23.10.2017

Hatred and pain in Syria

Al-Qaryatayn is a small Christian town southeast of Homs around an oasis in the Syrian Desert. When IS (Islamic Styate) captured the town, most Christians fled or were killed and IS destroyed the famous 1,500 year old Monastery of St. Elian.

In April 2016 the Syrian army chased IS out, but in a surprising and bold assault, IS shock troops together with sleeper cells recently captured the town again for three weeks. The Islamic fighters are eliminated now, but in the short time of their reign they executed 52 civilians for cooperating and dealing with the Syrian government.

One can only guess what would have happened to the 120,000 remaining civilians in Deir ez-Zor, if IS would have overrun the besieged city on the Euphrates River. It could have resulted in the greatest bloodbath of the Syrian war because all of the civilians were considered as unrepentent government supporters.

The Islamists didn’t get a chance to commit a large scale massacre, because the elite Republican Guards of the 104th Airborne Brigade, led by the highly respected and famed General Issam Zahreddine, held out against constant attacks by suicide bombers and fanatical inghemasiyoun fighters. Their indefatigable and unyielding resistance not only prevented a bloodbath but also bogged down thousand of Islamists, making army progress in other parts of the country possible.


After the siege was lifted, Issam Zahreddine took a one week leave to be with his family in Suwayda. When he came back to continue the cleanup of IS positions around Deir ez-Zor, he first went to Saqr island, conducting special operations there. The island, enveloped by the Euphrates River and a side arm, is a heavily contested area southeast of the city. It is difficult terrain with a comparatively lush vegetation giving cover to IS positions, it is heavily mined and fortified. Though the Syrian army after many tries has broken through the Islamists defenses, it has still captured only one third of the island.

And then the unthinkable happened: Issam Zahreddine died, when his vehicle struck a landmine on the frontline at Saqr island.
Issam Zahreddin’s successor in Deir ez-Zor, General Wael Zayzafoun, died in combat only two days after Zahreddin. General Ghassan Iskander Tarraf is now the new commander of the Republican Guards in the city, he was a confident of Zahreddine throughout the siege and one can only hope, that he will live longer as his predecessors. General Tarraf is one of Syria’s most highly decorated military officers, until now he was the field commander of the elite Al-Qassem Group, a small special operations unit that primarily operated in Deir ez-Zor province.

How can it be, that important military leaders like Zahreddine and Zayzafoun put their life on the line, fighting along with their soldiers at the front?

It is a matter of honesty! If they send their men into battle, knowing that a number of them will die, they have to be with them, showing them that they care and that they will not forsake them, showing them that they don’t cowardly hide in command centers and that they all stand together to save their country from the Islamic terrorists which foreign powers unleashed against Syria.

Russian General Valeri Assapov died only a few days earlier when IS hit his post with a pinpoint strike. Russians suspect that IS got a hint from Western intelligence.

In some respect Zahreddine’s death reminds of Mohammed Rafia, Syrian-Palestinian leader of Liwa al-Quds, who died on the dawn of victory in Aleppo shortly after capturing the important Handarat camp in the north of the city.

These brave men, who made the ultimate sacrifice for a just cause, will not be forgotten.
General Zahreddine is a symbol of Syria’s independence, its multi-cultural society, and its spirit of unity in the face of aggression. He belonged to the Druze minority, which has about 600,000 members in Syria. The Druze are an esoteric religious group who self-identify as unitarians. They originated in Asia and mix Shia Islam with Greek philosophy and Hinduism.

Despite their small number, Druze always played an important role in Syria. Sultan Pasha al Atrash, one of the leaders of the Arab revolt and an important figure in the establishment of the Syrian state was a Druze – Issam Zahreddine is related to him through his mother’s family.

As a Druze Syrian, Zahreddine led Sunnis, Shias, Christians, Alevites, and others on the field in battle, all men who identified as Syrian first and foremost, rejecting the sectarian strife which foreign conspiracy brought upon them. Zahreddine was in this sense symbolic of the unifying, modern Arab nationalism that Syria always was a bastion of. While other secular governments (in Afghanistan, Iraq, Tunisia. Libya) succumbed to external aggression, subversion, and terrorism, Syria still holds on to the ideals of Arab socialism and national independence.
General Zahreddine was 56 years old and he is survived by his wife and children, including his son Yarob, who fought alongside him in Deir ez-Zor. Often referred to as the “Lion of Syria” or “Lion of the Republican Guard,” songs and poems were written about his seemingly endless supply of courage, stamina, and patriotic zeal.
His body was first brought to Damascus to be saluted there and then carried to his hometown Suwayda. Thousands of moaners packed the provincial stadium and attended the funeral procession. There were processions also in many other Syrian towns and even in occupied Golan, where the Druze still consider themselves as Syrians. Hundreds took part in a procession through the Druze town of Majdal Shams under the weary eyes of Israeli security forces.

Like any other important Syrian who resists the takeover by Islamists, Issam Zahreddine was accused of war crimes and as in all cases the accusations were based on nothing than hearsay and the testimonies of clearly biased and partisan witnesses.

