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Tuesday
May312011

"Evaggelos Vallianatos" - How Our Government Has Merged With Corporations

By Evaggelos Vallianatos, TruthOut.org
Posted on May 26, 2011, Printed on May 31, 2011
http://www.alternet.org/story/151101/how_our_government_has_merged_with_corporations

The 20th century was the bloodiest and most violent in human history. This led some countries to fascism - a system characterized by the state and large business becoming almost indistinguishable. The first decade of the 21st century suffers from that anti-democratic legacy.

The government of the United States, for example, is largely rented to corporations. Big business sends multiple thousands of lobbyists to Washington, DC, to buy favors and get their point of view across in Congress and the executive branch: The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the new war in Libya have been a boon to munitions manufacturers, "security" companies and private mercenary armies. They are part of a permanent war economy, making the US the world's sheriff.

This so-called "defense" has spawned America's largest businesses, besides being the mother of the military-industrial complex. One company, Lockheed Martin, gets more than $29 billion per year for making weapons for the Pentagon. Lockheed Martin also makes foreign policy for America.(1)

The financial meltdown of 2008 proved beyond reasonable doubt that the government is in the pockets of, in this case, banks "too large to fail." President Barack Obama, elected to redress the injustices of the George W. Bush administration, ditched his promises and ethics to bailout banking billionaires.

The BP poisoning of the Gulf of Mexico in the spring of 2010 was a consequence of BP making energy policy for the US government.

The federal government often sides with manufacturers of hazardous products. I know this from personal experience. I worked for 25 years for the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA has been manipulating science with the blowing of corporate wind and political interest.

The EPA nearly always is using science to cover up the hazardous and biocidal nature of American industry, including the poisoning of nature and humans by nuclear power plants, which are siblings of nuclear weapons.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
May312011

"Tom Engelhardt" - Are We Living in Post-Legal America?

By Tom Engelhardt, Tomdispatch.com
Posted on May 30, 2011, Printed on May 31, 2011
http://www.tomdispatch.com/

Is the Libyan war legal?  Was Bin Laden’s killing legal?  Is it legal for the president of the United States to target an American citizen for assassination?  Were those “enhanced interrogation techniques” legal? These are all questions raised in recent weeks.  Each seems to call out for debate, for answers.  Or does it?

Now, you couldn’t call me a legal scholar.  I’ve never set foot inside a law school, and in 66 years only made it onto a single jury (dismissed before trial when the civil suit was settled out of court).  Still, I feel at least as capable as any constitutional law professor of answering such questions. 

My answer is this: they are irrelevant.  Think of them as twentieth-century questions that don't begin to come to grips with twenty-first century American realities.  In fact, think of them, and the very idea of a nation based on the rule of law, as a reflection of nostalgia for, or sentimentality about, a long-lost republic.  At least in terms of what used to be called “foreign policy,” and more recently “national security,” the United States is now a post-legal society.  (And you could certainly include in this mix the too-big-to-jail financial and corporate elite.)

It’s easy enough to explain what I mean.  if, in a country theoretically organized under the rule of law, wrongdoers are never brought to justice and nobody is held accountable for possibly serious crimes, then you don’t have to be a constitutional law professor to know that its citizens actually exist in a post-legal state.  If so, “Is it legal?” is the wrong question to be asking, even if we have yet to discover the right one.

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Tuesday
May312011

" Progressive Radio Network Host Glen Ford, Monday @ 4pm(est)" - The Corporate Dream -- Teachers as Temps

Published on Sunday, May 29, 2011 by Black Agenda Report

A Black Agenda Radio commentary

As Democrats hustle to shovel a billion dollars into President Obama’s campaign coffers – making promises to rich people and their corporations every step of the way – America’s billionaires are spending even more money to seize control of the nation’s public schools. Although super-wealthy capitalists like Microsoft’s Bill Gates, fellow computer mogul Michael Dell, real estate magnate Eli Broad, and the rapacious owners of Wal-Mart, the Walton Family, would like people to think of them as philanthropists, they are nothing more than down-and-dirty investors who hope to reap much more than they sow. This mega-buck mafia's goal is to gain access to the $600 billion per year that taxpayers pump into public schools, and then to profit in perpetuity by shaping the nation’s educational system to their corporate needs. The corporate education project has nothing to do with growing new generations of smarter, socially aware, independent-thinking citizens, but is designed to raid public treasuries through wholesale contracting-out of public schooling.

