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Archive for December 25th, 2007

Jayne Lyn Stahl: Potentially Dangerous

Back in 1950, J. Edgar Hoover, FBI director for nearly half a century, had a plan for the “permanent detention” of 12,000 Americans at military bases, and domestic prisons, according to a document declassified on Friday and reported by The New York Times. His goal was to have then President Truman suspend habeas corpus, and arrest any person deemed “potentially dangerous.”

So, you might find yourself unfortunate enough to be on J. Edgar’s list only because you’re thought to have the potential for being dangerous. One wonders what Mr. Hoover’s definition of the word “dangerous” was, and how that might be instructive in light of today’s political climate. Can it be said that danger, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder?

It was also Hoover’s idea to construct a behemoth, all-encompassing arrest warrant, not unlike the ubiquitous National Security Agency spy program, which could be issued to facilitate the massive arrests stemming from years of investigations by the bureau. Evidently, “Hoover’s list” took some time to prepare.

Should the plan to incarcerate more than ten thousand Americans have panned out, it would not have been the first time a debacle of this nature had occurred on native soil. In 1920, Hoover organized the Palmer Raids, in which thousands of people were rounded up, and labeled pinkos and radicals, providing precedent, if not impetus, for the Korean War game plan.

The Palmer Raids were the precursor to the Great Purge of Josef Stalin which has, interestingly, also come to be known as the “Great Terror.” War sure comes in handy, not just for those fat, juicy war contracts, making the rich even richer, but for classifying those who don’t get with the program as “potentially” risky, hence worthy of taxpayer expense to sweep them up, hole them up somewhere, divest them of their First Amendment rights, and disenfranchise them.

Hoover sent his proposal to Truman in July, 1950, in the first two weeks after combat began in Korea, and two months later, the president approved a measure which allowed for detaining “dangerous radicals.” It is unknown what Truman’s response to Hoover’s plan was inasmuch as the plan itself was never implemented, even when the Chinese entered the Korean War, and the president felt compelled to declare a state of emergency. Wouldn’t you just love to be a fly on that wall? No, not the Berlin wall, but the wall separating President Truman and J. Edgar Hoover!

It would be fascinating if a future document were to be discovered showing a debate between the president and director of what was the signature intelligence agency of the day. There could be no controversy when it came to Hoover’s unilateral vision of those who posed the most egregious risk to national security, as well as his goal of protecting the country “against treason, espionage, and sabotage.” By his own admission, 97 percent of those he deemed “potentially dangerous” were U.S. citizens, so his call to suspend habeas corpus was as unconstitutional then as it is now. Hoover’s plan granted the right to a hearing, but the nuance of evidence was nowhere to be found.

We may not know much, but we can make an educated guess that J. Edgar would be a big fan of military tribunals, and having to enter a guilty plea before seeing counsel, as well as granting immunity to commanders-in-chief from war crime charges. Overall, one can imagine that Mr. Hoover would be a huge proponent of the Military Commissions Act of 2006, and would tip the scales in favor of expanded surveillance powers for the N.S.A. . In fact, he’d probably have pedicures with Vladimir Putin, then go back to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, and blitz the server containing millions of “deleted” White House emails, some of which may even prove that the president conferred with counsel before ordering the destruction of “enhanced interrogation” videotapes. Not only does presidente 43 allow for indefinite detention of prisoners without redress, or access to counsel, but he rubber stamps methods of interrogation which wouldn’t even pass J. Edgar Hoover’s smell test.

One can only hope that Congress doesn’t roll over for President Bush again, in this investigation, as it did a year ago September, when it allowed the president to suspend habeas corpus for anyone classified as an “unlawful enemy combatant,” a phrase coined by former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Ostensibly, Mr. Rumsfeld never read the Constitution any more than his colleagues, in Congress, as the Constitution clearly states that habeas corpus may only be suspended when public safety is jeopardized by “rebellion or invasion.”

The Supreme Court recently reaffirmed the habeas corpus right of U.S. citizens, but is only now hearing arguments about whether non-citizens, at Guantanamo Bay, should be entitled to the same rights as were granted by the Magna Carta some 500 years ago, but who’s counting? So, here we are, 50 years later, in the midst of a “war on terror,” and only now coming to learn that the intelligence arm of our own government was about to perpetrate a “Great Terror” on 12,000 of its own citizens.

What is the purpose of the past if not to be instructive? We must never again allow the cannibals of abstractions like “potentially dangerous,” and war on terror, to infect us with the kind of arrogance, and self-righteousness which, in trying to pass itself off as patriotism, is little more than thinly disguised abuse of power.

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Travel Stories Of 2007

There’s only sure fire way to draw up a definitive list of best travel features - the ones you read most More

Three Ways To Get Richer Next Year

How are you holding up during the Writers Guild of America strike out in Hollywood? With freshly scripted programming drying up, the next few weeks will be challenging unless you relish a steady diet of reruns, reality television, and reruns of reality television.

I’ve got a plan. It may or may not make you richer, but it will make you smarter.

See that plug on your television set? Good. Yank it.

