14 May 2022

The legal implications of the US Supreme Court’s draft anti-abortion decision

Tom Carter


Supreme Court justice Samuel Alito’s draft ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, leaked and published on May 2 in Politico, would abolish the federal right to abortion for 175 million women in all states and US territories, overturning the landmark Roe v. Wade decision in 1973 that recognized abortion as a constitutional right.

The proposed ruling by Alito, who was appointed to the Supreme Court by president George W. Bush in 2005, purports to represent the decision of a majority of the nine justices. Chief Justice John Roberts has confirmed the authenticity of the draft, calling for an investigation to determine who leaked it.

Asserting that the prerogative to prohibit or regulate abortion is being “returned” to the state governments, Alito’s draft decision opens the floodgates not just for state and local laws banning abortion, but for laws prohibiting women from traveling to obtain abortions and laws that would jail doctors, nurses, friends, and family members who “aid or abet” an abortion. At least 13 states have already passed so-called “trigger laws,” designed to go into effect after the Supreme Court hands down its final decision.

Notwithstanding Alito’s invocation of states’ rights, the abolition of the federal constitutional right to abortion would remove the only legal obstacle to Congress passing a federal law banning abortion in all 50 states—not just criminalizing abortions in Florida and Texas, but in California and New York as well. Republican senate minority leader Mitch McConnell already indicated that such a law is “possible.”

The U.S Supreme Court building is seen at dusk in Washington on Oct. 22, 2021. [AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite]

If the far-right majority on the Supreme Court were to stop there—at abolishing the federal constitutional right to abortion—that would already constitute the most reactionary decision since the Supreme Court’s 1944 Korematsu v. US decision upholding internment camps for Japanese Americans during the Second World War.

But Alito’s draft opinion goes much further. Echoing the phony “originalist” arguments of the late arch-reactionary Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia—according to which the interpretation must be made according to its supposedly “original,” eighteenth century meaning—Alito’s draft decision goes on to deny the validity of “rights that are not mentioned in the Constitution.”

Virtually all modern civil rights are not “mentioned in the Constitution,” for the simple reason that modern society did not exist when the Bill of Rights was ratified in 1791. However limited and belated, the expansion of constitutional rights in the US—from the aftermath of the American Revolution and Civil War to the period of the Civil Rights movement—took the form of recognizing in the essential principles of the founding documents new implications for democratic rights in modern society.

Alito’s formulas provide a framework not just for dismantling the right to abortion, but for putting all modern civil rights on the chopping block.

1. Alito’s concept of “rights not mentioned in the Constitution.”

To appreciate the reactionary implications of the draft decision, it is necessary first and foremost to address its fundamentally fraudulent claim to “heed” some kind of original historical understanding of the Constitution. For all of Alito’s reverent invocations of “our founding document” and “this Nation’s history and tradition,” the draft decision turns the historical conceptions of democratic rights advanced in the American Revolution and Civil War upside-down.

“The Constitution makes no reference to abortion,” Alito writes. “The Court has long been reluctant to recognize rights not mentioned in the Constitution.” The premise is that rights only exist that are expressly referenced in the Constitution, or which are later (reluctantly) recognized by the Supreme Court. If the Constitution does not expressly mention a right such as abortion, according to Alito, then by default the right does not exist.

This is, in fact, precisely the opposite of the essential and “original” conception of the Constitution, which the American Revolutionaries designed to confer only those specifically enumerated powers on the government that are listed in the Constitution, reserving all rights by default to the people.

American revolutionary James Madison, who drafted the Bill of Rights, was initially opposed to the idea on the grounds that any list of rights would be inherently limiting, and that it would be better to proceed with the conception that all rights are retained by the people except to the extent powers were specifically and necessarily granted to the government.

The Ninth Amendment addressed this concern by providing: “The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”

Standing Alito’s logic on its feet, one could just as well argue that abortion is a right that is retained by the people because the Constitution does not expressly grant the government the power to ban it.

At the time of the American Revolution, as a matter of fact, voluntary abortion was generally not penalized before the “quickening,” or the time at which the fetus could be felt to move, after which killing the fetus fell into a vague and indeterminate category of criminal offense located somewhere between a misdemeanor and a murder. (Frederick Engels, in Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, remarked that jurists “cudgeled their brains in vain to discover a rational limit beyond which the killing of the child in its mother’s womb is murder.”)

The American revolutionaries did not alter this legal framework, which they inherited from English common law. It goes without saying that at the time, women did not enjoy anything resembling modern liberty. In addition to the roughly quarter-million women who were enslaved, together with those indentured and bound to labor for landlords and aristocrats, all but the wealthiest women lived under a form of domestic servitude, expected to perform household labor for their entire lives, shut indoors and excluded from public life.

While the revolution radically democratized American society and culture and laid the foundations for great advances in social progress, it would be more than a century before women could vote, and two centuries before the last vestiges of women’s inferior legal status were finally swept out of the legal system.

The authors of the Constitution and Bill of Rights obviously did not have the benefit of the tremendous advances in scientific and medical knowledge that would be made over the intervening centuries, not to mention all the subsequent advances in social practices and human culture in general. Modern medical procedures, and the religious fundamentalist movement to ban them, likewise did not exist.

All this underscores the tendentious, arbitrary, and illegitimate character of Alito’s method, which involves searching the writings of people living in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries for the meaning of “liberty” for women in twenty-first century American society.

In 1876, for example, eight years after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, chief justice Morrison Waite denied a woman’s application to appear before the Supreme Court, stating that “none but men are permitted to practice before it as attorneys and counselors.” He continued: “This is in accordance with immemorial usage in England, and the law and practice in all the States.” Applying Alito’s method, this historical episode could be cited as definitive proof that the constitutional guarantee of “liberty” was never “intended” to abolish the inferior legal status of women.

Refuting Alito’s phony brand of “originalism” requires only a citation to American revolutionary Thomas Jefferson. In a letter in 1816, Jefferson remarked: “Some men look at Constitutions with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them, like the ark of the covenant, too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human ...”

Laws and institutions, Jefferson continued, “must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths disclosed, and manners and opinions change with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also, and keep pace ... we might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy, as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.”

Alito’s “originalism,” while it reverently invokes the “founders,” in fact tramples on the memories of the American revolutionaries, whom he conscripts into the roles of “barbarous ancestors,” whose dead hands would block all progress and enlightenment for centuries to come.

2. The legal significance of the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of “liberty”

Alito’s method lacks roots in the Supreme Court’s own traditions of constitutional interpretation.

The police in their modern form, for example, did not exist at the time the Constitution was ratified, and so the word “police” does not appear anywhere in the text of the Constitution or the 1791 Bill of Rights. No powers are expressly conferred on police officers, and no rights are recognized against police officers, for the simple reason that the modern institution of the police—SWAT teams, batons, and tasers—did not exist at the end of the eighteenth century. For the same obvious reason, the Constitution does not mention wiretapping and electronic surveillance.

The police appeared on stage later in American history, in response to the emergence of a powerful labor movement in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The Supreme Court belatedly (“reluctantly,” to use Alito’s word) recognized rights against the police in the period following their appearance on the historical stage. This process culminated in the right to the famous Miranda warning (“you have a right to remain silent, you have a right to an attorney”) in 1966, together with cases establishing the right against “excessive force,” false arrests, and frame-ups by police in a series of decisions from the 1960s to the 1980s.