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Tuesday
May312011

"www.opednews.com" - Amazon.com Reveals the Most Well-Read Cities in America

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Amazon-com-Reveals-the-Mos-by-Press-Release-110528-43.html

 

May 28, 2011

By Press Release

Cambridge, Mass., tops the list with the most books, magazines and newspapers purchased per capita of any city in the United States

Just in time for the summer reading season, Amazon.com announced its list of the Top 20 Most Well-Read Cities in America. After compiling sales data of all book, magazine and newspaper sales in both print and Kindle format since Jan. 1, 2011, on a per capita basis in cities with more than 100,000 residents, the Top 20 Most Well-Read Cities are:

1. Cambridge, Mass.

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Tuesday
May312011

"Times of India" - E-waste pollution causes cancer, DNA damage

A new study has revealed that e-waste can cause adverse effects on human health, such as inflammation and oxidative stress.

These may later transform into cardiovascular disease, DNA damage and possibly cancer.

Electronic waste is described as end-of-life electrical goods such as computers, televisions, printers, and mobile phones.

The study shows due to the crude recycling process, many pollutants such as persistent organic pollutants and heavy metals are released from e-waste, which can accumulate in the human body through inhaling contaminated air.

To confirm this, researchers took air samples from one of the largest e-waste dismantling areas in China and examined their effects on human lung epithelial cells.

The results showed that the samples of pollutants caused significant increases in both IL-8 and ROS levels indicators of an inflammatory response and oxidative stress respectively.

An increase in the levels of the p53 protein was also observed with the risk of organic-soluble pollutants being much higher than water-soluble pollutants.

"Both inflammatory response and oxidative stress may lead to DNA damage, which could induce oncogenesis, or even cancer. Of course, inflammatory response and oxidative stress are also associated with other diseases, such as cardiovascular diseases," said study co-author Dr Fangxing Yang of Zhejiang University.

"From these results it is clear that the ''open'' dismantlement of e-waste must be forbidden with more primitive techniques improved. As the results show potential adverse effects on human health, workers at these sites must also be given proper protection," he added.

The study appears in IOP Publishing's journal Environmental Research Letters.

 



Tuesday
May312011

"Wendell Potter" - Health Insurers Have Had Their Chance

by Wendell Potter

Of the many supporters of a single-payer health care system in the United States, some of the most ardent are small business owners who have struggled to continue offering coverage to their workers.

Among them are David Steil, a small business owner and former Republican -- yes, Republican -- state legislator in Pennsylvania who earlier this year became president of the advocacy group Health Care 4 All PA.

Another supporter is Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin, who last Thursday signed a bill that sets the stage for the country's first single-payer plan. If all goes as Shumlin and the bill's many backers hope, all 620,000 Vermonters will eventually be enrolled in a state-run plan to replace Blue Cross, CIGNA and other private insurers whose business practices have contributed to the number of Vermonters without coverage -- approximately 60,000 and growing.

Both men told me last week that their feelings were shaped by their backgrounds. Their experiences as businessmen convinced them that a health care system controlled by private insurers cannot be sustained, regardless of attempts to force those insurers to provide affordable access to care for all Americans. They are both skeptical that the Obama administration's Affordable Care Act will provide the fix the country needs, even with the new regulations and consumer protections.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
May312011

host By Alison Rose Levy
 
Share  

Media "The shock, grief and loss were overwhelming."

How should we understand this latest and most troubling insight into the reality of our media ecology?


In the aftermath of the resolution of the Great Birther bash-up, even as President Obama tried to lay the issue at rest by producing the document that showed, proved, verified, documented, and validated his birth in one of the great states of our disunion, it was said that its release would only fuel more debate, and convince no one.

In other words, in the end, this long debated fact didn’t matter.

Facts no longer seem to matter on other issues, too, as articulated in the now infamous memo issued by retiring Senator Jon Kyle whose office, when confronted with evidence that he misspoke on the matter of how much money Planned Parenthood spent on abortions—he claimed 90%, the truth was but 3%,  issued an advisory that said, “The statement was not meant to be factual.”
The shock, grief and loss were overwhelming. On the city's streets, people wept openly. Normally business-like New Yorkers made caring eye contact and comforted total strangers. Downtown, missing person notices were taped to every tree. Reading them broke my heart. Shrines, candles, and mourners settled into Union Square Park. Sharing our grief was the path to healing. It was like living in a sea of compassion. We wept for those who had died, and lost loved ones, for the angry and wounded people, who would do such a thing, and we wept for our city, for our country and for the world.