I’m hurting for entertainment as much as the next guy, but I’ve always believed that when life gives you lemons, you open a tequila bar. This is the best time to profit from the lull in programming. If you have spare time now away from the boob tube, use it to brush up on ways to become a better investor.

I have a few tips to get you started. Some will take you less time than the hour you were going to spend watching Desperate Housewives or CSI.

1. Get up to speed with fundamentals
Is your portfolio making promises that your due diligence can’t keep? It’s perfectly natural. Most investors start out as speculators, running with stock tips before they understand what truly drives the markets or how to value a company.

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Nigella Lawson’s Favorite Christmas Recipes

Christmas seems to instill an unparallelled tremor of expectation in people. We seem to feel that for this crucial period we must suddenly become great hosts and untiring chefs, ready with a cocktail and a full table at all hours. I want you to feel better about the big parties and the little dinners you suddenly find yourself throwing. I’m not telling you not to worry, I’m giving you the recipes so you won’t have to.

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Robbie Gennet: What Makes People So Susceptible to Fascism?

It is a profound question with a myriad of answers and few solutions: What makes people so susceptible to fascism? Who are those flag-waving throngs cheering on their proud leader? And why do they cheerfully support a figurehead and system that works against their own self-interests? Are they gullible, naive to the point of complete self-chosen ignorance? Are they maniacal narcissists bent on proving their superiority to the world? Or are they scared of acting like they don’t agree with the mob? Because, as Ronnie James Dio sings, the Mob rules. But fascism and it’s various philosophical and psychological faces rule the Mob. Fear is the ultimate tool of control and fascist leaders know it and use it well. But in order to understand why people fall prey to fascism’s spell, we must understand the nature of the beast. Governments, religions and cults use fear as a tool of control because when humans are scared, they are easy to control and manipulate. Fear is the ultimate weapon for it works on your own people as well as your enemies.

A little history: Benito Mussolini invented the term fascism in the 1920s and the philosophy it was built on was based in controlling people with fear and repression. Mussolini’s own words:

“The Fascist conception of the State is all-embracing; outside of it no human or spiritual values can exist, much less have value. Thus understood, Fascism is totalitarian, and the Fascist State — a synthesis and a unit inclusive of all values — interprets, develops, and potentiates the whole life of a people.”

Ah yes, the State. The State which rules supreme against socialism, liberalism, democracy and individualism. The connection to religion is strong too. Again, Benito’s words:

“Fascism is a religious conception in which man is seen in his immanent relationship with a superior law and with an objective Will that transcends the particular individual and raises him to conscious membership of a spiritual society. Whoever has seen in the religious politics of the Fascist regime nothing but mere opportunism has not understood that Fascism besides being a system of government is also, and above all, a system of thought.”

Fascism models itself on one of the best sales pitches in the world, that of organized religion. Fascism needs it’s followers to engage in docile servitude to the all-powerful State. They model it on organized religion’s ability to control its followers en masse via fear (of the all-powerful God) and repression (of human nature, needs and rights). When you witness religious conflicts you see people on both sides who are under control. None of them is fighting for true justice, liberty, freedom or democracy. They are fighting each other due to simple dogmatic differences that are inflamed by their leaders with hate, fear and repression. They are fed this rhetoric from day one and they simply know no other way to act out. And this is how their leaders want it or it would truly be over. Take the Taliban in Afghanistan. They are certainly set on controlling society under the strictest Islamic Sharia law and they could be referred to as authoritarian, fundamentalist and/or totalitarian. But a totalitarian or authoritarian government is not necessarily a fascist one. Those characteristics only play a part in what makes a government or ruling power fascist. Add to the mix some flag-centric nationalism, some uber-macho militarism and a corporatist hierarchy that puts all the “right” people in power and you’ve got the makings of a top notch fascist regime. Now take your message to the airwaves and fill it with fear because fear leads to control (talking to you, Fox News). And if you control the airwaves, all the better. Fear is a powerful weapon because it works. It works on people individually but also collectively, such as a crowd panicking and trampling those in their midst.

President Franklin Roosevelt, in his inaugural address, stated simply:

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself — nameless, unreasoning, unjustified, terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.”

And then in 1942, Roosevelt had this to say:

“The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is Fascism — ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power.”

In America, our controlling private powers are corporations. Powerful, rich and globally connected, the corporations that privately control us do it in a myriad of ways. And as in most capitalistic societies, they benefit enormously. This is not a call to socialism or a a screed against the elite; you need not dig deep or at all to see the corporate ownership of all things in our society. Ownership of media companies connected to Defense companies connected to consumer product companies (talking to you, General Electric), multi-headed hydras that all breathe from a central command and control. And that command and control owns our government. By Roosevelt’s definition, we are under a state of fascism in this country. Or as Cindy Sheehan so eloquently put it “a fascist corporate wasteland.” But it takes two sides of the equation and for fascism to work, let alone exist, it needs people under its spell.

