G A N Z E E R . T O D A Y

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Endorsing a presidential candidate shouldn't necessitate more than just that, stating one's endorsement, or at most stating some of the attractive ideas and policies said candidate is looking to bring to the table. Democracy in America however is so primitive and regressed that if said candidate is other than one of the two put forth by the only two political parties that have had a chokehold on American politics for the better part of the last 200 years, a much more elaborate explanation becomes mandatory. So, let's get into it:

Resisting Dictatorship

Too many people get hung up on the optics of dictatorship; the president/leader must don a military uniform, hail from military background, or have inherited their position in office from their deceased father. If not a single individual or family, then one single party must dominate politics and it is typically understood that they maintain power for multiple decades on end, typically with an iron fist. This is what most people think of when they think of dictatorships, completely overlooking some of the ways dictatorships operate and some of the tactics they employ to stay in power. A key misconception is the notion that a dictatorship maintains power solely through the rule of an iron fist. Of equal or even more importance are the psychological tactics employed by dictatorships to persuade the masses that considering any other options aside from their rule would be unrealistic or worse, dangerous. This is why people accept living under dictatorships for extended periods of time, because of the belief that “this is really the best we've got”. The inevitable uprising against the dictatorship finally occurs, not because iron rule has laxed, but because people's conviction that they can have a much better political system becomes more widespread.

Knowing the tactics employed by what we might call “Traditional Dictatorships”, it isn't difficult to see that they are quite exact to those applied in the United States. After all, each of the two political parties have managed to ingrain within the minds of their constituents that voting for anyone other than them is the most dangerous thing an American can possibly ever do. And every year when fresh young new voters register, this indoctrination is passed onto them by their elders, guaranteeing votes for none other than the two parties that have dominated politics for close to two centuries. When a voter wants to rebel, the best they can think of is voting for blue instead of red or vice versa! This practically guarantees that all votes, one generation after another, forever remain between both parties.

Now things start to look particularly sinister when you pause and consider the fact that it isn't only the State Department that is controlled by Republicans/Democrats, but practically every single position of political power in the country is. Congressman, representatives, senators, governors, supreme justices, mayors are all positions held by a member of one of both parties.

What we are looking at here is practically a rather peculiar two-party dictatorship.

Throw in the police brutality, mass incarceration, and military expansionism and you practically have one of worst-acting dictatorships on the planet.

The thing about what we understand to be traditional dictatorships is that, while most people fall into the trap of not accepting any alternatives for an extended period of time, they still know that they live under a dictatorship. They just tolerate it. In their minds, temporarily. Americans however like to think they live in the greatest democracy on Earth, while also simultaneously telling themselves that they have no choice but to vote for the lesser of two evils. The latter being mostly true for a good bulk of democrat voters in particular but not so much for most republicans who at least don't think they're making some kind of compromise when they cast their votes. This makes a very specific segment of democrat voters in particular the most dangerous and cumbersome barrier that keeps Americans from breaking away from the two-party dictatorship holding the country back from genuine progress.

“None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.” ― Goethe.

Votes in Translation

Dictatorships want people to vote. That is exactly how they are able to claim legitimacy. It is why they encourage people to vote, and in the process utilize all possible maneuvers for the votes to go in their favor. Chief among these maneuvers is of course the media apparatuses they exercise influence over. In America, it becomes quite laughable when citizenry take it upon themselves to encourage people to vote, thinking they are engaging in some great work of revolutionary activism, not realizing that all they're doing is the dictatorship's work for it. It is only activism if you encourage people to vote against the dictatorship, and in America that means voting against the two-party system.

Truth of the matter is that neither Republican nor Democrat politicians have any care for the interests of the greater American public. The only thing they do care about is your vote and donations. These are the things they ask Americans to give time and time again, but the thing they never ask for is people's thoughts, ideas, or needs. For those, they speak to the uber wealthy. It is precisely why the two-party dictatorship of the United States has continuously served the interests of the wealthy elite over the interests of the general public for the vast majority of the nation's existence, despite all the honey-coated speeches delivered at rallies during election season. Or the speeches televised before or after enacting catastrophic policies, speeches given just to manufacture consent.

Protesting a decision or policy after giving them your vote means nothing. You already legitimized their rule with your vote, and it's very easy to claim that any oppositional protest is only representative of a miniscule fringe of radicals (which is exactly what they do, every time: forget not what happened to Occupy Wallstreet when Obama was in office). The only way to depose of a dictatorship is through the ballot box or taking to the street, and I'm afraid the latter is a particularly tall order for a country the size of the United States. Your best bet is to utilize the ballot box. Don't allow yourself to be gaslit into utilizing it in favor of despicable people who care not for you or your wants.