Zahreddine was defamed as the “Druze Beast” among Islamic rebels for alleged beatings of protesters in Douma. In a statement to the Western NGO HRW (Human Rights Watch), a former Lieutenant Colonel in the Syrian Army claimed that Zahreddine had ordered most of the beatings of protesters in Douma, during the early stages of the Syrian Civil War, and that Zahreddine always had an electric baton on his person, which he used to attack protesters.

A defector, most probably one of the thousands who were payed huge bribes by Qatar, has every reason to slander and smear the Syrian army.

As a senior military officer Issam Zahreddine was also held responsible for the alleged repression against civilians in the early stages of the Syrian war, including during the siege of Baba Amr in February 2012. After he successfully led the battle that expelled Islamists from Homes, Syria’s third largest city, he was accused of indiscriminate shelling of civilian houses, hospitals, schools.

General Zahreddine was also put on a sanctions list of the European Union for no apparent reason.
While Western media largely ignored the story of his death (because Assad doesn’t fight IS, only the Kurds do), Islamist sympathizers on social media, in forums, and in comment sections rejoiced and had a field day. Most European analysts and politicians have accepted the fact, that Syria has won against the Islamic intruders, yet online warriors still spit venom and pretend, that “the bloody regime is on its last death throes,” and “butcher Assad will soon be standing trial at the ICC in The Hague.”

Killed soldiers are scorned and called ”Assadist” dogs who deserve being exterminated, while the snipers and suicide bombers who killed them are praised as “heroes of the revolution.” The Syrian army is ridiculed and derided as incompetent, amateurish, corrupt, disorganized. “No wonder that it is easily outsmarted by the glorious Islamic rebels,” say the online warriors.

Soldiers who run for their life because a suicide bomber drives his car full of explosives at maximum speed towards them are mocked and laughed at, the videoclips where their body parts fly through the air are watched with glee.

Dehumanizing the enemy is common in war. War is inherently insane, cruel, sadistic, psychopathic. Nobody can escape the mental degradation, corruption, the numbing of the mind. The warriors of all sides will be emotionally crippled for life. They will suffer from PTSD (post-traumatic-stress-disorder), from hearing loss, from nightmares and insomnia, many will be maimed.

While Syrian soldiers are called Assadist dogs, the Islamists are called rats. Captured Syrian soldiers are tortured to death, beheaded, burned alive, or executed in various other painful ways. Captured Islamists are seldom, they usually don’t capitulate. Wounded enemies are left to die. Syrian troops don’t dare to approach wounded Islamists because time and again the enemy faked and just waited to explode his suicide belt when the soldiers were near enough to be hurt in the explosion.

There are no rules of war, the Geneva Convention doesn’t apply. It never applied, because the US Congress refused to ratify the 1977 Protocols even after the US government signed it.
How can a civil society be restored after the traumatic experience of war? Can there be one day forgiveness, reconciliation, understanding, harmony, peace, love?

The Syrian government has repeatedly declared amnesties and has negotiated reconciliation agreements, it has evacuated Islamist fighters to Idlib and to the Turkish border region in the proverbial “green buses.” Russia has set up deconfliction zones and organized ceasefires. A compromise about limited autonomy of the Kurds is still possible despite the fact, that Kurdish led SDF units in a surprising move took over the Omar oilfield from IS without a fight. This smells like foul play — while Syrian soldiers have to fight for every meter and pay with their lives, the Kurds just walk in unopposed.
A few last words about the defamation campaign against Syria:

The arguments of regime change propagandists are all based on a decade long demonization campaign of the Syrian Baath leadership. The Baath party is secular, with a program of Arab nationalism and socialism. With this traits it is an annoyance and a threat not only to Islamic fundamentalists and Arab potentates, but also to Israel.

In Syria itself President Dr. Bashar al-Assad is viewed as soft and compromising and many Syrians think that his father Hafez or Bashar’s brother Bassel, who died in a car accident, would have crushed the demonstrations in Daraa and Homs with overwhelming force, thereby avoiding the tragedy of the Syrian war.

Syrian policemen initially were not even armed and they only got pistols to defend themselves when armed elements among the demonstrators shot at them. Even then they had to give account of every fired shot. The Mukhabarat undeniably used harsher methods but they only took action after a number of policemen were killed by demonstrators.

Several times Dr. Bashar al-Assad tried to calm down the unrest by releasing prisoners and declaring ceasefires, actions which the Islamists and their foreign supporters misunderstood as weakness and which only emboldened them. He was even accused of deliberately releasing jailed Islamists to weaken the secular opposition and “taint the revolution,” an argument which ignores the fact, that the Islamists were in charge from the first day on and a truly secular opposition only existed in Turkish hotel rooms and in the imagination of Western commentators. 

Dr. al-Assad and his wife Asma, both highly educated and meeting western ideals in many respects, were a major headache for the regime change propagandists. The article ”A Rose in the Desert,” by the fashion magazine Vogue, which showed the Assad family in a sympathetic light, had to be hastily removed, the families private emails were intercepted and used for ridiculous accusations of hubris and vanity.

