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A nation that is failing its people

At the peak of its power, it was often said that "the sun never sets on the British Empire" because its span across the globe ensured that the sun was always shining on at least one of its numerous territories.

Francis Anthony Govia

For those of us who are concerned about a nation’s veracious appetite for war, let us be reminded that there was a time when the sun never set on a British Empire, and even that has become a thing of the past.  All that are left of Rome are crumbling stones, and Greece is bankrupt.  The “Ottomans” hope to reclaim the glory of the past by rebuilding a silk road between the East and West and raising their voice in geopolitics, but Turkey is more a vassal today than a master.  And those who run our great country, the United States, are intoxicated with power, and would not let reason dictate foreign policy, but are inclined to bully and strong-arm a world of nations that are constantly evolving and shifting, with people who do not  wish to be treated as if there are members of colonies.  The elite have duped us in to believing that we are one of them, but in truth we live in a nation of separate and unequal.  Men live in a world of the conscionable and the unconscionable. Irrespective of the nation where we are citizens, we are brothers spanning nations based on our standing in society within nations, or our empathy for others. The spring in the Middle East has demonstrated to us that the masses are asking for more, and they are not unlike us.  This nation when it was founded, came out of many were one.  But today, out of many we are many. They say we are a super power. They have no reason to listen to anyone – not even the voices of our citizens.  Let Americans occupy the streets. We will be chased away, and gassed like the lowly Shiites in Bahrain, and many of us are dissatisfied with the indifference of our leaders. But still there is no reason for us to sit in gloom.  We have to prepare to do something better. I have reason to believe with joy that voice that said to me when I was a child:  “The longest road has a turn.”  Be on the right way when that day comes.  If there is not a turn in a road, it is going nowhere.

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Not price freedom

Francis Anthony Govia

In spite of all that are given to them, they who are easy to corrupt shall always demand more freedom. Those who are cultured should agitate for morality and fairness. Citizens of an advanced society should give more weight to morality and fairness.

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Considering all things

Francis Anthony Govia

The most important skill that a person can acquire is the ability to read; the curiosity to go on a differing course, the morality to stay grounded, and the independence to analyze things.

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Libya: ICC prosecutor seeks warrant for Gaddafi

The leaders of Western democracies have bombed and killed more civilians in the last decade than the regime of Muammar Gaddafi but ICC prosecutors will not issue arrest warrants for those that are ensconced in the position of leadership and protected by a legacy to dictate the course of the UN. One wonders if the lives the UN has mandated to protect in Misrata are more important than the many Libyans that reside in Tripoli – Gaddafi’s stronghold. Further, why is the court so silent to the atrocities that are committed against innocent civilians in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Palestine, Pakistan, Yemen and Afghanistan? Justice for our world is not only selective but the communication that supports it is absurd. We are told that a bomb delivered by a suicide bomber that kills civilians is an act of terrorism but a Tomahawk missile or Drone that kills the innocent serves to end terrorism. Such communication is foolish, lacks credibility, and is seen in the eyes of the independent public for what it is -- rubbish!

BBC

The International Criminal Court chief prosecutor is seeking the arrest of Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi and two others for crimes against humanity.

Luis Moreno-Ocampo said Col Gaddafi, his son Saif al-Islam, and intelligence chief Abdullah al-Sanussi bore the greatest responsibility for “widespread and systematic attacks” on civilians.

ICC judges must still decide whether or not to issue warrants for their arrest.

The Libyan government has already said it will ignore the announcement.

Deputy Foreign Minister Khalid Kaim said the court was a “baby of the European Union designed for African politicians and leaders” and its practices were “questionable”.

Libya did not recognise its jurisdiction, like a few other African countries and the United States, he added.

Read more>>>

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The Political Economy of the End of Tyranny

Ronald Bailey

Reason

Poor man rise up and break the shackles that stop your progress!