“Always vote for principle, though you may vote alone.” ― John Quincy Adams

Why Cornel

Cornel West is an accomplished intellectual with a very lucid view on the dangers of the corporate duopoly—as he calls it—that controls and manipulates American life. He understands fully well the inherent relationship between extortionist capitalism and environmental destruction, and places extreme urgency on the need to eradicate homelessness and poverty in the United States. Being an academic with a longstanding relationship with universities and college campuses, he's well aware of the increasing barriers that keep people from receiving quality education and the hurdles that deter the free flow of knowledge. He understands that mass incarceration is big business for a select few that is fueled by the systemic racism imbued within policing policies, and that America's appetite for global military expansionism helps prop authoritarian dictatorships the world over and inevitably does not bode well for America itself. He is vocal about the plight of the Palestinian people and oppressed people everywhere like no other politician, and damn is he a good speaker. Both pointed and poetic, with echoes of Martin Luther King Junior revibrating in every sentence. Cornel West speaks the truth, does the right thing, and takes shit from nobody, with the intellect and knowledge to back it up. Also, the man consistently dons his own unique uniform, and I always respect someone with a unique sense of style and personal identity :)

His running mate, Melina Abdullah, is awesome. An accomplished professor of Pan-African studies and co-founder of Black Lives Matter, that would be enough for me to support this woman. She is smart, knowledgeable, highly ethical and badass as all hell. Also cool enough to create and host not one radio show, but two.

As an aside, a note on the strain of American academics who like to lecture about dictatorships and resistance movements that take place halfway across the world: Yo, what the hell? For the first time in forever you have two highly accomplished and very well regarded academics running for office, and you aren't all over this shit? You are allowing yourself to be forced into keeping the long-standing American regime in place despite your reservations and you still have the nerve to teach about the terrible plight of “the other” elsewhere? For shame, honestly. Unless of course you've actually managed to convince yourself that you genuinely want the terrible war-mongering capitalists in office, in which case, America has a bigger problem on its hands.

As another aside, the struggle clearly does not start and end with the White House. Consistent organizing is imperative to free all positions of governance from the grip of two-party dictatorship and replace it with a genuinely varied political system reflective of the multiplicity of the American people and their interests. Steady work must be done if third party congressmen, representatives, senators, governors, and mayors are to be voted in. It will surely be a long uphill battle that is far from easy, but anything is doable with adequate organizing. And some things are better worth organizing for than others.

“Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people, can transform the world.” ― Howard Zinn

P.S. The image at the very top of this post is available as a free hi-res download as well as a physical print. There is also a yard sign version.

#journal #work #politics #usa

Sounds like Netanyahu is genuinely worried about the prospect of an ICC arrest warrant issued against him. The problem with such a prospect however is that it would make the US complicit given America's unwavering support and backing of Israel. And the problem with that is the American Service-Members' Protection Act passed in 2002 which defends US officials and military personnel from possible detention or prosecution by the ICC. Informally known as “the Hague Invasion Act”, the law also authorizes the president to use “all means necessary”, including an invasion of The Netherlands where the ICC is located, according to Democracy Now.

#journal #politics

The new trade corridor revealed by Benjamin Netanyahu at the UN General Assembly three weeks ago would connect India to a port in Israel via maritime and rail links as well as energy pipelines and fiber optic cables that pass through the Arabian Peninsula.

Hence the recent treaty with the Emirates and talks of an impending treaty with Saudi Arabia. Goods of course would then move from Israel to Europe and the United States, theoretically cutting transport time while also eliminating dependance on what has arguably been the single most important global trade artery for the past 154 years: The Suez Canal. Egypt has for the longest time avoided privatizing the state-owned Suez Canal Authority despite express interest from the Gulf Arab states. Add to that, the defeat of the US-backed Saudi/UAE assault on Yemen, which—had they won—would've given them significant control over the Bab El-Mandab Strait, without which you couldn't enter into the Red Sea to make it to the Suez Canal to begin with. Instead, the victory was to go to Iranian-backed Houthi-rebels (Iran, ever the thorn in Saudi's geopolitical ambitions). Alas, a complete monopoly over the most important trade route in the world was not to be obtained by Saudi/UAE.

In comes Israel with a visionary new solution, one in which it would get to have a huge stake. The plan is applauded and encouraged by the United States, UK, and Europe's biggest players: France and Germany. Caveat though, there's that thorn again, embodied in another Iran-backed guerilla fighting group: Hamas. It was time for Israel to do away with them (despite Israel helping create Hamas in the first place in order to undermine Yasser Arafat's Fatah in 1987). In fact, it was time to do away with the Palestinians altogether, clear out Gaza and claim the entirety of the land once officially known as Palestine (which Netanyahu had the audacity to claim was in fact the map of Israel in 1948 during his latest UNGA speech), even though it looked more like this:

But to clear out Gaza? Over 2 million people? Something very dramatic would have to occur in order to galvanize the international community behind a move like that.