After nothing was found to incriminate Dr. Assad personally, the image of a bloodthirsty dictator was built based on a series of false flag atrocities, starting with the Houla massacre in 2012, where the UN concluded from eye witness reports that Syrian troops did it, despite the fact that the victims were mostly government supporters.

Witness reports and photo documents were also the only evidence for most of the other alleged crimes of Dr. Assad, who soon was customarily called “butcher” Assad. The terms shabiha, Mukhabarat, barrel bombs, East Ghouta gas attack, Caesar photos, Sednaya prison were repeated again and again to become synonymous for Dr. Assad’s immorality and savageness, though any discussion about the terms and associated assumptions was and still is avoided.

After years of intensive brainwashing, for most of the western media audience now shabiha, barrel bombs, sarin, Caesar, Sednaya have a strong negative emotional connotation and articles about Syria only need to use one of these words to set the tone. In online forums and comment sections these words likewise are used as contractions and shorthand symbols to affirm the wickedness of President Assad.

No further proof of the barbarity and ruthlessness of the regime is needed, dissenters are labeled “tin-foil hat conspiracy theorists.” Or just ridiculed: lol….

10.10.2017

Links October 2017

Most of the blog subscribers are from the USA, and most of the blog posts refer to the USA. The website host is a US company, the texts are composed on an Apple computer, even the keyboard is US-English.

Yet, as readers know, most posts criticize and strongly oppose US politics, culture, and social climate.

This discrepancy emanates from the fact, that the USA is the worlds most influential and most powerful nation both in military, economic, and cultural terms, and that US superior power and reach is used to exploit other countries and nature, or even destroy other countries and nature.

Beside being a menace to everyone who doesn’t share US ideals and doesn’t comply, bow, and cave, the USA gives a terrible example of “social darwinism” (survival of the fittest), of a world without grace, caring, kindness, understanding, compassion, love.

Well, that is just how life is and how nature works, one may argue. Be fast and smart, kill before you are killed. Nature is cruel indeed, and most living beings end up being eaten alive.

Though this is partly true, there are many species who cooperate with their peers and even with other species (in symbiotic relations). An ant-heap, a beehive, a wolf pack, an elephant herd, bird flocks, fish schools, they are all examples of social behavior, they are proof that supporting each other and working together has benefits. At the dawn of human history, as we started to populate and conquer the globe one million years ago, fending off the big beasts and finding enough food was only possible by coordinated hunting and foraging in families, groups, tribes.

Have we lost our social instinct, as the big beasts are extinct and food is plentiful because of cheap fossil fuels?

Back to the USA, leader of the free world, shining city on the hill, beacon of democracy, justice, and fairness. 58 killed, 526 wounded in Las Vegas. A new record for mass shoutings and a new record for investors, as stocks of gun manufacturers jumped more than 3 percent. As everybody knows, gun sales increase after every mass shouting.

What else can be expected from a society which was founded on the genocide of Native Americans and on the slave labor of kidnapped Africans? One should not dwell endlessly on the past, but if history is consistent over centuries and also matched by presence, it says something.

Never ending military interventions, occupations, wars, failed states (Libya), destabilizations via NGOs, CIA-coups, drone assassinations, these are the presence. Not to forget the exploitation of other countries via mega-corporations, trade, the global financial system and Wall Street, petrodollar, and 20.3 trillion US national debt which will never be paid back.

History may be one factor, the internal mechanics of an unchecked superpower, which ignores rules and laws, which misbehaves without ever being punished, is another. There is also the blind faith in technological progress and in human superiority over nature, but these are not special and unique US-American traits.

Isn’t it logical, that the deadly violence inflicted abroad gets mirrored in deadly violence at home?

Mass shoutings are now as American as apple pie, the reaction to Puerto Rico’s plight after Hurricane Maria gives a strong signal about generosity and the social contract, Donald Trump has become the epitome of US-American hubris and vanity.

One may blame the economic system (cutthroat capitalism), culture (white supremacy, religious bigotry, self-righteousness), the social climate (egoism, materialism), in the end they are nothing else than the sum of all social interactions in US-America and the sum of views, values, attitudes, mindsets of all US-Americans. There are for sure many kind, caring, compassionate, humble, thoughtful, wise people living there, but they are either not the majority or they are not at the levers of power.

Is it the family upbringing? Is the education system to blame? Is the exposure to relentless round-the-clock propaganda, indoctrination, deception, lies by mass media at fault?

Deep rooted cultural traditions, customs, habits, views, attitudes are hard to change. Not by a handful of activists, journalists, bloggers, and dissident politicians. Well, the last sentence is an overstatement, is clearly wrong, because they are not only a handful. To be correct, they are thousands and thousands, their names would fill a book or two.

