui veulent dire "je comprend, moi aussi, je sais, nous sommes ensembles dans ce trop difficile combat."

    La commission contre les violences ne fait donc rien, alors que les faits leurs ont été remontés plusieurs fois et qu’ils savent que plainte a été posé. Aucune sanction n’est prise contre Alexis Bouchou à ce jour.

    La majorité des personnes étant au courant ne m’a pas volontairement contacté, pour des raisons que j’ignore mais qui donne un goût amer à ma bouche, ni apporté un soutien effectif, ni n’a cherché à m’orienter vers des personnels juridiques et médicaux.

    J’ai besoin de faire une pause avant de conclure.

  • Quelques extraits de la #BD
    #Humains, #La_Roya est une fleuve , dont il a déjà été question ici :


    https://seenthis.net/messages/693475

    Extraits :


    #ligne #ligne_frontalière #zone_frontalière #frontière_mobile


    #histoire #Giraude #grillage #barrières_frontalières


    #walls_don't_work


    #pas_de_la_mort #campement


    #tunnel #refoulement #push-back #risque


    #légende_de_mamadou #passeurs #vêtements


    #ouverture_des_frontières


    #Roya_citoyenne #délit_de_solidarité #business #armée #militarisation_des_frontières #drones


    #jeu_de_l'oie #migrerrance


    #Bella_ciao #fête


    #Méditerranée #mer_Méditerranée


    #memoria_delle_Alpi


    #20_km #20_kilomètres #Sospel #PAF #police_aux_frontières


    #illégalité #légalité


    #sans-papiers #papiers


    #Francesco_Biamonti


    #Briançon #Hautes-Alpes


    #ouvrir_les_frontières


    #inhumanité


    #mourir_aux_frontières #décès #mort


    #invisibilité #invisibilisation


    #neige #froid

    #bande_dessinée #livre #frontière_sud-alpine #solidarité #frontières #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Cédric_Herrou #Vintimille #Italie #France #Menton #Alpes #montagne

    ping @nepthys @reka

    • Dans la BD on cite le #livre
      "Les Paroles la nuit" de Francesco Biamonti

      Dans l’obscurité de la nuit, sur les sentiers des collines ligures battues par le vent, parmi ces terres arides, de roches et d’argile, de ronces, d’oliviers et de mimosas, erre une humanité inquiète en proie à la violence qui règne sur les côtes : ce sont les laissés-pour-compte de la modernité occidentale, attirés par la frontière française, à la recherche d’une terre d’accueil.

      Des coups de feu, un bruissement dans les arbres, les restes d’un bivouac, des traces de sang, un cadavre retrouvé au petit matin sont les signes du passage de ces hordes de damnés, incarnés par deux personnages poignants, un homme et une petite fille kurdes qu’un implacable destin poursuit.

      Donnant voix aux silences de Leonardo et de ses amis, à leurs remords, à leur perception des événements et des choses, l’auteur nous livre des tranches d’existence qui se détachent sur un paysage à la lumière changeante ; la dérive de notre monde malade revient sans cesse dans une conversation suspendue au-dessus de l’abîme.

      http://www.seuil.com/ouvrage/les-paroles-la-nuit-francesco-biamonti/9782020350105

  • Michael Snyder et la dystopie californienne
    http://www.dedefensa.org/article/michael-snyder-et-la-dystopie-californienne

    Michael Snyder et la dystopie californienne

    Les films de dystopie (Blade runner, Rollerball, Soleil vert) nous promettaient un futur abominable et surréaliste, et en vérité nous avons un futur nul qui confirme l’observation de Léon Bloy faite en 1906, à savoir que nous sommes déjà morts. On est dans un monde bête, laid, matérialiste, certes surpeuplé, mais qui ne va pas trop mal, qui fonctionne globalement. Ce n’est pas grave, on continue dans les fictions de nous promettre un futur abominable au lieu de nous montrer notre présent cher et dégoûtant… Il semble que ce pessimisme extra soit de mise dans nos sociétés pour établir la dictature ou cet imprécis ordre mondial dont rêve une partie des élites humanitaires. On nous promet le pire pour nous donner des ordres. Mais c’est un autre sujet… je maintiens (...)