None of these rights are expressly and specifically “enumerated” in the Constitution, but notwithstanding this fact, the Supreme Courts of earlier decades recognized them as implicit in the fundamental democratic guarantees contained in the Bill of Rights and Civil War Amendments.

At their best, this category of Supreme Court decisions recognizes the founding documents as containing essential democratic principles that each generation must put into effect under new and unforeseen circumstances, following advances in scientific knowledge and in light of historical experience.

The high-water mark of these conceptions was the period of civil rights reforms lasting from roughly the 1940s to the 1970s, including the period during which Earl Warren, appointed by president Dwight Eisenhower, served as chief justice from 1953 to 1969, known as the Warren Court Era.

This was a period of the post-war boom, a relative and temporary capitalist stabilization in the US in the wake of the devastation of the Second World War. The period was marked by mass civil rights struggles demanding legal equality for women and minorities, a powerful social movement against the war in Vietnam, and the strike wave of the late 1960s and early 1970s. During this period, the Russian Revolution remained a powerful and fresh living memory, which inspired masses of people and gave pause to the reactionaries.

While it has served for the most part as an essentially reactionary institution throughout its history, the Supreme Court during this limited historical window produced a body of democratic jurisprudence that has been a source of bitter disgruntlement for “originalists” and reactionaries ever since.

Instrumental in the concrete development of civil rights law during this period was the text of the 1868 Fourteenth Amendment, passed in the aftermath of the Civil War along with the Thirteenth Amendment, abolishing slavery, and the Fifteenth Amendment, extending the right to vote to former slaves. Together, these amendments effectively overturned the Supreme Court’s notorious Dred Scott decision, which had helped galvanize mass opposition to slavery in the period immediately before the Civil War.

The most important clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that state governments may not “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” This protection of “liberty” was the key legal mechanism for the entire edifice of civil rights law established by the Supreme Court in the twentieth century.

The Supreme Court, interpreting this clause, indicated that it did not just guarantee the right to formally correct legal procedures (“procedural due process”), but that the term “liberty” necessarily included all fundamental rights that are “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental.” This meaning of the “due process clause” was described as “substantive due process.”

In the twentieth century, the Supreme Court decided that the Fourteenth Amendment had “incorporated” many essential rights and conceptions from the Bill of Rights, such that they could be applied against state governments, including the rights to freedom of speech (1925), freedom of the press (1931), freedom of assembly (1937), free exercise of religion (1940), freedom of expressive association (1958), freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures (1961), freedom from “cruel and unusual punishments” (1962), the right against self-incrimination (1964-66), and the right to a speedy trial (1967), among others.

It was because of this guarantee of “liberty” that the Supreme Court decision in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) included a right to privacy that prevented a state government from outlawing contraception. In 1973, in Roe v. Wade, as part of this line of cases, the Supreme Court decided that “liberty” included the right to abortion. As recently as 2015, in Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court determined that it included the right of same-sex couples to marry.

Given this context, Alito’s attack on “unenumerated rights” triggers alarm bells for all of the rights that the Supreme Court recognized under the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of liberty.

3. The Roe v. Wade decision

The language Alito’s uses to denounce the Roe v. Wade decision is remarkable for a Supreme Court justice nominally adhering to the doctrine of stare decisis, which requires deference to prior decisions. “Roe was egregiously wrong from the start,” Alito fumes. “Its reasoning was exceptionally weak, and the decision has had damaging consequences.”

The landmark Roe v. Wade case was brought on behalf of women led by Norma McCorvey, an unmarried pregnant woman who challenged Texas laws prohibiting doctors from performing abortions except where the woman’s life was in danger. To protect her privacy (and the stigma against “unwed mothers”), McCorvey filed the lawsuit under the fictitious name of “Jane Roe,” a variant on “John Doe.” Henry Wade was the district attorney of the county of Dallas, Texas.

In upholding the constitutional right of “Jane Roe”’s right to abortion, and by extension the right of all women to obtain one, the Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade considered what Alito does not: modern conditions facing women, including a “distressful life and future” for the woman denied an abortion, together with “psychological harm” and the “distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child.”

The Supreme Court reasoned in Roe v. Wade that privacy is a “personal right that can be deemed fundamental or implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.” The decision whether to terminate a pregnancy, the Supreme Court concluded, is under modern conditions a private one—between a woman and her doctor—such that it falls within a woman’s right to privacy and outside the government’s ability to ban it outright.

The Supreme Court concluded: “This right of privacy, whether it be founded in the Fourteenth Amendment's concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action, as we feel it is, or, as the District Court determined, in the Ninth Amendment's reservation of rights to the people, is broad enough to encompass a woman's decision whether or not to terminate her pregnancy.”

This is the decision and reasoning that Alito arrogantly attacks as “egregiously wrong” and “exceptionally weak.”

4. Alito’s attack on the “workability” of Roe v. Wade

A major theme of Alito’s draft decision is that Roe v. Wade has not proved “workable” in practice.

Alito attacks the Roe v. Wade decision where it is weakest. The 1973 decision did not, contrary to popular misconceptions, uphold the right to abortion as unconditional and absolute.

Writing for the majority in Roe v. Wade, Blackmun actually took up arguments that “the woman's right is absolute and that she is entitled to terminate her pregnancy at whatever time, in whatever way, and for whatever reason she alone chooses.” Writing for the Supreme Court majority, Blackmun responded: “With this we do not agree.”

Meeting the reactionary advocates of “states’ rights” halfway, Blackmun acknowledged that “some state regulation in areas protected by that right is appropriate” where it is based on “safeguarding health, in maintaining medical standards, and in protecting potential life.”

“The privacy right involved, therefore, cannot be said to be absolute,” Blackmun wrote, rejecting the assertion that “one has an unlimited right to do with one's body as one pleases.” He continued, “The Court has refused to recognize an unlimited right of this kind in the past.”

While it was rooted in important democratic legal conceptions, these compromises gave the partial victory in Roe v. Wade a bitter aftertaste. While it upheld a qualified right to privacy that includes the right to abortion, the Supreme Court declined to strike down all anti-abortion laws in principle. Nor did the Supreme Court strike down anti-abortion laws on the legitimate ground that they constitute an illegal state attempt to impose religious beliefs on the population, which is prohibited by the First Amendment.

This recognition in Roe v. Wade of legitimate “state interests” in the regulation of abortion subsequently prompted decades of trench warfare in American courts, with well-funded reactionary lawyers claiming endlessly and disingenuously that their state’s anti-abortion laws were grounded in the state’s supposedly legitimate concern for “the health of the mother.”

The Supreme Court’s decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), which was intended to be a final compromise settlement of this relentless and obnoxious litigation, only made matters worse. The Supreme Court upheld Roe v. Wade, but abandoned privacy as a justification for the ruling, indicating that going forward laws would only be struck down that create an “undue burden” on a woman seeking an abortion of a “nonviable fetus.”

In his draft decisionAlito ridicules these tortured compromises, arguing that as a practical matter these formulations proved arbitrary and inconsistent in practice. What “burdens” were “undue” was a standard that was impossible for different judges to apply with any uniform objectivity, and efforts to define those terms only prompted further litigation as to the meaning of those definitions. Alito cites former chief justice William Rehnquist, who once wrote in a dissent that these terms seem “calculated to perpetuate give-it-a-try litigation.”

Alito attacks five decades of liberal compromises from the right, but the accusation that these frameworks proved “unworkable” is essentially true. These compromises, which may have been intended by the liberal justices to partially secure a democratic right by achieving a stable “settlement” with the reactionaries, only proved in time to be the mechanism for the reactionaries’ efforts to abolish the entire right at issue.

