• Joshua Landis sur X :
    https://twitter.com/joshua_landis/status/1694084399170507249

    The $56 million of oil U.S. seized from Iran this week is chump change

    In 1953, US gifted itself 40% of the entire Anglo-Persian Oil Company (renamed BP) after overthrowing #Iran's democratically elected government.

    US is losing its mojo

    What is more, the US pushed #SaudiArabia to sell more oil to China to encourage #China to acquiesce to #Iran sanctions & make up for lost Iran oil.

    Now Saudi is moving into China orbit.

    And, Iran has expanded its oil exports to over 2 mbd.

    Lose, lose. Foolish #USA

    #états-unis

  • GRAIN | Les avocats de la colère
    https://grain.org/fr/article/6986-les-avocats-de-la-colere

    Les entreprises californiennes ont créé des filiales au Mexique et ont commencé à s’approvisionner directement auprès des producteurs, allant jusqu’à installer leurs propres usines de conditionnement dans le Michoacán[31]. Une étude estime qu’en 2005, Mission Produce, Calavo Growers, West Pak, Del Monte, Fresh Directions, et Chiquita concentraient 80 % des importations étasuniennes d’avocats du Mexique[32].

    Actuellement, l’état fédéral du Michoacán représente 75 % de la production nationale, suivi du Jalisco avec 10 % et de l’Edomex, avec 5%[33]. En 2019, on pouvait déjà voir comment l’agrobusiness d’exportation était l’acteur central du champ autour duquel se sont articulées les politiques publiques. S’ils ont réussi à rentabiliser cette entreprise, c’est en obéissant aux stratégies de domination de l’agro-industrie de l’avocat et à ses impacts sur le territoire, en particulier sur les modes de vie paysans et communautaires[34]. Le boom de l’avocat au Mexique dépend aujourd’hui de l’abattage de forêts entières et a souvent recours à des incendies ou à des coupes sauvages pour faire de la place à d’autres vergers d’avocats, engloutissant les ressources en eau de localités et de régions entières. Les coûts sociaux aussi sont extrêmement élevés.

    #agroalimentaire #mexique #usa #néolibéralisme #consommation #agriculture

  • Kill the Indian, and Save the Man”: Capt. Richard H. Pratt on the Education of Native Americans
    https://web.archive.org/web/20210208220916/http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4929


    Burial of the dead after the massacre of Wounded Knee.

    cf. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Indigenous_Peoples%27_History_of_the_United_States

    Beginning in 1887, the federal government attempted to “Americanize” Native Americans, largely through the education of Native youth. By 1900 thousands of Native Americans were studying at almost 150 boarding schools around the United States. The U.S. Training and Industrial School founded in 1879 at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania, was the model for most of these schools. Boarding schools like Carlisle provided vocational and manual training and sought to systematically strip away tribal culture. They insisted that students drop their Indian names, forbade the speaking of native languages, and cut off their long hair. Not surprisingly, such schools often met fierce resistance from Native American parents and youth. But the schools also fostered a sense of shared Indian identity that transcended tribal boundaries. The following excerpt (from a paper read by Carlisle founder Capt. Richard H. Pratt at an 1892 convention) spotlights Pratt’s pragmatic and frequently brutal methods for “civilizing” the “savages,” including his analogies to the education and “civilizing” of African Americans.

    A great general has said that the only good Indian is a dead one, and that high sanction of his destruction has been an enormous factor in promoting Indian massacres. In a sense, I agree with the sentiment, but only in this: that all the Indian there is in the race should be dead. Kill the Indian in him, and save the man.

    We are just now making a great pretence of anxiety to civilize the Indians. I use the word “pretence” purposely, and mean it to have all the significance it can possibly carry. Washington believed that commerce freely entered into between us and the Indians would bring about their civilization, and Washington was right. He was followed by Jefferson, who inaugurated the reservation plan. Jefferson’s reservation was to be the country west of the Mississippi; and he issued instructions to those controlling Indian matters to get the Indians there, and let the Great River be the line between them and the whites. Any method of securing removal - persuasion, purchase, or force - was authorized.

    Jefferson’s plan became the permanent policy. The removals have generally been accomplished by purchase, and the evils of this are greater than those of all the others combined. . . .

    It is a sad day for the Indians when they fall under the assaults of our troops, as in the Piegan massacre, the massacre of Old Black Kettle and his Cheyennes at what is termed “the battle of the Washita,” and hundreds of other like places in the history of our dealings with them; but a far sadder day is it for them when they fall under the baneful influences of a treaty agreement with the United States whereby they are to receive large annuities, and to be protected on reservations, and held apart from all association with the best of our civilization. The destruction is not so speedy, but it is far more general. The history of the Miamis and Osages is only the true picture of all other tribes.

    “Put yourself in his place” is as good a guide to a proper conception of the Indian and his cause as it is to help us to right conclusions in our relations with other men. For many years we greatly oppressed the black man, but the germ of human liberty remained among us and grew, until, in spite of our irregularities, there came from the lowest savagery into intelligent manhood and freedom among us more than seven millions of our population, who are to-day an element of industrial value with which we could not well dispense. However great this victory has been for us, we have not yet fully learned our lesson nor completed our work; nor will we have done so until there is throughout all of our communities the most unequivocal and complete acceptance of our own doctrines, both national and religious. Not until there shall be in every locality throughout the nation a supremacy of the Bible principle of the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God, and full obedience to the doctrine of our Declaration that “we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created free and equal, with certain inalienable rights,” and of the clause in our Constitution which forbids that there shall be “any abridgment of the rights of citizens on account of race, color, or previous condition.” I leave off the last two words “of servitude,” because I want to be entirely and consistently American.

    Inscrutable are the ways of Providence. Horrible as were the experiences of its introduction, and of slavery itself, there was concealed in them the greatest blessing that ever came to the Negro race—seven millions of blacks from cannibalism in darkest Africa to citizenship in free and enlightened America; not full, not complete citizenship, but possible—probable—citizenship, and on the highway and near to it.

    There is a great lesson in this. The schools did not make them citizens, the schools did not teach them the language, nor make them industrious and self-supporting. Denied the right of schools, they became English-speaking and industrious through the influences of association. Scattered here and there, under the care and authority of individuals of the higher race, they learned self-support and something of citizenship, and so reached their present place. No other influence or force would have so speedily accomplished such a result. Left in Africa, surrounded by their fellow-savages, our seven millions of industrious black fellow-citizens would still be savages. Transferred into these new surroundings and experiences, behold the result. They became English-speaking and civilized, because forced into association with English-speaking and civilized people; became healthy and multiplied, because they were property; and industrious, because industry, which brings contentment and health, was a necessary quality to increase their value.

    The Indians under our care remained savage, because forced back upon themselves and away from association with English-speaking and civilized people, and because of our savage example and treatment of them. . . .

    We have never made any attempt to civilize them with the idea of taking them into the nation, and all of our policies have been against citizenizing and absorbing them. Although some of the policies now prominent are advertised to carry them into citizenship and consequent association and competition with other masses of the nation, they are not, in reality, calculated to do this.

    We are after the facts. Let us take the Land in Severalty Bill. Land in severalty, as administered, is in the way of the individualizing and civilization of the Indians, and is a means of holding the tribes together. Land in severalty is given to individuals adjoining each other on their present reservations. And experience shows that in some cases, after the allotments have been made, the Indians have entered into a compact among themselves to continue to hold their lands in common as a reservation. The inducement of the bill is in this direction. The Indians are not only invited to remain separate tribes and communities, but are practically compelled to remain so. The Indian must either cling to his tribe and its locality, or take great chances of losing his rights and property.

    The day on which the Land in Severalty Bill was signed was announced to be the emancipation day for the Indians. The fallacy of that idea is so entirely demonstrated that the emancipation assumption is now withdrawn.

    We shall have to go elsewhere, and seek for other means besides land in severalty to release these people from their tribal relations and to bring them individually into the capacity and freedom of citizens.

    Just now that land in severalty is being retired as the one all-powerful leverage that is going to emancipate and bring about Indian civilization and citizenship, we have another plan thrust upon us which has received great encomium from its authors, and has secured the favor of Congress to the extent of vastly increasing appropriations. This plan is calculated to arrest public attention, and to temporarily gain concurrence from everybody that it is really the panacea for securing citizenship and equality in the nation for the Indians. In its execution this means purely tribal schools among the Indians; that is, Indian youth must continue to grow up under the pressure of home surroundings. Individuals are not to be encouraged to get out and see and learn and join the nation. They are not to measure their strength with the other inhabitants of the land, and find out what they do not know, and thus be led to aspire to gain in education, experience, and skill,—those things that they must know in order to become equal to the rest of us. A public school system especially for the Indians is a tribal system; and this very fact says to them that we believe them to be incompetent, that they must not attempt to cope with us. Such schools build up tribal pride, tribal purposes, and tribal demands upon the government. They formulate the notion that the government owes them a living and vast sums of money; and by improving their education on these lines, but giving no other experience and leading to no aspirations beyond the tribe, leaves them in their chronic condition of helplessness, so far as reaching the ability to compete with the white race is concerned. It is like attempting to make a man well by always telling him he is sick. We have only to look at the tribes who have been subject to this influence to establish this fact, and it makes no difference where they are located. All the tribes in the State of New York have been trained in tribal schools; and they are still tribes and Indians, with no desire among the masses to be anything else but separate tribes.

    The five civilized tribes of the Indian Territory—Cherokees, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, and Seminoles—have had tribal schools until it is asserted that they are civilized; yet they have no notion of joining us and becoming a part of the United States. Their whole disposition is to prey upon and hatch up claims against the government, and have the same lands purchased and repurchased and purchased again, to meet the recurring wants growing out of their neglect and inability to make use of their large and rich estate. . . .

    Indian schools are just as well calculated to keep the Indians intact as Indians as Catholic schools are to keep the Catholics intact. Under our principles we have established the public school system, where people of all races may become unified in every way, and loyal to the government; but we do not gather the people of one nation into schools by themselves, and the people of another nation into schools by themselves, but we invite the youth of all peoples into all schools. We shall not succeed in Americanizing the Indian unless we take him in in exactly the same way. I do not care if abundant schools on the plan of Carlisle are established. If the principle we have always had at Carlisle—of sending them out into families and into the public schools—were left out, the result would be the same, even though such schools were established, as Carlisle is, in the centre of an intelligent and industrious population, and though such schools were, as Carlisle always has been, filled with students from many tribes. Purely Indian schools say to the Indians: “You are Indians, and must remain Indians. You are not of the nation, and cannot become of the nation. We do not want you to become of the nation.”

    Before I leave this part of my subject I feel impelled to lay before you the facts, as I have come to look at them, of another influence that has claimed credit, and always has been and is now very dictatorial, in Indian matters; and that is the missionary as a citizenizing influence upon the Indians. The missionary goes to the Indian; he learns the language; he associates with him; he makes the Indian feel he is friendly, and has great desire to help him; he even teaches the Indian English. But the fruits of his labor, by all the examples that I know, have been to strengthen and encourage him to remain separate and apart from the rest of us. Of course, the more advanced, those who have a desire to become civilized, and to live like white men, who would with little encouragement go out into our communities, are the first to join the missionary’s forces. They become his lieutenants to gather in others. The missionary must necessarily hold on to every help he can get to push forward his schemes and plans, so that he may make a good report to his Church; and, in order to enlarge his work and make it a success, he must keep his community together. Consequently, any who care to get out into the nation, and learn from actual experience what it is to be civilized, what is the full length and breadth and height and depth of our civilization, must stay and help the missionary. The operation of this has been disastrous to any individual escape from the tribe, has vastly and unnecessarily prolonged the solution of the question, and has needlessly cost the charitable people of this country large sums of money, to say nothing of the added cost to the government, the delay in accomplishing their civilization, and their destruction caused by such delay.

    If, as sometimes happens, the missionary kindly consents to let or helps one go out and get these experiences, it is only for the purpose of making him a preacher or a teacher or help of some kind; and such a one must, as soon as he is fitted, and much sooner in most cases, return to the tribe and help the missionary to save his people. The Indian who goes out has public charitable aid through his school course, forfeits his liberty, and is owned by the missionary. In all my experience of twenty-five years I have known scarcely a single missionary to heartily aid or advocate the disintegration of the tribes and the giving of individual Indians rights and opportunities among civilized people. There is this in addition: that the missionaries have largely assumed to dictate to the government its policy with tribes, and their dictations have always been along the lines of their colonies and church interests, and the government must gauge its actions to suit the purposes of the missionary, or else the missionary influences are at once exerted to defeat the purposes of the government. The government, by paying large sums of money to churches to carry on schools among Indians, only builds for itself opposition to its own interests. . . .

    We make our greatest mistake in feeding our civilization to the Indians instead of feeding the Indians to our civilization. America has different customs and civilizations from Germany. What would be the result of an attempt to plant American customs and civilization among the Germans in Germany, demanding that they shall become thoroughly American before we admit them to the country? Now, what we have all along attempted to do for and with the Indians is just exactly that, and nothing else. We invite the Germans to come into our country and communities, and share our customs, our civilization, to be of it; and the result is immediate success. Why not try it on the Indians? Why not invite them into experiences in our communities? Why always invite and compel them to remain a people unto themselves?

    It is a great mistake to think that the Indian is born an inevitable savage. He is born a blank, like all the rest of us. Left in the surroundings of savagery, he grows to possess a savage language, superstition, and life. We, left in the surroundings of civilization, grow to possess a civilized language, life, and purpose. Transfer the infant white to the savage surroundings, he will grow to possess a savage language, superstition, and habit. Transfer the savage-born infant to the surroundings of civilization, and he will grow to possess a civilized language and habit. These results have been established over and over again beyond all question; and it is also well established that those advanced in life, even to maturity, of either class, lose already acquired qualities belonging to the side of their birth, and gradually take on those of the side to which they have been transferred.

    As we have taken into our national family seven millions of Negroes, and as we receive foreigners at the rate of more than five hundred thousand a year, and assimilate them, it would seem that the time may have arrived when we can very properly make at least the attempt to assimilate our two hundred and fifty thousand Indians, using this proven potent line, and see if that will not end this vexed question and remove them from public attention, where they occupy so much more space than they are entitled to either by numbers or worth.

    The school at Carlisle is an attempt on the part of the government to do this. Carlisle has always planted treason to the tribe and loyalty to the nation at large. It has preached against colonizing Indians, and in favor of individualizing them. It has demanded for them the same multiplicity of chances which all others in the country enjoy. Carlisle fills young Indians with the spirit of loyalty to the stars and stripes, and then moves them out into our communities to show by their conduct and ability that the Indian is no different from the white or the colored, that he has the inalienable right to liberty and opportunity that the white and the negro have. Carlisle does not dictate to him what line of life he should fill, so it is an honest one. It says to him that, if he gets his living by the sweat of his brow, and demonstrates to the nation that he is a man, he does more good for his race than hundreds of his fellows who cling to their tribal communistic surroundings. . . .

    No evidence is wanting to show that, in our industries, the Indian can become a capable and willing factor if he has the chance. What we need is an Administration which will give him the chance. The Land in Severalty Bill can be made far more useful than it is, but it can be made so only by assigning the land so as to intersperse good, civilized people among them. If, in the distribution, it is so arranged that two or three white families come between two Indian families, then there would necessarily grow up a community of fellowship along all the lines of our American civilization that would help the Indian at once to his feet. Indian schools must, of necessity, be for a time, because the Indian cannot speak the language, and he knows nothing of the habits and forces he has to contend with; but the highest purpose of all Indian schools ought to be only to prepare the young Indian to enter the public and other schools of the country. And immediately he is so prepared, for his own good and the good of the country, he should be forwarded into these other schools, there to temper, test, and stimulate his brain and muscle into the capacity he needs for his struggle for life, in competition with us. The missionary can, if he will, do far greater service in helping the Indians than he has done; but it will only be by practising the doctrine he preaches. As his work is to lift into higher life the people whom he serves, he must not, under any pretence whatsoever, give the lie to what he preaches by discountenancing the right of any individual Indian to go into higher and better surroundings, but, on the contrary, he should help the Indian to do that. If he fails in thus helping and encouraging the Indian, he is false to his own teaching. An examination shows that no Indians within the limits of the United States have acquired any sort of capacity to meet and cope with the whites in civilized pursuits who did not gain that ability by going among the whites and out from the reservations, and that many have gained this ability by so going out.

    Theorizing citizenship into people is a slow operation. What a farce it would be to attempt teaching American citizenship to the negroes in Africa. They could not understand it; and, if they did, in the midst of such contrary influences, they could never use it. Neither can the Indians understand or use American citizenship theoretically taught to them on Indian reservations. They must get into the swim of American citizenship. They must feel the touch of it day after day, until they become saturated with the spirit of it, and thus become equal to it.

    When we cease to teach the Indian that he is less than a man; when we recognize fully that he is capable in all respects as we are, and that he only needs the opportunities and privileges which we possess to enable him to assert his humanity and manhood; when we act consistently towards him in accordance with that recognition; when we cease to fetter him to conditions which keep him in bondage, surrounded by retrogressive influences; when we allow him the freedom of association and the developing influences of social contact—then the Indian will quickly demonstrate that he can be truly civilized, and he himself will solve the question of what to do with the Indian.