There are unwavering and unflinching peace activists like Philip Berrigan, Grady Flores, Harry Murray, Michael Walli,  Megan Rice, Greg Boertje-Obed, Jessica Reznicek, Kathy Kelly, Cindy Sheehan — just to name a few. 

There are politicians like Kshama Sawant, Elizabeth Warren, Richard Black, Tulsi Gabbard, and others.
http://prn.fm/gary-nulls-list-dream-executive-government/

There are journalists, writers, bloggers like William Blum, Robert Parry, James Petras, Yves Smith, Sibel Edmonts, Ann Garrison, Glen Ford, and many, many more.

The writers build on a glorious tradition, because US authors like for instance Mark Twain, Ernest Hemingway, John Steinbeck, Truman Capote, Kurt Vonnegut, and Toni Morrison have greatly contributed to world culture, reporting about US life and the human condition in general. They have become part of world literature.

Beyond individual efforts there were popular mass movements like the Madison protests against Governor Scott Walker, Occupy Wall Street, the fight for a $15 minimum wage; Black Lives Matter; the Sanders candidacy, the anti-Trump protests. In fact, there were many mass movements before that, they were happening all the time, they were only ignored and purposefully overlooked by the press.

Upton Sinclair, Jack London were early socialists. After WWII there were Paul Goodman, John Cage, Allan Ginsberg. Philip Randolph led the 1963 March on Washington at which Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his speech “I have a dream”.

Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot dead, Malcolm X was shot dead. 

The hippie subculture of the 60s influenced young folks around the world. Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Peter, Paul and Mary, Phil Ochs, Joan Baez; they all sang for a peaceful future. Buffy Sainte-Marie’s “Universal Soldier” became a hymn of the anti-war movement.

Beatles member and peace activist John Lennon (working class hero) made New York his second home. He should have stayed in Britain. Or anywhere else, but not in the USA! He was spied on by the FBI and shot death in 1980.

Lennon brought British Pop to the US, but he was heavily influenced by Rhythm & Blues. Blues, Jazz, Gospel, R&B, Soul, and other variants of African American music had emerged from a fusion of European musical structures and African rhythms. This is the greatest cultural gift US-America gave to the world, and the world took it thankfully, enchanted and fascinated by the musics authenticity, primal force, and sophistication.

African American music consequently became a major component of US cultural attraction, of US soft power, yet, as black musicians were cheered around the globe, in their homeland they were not appreciated that much. And many died young.
Same Cook (“A Change Is Gonna Come”) was shot dead by a hotel manager.

Otis Redding died when his plane crashed into a lake. In the night after his death, guitarist Steve Cropper rushed to the studio and mixed preliminary demo takes made a few days before into the song “Dock of the Bay,” which became an instant posthumous hit. Never let a business opportunity go to waste. “Dock of the Bay” and “Try a Little Tenderness” are Otis’ lasting legacy.

Donny Hathaway, partner of Roberta Flack and one of the most gifted composers and singers, jumped to his death from a New York hotel room. 

Al Jackson of Booker T & the M.G.s was killed by a burglar.

King Curtis, R&B saxophonist and singer, was stabbed in the heart in front of his New York home. Steve Wonder performed “Abraham, Martin and John” at his funeral.

Marvin Gaye was shot dead by his father. His album “Whats Going On” was a masterpiece, addressing the insanity of war and environmental destruction.

While their music was an inspiration for people around the world, their life reflected the cruel and unforgiving nature of US society.

So many great minds, so much talent, powerful visions of peace and love, and yet, such a horrible outcome. Maybe (the equally great) Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States” can give an answer why:
https://mvlindsey.files.wordpress.com/2015/08/peoples-history-zinn-1980.pdf

Back to presence:

The Las Vegas mass shouting raises some questions: How can a person cary 23 guns into his hotel room with nobody asking? Why is it even allowed to possess so many weapons? Why can an accessory be openly sold, which converts semiautomatic rifles into assault weapons?
http://www.atimes.com/fatal-obsession-world-struggles-understand/?utm
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/10/03/pers-o03.html

Feline news:
https://www.thedodo.com/in-the-wild/ringling-tiger-escaped-killed Sad news this time. US police did, what they are used to do, they shot and killed.
http://people.com/pets/she-wont-be-the-last-to-die-animal-rights-groups-react-to-escaped-tigers-death-in-georgia/
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/oct/08/grenfell-tower-survivor-reunited-with-cat-she-lost