The ”unworkability” of these compromises, contrary to the reactionary conclusion drawn by Alito, underscores why abortion is a right that must be upheld—and can only be upheld—as unconditional, unqualified, and absolute.

5. The right to abortion

The first government in the world to fully recognize the right to abortion was the workers’ government established after the October Revolution in Russia.

The Decree on Abortion, published on November 18, 1920 decriminalized abortion to the fullest extent in any country. It was part of a series of revolutionary decrees freely allowing divorce and decriminalizing homosexuality, which were combined with aggressive efforts to alleviate the burden of household labor on women. Soviet society opened public laundries, kitchens, and nurseries with the aim of freeing women to participate in public life, permitting women to obtain educations, develop professional careers, and participate equally in all aspects of politics and culture.

Trotsky, writing in 1936, characterized these early efforts:

The October revolution honestly fulfilled its obligations in relation to woman. The young government not only gave her all political and legal rights in equality with man, but, what is more important, did all that it could, and in any case incomparably more than any other government ever did, actually to secure her access to all forms of economic and cultural work. …

The revolution made a heroic effort to destroy the so-called “family hearth” – that archaic, stuffy and stagnant institution in which the woman of the toiling classes performs galley labor from childhood to death. The place of the family as a shut-in petty enterprise was to be occupied, according to the plans, by a finished system of social care and accommodation: maternity houses, nurseries, kindergartens, schools, social dining rooms, social laundries, first-aid stations, hospitals, sanatoria, athletic organizations, moving-picture theaters, etc.

Trotsky and the Left Opposition opposed the subsequent efforts by the Stalinists, after they usurped power, to undermine the right to abortion. In The Revolution Betrayed, Trotsky denounced one Stalinist jurist on the highest Soviet court, who stupidly opined that a woman has no right to decline “the joys of motherhood.”

Defending the right to abortion that had been unequivocally recognized in the early period following the October Revolution, Trotsky wrote, “revolutionary power gave women the right to abortion, which in conditions of want and family distress … is one of her most important civil, political and cultural rights.”

This conception of the absolute right to abortion in modern society is linked to the principle of equality, and of a woman’s right to participate equally in civil, political, and cultural life, which in light of human biology as a practical matter in modern society requires free and unrestricted access to reproductive health care.

6. The end of the USSR and collapse of democratic rights in the US

In the postwar period, the Supreme Court, as Alito writes, “reluctantly” recognized an important series of modern civil rights, belatedly taking aim in particular at racial apartheid and the unequal status of women, which persisted well into the second half of the 20th century in America.

While these cases were being argued, American civil rights advocates frequently pointed to the embarrassment that these unequal and discriminatory practices caused to the United States internationally, under conditions where citizens of the Soviet Union had long enjoyed equal legal status regardless of race or sex.

During this period, the Supreme Court ruled segregation unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education (1954), going on to strike down Jim Crow laws such as Virginia’s prohibition on interracial marriage in Loving v. Virginia in 1967 (about which an interesting film was recently made).

In addition to Roe v. Wade, in Kirchberg v. Feenstra (decided in the shockingly late year of 1981), the Supreme Court struck down Louisiana’s so-called “head and master” law, which gave the husband unequal control over marital property.

How would Alito’s “originalist” method operate in those cases? “The Constitution does not specifically mention a right to interracial marriage,” Alito would write. “Nor does it say anything about a woman’s right to marital property or the right to attend a desegregated school. Therefore, we must examine eighteenth and nineteenth century attitudes to determine the meaning of the Constitution on these questions.”

The “originalist” school of thought espoused by Alito has its roots in resistance to desegregation. A chief proponent of “originalism” was Ronald Reagan’s rejected Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork, an open opponent of the entire framework of reforms erected in the civil rights period.

The liquidation of the USSR in 1989-1991 removed an important brake on the abrogation of democratic rights in the US. In the 1990s, Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia, a Regan appointee who revealed himself to be an “originalist” of the same type as Bork, became a rallying point for the efforts to roll back the civil rights reforms.

Scalia, it should be remembered, was confirmed by a unanimous 98-0 vote in the Senate, including current president Joe Biden, who commemorated Scalia as “one of our most influential justices,” to be remembered as “a mentor, dear friend, and a man devoted to his faith and his family.”

Scalia went on to participate in the Supreme Court’s infamous decision in Bush v. Gore, which was instrumental to the theft of the 2000 elections. Applying the same “originalist” method that Alito now employs, the Bush v. Gore decision included the extraordinary formula that an “individual citizen has no federal constitutional right to vote for electors for the President of the United States” independent of the voting procedure the state government imposes, because no such right is specifically enumerated in the Constitution. The Supreme Court halted the counting of votes in Florida, effectively handing the presidency to George W. Bush, who had lost the popular vote.

The period following the stolen election of 2000 was marked by the explosion of US militarism, the establishment of a police-state apparatus under the new Department of Homeland Security, as well as an assault on democratic rights across the board under the framework of the “war on terror,” which was announced in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Memos circulated in the White House regarding torture practices to be authorized, the American president signed secret death warrants for “terrorists,” and American assassins and kidnappers scoured the globe for victims to abduct, torture and murder. American spies eavesdropped on the private conversations, messages, and internet browsing of millions, and military tribunals were established for the prosecution of so-called “illegal enemy combatants.” These practices escalated under the Bush administration and under the subsequent Democratic administration of Barack Obama.

The Supreme Court, which would have been in any healthy democratic society a key institutional bulwark against the flood of these tyrannical and authoritarian practices, completely failed in its institutional purpose. Its legitimacy shattered by the corrupt 2000 decision installing Bush as president, and increasingly stacked with ultra-right judges, the Supreme Court—including both Democratic and Republican nominees—fully endorsed the “war on terror” that was, in reality, a war on democratic rights.

An unrelenting two decades of assaults on democratic rights paved the way, in the midst of the global coronavirus pandemic, for Donald Trump’s violent coup attempt on January 6, 2021—in which Trump envisioned the Supreme Court reprising its role from 2000, halting the counting of votes and stealing the election in his favor. Announcing his victory on November 4, 2020, Trump told a rally of his supporters. “We’ll be going to the US Supreme Court! We want all voting to stop!”

The six justices that evidently constitute the majority behind Alito’s draft include three Trump appointees: Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh, and Neil Gorsuch. Two more—Chief Justice John Roberts and Alito—are appointees of George W. Bush, the same president that the Supreme Court installed in a stolen election in 2000. Finally, there is Clarence Thomas, whose wife Virginia “Ginny” Thomas served as a key advisor to Trump and a conduit for the recruitment of far-right extremists into the Trump administration. Clarence Thomas recently voted against allowing the congressional committee investigating the coup attempt to access his wife’s correspondence, in a flagrant breach of judicial ethics.

With this far-right bloc at the helm, the Supreme Court is a massively discredited institution. Over the last 20 months, according to a poll published Friday in the New York Post, respondents expressing “some” or “a lot” of confidence in the Supreme Court plummeted from 70 percent to 51 percent. Those expressing “a lot” of confidence dropped from 20 percent to just 14 percent—or less than one in six Americans.