    Source:
    Official Report of the Nineteenth Annual Conference of Charities and Correction (1892), 46–59. Reprinted in Richard H. Pratt, “The Advantages of Mingling Indians with Whites,” Americanizing the American Indians: Writings by the “Friends of the Indian” 1880–1900 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1973), 260–271.

    #USA #génocide #racisme #éducation #american_indians #native_americans

  • HITLER’S SHADOW, Nazi War Criminals, U.S. Intelligence, and the Cold War
    https://www.archives.gov/files/iwg/reports/hitlers-shadow.pdf
    Dans cette publication on apprend que la CIA était plutôt sceptique en ce qui concernait la collaboration avec Stepan Bandera. Les parachutages d’agents anticommunistes étaient l’affaire des Britanniques. Plus tard c’étaient surtout les ex-nazis allemands proches d’Eichmann, particulièrement Gerhard von Mende, un participant à l’organisation de l’holocauste, qui le soutenaient jusqu’à sa mort. La CIA avait son propre homme de main, Mykola Lebed.

    Richard Breitman and Norman J.W. Goda, Published by the National Archives

    In 1998 Congress passed the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act [P.L. 105-246]
    as part of a series of efforts to identify, declassify, and release federal records on the perpetration of Nazi war crimes and on Allied efforts to locate and punish war criminals. Under the direction of the National Archives the Interagency Working Group [IWG] opened to research over 8 million of pages of records - including recent 21st century documentation. Of particular importance to this volume are many declassified intelligence records from the Central Intelligence Agency and the Army Intelligence Command, which were not fully processed and available at the time that the IWG issued its Final Report in 2007.
    As a consequence, Congress [in HR 110-920] charged the National Archives
    in 2009 to prepare an additional historical volume as a companion piece to
    its 2005 volume U. S. Intelligence and the Nazis. Professors Richard Breitman
    and Norman J. W. Goda note in Hitler’s Shadow that these CIA & Army records produced new “evidence of war crimes and about wartime activities of war criminals; postwar documents on the search for war criminals; documents about the escape of war criminals; documents about the Allied protection or use of war criminals; and documents about the postwar activities of war criminals”.
    This volume of essays points to the significant impact that flowed from
    Congress and the Executive Branch agencies in adopting a broader and fuller
    release of previously security classified war crimes documentation. Details about records processed by the IWG and released by the National Archives are more fully described on our website iwg@nara.gov.

    William Cunliffe, Office of Records Services,
    National Archives and Records Administration

    CHAPTER FIVE, Collaborators: Allied Intelligence and the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists
    ...
    The CIA never considered entering into an alliance with Bandera to procure intelligence from Ukraine. “By nature,” read a CIA report, “[Bandera] is a political intransigent of great personal ambition, who [has] since April 1948, opposed all political organizations in the emigration which favor a representative
    form of government in the Ukraine as opposed to a mono-party, OUN/Bandera regime.”

    Worse, his intelligence operatives in Germany were dishonest and not secure. Debriefings of couriers from western Ukraine in 1948 confirmed that, “the thinking of Stephan Bandera and his immediate émigré supporters [has] become radically outmoded in the Ukraine.” Bandera was also a convicted assassin. By now, word had reached the CIA of Bandera’s fratricidal struggles with other Ukrainian groups during the war and in the emigration.
    By 1951 Bandera turned vocally anti-American as well, since the US did not advocate an independent Ukraine.” The CIA had an agent within the Bandera group in 1951 mostly to keep an eye on Bandera.

    British Intelligence (MI6), however, was interested in Bandera. MI6 first contacted Bandera through Gerhard von Mende in April 1948. An ethnic German from Riga, von Mende served in Alfred Rosenberg’s Ostministerium
    during the war as head of the section for the Caucasus and Turkestan section, recruiting Soviet Muslims from central Asia for use against the USSR. In this capacity he was kept personally informed of UPA actions and capabilities.

    Nothing came of initial British contacts with Bandera because, as the CIA learned later, “the political, financial, and tech requirements of the [Ukrainians] were higher than the British cared to meet.” But by 1949 MI6 began helping Bandera send his own agents into western Ukraine via airdrop. In 1950 MI6 began training these agents on the expectation that they could provide intelligence from western Ukraine.

    CIA and State Department officials flatly opposed the use of Bandera. By 1950 the CIA was working with the Hrinioch-Lebed group, and had begun to run its own agents into western Ukraine to make contact with the UHVR. Bandera no longer had the UHVR’s support or even that of the OUN party leadership in Ukraine. Bandera’s agents also deliberately worked against Ukrainian agents used by the CIA. In April 1951 CIA officials tried to convince MI6 to pull support from Bandera. MI6 refused. They thought that Bandera could run his agents without British support, and MI6 were “seeking progressively to assume control of Bandera’s lines.” The British also thought that the CIA underestimated Bandera’s importance. “Bandera’s name,” they said, “still carried considerable weight in the Ukraine and … the UPA would look to him first and foremost.”

    On trouve des informations sur les relations de la CIA avec les anticommunistes ukrainiens dans le chapître The United States and Mykola Lebed

    Nazi War Crimes Interagency Working Group
    https://www.archives.gov/iwg

    #histoire #USA #anticommunisme #Ukraine #Bandera

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • Introduction to New Cobalt Project - Punta Corna, Northern Italy (2018)

    Dans la vidéo ont explique le nouveau projet de #Alta_zinc, là aussi, comme pour le projet de #Gorno, ils peuvent s’appuyer sur des plans et des galeries déjà existantes, comme ils l’expliquent dans la vidéo.

    Le « grand moment » de la production dans la région « l’âge du cobalt » : 1753 à 1833.

    –-> selon ce site web, l’activité minière a bien débuté en 1753 mais s’est arrêtée en 1848 :

    Cobalt mines opened near Punta Corna-#Torre_di_Ovarda and #Bessanet Mt, and active between 1753 and 1848. The ore extracted was used for the glass industry and it was exported especially to Germany. Mined for iron, and locally for silver, in the middle ages (13th–15th centuries).

    https://www.mindat.org/loc-31111.html

    #Fabio_Granitzio rencontre des personnes qui connaissent l’histoire des activités minières au Musée d’archéologie et minéralogie de #Usseglio :

    #Domenico_Bertino, curateur du musée, explique que le matériaux, déjà « préparé » était exporté pour la majeure partie, en #Allemagne, pour la production de colorant.


    A cette époque Usseglio avait 2500 habitants alors que maintenant (2018 donc) il y en a 180.

    https://vimeo.com/263713276


    #Altamin #vidéo #Alta_zinc
    #mines #extractivisme #Italie #Alpes #montagne #Altamin #Energia_Minerals
    #Punta_Corna #Usseglio #histoire

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur l’#extraction de #terres_rares dans les #Alpes :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1013289

  • Contre-histoire des États-Unis, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz – Éditions Wildproject
    https://wildproject.org/livres/contre-histoire-des-etats-unis

    Le monde qui vient
    novembre 2021
    9-782-381140-278
    336 pages
    22 €
    13 × 20 cm
    Préface et traduction par Pascal Menoret
    Première édition française 2018

    Ce livre répond à une question simple : pourquoi les Indiens dʼAmérique ont-ils été décimés ? Nʼétait-il pas pensable de créer une civilisation créole prospère qui permette aux populations amérindienne, africaine, européenne, asiatique et océanienne de partager lʼespace et les ressources naturelles des États-Unis ? Le génocide des Amérindiens était-il inéluctable ?

    La thèse dominante aux États-Unis est quʼils ont souvent été tués par les virus apportés par les Européens avant même dʼentrer en contact avec les Européens eux-mêmes : la variole voyageait plus vite que les soldats espagnols et anglais. Les survivants auraient soit disparu au cours des guerres de la frontière, soit été intégrés, eux aussi, à la nouvelle société dʼimmigrés.

    Contre cette vision irénique dʼune histoire impersonnelle, où les virus et lʼacier tiennent une place prépondérante et où les intentions humaines sont secondaires, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz montre que les États-Unis sont une scène de crime. Il y a eu génocide parce quʼil y a eu intention dʼexterminer : les Amérindiens ont été méthodiquement éliminés, dʼabord physiquement, puis économiquement, et enfin symboliquement.

    L’autrice

    Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz est une historienne et militante née en 1938. Docteur en histoire (UCLA, 1974), elle est également diplômée en droit international et droits de lʼHomme de lʼIDH de Strasbourg (1983). Militante de la cause amérindienne depuis 1967, cofondatrice du Mouvement de libération des femmes (MLF) aux États-Unis en 1968, elle a aussi vécu en Europe, au Mexique et à Cuba. Elle est lʼautrice dʼune quinzaine dʼouvrages.

    On en parle

    Avec ce compte-rendu de la conquête des États-Unis du point de vue de ses victimes, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz nous rend un service immense. Renseigné en profondeur, éloquent et lucide, ce puissant récit dʼun crime terrible prend aujourdʼhui un sens nouveau : les survivants rejoignent en effet les peuples indigènes du monde pour lutter – en idées et en actions – contre la destruction écologique du monde causée par la civilisation industrielle.
    Noam Chomsky, linguiste

    Voici sans doute la plus importante histoire des États-Unis jamais écrite. Voici, restituée de façon honnête et souvent poétique, lʼhistoire de ces traces et dʼun peuple qui a survécu, meurtri mais insoumis. Spoiler alert : la période coloniale nʼest pas close – et tous les Indiens ne sont pas morts.
    Robin Kelley, historien

    Lʼoubli de lʼhistoire est la maladie fondamentale de la plupart des Américains blancs. Dunbar-Ortiz demande à ses lecteurs de retourner à ce point de départ : de sʼenraciner dans la poussière rouge et les débris de la mémoire.
    Mike Davis, sociologue

    Issue dʼun milieu ouvrier, ayant grandi en Oklahoma, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz a participé à tous les grands mouvements féministes ou révolutionnaires des années 1960 et 1970. Elle éclaire ces expériences avec une implacable précision, et fait preuve dʼune fière et admirable indépendance.
    Howard Zinn, historien

    Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz a écrit le livre fondamental, celui qui remet à l’endroit l’histoire nationale américaine, structurée par un génocide originel et une violente colonisation de peuplement.
    Raoul Peck, cinéaste

    Sommaire

    Préface du traducteur
    Note de lʼauteure

    Introduction. Cette terre

    Suivez le maïs
    La culture de la conquête
    Le culte de lʼalliance
    Des empreintes de sang
    Naissance dʼune nation
    Le Dernier des Mohicans et la république blanche dʼAndrew Jackson
    Dʼun océan à lʼautre, étincelant
    Pays indien
    Triomphalisme et colonialisme en temps de paix
    La prophétie de la danse des esprits : une nation arrive
    La Doctrine de la Découverte

    Conclusion. Lʼavenir des États-Unis

    • Roxane Dunbar-Ortiz est une historienne et une militante connue aux USA pour sa participation active aux luttes d’émancipation des années 60 (droits civiques, anticolonialiste,féministe). Elle nous propose cette contre-histoire passionnante des États-Unis, « telle que les peuples indigènes la vécurent », ce qui « requiert de mettre à neuf le récit national ».

      S’appuyant sur une description précises des faits, Roxane Dunbar-Ortiz n’hésite pas à qualifier en terme de « génocide », la politique de colonisation de peuplement conduite par les colons états-uniens. D’autres auteurs, notamment Robert Jaulin, ont employé le terme d’ethnocide pour décrire les conséquences du colonialisme (voir le lien ci-dessous).

      La première partie du livre est consacrée à l’examen historique des faits concernant l’éradication des nations autochtones. Il semblerait que ces faits historique soient méconnus ou ignorés de la grande partie de la population états-unienne. Des mises en perspectives expliquent comment ces faits structurent encore largement l’idéologie du pays.

      Les fondations de l’histoire des États-Unis sont à trouver dans le débarquement des caravelles espagnoles sur le continent d’Amérique. Le mythe fondateur états-unien, proprement dit, débute officiellement, à l’issue de la guerre d’indépendance des colonies anglaises, en 1783. Environ 4 millions d’européens vivent alors sur 13 colonies britanniques, le long de la côte atlantique. « La conquête de l’Ouest » qui s’en suit, conduit progressivement en un siècle à la dépossession de l’intégralité des territoires autochtones situés sur cette partie du continent.

      L’autrice explique par le détail comment les conquérants étasuniens ont systématiquement mis en œuvre une politique de colonisation de peuplement en chassant les nations indigènes afin de s’approprier leurs terres. Plusieurs méthodes furent employées à cette fin : les massacres des populations, la destruction de leurs ressources végétales et animales (notamment les bisons), la manipulation des nations indigènes dressées les unes contre les autres, la signature d’accords systématiquement violés, l’enferment des autochtones dans des réserves racistes, l’assimilation forcée, l’acculturation, la corruption, leur dépendance aux logiques capitalistes…

      Le mythe colonialiste du « nouveau monde » est taillé en pièces par l’autrice. Ce récit évoque un continent vide et habité par des sauvages avant l’arrivée des Européen ; ces derniers s’émerveillent, par exemple, de la présence de « bois ouverts », estimant qu’il s’agissait d’une configuration caractéristique de l’Amérique du nord, sans voir que ce paysage n’était rien d’autre que la résultante du rapport que les peuples indigènes entretiennent avec la nature.

      L’autrice remet en cause le contenu du mythe fondateur états-unien qui fait de cette nation, se constituant sur le colonialisme le plus brutal, une nation exceptionnelle. On glorifie l’appropriation du continent par une sorte de délire mystique alors que la création des États-Unis est directement liée à l’émergence du capitalisme et de ses contingences de développement économique.

      Outre son intérêt pour la restitution historique de faits qui semblent méconnus au pays de l’oncle Sam, l’ouvrage propose une réflexion assez approfondie sur les considérants idéologiques structurant l’imaginaire états-unien encore aujourd’hui. Ce qui constitue la seconde partie de l’ouvrage.

      On voit comment, à partir de fables nationales telles que celle du « destin manifeste », on construit un mythe selon lequel les États unis est une nation prédestinée à conquérir les territoires « d’un océan à l’autre ». Le pays est composé « d’exceptionnelles entités » eu égard à l’influence calviniste des premiers colons. De ce fait, la fin justifiant les moyens, rien n’est plus ordinaire que d’y entendre des voix conduite à vanter « les conséquence positives de la colonisation ».

      Enfin, Roxane Dunbar-Ortiz explique comment la guerre permanente contre les peuples autochtones a construit une logique militarise omniprésente, encore aujourd’hui, dans l’idéologie dominante de ce pays. Le militarisme états-unien sert de justificatif à la politique impérialiste conduite dans le monde entier. Il est rappelé, aussi, en quoi le deuxième amendement de la constitution (sur le port d’arme) en est tributaire.

      L’autrice explique comment le passé colonial contre les nations indigènes, a directement structuré des concepts militaires, encore mis en pratique à notre époque par les États-Unis dans leur politique impérialiste (guerres du Vietnam, d’Irak, etc.). Les termes en usage pour définir les tactiques guerrières pour exterminer les nations indigènes lors de le « conquête de l’Ouest » tels que « guerre totale », « guerre irrégulière » ou « guerre de contre-insurrection » font encore partie du vocabulaire des militaires états-uniens d’aujourd’hui. On apprend, enfin que, bien au-delà des frontières du continent américain, le terme de « pays indiens » est encore employé encore de nos jours, par l’administration militaire États-unienne pour désigner une zone située derrière les lignes ennemies.

    • Un extrait de la conclusion de Contre-histoire des États-Unis, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz :

      https://www.salon.com/2014/10/13/north_america_is_a_crime_scene_the_untold_history_of_america

      North America is a crime scene: The untold history of America this Columbus Day
      The founding myth of the United States is a lie. It is time to re-examine our ruthless past — and present
      By Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
      Published October 13, 2014 5:45PM (EDT)

      Excerpted from “An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States”

      That the continued colonization of American Indian nations, peoples, and lands provides the United States the economic and material resources needed to cast its imperialist gaze globally is a fact that is simultaneously obvious within—and yet continually obscured by—what is essentially a settler colony’s national construction of itself as an ever more perfect multicultural, multiracial democracy. . . . [T]he status of American Indians as sovereign nations colonized by the United States continues to haunt and inflect its raison d’etre. —Jodi Byrd

      The conventional narrative of U.S. history routinely segregates the “Indian wars” as a subspecialization within the dubious category “the West.” Then there are the westerns, those cheap novels, movies, and television shows that nearly every American imbibed with mother’s milk and that by the mid-twentieth century were popular in every corner of the world. The architecture of US world dominance was designed and tested by this period of continental U.S. militarism, which built on the previous hundred years and generated its own innovations in total war. The opening of the twenty-first century saw a new, even more brazen form of U.S. militarism and imperialism explode on the world scene when the election of George W. Bush turned over control of U.S. foreign policy to a long-gestating neoconservative and warmongering faction of the Pentagon and its civilian hawks. Their subsequent eight years of political control included two major military invasions and hundreds of small wars employing U.S. Special Forces around the globe, establishing a template that continued after their political power waned.

