Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Poet of Democracy

Those corpses of young men,
those martyrs that hang from the gibbets
those hearts pierced by grey lead,
cold and motionless as they seem, live
elsewhere with unslaughtered vitality.
...
they live in other young men, O kings!
they live in brothers, again ready to defy you!

poem by
Walter "Walt" Whitman (May 31, 1819 – March 26, 1892) was an American poet, essayist and journalist and humanist, Whitman is among the most influential poets in the American canon, often called the father of free verse.
 
more on Whitman follow the link Whitman

2nd independence struggle

kenyans will take arms in less than 50yrs to fight for their independence once again...this tym against the greedy few.. somebody just made 800million shillings from people who couldnt feed themselves last year and we all contribute an equal amount to feed them

Fired for teaching Malcolm X

A high school teacher in Los Angeles got fired for encouraging her students to be, well, socially engaged. Karen Salazar was accused of teaching a curriculum that was too “Afro-centric”. You see, teaching texts like the Autobiography of Malcolm X is dangerous. Students organizing and mobilizing on the high school campus was apparently too much for stuffed up administrators (and most definitely, their higher ups) to see and deal with, so they do what they usually do in such circumstances: Scapegoat a teacher, because, of course, students themselves are too stupid to do anything on their own, and press down on her. In this case, they’ve decided to fire Ms. Salazar.
No, wait, it wasn’t that the curriculum was too “Afro-centric” after all — the materials, apparently, were appropriate. It’s just that her teaching style crossed the line into advocacy. You see, when someone encourages you to change the conditions in society that produce inequality and injustice, that’s inappropriate. Ms. Salazar quotes Paulo Freire, she says one should practice “education as the practice of freedom.” In a democratic country, where education is supposed to be a pillar of freedom, that would be all right. But in countries which pass themselves as democracies but practice so many dispersed forms of tyranny, education needs to be the brainwashing of students to toe the line.
And by firing Karen Salazar, that’s precisely what these administrators are trying to enforce. It’s not that she teaches Malcolm X and Tupac, or that she quotes Freire. It’s that students are organizing and mobilizing, learning to work together in cooperative and collective frameworks to challenge authority and change things for the better. And that’s too much.
Learn more about the struggle of the students to have Ms. Salazar reinstated — including videos of their mass actions — here: http://savesalazar.pbwiki.com/ source: Fired for teaching Malcolm X

Malcolm X Quotes: Part 3

The Negro revolution is controlled by foxy white liberals, by the Government itself. But the Black Revolution is controlled only by God."

"There is nothing in our book, the Koran, that teaches us to suffer peacefully. Our religion teaches us to be intelligent. Be peaceful, be courteous, obey the law, respect everyone; but if someone puts his hand on you, send him to the cemetery. That's a good religion."
-- "Message to the Grass Roots," speech, Nov. 1963, Detroit (published in Malcolm X Speaks, ch. 1, 1965).

"Sitting at the table doesn't make you a diner. You must be eating some of what's on that plate. Being here in America doesn't make you an American. Being born here in America doesn't make you an American."

"It's just like when you've got some coffee that's too black, which means it's too strong. What do you do? You integrate it with cream, you make it weak. But if you pour too much cream in it, you won't even know you ever had coffee. It used to be hot, it becomes cool. It used to be strong, it becomes weak. It used to wake you up, now it puts you to sleep."
-- "Message to the Grass Roots," speech, Nov. 1963, Detroit (published in Malcolm X Speaks, ch. 1, 1965).

"...I always had a deep affection for Malcolm and felt that he had a great ability to put his finger on the existence and the root of the problem. He was an eloquent spokesman for his point of view and no one can honestly doubt that Malcolm had a great concern for the problems we face as a race."
-- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in a telegram to Betty Shabazz after the murder of Malcolm X

"Here - at this final hour, Harlem has come to bid farewell to one of its brightest hopes - extinguished now, and gone from us forever.. Many will ask what Harlem finds to honor in this stormy, controversial and bold young captain - and we will smile. .We will answer and say unto them, 'Did you ever talk to Brother Malcolm? Did you ever really listen to him? .For if you did you would know him. And if you knew him you would know why we must honor him.'"
-- Ossie Davis, actor, in his eulogy at Malcolm X's funeral

"This was a brother you could believe. There was the sense that he was not in it for something. That was the extraordinary thing about him. He was in it because of his commitment to our liberation."
-- James Turner, founding director of Africana Studies at Cornell University
-- "The Ballot or the Bullet," speech, April 3 1964, Cleveland, Ohio (published in Malcolm X Speaks, ch. 3, 1965).

If violence is wrong in America, violence is wrong abroad. If it is wrong to be violent defending black women and black children and black babies and black men, then it is wrong for America to draft us, and make us violent abroad in defense of her. And if it is right for America to draft us, and teach us how to be violent in defense of her, then it is right for you and me to do whatever is necessary to defend our own people right here in this country."
-- Speech, Nov. 1963, New York City.

Malcolm X Quotes: Part 2

They put your mind right in a bag, and take it wherever they want."

Don't be in a hurry to condemn because he doesn't do what you do or think as you think or as fast. There was a time when you didn't know what you know today.

Concerning nonviolence, it is criminal to teach a man not to defend himself when he is the constant victim of brutal attacks.

A race of people is like an individual man; until it uses its own talent, takes pride in its own history, expresses its own culture, affirms its own selfhood, it can never fulfill itself.

I feel like a man who has been asleep somewhat and under someone else's control. I feel that what I'm thinking and saying is now for myself. Before it was for and by the guidance of Elijah Muhammad. Now I think with my own mind, sir

I believe that there will ultimately be a clash between the oppressed and those that do the oppressing. I believe that there will be a clash between those who want freedom, justice and equality for everyone and those who want to continue the systems of exploitation."
When a person places the proper value on freedom, there is nothing under the sun that he will not do to acquire that freedom. Whenever you hear a man saying he wants freedom, but in the next breath he is going to tell you what he won't do to get it, or what he doesn't believe in doing in order to get it, he doesn't believe in freedom. A man who believes in freedom will do anything under the sun to acquire . . . or preserve his freedom.

Dr. King wants the same thing I want. Freedom.

I want Dr. King to know that I didn't come to Selma to make his job difficult. I really did come thinking I could make it easier. If the white people realize what the alternative is, perhaps they will be more willing to hear Dr. King."
-- in a conversation with Mrs. Coretta Scott King

I am not a racist. I am against every form of racism and segregation, every form of discrimination. I believe in human beings, and that all human beings should be respected as such, regardless of their color.

The common goal of 22 million Afro-Americans is respect as human beings, the God-given right to be a human being. Our common goal is to obtain the human rights that America has been denying us. We can never get civil rights in America until our human rights are first restored. We will never be recognized as citizens there until we are first recognized as humans."
-- "Racism: the Cancer that is Destroying America," in Egyptian Gazette (Aug. 25 1964).

I believe in the brotherhood of man, all men, but I don't believe in brotherhood with anybody who doesn't want brotherhood with me. I believe in treating people right, but I'm not going to waste my time trying to treat somebody right who doesn't know how to return the treatment."
-- Speech, Dec. 12 1964, New York City.

There is nothing in our book, the Koran, that teaches us to suffer peacefully. Our religion teaches us to be intelligent. Be peaceful, be courteous, obey the law, respect everyone; but if someone puts his hand on you, send him to the cemetery. That's a good religion."
-- "Message to the Grass Roots," speech, Nov. 1963, Detroit (published in Malcolm X Speaks, ch. 1, 1965).