I can recall the moment my grief lifted: It happened when I went to shop at the Park Slope food co-op in Brooklyn. There I saw what seemed like a miracle at the time: people of every ethnic group, race, and religion buying healthy food together. In New York, there are many African-Americans, Latin Americans, Hispanics, Asians, Africans, Middle Easterners, Europeans, tons of folks from Eastern Europe -- and thankfully, even a Native American was there that day.
What healed my grief was being in a tolerant multi-ethnic community. The co-op is that kind of community. At its best, so is New York.


In the aftermath of 9/11, like many New Yorkers, I was stunned that our grief was highjacked for a agenda that had nothing to do with the incident, and even less to do with healing. We embroiled ourselves and drained our economy to go after the wrong guy. Even if he'd been the right guy, honoring New York's grief would have meant devoting this country's resources to support our citizens across ethnicities and races, to give people food, health care, a decent education, job opportunities, and retool our country for a sustainable future.


Now, more than a decade later, our country is turning back many societal initiatives, even as some people rejoice at the death of Osama bin Laden.
The grief we shared, and the compassion we felt as New Yorkers, have been submerged, rather than honored.
Many recognize that further violence is no solution.

ny

A putative Martin Luther King quote currently circulating has it that only love can heal hatred. While I appreciate this uplifting sentiment, let's be real. I know very few people, apart from enablers in abusive relationships, who can feel saintly love for a person behaving destructively, nor is it appropriate in my opinion. There has to be a middle position between "loving" wrongdoers, and (as a well known New York T-shirt has it), "hunting them down and shooting them." In the Kabbalah, there's a balance between mercy (similar to compassion) and justice. The right kind of justice as the I Ching says, will always be mild and temperate to prevent further excesses -- that is to say counter-attacks. If you and your friends live near ground zero, you care about little things like that.


That's why, I would've preferred to see Osama bin Laden brought to an international tribunal, rather than taken out in the night. That would have been a win for those who value fairness and justice, rather than shoot 'em up tactics. It would have helped us see the human reality of the guy who hated us. People tell me that he was a symbol. When the press purveys any image into the mass psyche, then voila! a symbol. But when 9/11 is turned into a symbol, with its "enemy," and its "heroes," we fall prey to being manipulated by symbols, and wind up as pawns in a giant chess game.


Let us not forget the "heroes" in this chess game. While tossing around terms like "evil," President George W. Bush, and Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, both Republicans, rushed to don hard hats and pose for photo ops with the first responders who rushed to the scene of 9/11 to save lives. Those "heroes" were yet another group of human beings used as symbols. To me, these were the blue-collar guys in my hometown.
How tragic that nine years later, in December 2010, the Republican leadership was all too ready to throw the "heroes" to the dogs, once their usefulness had passed, by denying them a decent life or death with medical care. This current leadership derides those who are ill or disenfranchised. They seek to strip the public good -- Medicare, education, health, public media and the EPA. When they were in power during 9/11, President Bush told his EPA commissioner to lie about the air quality at the 9/11 site. The same party is now gunning to gut the EPA so that the public lacks health and environmental protection.


So to anyone who has bought into all of these symbols, I have one thing to say. If you want to honor the 9/11 tragedy, forget about symbols and remember real human beings. More death and killing won't help.
Healing New York's loss entails policies that support rather than discard people, We don't need a monument to hatred and fear against people of different backgrounds. Let's help people learn to live together and cooperate, as we do here in New York. It's not about distracting us with symbols, it's about caring about real people. And it's not about grandstanding while you pick our pockets. If our fellow Americans aren't street smart enough to spot a pick-pocket, we can help you figure that out too.


Back in the time of 9/11, honoring New York's grief was the way to healing. It still is.

Connect the Dots radio, Saturday, May 7th at Noon ET with Robert McChesney on the free press. Connect the Dots: Sign up and find out about my insights, radio shows, activist links, and offerings at: www.healthjournalistblog.com and Connect the Dots on Facebook


 

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Tuesday
May312011

"Lester Brown" - The New Geopolitics of Food

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/25/the_new_geopolitics_of_food?print=yes&hidecomments=yes&page=full

From the Middle East to Madagascar, high prices are spawning land grabs and ousting dictators. Welcome to the 21st-century food wars.

by Lester Brown

In the United States, when world wheat prices rise by 75 percent, as they have over the last year, it means the difference between a $2 loaf of bread and a loaf costing maybe $2.10. If, however, you live in New Delhi, those skyrocketing costs really matter: A doubling in the world price of wheat actually means that the wheat you carry home from the market to hand-grind into flour for chapatis costs twice as much. And the same is true with rice. If the world price of rice doubles, so does the price of rice in your neighborhood market in Jakarta. And so does the cost of the bowl of boiled rice on an Indonesian family's dinner table.

