In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for January, 2009

Obama’s partisan, profane confidant reins it in

Posted by seumasach on January 26, 2009

 

 

 

IHT

25th January, 2009

Earlier this month, Barack Obama was meeting with the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, and other lawmakers when Rahm Emanuel, his chief of staff, began nervously cracking a knuckle.

Obama then turned to complain to Emanuel about his noisy habit.

At which point, Emanuel held the offending knuckle up to Obama’s left ear and, like an annoying little brother, snapped off a few special cracks.

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Cuba to insist on Guantanamo base closure – Raul Castro

Posted by seumasach on January 26, 2009

 

HAVANA, January 22 (Itar-Tass) – Cuba strengthens its demand to liquidate the US naval base at Guantanamo Bay Cuban leader Raul Castro said in an exclusive interview with Itar-Tass on Thursday.

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Power to the people!!

Posted by seumasach on January 26, 2009

“This is history in the making, people. Momentous and incredible.”

by ALDA on JANUARY 25, 2009

Viva la revolucion bolivarista en Islandia! We are seeing the beginning of the pattern that unfolded in Bolivia and elsewhere in South America: sections of the corrupt elite crumbling away before popular pressure. Alda is right- Iceland is “at the very center of change” but not just in Iceland. Hopefully we can bring this model of protest to the UK where 60 million people are being left to the tender mercies of a vicious financier elite who have everyone in their pockets, most of all the government.

by ALDA on JANUARY 25, 2009

Iceland Weather Report

Please click on link to see videos

The Minister of Commerce and Banking announced his resignation this morning. He moreover announced that he had dismissed the director and board of the Financial Supervisory Authority.

wOOOOOOt!!!

Seriously, I feel like doing a frenzied African war dance in my living room. In fact …

[…]

wOOOOOOt!!!

OK, now that that’s out of the way it’s time to get cynical [because, you know, despite my empathy with people with cancer and suchlike I can get cynical with the best of you … er … them]…

The minister would have us believe that this is a “decision of conscience”, thereby exposing his own simple-mindedness as I don’t think any thinking person will believe that. If this was so, why didn’t he resign weeks ago?  On the contrary it is evident that this is merely a well-constructed ploy [and not even that well constructed, really] to enhance his image now that elections have been called. With any luck [on his part] he will only have to be out of a job for about four or five months and will then be re-elected; had he not resigned, however, the chances of that would have been slim. He is a minister for the Social Democratic Alliance, which has plummeted in popularity over the last week or so, and I suspect he feels this is his – and their – only chance at re-election.

Still, he’s the first one to publicly shoulder responsibility for the economic implosion, despite not even having been in government when the whole system was engineered, so we can give him -1 point on the Bananarepublic-o-meter for that. And -2 points for kicking the fricking amateurs at the FSA out on their butts before he left. No, make that -3 points. Huzzah!!

Meanwhile, the Central Bank board operates under the auspices of the Prime Minister who has done nothing but declare his unfailing devotion to Davíd Oddsson and his cronies at the bank. We shall see if the Independence Party pulls a similar stunt as the SDA to raise its popularity, although with the unnatural power that Doddsson appears to wield over the PM and his people I don’t expect a great deal from that camp.

MEANWHILE, I PROMISED A REPORT
On yesterday’s demonstration, which was incredible. To be perfectly honest, I half-expected that with the government’s concession to the public, i.e. calling elections this spring, protester numbers would drop off and people would slink back into complacency. Not so. Yesterday’s demonstration was the most well-attended to date, with over 5,000 people participating. The energy was incredible – vastly different from the strong undercurrent of of anger, hopelessness and despair that has prevailed of late. It’s like our latest victory [the PM’s intention to call elections] has unleashed tremendous energy and elation and yesterday’s demonstration was almost like a celebration. It was fantastic to be there, at the very center of change and at such a momentous time in the history of our nation.

Here is part of an excellent speech by writer Guðmundur Andri Thorsson [unfortunately slightly truncated] which will give you small idea of the atmosphere and also protester numbers:

When the demonstration ended, the organizers announced from the podium that a choir would sing in front of the parliament building. This has never happened before. Happily we were standing nearby and so we got to hear them perform two of our most beautiful national songs: Land míns föður, landið mitt [The land of my father, my land] and Hver á sér fegra föðurland [Who has a more beautiful fatherland?]. It was very moving, and really lifted the mood. I managed to record a little bit of the former song, here:

As soon as they had finished, people started once more banging drums, pots, pans and whatever they had, and chanting Vanhæf ríkisstjórn![Incompetent government!]. It’s like a tribal chant that has been ongoing for the past week, and it’s fantastic.

This is history in the making, people. Momentous and incredible.

IT’S A CALM AND MILD SUNDAY
I suppose this is what is called “light air” according to the Beaufort wind scale [if you’ve been using the forums, you may have noticed the different ranks given to people according to number of posts – you start off calm and work your way up to a hurricane…] – and it sure looks nice out there. Gentle sunshine this morning but it is currently overcast in the capital, with temps at 2°C [36F]. Sunrise was at 10:28 am and sunset due for 4:53 pm. This afternoon at 3 pm there is yet another demonstration, this time on Lækjartorg square, to protest vandalism and violence against the police.