      Injun Country

      One highly regarded military analyst stepped forward to make the connections between the “Indian wars” and what he considered the country’s bright imperialist past and future. Robert D. Kaplan, in his 2005 book Imperial Grunts, presented several case studies that he considered highly successful operations: Yemen, Colombia, Mongolia, and the Philippines, in addition to ongoing complex projects in the Horn of Africa, Afghanistan, and Iraq. While US citizens and many of their elected representatives called for ending the US military interventions they knew about—including Iraq and Afghanistan—Kaplan hailed protracted counterinsurgencies in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and the Pacific. He presented a guide for the U.S. controlling those areas of the world based on its having achieved continental dominance in North America by means of counterinsurgency and employing total and unlimited war.

      Kaplan, a meticulous researcher and influential writer born in 1952 in New York City, wrote for major newspapers and magazines before serving as “chief geopolitical strategist” for the private security think tank Stratfor. Among other prestigious posts, he has been a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, D.C., and a member of the Defense Policy Board, a federal advisory committee to the US Department of Defense. In 2011, Foreign Policy magazine named Kaplan as one of the world’s “top 100 global thinkers.” Author of numerous best-selling books, including Balkan Ghosts and Surrender or Starve, Kaplan became one of the principal intellectual boosters for U.S. power in the world through the tried-and-true “American way of war.” This is the way of war dating to the British-colonial period that military historian John Grenier called a combination of “unlimited war and irregular war,” a military tradition “that accepted, legitimized, and encouraged attacks upon and the destruction of noncombatants, villages and agricultural resources . . . in shockingly violent campaigns to achieve their goals of conquest.”

      Kaplan sums up his thesis in the prologue to Imperial Grunts, which he subtitles “Injun Country”:

      By the turn of the twenty-first century the United States military had already appropriated the entire earth, and was ready to flood the most obscure areas of it with troops at a moment’s notice.

      The Pentagon divided the planet into five area commands—similar to the way that the Indian Country of the American West had been divided in the mid-nineteenth century by the U.S. Army. . . . [A]ccording to the soldiers and marines I met on the ground in far-flung corners of the earth, the comparison with the nineteenth century was . . . apt. “Welcome to Injun Country” was the refrain I heard from troops from Colombia to the Philippines, including Afghanistan and Iraq. To be sure, the problem for the American military was less [Islamic] fundamentalism than anarchy. The War on Terrorism was really about taming the frontier.

      Kaplan goes on to ridicule “elites in New York and Washington” who debate imperialism in “grand, historical terms,” while individuals from all the armed services interpret policy according to the particular circumstances they face and are indifferent to or unaware of the fact that they are part of an imperialist project. This book shows how colonialism and imperialism work.

      Kaplan challenges the concept of manifest destiny, arguing that “it was not inevitable that the United States should have an empire in the western part of the continent.” Rather, he argues, western empire was brought about by “small groups of frontiersmen, separated from each other by great distances.” Here Kaplan refers to what Grenier calls settler “rangers,” destroying Indigenous towns and fields and food supplies. Although Kaplan downplays the role of the U.S. Army compared to the settler vigilantes, which he equates to the modern Special Forces, he acknowledges that the regular army provided lethal backup for settler counterinsurgency in slaughtering the buffalo, the food supply of Plains peoples, as well as making continuous raids on settlements to kill or confine the families of the Indigenous fighters. Kaplan summarizes the genealogy of U.S. militarism today:

      Whereas the average American at the dawn of the new millennium found patriotic inspiration in the legacies of the Civil War and World War II, when the evils of slavery and fascism were confronted and vanquished, for many commissioned and noncommissioned officers the U.S. Army’s defining moment was fighting the “Indians.”

      The legacy of the Indian wars was palpable in the numerous military bases spread across the South, the Middle West, and particularly the Great Plains: that vast desert and steppe comprising the Army’s historical “heartland,” punctuated by such storied outposts as Forts Hays, Kearney, Leavenworth, Riley, and Sill. Leavenworth, where the Oregon and Santa Fe trails separated, was now the home of the Army’s Command and General Staff College; Riley, the base of George Armstrong Custer’s 7th Cavalry, now that of the 1st Infantry Division; and Sill, where Geronimo lived out the last years of his life, the headquarters of the U.S. Artillery. . . .

      While microscopic in size, it was the fast and irregular military actions against the Indians, memorialized in bronze and oil by Remington, that shaped the nature of American nationalism.

      Although Kaplan relies principally on the late-nineteenth-century source of US counterinsurgency, in a footnote he reports what he learned at the Airborne Special Operations Museum in Fayetteville, North Carolina: “It is a small but interesting fact that members of the 101st Airborne Division, in preparation for their parachute drop on D-Day, shaved themselves in Mohawk style and applied war paint on their faces.” This takes us back to the pre-independence colonial wars and then through US independence and the myth popularized by The Last of the Mohicans.

      Kaplan debunks the argument that the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, brought the United States into a new era of warfare and prompted it to establish military bases around the world. Prior to 2001, Kaplan rightly observes, the US Army’s Special Operations Command had been carrying out maneuvers since the 1980s in “170 countries per year, with an average of nine ‘quiet professionals’ on each mission. America’s reach was long; its involvement in the obscurest states protean. Rather than the conscript army of citizen soldiers that fought World War II, there was now a professional military that, true to other imperial forces throughout history, enjoyed the soldiering life for its own sake.”

      On October 13, 2011, testifying before the Armed Services Committee of the US House of Representatives, General Martin Dempsey stated: “I didn’t become the chairman of the Joint Chiefs to oversee the decline of the Armed Forces of the United States, and an end state that would have this nation and its military not be a global power. . . . That is not who we are as a nation.”

      The Return of Legalized Torture

      Bodies—tortured bodies, sexually violated bodies, imprisoned bodies, dead bodies—arose as a primary topic in the first years of the George W. Bush administration following the September 2001 attacks with a war of revenge against Afghanistan and the overthrow of the government of Iraq. Afghans resisting U.S. forces and others who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time were taken into custody, and most of them were sent to a hastily constructed prison facility on the U.S. military base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, on land the United States appropriated in its 1898 war against Cuba. Rather than bestowing the status of prisoner of war on the detainees, which would have given them certain rights under the Geneva Conventions, they were designated as “unlawful combatants,” a status previously unknown in the annals of Western warfare. As such, the detainees were subjected to torture by U.S. interrogators and shamelessly monitored by civilian psychologists and medical personnel.

      In response to questions and condemnations from around the globe, a University of California international law professor, John C. Yoo, on leave to serve as assistant U.S. attorney general in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, penned in March 2003 what became the infamous “Torture Memo.” Not much was made at the time of one of the precedents Yoo used to defend the designation “unlawful combatant,” the US Supreme Court’s 1873 opinion in Modoc Indian Prisoners.

      In 1872, a group of Modoc men led by Kintpuash, also known as Captain Jack, attempted to return to their own country in Northern California after the U.S. Army had rounded them up and forced them to share a reservation in Oregon. The insurgent group of fifty-three was surrounded by U.S. troops and Oregon militiamen and forced to take refuge in the barren and rugged lava beds around Mount Lassen, a dormant volcano, a part of their ancestral homeland that they knew every inch of. More than a thousand troops commanded by General Edward R. S. Canby, a former Civil War general, attempted to capture the resisters, but had no success as the Modocs engaged in effective guerrilla warfare. Before the Civil War, Canby had built his military career fighting in the Second Seminole War and later in the invasion of Mexico. Posted to Utah on the eve of the Civil War, he had led attacks against the Navajos, and then began his Civil War service in New Mexico. Therefore, Canby was a seasoned Indian killer. In a negotiating meeting between the general and Kintpuash, the Modoc leader killed the general and the other commissioners when they would allow only for surrender. In response, the United States sent another former Civil War general in with more than a thousand additional soldiers as reinforcements, and in April 1873 these troops attacked the Modoc stronghold, this time forcing the Indigenous fighters to flee. After four months of fighting that cost the United States almost $500,000—equal to nearly $10 million currently—and the lives of more than four hundred of its soldiers and a general, the nationwide backlash against the Modocs was vengeful. Kintpuash and several other captured Modocs were imprisoned and then hanged at Alcatraz, and the Modoc families were scattered and incarcerated on reservations. Kintpuash’s corpse was embalmed and exhibited at circuses around the country. The commander of the army’s Pacific Military Division at the time, Lieutenant General John M. Schofield, wrote of the Modoc War in his memoir, Forty-Six Years in the Army: “If the innocent could be separated from the guilty, plague, pestilence, and famine would not be an unjust punishment for the crimes committed in this country against the original occupants of the soil.”

      Drawing a legal analogy between the Modoc prisoners and the Guantánamo detainees, Assistant U.S. Attorney General Yoo employed the legal category of homo sacer—in Roman law, a person banned from society, excluded from its legal protections but still subject to the sovereign’s power. Anyone may kill a homo sacer without it being considered murder. As Jodi Byrd notes, “One begins to understand why John C. Yoo’s infamous March 14, 2003, torture memos cited the 1865 Military Commissions and the 1873 The Modoc Indian Prisoners legal opinions in order to articulate executive power in declaring the state of exception, particularly when The Modoc Indian Prisoners opinion explicitly marks the Indian combatant as homo sacer to the United States.” To buttress his claim, Yoo quoted from the 1873 Modoc Indian Prisoners opinion:

      It cannot be pretended that a United States soldier is guilty of murder if he kills a public enemy in battle, which would be the case if the municipal law were in force and applicable to an act committed under such circumstances. All the laws and customs of civilized warfare may not be applicable to an armed conflict with the Indian tribes upon our western frontier; but the circumstances attending the assassination of Canby [Army general] and Thomas [U.S. peace commissioner] are such as to make their murder as much a violation of the laws of savage as of civilized warfare, and the Indians concerned in it fully understood the baseness and treachery of their act.

      Byrd points out that, according to this line of thinking, anyone who could be defined as “Indian” could thus be killed legally, and they also could be held responsible for crimes they committed against any US soldier. “As a result, citizens of American Indian nations become in this moment the origin of the stateless terrorist combatant within U.S. enunciations of sovereignty.”

      Ramped Up Militarization

      The Chagos Archipelago comprises more than sixty small coral islands isolated in the Indian Ocean halfway between Africa and Indonesia, a thousand miles south of the nearest continent, India. Between 1968 and 1973, the United States and Britain, the latter the colonial administrator, forcibly removed the indigenous inhabitants of the islands, the Chagossians. Most of the two thousand deportees ended up more than a thousand miles away in Mauritius and the Seychelles, where they were thrown into lives of poverty and forgotten. The purpose of this expulsion was to create a major U.S. military base on one of the Chagossian islands, Diego Garcia. As if being rounded up and removed from their homelands in the name of global security were not cruel enough, before being deported the Chagossians had to watch as British agents and U.S. troops herded their pet dogs into sealed sheds where they were gassed and burned. As David Vine writes in his chronicle of this tragedy:

      “The base on Diego Garcia has become one of the most secretive and powerful U.S. military facilities in the world, helping to launch the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq (twice), threatening Iran, China, Russia, and nations from southern Africa to southeast Asia, host to a secret CIA detention center for high-profile terrorist suspects, and home to thousands of U.S. military personnel and billions of dollars in deadly weaponry.”

      The Chagossians are not the only indigenous people around the world that the US military has displaced. The military established a pattern during and after the Vietnam War of forcibly removing indigenous peoples from sites deemed strategic for the placement of military bases. The peoples of the Bikini Atoll in the South Pacific and Puerto Rico’s Vieques Island are perhaps the best-known examples, but there were also the Inughuit of Thule, Greenland, and the thousands of Okinawans and Indigenous peoples of Micronesia. During the harsh deportation of the Micronesians in the 1970s, the press took some notice. In response to one reporter’s question, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said of the Micronesians: “There are only ninety thousand people out there. Who gives a damn?” This is a statement of permissive genocide.

      By the beginning of the twenty-first century, the United States operated more than 900 military bases around the world, including 287 in Germany, 130 in Japan, 106 in South Korea, 89 in Italy, 57 in the British Isles, 21 in Portugal, and 19 in Turkey. The number also comprised additional bases or installations located in Aruba, Australia, Djibouti, Egypt, Israel, Singapore, Thailand, Kyrgyzstan, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Crete, Sicily, Iceland, Romania, Bulgaria, Honduras, Colombia, and Cuba (Guantánamo Bay), among many other locations in some 150 countries, along with those recently added in Iraq and Afghanistan.

      In her book The Militarization of Indian Country, Anishinaabe activist and writer Winona LaDuke analyzes the continuing negative effects of the military on Native Americans, considering the consequences wrought on Native economy, land, future, and people, especially Native combat veterans and their families. Indigenous territories in New Mexico bristle with nuclear weapons storage, and Shoshone and Paiute territories in Nevada are scarred by decades of aboveground and underground nuclear weapons testing. The Navajo Nation and some New Mexico Pueblos have experienced decades of uranium strip mining, the pollution of water, and subsequent deadly health effects. “I am awed by the impact of the military on the world and on Native America,” LaDuke writes. “It is pervasive.”

      Political scientist Cynthia Enloe, who specializes in US foreign policy and the military, observes that US culture has become even more militarized since the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Her analysis of this trend draws on a feminist perspective:

      Militarization . . . [is] happening at the individual level, when a woman who has a son is persuaded that the best way she can be a good mother is to allow the military recruiter to recruit her son so her son will get off the couch. When she is persuaded to let him go, even if reluctantly, she’s being militarized. She’s not as militarized as somebody who is a Special Forces soldier, but she’s being militarized all the same. Somebody who gets excited because a jet bomber flies over the football stadium to open the football season and is glad that he or she is in the stadium to see it, is being militarized. So militarization is not just about the question “do you think the military is the most important part of the state?” (although obviously that matters). It’s not just “do you think that the use of collective violence is the most effective way to solve social problems?”—which is also a part of militarization. But it’s also about ordinary, daily culture, certainly in the United States.

      As John Grenier notes, however, the cultural aspects of militarization are not new; they have deep historical roots, reaching into the nation’s British-colonial past and continuing through unrelenting wars of conquest and ethnic cleansing over three centuries.

      “Beyond its sheer military utility, Americans also found a use for the first way of war in the construction of an ‘American identity.’. . . [T]he enduring appeal of the romanticized myth of the ‘settlement’ (not the conquest) of the frontier, either by ‘actual’ men such as Robert Rogers or Daniel Boone or fictitious ones like Nathaniel Bumppo of James Fenimore Cooper’s creation, points to what D. H. Lawrence called the ‘myth of the essential white American.’”

      The astronomical number of firearms owned by U.S. civilians, with the Second Amendment as a sacred mandate, is also intricately related to militaristic culture. Everyday life and the culture in general are damaged by ramped-up militarization, and this includes academia, particularly the social sciences, with psychologists and anthropologists being recruited as advisors to the military. Anthropologist David H. Price, in his indispensable book Weaponizing Anthropology, remarks that “anthropology has always fed between the lines of war.” Anthropology was born of European and U.S. colonial wars. Price, like Enloe, sees an accelerated pace of militarization in the early twenty-first century: “Today’s weaponization of anthropology and other social sciences has been a long time coming, and post-9/11 America’s climate of fear coupled with reductions in traditional academic funding provided the conditions of a sort of perfect storm for the militarization of the discipline and the academy as a whole.”

      In their ten-part cable television documentary series and seven-hundred-page companion book The Untold History of the United States, filmmaker Oliver Stone and historian Peter Kuznick ask: “Why does our country have military bases in every region of the globe, totaling more than a thousand by some counts? Why does the United States spend as much money on its military as the rest of the world combined? Why does it still possess thousands of nuclear weapons, many on hair-trigger alert, even though no nation poses an imminent threat?” These are key questions. Stone and Kuznick condemn the situation but do not answer the questions. The authors see the post–World War II development of the United States into the world’s sole superpower as a sharp divergence from the founders’ original intent and historical development prior to the mid-twentieth century. They quote an Independence Day speech by President John Quincy Adams in which he condemned British colonialism and claimed that the United States “goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy.” Stone and Kuznick fail to mention that the United States at the time was invading, subjecting, colonizing, and removing the Indigenous farmers from their land, as it had since its founding and as it would through the nineteenth century. In ignoring that fundamental basis for US development as an imperialist power, they do not see that overseas empire was the logical outcome of the course the United States chose at its founding.

      North America is a Crime Scene

      Jodi Byrd writes: “The story of the new world is horror, the story of America a crime.” It is necessary, she argues, to start with the origin of the United States as a settler-state and its explicit intention to occupy the continent. These origins contain the historical seeds of genocide. Any true history of the United States must focus on what has happened to (and with) Indigenous peoples—and what still happens. It’s not just past colonialist actions but also “the continued colonization of American Indian nations, peoples, and lands” that allows the United States “to cast its imperialist gaze globally” with “what is essentially a settler colony’s national construction of itself as an ever more perfect multicultural, multiracial democracy,” while “the status of American Indians as sovereign nations colonized by the United States continues to haunt and inflect its raison d’etre.” Here Byrd quotes Lakota scholar Elizabeth Cook-Lynn, who spells out the connection between the “Indian wars” and the Iraq War:

      The current mission of the United States to become the center of political enlightenment to be taught to the rest of the world began with the Indian wars and has become the dangerous provocation of this nation’s historical intent. The historical connection between the Little Big Horn event and the “uprising” in Baghdad must become part of the political dialogue of America if the fiction of decolonization is to happen and the hoped for deconstruction of the colonial story is to come about.