"Sitting at the table doesn't make you a diner. You must be eating some of what's on that plate. Being here in America doesn't make you an American. Being born here in America doesn't make you an American."
-- "The Ballot or the Bullet," speech, April 3 1964, Cleveland, Ohio (published in Malcolm X Speaks, ch. 3, 1965).

"If violence is wrong in America, violence is wrong abroad. If it is wrong to be violent defending black women and black children and black babies and black men, then it is wrong for America to draft us, and make us violent abroad in defense of her. And if it is right for America to draft us, and teach us how to be violent in defense of her, then it is right for you and me to do whatever is necessary to defend our own people right here in this country."
-- Speech, Nov. 1963, New York City.

Malcolm X Quotes: Part 1

I am for violence if non-violence means we continue postponing a solution to the American black man's problem just to avoid violence.

I believe in a religion that believes in freedom. Any time I have to accept a religion that won't let me fight a battle for my people, I say to hell with that religion.

I don't even call it violence when it's in self defense; I call it intelligence.

I'm for truth, no matter who tells it. I'm for justice, no matter who it's for or against.

We are nonviolent with people who are nonviolent with us

If you're not ready to die for it, put the word 'freedom' out of your vocabulary

My Alma mater was books, a good library... I could spend the rest of my life reading, just satisfying
my curiosity.

If you have no critics you'll likely have no success

Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it.

The future belongs to those who prepare for it today.

You're not supposed to be so blind with patriotism that you can't face reality. Wrong is wrong, no matter who says it.

You show me a capitalist, and I'll show you a bloodsucker.

You don't have to be a man to fight for freedom. All you have to do is to be an intelligent human being.

You can't separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom

Truth is on the side of the oppressed.

Commercial Churches

and now that its no longer a secret that our churches have gone commercial my suggestion is that they should list on the stock exchange that way they may raise the amount of money they may require and invest and probably their flock may benefit more from their generous contribution.

Friday, March 23, 2012

MALCOLM X: OXFORD UNION DEBATE (December 3, 1964)

Why Kikuyu community must not be misled again

The Limuru Gema meeting is the epitome of tribal bigotry, I must commend Kenyans because day by day our eyes are opening to see that such meeting and many others that will follow to consolidate votes on the basis of the tongue will never breed anything tangible for the hardworking Kenyans. Koigi wa Wamwere article on the standard newspaper going round in the social media has put in black and white. The day we Kenyans fully appreciate the politics of issues and not personalities and tribes its the day we fully appreciate the very power of organized people conscious of their culture and economic systems, then  no politician or business elite will call a meeting in our name for their selfish gains.

for koigi wa mwere articleThe Standard | Online Edition :: Why Kikuyu community must not be misled again

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

What is independence really?

if people die hunger of in somalia and same in kenya...then there no difference between a militia and goverment ... people what is difference between kenyan people in IDP camps, turkana, samburu and north eastern and the people in stateless/lawless Somalia, both depend on the UN and well wishers to feed them.what is independence to them ?Is it the flag, the national anthem, a black president.what is it? Ngugi wa Thiong'o in the mouth of Gikonyo a character in his book A Grain of Wheat describes independence as ' warm water in the mouth of a thirsty man' i think i concur. Let no make our constitution making process and results feel the the same.

WHO TAUGHT YOU TO HATE YOURSELF? (May 5, 1962, Los Angeles)

MALCOLM X: BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY

MALCOLM X: "You're Afraid To Bleed!"

MALCOLM X: OUR HISTORY WAS DESTROYED BY SLAVERY

Brainwashing the citizens

A large majority of Americans – 87 percent, according to one poll – approve of the killing of Bin Laden. Many were visibly overcome by joy when they heard the news, and the subsequent warning by CIA director Leon Panetta that the operation would actually increase the terrorist threat to the US only slightly damped their spirits.
Within a few days of the operation, video games were on the market offering simulated experiences of killing Osama – or, in one case, his ghost! If you get killed by him first, never mind: you can just start over again.
Sam Sommers, a sociology professor at Tufts University, explained the jubilant reaction as follows: “September 11 shook our belief [that] the world [is] a just and fair place where you get what you deserve. Innocent people died senselessly. Seeing this closing scene, for many people, provides a just ending.” Hence the “sense of relief” expressed by the widow of one 9/11 victim.
What can account for this strange belief that the world is a just and fair place? How is it possible not to know that innocent people die senselessly every day? Perhaps it has something to do with religion, which has more influence over people’s minds in the United States than in most of Western Europe. Perhaps it also reflects the complacent platitudes of “positive thinking”.
Good sense
Besides, was 9/11 senseless? It made good sense to Bin Laden. In his journal, captured by the Navy Seals, he wondered how many Americans it would be necessary to kill to make the United States withdraw its forces from the Moslem world. He pursued a carefully devised strategy – to lure America into a long and exhausting war of attrition that would eventually lead to its economic collapse. It was the same strategy he had used – in alliance with the US – against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. This time too, the strategy so far seems to be working very well.
The worst that can be said of Bin Laden is that he was a ruthless warlord willing to sacrifice innocent people on a large scale to achieve his political goals. Let us grant that this makes him an evil man. But let us be consistent and place this judgment in a broader context. World history is full of such evil men (and a few evil women). They are called “great statesmen”.
And look who’s talking!
Many American presidents, whether Republicans or Democrats, have been no less ruthless. Osama killed some 2,800 Americans on 9/11. Compare this with the 3,500 civilians killed by Bush Senior in the December 1989 invasion of Panama – a minor affair as American military interventions go. Or the 3,800 Afghan civilians killed by American bombing within three months of 9/11. Or consider the statement by then US Ambassador to the UN Madeleine Albright (in an interview on 60 Minutes on May 12, 1996) that the deaths of half a million children caused by the US-led embargo on Iraq were “a price worth paying.”
The United States has now avenged 9/11. “Justice has been done,” says Obama. Bin Laden also saw himself as an agent of justice and vengeance (neither of them drawing any distinction between the two). In 2004 he revealed how he first got the idea of destroying the Twin Towers. He was watching the destruction of tower blocks in Beirut on television in 1982, when Israel, backed up by the US Sixth Fleet, was invading Lebanon. Why, he asked himself, should he not “punish the unjust in the same way”?
Clearly, the Towers in New York are not the only twins in this story. It is also a story about twin barbarisms. (Gilbert Achcar elaborates on this thought in his book The Clash of Barbarisms: The Making of the New World Disorder, Paradigm Publishers 2006.)
The assumption of benevolence
The Americans who celebrated the death of Bin Laden were not bothered by reflections such as these. But let’s not be too harsh on them. Facts that might inspire critical reflection are never mentioned in the mainstream corporate media aimed at ordinary people. Now and then it is admitted that the United States may sometimes make a mistake, but the assumption of benevolence – the idea that America is inherently a force for good in the world – can never be questioned. No alternative perspective is ever presented. And this “patriotic” outlook is drummed into American hearts and minds from the earliest school years.
And yet it is not just a matter of information and ideas not being available. After all, while by no means a democracy in any real sense, the United States is not a totalitarian state either. Thanks in part to the internet, alternative ideas and sources of information are now easily accessible to those determined to seek them out. But not so very many do seek them out.
Why? One reason is that most people are too preoccupied with earning a living, ensuring their own survival. Social pressures are a very important factor. But perhaps the crucial barrier is within the psyche. If your positive self-image is based on the idea of how marvellous “your country” is, then even if you do encounter discordant information it must be rejected or interpreted as somehow irrelevant. Accepting reality would be too painful, too threatening to the self.
Stefan
http://theworldsocialist.blogspot.com/