Environmental news:
http://e360.yale.edu/features/small-pests-big-problems-the-global-spread-of-bark-beetles
https://www.counterpunch.org/2017/09/19/what-we-sow-is-what-we-eat/ So we have to grow our own food as long as it is allowed. And when it is forbidden (under the pretext of preventing the spread of plant diseases and weeds) we have to work for the collapse of the system, which should not be too difficult considering the glaring fundamental systemic flaws.
http://www.alternet.org/environment/how-many-500-year-storms-must-batter-shores-coastal-residents-pack-and-leave People near the coast should move to safer areas. But where can they go, it is crowded everywhere.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-09-21/nestl-makes-billions-bottling-water-it-pays-nearly-nothing-for
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/oct/02/coca-cola-increased-its-production-of-plastic-bottles-by-a-billion-last-year-say-greenpeace
https://corporateeurope.org/food-and-agriculture/2017/09/endocrine-disruptors
http://www.ozy.com/acumen/where-eco-warriors-are-being-murdered/80016
http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-wrigley-flavors-lawsuit-20170927-story.html This is about flavoring chemicals such as diacetyl and acetyl propionyl in beverages, baked goods and snack foods, chewing gum and other candy, fats and oils, dairy and imitation dairy products, gelatins and puddings, meat products and gravies.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/sep/26/sixth-mass-extinction-of-wildlife-also-threatens-global-food-supplies
http://e360.yale.edu/features/how-a-dam-building-boom-is-transforming-the-brazilian-amazon
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/sep/26/national-park-plastics-bottled-water-ban
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-houston-harvey-superfund-site-spills-20170918-story.html
http://www.cityam.com/271732/mps-review-baby-nuclear-reactor-plans-cheaper-source-secure
http://www.nationalobserver.com/2017/10/01/news/fear-and-money-breeds-silence-saskatchewan
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2017/09/29/egypt-nile-river-danger/679222001/
https://theintercept.com/2017/10/05/factory-farms-fbi-missing-piglets-animal-rights-glenn-greenwald/ The pictures are horrible. Glad to be a vegetarian.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/oct/04/factory-farming-destructive-wasteful-cruel-says-philip-lymbery-farmageddon-author
https://www.globalresearch.ca/monsantos-violence-in-india-the-sacred-and-the-profane/5581536
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/10/benzene-tree-organic-compounds/530655/ Long read for the professional environmentalist. Structural formulas are missing.

Economic news:
http://commonstransition.org/history-evolution-commons/
https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2017-09-12/how-western-capital-colonized-eastern-europe This article is based on the premise, that economic growth will go on forever. In a few years, when one environmental disaster after the other strikes, economic growth will be the least of concerns. Then it will come out who is best prepared for the changes which nature commandeers, who is willing and able to adapt, and how much compassion for and solidarity with the less fortunate is left in western societies.
http://www.21global.ucsb.edu/global-e/september-2017/re-imagining-politics-through-lens-commons
http://russiafeed.com/confirmed-foreign-investors-flock-back-russia/
https://www.theguardian.com/working-in-development/2017/oct/07/how-to-avert-the-apocalypse-take-lessons-from-costa-rica

Media and technology news:
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-09-25/leaked-descriptions-infamous-russia-ads-derail-collusion-narrative-they-showed-suppo
http://freewestmedia.com/2017/09/23/foreign-governments-spend-millions-to-influence-russian-elections/
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/oct/05/smartphone-addiction-silicon-valley-dystopia

Imperial news
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/09/30/pers-s30.html
https://www.cfr.org/blog/puerto-rico-after-maria-initial-thoughts-fiscal-and-economic-implications
https://www.buzzfeed.com/buzzfeednews/maria-1?utm_term=.ukzeaXEwvq#.esgr17v86w BuzzFeed Puerto Rico updates (Closed now, but still informative).
https://www.wired.com/story/puerto-ricos-slow-motion-medical-disaster/
https://news.vice.com/story/how-devastated-puerto-rico-really-is-by-the-numbers
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-puertorico-survival/in-puerto-rico-acute-shortages-plunge-the-masses-into-survival-struggle-idUSKCN1C61SZNeglected, abandoned, forgotten. How the worlds richest country cares for citizens which are not billionaires or at least millionaires.
http://www.latinorebels.com/2017/09/30/the-cruelest-storm-a-statement-for-puerto-rico/
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mcnamara-electricity-commentary/commentary-how-we-could-have-prevented-some-of-puerto-ricos-misery-idUSKCN1C42ER Who pays for a resilient electricity grid?
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-puertorico-utility-specialreport/special-report-the-bankrupt-utility-behind-puerto-ricos-power-crisis-idUSKBN1C92B5?utm
https://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2017/10/2/16392670/puerto-rico-death-toll-trump
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/larison/trumps-disgraceful-puerto-rico-attack/
https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2017-09-20/the-consequences-of-the-u-s-baby-bust
http://www.paulcraigroberts.org/2017/09/19/54625/ About Trump’s UN speech.
https://www.truthdig.com/articles/capitalism-the-nightmare/ Harsh (and justified) criticism, but no plan, no roadmap how to install a better system. In the comments some catchphrases like: Organize, educate, revolt.
If it would be that easy! Around the world ruling elites have a stranglehold on all systems of government and on all media and they aren’t going to let go peacefully. They spy on people and detain them without charges, torture them or let them disappear. The police forces are armed with military grade weapons and tanks and they have a hostile relationship with the public who funds them. The capitalists are prepared for the fight.
http://inthesetimes.com/article/20543/corporate-money-citizens-united-corruption
http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-ln-std-rates-20170926-story.html
Record numbers of US-citizens older than 65 are working — now nearly 1 in 5. The average man retires or partly retires aged 65.1, almost two years later than in 1997, while women work 2.8 years longer to retire at 63.6 years,
Violent crime in US rises for the second consecutive year. Among the reasons that have been cited for the increase: A profusion of handguns, poverty and social isolation, warring gangs involved in the drug trade.