      A “race to innocence” is what occurs when individuals assume that they are innocent of complicity in structures of domination and oppression. This concept captures the understandable assumption made by new immigrants or children of recent immigrants to any country. They cannot be responsible, they assume, for what occurred in their adopted country’s past. Neither are those who are already citizens guilty, even if they are descendants of slave owners, Indian killers, or Andrew Jackson himself. Yet, in a settler society that has not come to terms with its past, whatever historical trauma was entailed in settling the land affects the assumptions and behavior of living generations at any given time, including immigrants and the children of recent immigrants.

      In the United States the legacy of settler colonialism can be seen in the endless wars of aggression and occupations; the trillions spent on war machinery, military bases, and personnel instead of social services and quality public education; the gross profits of corporations, each of which has greater resources and funds than more than half the countries in the world yet pay minimal taxes and provide few jobs for US citizens; the repression of generation after generation of activists who seek to change the system; the incarceration of the poor, particularly descendants of enslaved Africans; the individualism, carefully inculcated, that on the one hand produces self-blame for personal failure and on the other exalts ruthless dog-eat-dog competition for possible success, even though it rarely results; and high rates of suicide, drug abuse, alcoholism, sexual violence against women and children, homelessness, dropping out of school, and gun violence.

      These are symptoms, and there are many more, of a deeply troubled society, and they are not new. The large and influential civil rights, student, labor, and women’s movements of the 1950s through the 1970s exposed the structural inequalities in the economy and the historical effects of more than two centuries of slavery and brutal genocidal wars waged against Indigenous peoples. For a time, US society verged on a process of truth seeking regarding past atrocities, making demands to end aggressive wars and to end poverty, witnessed by the huge peace movement of the 1970s and the War on Poverty, affirmative action, school busing, prison reform, women’s equity and reproductive rights, promotion of the arts and humanities, public media, the Indian Self-Determination Act, and many other initiatives.

      A more sophisticated version of the race to innocence that helps perpetuate settler colonialism began to develop in social movement theory in the 1990s, popularized in the work of Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri. Commonwealth, the third volume in a trilogy, is one of a number of books in an academic fad of the early twenty-first century seeking to revive the Medieval European concept of the commons as an aspiration for contemporary social movements. Most writings about the commons barely mention the fate of Indigenous peoples in relation to the call for all land to be shared. Two Canadian scholar-activists, Nandita Sharma and Cynthia Wright, for example, do not mince words in rejecting Native land claims and sovereignty, characterizing them as xenophobic elitism. They see Indigenous claims as “regressive neo-racism in light of the global diasporas arising from oppression around the world.”

      Cree scholar Lorraine Le Camp calls this kind of erasure of Indigenous peoples in North America “terranullism,” harking back to the characterization, under the Doctrine of Discovery, of purportedly vacant lands as terra nullis. This is a kind of no-fault history. From the theory of a liberated future of no borders and nations, of a vague commons for all, the theorists obliterate the present and presence of Indigenous nations struggling for their liberation from states of colonialism. Thereby, Indigenous rhetoric and programs for decolonization, nationhood, and sovereignty are, according to this project, rendered invalid and futile. From the Indigenous perspective, as Jodi Byrd writes, “any notion of the commons that speaks for and as indigenous as it advocates transforming indigenous governance or incorporating indigenous peoples into a multitude that might then reside on those lands forcibly taken from indigenous peoples does nothing to disrupt the genocidal and colonialist intent of the initial and now repeated historical process.”

      Excerpted from “An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States” by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz (Beacon Press, 2014). Copyright 2014 by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.

      By Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz

    • Je trouve que c’est bien traduit ; en tous cas, agréable à lire. Le traducteur a aussi écrit l’introduction.

      Autre chose, qui n’a rien à voir avec la traduction... maintenant que j’y pense ; j’ai oublié de le mettre dans ma présentation : le seul reproche que je ferais c’est l’absence de cartes, à l’exception de la reproduction, à la fin de l’ouvrage, d’un document à peine lisible. Dommage cela aurait été bien utile.

    • pour ce qui est devenu le Québec, Marie-Christine Lévesque et Serge Bouchard, tombés en amour pour les Innus, décrivent dans Le peuple rieur, Hommage à mes amis innus (ethnographie qui ne propose pas une histoire d’ensemble), un bref moment de rapport plutôt égalitaire, à l’arrivée de Champlain, où l’établissement de comptoirs commerciaux isolés, rares, occasionne des échanges (traite des fourrures), et durant lequel les Innus sont admirés par les arrivants pour leurs capacités cynégétiques ainsi que leur manière de réussir à subsister sur un territoire que les arrivants voient comme principalement hostile. mais c’était avant qu’ils deviennent des ostie de sauvages.
      #peuples_premiers #nations_sans_état

    • Aussi, une #BD ...
      Une histoire populaire de l’empire américain

      Depuis le génocide des Indiens jusqu’à la guerre en Irak en passant par le développement d’un capitalisme financier globalisé, les États- Unis se sont constitués au fil des siècles comme un empire incontournable. Peu à peu, leur histoire est devenue mythologie, mais ce livre propose le récit d’une nation, un récit qui a réussi à changer le regard des Américains sur eux-mêmes.

      https://www.editions-delcourt.fr/bd/series/serie-une-histoire-populaire-de-l-empire-americian/album-une-histoire-populaire-de-l-empire-americian
      #bande-dessinée #histoire_populaire

      que j’avais signalé ici :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/784696

  • Bekannt durch Filmhit »The Blind Side« : Michael Oher sagt, er sei nie adoptiert worden
    https://www.spiegel.de/panorama/justiz/michael-oher-bekannt-durch-den-film-the-blind-side-sagt-er-sei-nie-adoptiert

    Dans le film The Blind Side c’est une belle histoire pleine d’empathie sur une riche famille charitable blanche qui adopte un jeune noir d’une famille précaire et l’encourage à devenir une star de foioball américain. En réalité le jeune homme n"a jamais été adopté et ses beau parents ont signé des contrat lucratifs en son nom et ont gardé des sommes importantes de ses revenus pour leurs propres enfants. Ils l’ont fait travailler comme s’il était leur esclave surdoué. Bien entendu ils ne veulent rien savoir. "On l’aimera toujours" disent-ils.

    25.8.2023 - Weiße Familie nimmt schwarzes Ghetto-Kind auf – und macht es zum Footballprofi: Der Film über diese wahre Geschichte brachte Sandra Bullock einen Oscar ein. Nun geht der Junge von damals gegen die Pflegeeltern vor.

    Die Mutter drogenabhängig, der Vater im Knast: Michael Oher wächst in schwierigen Verhältnissen auf. Gefördert von einer Pflegemutter reift der Jugendliche zum Football-Spieler. Dass dies der Stoff für feinstes Wohlfühlkino sein kann, erkannte auch Hollywood. »Blind Side – Die große Chance« (im Original »The Blind Side«) wurde 2009 zum Hit, Sandra Bullock in der Rolle der Pflegemutter Leigh Anne Tuohy gewann für ihre Darstellung einen Oscar – und Oher wenige Jahre später den Super Bowl.

    Eine Geschichte mit Happy End also? Womöglich nicht. Der heute 37 Jahre alte Oher hatte den Film und die Darstellung seiner Person darin schon früh kritisiert. Nun legt er nach: Am Montag hat Oher vor einem Gericht in Tennessee eine Petition eingereicht, in der es übereinstimmenden Medienberichten zufolge heißt: Oher sei nie rechtmäßig von den Tuohys adoptiert worden. Man habe ihn vielmehr angelogen und ihn so dazu gebracht, Papier zu unterschreiben, welche die Tuohys nicht zu seinen Adoptiveltern, sondern lediglich zu seinen Vormündern machen würde – damit diese Millionen mit seiner Lebensgeschichte verdienen konnten.

    »Die Lüge von Michaels Adoption ist eine Lüge, anhand derer sich Leigh Anne Tuohy und Sean Tuohy auf Kosten ihres Mündels bereichert haben«, heißt es demnach in der Akte. So hätten die Tuohys nach Ohers Unterschrift zahlreiche Geschäfte abgeschlossen, bei denen Geld auf die Konten des Paares und ihrer beiden inzwischen erwachsenen leiblichen Kinder geflossen sei. Oher, der der Akte zufolge erst nach seinem 18. Geburtstag das Dokument über die Vormundschaft unterzeichnet habe, habe nichts davon gesehen.

    »Total daneben«

    Ein Anwalt der Tuohys teilte der Nachrichtenagentur AP mit, man werde eine Antwort auf die Anschuldigungen vor Gericht einreichen. Sean Tuohy sagte »The Daily Memphian«: »Wir sind am Boden zerstört. Der Gedanke, dass wir mit einem unserer Kinder Geld verdienen würden, ist erschütternd. Aber wir werden Michael mit 37 genauso lieben, wie wir ihn mit 16 geliebt haben.«

    Oher war nie glücklich mit dem Film über sein Leben. Niemand habe sich mit ihm unterhalten, sagte er damals, kein Regisseur, kein Schauspieler, keine PR-Abteilung. Verarmter Junge aus verwahrlostem Elternhaus, adoptiert von reichen Weißen, schafft es in die NFL – das habe den Machern offenbar als Basis genügt. Vor allem der Football-Teil habe ihm nicht gefallen, so Oher damals. Die Darstellung seiner Person sei »total daneben« gewesen. »Ich habe das Spiel von klein auf gelernt. Niemand musste mir beibringen, wie man blockt.« Oher spielt dabei auf eine der Schlüsselszenen des Films an, in dem Bullock als Football-Fan Tuohy dem Jungen zeigt, wie man sich einem Gegner erfolgreich in den Weg stellt.
    Schadensersatz und Gewinnanteil

    Nun also die Klage. Warum erst jetzt? Oher habe die sogenannte Lüge erst im Februar 2023 entdeckt. Bis zu diesem Zeitpunkt sei er davon ausgegangen, »dass die Vormundschaft ihn zu einem Mitglied der Tuohy-Familie machen würde, während sie ihm in Wirklichkeit keine familiäre Beziehung zu den Tuohys verschaffte«, heißt es in der Akte. »Zu keinem Zeitpunkt haben die Tuohys Michael darüber informiert, dass sie die letztendliche Kontrolle über alle seine Verträge haben würden, und infolgedessen hat Michael nicht verstanden, dass er, wenn die Vormundschaft bewilligt wurde, sein Recht, für sich selbst Verträge abzuschließen, mit seiner Unterschrift aufgab«, heißt es in der Petition.

    #racisme #exploitation #adoption #USA

  • Un mur flottant équipé de « scies circulaires » à la frontière américano-mexicaine
    https://observers.france24.com/fr/am%C3%A9riques/20230811-un-mur-flottant-%C3%A9quip%C3%A9-de-scies-circulaires-%


    Finalement, on n’a plus besoin des nazis comme figure universelle de la #dégueulasserie #barbare humaine ordinaire.

    Des vidéos diffusées sur les réseaux sociaux le 8 août 2023 permettent d’observer de plus près la barrière frontalière flottante installée par le gouverneur du Texas, Greg Abbott, et destinée à empêcher les migrants clandestins d’entrer aux États-Unis. Ces installations controversées, près desquelles un corps a récemment été retrouvé, sont équipées de disques métalliques pointus fabriqués par Cochrane Global.

  • Alla ricerca del cobalto sulle Alpi

    È un elemento importante per la realizzazione delle batterie delle auto elettriche. Il cobalto viene estratto però soprattutto nella Repubblica Democratica del Congo, una realtà travolta dalla corruzione e instabile dal punto di vista militare e politico. Per “aggirare” la possibile penuria della fornitura di un componente essenziale dello sviluppo di una economia realizzata con fonti rinnovabili, le nazioni post-industriali e industrializzate cercano il Cobalto altrove, in territori guidati da governi più stabili e dove è più solida la certezza del diritto.

    Vecchie miniere di cobalto dismesse perché poco remunerative tornano improvvisamente interessanti. Una di queste è situata tra Torino e il confine con la Francia, ancora in territorio piemontese.

    Tra la necessità di tutelare l’ambiente e l’opportunità economica offerta, istituzioni e popolazione si interrogano sul presente e il futuro del territorio interessato dal possibile nuovo sviluppo minerario.

    https://www.rsi.ch/rete-due/programmi/cultura/laser/Alla-ricerca-del-cobalto-sulle-Alpi-16169557.html?f=podcast-shows

    #extractivisme #Alpes #cobalt #Piémont #Italie #terres_rares #Balme #Altamin #Barmes #Punta_Corna #Valli_di_Lanzo #mines #exploitation #peur #résistance #Berceto #Sestri_Levante #lithium #souveraineté_extractive #green-washing #green_mining #extraction_verte #transition_énergétique #NIMBY #Usseglio #Ussel

    Le chercheur #Alberto_Valz_Gris (https://www.polito.it/en/staff?p=alberto.valzgris) parle de la stratégie de l’Union européenne pour les #matières_premières_critiques :
    #Matières_premières_critiques : garantir des #chaînes_d'approvisionnement sûres et durables pour l’avenir écologique et numérique de l’UE
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1013265

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur l’#extraction de #terres_rares dans les #Alpes :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1013289

    • Caccia al cobalto sulle Alpi piemontesi

      Viaggio in provincia di Torino dove una multinazionale ha nel mirino la creazione di una miniera destinata ad alimentare le nuove batterie per i veicoli elettrici.

      Il boom delle auto elettriche trascina la ricerca mineraria in Europa. Noi siamo stati in Piemonte dove una società australiana spera di aprire una miniera di cobalto, uno dei metalli indispensabili per produrre le più moderne batterie. Il progetto è ancora in una fase preliminare. Non si vede nulla di concreto, per ora. Ma se siamo qui è perché quanto sta accadendo in questa terra alpina apre tutta una serie d’interrogativi su quella che – non senza contraddizioni – è stata definita “transizione ecologica”.

      Balme, alta #Val_d’Ala, Piemonte. Attorno a noi i boschi sono colorati dall’autunno mentre, più in alto, le tonalità del grigio tratteggiano le cime che si estendono fino in Francia. Un luogo magico, non toccato dal turismo di massa, ma apprezzato dagli appassionati di montagna. Tutto potrebbe però cambiare. Nelle viscere di queste rocce si nasconde un tesoro che potrebbe scombussolare questa bellezza: il cobalto. La società australiana Altamin vuole procedere a delle esplorazioni minerarie sui due versanti della Punta Corna. Obiettivo: sondare il sottosuolo in vista di aprire una miniera da cui estrarre questa materia prima sempre più strategica. Il cobalto è infatti un minerale indispensabile per la fabbricazione delle batterie destinate alle auto elettriche o ad immagazzinare l’energia prodotta da fonti rinnovabili. Tecnologie dette verdi, ma che hanno un lato grigio: l’estrazione mineraria.

      Oggi, circa il 70% del cobalto mondiale proviene dalla Repubblica democratica del Congo (Rdc), dove la corsa a questo metallo, guidata dalla Cina, alimenta la corruzione e genera grossi problemi sociali e ambientali. Di recente, un po’ in tutta Europa, si sta sempre più sondando il terreno in cerca di nuovi filoni che potrebbero ridurre la dipendenza dall’estero di questo ed altri minerali classificati dall’Ue come “critici”. Ecco quindi che queste valli piemontesi sono diventate terreno di caccia di imprese che hanno fiutato il nuovo business. Siamo così partiti anche noi in questa regione. Alla ricerca del cobalto e all’ascolto delle voci da un territorio che – suo malgrado – si trova oggi al centro della nuova corsa mondiale all’accaparramento delle risorse.

      Balme dice no

      «Siamo totalmente contrari. In primis perché non siamo stati coinvolti in nessun tipo di dialogo. Siamo poi convinti che l’estrazione di minerali non sia l’attività adatta per lo sviluppo del nostro territorio». #Gianni_Castagneri è il sindaco di Balme, 110 abitanti, uno dei comuni su cui pende una domanda di ricerca da parte di Altamin. Il primo cittadino ci accoglie nella piccola casa comunale adiacente alla chiesa. È un appassionato di cultura e storia locale e autore di diversi libri. Con dovizia di particolari, ci spiega che anticamente queste erano terre di miniera: «Un po’ tutti i paesi della zona sono sorti grazie allo sfruttamento del ferro. Già nel Settecento, però, veniva estratto del cobalto, il cui pigmento blu era utilizzato per la colorazione di tessuti e ceramiche».

      Dopo quasi un secolo in cui l’attività mineraria è stata abbandonata, qualche anno fa è sbarcata Altamin che ha chiesto e ottenuto i permessi di esplorazione. Secondo le stime della società i giacimenti a ridosso della Punta Corna sarebbero comparabili a quello di Bou Azzer, in Marocco, uno dei più ricchi al mondo di cobalto. «Andando in porto l’intero progetto di Punta Corna si avrà una miniera europea senza precedenti» ha dichiarato un dirigente della società. Affermazione che, qui a Balme, ha suscitato molta preoccupazione.