We live in interesting times. Long-standing autocracies in the Arab world are collapsing like overcooked soufflés. The urgent question is: What happens next? The collapse of authoritarian regimes is not all that unusual. Between 1945 and 2002, 316 authoritarian leaders across the globe fell from power through nonconstitutional means, according to a 2009 study [PDF] in the American Journal of Political Science by University of Illinois political scientist Milan Svolik.

By nonconstitutional means, Svolik includes any exits that were not the result of natural death, a constitutionally mandated process like an election, a vote by a ruling body, or a hereditary succession. Of the 303 despots for whom Svolik could unambiguously ascertain how they lost political power, it turns out that only 32 tyrants were removed by a popular uprising. Another 30 left under public pressure to democratize, e.g., Chile’s Augusto Pinochet. Twenty were assassinated, e.g., Egypt’s Anwar Sadat, and only 16 were removed by foreign intervention, e.g., Panama’s Manuel Noriega. The remaining 205 were ousted by other government members or by members of the security forces—that is to say, by classic coups d’etat. Uneasy indeed lies the head that wears the crown, general’s cap, or keffiyeh.

Svolik develops a model of dictatorship in which autocrats achieve power initially as the first among equals in a ruling coalition. He argues that “a central problem of authoritarian governance is the problem of power sharing between the dictator and the ruling coalition.” Constant jockeying for access to resources and authority among members of the coalition makes holding onto power unstable, so new dictators have an incentive to try to weaken members of the coalition that might challenge them by rewarding loyalists.

However, as Svolik’s data show, this process of power consolidation provokes successful coups d’etat about two-thirds of the time. But the longer a dictator rules, the more secure his power. Svolik finds among tyrants who ruled for less than 10 years, 162 were removed by coups while only 31 died in office. On the other hand, among despots who ruled for 10 years or more, only 41 were removed by coup while 45 died in office. “Thus for dictators who survive in office for at least ten years, the odds of dying of natural causes rather than being removed by a coup improve from less than one in five to more than one in one!,” notes Svolik. He also finds that the tenure of military dictators averages a bit over four years while single-party and personalist dictators average about 11 years in power. Why the difference?

One dynamic is that personalist dictators destroy pre-existing social and political institutions, which eliminates rival centers where would-be opponents might organize and plot. A good case in point is Muammar Qaddafi, who has undermined the army that initially brought him to power. Instead he and his children have created alternative institutions that are dependent for resources directly from them. A good example is the Khamis brigade, a special military unit directly created and run by Qaddafi’s son Khamis. Reports suggest that the Khamis brigade is actively trying to retake towns close to Tripoli now controlled by opponents to the Qaddafi regime. Similarly, the Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin ruthlessly transformed that single-party state into a personalist dictatorship by means of periodic purges, so that all who remained in the government and military were directly beholden to his patronage. Stalin died in his bed.

Read more>>>

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Tahrir Square: The Center of Liberation

The Muffin Post

History will reflect on this time in Egypt as a momentous occasion when the human spirit proved more indomitable than guns and bullets, and the failed politics that dominated the Middle East and Africa for most of the 20th Century.

The Arab voice on the street that have long been subdued, silenced, and ignored have risen up to dispel the lies that have been told by rulers across the Globe that Moslems are not interested in life, liberty, equality, and the pursuit of happiness.

In Tahrir Square where two million people, lead by Islamic scholar Yousuf El-Qaradawi, gathered and prayed together in celebration of the departure of Hosni Mubark, the Arab voice for freedom appear to be more coherent than anything we currently experience in the West. Nothing! Not even a language barrier can marginalize what we – the other ordinary people – now witness.

The Middle East – the most unlikely of places – is a shining example to the world that freedom should not be bought, but earned.