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Crisis? which crisis?- The silence of the sheep

Posted by seumasach on January 25, 2009

 

We at inthesenewtimes are not at all surprised by the disappearance of the left in the wake of the crisis they’ve been talking up about for decades. We saw at first hand there refusal to organise seriously against the Iraq war and felt the full force of their attempts to nobble our own oppositional work. There was a time when all this would have been seen for what it is: treachery. Now we have all kinds of sophistic explanations such as  “modern globalized life taking so much energy and personal time from everybody, that nothing is left for thinking, re-thinking – and acting up?’ Incidently, I recall reading Spengler’s Decline of the West years ago and noting with surprise his claim that the left always followed the financiers’ agenda. Since then I have learnt that the Whig financier elite funded Jacobite rebellions in the 18th century and organised  Fenian plots and the 1820 Scottish uprising in the 19th. According to John MacLean, whose integrity , in my view, is beyond question, the early British Communist Party was stuffed full of informants. Since the elite seem to control just about everything, and everyone who is anyone, why not the left?: and why not, then, stand them down or scuttle them when their services are no longer required and the may actually become a liability? Whatever the explanation for the strange death of the left, the main lesson to learn is that they are dead and that the task of resistance falls to ourselves alone.

Blunahase

25th January, 2009

The silence of the sheep. “The crisis of capitalism ought to be the hour of the socialists” and Linke (leftists), wrote the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) in its sunday issue of Nov 23rd 2008. “But instead they withdraw into Wahnsinn” (crazyness), the subtitle continues under the headline „Brüder, zum Abgrund“ (Brothers, To The Abyss!).

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Iceland commerce minister resigns

Posted by smeddum on January 25, 2009

Iceland’s commerce minister resigns
By DAVID STRINGER –
25/01/09
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — Iceland’s Minister of Commerce resigned his post on Sunday, citing the pressures of the island nation’s economic collapse. Read the rest of this entry »

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NATO: the Imperial Pitbull

Posted by seumasach on January 25, 2009

 

Prof. Edward S. Herman

Global Research

23rd January, 2009

One of the deceptive clichés of Western accounts of post World War II history is that NATO was constructed  as a defensive arrangement to block the threat of  a Soviet attack on Western Europe.  This is false. It is true that Western propaganda played up the Soviet menace, but many key U.S. and Western European statesmen recognized that a Soviet invasion was not a real threat.  The Soviet Union had been devastated, and while in possession of a large army it was exhausted and needed time for recuperation. The United States was riding high, the war had revitalized its economy, it suffered no war damage, and it had the atomic bomb in its arsenal, which it had displayed to  the Soviet Union by killing a quarter of  a million Japanese civilians at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Hitting the Soviet Union before it recovered or had atomic weapons was discussed in Washington, even if rejected in favor of “containment,”  economic warfare, and other forms of  destabilization. NSC 68, dated April 1950, while decrying the great Soviet menace, explicitly called for a program of destabilization aimed at regime change in that country, finally achieved in 1991.

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Saudi patience is running out

Posted by seumasach on January 25, 2009

FT

22nd January, 2009

In my decades as a public servant, I have strongly promoted the Arab-Israeli peace process. During recent months, I argued that the peace plan proposed by Saudi Arabia could be implemented under an Obama administration if the Israelis and Palestinians both accepted difficult compromises. I told my audiences this was worth the energies of the incoming administration for, as the late Indian diplomat Vijaya Lakshmi Nehru Pandit said: “The more we sweat in peace, the less we bleed in war.”

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Al-Faisal calls upon Arab FMs to seek action to end “Israeli aggression”

Posted by seumasach on January 25, 2009

I have somewhat belatedly come across this article which should be read alongside the  latest Saudi remarks condemnng the USA for its role in the Gaza massacre .

 CAIRO, Dec 31 (KUNA) — Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal called upon the Arab foreign ministers during their urgent meeting in Cairo on Wednesday to focus on action rather than rhetoric to halt the Israeli aggression in Gaza.
Head of the Arab Foreign Ministers’ Council in its current session, Prince Saud Al-Faisal said, “The situation in Gaza is a massacre, and a crime against humanity, additional violence and extremism are expected in absence of any peace plans, which Israel claims it is working towards.” Questioning, he said, “What peace could be achieved from a mad military machine that only destoys and kills? which reflects the true Israeli identity.

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Ministers impose huge rise in court fees for those on brink of bankruptcy.

Posted by seumasach on January 24, 2009

 

Ministers were accused last night of profiteering from the soaring numbers of people facing bankruptcy after they announced huge increases in fees at debtors’ courts.

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Latvia split over ‘fascist cemetery’

Posted by seumasach on January 24, 2009

Russia Today

24th January, 2009

A political row has broken out in Latvia over the commemoration in a Riga war cemetery of Italian fascist leader Benito Mussolini.

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BBC ban on Gaza aid broadcast sparks ire

Posted by seumasach on January 24, 2009

PressTV

24th January, 2009

Thousands of people are expected to hold a protest in London, decrying BBC’s refusal to broadcast a charity appeal for war-hit Gazans. 

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