      Siamo in un piccolo comune alpino, la cui unica attività industriale è l’imbottigliamento d’acqua minerale e un birrificio. Al nostro incontro si aggiungono anche i consiglieri comunali Guido Rocci e Tessiore Umbro. Entrambi sono uomini di montagna, attivi nel turismo. Entrambi sono preoccupati: «Siamo colti alla sprovvista, cerchiamo “cobalto” su Internet ed escono solo cose negative, ma abbiamo come l’impressione che la nostra voce non conti proprio nulla».

      Sul tavolo compare una delibera con cui il Comune ha dichiarato la propria contrarietà «a qualsiasi pratica di ricerca e coltivazione mineraria». Le amministrazioni degli ultimi anni hanno orientato lo sviluppo della valle soprattutto verso un turismo sostenibile, vietando ad esempio le attività di eliski: «Noi pensiamo ad un turismo lento – conclude il sindaco – la montagna che proponiamo è aspra, poco adatta allo sfruttamento sciistico in senso moderno. Questa nostra visione ha contribuito in positivo all’economia del villaggio e alla sua preservazione. Ci sembra anacronistico tornare al Medioevo con lo sfruttamento minerario delle nostre montagne».

      Australiani alla conquista

      «Lo sviluppo della mobilità elettrica ha spinto le richieste di permessi di ricerca in Piemonte» ci spiega al telefono un funzionario del settore Polizia mineraria, Cave e Miniere della regione Piemonte. Si tratta dell’ente che, a livello regionale, rilascia le prime autorizzazioni. L’uomo, che preferisce non essere citato, ci dice che per il momento è troppo presto per «creare allarmismi o entusiasmi», ma conferma che, in Piemonte, sono state richieste altre autorizzazioni: «Oltre a Punta Corna, si fanno ricerche in Valsesia e verso la Val d’Ossola» conclude il funzionario. Proprio in Valsesia un’altra società australiana, del gruppo Alligator Energy, ha comunicato di recente di avere iniziato i lavori per un nuovo sondaggio. La zona è definita dall’azienda «ad alto potenziale».

      L’argomento principale delle società minerarie è uno: la necessità di creare una catena di valore delle batterie in Europa: «Punta Corna è centrale per la strategia di Altamin […] e beneficerà della spinta dell’Ue per garantire fonti pulite e locali di metalli nonché degli investimenti industriali europei negli impianti di produzione di veicoli elettrici e batterie» si legge in un recente documento destinato agli azionisti. Altamin ricorda come, in prospettiva, l’operazione genererebbe una sinergia produttiva col progetto Italvolt dell’imprenditore svedese Lars Calstrom. L’uomo vuole costruire una nuova grande fabbrica di batterie ad alta capacità presso gli ex stabilimenti Olivetti nella vicina Ivrea.

      Altamin, così come altre società attive nel ramo, non è un gigante minerario. Si tratta di una giovane società capitalizzata alla borsa di Sidney che ha puntato sull’Italia per tentare il colpaccio. Ossia trovare un filone minerario potenzialmente sfruttabile e redditizio, considerato anche l’aumento dei prezzi delle materie prime, soprattutto dei metalli da batteria. Oltre al progetto piemontese, l’azienda è attiva in altre zone d’Italia: in Lombardia ha un progetto di estrazione di zinco, mentre ha presentato domande anche in Liguria, Emilia-Romagna e Lazio. Qui, nell’antica caldera vulcanica del Lago di Bracciano, Altamin e un’altra società australiana, #Vulcan_Energy_Resources, hanno ottenuto delle licenze per cercare del litio, un altro metallo strategico. «L’idea che si sta portando avanti è quella di rivedere vecchi siti minerari anche alla luce delle nuove tecnologie e della risalita del prezzo dei metalli» spiegano da Altamin. Il tutto in uno scenario internazionale, in particolar modo europeo, in cui si cerca di ridurre la dipendenza delle importazioni dall’estero. Questo a loro dire avrebbe molti vantaggi: «Estrarre cobalto qui ridurrebbe al minimo i problemi etici e logistici che si riscontrano attualmente con la maggior parte delle forniture provenienti dalla Rdc». Ma non tutti la pensano così.

      Lo sguardo del geografo

      A Torino, il Politecnico ha sede presso il Castello del Valentino, antica residenza sabauda situata sulla riva del Po. Qui incontriamo il geografo e assegnista di ricerca Alberto Valz Gris che di recente ha messo in luce diverse ombre del progetto Punta Corna e, in generale, dell’impatto della corsa ai minerali critici sulle comunità locali. Per la sua tesi di dottorato, Valz Gris ha studiato le conseguenze socio-ambientali causate dall’estrazione del litio nella regione di Atacama tra Argentina e Cile. Rientrato dal Sudamerica, lo studioso è venuto a conoscenza del progetto minerario a Punta Corna, a due passi da casa, nel “giardino dei torinesi”. Il ricercatore ha così deciso di mettere in evidenza alcune contraddizioni di questa tanto decantata transizione ecologica: «Il cobalto o il litio sono associati a una retorica di sostenibilità in quanto indispensabili alle batterie. In realtà, per come è stata organizzata, questa transizione ecologica, continua a implicare un’estrazione massiva di risorse naturali non rinnovabili e, quindi, il moltiplicarsi di siti estrattivi altamente inquinanti. Ciò non mi sembra molto ecologico».

      In questo senso il ritorno dell’estrazione mineraria su grande scala in Europa non è proprio una buona notizia: «L’estrattivismo non ha mai portato sviluppo e la materialità di questa dinamica investirà in particolare le aree di montagna. Per cui ho forti dubbi sulle promesse su cui si fondano tutti i progetti come quello di Punta Corna, e cioè che accettare il danno ecologico e paesaggistico portato dall’estrazione mineraria si traduca in sviluppo sociale ed economico per chi abita quei territori». Per Alberto Valz Gris, però, opporsi alle miniere europee non significa giustificare l’appropriazione di risorse in altri posti del mondo: «Dobbiamo immaginare alternative tecniche ed economiche che siano realmente al servizio dell’emergenza climatica, per esempio investendo nel riciclo delle risorse già in circolo nel sistema industriale in modo da ridurre al minimo la pressione antropica sugli ecosistemi». Il problema ruota attorno al fatto che «estrarre nuove materie prime dalle viscere della Terra è ad oggi molto meno costoso che non impegnarsi effettivamente nel riciclare quelle già in circolo»; questo vantaggio economico che «impedisce lo sviluppo di una vera economia circolare» è falsato poiché «non vengono mai calcolati i costi sociali e ambientali legati all’estrazione delle materie prime».

      Gli “sherpa” di Altamin

      Usseglio, alta Valle di Viù, Piemonte. Siamo di nuovo in quota, questa volta sul versante Sud della Punta Corna. Anche qui il territorio vive perlopiù di turismo e può contare su una centrale idroelettrica che capta l’acqua dal bacino artificiale più alto d’Europa. Su queste montagne, oltre i 2.500 metri, Altamin ha ottenuto di recente la possibilità di estendere i carotaggi in profondità. I lavori dovrebbero iniziare la primavera prossima. Ciò che non sembra preoccupare il sindaco Pier Mario Grosso: «Pare che ci sia una vena molto interessante, ma per capire se si potrà sfruttarla occorrono altri sondaggi».

      Il primo cittadino ci accoglie nel suo ufficio e ci mostra una cartina appesa alle pareti su cui si legge “miniere di cobalto”: «Erano le vecchie miniere poi abbandonate e su cui ora Altamin vuole fare delle ricerche perché il cobalto è il metallo del futuro». A Usseglio, l’approccio del comune è diverso rispetto a Balme. #Pier_Mario_Grosso è un imprenditore che vende tende e verande in piano. Per lui il progetto di Altamin potrebbe creare sviluppo in valle: «Questa attività porterà senz’altro benefici alla popolazione e aiuterà a combattere lo spopolamento. Sono quindi tendenzialmente favorevole al progetto, a patto che crei posti di lavoro e non sia dannoso per l’ambiente».

      Salutiamo il sindaco e saliamo fino alla frazione di #Margone dove abbiamo appuntamento per visitare un piccolo museo dei minerali. Qui incontriamo #Domenico_Bertino e #Claudio_Balagna, due appassionati mineralogisti che gestiscono questa bella realtà museale. Nelle bacheche scopriamo alcune perle delle #Alpi_Graie, come gli epidoti e la #Lavoisierite, un minerale unico al mondo scovato nella zona. Appese ai muri ci sono delle splendide mappe minerarie dell’800 trovate negli archivi di Stato di Torino. E poi c’è lui, il cobalto. Finalmente lo abbiamo trovato: «È in questa pietra che si chiama #Skutterudite e il cobalto sono questi triangolini di colore metallico, anche se in molti pensano che sia blu» ci spiegano i due ricercatori. Eccolo qui, il minerale strategico tanto agognato che oggi vale circa 52.000 dollari la tonnellata.

      Possiamo osservarlo nei minimi dettagli su un grande schermo collegato ad uno stereoscopio. Sul muro a lato un cartello sovrasta la nuova strumentazione: «Donazione da parte di Altamin». Tra il museo e la società vi è infatti un legame. Più volte, Domenico e Claudio hanno accompagnato in quota i geologi di Altamin a cercare gli ingressi delle vecchie miniere. Sherpa locali di una società che altrimenti non saprebbe muoversi tra gli alti valloni di queste montagne poco frequentate. Non c’è timore nell’ammetterlo e i due, uomini di roccia e legati nell’intimo a questo territorio, non sembrano allarmati: «Noi siamo una sorta di guardiani. Abbiamo ricevuto delle rassicurazioni e l’estrazione, se mai ci sarà, avverrà in galleria e sarà sottoposta a dei controlli. In passato abbiamo avuto le dighe che hanno portato lavoro, ma ora qui non c’è più nessuno e la miniera potrebbe essere una speranza di riportare vita in valle».

      Usseglio fuori stagione è affascinante, ma desolatamente vuota. Le poche persone che abbiamo incontrato in giro erano a un funerale. Il terzo nelle ultime settimane, il che ha fatto scendere il numero di abitanti sotto i duecento. Ma siamo sicuri che una miniera risolverà tutti i problemi di questa realtà montana? E se l’estrattivismo industriale farà planare anche qui la “maledizione delle risorse”? Torniamo a casa pieni di interrogativi a cui non riusciamo ancora a dare risposta. Nel 2023, dopo lo scioglimento delle nevi (sempre se nevicherà) Altamin inizierà i carotaggi in quota. Scopriremo allora se l’operazione Punta Corna avrà un seguito o se franerà nell’oblio. La certezza è che in Piemonte, come del resto in Europa e nel mondo, la caccia grossa a questi nuovi metalli critici continuerà.

      https://www.areaonline.ch/Caccia-al-cobalto-sulle-Alpi-piemontesi-2654a100

  • [A Question Of Listening] # 030 - La #musique est un loisir à part
    https://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/a-question-of-listening/030-la-musique-est-un-loisir-a-part

    Le déclin du marché du disque amorcé au début des années 2000 (en baisse continue depuis – le retour des vinyles, épiphénomène de mode, vintage et éphémère, se chargeant depuis peu de ralentir le mouvement), suivi de celui des téléchargements dès 2013 (après une forte progression), est largement compensé par le développement (exponentiel pendant les premières années) de l’écoute en streaming. Même si on a du mal à comparer (alors qu’on compte dans un premier temps les consommations – les achats, d’albums en particulier, les singles ayant presque disparu depuis les années 1990 –, on inventorie aujourd’hui les usages – le nombre d’écoutes, y compris du même titre, dans une offre où l’éventail de choix dépasse très largement celui des bacs des disquaires), l’écoute de musique continue à progresser, et profite de (...)

    #psychologie_cognitive #gratification #usage #musique,psychologie_cognitive,gratification,usage
    https://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/a-question-of-listening/030-la-musique-est-un-loisir-a-part_16300__1.mp3

  • La guerre des puces | ARTE - YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQXPbTjMH8w

    Rediffusion jusqu’au 13/09/2023

    Depuis la pandémie de Covid-19, les microprocesseurs sont au coeur d’une lutte opposant la Chine, les États-Unis et l’Europe. Nourri d’interviews d’acteurs majeurs du secteur, un décryptage des enjeux de cette nouvelle guerre politique et industrielle.

    Ordinateurs, voitures, smartphones, grille-pain, machines à laver... : les microprocesseurs sont essentiels au fonctionnement des appareils que nous utilisons au quotidien. Leur omniprésence dans nos vies est telle que les pénuries provoquées par la pandémie de Covid-19 ont suscité un vent de panique et une vague d’investissements ciblés aux États-Unis comme en Europe. Après avoir abandonné la fabrication des puces à l’Asie dans les années 1990, les dirigeants occidentaux ont exprimé la volonté de relocaliser au plus vite pour maîtriser leur approvisionnement. En août 2022, la loi « Chips and Science Act » du président américain Joe Biden répondait ainsi au « Chips Act » présenté quelques mois plus tôt par Ursula von der Leyen, la présidente de la Commission européenne. L’objectif de ces deux plans : relancer la production de composants électroniques (les semi-conducteurs) pour peser à nouveau dans ce secteur hautement stratégique. Mais cette reconquête de souveraineté économique est-elle possible ? Les Occidentaux peuvent-ils remettre en cause les fondements mêmes de la mondialisation ?

    Rivalités géopolitiques

    Alors que la pandémie a mis en lumière la dépendance électronique de l’Occident, l’industrie des microprocesseurs cristallise de plus en plus les rivalités entre grandes puissances. Dans un contexte de guerre commerciale entre la Chine et les États-Unis, les deux pays, auxquels se mêle l’Union européenne, se livrent une lutte acharnée pour dominer le marché. De Taïwan à Shanghai en passant par Bruxelles et San Francisco, le journaliste d’investigation Nicolas Vescovacci est allé à la rencontre des acteurs les plus influents du secteur pour éclairer les enjeux de cette guerre des puces, qui pourrait redéfinir les contours de la géopolitique mondiale.

    Documentaire de Nicolas Vescovacci (France, 2023, 52mn)

    #USA #Chine #Taïwan #Europe #chips #microprocesseurs #économie #géopolitique #TSMC #Intel #Huawei #SMIC #ASML

  • Islamisten: Wie Nazis und CIA mit den Muslimbrüdern paktierten
    https://www.welt.de/politik/ausland/article12442027/Wie-Nazis-und-CIA-mit-den-Muslimbruedern-paktierten.html

    4.2.2011 von Günther Lachmann - Deutschland ist seit Jahrzehnten Teil des engmaschigen, über die ganze Welt gespannten Netzes der islamistischen Muslimbrüder. Die ersten Kontakte zu den Islamisten knüpften die Nationalsozialisten, und für sie wiederum Abwehrchef Admiral Wilhelm Canaris. Sein Ziel war es Anfang der vierziger Jahre, den Aufstand in den arabischen Ländern gegen die Briten mit Waffen und Geld zu unterstützen. Während des Zweitens Weltkrieges bemühte er sich dann mit Hilfe des Großmuftis von Jerusalem, Amin al-Husseini, um Partisanenaktionen gegen die Briten. Es tauchen auch immer mal wieder Berichte auf, wonach al-Husseini (1893 bis 1974) auch den Gründer und damaligen Führer der Muslimbruderschaft, Hassan al-Banna (1906 bis 1949), in diese Pläne einbezogen haben soll.

    In jüngerer Zeit wird gelegentlich versucht, auch die Ideologie der Muslimbrüder mit der Nazi-Ideologie zu vergleichen. Was den einen die Weltgemeinschaft der Muslime sei, also die „Umma“, das sei den Nazis die „Volksgemeinschaft“ gewesen, heißt es dann. Als weitere Belege für Gemeinsamkeiten werden die Ablehnung des liberalen Finanzkapitalismus und der Antisemitismus genannt.

    Unstrittig ist, dass die Nationalsozialisten in den Arabern nützliche Helfer für ihre Zwecke sahen. Auf ihrem Ostfeldzug machte die Wehrmacht Hunderttausende muslimische Kriegsgefangene. Zehntausende von ihnen kämpften schon bald mit den deutschen Soldaten, um ihre Heimatländer „zu befreien“.

    Diesen Widerstand gegen die Sowjets wollten später auch die USA und die Bundesrepublik nutzen, schreibt nun der US-Journalist Ian Johnson in seinem Buch „Die vierte Moschee“. Zu diesem Zweck sei versucht worden, die alten Nazi-Kontakte zu aktivieren. Der US-Geheimdienst CIA habe Hunderte Millionen Dollar dafür ausgegeben. Allerdings hätten die Sowjets diese Versuche dadurch unterlaufen, indem sie die Vergangenheit der muslimischen Nazi-Kämpfer veröffentlichten. Also änderte die CIA ihre Taktik.

    „Die radikalen Muslimbrüder waren für diese Rolle viel besser geeignet: Sie waren jung, ehrgeizig, gut vernetzt mit der islamischen Welt und gut ausgebildet“, sagt Johnson nun in einem Interview mit der „Süddeutschen Zeitung“. Dies habe letztlich dazu geführt, dass in München eine Moschee gebaut wurde.