Welcome to the new food economics of 2011: Prices are climbing, but the impact is not at all being felt equally. For Americans, who spend less than one-tenth of their income in the supermarket, the soaring food prices we've seen so far this year are an annoyance, not a calamity. But for the planet's poorest 2 billion people, who spend 50 to 70 percent of their income on food, these soaring prices may mean going from two meals a day to one. Those who are barely hanging on to the lower rungs of the global economic ladder risk losing their grip entirely. This can contribute -- and it has -- to revolutions and upheaval.

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Tuesday
May312011

"www.sciencedaily.com" - Social Life and Mobility Are Keys to Quality of Life in Old Age

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/05/110528191542.htm

ScienceDaily (May 30, 2011) — Maintaining social relationships and mobility in old age are so important for general well-being that some elderly people will go to extreme lengths to keep active, according to research funded by the United Kingdom's Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC). Surveys conducted during the development of a new measure of quality of life in older people found that some people in their nineties continued to play bowls with the aid of new knees, arm extensions or binoculars to help combat double vision.

According to the research, developed by Ann Bowling, Professor of Health Care for Older Adults at Kingston University London and St George's, University of London, another key to happiness in old age is resourcefulness. One 85-year-old widower told the researchers he had developed a wooden sock horn so he could dry between his toes after his wife, who used to help him because he couldn't bend down, had died and had even given some to other people with the same problem.

Outlining the research at a debate on how to measure what matters to people, Professor Bowling told an audience of 200 academics, policy-makers, government officials and representatives from voluntary groups that an essential requirement for coping with the challenges of older age was to build reserves of social support and self belief. "These social and psychological resources enable people to make the most of their skills, opportunities and abilities so they can compensate when they can no longer do things," she said.

Opening the debate, Baroness Sally Greengross, chief executive of the International Longevity Centre-UK, said developing robust methods of measuring quality of life would help both the Government and individuals plan for the future. "Well-being means different things at different times to different people so we need precise methods of measurement," she said. "The long-term aim is to find out what can be done to improve the quality of life amongst older people."

Professor Bowling explained that it had been necessary to develop a new method of measuring quality of life in older age because previous questionnaires had relied on expert or top down opinions and measures such as income. The Older People's Quality of Life Questionnaire was developed from a series of face-to-face interviews with 999 people aged over 65, randomly sampled across Britain during a period of nine years, and further tested with two more national samples, one of which reflected ethnic diversity. "Quality of life is a subjective concept so we decided it was necessary to ask older individuals what their priorities were," Professor Bowling said.

The event marked the national launch of a series of regional debates on quality of life in older age, being organised by the International Longevity Centre-UK and the Actuarial Profession in partnership with the ESRC.

Tuesday
May312011

"Mike Whitney" - Increasing the Deficits Will Fire-up The Economy and Add Jobs

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Increasing-the-Deficits-Wi-by-Mike-Whitney-110528-705.html

 May 28, 2011

By Mike Whitney

How do you light a fire under Congress? How do you get these guys to do what they're paid to do?

Look, we're five years into this slump, millions of people have lost their homes and jobs, 44 million people are on food stamps, the economy is in the tank, and congress won't lift a finger to help. What's that all about? You'd think that the revision in GDP and the uptick in unemployment claims would set off alarms on Capital Hill. But it hasn't. They just shrug it off and move on. What do they care? They get their fat paycheck one way or another, so what difference does it make to them? Besides, if they play their cards right, they'll nab a 6-figure lobbying job as soon as they retire and spend the rest of their lives working on their chip-shot and swilling single-malt at the club with their moneybags friends. Doesn't that piss you off?

Congress just doesn't seem to "get it." They don't understand what people are going through; how maxed out they are. We're in the middle of a Depression and all they want to do is score points playing political circle-jerk by stonewalling the debt ceiling or jacking-around with Medicare. Meanwhile, unemployment is on the rise (initial claims rose to 424,000 on Thursday), GDP is falling (1Q GDP revised to 1.8%), durable goods are down 3.6-percent in April, the market is topping out, business investment is flat, Europe's on the ropes, Japan is in a historic slump, China is overheating, the output gap is as wide as it was six quarters ago, bank balance sheets are bleeding red from falling home prices and non-performing loans, and the housing market is crashing.

 

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