In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for January, 2011

The Met Office fries while the rest of the world freezes

Posted by seumasach on January 9, 2011

Christopher Booker

Telegraph

9th January, 2011

First it was a national joke. Then its professional failings became a national disaster. Now, the dishonesty of its attempts to fight off a barrage of criticism has become a real national scandal. I am talking yet again of that sad organisation the UK Met Office, as it now defends its bizarre record with claims as embarrassingly absurd as any which can ever have been made by highly-paid government officials.

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Waste Effort: US ghost cash flushed down Afghan drain

Posted by smeddum on January 9, 2011

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Central Banks are Acquiring Gold, Dumping US Dollars

Posted by smeddum on January 8, 2011

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by Michel Chossudovsky

Global research

January 6, 2011

There is evidence that central banks in several regions of the World are building up their gold reserves. What is published are the official purchases.

A large part of these Central Bank purchases of gold bullion are not disclosed. They are undertaken through third party contracting companies, with utmost discretion.

US dollar holdings and US dollar denominated debt instruments are in effect being traded in for gold, which in turn puts pressure on the US dollar. Read the rest of this entry »

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BBC should apologise to MPs and to Parliament

Posted by seumasach on January 8, 2011

Alistair Philips and Graham Lamburn

Powerwatch

7th January, 2011

We claim that the BBC acted in a most inappropriate and rude manner by posting on-screen comments during Mr Tom Watson’s Adjournment Debate in the House of Commons on 20th December 2010. These comments, some of which were factually incorrect, contradicted the valid concerns being expressed on behalf of the public by the two MPs. The adversarial comments were displayed to the nation while the MPs were actually speaking. We see this as blatant lobbying by a news organisation. The MPs would not have been aware of the comments. The comments have been quietly removed by the BBC from the version that is on the BBC i-player.

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Obama and the crisis of neo-liberal black intellectuals

Posted by seumasach on January 8, 2011

Antonio Monteiro

African American Futures

20th August, 2010

Charles Pete Banner-Haley’s book From Du Bois to Obama: African American Intellectuals in the Public Forum (2010) is a history of African American intellectuals from the standpoint of Barack Obama ‘s presidency. From his Obama post racial dream-world, Banner-Haley tells us, “African American intellectuals in the twenty-first century can take their cue from an Obama presidency and the words he spoke in Philadelphia during the race for the nomination. They can become ‘transformative black intelligentsia’ (123).” It should be obvious, the last thing black intellectuals need to do is “take their cue” from a pro-war, pro Wall Street, pro American imperialism presidency. Rather than fulfilling the legacy of W.E.B Du Bois (as the author claims) it is its opposite. Obama’s presidency represents a rupture with Du Bois and the progressive wing of black intellectuals. Obama’s Philadelphia speech was a neo-Booker T Washington compromise speech (equivalent to Washington’s Atlanta Compromise Address delivered in 1895). Obama decidedly argued that we had pretty much moved beyond racism’s most lethal forms. For him, while slavery was the nation’s ‘original sin’ racism left scars that damaged both whites and blacks. Hence, both his white grandmother and Reverend Jeremiah Wright represented the past of racial prejudice, stereotypes, fear, animus and anger. He positioned himself as representing the future of racial compromise and reconciliation. In neo-Booker T Washington style he urged black folk literally to “put your buckets down where you are”, instead of challenging white supremacy. The Obama presidency, in the end, seeks to fashion a racial compromise with conservatives, similar to Washington’s compromise with the Jim Crow South.

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China’s daunting job to see euro prevail

Posted by smeddum on January 7, 2011

China’s daunting job to see euro prevail

January 05, 2011

People’s Daily


By Li Hong

Vice-premier Li Keqiang’s op-ed piece on Spain’s leading newspaper El Pais and his high-profile visit to Spain, Germany and Britain are to send reassuring signals to a jittery bloc of a continent that China is firmly behind Europe and their common currency, euro. Read the rest of this entry »

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New hacking evidence: Tom Watson’s letter to the director of public prosecutions

Posted by seumasach on January 7, 2011

Labour Uncut

Keir Starmer QC, Director of Public Prosecutions

Rose Court, 2 Southwark Bridge
London,SE1 9HS

6 January 2011

As you know, News International has suspended a senior executive in light of ongoing allegations about the News of the World’s illegal phone hacking activities.

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Songs of struggle: Paul Robeson remembered

Posted by seumasach on January 7, 2011

    Arts Correspondent
     

    Workers

    January, 2011

    The American singer Paul Robeson’s unique and beautiful bass voice is instantly recognisable. His version of Old Man River is an integral part of our musical history. Now a re-enactment of episodes from Robeson’s life is beginning an ambitious British tour, having become a hit at the 2010 Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

    Less well-known is that he also performed for British trade unionists at the May Day Rally in Glasgow’s Queen’s Park 50 years ago. This was part of a long association and affection for British workers

    Audiences flocked to hear him in the knowledge that his US passport had been revoked following his and his wife Essie‘s “trial” by the House Un-American Activities Committee. She had been summoned before them in 1953 to explain her 1945 book African Journey and her comments like “the one hopeful light on the horizon…is the exciting and encouraging conditions in Soviet Russia…”.