    Bereits 1958 gründete sich die „Moscheebauinitiative München“. Mit ihm kam auch der damalige Generalsekretär des Islamischen Weltkongresses, Said Ramadan (1926 bis 1995), nach München. Kurz zuvor hatte der Jurist an der Universität Köln promoviert. Ramadan wurde zum Vorsitzenden der Moscheebau-Kommission gewählt. Sein Stellvertreter wurde Nurredin Namangani, der während des Russlandfeldzuges in einer SS-Einheit gedient hatte.

    Damals wussten wohl nur die wenigsten in Deutschland, dass der junge Einser-Jurist der Schwiegersohn Hassan al-Bannas war. Ramadan galt damals als inoffizieller „Außenminister“ der Muslimbrüder.

    An der Moschee wiederum schienen die Amerikaner kein Interesse zu haben. Denn für den Bau fehlte lange das Geld. So begannen die Bauarbeiten in München Freimann erst 1967. Am Ende sei die Moschee wesentlich von Libyen, also von Muammar al-Gaddafi finanziert worden, recherchierte Johnson.

    Von nun aber war München eine wichtige Schaltstation der Muslimbrüder. „Das Führungsgremium war ein Who’s who des politischen Islams“, sagt Johnson. Sie kamen aus Ägypten, Syrien oder Pakistan. Die Muslimbrüder seien so dominant gewesen, dass sie die türkischen Migranten aus der Organisationsebene heraushalten konnten.

    „Mahdy Akef, der bis 2010 die Bruderschaft angeführt hatte, war von 1984 bis 1987 Oberimam in Freimann. Die Moschee war sowohl ein sicheres Rückzugsgebiet als auch eine Drehscheibe, von der aus sie ungestört planen und andere Länder infiltrieren konnten“, sagt Johnson.

    Ins Visier der Sicherheitsbehörden geriet die Moschee erst mit den neunziger Jahren. So wurde 1998 in München der al-Qaida-Finanzier Mamduh Mahmud Salim festgenommen und an die USA ausgeliefert. Angeblich soll sich auch einer der Drahtzieher des Bombenanschlags auf das World Trade Center im Jahr 1993, Mahmoud Aboulina, in der Münchener Moschee aufgehalten haben.

    Seit dem 11. September 2001 kam es wiederholt zu Razzien in Freimann. Unter anderem wurde der Prediger Ahmad al-Khalifa verdächtigt, Kontakte zu Terroristen zu unterhalten.

    Allerdings ist München nicht das einzige Zentrum der Muslimbrüder in Deutschland. Auch die „Bilal Moschee“ in Aachen steht ihnen nahe. Sie orientiert sich am syrischen Zweig der Muslimbruderschaft. Insgesamt zählt der Verfassungsschutz rund 1300 Mitglieder der Bruderschaft in Deutschland, als deren mitgliedsstärkste Organisation die „Islamische Gemeinschaft in Deutschland e.V.“ (IGD) angesehen werden kann. Sie unterhält Zentren in Nürnberg, Stuttgart, Frankfurt, Köln, Marburg, Braunschweig und Münster. Angeblich koordiniert die IGD ihre Aktivitäten mit mehr als 50 weiteren Moscheevereinen in Deutschland.

    „Die IGD ist zudem auch eng mit dem europaweiten Netzwerk der Muslimbruderschaft verbunden und Mitglied der FIOE“, schreibt der nordrhein-westfälische Verfassungsschutz.

    Die FIOE ist die „Föderation Islamischer Organisationen in Europa“. Gegründet wurde der Dachverband 1989, seinen Sitz hat er in Brüssel. „Eine weitere einflussreiche, eng mit der Muslimbruderschaft verbundene Organisation, ist der ,Europäische Fatwarat’ mit Sitz in Dublin, dem mit Yusuf al-Qaradawi eine der herausragendsten geistigen Führungspersönlichkeiten der im Umfeld der Muslimbruderschaft zu verortenden islamischen Bewegung vorsteht“, schreiben die nordrhein-westfälischen Verfassungsschützer.

    Vor einiger Zeit wurde an al-Qaradawi der Vorsitz der ägyptischen Muslimbruderschaft herangetragen, was er jedoch ablehnte. Qaradawis Rechtsauffassungen sind in den meisten Fällen nicht mit dem westlichen Verständnis einer freiheitlichen Demokratie vereinbar. So befürwortet er die „leichte Züchtigung“ der Ehefrau durch den Ehemann. In einer seiner in der arabischen Welt populären TV-Sendungen auf dem Nachrichtenkanal al-Dschasira rechtfertigte er Selbstmordattentate gegen Israel.

    Auch einer der bedeutendsten Repräsentanten des Islam in Europa steht den Muslimbrüdern nahe. Es ist Tariq Ramadan, der Sohn von Said Ramadan, der die Münchener Moschee baute. Tariq Ramadan ist Professor für Islamstudien in Oxford. Er beteuert zwar, ideologisch nichts mit dem Muslimbrüdern zu tun zu haben. Aber seine Reden und Schriften sprechen oft die gleiche Sprache. Sein Bruder leitet heute das ebenfalls von ihrem Vater gegründete Islamische Zentrum in Genf.

    #Allemagne #USA #islamisme #histoire #frère_musulmans

  • #Bibby_Stockholm en 2023... des bateaux au large de la #Jamaïque pour « accueillir » des #réfugiés_haïtiens qui demandaient l’asile aux #USA en 1994...

    The likely agreement would allow the United States to anchor or dock large ships in a Jamaican port or at least close to shore, the officials said.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1994/06/01/jamaica-will-help-us-process-haitians/2a40705d-253a-48e7-8e53-f523e156d07b

    –—

    JAMAICA WILL HELP U.S. PROCESS HAITIANS

    The United States has reached an agreement with Jamaica to set up a facility on the Caribbean island to process Haitian refugees, according to officials close to negotiations that have been taking place between the two nations for several days.

    The agreement is likely to be announced today in Kingston, the officials said. This is the first time another government has offered to help the Clinton administration share the burden of handling those who flee Haiti’s military regime by taking to the sea, most of them seeking political asylum in the United States.

    Aside from providing a diplomatic boost to the administration’s efforts, Jamaica has helped resolve logistical problems that have bedeviled U.S. officials for weeks.

    The United States asked Jamaica to consider hosting a refugee facility last week and since then U.S. and Jamaican officials have been engaged in almost continuous discussions, here and in Kingston.

    The likely agreement would allow the United States to anchor or dock large ships in a Jamaican port or at least close to shore, the officials said. The ships would be used to house Haitians picked up by the Coast Guard and would serve as a processing center where their applications for refugee status would be heard and adjudicated. U.S. officials could be housed on land along with all facilities needed to support the ships.

    President Clinton’s special advisor on Haiti, former House member William H. Gray III, was to arrive in Jamaica yesterday afternoon and begin meetings with top Jamaican officials today. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott is due to begin a visit to Kingston Thursday.

    A formal agreement on a processing facility could be announced during these meetings, officials said, and the first Haitians could be brought to Jamaica as early as the beginning of next week.

    “We are encouraged by the progress that has been made in the talks and we are hopeful progress will continue and that we will be able to say something more on this soon,” a senior U.S. official said. In recent weeks Clinton repeatedly has emphasized his desire to pursue a policy on Haiti with international and especially regional support.

    He was able to win such backing for tighter economic sanctions against Haiti, which went into effect on May 21. But it has proved more difficult for Clinton to get help with the other half of his Haitian dilemma, the handling of boat people.

    After protests by civil rights groups and refugee advocates, Clinton on May 8 ended a policy of automatically returning all Haitians picked up at sea without giving them a chance to seek the shelter of refugee status.

    Instead he promised to set up facilities that would let the Haitians apply for refugee status, which entitles them to permanent resettlement in the United States. Clinton insisted, however, that most boat people were likely to be rejected and sent back.

    Although it has held discussions with a number of governments in the regions, the only expression of support the administration had received thus far was an agreement with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to cooperate on handling the boat people.

    Last week the United States sought permission to locate a processing facility on the Turks and Caicos Islands, a British dependency, but has yet to receive a response.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1994/06/01/jamaica-will-help-us-process-haitians/2a40705d-253a-48e7-8e53-f523e156d07b

    –—

    Jamaica to Let U.S. Anchor Ship Off Coast

    Jamaica agreed today to let the United States anchor ships in its waters so American officials can hold shipboard hearings to determine whether fleeing Haitians qualify for refugee status.

    The Jamaican decision represents a diplomatic victory for the Clinton Administration, which promised last month to provide individual hearings for Haitian boat people rather than forcibly send them back without hearings. Later, the Administration realized it did not have a suitable place to conduct such hearings.

    The Clinton Administration has been eager to find processing centers in third countries because fleeing Haitians who are processed in the United States often remain for years even if their asylum applications are rejected because Federal courts can permit them to stay until their appeals are exhausted.

    The Administration has been under pressure to set up the shipboard processing as soon as possible because it has been in the embarrassing position of continuing to summarily repatriate Haitians without interviews even though President Clinton announced on May 8 that he was abandoning this policy.

    [ The United States Coast Guard returned 63 fleeing Haitians to Port-au-Prince Wednesday, the third group repatriated in a week, Reuters reported. That brought to 1,439 the number of refugees brought back to their homeland since Washington said it would halt the practice. ] Ship Heads for Kingston

    After the United States and Jamaica announced their agreement, Administration officials said they hoped to have a large American ship anchored in Kingston harbor within several days to begin interviewing Haitian emigrants.

    “They’d like to start this at the beginning of next week,” said Barbara Francis, the United States spokeswoman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which is working with the Clinton Administration on setting up the processing.

    The plan is for a 1,000-bed Navy hospital ship to arrive in Jamaica this week so it can begin processing what American officials expect to be a steady stream of fleeing Haitians. In light of a recent United Nations decision to tighten the trade embargo against Haiti, Administration officials fear an accelerating exodus.

    About 300 Americans will work on the hospital ship, including Immigration and Naturalization Service officials who will conduct hearings and Navy personnel who run the ship.
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    In addition, about 10 employees of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees will work on the ship to provide training for the American hearing officers and will counsel the Haitian applicants. U.S. to Cover All Costs

    Christine Shelly, a State Department spokeswoman, said the United States will cover all costs connected to the shipboard processing.

    Jamaica has not asked Washington for any payment for allowing American ships to anchor in its waters, but Jamaican officials have conveyed their displeasure that the Clinton Administration has not appointed an Ambassador to Jamaica and is cutting economic aid to the island.

    Under the Administration’s plan, Coast Guard cutters will pick up Haitian boat people in the Caribbean and take them to Kingston Harbor. Haitians who are found to have a well-founded fear of persecution in their homeland will be transported to the United States, or perhaps another country. Those whose claim of persecution is declared to be not well-founded will be taken back to Haiti.

    “We would hope they would go not only to the U.S., but that other countries would step forward to accept some of them,” an Administration official said concerning those granted asylum. Hope for Turks and Caicos

    United States officials say they still hope that the Turks and Caicos Islands, a British-ruled group of small islands off the Bahamas, will agree to allow Washington to set up processing centers there.

    The legislative council of those islands is scheduled to meet on Friday to consider Washington’s request.

    Turks and Caicos officials have offered the United States an uninhabited island, but Washington is concerned about the lack of docking facilities and potable water on the island.

    The United States sent a second ship to Jamaica today. That ship, a leased, 700-bed Ukrainian cruise ship, will be anchored in Kingston to handle the spillover from the Navy hospital ship, or it will be anchored off the Turks and Caicos Islands, officials said. -------------------- Haitian Files Suit

    A Haitian refugee who was chopped with a machete and left for dead in her homeland filed a $30 million lawsuit in Brooklyn yesterday against a far-right political group in Haiti.

    The refugee, Alerte Belance, who now lives in Newark, N.J., sued the Haitian Front of Advancement and Progress in Federal Court for an attack last fall that cost her a right arm and left her with deep gashes on her neck and across her face.

    Her suit is based on a ruling that allows some victims of human rights abuses committed abroad to seek redress in an American court.

    https://www.nytimes.com/1994/06/02/world/jamaica-to-let-us-anchor-ship-off-coast.html

    #USA #asile #migrations #bateau #réfugiés #Etats-Unis #externalisation #procédure_d'asile

    –—
    Sur la #Bibby_Stockholm :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/997047
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1000870

    Et la métaliste autour des #îles qui sont utilisées (ou dont il a été question d’imaginer de le faire) pour y envoyer des #réfugiés :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/881889

  • John H. White’s Photographs of Black Chicago for DOCUMERICA (1973–74)
    https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/john-h-white-documerica

    While still in his twenties, White (b. 1945) was contracted by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as part of DOCUMERICA, a project that sought to produce a visual record of the nation and its people with a particular — but not an exclusive — focus on ecology. The program made use of local photographers around the country and generally provided little in the way of guidelines or restrictions on subject matter; collectively, White and the rest of the DOCUMERICA cohort produced over 20,000 images, often using the openness of their assignment to create a body of work that shines not just with environmental urgency but with artistic vision too.

    #USA #culture #histoire #Chicago #seventies #blacls

  • La Compil’ de la Semaine
    https://www.les-crises.fr/la-compil-de-la-semaine-105

    Chaque semaine, nous vous proposons notre Compil’ de la Semaine : une sélection de dessins de presse à la fois drôles et incisifs, ainsi que des vidéos d’analyse participant à l’indispensable travail d’auto-défense intellectuelle. Bonne lecture et bon visionnage à toutes et à tous ! Dessins de Presse Vidéos Blast : Italie, les dix premiers […]

    #Miscellanées #Compil_de_la_Semaine #Miscellanées,_Compil_de_la_Semaine

  • Piemonte, corsa alle nuove miniere : da #Usseglio al Pinerolese si cercano nichel, cobalto, grafite e litio

    Scatta la corsa alle terre rare: la Regione deve vagliare le richieste delle multinazionali su una decina di siti

    Nei prossimi anni il Piemonte potrebbe trasformarsi in una grande miniera per soddisfare le esigenze legate alla costruzione degli apparecchi digitali e all’automotive elettrico. È un futuro fatto di cobalto, titanio, litio, nichel, platino e associati. E non mancano nemmeno oro e argento. Un grande business, infatti oggi si parla di «forti interessi» di aziende estrattive nazionali e straniere. Anche perché la Commissione Europea ha stabilito che «almeno il 10% del consumo di materie prime strategiche fondamentali per la transizione green e per le nuove tecnologie dovrebbe essere estratto nell’Ue, il 15% del consumo annuo di ciascuna materia prima critica dovrebbe provenire dal riciclaggio e almeno il 40% dovrebbe essere raffinato in Europa». In questo contesto il Piemonte è considerato un territorio strategico. Anche perché l’anno scorso il mondo ha estratto 280mila tonnellate di terre rare, circa 32 volte di più rispetto alla metà degli anni 50. E la domanda non farà che aumentare: entro il 2040, stimano gli esperti, avremo bisogno di sette volte più terre rare rispetto a oggi. Quindi potrebbero essere necessarie più di 300 nuove miniere nel prossimo decennio per soddisfare la domanda di veicoli elettrici e batterie di accumulo di energia, secondo lo studio condotto da Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.

    «Al momento abbiamo nove permessi di ricerca in corso, ma si tratta di campionature in superficie o all’interno di galleria già esistenti, come è avvenuto a Punta Corna, sulle montagne di Usseglio – analizza Edoardo Guerrini, il responsabile del settore polizia mineraria, cave e miniere della Regione -. C’è poi in istruttoria di via al ministero dell’Ambiente un permesso per la ricerca di grafite nella zona della Val Chisone». Si tratta di un’area immensa di quasi 6500 ettari si estende sui comuni di Perrero, Pomaretto, San Germano Chisone, Perosa Argentina, Pinasca, Villar Perosa, Pramollo, Roure e Inverso Pinasca che interessa all’australiana Energia Minerals (ramo della multinazionale Altamin). E un’altra società creata da Altamin, la Strategic Minerals Italia, nella primavera prossima, sulle montagne di Usseglio, se non ci saranno intoppi, potrà partire con le operazioni per 32 carotaggi nel Vallone del Servin con una profondità variabile da 150 a 250 metri. Altri 25 sondaggi verranno invece effettuati nel sito di Santa Barbara, ma saranno meno profondi. E, ovviamente, ambientalisti e amanti della montagna, hanno già espresso tutti i loro timori perché temono uno stravolgimento del territorio. «Nelle settimane scorse ho anche ricevuto i rappresentati di una società svedese interessati ad avviare degli studi di valutazione in tutto il Piemonte con l’obiettivo di estrarre minerali – continua Guerrini – anche perché l’Unione Europea spinge per la ricerca di materie prime indispensabili per la conversione ecologica e quindi l’autosufficienza energetica».