Workers' Exploitation: Their important role in the capitalist system


It’s exploitation that causes workers’ problems.
On an ultra-simplistic level we could say that capitalism in the persona of capitalists uses capital (in its basic form, money) to make a profit. By utilising capital in the form of property, equipment, machinery, investment or speculation the capitalist needs to employ members of the working class in order to increase the original capital for the benefit of the capitalist. This can only be done if the workers agree knowingly or unknowingly to their own exploitation.
Why exploitation? In the monetary world society we live in everyone has a need for money on a regular ongoing basis in order to secure the essentials of life. By accepting employment workers undertake to work (knowingly or unknowingly) part of the time for their own remuneration and part of the time in order to meet the capitalist’s need for reinvestment in their business and to augment their accumulation of profit.
There are three elements to the capitalist’s expectation in relation to employees. First, workers must be paid sufficient remuneration to keep them returning to work; the terms and conditions of work may change depending on the available source of labour. Second, the capitalist’s own ongoing costs must be met – replacement machinery, upkeep, purchase of materials etc. And third, there must be a sufficient element of profit for the capitalist as his incentive to continue. As a business gets bigger, employing a larger workforce, the accumulated ‘extra’ time (over and above the length of time required to earn the wages) from this extra workforce gets added to the capitalist’s pot, increasing their profit, not the workers’ pay packets. When demanding a fair day’s work for a fair day’s pay who stops to ask about the capitalist’s own fair day’s work? Capitalism labour to make profit, to make big money for a few at the expense and from the labour of the majority, i.e. exploitation.
When the recognition hits home that money is the recurring impediment, the fundamental issue in the daily life of the worker awareness grows of all the many problems it causes. Whatever issue is under consideration – be it getting to and from work, getting married, having children, repair and maintenance of personal property, heating the home sufficiently, having a holiday or a reasonably comfortable retirement – the primary issue is a financial one. Money is the issue.
A season ticket for premier league football is beyond the means of most of us, as is a ticket for the opera, a family trip on an open-top London bus, or even higher education for a growing child (add your own would-be-nice list). For the worker it’s a constant prioritising of seemingly never-ending constraints in the form of utility bills, car payments and servicing, rent or mortgage – all eating away at the possibility of a financially stress-free enjoyable family day out, let alone a financially stress-free month until the next pay day rolls around.
None of the simple pleasures mentioned above are beyond the capitalists’ reach however. They, the tiny minority, can have it all. But, actually, who is dispensable, who indispensable? In a monetary society the worker needs the capitalist and likewise the capitalist needs (some) workers. Notice just how unbalanced this equation is: there are always more looking for work than can find it, whilst those seeking workers have an almost inexhaustible supply. However, in a world of voluntary work and free access (a post-money society) the worker will have no need for the capitalist who will then need to join the rest of us and become a contributor too to fit into the new, inclusive and cooperative society.
Whether from an individual or community standpoint economic problems greatly impinge on social life. Individuals are severely limited within the system as to the impact they can have on their overall situation. Similarly, communities are limited by their local budgets as to the overall impact they can have on the general quality and quantity of facilities available for their residents. Any so-called political ‘solutions’ that are offered or imposed to ease social problems are almost invariably economically based (because what can be done without money?) and limited in scope (because of economic limitations) thus not offering genuine, complete, satisfactory solutions at all.
It’s a vicious circle of individual or community issues requiring solutions which invariably need economic input. The entanglement of social/political issues with economic concerns keeps us bogged down in an illusory, ostensible, false position, one we are led to believe has no alternative– an apparent but deceptive case. Inequality of access, whether to goods or services, is largely an economic factor alienating sectors of society one from another.
The main factor – exploitation – being the element that needs to be eliminated if we are to win the class war, let’s ask ‘who needs money most?’ The working class can win this fight when they recognise the antagonism between the capitalists’ need and their own needs. Money is not what we need – it’s the things it buys us we need. Capitalists do need it – it’s the basis of their accumulation. We win the class war when we plan together for a society of voluntary work and common ownership that will overcome the constraints of capitalism and rid ourselves of the divisive class system. It’s not a moral issue but a simple material fact: the principles of capitalism and socialism being opposite and antagonistic.
JANET SURMAN