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Bahrain: A fissured future in a ‘fictitious democracy’

Thousands of demonstrators came to support the friends and family of Mahmood Makki Abotakki on Feb. 18. Mahmood was shot and killed during the Pearl Roundabout uprising when police stormed the square at 3 a.m. Photo: Lucas Oleniuk

Jesse McLean

The Star

Mohammed Khalil sits on a curb, his back to the towering monument in the middle of Pearl Roundabout, and takes a long drag on a Marlboro cigarette.

The 22-year-old Bahraini was among the first throng of protesters to rush back into the landmark square on Feb. 19 after riot police retreated. But he hasn’t been able to sleep well since.

“I keep worrying: What happens now?” he said softly.

Two days before the square was reclaimed, a pre-dawn assault by police killed four protesters, their bodies peppered with shotgun pellets.

After criticism from the international community, including its U.S. allies, the crown prince of Bahrain’s Al-Khalifa royal family ordered police and tanks to withdraw from city streets and announced demonstrators would be free to protest. The prince also said he would talk with opposition groups to restore calm in this tiny Gulf kingdom.

But opposition politicians and blocs have struggled for days to coordinate a response to the government’s call for discussions, revealing fissures in the protesters’ ranks. Now that it’s time to make their demands, they have to decide exactly what it is they want.

“We have people who want many things, different things. I’m very scared some people will be here, and here and here and there,” Khalil said, moving his hands in the air, left to right, along some invisible spectrum.

The protesters do have core demands, articulated in a press release by seven main opposition parties, calling for the dissolution of the current government, a constitutional monarchy and democratic reform that will end the nepotism that has seen the prime minister and his cabinet, many of whom are members of the Sunni ruling family, handpicked by the king. They want solutions to unemployment and housing shortages, problems that plague the country’s Shiite majority.

But many of the youth are at the extreme end of the spectrum described by Khalil. They want to oust the monarchy itself. With each demonstrator killed — there have been seven deaths since protests began on Valentine’s Day — the discontent among the youth intensifies, as do their demands. They no longer just shout slogans for the prime minister to resign. They yell, “Death to Al-Khalifa.”

“The strongest card in the hands of the opposition are the youth who are willing to give their lives (for change),” said Ebrahim Sharif, the middle-aged secretary general of the secular-leftist Waad party. “They have to be represented so they don’t feel the revolution has been hijacked by my generation.”

Read more>>>

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How the rich got richer

Anthony B. Robinson

The Christian Century

Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson tell a story that is at once familiar and unfamiliar. The familiar part is that over the past 30 years inequality in both wealth and income has grown dramatically in the United States.

Since the late 1970s the wealthiest 1 percent of the nation’s population has pocketed more than 35 percent of the real national income growth, which is more than the bottom 90 percent of the population combined. Or looking at it from a different angle, between 1979 and 2006 the bottom 20 percent of the population had real income growth of 0.3 percent and the middle 20 percent had real income growth of 0.7 percent, while the top 1 percent enjoyed real income growth of an astonishing 260 percent.

We have moved from what Hacker and Pierson call the “Broadland” of the 30 years before 1979, when growth in wealth was broadly shared by all sectors of the population, to “Richistan,” where the lion’s share of wealth goes to the top 1 percent. And the tiny growth in the real income of the middle class has been the consequence of people working more: individuals are working more hours, and more family members are in the job market.

The less familiar part of the narrative is about how this inequality came about. Hacker and Pierson trace the story of a “thirty-year war” that began, unexpectedly, in the Carter years. In the late 1970s capital gains taxes were slashed, payroll taxes raised and unions crippled. The authors argue that the enormous shift in wealth was not caused by the usual suspects—economic globalization or technological change that benefits the educated. Nor was it the consequence of the “unfettered market” taking its natural course. Rather, it was the result of government policy—that is, of politics that have tilted the playing field in favor of the wealthy and the superwealthy, the latter being the top tenth of the top 1 percent of the population.

Since the late 1970s business and corporate interests have fought successfully for lower tax rates, especially for the most affluent; deregulation of financial markets and executive pay; and erosion of the powers of countervailing groups—labor unions chief among them.