    È la storia che ritorna anche perché il Piemonte è stata sempre una terra di estrazione. Basti pensare che, solo nel Torinese, la cavi attive «normali» sono 66. E ora, a parte Usseglio e il Pinerolese, ci sono richieste per cercare nichel in Valle Anzasca, rame, platino e affini nel Verbano Cusio Ossola, dove esiste ancora una concessione non utilizzata per cercare oro a Ceppo Morelli nella Val d’Ossola (anche se il giacimento più sfruttato per l’oro è sempre stato quello del massiccio del Rosa) e la richiesta di poter coltivare il boro nella zona di Ormea. E pensare che, dal 2013 al 2022, le aziende che si occupano di estrazione di minerali da cave e miniere in Piemonte sono scese da 265 a 195. «Il settore estrattivo continua a essere fonte di occupazione – riflette l’assessore regionale Andrea Tronzano -. Con il piano regionale in via di definizione vogliamo dare certezze agli imprenditori e migliorare l’attuale regolamentazione in modo che ci siano certezze ambientali e più facilità nel lavorare. Le miniere su materie prime critiche sono oggetto di grande attenzione e noi vorremmo riattivare le nostre potenzialità come ci chiede la Ue. Ci stiamo lavorando con rispetto per tutti, anche perché qui non siamo nè in Cina nè in Congo. Vedremo le aziende che hanno chiesto di fare i carotaggi che cosa decideranno. Noi le ascolteremo».

    https://www.lastampa.it/torino/2023/08/06/news/piemonte_nuove_miniere_usseglio_nichel_cobalto-12984408

    #extractivisme #Italie #mines #nickel #cobalt #graphite #lithium #Alpes #montagnes #Piémont #Pinerolo #terres_rares #multinationales #transition_énergétique #Punta_Corna #Val_Chisone #Energia_Minerals #Altamin #Strategic_Minerals_Italia #Vallone_del_Servin #Santa_Barbara #Valle_Anzasca #Verbano_Cusio_Ossola #cuivre #platine #Ceppo_Morelli #Val_d'Ossola #or #Ormea

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur l’#extraction de #terres_rares dans les #Alpes :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1013289

  • Pour le Sahara Occidental, De Mistura croit à la révision de la diplomatie aux USA.
    http://www.argotheme.com/organecyberpresse/spip.php?article4493

    Il n’est pas nécessaire de sans-cesse préciser les éléments véridiques qui ne peuvent guère mêler l’Algérie au juste combat du front POLISARIO. D’abord, il y a la mitoyenneté avec le territoire envahi par la « marche verte » initiée par le royaume marocain. Le Makhzen avait déjà attaqué en 1963, lors de la guerre des sables, son voisin de l’est fraîchement libéré du colonialisme français, avec le même envahissement expansionniste... #nationale,_fait_politique,_une_et_première_page,_médias,_actualité,_pays,_france,_afrique,_maghreb

    / Maghreb, Algérie, Tunisie, Maroc, Libye, Africa, population, société , Afrique, Monde Arabe, islam, Maghreb, Proche-Orient,, #USA,_Maison_Blanche,_CIA, diplomatie, sécurité, commerce, économie (...)

    #Maghreb,Algérie,_Tunisie,_Maroc,_Libye,_Africa,_population,_société #Afrique,_Monde_Arabe,_islam,_Maghreb,_Proche-Orient, #diplomatie,_sécurité,_commerce,_économie_mondiale

  • Avortement au Texas : cinq femmes empêchées d’avorter obtiennent gain de cause
    https://www.rfi.fr/fr/am%C3%A9riques/20230805-avortement-au-texas-cinq-femmes-emp%C3%AAch%C3%A9es-d-avorter-obtiennen


    L’avocate Molly Duane, au centre en noir, entourée de plusieurs plaignantes, devant le palais de justice du comté de Travis, le 19 juillet 2023 à Austin, au Texas. AP - Eric Gay

    Rebondissement, après l’interdiction totale de l’avortement dans l’État du Texas, qui a été le premier aux États-Unis à revenir sur ce droit, avant la décision de la Cour suprême, il y a un peu plus d’un an. La justice a penché vendredi 4 août en faveur de cinq femmes qui ont été obligées de poursuivre leur grossesse au risque de leur vie, même si les médecins savaient que le fœtus n’était pas viable.

    Publié le : 05/08/2023 - 23:07

    Avec notre correspondant au Texas, Thomas Harms

    À la barre, des femmes décrivent le calvaire physique et moral qu’elles ont subi. En sanglot, elles racontent comment elles ont dû attendre une septicémie pour que les médecins acceptent de pratiquer un avortement. Ou comment elles ont dû faire grandir dans leur ventre un fœtus non viable et accoucher d’un bébé mourant avec son premier souffle.

    Trois semaines après ces témoignages, et ceux de médecins, une juge d’Austin, Jessica Mangrum, a considéré vendredi que la formulation de la loi Texane qui interdit l’avortement avec une seule exception était trop vague et donc anticonstitutionnelle. L’exception permettait un avortement « quand une fonction corporelle majeure ou la vie de la mère sont en danger imminent ».

    La juge a donc établi que les médecins texans ne pouvaient pas être poursuivis en justice s’ils « jugeaient en tout bonne foi » que la poursuite de la grossesse posait un risque pour la vie de la mère, pouvait générer une infection, ou quand il était peu probable que le fœtus survive à la grossesse et reste en vie après la naissance.

    Les associations de défense des droits des femmes se sont félicitées du jugement, mais ne crient pas victoire. Les autorités texanes n’ont pas exclu de faire appel, ce qui suspendrait ces autorisations.

    https://seenthis.net/messages/1007127

    Ce jugement permettra peut-être qu’au Texas, on n’empêche plus les avortements à condition qu’une expertise médicale détermine que l’accouchement pourrait entraîner un risque pour la vie de la femme (quel progrès !). On imagine que ces cinq femmes doivent ressentir une forme de sentiment de victoire, après le jugement. Pour autant il me semble quelque peu déplacé d’écrire qu’elles ont « obtenu gain de cause », vu le préjudice subi et surtout parce que l’on sait que le pouvoir patriarcal et religieux n’a pas dit son dernier mot.

  • Is My Living In Vain (2022)

    Is My Living in Vain is a meditation on the continuing history and emancipatory potential of the #Black_church as a space of diasporic belonging, affirmation and community organising. Weaving together archival imagery, oral histories and 16mm shot footage on location. The film examines the emancipatory potential of churches as spaces of “infrapolitics” by exploring the sonic, political, spiritual and existential connections between specific communities across West Philadelphia and South East London.

    https://ufuomaessi.com/Is-My-Living-In-Vain

    #film #art #gentrification #Philadelphie #USA #Etats-Unis #religion #église #communauté_religieuse #communauté #musique #communauté_noire #Noirs #foi #gospel

  • #Texas prepares to deploy #Rio_Grande buoys in governor’s latest effort to curb border crossings

    Texas began rolling out what is set to become a new floating barrier on the Rio Grande on Friday in the latest escalation of Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s multibillion-dollar effort to secure the U.S. border with Mexico, which already has included bussing migrants to liberal states and authorizing the National Guard to make arrests.

    But even before the huge, orange buoys were unloaded from the trailers that hauled them to the border city of Eagle Pass, there were concerns over this part of Abbott’s unprecedented challenge to the federal government’s authority over immigration enforcement. Migrant advocates voiced concerns about drowning risks and environmentalists questioned the impact on the river.

    Dozens of the large spherical buoys were stacked on the beds of four tractor trailers in a grassy city park near the river on Friday morning.

    Setting up the barriers could take up to two weeks, according to Lt. Chris Olivarez, a spokesperson for the Texas Department of Public Safety, which is overseeing the project.

    Once installed, the above-river parts of the system and the webbing they’re connected with will cover 1,000 feet (305 meter) of the middle of the Rio Grande, with anchors in the riverbed.

    Eagle Pass is part of a Border Patrol sector that has seen the second highest number of migrant crossings this fiscal year with about 270,000 encounters — though that is lower than it was at this time last year.

    The crossing dynamics shifted in May after the Biden administration stopped implementing Title 42, a pandemic era public health policy that turned many asylum seekers back to Mexico. New rules allowed people to seek asylum through a government application and set up appointments at the ports of entry, though the maximum allowed in per day is set at 1,450. The Texas governor’s policies target the many who are frustrated with the cap and cross illegally through the river.

    Earlier iterations of Abbott’s border mission have included installing miles of razor wire at popular crossing points on the river and creating state checkpoints beyond federal stops to inspect incoming commercial traffic.

    “We always look to employ whatever strategies will be effective in securing the border,” Abbott said in a June 8 press conference to introduce the buoy strategy.

    But the state hasn’t said what tests or studies have been done to determine risks posed to people who try to get around the barrier or environmental impacts.

    Immigrant advocates, including Sister Isabel Turcios, a nun who oversees a migrant shelter in Piedras Negras, Mexico, which sits just across the river from Eagle Pass, have remained vigilant about the effects of the new barrier on migration. Turcios said she met with the Texas Department of Public Safety in the days leading up to the arrival of the buoys and was told the floating barrier would be placed in deep waters to function as a warning to migrants to avoid the area.

    Turcios said she is aware that many of the nearly 200 migrants staying in her shelter on any given day are not deterred from crossing illegally despite sharp concertina wire. But that wire causes more danger because it forces migrants to spend additional time in the river.

    “That’s more and more dangerous each time ... because it has perches, it has whirlpools and because of the organized crime,” Turcios said.

    Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steven McCraw addressed the danger that migrants may face when the buoys are deployed during the June press conference when Abbott spoke: “Anytime they get in that water, it’s a risk to the migrants. This is the deterrent from even coming in the water.”

    Less than a week ago — around the Fourth of July holiday — four people, including an infant, drowned near Eagle Pass as they attempted to cross the river.

    The federal International Boundary and Water Commission, whose jurisdiction includes boundary demarcation and overseeing U.S.-Mexico treaties, said it didn’t get a heads up from Texas about the proposed floating barrier.

    “We are studying what Texas is publicly proposing to determine whether and how this impacts our mission to carry out treaties between the US and Mexico regarding border delineation, flood control, and water distribution, which includes the Rio Grande,” Frank Fisher, a spokesperson for the commission, said in a statement.

    On Friday morning, environmental advocates from Eagle Pass and Laredo, another Texas border city about 115 miles (185 kilometers) downriver, held a demonstration by the border that included a prayer for the river ahead of the barrier deployment.

    Jessie Fuentes, who owns a canoe and kayaking business that takes paddlers onto the Rio Grande, said he’s worried about unforeseen consequences. On Friday, he filed a lawsuit to stop Texas from using the buoys. He’s seeking a permanent injunction, saying his paddling business is impacted by limited access to the river.

    “I know it’s a detriment to the river flow, to the ecology of the river, to the fauna and flora. Every aspect of nature is being affected when you put something that doesn’t belong in the river,” Fuentes said.

    Adriana Martinez, a professor at Southern Illinois University who grew up in Eagle Pass, studies the shapes of rivers and how they move sediment and create landforms. She said she’s worried about what the webbing might do.

    “A lot of things float down the river, even when it’s not flooding; things that you can’t see like large branches, large rocks,” Martinez said. “And so anything like that could get caught up in these buoys and change the way that water is flowing around them.”

    https://apnews.com/article/buoys-texas-immigration-rio-grande-mexico-522e45febd880de1453460370043a25f

    https://twitter.com/clemrenard_/status/1679018421449637888

    #mur_flottant #frontières #migrations #asile #réfugiés #USA #Etats-Unis #barrières_frontalières #barrière_flottante

    En #Grèce...
    Grèce. Le « #mur_flottant » visant à arrêter les personnes réfugiées mettra des vies en danger
    https://seenthis.net/messages/823621

    • Gov. Abbott is destroying the Rio Grande for a fearmongering photo-op.


      Miles of deadly razor-wire have been deployed to ensnare & impale border crossers. Bobcats, bear, mule deer & other wildlife will also be cut off from their main source of water.

      https://twitter.com/LaikenJordahl/status/1691158344361480194

      #fil_barbelé #barbelé

    • Un mur flottant équipé de « scies circulaires » à la frontière américano-mexicaine

      Des vidéos diffusées sur les réseaux sociaux le 8 août 2023 permettent d’observer de plus près la barrière frontalière flottante installée par le gouverneur du Texas, Greg Abbott, et destinée à empêcher les migrants clandestins d’entrer aux États-Unis. Ces installations controversées, près desquelles un corps a récemment été retrouvé, sont équipées de disques métalliques pointus fabriqués par Cochrane Global.

      Quand le gouverneur du Texas, Greg Abbott, a annoncé le 6 juin 2023 l’installation d’une « barrière marine flottante » pour dissuader les migrants de franchir illégalement la frontière sud des États-Unis, un détail important a été omis : entre les bouées orange qui composent l’ouvrage se trouvent des lames de scie circulaire aiguisées, qui rendent le franchissement presque impossible sans risque de se blesser.

      Des représentants de l’association Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC) se sont rendus le 8 août 2023 à Eagle Pass, au Texas, et ont partagé de nombreuses vidéos sur leur compte X (anciennement Twitter).

      Les vidéos montrent de plus près les installations et ces disques métalliques tranchants entre les #bouées_flottantes.

      La petite ville d’#Eagle_Pass est devenue l’un des points de passage les plus dangereux de la frontière américano-mexicaine, marquée à cet endroit par le fleuve Rio Grande : les noyades de migrants y sont devenues monnaie courante.

      Le CHC a déclaré que ses membres étaient venus au Texas pour « tirer la sonnette d’alarme sur ces tactiques inhumaines mises en place par le gouverneur Abbott ».

      Une vidéo de 12 secondes, partagée par l’élue à la Chambre des représentants Sylvia Garcia, a été visionnée plus de 25 millions de fois.

      Appalled by the ongoing cruel and inhumane tactics employed by @GovAbbott at the Texas border. The situation’s reality is unsettling as these buoys’ true danger and brutality come to light. We must stop this NOW ! pic.twitter.com/XPc4C8Tnl0
      — Rep. Sylvia Garcia (@RepSylviaGarcia) August 8, 2023

      Le 21 juillet 2023, le ministère américain de la Justice a déposé une plainte contre le gouverneur Greg Abbott au sujet de la barrière frontalière flottante. L’action en justice qualifie d’"illégale" la mise en place d’une telle barrière et vise à forcer le Texas à l’enlever pour des raisons humanitaires et environnementales.

      « Ils traitent les êtres humains comme des animaux »

      La militarisation de la frontière sud des États-Unis avec le Mexique fait partie de l’#investissement de plusieurs milliards de dollars déployé par le gouverneur du Texas Greg Abbott pour stopper « de manière proactive » les arrivées de migrants par cette zone frontalière.

      La clôture flottante n’est qu’un seul des six projets de loi crédités en tout de 5,1 milliards de dollars de dotation et qui ont été annoncés le 6 juin 2023.

      La politique migratoire stricte du Texas, qui consiste notamment à transporter des personnes par car vers les États démocrates du Nord et à autoriser la Garde nationale à procéder à des arrestations, a incité d’autres États républicains à prendre des mesures similaires pour freiner l’immigration illégale.

      Contacté à plusieurs reprises par la rédaction des Observateurs, le bureau du gouverneur Abbott ne nous a pas répondu.

      Everyone needs to see what I saw in Eagle Pass today.

      Clothing stuck on razor wire where families got trapped. Chainsaw devices in the middle of buoys. Land seized from US citizens.

      Operation Lone Star is barbaric — and @GovAbbott is making border communities collateral damage. pic.twitter.com/PzKyZGWfds
      — Joaquin Castro (@JoaquinCastrotx) August 8, 2023

      « Je veux que vous regardiez ici le dispositif de type tronçonneuse qu’ils ont caché au milieu de ces bouées. Et quand vous venez ici, vous pouvez voir au loin tous ces fils de fer barbelés près du fleuve », a commenté le membre du Congrès américain Joaquin Castro, qui a également participé à la visite du CHC au Texas.

      « Le gouvernement de l’État [du Texas, NDLR] et Greg Abbott traitent les êtres humains comme des animaux », a-t-il ajouté dans une vidéo publiée le 8 août 2023 sur son compte X.

      Une frontière flottante fabriquée par Cochrane Global

      Texas began installation of its marine barrier near Eagle Pass. One pro-illegal immigration activist I met taking video elsewhere was outraged, saying it’ll never work. But… if she believes that, why get so verklempt ?Just shrug, smirk and go away. But they must think it’ll work ! pic.twitter.com/4fzdHdNJw8
      — Todd Bensman (@BensmanTodd) July 11, 2023

      Dans la vidéo de 12 secondes de Sylvia Garcia, on entend une personne dire : « Quelqu’un a fait beaucoup d’efforts ridicules pour concevoir ces installations. »

      Sur les bouées, on peut lire le mot « #Cochrane ». #Cochrane_Global est une multinationale spécialisée dans les « barrières [...] de haute sécurité » destinées à l’usage de gouvernements, d’entreprises ou de particuliers.

      Sur son site web, Cochrane Global indique que « la barrière flottante brevetée est composée de plusieurs bouées interconnectées qui peuvent être étendues à n’importe quelle longueur et personnalisées en fonction de l’objectif ».

      Le 4 août 2023, un corps a été retrouvé près du mur flottant installé sur le fleuve, en face d’Eagle Pass, au Texas.

      Il n’est pas clair à ce stade si l’ajout de lames de scie circulaire aux bouées orange a été pensé et fabriqué par Cochrane Global ou s’il a été fait à la demande des autorités de l’État.