Imperial conquest news:
http://www.defenddemocracy.press/starve-them-to-death/ The self-declared defenders of human rights never had any qualms to starve people to death for political gains.
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/why-wont-american-media-tell-truth-about-whats-happening-venezuela
http://www.atimes.com/article/wheels-deals-trouble-brewing-house-saud/
https://journal-neo.org/2017/10/01/the-dishonest-career-of-the-remarkable-srda-popovic/
http://www.defenddemocracy.press/has-the-israel-lobby-destroyed-americans-first-amendment-rights/ Israel’s influence in Washington can be mentioned only if framed in a positive way. So: The military interventions, occupations, CIA-coups, and Islamist proxy wars in the Middle East on behalf of Israel have alienated Arab populations forever and no bribing, no assassinations, no air wars, no propping up of monarchs and military dictators, no funding of Islamic insurgencies will change that. The simmering resentments and hostility on the “Arab street” will thwart US soft power and significantly impede US geopolitical moves.
A lot of people will regard this result as positive!
http://www.refworld.org/pdfid/59ba95824.pdf UN-report about the sanctions against Russia.
http://theduran.com/un-report-anti-russian-sanctions-failed/
https://ingaza.wordpress.com/2017/10/08/syria-war-diary-order-returns-to-western-cities-civilians-recount-horrors-of-rebel-rule/ Very well documented report about the moderate rebels, who in western media fairytales were heroic freedom fighters, but in reality lowlife, thugs, criminals, who gladly took CIA money while at the same time pillaging Syrian towns and terrorizing the hapless population.

Uncategorized news:
https://dgrnewsservice.org/civilization/colonialism/new-report-exposes-widespread-abuse-funded-big-conservation-organizations/
http://www.defenddemocracy.press/podemos-catalonia-and-the-workers-movement-in-the-spanish-state/
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2017/10/standoff-in-catalonia.html
http://original.antiwar.com/thomas-harrington/2017/10/04/last-sunday-catalonia-pirates-1-invincible-armada-0/ Many useful hints, how to out-trick an overbearing central state with nonviolent methods. Of course, create parallel structures of governance and communication first.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/ryanhatesthis/the-story-of-the-catalan-independence-vote-in-spain-for-now?utm
http://www.businessinsider.de/how-guns-in-movies-and-video-games-affect-peoples-behaviors-2017-9?r=US&IR=T

News from cat paradise:

The leaves are falling and cover everything. Especially the big leaves from the grapevines suffocate the ground vegetation (moss, sedum, glover, strawberries), so I have to clear them away. Some animals dig around in the garden, it could be the cats, birds, hedgehogs, ground squirrels, who knows. They mess up the moss and mix it with the leaves. At certain points I could protect the ground vegetation with metal mesh, but that also protects the slugs, so it is not an universal applicable remedy. The option, which remains, is painstakingly collecting the leaves by hand.

Nature has her distinctive ways, and if you want impose your own order, you have to work hard for it. Zen and the art of gardening, zen and the art of collecting leaves. I’m carrying the leaves to one of the composting containers and I’m meditating at the composting container about time, change, life, mortality, transience.

A lot of grapes are still not completely ripe, which means they are sour. The freezers are completely full anyway, so I’m in no hurry to harvest them. The birds will get some, but that is okay, there is enough for all of us.

As temperatures gradually drop, my feline companions gradually convert from outdoor to indoor cats. They all got their annual vaccination and anti-worming pills. I brought them to the veterinarian two month earlier than planned because at the animal asylum where I regularly volunteer there was a case of leucosis and I was panicking and wanted to have them checked. No leucosis here fortunately.

Rosy has a chronic cold, I have to give here occasionally antibiotics. Miss Marple has skin cancer on her right ear and on her nose. It is progressing very slowly. With 19 years she would not survive surgery, she has a weak heart too. She would probably not awake from anesthesia. I hope, that Miss Marple will have a wonderful summer next year and than we will see what comes next.

We will have a nice fall and winter, gathering around the stove. I replaced nearly all chamotte tiles in the stove because the old ones had cracks and some were broken. Every free space in the cellar is filled up with wood, it will be warm and cosy.

I recently read about the Tambora volcanic eruption in 1815 and the “Year Without a Summer” in 1816, which gave me an idea what a nuclear winter would be like. I hope that Donald Trump can be restrained and that the sane people in the USA, Russia, China, Britain, France, India, Pakistan, Israel, and North Korea prevail.

We surely care, we do what we can, without illusions and false positive thinking. We will enjoy life, every day and every minute of it, whatever may come. If someone has a better idea how to spend life, please tell me.