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The Middle East’s paradox of plenty

Ihsan Isik

Today’s Zaman

The repressive regime of 30 years in Egypt surrendered to the 18-day-long resistance of the people. According to many political authorities, Egypt’s journey towards welfare and democracy could have started much earlier.

What prevented Egypt from joining the global winds of democratization in the 1980s was “the oil of diplomacy.” First, there was the competition between Moscow and Washington to win Egypt over through foreign assistance during the Cold War era, then the investments of oil-rich Gulf countries and Egyptians living abroad and finally Egypt’s discovery of its own natural gas and oil in the 1980s and 1990s put off the public’s resistance. When Egypt found oil and natural gas, the people thought it was a blessing gushing out from underground. But this wealth never turned into a blessing showering over them. To the contrary, the dark fossil fuel bursting from the ground became a calamity for the Egyptian people.

According to several scholarly studies, the richer countries get, the more democratic the administrations become. But there is one exception to this process. If national wealth relies primarily on natural resources such as oil, natural gas, diamonds, gold or copper, then democratization in that country either slows down or completely stops. Recent studies have found that resource-rich countries (compared to resource-poor countries) are not only more anti-democratic, but they are also backward in economic development and more prone to civil clashes. In political economy, the rich country-poor, suppressed people contradiction is called the “paradox of plenty,” “the resource curse” or “the Dutch disease.” The paradox of plenty is seen in countries that found oil before installing laws and democracy more so than in countries that found oil after establishing laws and democracy, such as Norway, Denmark, England and the US.

Inverse correlation between oil prices and democratization

The income per capita in oil-rich Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) members declined by 1.3 percent between 1965 and 1998, while the income per capita increased by 2.2 percent in poor countries, a scientific puzzle. Some recent studies found an inverse correlation between oil prices and democratization. According to Stanford University’s Larry Diamond, none of the 23 countries that derive most of their export earnings from oil and natural gas is a democracy. According to Freedom House, the worst year for freedom in the world since the end of the Cold War was 2007, the year when oil prices peaked. Freedom of speech, freedom of the press, free and fair elections, freedom to organize, the transparency of the government, the impartiality of the judiciary, the maintenance of laws and the establishment of independent political parties and nongovernmental organizations are hurt in oil-rich countries when oil prices rise. In contrast, when oil prices decline, signs of freedom substantially improve.

Read more>>>

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German politicians under fire for criticizing Israel

Dirk Niebel Photo: Michael Gottschalk

Sven Becker and Christoph Schult

Der Spiegel

A dispute is brewing in the German-Israeli Association over a fundamental question: How openly should German politicians be allowed to criticize the policies of the Jewish state?

Dirk Niebel, a member of Germany’s pro-business Free Democratic Party (FDP), isn’t known for his reticence. But when it comes to criticizing Israel, Niebel, who spent a year living in a kibbutz as a young man, has always been cautious. As a sign of his solidarity, he became vice-president of the German-Israeli Association (DIG), a staunchly pro-Israeli group, in 2000. It was a close relationship, at least until last year.

As Germany’s Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development, he had planned a trip to the Gaza Strip last June to tour a sewage treatment plant in Palestinian territory funded by the German government. When the Israelis denied him access to the plant, Niebel referred to the decision as a “major foreign policy mistake.” In the heat of the moment, he added that “time is running out” for Israel.

The loudest criticism of his undiplomatic statement did not come from Jerusalem, but from the home front, namely from several fellow members of the DIG. “Niebel should have known that Israel, given the tense situation, has little understanding for demonstrative visits, no matter how well-intentioned,” chided DIG officials Claudia Korenke and Jochen Feilcke.

Since then there has been a fundamental dispute among Israel supporters over the direction of their movement, a dispute fraught with insults and accusations. It revolves around power, positions and the question of how much criticism of Israel’s policy should be allowed among its friends.

Read more>>>

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