The Warren Court period, during which the Supreme Court “reluctantly” acknowledged basic democratic rights under specific historical conditions, is an exception to the generally reactionary history of this institution, which, after all, upheld slavery and segregation, resisted the New Deal, signed off on internment camps for Japanese Americans, stole the 2000 elections, and endorsed the Guantanamo Bay military tribunals. Its members are not elected, but are appointed for life through the US Senate, the very existence of which was an anti-democratic concession, and in which today a rural state like Wyoming (population 580,000) is still allocated the same number of votes as California (population 40 million).

This “originalist” school championed by Alito is not a principled or coherent jurisprudential framework. Alito has no problem discovering new constitutional rights for corporations, such as the right to bribe politicians, recognized in the 2010 case of Citizens United v. FEC. It did not trouble Alito and his colleagues that corporations, much less their right to buy off politicians, were not “enumerated” in the Constitution.

Their reverence for the “original” meaning of the Constitution also has not stopped the “originalists” from constantly expanding the reactionary and authoritarian doctrine of “qualified immunity” for police, which provides legal cover for the cops who gun down and asphyxiate over one thousand people on America’s streets every year. Like constitutional rights for corporations, there is no mention of the phrase “qualified immunity” anywhere in the Constitution or Bill of Rights.

For its part, the Democratic Party and its satellites, notwithstanding their feeble protests to the publication of Alito’s draft, offers no perspective for the defense of democratic rights against the far-right assault. The Democratic Party had a half-century within which to codify the right to abortion in federal law, refusing repeatedly to do so while at the same time failing to block nominations that have stacked the Supreme Court with right-wing extremists. Biden, invoking his Catholic background, voted in 1981 for a failed constitutional amendment that would have overturned Roe v. Wade.

Moreover, with its embrace of the 1619 Project, which falsifies and denigrates the genuine democratic legacies of the American Revolution and Civil War, the Democrats have effectively ceded the Constitution to the “originalists,” opening the door for far-right hooligans like Alito to posture as defenders of its “true” and “historical” meaning.

Alito’s declaration of open warfare on civil rights takes place in a specific historical context. This decade opened with the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, to which the political establishment in the US responded with callous indifference, preferring to speculate and profiteer on Wall Street rather than prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths.

The largest protests in American history erupted that same year in the wake of the killing of George Floyd. The Trump administration orchestrated a brutal crackdown, mobilizing far-right militias against the protesters that he would go on to use the following year in an attempt to storm the Capitol. The eruption of the US-NATO war with Russia in 2022, together with spiraling inflation, coincides with growing numbers of strikes, demonstrations, and other symptoms of insubordinate moods in the working class internationally which the American ruling class hates and fears.

The Supreme Court is now poised to tear up democratic rights like a collection of corrupt corporate executives who, in a final act of wild desperation, feed all of their files into the office shredder at midnight—getting rid of anything that might be used against them.

But the far-right bloc on the Supreme Court is playing with fire. In 1857, the Supreme Court’s arrogant determination that people of African descent like Dred Scott were “not included, and were not intended to be included” as citizens under the Constitution radicalized anti-slavery sentiment throughout the North, including the views of future president Abraham Lincoln, and helped precipitate the Second American Revolution. That Supreme Court decision was effectively overruled on the battlefields of Gettysburg and Antietam.

The decision to reinstate what amounts to de jure discrimination against 175 million women, a half-century after such discrimination was ruled unconstitutional, will have a similarly radicalizing effect on American society. The reactionary judges on the Supreme Court will find that they cannot so easily, with the stroke of a pen, eliminate rights that have been won in struggle and firmly established in mass consciousness for multiple generations.

For millions of women as well as men in the US, a woman’s right to bodily autonomy is a settled question, and any attempt to turn back the clock will be regarded as outrageous and obscene.

At least 450 children across 20 countries now suffering from acute hepatitis

Benjamin Mateus


Global cases of acute hepatitis among children have grown sharply to 450 children across at least 20 countries since the outbreak was first brought to the attention of the World Health Organization (WHO) by the Scottish National Health Service in early April. Acute hepatitis is an inflammation of the liver that can lead to imminent liver failure, a life-threatening condition. At present, 12 children have died globally during the ongoing outbreak.

In their initial report to the WHO, the NHS Scotland wrote that “five children aged three to five presented to the Royal Hospital for Children, Glasgow with severe hepatitis of unknown etiology within a three-week period. The typical number of cases of hepatitis of unknown etiology across Scotland would be fewer than four per year.”

Children and their caregivers arrive for school in New York, Monday, March 7, 2022. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

By April 8, the global case count had risen to 74. All cases had tested negative for the usually suspected viruses. A number of children were documented to have been infected with an adenovirus or COVID-19, though other factors were being considered.

On April 15, the WHO released the first of three disease outbreak alerts, asking health systems and public health officials to heighten their awareness and diligence in identifying, investigating and reporting hepatitis cases. They said, “Given the increase in cases reported over the past one month and enhanced case search activities, more cases are likely to be reported in the coming days.”

By April 21, 169 cases had been reported across 12 countries, ranging in age from one month to 16 years old. The bulk of these cases were from the United Kingdom, while the US had observed eleven cases by then. At this time, the WHO made clear that the COVID-19 vaccines were not implicated in the hepatitis outbreak, as a significant majority of the impacted children were unvaccinated.

On Tuesday, the WHO announced that the number of probable cases of hepatitis in children now stands at 348 spanning 20 countries across five global regions.

The recent spike in global pediatric hepatitis cases since late last month reflects additions made by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in their ongoing investigation. There are currently 109 such cases in the US from a total of 25 states and territories.

Dr. Jay Butler, the deputy director for infectious diseases at the CDC, noted that 90 percent of these children were hospitalized dating back to October 2021, when nine such cases were identified in Alabama. He said 14 percent required an emergent liver transplant and five of the children tragically died.

Dr. Philippa Easterbrook, a senior scientist at the WHO’s Global HIV, Hepatitis and STI Programmes, stated Tuesday, “At present the leading hypotheses remain those which involve adenovirus, but I think still there is the important consideration about the role of COVID as well, either as a co-infection or as a past infection. Over the last week, more testing has gone on… confirming that still around 70 percent of the cases that have been tested are positive for adenovirus.”

On Wednesday, the European CDC published an update indicating the total number of cases worldwide has reached 450. In the EU/European Economic Area, the total number of cases stands at 105, with Italy reporting the most cases at 35, followed by Spain with 22, then Sweden with 9. The United Kingdom currently has the most confirmed cases of any country at 163, and six countries have reported more than five cases.

On Thursday, Ireland reported the death of a child from acute hepatic failure, raising the global total to 12. Brazil is investigating another eight cases, bringing their total to 28. In all, the fatality rate is between 2-3 percent and rates of liver transplantation range between 10-15 percent.

The etiology for the devastating cases remains to be elucidated. The statement by Easterbrook is opaque, and many scientists have noted that the presence of adenovirus among cases does not directly implicate this ubiquitous virus as causative.

It seems more than coincidental that the sudden emergence of a rare disease never before described among healthy children has taken place just months after the massive wave of COVID-19 infections that spread across the globe during the Omicron BA.1 surge last winter. Seroprevalence studies indicate that potentially hundreds of millions of children have been infected worldwide since last December, making rare manifestation of COVID-19 infection more likely to arise.

Notably, acute hepatitis has been previously associated with multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), which affects children after the acute phase of COVID-19 infection. In the US, the incidence of MIS-C has reportedly been around one in 3,000-4,000 COVID-19 cases.