Capitalism: why economic crisis should not come as a suprise

Friday, June 3, 2011

Crisis: the stories so far


Business As Usual: The Economic Crisis And The Failure Of Capitalism by Paul Mattick. Reacktion Books: 2011.
Just yesterday, we were all supposed to believe that the globalisation of capitalism and free markets was the route to freedom, peace and prosperity for all. Then, with barely an explanation, and somewhat out of the blue, the story changed. Now we are to believe that, due to circumstances beyond anyone’s control, prosperity will have to give way to austerity. The good times are over.
It is characteristic of crises that the stories we are expected to believe suddenly change. But how can we understand the change? And might there not be better stories than the rather grim and gloomy one we’ve been ordered to swallow? Paul Mattick Jnr’s short book is just such an alternative. For him the crisis signals the complete bankruptcy and destruction of mainstream economics.
Why crisis is impossible
Why did the crisis appear as a bolt out of the blue? Why was it not expected or anticipated by any economist or mainstream commentator? In short, because there is no place in the standard economic story for crisis, any more than there’s a place for wizards and interstellar travel in a 19th-century realist novel. The old story goes something like this:
“Capitalism is a system for producing wealth to satisfy consumer needs. Individuals set up in business looking out only for their own interest, but in doing so produce for society. Only what can be sold will be produced; money will be borrowed, land rented and labour hired only because the resulting production meets a need. The money earned by selling one’s product will then be spent either on consumption or further production. The economy therefore tends naturally to a balanced state, in which all products find buyers. There may be momentary imbalances between supply and demand, but rising and falling prices soon take care of those. In this way, capitalism creates the wealth of nations, and all is well in the best of all possible worlds.”
No doubt the story sounds reasonable – it is, after all, part of our cultural inheritance, as familiar as Noah and his ark, Jesus and the wise men, Little Red Riding Hood and her granny. But there’s no room in this picture for the kind of crisis we’re currently living through. The crisis appears as a shock and is regarded as a mystery simply because there’s no framework within which it makes sense. We can understand that a very small scale ‘crisis’ will result if a business fails to meet consumer need: it may go bust, and this will be a crisis for those relying on that business for their living. But there’s no reason why this should cause much of a problem for the system as a whole – and economists never expect it to. Within the framework outlined above, there is no room for the sort of crises we actually see in the real world – society-wide and global crises where vast amounts of real wealth and the means of producing it (factories, mines, offices and so on) exist side by side with grinding poverty and unemployment. This kind of insanity makes no sense in terms of the story. Surely, great masses of wealth would just go to satisfy consumer demand? And if wealth outstripped consumer demand, then, well, great! The age of leisure and abundance, long promised by capitalism, would finally be upon us, and we could collectively lay back and enjoy it.
Unable to find a satisfying explanation from within the story, the storytellers are obliged to smuggle in some bogeymen from the wings. The balance we expect from the story is then upset by one of various villains, which one depending on the predilections of the storyteller: state interference or largesse, insufficient (or too much) regulation, greed, and so on. Quite why these things sometimes cause a crisis and sometimes not when they’re always lurking in the wings is left unexplained.
Why crisis is inevitable
However, there are some thinkers, Mattick among them, who were not at all surprised by the crisis. This is not, as Mattick says at the start of his book, because they are cleverer than the mainstream storytellers. Nor have they access to more or better information – in fact, for the most part, rather the opposite. Instead it is a matter “of knowing how to think about what is going on”. Or, in the terms we’ve introduced in this article, of having access to better stories – stories that capture what’s actually going on in the real world. Here’s Mattick’s story:
“Capitalism is not primarily a system for producing wealth to meet consumer demand, but for making money. This is what business is all about: using money to make more money. The capitalist (or, increasingly, a capitalist institution subsidised and backed by the state) starts off with a sum of money, which he throws into circulation in the expectation that it will return to him as a greater sum than he started with. To this end, the capitalist buys means of production and labour power on the market, then puts these to work to produce goods, which he then takes to market in the expectation not just of sales, but of profits. If he is successful in his aim, and if he is to remain a capitalist and keep up with the competition, he must reinvest at least a portion of that profit in yet more production, buying yet more labour power and means of production, to produce yet more wealth and, potentially, money profits. And then the cycle begins again, on an ever-expanding scale.”
The motive here is not the satisfaction of consumer need – a relatively straightforward matter – but the production and appropriation of profits on an ever-expanding scale – a much more tricky thing to achieve. And as the production of social wealth increasingly takes on this capitalist character, the production of the things we need increasingly relies not on our need for them, nor on our ability to produce them, but on the ability of capitalists to make profits from the whole process. When they cannot make or do not expect to make a profit from production, or when they produce too much to sell profitably, they will not invest in production, but in speculation, or will not invest at all, and hoard money. This can affect not just their own line of business, but the whole system of wealth production. Crisis, in this view, is not caused by any bogeyman in the wings, but is a necessary result of the process itself.
What’s the answer?
Once we’ve understood this story, our expectations are turned on their head. We are no longer shocked by capitalism’s periodic crises, but expect them. The question then is, do we really need to forever make our lives hostage to capitalist profit; or might we be able to do things in a different way? In the mainstream, the debate over how to resolve the crisis is between two alternatives. The first is to just let things collapse so the economy undergoes the necessary correction, restoring profitability and eventually returning the system to business as usual. The second is that the central banks should continue to print money and the state bail-out bankrupt banks and countries and so on, so that ‘business as usual’ is not disrupted by potentially catastrophic upheavals (as was the case in the Great Depression of the 1930s). The debate is between the needs of business, on the one hand, and the need to preserve social cohesion (for the needs of business) on the other. Businessmen and policy-makers are damned if they do, and damned if they don’t. But what are usually thought of as ‘socialist’ alternatives are unlikely to work either – history has shown that reformist social democracy and ‘communist’ central planning have been no better at controlling capitalism’s crises than anything else. It’s no good, says Mattick, demanding jobs from a system that would happily give us the jobs if it could.
If there’s hope, it’s in the belief that human beings will eventually tire of walking into brick walls and begin to look for a door. If you have a concern that produces socially necessary goods or services, on the one hand, and poor and unemployed people on the other, and there is no way of putting the two together in a way that produces profits for owners, then that’s what capitalism calls a crisis. The solution – bringing workers, the unemployed, the poor and the means of producing wealth together, not in order to make profits, but to provide for need – is called socialism.
The story has a name
We’ve left the name of this alternative story till the end because it is liable to scare unwary readers. That’s because, in the standard story, it’s portrayed as one of those bogeymen waiting in the wings. The name is Marxian socialism. Mattick’s is the second major book from a Marxist thinker to appear since the onset of the crisis (the first was David Harvey’s Enigma Of Capital, favourably reviewed in the June 2010 Socialist Standard). And we highly recommend it – it’s a brilliantly comprehensive and yet miraculously short history and analysis of capitalist crisis. The Marxists associated with this journal will have their differences with the details of Mattick’s account. In particular, we would say he puts too much emphasis on Marx’s law of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall, and throws the baby out with the bathwater when he rightly rejects the old left but places his faith seemingly more in the spontaneous appearance of mutual aid and communist formations than in working-class political organisation. But what’s more important than the minor disagreements is the framework that Marxism provides for understanding what’s going on in the real world, and for that, Mattick’s book is an essential guide.
STUART WATKINS

lmnop.:

lmnop.:

lmnop.: Canye West at Occupy Wallstreet with my poster in...

lmnop.:
Canye West at Occupy Wallstreet with my poster in...
: Canye West at Occupy Wallstreet with my poster in the background! this photo is in Rolling Stone Magazine. new work

lmnop.: D17 Day of Action #OWSwe started out at Duarte Pa...

lmnop.: D17 Day of Action #OWS
we started out at Duarte Pa...
: D17 Day of Action #OWS we started out at Duarte Park on Canal and 6th St in Manhattan. To celebrate OWS 3 month birthday, Bradley Manning's ...

Monday, March 19, 2012

lmnop.: Another World is Possible

lmnop.: Another World is Possible: "We have it in our power to begin the world over again" Thomas Paine (from the night the barricades were removed from the perimeter of ...

lmnop.: Occupy Wallstreet

lmnop.: Occupy Wallstreet: In my opinion, the Occupy Wallstreet Movement is about a fundamental shift of values. The shift needed is a complete 180 degree revolution f...

Tribalism

why dont we have tribal clashes in karen, muthaiga, or Runda...and as Mzalendo kibunjia traverses the country lecturing us on how to end tribalism in kenya, i have the courage to tell him there are only two tribes in kenya
THE HAVES and THE HAVE NOTS.Any other description of a tribe in negative light because of the different tongues we speak is missing the point... i am a proud gikuyu i love my tongue and origin from slopes of Mt. Kenya with ultmost respect for all sub nationalities of kenya and much hatred for anyone who opppresses another to make super profits/ misuses power to accumalate wealth, then turns peasants against each and blame it on the tongues we speak. When the workers of kenya go onstrike do they report luo nurses went on strike, kalenjin teachers are on strike, kikuyu doctors on strike.. its just a strike.. its time kibunjia rethinked his work....gud evng the diverse pple of kenya

Friday, March 16, 2012

IMF backs Central Bank on high interest rates regime

 The Bretton wood institutions have been in the country almost since independence and their influence on the local economy cannot be ignored. During last years Kshs. crisis the IMF landed in the country after a babyish cry from the then Kenya's Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta and they responded generously with a $25 Million Dollars to ease pressure on the suffocating shilling. The country is already deep in debt recently the same newspaper with the link below revealed that every child born in Kenya is slapped with Kshs. 33,000/- debt before its first breath. From the below link you will be able to detect the teacher- student relation between our government and the imperialist financial institutions. A kind of big brother withholding its an OK  sign to ever unsure subject. Enjoy the read and discern the foreign influence and control on our financial institutions and you will know that the citizens concerns are never the subject of any discussions in these quarters.
The Standard | Online Edition :: IMF backs Central Bank on high interest rates regime

Dead Student Graded

There was a hullabaloo in Kenya parliament when an MP from Northern Eastern Kenya tabled results of a student in last KCSE exam who was dead at the time of the said exam exercise. The student was grade as sat and cheated. This has raised queries on the credibility on the exam administration body KNEC. The head of the exam body is brutally opposed to an audit to authenticate the exam results. for info on this follow the nation newspaper link:
 
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/Dead+student+had+been+graded++/-/1056/1367276/-/julhodz/-/index.html

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Kenya: leaders out of touch

 And you know your in kenya when you find leaders completely out touch with the masses and the church is not left out.