For those of us who see fascism for what it is, we are not cowed by the party line, we are not blind to the naked emporer and we know that if we don’t stand up and point that out, we are headed for disaster. But how do we point that out to people under control? How do you convince people under the spell of a grand illusion that it is, in fact, not real? Though I don’t have an answer, I yearn for one because I see the danger of a mob under control. I see it in the arms raised to salute Hitler. I see it in the suicide bombings across the Middle East. I see it in fundamentalist churches, in street and prison gangs, in the listeners of the right wing bigots and hatemongers (yes, Bill O’Reilly and Rush Limbaugh, I’m talking to you.) Do you ever wonder why people still listen to Rush Limbaugh or tune in to Bill O’Reilly? Why Bush still has any approval rating at all? Do you wonder why those people can’t see they are being rooked, duped, manipulated and used?

The larger point I’d like to make is that when you look at the principles and philosophies of fascism, you can clearly see their presence in the last six years of American society. There are three sources I’d like to reference that put this fact into perspective and illustrate how America has become Fascist.

The first is the article “Fascism Anyone?” by Laurence Britt, which is expertly broken down by POAC in this article as follows:

1.) Powerful and Continuing Nationalism

2.) Disdain for the Recognition of Human Rights

3.) Identification of Enemies/Scapegoats as a Unifying Cause

4.) Supremacy of the Military

5.) Rampant Sexism

6.) Controlled Mass Media

7.) Obsession with National Security

8.) Religion and Government are Intertwined

9.) Corporate Power is Protected

10.) Labor Power is Suppressed

11.) Disdain for Intellectuals and the Arts

12.) Obsession with Crime and Punishment

13.) Rampant Cronyism and Corruption

14. Fraudulent Elections

The second is Naomi Klein’s excellent April 2007 article entitled “Fascist America in 10 Easy Steps”, in which she describes Fascism as follows:

1. Invoke a terrifying internal and external enemy

2. Create a gulag (Guantanamo will do)

3. Develop a thug caste

4. Set up an internal surveillance system

5. Harass citizens’ groups

6. Engage in arbitrary detention and release

7. Target key individuals

8. Control the press

9. Dissent equals treason

10. Suspend the rule of law

The third is an illustration not of fascism’s tenets but of how fascism is used to start a war, much like it was used to start our Iraq debacle. On the excellent “George Washington’s Blog” is a piece called “Introduction to False Flag Terror” which shows how flag-waving nationalism is used to support an pre-approved agenda via a national tragedy, an incident that is seen as an attack on the country which could then be countered by military retaliation. (It helps that you retaliate against the right country, of course.) But the truth is this: when fascism is used to justify a war with a particular country or race, that is a situation with some sort of definition of an enemy. But when fascism is used to justify a war with a vague enemy (”terrorists”) or a noun (”terrorism”) it has no end, no definition of success and enough vague grey areas that it makes a perfect target for fascist regimes. A War on Terror or Terrorism never ends because it constantly creates more of the enemy it is “trying” to defeat. The defense industry practically encourages the cycle because it’s good for business. No enemy, no business.

It takes three components to make fascism work: government, corporations and people. We all know how governments and corporations can be corrupt and we certainly have seen how large populations of people can succumb to the sway of nationalism and fear. But what we haven’t figured out is how to inoculate people against this disease, how to give them a bullshit detector that works and doesn’t allow any attempt at fascist control to attain even a modicum of success. At this low point in American history, we should have riots in the streets calling for the impeachment and/or arrest of the Bush/Cheney cabal but instead, we have a large majority of the population sitting idly, waiting for someone else to step in and do something about it. “Why doesn’t somebody do something?” they ask. But until you realize that somebody is YOU, this shameful situation will persist. History will not judge this generation kindly. It seems the Me Generation has turned into the Anybody But Me Generation, waiting for a revolution that somebody else starts up, waiting for a bandwagon they can jump on to say “Look! I too care about this travesty!” Where are your guts, people? Where are your balls? Have you traded them for iPods and Starbucks, proverbial fingers in your ears and nose down in your latte until it all blows over? It is long past the time to wake up and act and it doesn’t have to take money and politics to create big change. It just has to take knowing what is at stake and acting with conviction. Think of Ghandi. Think of Martin Luther King. Think of Guy Fawkes - remember, remember the Fifth of November! One individual can make all the difference in this world. Why can’t that person be you?

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Talking With Real Live Stay-At-Home Dads

A sunny morning in the affluent London suburb of Wimbledon, and the atmosphere in the playgroup is jolly, but a good deal quieter than you would expect with 13 children and 12 adults milling around a church hall. The reason isn’t hard to spot: the parents are all men, and there is a certain masculine reserve in the air. Welcome to Dads and Little’Uns.

Chatting over coffee and an impressive array of biscuits, the ten or so fathers maintain a low hum of conversation, breaking off every so often to rescue a toddler from underneath a fallen toy or to redirect an off-target crawl. The men bring their children here every Monday and Friday, all year round (£4 a week into the kitty to cover costs). Theirs appears to be the first and perhaps only regular group for stay-at-home fathers in London. They are part of a growing trend for husbands to move on to traditional female territory, taking care of home and children while their high-powered other half is out hunting and gathering.

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