In a tweet now shared more than 10,000 times, gastroenterologist Dr. Farid Jalali explained that adenoviruses have only caused acute liver failure in patients with severe immunodeficiency and not previously healthy children. The severity of the disease is dependent on the intensity and duration of the immunosuppression in cases where patients are being treated for malignancy on chemotherapy or taking anti-rejection medication after organ transplant.

Dr. Jalali explained that adenovirus infections are very common in children and can be detected in up to 11 percent of healthy, asymptomatic children from throat samples. Additionally, the virus can persist for months to years in approximately 30 percent of “immunocompetent” children.

He wrote, “Relying on adenovirus detection by PCR in children (often incidental due to persistence and shedding) can falsely attribute adenovirus as the cause of disease for which the clinician may have no other proper explanation (e.g., pediatric acute liver failure in context of COVID-19 pandemic?).”

Because of his expert and well-reasoned explanations and concerns, Dr. Jalali has received numerous threats and vilification by right-wing commentators.

Australian epidemiologist Dr. Raina MacIntyre weighed in on these issues with a rare but lengthy Twitter thread, noting, “It’s most likely a complication of COVID-19 but may take a while to be adjudicated as much.”

Dr. MacIntyre added, “Hepatitis is a known presentation of MIS-C and MIS-C is a late complication after the acute infection [of COVID]. So, the fact that [SARS-CoV-2] PCR is negative is not surprising… SARS-CoV-2 is tropic to the liver and commonly causes liver injury, so biological plausibility (one of the Bradford-Hill criteria for causation) is present.”

Interestingly, many of these children had not obtained COVID-19 antibody testing nor were the liver biopsies checked for SARS-CoV-2 virus.

Dr. MacIntyre asks pointedly, “And what about ideological reasons why there is a concerted effort to deny COVID as a cause and find another explanation? Any explanation? It’s called ‘escalating commitment to a failing proposition’ and is a normal reaction to accruing evidence that a vested position is wrong.”

The impact of COVID-19 on children has been repeatedly minimized by almost every world government. Last year, US President Joe Biden famously told a second-grader that she shouldn’t fear COVID-19, that schools are safe to return to and she was unlikely to infect her parents. These have proven to be bald-faced lies and COVID-19 is demonstrably dangerous for children, with tens of thousands of children having likely been killed by the virus worldwide.

Dr. MacIntyre concludes her thread by noting, “In the UK, children were denied vaccination for the longest time, and then belatedly and reluctantly offered it. When countries and experts have invested in this position, and evidence accrues that it is a wrong position, we see escalating commitment to a failing proposition… Perhaps this is why we have not seen a proper epidemiologic analysis of causation… yet. Yes, it may be caused by something else. But in the midst of the pandemic, COVID is the most likely cause.”

The realities confronting Ukraine’s six million refugees

Andrea Peters


Six million people have now fled Ukraine, according to recent data from the United Nations Human Rights Commission. Another 7.7 million are internally displaced. Collectively, this represents about 31 percent of the country’s population.

While the Western media has sought to portray the situation as if the women, children, and elderly men pouring out of Ukraine are walking into the loving arms of America and Europe’s governments, all of the social and political problems of global capitalism in a severe state of decay—poverty, inequality, the breakdown of the health care system, low wages, human trafficking, anti-immigrant chauvinism and racism, and borders that cannot be crossed without visas—are manifesting themselves in the refugee crisis.

The United States, which just approved a $40 billion package for Ukraine that is primarily devoted to transforming the country into killing fields, will admit just 100,000 refugees. The “United for Ukraine” program, while receiving 19,000 applications so far, has granted visas to just 6,000. Entrants must complete background checks, biometric scans and, most significantly, demonstrate that they have private sponsors in the US that have the financial means to support them.

Prior to the start of “United for Ukraine,” 20,000 refugees from the country were piling up along the southern border of the US. While they have mostly been dispersed, going to Mexico City or back to Europe, some are still being housed in temporary shelters staffed by volunteers. Washington insists that no Ukrainians will be admitted to the country or granted any legal status unless they complete the visa process off of US soil.

In the UK, a Home Office representative told the press on Wednesday that Ukrainians going to the country without documentation will be deported, possibly to war-torn Rwanda, to which African migrants are now being sent. Any Ukrainian entering Great Britain by transiting from Ireland to Northern Ireland and then to the British mainland will be treated as an illegal immigrant. The government official would not say whether those crossing the English Channel from France would also be included in this category.

News is continuing to come out about problems with Great Britain’s “Homes for Ukraine” program. Migrants, predominantly women and children, have been placed in households for which there have been no criminal background checks, even though this step is supposed to be required. Currently, there are efforts to get 600 Ukrainian families out of places that have since been deemed unsafe. Advocates are concerned that the vulnerable population will fall prey to human traffickers.

In addition, Britain’s grossly underfunded National Health Service (NHS), while in principle accessible to those Ukrainians granted entry, cannot handle the needs of the population. Refugee advocates note that the migrants, particularly children, are in extreme need of mental health services. They face a two-year wait to receive any.

Canada, home to 10 million Ukrainians and a breeding ground of far-right Ukrainian nationalism, has come under criticism for failing to provide any means to get to the North American country for those receiving temporary, three-year visas through the Canada-Ukraine Emergency Travel Authorization program.

In response, Ottawa announced that it is sending three charter planes in late May and early June to transport a mere 900 refugees. They can get seats on the planes on “first come, first serve” basis. Once in Canada, “free accommodation will be offered to Ukrainians who do not have a suitable place to stay for up to 14 days,” an official told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. What the individuals from among Europe’s poorest country are supposed to do with themselves after those two weeks is unclear.

Germany, which has declared that it will set no upper limit on the number of Ukrainian refugees it will take, is, according to the leading American journal Foreign Policy, kicking Afghans, who sought safe harbor from the Taliban, out of their apartments in order to make way for the newcomers from Ukraine.

Reporting on the circumstances of one Afghan household, Foreign Policy wrote, “Amiri and her family have already been moved twice since their March eviction and now live in a former hotel on Berlin’s northern outskirts in Reinickendorf that is advertised as a temporary shelter for people who are ‘homeless’; it’s the family’s third home within a month.”

Germany is also refusing visa-free admission to Ukrainians who do not have biometric Ukrainian passports. They are stuck in Poland, which is the primary recipient of those escaping the Russian-Ukraine/NATO war. There have been 3,200,000 people who have crossed into its territory. How many are staying there or moving onto other places—or at least trying to—is unclear because the responsibility for managing this population has largely devolved to city and local-level governments that are struggling to get a grip on the situation.

Charities, non-governmental organizations, church groups and ordinary people are those primarily providing services, such as help finding temporary shelter, food and clothing, medical care, schooling and so forth. The mayor of Warsaw recently described the response as an “improvisation.”

He said that the federal government, while allowing Ukrainians to cross the border, has been giving little logistical support. Financing for many efforts is coming out of city budgets, but volunteers are frequently those stepping in to do the on-the-ground work, and the money allocated is not enough.

One Polish volunteer told The New Republic in mid-April, “At first, the laundromats would launder the sheets we needed for free; caterers wouldn’t charge for food. That’s starting to end,” but, he added, “people are still coming.” The situation is particularly unsustainable because the ability of the citizenry to provide things like housing by opening up their homes to families in need cannot continue for months, much less years on end.