Kenya: Southern Bypass controversy

Southern Bypass controversy rages on...
To that row over a park and a road. Conservationists are now warning the government to take its time and look for an alternative to hiving off a section of the Nairobi National Park. The Government wants to annex at least 80 acres of the park to pave way for the Southern Bypass that is set to ease congestion in the city.

Blinded by them

I tell you if you can spot difference between -Raila the current and only the third prime minister of kenya that is of course after Kimaathi wa Waciuri and Jomo Kenyatta, Uhuru Kenyatta the son of the first president of Kenya,  Mwai Kibaki the current president of Kenya, William Ruto former committed student of self declared professor of politics and second president of Kenya Daniel arap Moi-I tell your blind, they because they are one and the same; typical kenyan politicians. Yesterday I wrote about how a man named Edward Barneys also credited with the term Public Relations which was non existent before to replace the word propaganda which had negative lining as used by the Germans. His reasoning was if you could use propaganda for was you could definitely use for peace. Through his theories derived from his uncle's ( Sigmud Frued) theories of pyscho analysis he appealed to peoples emotions and ruled the USA in the 1920s until the great depression came in the early 1930s. In Kenya in the recent days there is debate about the International Criminal Court confirmation of charges on two of the purpoted leading presidential candidates and an alledged letter from the UK claiming the ICC will arrest Kibaki and want to keep the said candidates off this years general election. an exchange of bitter words between raila, uhuru ,ruto and Kibaki. Their sympathisers  have come to defend their tribal chiefs, the citizenry especially in the social networks are equally charged be. Typical Kenya's reactionary politics of non issues (tribal emotions have been stroked)depending on where we come we are pointing guns at each other.This is bigotry.But these, all of them kibaki,raila,uhuru, ruto are  just laughing, looking from above like big brother as they continue fooling us, their peasant admirers, this is  until they get what they want- power, None of them will be hurt but the peasants will be left baying for each others blood excatly what they want to see. Have blood free future people.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Century of self

Please send this video to your contact list and tweet often, so that we send it viral. Let us remember "Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people" - John Adams - Second President - 1797 - 1801
Now is the first day of a new beginning.
Each one - Reach One- Each One - Teach One
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TjP2gHoBLvA

Getting our Priorities wrong

 If killing were a competition then our roads are doing way better than al shabaab. Am just sayn we got our priorities al wrong.. there more life threating conditions than al shabaab. The goverment drwn all our resources and put them in a war that does not concern and this has been my stand since before our invasion to somalia began. since there has been increaesd attacts by the said terrorists groups owing to our offensive. my argument that the targetting were tourists visiting and not kenyan the goverment should have concentrated on defence and not offence especially at time our economy is experiecing a sharp decline. But still not too late to call it a day we can call our sons and daughters back home and put these resources in better use such paying our teachers, nurses and doctors. we can invest these resources in fooed security programmes to avoid a recurrence of last year devastation and loss dignity where a great number of kenyan mostly in arid areas died of hunger. we can also invest in road inspection unit that is committed to ensuring safe driving of public service to put an end the road carnage that continue to claim high number of kenyans each day.
http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/InsidePage.php?id=2000043490&cid=

Intellect vs Emotions

I have been studying the nature of human being and have come to agree with Edward Barneys commonly reffered as the fathe of public relations also the nephew of Sigmud frued the reknown psycho analylist, That if you want to catch peoples attention dont sell to their intellect sell to their emotions. And this man ruled the united states in the 1920s in politics and in business. Pretty very much what our leaders do with us, they have mastered the art and they swing the kenyan public right left and center stroking their emotional attachemnt to their tribes, fooling their peasant admirers that by attacking you neighbor then you will be better tomorrow. This didnt start yesterday or the day before this typical kenyan politics where you come from and the tongue you speak determines your votes and who can join in to form coalition and political marriages of convinience. The kenyan media has also coined the word political backyard to reffer to followers of the tribal chiefs. The hope of this country in the hands of an upcoming young generation no the one in the university but below the age of ten and those being born. Beyond age 10 if you ask i think they have already been poisoned and the kind of education they continue to receive both at home and in kenyas school system will only lead in deep waters than we are in now. 

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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Moism without Moi

why does the goverment play so many games. Its a reggae tune by one most successful reggae band morgan heritage but its so real. Farmers in rural areas who rely on farming for everything are being held hostage by cartels who want to control the ferlizer business. rpeorts indicate that major players in the industries like Mea Ltd did accept the bidding as done by the public owne Cereals Board. As the giants fight the grass is hurting(farmers) and you can be sure the cartel members are in the heart of this goverment and hve been major players in the previous goverment since independece.Somebody said moism without moi is equally dangerous as moism with moi. Moism was term first used in the 1980s during the rule of former president moi to reffer to the impunity the insensitivenes, the contempt of the state towards the citizenry. Public officials and powerful business elites went on unbated to swindle kenya(ns) and though there some like it has stopped even this kibaki goverment has its own sacred cows, the untouchables who get the tenders,and major contracts in the goverment which they dont fulfill or will fulfill at their pace and in pathetic manner. follow the link to see the cartels at work http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/editorial/InsidePage.php?id=2000053937&cid=4

Nurses strike



One of the dailies yesterday reported death of a mother and child due to excessive bleeding as she could not be attended by the striking health workers. But this was not Minister Nyong'os wife and child or of any other of the ruling class or business elites. In this a case a person has not eaten a dog this is no news. State insensitiveness to various striking workers' groups is at its peak, this goverment is broke when is workers are on strike but still bloated with non-perfoming minister and assistant minister(42 minister and over 100 assistant ministers) all earning over a million kenya shilllings). You can easily tell the place of kenyan worker in the 'busy' schedule of kenyan politician, who neither nor his family requires the services of a peasant health worker. In real sense the services of a peasant health worker are only required by another peasant a farmer, a mechanic, a boda boda operator, house wife,a helpeless child and of the nurses household members. The media an ally of the ruling class has not made it easy for the striking peasants making them look bad from the ailing peasants eye while the real culprit seats pretty in their luxurios offices.The very result the ruling class want to see , the peasants despising each other instead standing united. Have unity filled day people.

linda nchi

War propaganda has always over the years been used to make the people buy into the idea that the goverment is always acting on their best interests as it wages wars on other sates. it was done in Germany and the United Sates perfected it. our country have never declared war on any state since independence but this modest state of our country was rudely interuppted by an un warranted declaration that the nation will have to go on offensive against an armophous militia in the neigbouring country Somalia. Al shabaab is believed to be associated with a reknown anti american group al queda. Our minister of internal security Saitoti addressed the nation shortly after yet another blast in the Kenya capital city the third in a span of two months and probably the six if we include the ones occuring in North eastern town of Garissa telling us we are more secure than before the KDF offensive into Somalia. Before the offensive if the attacts is anything to go kenya had witnessed just a single attacks and if attacks/territorial integrity were anthing to go by the our forces should be in migingo and Ethiopian where our country men continue to harrassed by ugandan authorities and maimed and murdered by a rogue militia at the Ethiopian border. What am saying let the goverment call of the offensive it was estimated to take two months has has been almost 5months now. its costing us lives of both our servicemen and innocent civilians. Stop this cheap propaganda even major chirchir aliwezwa follow the link http://www.mashada.com/baraza/2012/01/11/major-chirchir-wears-egg-to-work/
n b4 this linda nchi operation... kweli tuna macho hatuoni