    His passport application had been denied following his acceptance of the 1952 Stalin Peace Prize, and even by late 1953 his career and health were badly affected by the stress caused by attacks in the press and cancellation of engagements abroad – including invitations to sing at the Eisteddfod in Wales and to take the lead in Othello on a British tour.

    ‘Danger of disorder’

    At home, a concert in Brooklyn was cancelled for fear of “the danger of disorder” and at another in Hartford he was surrounded by 250 police while performing, facing press shouts of “why are you hurting your cause by allying yourself with the communists?” However, dozens of trade unionists at outdoor concerts showed their support by guarding him from his enemies.

    The same type of organising spirit saw him sing to 40,000 by standing just inside the Canadian border, in 1952. He was at the same time distressed by antagonism he felt coming from organisations like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); for example its threats to its Oberlin branch if it did not cancel his 1953 concert. When he learned of this several years later he commented: “Yes, those were the people who did the final hatchet job on me.” He later felt acutely the reluctance of the NAACP to share platforms with him.

    But back in Britain, starting in 1954, a campaign grew over the next few years under the slogan “Let Robeson Sing”. Promoted by British workers, the Welsh miners and their choirs spearheaded this, and the Scottish Trades Union Congress passed a resolution demanding the restoration of his passport. Even Labour leader Aneurin Bevan was forced to lend tacit support.

    Passport restored

    In his biography of Robeson, Martin Duberman assesses that this campaign exerted considerable pressure on the US government to the extent that by 1959, his passport restored, he was able to take up the invitation to perform Othello at Stratford. Praised by London critic W. A. Darlington as being among best portrayals of the role he had ever seen, the production was by the up-and-coming director Tony Richardson, fresh from John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger.

    May Day Rally
    Paul Robeson singing at the May Day rally in Glasgow’s Queen’s Park in 1960.
    Photo courtesy of Glasgow Trades Union Council archives

    After a rapturous reception in Moscow, he was back in Britain for a singing tour that included the Glasgow May Day, where he told the crowd “You will need all the strength you have got to see that you who create the wealth of the country have a chance to enjoy it!” Most memorable were the times he spent with the choirs of the Welsh mining communities, singing with them and even addressing their meetings in Welsh. Inspired by their spirit of struggle he made a feature film (which also aided the anti-fascist war effort) in 1939-1940 entitled The Proud Valley. “The artist must take sides – elect to side with either slavery or freedom” and that it is “back to fascism or on to socialism”, he said. And when he performed songs extracted from musicals or the folk tradition, he often added his own words to inspire workers to struggle.

    During the following decades Paul Robeson continued his performances, although singing less in the years leading to his death in 1976, but the vigour of his writing and speaking kept much of its power. Largely ignored in the USA till now, this inspirational character is again being remembered. The CD Paul Robeson: Songs of Struggle has been issued on the Dorset based Regis label; and the actor Tayo Aluko has embarked on a Britain-wide tour with a one-man play, Call Mr Robeson – a portrayal of a life of struggle and the stresses that inevitably went with that.

    Accompanied by pianist Michael Conliffe, Aluko performs Robeson’s most famous songs, and re-enacts episodes from his life including the courtroom dramas of the 1950s McCarthy interrogations. This show has been honed over several years, including performances in Glasgow in 2006. Now following its 5 star reviews from the 2010 Edinburgh Festival Fringe (“Tayo Aluko has written and performs an outstanding tribute and reaffirmation of Robeson’s work and his place in human history“: “this piece has it all. It really is a hidden gem which deserves to be hidden from history no more”), it is beginning an ambitious British tour.

    The tour begins in London at Theatro Technis, Crowndale Road NW1 1TT from 4 to 23 January ; then goes to Darlington Arts Centre (25 January), Bury (The Met, 26 January), Salford (The Lowry, 27 January), Derby (Guildhall Theatre, 28th), Goole (the Junction, 29 January), Peebles (Eastgate Arts Centre, 4 February) and Inverness at the Eden Court on 5 February. For more details see www.callmrrobeson.com.

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Obama-Meet the new economic death squad

Posted by seumasach on January 7, 2011

David deGraw

Amped Status

7th January

Sticking with my New Year’s resolution to not participate injournalism of appeasement, this article and headline will definitely not be picked up by the appeasers. The unfortunate truth that they don’t want to acknowledge is that Barack “Banana Republic Bankster Puppet” Obama has bowed to his masters yet again.

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The fascist state of Scotland and the SNP

Posted by seumasach on January 7, 2011

Ian Hamilton QC

6th January, 2011

I fear for what is happening to the administration of justice. I blame the SNP because they are the government. It started under Labour so an election will make no difference. Here are examples of what I fear.

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Press Gangs – The latest developments

Posted by seumasach on January 7, 2011

Kenneth Roy

Scottish Review

7th January, 2011

Unknown to the public, there exists a remarkably close relationship between the Crown Office, the police and the media, including the release – the authorised release – of material relating to criminal trials, documents that once would have been considered sacrosanct. So, before we turn to the urgent business of unauthorised releases, let’s look at the stuff going out to the media which is completely above-board.

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