Poland’s capital has seen its population grow by more than 15 percent in two and a half months, with 300,000 Ukrainians now living in the city and making up one of out of every five residents. Rents, reports The New Republic, “rose 15 percent in the first two weeks of the war—in Kraków 26 percent and in Wrocław 33 percent.” Inflation, running at 12.3 percent as of April, is now the highest it has been since 1998.

Warsaw, which now has 120,000 Ukrainian children to educate, is hiring refugee teachers to educate them at a rate of $40 a day for six hours of work—a little over $6.50 an hour. This is not enough to even cover the average rent of a one-bedroom apartment. Many refugee households, moreover, do not have two earners, as working age men are not allowed to leave Ukraine.

After Poland’s banking system started to enter a crisis in March because it was unable to handle the volume of near-worthless Ukrainian currency that refugees were trying to exchange for Polish zloty, a policy has been instituted whereby migrants are guaranteed the ability to exchange 300 euros worth of hryvnia for three months. What happens after that time is unknown.

Other countries are also buckling under the weight of the refugee crisis. The tiny country of Moldova—home to 3 million people and along with Ukraine one of the poorest countries in Europe—has seen 430,000 refugees transit through its territory, of which 95,000 have remained. With anemic economic growth, inflation running at 22 percent, soaring natural gas prices and the lasting effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, it simply cannot provide for this population.

Remittances from Moldovans working abroad, which amounted to $1.5 billion in 2020, or 10 percent of the country’s GDP, have also collapsed. The International Monetary Fund has even appealed to foreign powers to simply give Moldova money, so that the country, of geostrategic significance in the conflict with Russia, does not implode.

In March the EU decided to grant Ukrainian refugees “temporary protection status” (TPS), which allows them to live in member states, as well as potentially receive some social benefits and possibly work on a legal basis. It was portrayed by Brussels as a great humanitarian act. Indeed, it is more than desperate migrants from the Middle East and Africa—left to drown in the Mediterranean, locked up in detention facilities, water-cannoned at the border, abused by the police, and deported—have received.

However, the length of stay allowed under TPS varies from country to country, from as little as 90 days to one year. Sometimes, but not always, it comes with the possibility of renewal. In the meantime, refugees have to apply for longer-term work permits or permanent asylum through completely overloaded official channels with endless waits and bureaucratic obstacles. Many will be denied and shipped back to Ukraine, regardless of whether or not it is safe.

In addition, it is clear that some within the EU largely view Ukrainian refugees as a profitable, low-wage workforce. “We can already see how many people from Ukraine are working legally in Poland, often filling in jobs that Poles don’t want, so it’s evident that the help is mutual,” said Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki recently. The jobs that Poles “don’t want” are those with substandard wages and working conditions.

Furthermore, TPS status is being denied to those who cannot prove Ukrainian citizenship, such as Africans who were studying in Ukraine when the war broke out and refugees from the Middle East who were using Eastern Europe as a transit point. Roma with dual citizenship are also being refused EU entry. The Czech Republic, for instance, just instituted new rules for refugees to show proof of identification with the express aim of keeping them out.

When noted in the press, these facts are frequently attributed to racism. This plays a role, with EU states having long promoted the most disgusting forms of anti-Arab, anti-African and anti-Roma prejudice and discrimination.

But the central issue is not the skin color or origins of the refugees. It is the fact that Ukrainians are fleeing a war allegedly created in its entirety by dictator Vladimir Putin and his hatred of “freedom” and “democracy.” The Ukrainian refugees, pawns in America’s and Europe’s quest for domination, are thus easily used in the anti-Russian propaganda that is laying the groundwork for the US and NATO to launch a direct war against Moscow. Thus, they for the moment receive relatively sympathetic treatment in the media and some governmental assistance.

Refugees from Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and elsewhere, however, are attempting to get out of areas that are clearly and directly the product of the total destruction of these regions by the US and its allies. And those fleeing Africa are trying to escape violence and desperate poverty that are the products of the colonial and neo-colonial rape of the continent. Apart from their usefulness in whipping up anti-immigrant chauvinism in an effort to divert social anger in a right-wing direction, for Washington and Brussels, these refugees are largely human trash.

As the crisis unleashed by the war spirals, Ukraine’s refugees, like their country, will also be brutalized.

13 May 2022

Microsoft Research PhD Fellowship 2022

Application Deadline: 7th June 2022

About the Award: Fellowships for PhD students at universities globally pursuing research aligned to the Microsoft Research areas of focus.

Type: Fellowship

Eligibility:

  • Microsoft’s mission is to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more. Students should support this mission and embrace opportunities to foster diverse and inclusive cultures within their communities.
  • PhD students must be enrolled at a university in Africa
  • Proposed research must be closely related to one of the themes at Microsoft Africa Research Institute (MARI)
    • AI/ML/NLP/data science: In many practically useful applications, data is often scarce and biased. Understanding how we work under these settings and deliver useful results has a great impact for many practical problems and gives us deep insights into what it means to learn with data. From practical application such as NLP, to understanding the fairness and generality of results and deepening our understanding of what is feasible with the available data for a particular problem. We’re interested how we work better with the limitations of data.
    • Health: Advances in machine learning and AI offer us an opportunity to address the disparities in the access to, and delivery of quality healthcare for all people. We’re interested in understanding and exploring spaces where technology can assist to fill the gap, from assisting healthcare practitioners to perform their roles more effectively, to bridging the last mile to patients, through scaling the delivery and reach of quality healthcare using technology.
    • Sustainability: Microsoft’s commitment to sustainability will be achieved by leveraging cloud and artificial intelligence (AI) tools to transform the way we monitor, model and ultimately help in solving environmental challenges facing the globe. Within MARI, we are applying AI and analytics to understand and develop solutions that will address challenges related to sustainability. If you are a student enrolled in an African University undertaking a PhD program in artificial intelligence, machine learning, statistics or a related field with a focus on solving problems related to sustainability, we would be delighted to receive your application.​​
    • Human-computer interaction: We seek fellows in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) who will explore Usability and Design questions under the areas of Work, Health and Sustainability & Society. Typically, HCI interns lead and conduct research studies (online or on the ground), usability studies, literature reviews, and design interventions.
  • Students must be entering their second year or beyond of their PhD program sometime between August 2022 – July 2023 having taken into account transfers, approved leaves of absence, etc.
  • PhD students must continue to be enrolled at the university in the beginning of academic year 2022 or forfeit the award. Fellowships are not available for extension. If you require time away for family or medical leave, this will be accommodated. If you are unsure if a particular need for time away will affect the award, you can contact Microsoft Research Fellowships at msfellow@microsoft.com.
  • Payment of the award, as described above, will be made directly to the university and dispersed according to the university’s policies. Microsoft will have discretion as to how any remaining funds will be used if the student is no longer qualified to receive funding (e.g., if the student unenrolls from the program, graduates, or transfers to a different university).
  • Funding is for use only during the recipient’s time in the PhD program; it cannot be used for support in a role past graduation, such as a postdoc or faculty position. Those interested in receiving this fellowship will need to confirm their PhD program starting month and year, as well as their expected graduation month and year.
  • A recipient of the Microsoft Research PhD Fellowship subject to disciplinary proceedings for inappropriate behavior, including but not limited to discrimination, harassment (including sexual harassment), or plagiarism will forfeit their funding.
  • PhD students submitting a proposal should be able to communicate about their research (both in writing and verbally) in English.