27.09.2017

Cuba and Puerto Rico – A Tale of Two Islands

In the course of a few days Cuba was struck by Hurricane Irma, Puerto Rico by Hurricane Maria, both monstrous storms who destroyed crucial infrastructure, buildings, and agriculture. 

Cuba is a poor country without any considerable mineral resources, a former Spanish colony, exploited and neglected like every other colony. After the USA defeated Spain in 1898, a US-dependent government and later a dictatorship were installed — Cuba became an American colony in all but name. This ended when a guerrilla movement under Fidel and Raul Castro overthrew the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista, resulting in a failed invasion attempt (Bay of Pigs) and a trade and travel embargo which has Cuba cut off from the American mainland since 57 years. After a short easing of the embargo, restrictions on travel and business were increased again by US President Donald Trump.

Cuba is called a communist dictatorship, it is uniformly denounced and condemned in western media for its human rights record and failed economic policies. The response to the disastrous storm though surprisingly appears to have been appropriate.

Determination and solidarity are the key

Hurricane Irma initially was expected to largely spare the island, but instead, the storm practically ran the whole length of the nation, leaving a path of destruction along the northern coast. This was the first time the eye of a category five storm reached Cuba since 1932, and the immediate consequences were dire.

The malecon, Havana’s famed seawall, was no match for the 20-foot swells that hurtled against it. Low-lying neighborhoods were flooded, laying to waste the belongings of tens of thousands of Habaneros. The historic hurricane took 10 Cuban lives, damaged more than 4,000 homes, inundated downtown Havana with knee-high floods, and destroyed thousands acres of sugar cane. More than 3.1 million people — a quarter of the island’s population — lost water service.

Army, police, firemen, and thousands of state employees were in the streets of Havana from the moment it was safe to be out. Despite the lack of adequate materials, teams with chainsaws arrived to remove the worst of the felled trees and clear much of the debris.

The Cuban capital was largely without power or water for six days. After that first week, though, most of the island regained power relatively quickly. Some of the big tour operators have started again to tweet pictures of the main tourist beaches in resorts like Varadero, showing them freshly cleaned and open for business.

Although many people have returned to their homes, thousands remain evacuated due to the partial or total destruction of the houses or apartments. Some 500 schools and other public institutions continue to serve as shelters for people who lost their home.

Biased media coverage

US media coverage focused on horrific scenes of destroyed coastal towns and severe flooding in the capital. Along came a US State Department travel advisory that urged visitors to “carefully consider the risks of travel to Cuba.”

The BBC reported widespread criticism of the state’s response that was purportedly voiced on the street by many Cubans, citing a Habanero: “If the Commander in Chief, Fidel Castro, was still alive, I can tell you this would have been very different.”

But even the BBC had to admit: “Nevertheless, in some of the worst-hit areas of the capital the operation was impressive and, government propaganda aside, the truth is that much of Cuba is getting back to normal after the devastating storm.”

As usual after natural disasters in Latin America, a Venezuelan Air Force Y-8  plane with a load of 7.3 tons was the first help to arrive. The shipment consisted of mattresses, water, and canned food. Another 600 tons are on the way by ship, including construction materials, doors, windows, sinks, and other practical goods. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro instantly went to Havana, formally delivering a donation for hurricane victims.

Panama was the next to airlift a shipment of four tons of humanitarian aid and Russian Emergencies Minister Vladimir Puchkov instantly promised 1,200 tons of construction materials. The governments of Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, China, Dominica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Spain, Mexico, Nicaragua, Uruguay, and Vietnam also expressed their willingness to assist.

No help can be expected from the USA. There are millions of dollars worth of food, medicine, and building materials stored in the US military base at Guantanamo Bay in the easternmost part of Cuba, known for its detention camp where suspected Islamists are held without trial.

Providing some help would be a gesture of good will, costing not much, yet the US military has not shared a single bottle of potable water with Cuban residents affected by the hurricane outside the perimeter fencing at the base.

That “determination and solidarity” are part of Cuba’s collective consciousness and not just a slick political slogan, has been proven beyond doubt by countless individual responses to the disaster. Left without electricity and gas, families cooked for their neighbors the collected leftovers from defunct fridges with charcoal. Firms and professionals of all trades shared their resources with others who normally would be competitors. Every abled person joined the rescue efforts, cleaning up and rebuilding started immediately after the winds eased.

The contrast could not be more stark

Just like Cuba, Puerto Rico was taken over by the USA after the victorious war against Spain. Citizenship to the island’s residents was granted in 1917, mainly to draft 20,000 of them into service for WWI. Puerto Rico is a US commonwealth (though not a state), it is part of the worlds richest country and one would expect that the storms damage could be overcome much faster and easier than in Cuba.

Yet, while Cuba is quickly returning to normal, Puerto Rico is in chaos. 

The official death toll stands at 16, but there is no doubt, that it will climb when remote areas finally can be reached and the rubble of destroyed buildings be cleared away. When that will be or if it ever will be is everyone’s guess.