Priorities wrong

if killing were a competition then our roads r doing way better than al shabaab..... Am just sayn we got our priorities al wrong...hav priotised day pple

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

phantom Ken-Ren Fertiliser Factory project


By 2015, when Kenya is due to make the last payments due on account of the phantom Ken-Ren Fertiliser Factory project, Kenyan taxpayers will have been gouged over Kshs 5.1 billion in respect of an original guarantee of only Kshs 350 million. The Kenyan taxpayer will have paid 14 times the value of the project and received nothing. Without the factory Kenya continues to import almost 500,000 metric tones of fertilizer annually and the bill amounts to Tens-of-Billions-of-Shillings. The factory could have employed scores of Kenyans and lowered the cost of agriculture production and food for tens of millions of Kenyans – for decades. The factory’s contribution to food security would have been immense. As things stand today, Kenyans have no option for balanced crop nutrition apart from imported fertilizer blends. And now, there is even a shortage of imported fertiliser. While the farmers protest, and politicians cry crocodile tears, it is time to declare that the Ken-Ren fertilizer factory fiasco was economic sabotage not just corruption.
The Ken-Ren Fertiliser Factory was a joint venture entered into in the mid 1970s between the Government and a now bankrupt American firm known as N-REN Corporation, to form a company registered as Ken-Ren Chemical and Fertilizers Company Limited (Ken-Ren). The plan was to save Kenya huge amounts of money then being spent on importing fertilizer. Ken-Ren was to build a factory at Changamwe, Mombasa to manufacture fertilizer for domestic consumption and export markets. The location, near Kenya’s coastal Oil Refinery was ideal and the use of refinery by-products to manufacture fertiliser made economic sense.
Ken-Ren on advice of N-Ren Corporation entered into several financing and equipment procurement contracts with various Austrian and Belgian banks and suppliers, with the Government of Kenya being the guarantor. The total guarantee provided to Ken-Ren, by the Kenyan Government, was US$.42,796 million (at that time about Kshs 350 million) at an interest rate of 8.5% p.a and other charges. The suppliers of equipment and machinery were Coppee-Lavalin of Belgium and Voest Alpine of Austria.
The American partners turned out to be fraudulent. The fertilizer factory project failed to take off and Ken-Ren was subsequently placed under receivership in September 1978, with the Registrar-General being appointed the official receiver and provisional liquidator. Although no work was done on the proposed factory, various pieces of equipment worth Kshs.237 million were delivered at the port of Mombasa by the Austrian firm, Voest Alpine. The rusting equipment can still be seen in Mombasa. Other equipment valued at Kshs.100 million was ordered and paid for but never shipped. Ultimately, the financiers for the Ken_Ren project instituted two sets of court cases and arbitral proceedings against the Kenyan Government – calling on the guarantee.
In the first case filed in May 1988 by the Ducroire Bank of Belgium against the Kenyan Government, the Tribunal sitting in November 2002 awarded the bank an amount of Kshs.1,720,000,000 (Euro.21,181,992), and a further sum of Kshs.6,790,875 (US$.87,500) in respect of legal costs. After further negotiations between the Kenyan Government and the financiers, the debt due was agreed at Kshs.3,274,934,000 (Euro.32,520,319) payable between July 2004 and June 2015. The Government had as at 30 June 2010 paid a sum of Kshs.2,016,894,395.70, made up of principal and interest leaving a balance of Kshs.1,258,039,604.30 (Euro.12,608,034.52) outstanding.
In the second case filed by BAWAG Bank of Austria on 29 June 1992 before a Tribunal, an award of Kshs.1,330,812,400 (Euro.16,635,156.16) was made in favour of the Austrian bank. However, the Government delayed honouring the award, and following several negotiations between it and the bank, a restructuring agreement was reached and signed on 14 November 2004. According to the agreement, the Government was required to pay a sum of Euro.16,635,156.16 twice a year, on every 31st March and 30th September. As at 30 September 2010, the Government had paid a sum of Kshs.1,044,173,755.35 in respect of principal and interest, leaving a balance of Kshs.837,312,353.50 (Euro.8,483,929.64) outstanding. As no fertiliser factory was ever constructed by Ken-Ren, the entire expenditure of Kshs.3,061,068,151.05 so far incurred on the project is nugatory. Incredibly, no-one has been prosecuted in Kenya and no recovery proceedings were brought by the Kenya Government; not even against N-REN Corporation.

By Mars Group Kenya.

class warfare

The obama campgain is advocating for higher taxes for business executives. and this has sparked debate on class war and obama is at pains to explain his tax policy. But why should he be at pains? whereas the facts can speak for themselves . The capitalist system is a total failure even those who have benefited from it are calling for an overhaul.

In kenya the gap between the rich and the poor its ever yawning and what is worse is the the masses are either ignorant or blinded by the ruling class and business elites. the middle class that is key to any revolution in any country is fast asleep. The rich has corrupted it with goodies to veil their eyes.

Gakunia

Gakunia a gikuyu word for a small sack was name given to the colonial Special branch agents who were dressed in sack hoods with eye holes. And every one picked from the reserves as a suspected mau mau freedom movement member was filed slowly past the ghostly figures who would suddenly say 'Take him' and you knew you were headed for a detention camp. The gakunias were simply professional betrayers. Selling their patriotism for a meal.Today the Gakunias dont need to be hooded they are in so called the august house,they are in ministries as corrupt ministers and PSs, they are greedy investors who underpay their workers, they are all over each day morgaging kenya..But we keep the hope that one day of days we will slay the dragon that sack our blood and swim in the comfort our sweat. As malcolm X said by 'any means necessary'. follow the link for more reads on kenyan history of independence and the maumau movement

http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&rh=n%3A283155%2Ck%3AJ.%20M.%20Kariuki%20parliament&page=1#/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=mau+mau+detainee&rh=n%3A283155%2Ck%3Amau+mau+detainee

A brief and crucial history of the United States


A brief and crucial history of the United States - Must Watch Video


Please send this video to your contact list and tweet often, so that we send it viral. Let us remember "Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people" - John Adams - Second President - 1797 - 1801

Now is the first day of a new beginning.
Each one - Reach One- Each One - Teach One
Posted February 23, 2012 -