I present you with not one major story reporting as much, but two:

Additionally, the “Peace Festival” that took place three miles outside of what is practically the densest concentration camp on the planet was moved to that specific location only 48 hours before the event. And the Guardian reports that festival goers were only informed of the new location a handful of hours prior (some who had traveled across the world for it). Hamas leadership itself admitted to being surprised at how easy it was for their fighters to breach the Israeli constructed barriers, typically very heavily guarded and surveilled.

Moreover, this notion of resettling Palestinians in Sinai has been pushed by Israel for a long time, since Mubarak was in power. It's been a lifelong dream of Netanyahu and it's one I'm sure you'll see mainstream Western media incessantly pushing in the next few days, while placing most of the fault of Palestinian plight on Egypt's shoulders. “Why is Egypt being such a jerk? Why won't it let the Palestinians through?”

The answer is obvious to literally anyone in the region: Palestinians would henceforth lose their claim to their own land, just as had happened to many a Palestinian before them. The only lens by which such a preposterous resettlement plan makes sense is a blatantly racist one that views all Arab-speaking peoples as a single ethnicity. As if Palestinians have no history in or connection to the land they're being forced to leave. And it's really messed up when other nation states think they have the right to decide where to settle people without involving those people in the decision-making process.

Herein lies the biggest barrier to Netanyahu's grand plan: the desire of the Palestinian people. It is the same desire they've held onto since the Nakba of 1948: The right of return.

In fact, there are a number of contingencies upon which lie the success of Netanyahu's demented masterplan, and it is those contingencies that I suspect may have made Saudi Arabia a little reluctant to rush into signing any treaties with Israel just yet. Granted, they do seem to be moving in Netanyahu's favor thus far. The problem with it all though despite its grand outlook is that it still doesn't suspect a number of potential left-field outcomes.

a) Assuming Egypt Resettles Palestinians in Sinai Aside from it not being entirely in Egypt's interest to keep them there forever, just to guarantee its sovereignty over its own territories and to ensure it doesn't get its share of attacks from insurgency groups for maintaining its peace with the country that stole their land, Egypt would soon realize that it may not be in her interest to allow this new India-Arabia-Israel trade corridor to exist. At least not securely. After all, it would be cutting into Egypt's already dwindling sources of income. So Israel may find itself in a situation where it is faced with guerilla attacks by groups trained, armed, and funded by Egypt itself (while pretending to maintain a facade of peace). Supporting insurgency groups is something Egypt has quite a bit of history with; The Feda'yeen (literally translates to “sacrificial fighters” of the 1950's and 60's), the National Liberation Front in Algeria, and the Mujahideen of Afghanistan to battle the Soviet Union on behalf of the United States (some of those same mujahideen would end up being a big part of the formation of the Taliban a little over a decade later—Oops) to name some of the most well-known ones. And you better believe an Egyptian-backed group of guerilla fighters would pose a far more formidable threat to Israel than Hamas.

b) Popular Support Masses across the Arab-speaking world have already taken to the street in huge numbers demanding an end to Israeli atrocities, marking an unprecedented unity between people stretching from Morocco all the way to Iraq and beyond, even including other non-Arab speaking peoples such as Iranians and Turks. Netanyahu may have suspected as much, but he may be taking a serious gamble on the fact that the leaders of these nations are autocratic and certainly act against the wishes of their own populations all the time. But his gamble overlooks the fact that among some of those autocrats are populist egomaniac nut-bags who might see this as an opportunity to fill the pan-Arab leadership role left vacant since Nasser passed in 1970, a role that would certainly give them an everlasting legacy long after they're dead. It is not an understatement to say that if Nasser rose from his grave today, his welcome would be on par with the Christian world's second coming of Jesus Christ—a privilege that not even Sadat would enjoy, despite the latter being the one who won back the Sinai Peninsula from Israel and the former being the one who lost it. An irony not at all lost on any Arab leader. Principle and moral standing will always garner far more respect than pragmatism, at least where I come from.   c) Proxy Clusterfuck This pressure exerted by US/UK/EU to resettle the Palestinian people—let alone their genocide—and participate in a complete alteration of regional geopolitics might even push Egypt to change its alliances, siding instead with Iran, Turkey, Russia and China, the latter having already increased investment in Egypt by 315% over the last 7 years and opting a stern position against Israel's latest aggression against Palestinians. Not to mention that this newly proposed India-Arabia-Israel corridor would somewhat undermine China's own New Silk Road, and disrupting the corridor would certainly be in the Asian giant's best interest. So, Israel may find itself trading Hamas for being caught in a big proxy war between the great powers of the East (China/Russia/Iran and quite possibly even Turkey) and those of the West (US/UK/EU).

Any way you look at it, none of what's been going on is actually about “the Jews” or Palestinians at all, who are the biggest victims in a big game of geopolitik centered around—not race, faith, or ethnicity as they'll have you believe—but in fact revolves entirely around money.

Or in other words: “It's the economy, stupid.”

#essay #analysis #politics