The dam on the Guajataca River is failing, forcing the emergency evacuation of 70,000 from the towns Isabela and Quebradillas plus surrounding areas. Unfortunately many people cannot be reached, as roads have been swept away while landlines and cellphone services are down (cellphone service has been wiped out in three quarters of the island).

The country’s agriculture has been devastated, with more than 80 percent of its crops destroyed. Thousands of trees continue to block main highways and thoroughfares, while some neighborhoods still remain flooded. 

Between 40 and 60 percent of the population lack access to potable water, while food is limited and difficult to get. Hospitals report that they are within days of running out of medicine, essential supplies, and fuel to run power generators. Garbage is going uncollected, while many streets are still flooded. Conditions are growing for the spread of deadly diseases, including cholera.

16,000 people have taken refuge in shelters, while thousands more are camping out in homes left in shambles and without roofs. In the central mountains outside San Juan people are running out of food. Many communities still haven’t been assessed days after the storm passed.

Traffic on flooded highways is being redirected by residents rather than the police, who are stretched to the limits. The main airport is in chaos with anxious passengers unable to find out if they will be able to travel, let alone when. Some travelers at the airport were told that passengers who do not already have tickets may not be able to secure flights out until October 4.

San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz told journalists: “What’s out there is total devastation. Total annihilation. People literally gasping for air in the merciless heat … People tell us often, ‘I don’t have my medication, I don’t have my insulin, I don’t have my blood pressure medication, I don’t have food, I don’t have drinking water.”

She spoke of people being taken from their homes in “near-death conditions,” including dialysis patients unable to get treatment and people whose oxygen tanks had run out. None of the hospitals which journalists visited had running water and all said that there were just days of supplies left.

The lifelines of civilization are cut

It will take weeks, possibly even months, to restore electricity, as most power lines are destroyed. Which means no refrigerated food, no fans or air conditioning in the tropical climate, no electric pumps to bring running water into homes, no electric stove to cook, no telecommunication. Electricity has to come from power generators, but fuel for them is also hard to get and costly.

To make matters worse: Puerto Rico’s power plants are clustered along the island’s south coast, a hard-to-reach area that was left exposed to all of the hurricanes wrath. A chain of high-voltage lines across the island’s mountainous middle connected those plants to the cities in the north, but the pylons and cables are gone now. It could take as long as two years to rebuild the power grid.

New lines should be build underground to withstand further storms, but there is no money for that, because the utility company PREPA (Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority) is bankrupt with 9 billion US$ debt. Thirty percent of PREPA’s employees have retired or migrated to the mainland since 2012 — especially its most skilled workers. Puerto Ricans experienced four to five times the number of service outages as US customers on average, though they pay the second-highest rates in the US after Hawaii. Even before the storm an estimated 4 billion US$ would have been needed to upgrade the electric grid, now costs will be several times that amount.

If PREPA is privatized, wich is the usual way to fix things in the USA, rates will be even higher, but who will be able to pay them? Puerto Rico’s economy was not in good shape even before the storm. The poverty rate is around 24 percent and unemployment is 12 percent, six in 10 children live in poverty. The educated and healthy leave for the mainland, between 2004 and 2016 the islands population declined by more than 10 percent.

Investment in infrastructure has not been seen in years. Puerto Rico’s 73 billion US$ debt roughly equals the 72 billion US$ estimated storm damages. Local self-government was effectively abrogated in June 2016 with the creation of a US-appointed Fiscal Supervisory Board (JSF), which has overriding power over the territory’s budget and is charged with imposing austerity measures aimed at meeting payments to Wall Street bondholders and the hedge funds which sought out Puerto Rican debt.

Trump's “Katrina”

Aid and rescue efforts are sluggish and poorly organized — FEMA officials are often unable to provide the help that the community needs. A few stores have reopened, but most remain closed due to the power outage.

The island’s main port in San Juan works again and a dozen ships arrived, bringing 1.6 million gallons of water, 23,000 cot beds, food, and electricity generators. 2,600 National Guard members have been deployed to Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands.

It is not enough and it doesn’t come fast enough, this is only a fraction what the destitute population would need.

Phillip Carter of the Center for a New American Security called the relief efforts “anemic” in an Slate article:

In some cases it took the federal government days to even contact local leaders in Puerto Rico’s major cities, let alone deploy aid. Only the most rudimentary military support is now on the ground. This is inadequate and calls to mind the lethargic response by the Bush administration to Hurricane Katrina in 2005…

In the five days since the storm, FEMA says it has distributed more than 1.5 million meals and 1.1 million liters of water to Americans affected by the storms, with more staged for future deliveries…

But Puerto Rico has 3.4 million residents, and another 100,000 live in the US Virgin Islands. Clean water is a basic daily necessity. These islands’ residents will need orders of magnitude more — plus food, fuel, electricity, housing, medicine, and other necessities — in the months to come until local capacity is restored.

Will local capacity ever be restored? Or will Puerto Rico become a second Haiti, demonstrating what US control means for a Caribbean island and showing Cubans how lucky they are to be isolated from the American mainland by a 57 year long blockade?