Eligible Countries: Countries in Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA)

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award:

  • $15,000 USD is provided to help complete research as part of their doctoral thesis work for academic year 2023–24.
  • Eligible recipients will be offered a 12-week paid internship with Microsoft Research’s Cambridge, UK lab, or the Microsoft Africa Research Institute (MARI).
  • Opportunities will be provided to build relationships with research teams at Microsoft and receive mentorship.

How to Apply: See information (in LINK) below

  • It is important to go through all application requirements in the Award Webpage (see Link below) before applying.

Visit Award Webpage for Details

Italian Government Bachelors, Masters & PhD Scholarships 2022/2023

Application Deadline: 9th June 2022 at 2pm

Offered annually? Yes

Eligible Countries: International

To be taken at (country): Scholarships can be awarded only for study/ research projects at institutions within the Italian public education and research system.

Fields of Study: Courses for which grants are available:

  •        Master’s Degree (Laurea Magistrale 2° ciclo)
  •        Courses of Higher Education in Arts, Music, and Dance (AFAM)
  •        PhD programmes
  •        Research under academic supervision (Progetti in co-tutela)
  •        Italian Language and Culture Courses

About Scholarship: The Italian Government awards scholarships for studying in Italy both to foreign citizens and Italian citizens resident abroad (IRE). The aim of these scholarships is fostering international cultural cooperation, spreading the Italian language, culture and science knowledge and promoting the economic and technological sectors of Italy all around the world.

Type: Masters, PhD, Research

Eligibility:

  1. Academic qualifications: Applications must only be submitted by foreign students not residing in Italy and by Italian citizens living abroad (IRE)* holding an appropriate academic qualification required to enroll to the Italian University/Institute. https://studyinitaly.esteri.it/en/Recognition-of-qualification.
  2. Age requirements: 
    • Applicants for Master’s Degree/Higher Education in Arts, Music, and Dance (AFAM) Programmes/ Italian Language and Culture Courses should not be over 28 years old by the deadline of this call, with the sole exception of renewals.
    • Applicants for PhD Programmes  should not be over 30 years old by the deadline of this call, with the sole exception of renewals.
    • Applicants for Research Projects under academic supervision should not be over 40 years old by the deadline of this call.
  3. Language proficiency 
    • Applicants must provide a certificate of their proficiency in Italian language. The minimum level required is B2 within the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR): (https://www.linguaitaliana.esteri.it/data/lingua/corsi/pdf/tabella_certificazioni.pdf).
    • Proof of proficiency in Italian is not required for courses entirely taught in English.
    • In this case applicants must provide a language certificate of their proficiency in English Language. The minimum level required is B2 within the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR).
    • For Italian language and culture courses, applicants must provide a certificate of their proficiency in Italian language. The minimum level required is A2 within the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR):

Number of Scholarships: not specified

Value of Scholarship:

  • Normally, the scholarship holders are exempt from the payment of the university tuition fees, in accordance with existing regulations. However the Universities, as part of their autonomy, may not allow such exemption. Candidates are therefore recommended to contact the chosen Institution in order to be informed on eventual taxes or tuition fees.
  • For the sole period of the scholarships granted by the Italian Government, the scholarship-holders are covered by an insurance policy against illness and/or accident. Air tickets are not granted, except for Chilean citizens.

Duration of Scholarship: 1 year

How to Apply: 

  • Click here to access the registration form
  • Before applying, please read carefully the Call for Procedure

Visit Scholarship Webpage for Details

Media Ignore Tragedies, Exploitation in Canadian Mines

Yves Engler


Eight miners in Burkina Faso have been stuck underground for nearly a month. Unlike other mining disasters, it’s received little attention outside West Africa.

Over the weekend K. Diallo tweeted, “for 20 days, 8 African miners have been stranded more than 500 meters deep in a zinc mine operated by a Canadian company in Burkina Faso. Why on earth isn’t there more outrage on this? Or is solidarity just a privilege that remains for those who live in the west and are white.”

Vancouver-based Trevali Mining owns the mine in central Burkina Faso. On April 16 the mine flooded during thunderstorms and eight miners were trapped 550 meters below the surface. Burkina Faso Prime Minister Alberta Ouedraogo reportedly blamed “irresponsibility” by those running the mines, saying the use of dynamite contributed to the flooding. Trevali’s managers have been temporary blocked from leaving the country.

The eight men stuck underground are but the latest in a string of tragedies at Canadian mines in Burkina Faso. At least 37 were killed in a rebel attack at Montréal based SEMAFO’s operations there in 2019. In October several of Toronto-based IAMGOLD’s employees were kidnapped in northern Burkina Faso. A half dozen villages were relocated to make way for IAMGOLD’s open pit gold mine, which gobbles up significant water in an arid region. That company was also accused of hiding gold in coal shipments to avoid paying royalties.

Labour violations, killings or ecological damage at Canadian mines in Burkina or elsewhere on the continent rarely receive much attention. When they are mentioned, it’s usually in the Globe and Mail Report on Business or Financial Post and there’s generally little about Canada’s influence over mining policy.

Canadian companies dominate the impoverished country’s main export industry. Responsible for 75% of the country’s gold exports, Canadian firms have some $4 billion invested in Burkina Faso.

Ottawa also shapes the country’s mining policy. The above data is drawn from a Canadian embassy sponsored project designed to promote the industry (interestingly, they failed to reveal how much profit Canadian firms extract from the country.) In 2014 Ottawa helped establish an office of the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum in Burkina Faso and has funded aid initiatives with the mining sector.

In response to Diallo’s tweet a number of individuals on social media pointed out how there’s a great deal of discussion about China buying up Africa’s natural resources but little about how Canadian companies dominate mining in most African countries. (In 2019 Natural Resources Canada reported that Canadian mining investment in Africa totaled $37.8 billion.) The crass double standard has been obvious for some time. In 2013 I wrote, “the dominant media prefers to focus on how Chinese companies are buying up the continent even though on a per capita basis Canadian corporations have taken control of a great deal more of Africa’s natural resources than China’s.”

In another example of media silence on Canadian mining policy in Burkina Faso I was unable to find a single criticism of the Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA) Ottawa signed with an interim, military-dominated regime, in any major Canadian news outlet.

In 2014 Ottawa signed a FIPA with the transition administration that took over after President Blaise Compaoré’s 27-year reign was ended by popular protest. Burkina Faso was represented at the April 2015 FIPA signing ceremony in Ottawa by Prime Minister Yacouba Isaac Zida, who was deputy commander of the presidential guard when Compaoré was ousted by popular protest six months earlier. While the West African nation’s caretaker government was supposed to move aside after an election planned for later that year, the FIPA cannot be fully repealed for 16 years.

At the time I submitted an opinion piece to four major dailies decrying this flagrant disregard for electoral democracy. Unsurprisingly, they all refused to publish it.

FIPAs undermine Africans’ ability to democratically determine economic policy by giving corporations the right to sue governments — in private, investor-friendly tribunals — for pursuing policies that interfere with their profit making. These bilateral investment accords are primarily about protecting Canadian mining firms from popular discontent. After decades of privatization and loosened restrictions on foreign investment through International Monetary Fund structural adjustment programs (SAPs), mining companies operating in Africa fear a reversal of these policies. The ability to sue a government in an international tribunal for lost profits partially alleviates those fears, which is why Ottawa has signed/negotiated these accords with 20 African countries.

There’s also been little discussion of Canada’s role promoting SAPs. Through the late 1980s and 1990s Canada channeled hundreds of millions of dollars in “aid” to support SAPs. The structural adjustment process forced more than thirty African governments to rewrite mining codes to facilitate foreign ownership and exploitation of their mineral resources. A World Bank promoted reform in Burkina Faso, for instance, reduced mining income taxes by 20 percent, dividend withholding taxes by 50 percent and capped the government’s share of mining ventures at 10 percent.