Transcript
Let Your Life Be a Friction to Stop the Machine
Nightmare and insanity are akin: mysterious and involuntary states that skew and distort objective reality. One wakens from nightmare; from insanity there is no awakening.
Whether Americans live in the one state or the other is the paramount question of this era.
For two hundred years Americans have been indoctrinated with a mythology created, imposed and sustained by a manipulating cabal: the financial elite that built its absolute control on the muscle and blood, good will, ignorance and credulity, of its citizenry.
America began with the invasion of a populated continent and the genocide of its native people. Once solidly established, it grafted enslavement of another race onto that base.
With those two pillars of state firmly in place it declared itself an independent nation in a document that nobly proclaimed the equality of all mankind.
In that act of monumental hypocrisy America’s myth had its beginning.
* * *
A Constitution was written that came to be regarded as American Holy Writ. Its central purposes were to defend private property and suppress mass democracy. It has fulfilled both those mandates beyond the wildest dreams of its creators.
Once the existing oligarchy was secure in law and native people largely exterminated, the ruling class increased its wealth and power fantastically in the 19th century, using the government as its enabler, exploiting to the limit the device of chartered corporations.
With its phenomenal money power, the financial elite began to use the military to expand its sway beyond the continent. Regions, territories, islands, and whole countries were annexed, invaded, and possessed outright, their peoples crushed, suppressed, and ruled.
Because ordinary Americans, like any people, need to believe that whatever the ruling elite undertakes in their nation’s name must be essentially benevolent, noble in purpose and justified in fact, the myth had to be radically modified for imperial expansion.
The foundational story was that Americans had come to a howling wilderness teeming with godless savages and, through invincible strength of character and purity of purpose, had tamed the land and honorably earned the right to possess their bountiful home.
In the era of extra-territorial expansion that version was polished to justify and ennoble imperialism. The new corollary was that America could not ignore colonialist brutality but was obliged, by the Manifest Destiny that led us to civilize our own continent, to carry our mission into barbaric darkness wherever tyranny created abuse and suffering.
A national myth that absolutely binds the loyalty of a people to its government must be a subtle and powerful elixir that elevates and aggrandizes that people’s self-regard. National policy will then appear to be an extension of its superior citizenry’s inchoate will, and the basis for a justified arrogance toward the lesser world.
The simple, powerful myth of America’s altruistic and heroic benevolence, shaped and maintained by the financial/political power elite, infused Americans with a deep and outrageously hubristic sense of racial superiority that, mobilized behind various imperial enterprises, has given all such adventures the character of a quasi-religious crusade. In this way insatiable imperialism acquires the apparent moral perfection of a syllogism.
* * *
With WWII, the world was reconfigured. American Capitalism emerged supreme from the horror that had virtually wrecked its capitalist partners. The Soviet Union, though, having absorbed by far the greatest devastation from Nazi Germany, had astonishingly risen above its ruin to become the leading challenger to America as a world power.
This challenge was not competitive, it was systemic: Soviet Communism was a direct threat to American hegemony in that it categorically refuted the philosophical basis of Predatory Capitalism. Grounded in Marx and Lenin, it attacked Capitalism’s inherent evils, monstrous inequities and flagrant injustices that, exacerbated by speculation, exploitation and fraud, would destroy it. And it promoted world revolution to that end.
This face-off of giants in the Cold War necessitated further refinement of the American myth. Now, instead of simply intervening in situations where despotism or tyranny required America to forcefully implant our just and ethical democracy, America had to become the shield and bulwark of the sacred capitalist system in which “free enterprise” was magically and increasingly identified with democracy and equally to be defended.
This version prevailed through many surrogate confrontations around the globe in the era of Mutually Assured Destruction and survived even the debacle of Vietnam, lasting until the collapse of the Soviet Union, as the propaganda stream became ever more intense and pervasive. On radio and television Americans were subjected to an unrelenting barrage of hyper-patriotism in which American moral superiority was a given, and America’s self-touted courage, generosity and decency were its unchallengeable proofs.
The implosion of the Soviet Union left America, in its own terminology, the “Sole Superpower in a Unipolar World”. This, however, did not result in diminution of the myth. The practical effect of having no doomsday enemy--China couldn’t plausibly be cast in that role then--was to supercharge it by increasing its element of pure, hubristic ego. America was no longer just called upon to defend the “Free World” from monstrous heresy; it was now, by virtue of its universally acknowledged, beatific “exceptionalism”, required to oversee and police it in the interests, and for the benefit, of lesser nations.
* * *
“Power corrupts”, said Lord Mahan, “and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
When the only rival and counterweight to American power disintegrated there was a sense within the American power elite that the opportunity existed, for the first time in history, for one country to absolutely dominate and effectively control the entire world.
This consensus was expressed in a policy statement composed by a cadre of major right-wing political players representing massive corporate capitalist interests called the Project for a New American Century. This triumphalist manifesto laid out a plan for absolute American access and control of essential resources and raw materials worldwide, to be guaranteed by the military which would enforce Full Spectrum Dominance.
The American Myth, which had seemed to have lost momentum and its animating principle in the totally unexpected so-called Cold War “victory”, was now re-energized with a less defensive and reactive essence, and given the glowing radiance and patina of a true and, for the first time, self-professed and articulated, imperial mission.
The attack on the Towers, an unimaginable provocation, was the trigger mechanism for the explosive launch of the effort to impose that imperial model in practice on the world.
* * *
It has been without question the most spectacular failure in the history of American misadventure. After a decade marked by the waste of trillions of dollars and tens of thousands of American lives, the stunning bankruptcy of our internally burglarized nation, and a consequent recession more fundamentally damaging than the Great One, Imperial America has nothing to show for the botched folly of its arrogant overreach but unequivocal disasters in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, with no end of madness in sight.
An impartial observer would have to say that the hypnotic hold of the American Myth on the loyalty of the people has led only to disgrace and disaster, and set a direct course to inevitable imperial decline and ruin. That would be inarguable on any rational basis, but it entirely mistakes the motive for, and the purpose of, the myth. The American Myth was never intended to serve the interests either of our country or of our people: it was created solely to buttress, shield, and exalt the ruling financial class. It has done that with astonishing and unbroken success that staggers the imagination from our earliest days.
The massive looting of Iraq/Afghanistan/Pakistan war funding to enrich the Corporate Tyranny—for that is what it has become—is on an unique scale of its own, without anything remotely comparable to its flagrant obscenity in the whole long history of war.
Neither the Pentagon nor any branch of the U.S. government can give any accounting whatever of the many billions of tax-generated dollars that have vanished, evaporated. There is no doubt but that beyond the outrageously inflated, no-bid contracts handed to giant corporate favorites with their preposterous guaranteed profits, much of the money was simply stolen in bulk by, through, or in spite of the military, and distributed among thieves and accomplices, some of it on huge pallets… for convenience, presumably.
* * *
While this wholesale robbery was going on under the oversight of the military abroad, the Corporate Tyranny had evolved a whole set of impenetrably complex devices for the generation of money without any economically productive source or result at home.
The sole driving force and purpose of Capitalism is the realization of profit. According to that calculus, reducing production costs increases profit margin. This leads to the obvious conclusion that as production costs near zero, profit is maximized.
 