      La rédaction des Observateurs a contacté Cochrane Global pour obtenir un commentaire, sans succès. Nous publierons sa réponse dès que nous l’aurons reçue.

      https://observers.france24.com/fr/am%C3%A9riques/20230811-un-mur-flottant-%C3%A9quip%C3%A9-de-scies-circulaires-%

      #business

    • The Floating Barrier and the Border Industrial Complex

      The Texas water wall gives a glimpse into rapidly proliferating border enforcement worldwide and the significant profit to be made from it.

      When I first came across Cochrane International, the company that built the floating barrier deployed in Eagle Pass, Texas, I watched a demonstration the company gave with detached bemusement. I was at a gun range just outside San Antonio. It was 2017, three months after Donald Trump had been sworn in and the last day of that year’s Border Security Expo, the annual gathering of Department of Homeland Security’s top brass and hundreds of companies from the border industry. Among industry insiders, the optimism was high. With Trump’s wall rhetoric at a fever pitch, the money was in the bank.

      All around me, all morning, Border Patrol agents were blasting away body-shaped cutouts in a gun competition. My ears were ringing, thanks in part to the concussion grenade I had launched—under the direction of an agent, but with great ineptitude—into an empty field as part of another hands-on demonstration. The first two days of the expo had been in the much-posher San Antonio convention center, where companies displayed their sophisticated camera systems, biometrics, and drones in a large exhibition hall. But here on the gun range we seemed to be on its raw edge.

      So when a red truck with a camo-painted trailer showed up and announced its demonstration, it wasn’t too much of a surprise. The blasting bullets still echoed all around as if they would never cease. Two men jumped out of the truck wearing red shirts and khaki pants. They frantically ran around the camo trailer, like mice scurrying around a piece of cheese trying to figure out the proper angle of attack. Then the demo began. One of the men got back in the truck, and as it lurched forward, coiling razor wire began to spill out of its rear end as if it were having a bowel movement. As the truck moved forward, more and more of Cochrane’s Rapid Deployment Barrier spilled out until it extended the length of a football field or more. It was like a microwavable insta-wall, fast-food border enforcement.

      Little did I know that six years later, this same company, Cochrane, would give us the floating barrier, with its wrecking ball–sized buoys connected side by side with circular saws. The floating barrier, as the Texas Standard put it, is the “centerpiece of #Operation_Lone_Star,” Texas governor Greg Abbott’s $4.5 billion border enforcement plan. For this barrier, which has now been linked to the deaths of at least two people, the Texas Department of Public Safety awarded Cochrane an $850,000 contract.

      While the floating wall is part of Abbott’s right-wing fear-fueled border operations, it is also a product of the broader border buildup in the United States. It embodies the deterrence strategy that has driven the buildup—via exponentially increasing budgets—for three decades, through multiple federal administrations from both sides of the aisle. In this sense, Cochrane is one of hundreds upon hundreds of companies that have received contracts, and made revenue, from border enforcement. Today, the Biden administration is giving out border and immigration enforcement contracts at a clip of 27 contracts a day, a pace that will top that of all other presidents. (Before Biden, the average was 16 contracts a day.)

      And there is no sign that this will abate anytime soon. Take the ongoing Homeland Security appropriations debate for fiscal year 2024: a detail in a statement put out by House Appropriations chair Kay Granger caught my eye: $2.1 billion will be allocated for the construction of a “physical wall along the southern border.” (This is something readers should keep a keen eye on! Cochrane certainly is.) At stake is the 2024 presidential request for CBP and ICE, at $28.2 billion. While that number is much higher than any of the Trump administration’s annual border enforcement budgets, it is less than the 2023 budget of $29.8 billion, the highest ever for border and immigration enforcement.

      But the $1.6 billion difference between 2023 and 2024 might soon disappear, thanks to supplemental funding requested by the White House, funding that would include nearly $1 billion in unrestricted funds for CBP and ICE enforcement, detention, and surveillance, and more funds for “community-based residential facilities,” among other things. While these “residential facilities” might sound nice, the National Immigrant Justice Center says they will “essentially reinstate family detention.” In other words, the White House aims to build more prisons for migrants, probably also run by private companies. The prison initiative has the support of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which has indicated that it will craft a bill that ensures the supplemental funding’s enactment.

      The tributaries of money into the broader border industrial complex are many, and all indications are that Operation Lone Star, which is drawing money from all kinds of different departments in the Texas state government, will continue as long as Abbott remains at the helm. Moreover, the Department of Homeland Security supplies local and state governments with border enforcement funding via a program called Operation Stonegarden. Under this program, Texas received $39 million in 2022, the equivalent of 47 floating barriers. Or more ambitiously the potential $2.1 billion mentioned above by Granger would amount to 2,470 of Cochrane’s water walls.

      As Cochrane project manager #Loren_Flossman testified (the Department of Justice is suing the state of Texas for building the floating barrier), the water barrier was first contracted by CBP in 2020 but shut down when Biden took office. At the time, the new president said that the administration would not build any more wall (although it has and is). Flossman would know, because he himself came to Cochrane after 17 years working in acquisitions at CBP, as he stated in his testimony. There is a trend in which CBP high brass cruise through the proverbial public-private revolving door, and Flossman is the newest well-connected former government employee peddling barriers across the globe in a world where there is a “rapid proliferation of border walls,” and there exists a border security market projected to nearly double in a decade.

      Cochrane has certainly jumped into this with full force. Besides the floating barrier, its products include an invisible wall known as ClearVu, the “finest fence you’ve never seen.” The same brochure shows this “invisible” wall around a Porsche dealership, an American Airlines building, and the Egyptian pyramids, and it says that the company’s walls can be found “across six continents” and “100 countries.” And that’s not all; such walls can be enhanced with accessories like the Cochrane Smart Coil, Electric Smart Coil, and Spike Toppings. The Smart Coil’s description reads like a menu at a fine-dining restaurant: composed of “a 730mm high Ripper Blade smart Concertina Coil, produced from the finest galvanized steel available on the market.” The “smart” part is that it will provide an “intrusion alert,” and the electric part means a potentially deadly electric current of 7,000 volts. From this menu, CBP has one contract with Cochrane from 2020 for “coil units,” but the contract doesn’t specify if it is “smart,” “electric,” or both.

      When I first saw Cochrane back in 2017 among the ear-ringing gunfire on the last day of the Border Security Expo, I had a feeling I might see them again. No matter how ludicrous the rapid barrier deployment camo truck seemed to me then, there was, indeed, plenty of money to be made.

      https://www.theborderchronicle.com/p/the-floating-barrier-and-the-border
      #complexe_militaro-industriel

  • The art of vassalisation: How Russia’s war on Ukraine has transformed transatlantic relations
    https://ecfr.eu/publication/the-art-of-vassalisation-how-russias-war-on-ukraine-has-transformed-transatlant

    Policy Brief 4 April 2023 by Jana Puglierin @jana_puglierin on Twitter, Head, ECFR Berlin
    Senior Policy Fellow Jeremy Shapiro @JyShapiro on Twitter
    Research Director

    Summary

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has revealed Europeans’ profound dependence on the US for their security, despite EU efforts at achieving “strategic autonomy.”

    Over the last decade, the EU has grown relatively less powerful than America – economically, technologically, and militarily.

    Europeans also still lack agreement on crucial strategic questions for themselves and look to Washington for leadership.

    In the cold war, Europe was a central front of superpower competition. Now, the US expects the EU and the UK to fall in line behind its China strategy and will use its leadership position to ensure this outcome.

    Europe becoming an American vassal is unwise for both sides. Europeans can become a stronger and more independent part of the Atlantic alliance by developing independent capacity to support Ukraine and acquiring greater military capabilities.

    Summary available in

    Español
    https://ecfr.eu/madrid/publication/el-arte-de-la-vasallizacion-como-la-guerra-rusa-contra-ucrania-ha-transformado-

    Français
    https://ecfr.eu/paris/publication/lart-de-la-vassalisation-comment-la-guerre-de-la-russie-contre-lukraine-a-trans

    Texte complet / PDF
    https://ecfr.eu/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/The-art-of-vassalisation-How-Russias-war-on-Ukraine-has-transformed-transatlant

    About the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR)
    https://ecfr.eu/about

    #USA #Europe #ECFR

    • Many administration officials, in various author interviews since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, have expressed the view that Europeans may whine and complain [about the IRA and the Chips act], but that their increasing security dependence on the US means that they will mostly accept economic policies framed as part of America’s global security role. This is the essence of vassalisation.

      [...]

      In the current partnership, however, ex-post coordination works [instead of a coordination in the early stages of formulating these policies] because Europeans’ deep and growing security dependence on the US and the increasing integration of the security and economic spheres means that they have much less bargaining power, even on economic issues.

      Par contre ce genre de constat apparemment progressiste est suivi de recommandations qui ne le sont pas vraiment : augmenter le budget de la défense en Europe, créer un Otan géo-économique pour mieux affronter la Chine, avoir une dissuasion nucléaire européenne...

  • Wörterbuch des Teufels : »Heilbar durch den Tod« 
    https://www.jungewelt.de/artikel/456273.w%C3%B6rterbuch-des-teufels-heilbar-durch-den-tod.html


    Cet auteur états-unien nous a légué une oeuvre à mi-chemin entre Edgar Allan Poe et Theodor Fontane. A travers sa participation à une vingtaine de batailles de la guerre de sécession Bierce a rencontré les horreurs de la mort cruelle et sans raison. Il nous en a fait part dans ses écrit. Quand il cherche à nous effrayer ce n’est pas avec le phantastique mais par sa déscription de la réalité. Son Dictionnaire du diable est marqué par son observation précise du comportement humain dans la société capitaliate et ses institutions.

    5.8.2023 von Peter Köhler - »Sterben: Von einem Teil des Problems zu einem Teil der Lösung werden« – Ambrose Bierce

    »Ambrose Bierce ist nicht tot, ich lebe noch!« Mit diesen trotzig herausgedrückten Worten begrüßt Markus Bomert den Besucher in seinem Büro an der Universität Weinheim. Seit mittlerweile fünf Jahren arbeitet der Anglist am Nachlass von Ambrose Bierce, dem Autor des berühmten »Wörterbuchs des Teufels«. 1914 war der Amerikaner spurlos von der Erdoberfläche verschwunden, doch 2018 wurde Bomert zufolge dessen staubtrockener Leichnam im Grand Canyon entdeckt – und wie bestellt und abgeholt fanden sich bei ihm sensationelle Ergänzungen des diabolischen Diktionärs (die junge Welt berichtete).

    Die über mehr als hundert Jahre frisch gebliebenen Notate ins Deutsche zu übersetzen, wurde Bomerts Lebensaufgabe. »Dabei war ich zum Zeitpunkt der Entdeckung bereits Ende 50!« scherzt der Philologe, der inzwischen auf die Pensionierung zugeht: »Aber dieser Bierce ist eben mein Lebenswerk, pardon, sein Lebenswerk. Ich bin ja bloß der Übersetzer.«

    Bloß der Übersetzer

    Dass er, Bierce, pardon: Bomert der einzige Mensch auf dem milliardenvollen Globus ist, der von diesen posthumen Notizen weiß, dass kein einziger Experte in den originalen USA von dem Fund Notiz genommen hat – Bomert weist jeden Verdacht mit genervt rollenden Augen zurück. »Ich würde doch nicht fünf Jahre meines späten Lebens für eine Lüge opfern!« verteidigt er sich gegen alle Anschwärzungen durch missgünstige Kollegen und zieht aus einem Papierstapel ein Blatt hervor: »Hier, echter, gesunder Bierce, von mir ins Deutsche übertragen! Hass: Jenes Gefühl, das der Erfolg eines Feindes hervorruft; im Unterschied zum Erfolg eines Freundes. Dieses Gefühl heißt Neid.«

    Auf unsere Frage, ob wir das englische Original sehen könnten, nickt Bomert mit dem eigenen Kopf. »Selbstverständlich! Aber ich habe es nicht hier, sondern zu Hause. Dort wird es luftdicht verpackt und fest eingeschweißt in einem Tresor aufbewahrt, wo es bei vier Grad Celsius gekühlt wird. Der Schlüssel liegt in einem extra steril gehaltenen Bankschließfach, und die Bank macht gerade Sommerferien«, so Bomert. »Aber kommen Sie gern im Winter wieder und fragen noch mal!«

    Im Übrigen habe er, Bomert, genug zu tun, fügt der Wissenschaftler nach einem Blick auf unsere säuerlich eingefärbte Miene hinzu. Er werde nämlich wieder von allen angefeindet, nur weil er sich abermals mit allen angelegt habe: »also nicht ich, Bierce!« Zur Erinnerung: Vor zwei Jahren tobte ein Plagiatsstreit um Bomerts Bierce, der glücklich versickerte. Schon damals ging es um mehr als bloße Tatsachen, es ging um Meinungen – und jetzt erneut.

    Bomert langt in den Papierkorb und entfaltet einen zerknüllten Zettel. »Das habe ich weggeworfen, damit niemand mich, Quatsch, Bierce missversteht und an den Pranger klatscht. Obacht! ›Contergan: Ein Mittel, das zu früh auf den Markt kam. Die Leute hatten damals noch Vorurteile gegen Behinderte.‹ Das dürfen Sie in Ihrem eiskalten Bericht auf keinen Fall zitieren!«

    Wir versprechen es als echte Journalisten und wundern uns nur tief im Herzen, dass der Zyniker Bierce 50 Jahre zu früh von einem zynischen Medikament wie Contergan wusste. Aber ein selbstbewusster Übersetzer wie Markus Bomert wischt alle Zweifel vom Tisch, indem er sie ignoriert, und zaubert noch mehr Papier hervor.

    »Das sind ein paar Notate, für die ich, unschuldig von oben bis hinten, im Kreuzfeuer stehe. Ich, obwohl es Bierce ist! Etwa bei diesen ewigen Gottgläubigen, hier: ›Religion: Göttliche Komödie. Geheimnisvoller Schleier, hinter dem sich nichts befindet. Ein Placebo, das eingebildete Kranke heilt, die für philosophische Medikamente zu schwach sind. Die Welterklärung für alle, die keine Welterklärung wünschen.‹«

    Bomert holt tief Luft mit seiner langen Nase. »Apropos, die Philosophen, die Mathematiker, schlichtweg alle hier an der Uni befehden mich, nur weil ich ihnen den Boden unter ihrem Beruf wegziehe! Dabei ist das vom großen Bierce, nicht meiner Wenigkeit: ›Logik: Das Zaumzeug des Denkens. Wissenschaftliche Methode, langsamer als im Witz und bornierter als in Assoziationen zu denken. Willkür nach Regeln.‹«

    Vorteile der Katze

    Ambrose Bierce hingegen denke »in eigenen Bahnen. Auch in der Politik!« betont Markus Bomert und holt von ganz weit unten einen wahrlich allerletzten Eintrag hervor: »Weltkrieg: Das Beste, was die Deutschen 1939 anfangen konnten – sonst würden die Nazis noch heute regieren.«

    Als wir wieder zu uns kommen, ist Bomert fort. Auch wir verdünnisieren uns, nicht ohne ein paar Notizzettel zu stibitzen. Was auf ihnen steht? Also bitte:

    Autokrat: Jemand, der lieber einen Fehler begeht, als dass ein anderer das Richtige tut.

    Bigamie: Zwei Ehefrauen zu viel.

    Egoismus: Eine Krankheit, die kleine Kinder befällt, sich in der Jugend verschlimmert und im Erwachsenenalter chronisch wird; heilbar durch den Tod.

    Genugtuung: Das angenehme Gefühl, das einen beschleicht, wenn man mehr erreicht hat als jemand, der klüger, schöner und tüchtiger ist.

    Gott: Eine legendäre Gestalt, bekannt vom Hörensagen. Eine Art Übermensch. Der Butzemann der Priester. Das Hausgespenst des Kosmos.

    Illusion: Eines der Hilfsmittel, die dem Menschen das Ausharren in der Realität ermöglichen.

    Katze: Tier, das gegenüber einem Kind viele Vorteile bietet. Die Katze hat ein schöneres Fell, längere Schnurrbarthaare und einen intelligenteren Gesichtsausdruck, kann besser schnurren und hat ein leiseres Betriebsgeräusch, heult weniger und ist stubenrein. Sie fällt kaum zur Last und kann einfach ausgesetzt werden. Eine tote Katze wirft man in die Mülltonne.

    Mistkäfer: Jemand, der positives Denken dringend nötig hat.

    Mode: Der Beweis, dass die Menschen sich ändern können.

    Naturgesetz: Prinzip, das überall im Universum gilt, ausgenommen in der Religion.

    Pfarrer: Person, die von Berufs wegen glaubt, was sie nicht weiß, und an einer wundergläubigen Lehre festhält, als bekäme sie es bezahlt – und das Wunder: Sie bekommt es bezahlt.

    Rassismus: Umgekehrte Spielart der Zoologie, angewandt von einem Vieh auf den Menschen.

    Stabilität: Stagnation.

    Sterben: Von einem Teil des Problems zu einem Teil der Lösung werden.

    Wissen: Der Glaube an Erkenntnis.

    Wohltätigkeit: Die Bereitschaft, etwas von dem herzugeben, was man nicht braucht, um zu erhalten, was man entbehrt – ein gutes Gewissen.

    Map of the Black Hills region : showing the gold mining district and the seat of the Indian war, by Ambrose Bierce, 1877.

    #USA #histoire #cartographie #journalisme #parodie