At the same time as Canada’s aid agency promoted reforms that benefited foreign mining firms in Burkina Faso, Canadians mapped the country’s underground riches. Long-time West Africa-based freelance journalist, Joan Baxter, describes a chance encounter with Canadian geologists in her 2008 book Dust From Our Eyes: an Unblinkered Look at Africa: “Another CIDA [Canadian International Development Agency] employee I met one evening in Bamako [Mali] told me his work with CIDA had been a long-term project to map the mineral resources of Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo. When we spoke, he was on a two-year sabbatical from CIDA, working with Canadian mining companies that had taken out concessions in that country. In the 1980s in Burkina Faso, I had met a team of Canadians who were flying in an odd-looking plane so full of antenna and wires that it resembled a flying catfish. When I asked the crew what kind of plane it was, they told me it was for mapping the underground riches of Burkina Faso, whose gold is now being mined today by foreign — and several Canadian — companies.”

Canada’s been shaping African mining policy since the colonial period. In 1916 Montreal-based Alcan started exploring in Guinea and a dozen years later began operating through a French subsidiary. After Guinea’s 1958 independence Alcan’s Boké project became highly contentious.

A decade before Uganda won its independence, Falconbridge acquired a 70% stake in the Kilembe copper-cobalt mine in the western part of the country. Independence leader Milton Obote’s nationalization of the mine is one reason the UK, US and Canada backed General Idi Amin’s coup against Obote.

Like the eight miners trapped underground for a month, Canada’s exploitation of African resources is of little interest to the dominant media.

12 May 2022

New South Korean president lines up behind US war drive

Ben McGrath


On May 10, Yoon Suk-yeol took office as the new president of South Korea. His inauguration marks a return to power of the conservative party, currently known as the People Power Party. Under Yoon, Seoul plans to increasingly integrate itself into United States’ war plans aimed at Russia and China.

South Korea's president-elect Yoon Suk Yeol speaks during a news conference at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea on March 10, 2022. (Kim Hong-ji/Pool Photo via AP)

While interspersing empty platitudes about freedom throughout his inaugural speech, Yoon made clear that his new administration would conform closely to the interests of US imperialism. Without directly referencing Moscow or Beijing, he stated, “We, as global citizens who enjoy real freedom, must never turn a blind eye when freedom is attacked. Freedom abides by the rules and seeks to aid others in need.”

Washington regularly trumpets “freedom” and claims that Russia and China have violated the so-called rules-based order around the world—the post-World War II order dominated by the US and in which it sets the rules—in order to justify ramping up military tensions with China and launching the US/NATO proxy war against Russia in Ukraine. Under the guise of “aiding others,” Yoon is preparing to take part in these conflicts.

In attendance at the ceremony were Douglas Emhoff, the husband of US Vice President Kamala Harris, and Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi. Beijing sent Vice President Wang Qishan to Tuesday’s inauguration ceremony, the highest ranking Chinese official to ever attend a South Korean inauguration.

Yoon held talks with the US and Chinese dignitaries, telling Emhoff that the US-South Korean “comprehensive strategic alliance [was] a top priority foreign policy.” Wang, who is close to President Xi Jinping, invited Yoon to visit China while stating, “China sincerely supports efforts by South and North Korea to improve their relations and seek reconciliation and cooperation.” Beijing undoubtedly hopes to build closer relations with Seoul in an effort to maintain the status quo on the Korean Peninsula.

Yoon however pledged to “bolster” the alliance with the US and to explicitly align Seoul with Washington in opposition to China during his presidential campaign. He has stacked his cabinet with figures having close connections with Washington, including his Foreign Minister Park Jin and Defense Minister Lee Jong-seop.

Park, a former lawmaker, has long-standing diplomatic ties with political circles in Washington. He served as head of the National Assembly’s foreign affairs committee from 2008–2010, which included meeting with US President Joe Biden when the latter served as chairman of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee. He most recently chaired South Korea’s parliamentary diplomacy forum with the US. Park also advocates closer relations with Japan.

Lee, a retired general, worked as a vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, tasked with mapping out the US-South Korea joint military posture. He was previously in charge of US policy at the Defense Ministry’s office of national defense policy. In addition, he earned his doctorate from Tennessee State University, focusing on the US-South Korea alliance.

Heavily committed to the alliance with Washington, the Yoon administration is adapting to the major shifts in international relations that have taken place since the beginning of the US/NATO-instigated proxy war against Russia in Ukraine. As such, Seoul’s foreign and military policies are largely dictated by Washington. The US military personnel and assets stationed in South Korea are deployed in the interests of US imperialism and Seoul is expected to fall in line with the Pentagon’s planning.

Yoon has already expressed support for the US retaining wartime operational control (OPCON) of the South Korean military, which means in the event of a conflict, Washington takes control of the latter’s large, well-equipped armed forces. He stated on May 7, “Who takes the command should be decided based on the most effective ways of winning a war, not for any causes or ideologies.”

This is also what lies behind Yoon’s offer of economy assistance to North Korea in his inaugural address, saying, “If North Korea genuinely embarks on a process to complete denuclearization, we are prepared to work with the international community to present an audacious plan that will vastly strengthen North Korea’s economy and improve the quality of life for its people.”

The approach is similar to that of the former Trump administration, which has not been fundamentally altered under Biden. Washington is attempting to neutralize North Korea or even bring Pyongyang into its orbit as the US turns its attention to waging war first against Russia and then China.

Therefore, while prepared for a conflict with the North, the military build-up, including calls by South Korean conservatives for the deployment of a second Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery and the return of US nuclear weapons to the peninsula are aimed above all at China and the Russian far east.

Foreign Minister Park has called for the resumption of the US-Korea Extended Deterrence Strategy and Consultation Group (EDSCG), which has not met since January 2018. The group allows Washington and Seoul to hold discussions on strategic and policy issues regarding so-called extended deterrence, including the use of nuclear weapons.

Speaking during a confirmation hearing on April 30, Park stated, “We will reactivate the EDSCG at an early stage so that the bilateral extended deterrence cooperation between South Korea and the United States can be systematically continued through a permanent consultation mechanism.”

Biden plans to visit South Korea and Japan for summits with Yoon and Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on May 21 and 23 respectively. Biden will almost certainly use his summit with Yoon to coordinate Seoul’s position on Russia and China. Yoon’s administration has already claimed that the war in Ukraine has security consequences for South Korea in Northeast Asia and is currently considering expanding so-called “humanitarian aid” to Kiev.

Yoon has also stated that, if invited, he would “positively review joining” the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad), a quasi-military alliance aimed at China, led by the US and including Japan, Australia, and India. Japanese media reported in April that Yoon requested to attend a Quad summit as an observer on May 24 in Tokyo, but his office denied this.

Yoon is also contemplating taking part in the NATO summit June 29–30 in Madrid, Spain, which could be his first meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Kishida. Yoon has pledged to improve Seoul’s relationship with Tokyo, another key demand from Washington.

The US/NATO proxy war with Russia in Ukraine is ultimately aimed at the weakening and break-up of Russia in preparation for conflict with China, which Washington regards as the chief threat to its global domination. The denunciations of North Korea provide a convenient pretext for Seoul to deepen its integration into US-led war drive.