There is no provision for social good in Capitalist theory. Corporations, created to optimize business opportunity through efficient specialization, were originally required to operate for public benefit but that provision was quickly finessed and forgotten.
American law courts have always favored corporate concentrations of wealth since they, like the Congress, exist to serve the moneyed interests. The American Myth was created to provide cover for the financial oligarchy to exploit the country and the citizenry, and the judiciary has consistently cooperated in ruling for corporations against the people.
Indeed, without ever considering the question in law, the Supreme Court long ago endowed corporations with “personhood”, that is with all rights of human beings under our Constitution. The way this travesty occurred--the slipshod by-product of an obliquely related case--shows that the court preferred to incorporate this perversion of the plain intent of the 14th amendment as an unexamined assumption rather than risk an eventual test which would unquestionably have created violent public outrage.
Given the collusion of Congress and the courts in securing legal invulnerability for the Corporate Tyranny and the principle that the only duty of corporations is maximization of profit, it was not surprising that megabanks, huge brokerage houses, giant insurance conglomerates, gilded hedge funds and the credit agencies pretending to certify their work, all engaged in massive and systemic fraud and deception for just that purpose. The result was the crash of ’08, the recession, and the stunning and unprecedented rescue and bailout of the biggest banks, investment houses, and insurance and credit conglomerates with taxpayer dollars. So much for the hallowed Invisible Hand of the Free Market…
* * *
The last decades have seen two related megatrends in American geopolitical mechanics, both with dire effects on the power of the American Myth. First, what belief the world at large had in it has been shattered by a catastrophic series of imbecile and irretrievable military failures and disasters, which has caused erosion of its efficacy at home. Second, in response to this, the State has made increasingly crude efforts to boost the Myth’s waning power by the imposition of totalitarian methods of surveillance, intimidation and coercion on the American people to a degree unprecedented in scope and scale.
The whole clanking, medieval apparatus of Homeland Security that has sprouted like an enormous poison fungus since 9/11 with its brutal police state mindset; the odious Patriot Act with its flagrant subversions of the Bill of Rights; the endless, fantasy-based terror-peddling of the prostitute corporate media with its clowns and harpies churning irrational fear and anger in the uninformed: all this grim, repressive endeavor is a concerted attempt to distract Americans from the real causes of their injury, abuse, and oppression.
And yet, even with the American Myth now totally and irreparably blown full of holes and exposed demonstrably for the tissue of lies, deceptions and frauds that it has always been, it somehow keeps its phenomenal hold on the great mass of the American people. The tragic reality is that, for the majority, their own identities have been so deeply and thoroughly infused with the myth that to disbelieve it is to disbelieve in themselves.
* * *
So the American Myth is dead, and yet it lives on in its deadness, horribly masking our crapshot economy, our bankrupt debtors prison of a society, our Ghost Dance charade of kabuki democracy, while typhoons of impending social, economic and ecological disaster build their enormous, lightning-charged thunderheads above the dark future before us.
And what is it that the dead Myth still imperfectly obscures for Americans? What is outside and beyond the opaque wall of faltering, failing dishonesty and deception? What is the horror that the shoddy, tattered Myth has so long and so effectively concealed?
It is the world that has suffered unrelieved exploitation by the violence of our imperialist mania. It is the many wrecked and pillaged economies financially looted by our imposed predatory capitalist austerity regimes. It is the teeming hundreds of millions of starved, deprived and dying children sacrificed to Wall Street commodities gaming. It is the multitudes of humble, innocent, ignorant people, barely surviving in absolutist and dictatorial regimes propped up in their barbaric cruelty by our military while our banks siphon off the profits left after arming their brutal police and armies and bribing their ruling Kings, Sheikhs or Generals. It is the millions of dead and maimed in the raped populations of simple tribal people whom our indiscriminately murderous juggernaut has left in its bloody wake in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. It is the appalling legacy of hate and repulsion, disdain and fear, that America has earned with its appalling hegemonist villainy in every corner of the world.
And at home, what is it we Americans have been so complicit in hiding from ourselves in our devotion to the perverse legend that has come to inhabit our souls like a succubus?
It is the millions of us with no work and no hope in middle age whose jobs and homes have been devoured by the heartless fraud machine of Wall Street. It is the trashed and demolished weedlots of our major cities eroding in crumbling, fire-gutted ruin. It is the many towns and cities with industries shut down and factories deserted or dismantled and shipped overseas. It is our decaying, disintegrating public schools, our bankrupt states and counties, our overtaxed, antiquated public transportation systems, our obsolete, dissolving infrastructure, our bloated, irrational prisons complex, our punishing and inadequate health care disaster, and over it all, the repressive mechanism of our police state, armed and empowered, ready for use against the American people themselves.
* * *
This is where we are. The great question now is whether we as a nation can awaken from this long historic nightmare and face the terrifying and exhilarating prospect of living in the full light of reality without the false props and dishonest constructs of a hoodwinked, herded and dishonored people or, whether we have internalized the falsity and disease to such an extent that it has become an organic, overmastering form of insanity?
In 1846, Henry David Thoreau, offended to his soul by the injustice of the American government’s invasion of Mexico, protested it and went to jail for his convictions. Later, in his essay On Civil Disobedience, he said this:
“If injustice is of such a nature that it requires you to be the agent of injustice to another, then, I say, break the law. Let your life be a counter friction to stop the machine.”
To attempt to break the hold of the American Myth will be a titanic, daunting challenge. To even begin to openly rebel against the might of the National Security State will require the courage to face much more than official disapproval and denunciation. Imperial America will not respond to even the most peaceful and orderly protest with anything less than hard police repression and the level of punishment will rise in relation to the scope and seriousness of the action undertaken.
Small protests will have no effect and will be meaningless. Organized mass events, when they occur, will draw the whole fiercely and brutally motivated National Security State apparatus down upon themselves. Americans, excepting those of our underclass who have felt it, have no experience with violent police or military repression. Those who commit peaceful civil disobedience, a first and innocent tactic of serious protest, will swiftly find out to their cost how it works. In a National Security State that has excised and eradicated all defensive laws and regulations intended to prevent abuse of the public, whatever the State does is legal. To such a pass have we in America come as a result of our long historic indoctrination in serving our financial elite, our Ruling Class.
To achieve any redemption for Americans, to make possible any more just, humane and life-honoring society, will require complete abandonment of the system of Predatory Capitalism. If offers no prospect of reform or improvement and we have all been witness to the idiocy of the so-called “democratic process” in action for generations now.
America is nearing the greatest crisis point in its history and the terrific cataclysm, when it happens, will determine the future our country is to have. If we cannot, in dominating numbers, rise to reject the heartless, mindless, soulless machine of Imperial Predatory Capitalism, we will be condemned to a fascistic command and control horror in which human beings are mere possessions of the State, units of production or service, and then perhaps not even that, as excess population in that brave, new world nay be eliminated.
That end is not inevitable. We are not lost. We are not even defeated because to this moment we have not engaged. We have not honored our responsibility as human beings. We have not risen to defend our humanity. We have let ourselves be ruled.
All around the world the thunder of vast and immeasurable discontent can be heard and felt. In Egypt and Spain, Jordan and Greece, Iraq and Sudan, Afghanistan and Ireland, Latin America, the Far East and Africa, the legitimate anger of humanity is expressing itself against the dead and killing hand of Predatory Capitalism and its agencies of violence. And here, in America, so long trapped and encapsulated, frozen like a fly in amber in a false religion of state idolatry, the anger is deep, widespread, and growing.
It is up to those who know and care to lead. As Thomas Paine said, “These are the times that try men’s souls.” Nothing is guaranteed us. That can’t matter. We cannot be concerned with odds or outcomes. We cannot let the Machine of Injustice grind on. We must oppose it with all the moral force we own. We must act with quiet courage to confront a vicious tyrannical system that is destroying the earth, its life, and its people. We must put our lives on the line to oppose it.
The Nightmare Machine of rapacious exploitation has overthrown humanity’s decency and reason and its bloody inhuman treason flourishes over us. This must be ended.
Let your life be a friction now to stop the Machine. 
See also -  The Century of the Self - How politicians and business learned to create and manipulate mass-consumer society.