2 Mar 2017

India: Million-strong bank workers’ strike opposes Modi’s big business “reforms”

Arun Kumar

One million bank workers joined a one-day, all-India strike Tuesday, February 28 to oppose Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s pro-big business “reform” of the country’s banking and monetary systems.
The one-day walkout, the third such action taken by bank workers since Modi’s Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government came to power in May 2014, crippled banking operations across the country.
Tuesday’s strike attests to workers’ growing opposition to the Indian elite’s neo-liberal economic “reform” measures and their readiness to fight against them. The strikers protested against the BJP’s plans to privatise public sector banks and modify the country’s labour laws to facilitate the quick “hire and fire” of workers, as well as the outsourcing of permanent jobs in the banking sector. They also demanded that the banks fill hundreds of thousands of existing job vacancies and compensate bank employees for the many, many hours of overtime work they performed in the weeks of chaos that followed the government’s November 8 “shock” demonetisation announcement.
The strike effectively shut down the country’s public sector banks, “old-generation” private banks, foreign banks, regional banks and cooperative banks. The 27 public sector banks alone account for three quarters of all Indian bank transactions. Due to the strike, the clearing of millions of cheques was held up for a day. ATM machines across the country went offline, as there was no one to replenish them when they ran out of funds.
The strike was organised by the United Forum of Bank Unions (UFBU), an umbrella organisation of nine unions, including the All India Bank Employees Association (AIBEA), All India Bank Officers Association (AIBOA), Bank Employees Federation of India (BEFI) and the Indian National Bank Employees’ Federation. All are either directly affiliated to, or closely aligned, with various opposition parties, including the Congress Party, the Indian bourgeoisie’s traditional party of government.
The bank employee unions affiliated to the BJP-controlled Bharatiya Amador Singh (BMS)—the National Organisation of Bank Workers (NOBW) and the National Organisation of Bank Officers (NOBO)—refused to participate in Tuesday’s strike.
The unions that did were in no way seeking to develop a genuine working class counter-offensive against the BJP government. Facing increasing rank-and-file demands for action, the UFBU unions called Tuesday’s strike so as to channel workers into futile protests directed at appealing to the BJP to change course and behind the various political parties to which they are tied. All of these parties—including the two Stalinist parliamentary parties, the Communist Party of India (CPI) and Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPM)—have implemented “pro-investor” reforms aimed at making India a cheap labour haven for global capital.
UFBU leaders themselves complained of having been forced to call Tuesday’s walkout due to the intransigence of the banks and government during tripartite talks held February 21 between the unions, the Indian Bankers Association (IBA), and the government’s chief labour commissioner. “The strike has been forced on us,” said AIBEA General Secretary C.H. Venkatachalam, “because of the adamant and insensitive attitude of the bank management and IBA.” He went on to lament, “They even did not bother to talk on providing compensation for extra hours put in by bank staff during the demonetisation period.”
The Modi government has already begun implementing its plans to privatise many of India’s public sector banks. Following on from the previous Congress Party-led government, the current BJP regime has reduced the government’s ownership share in the State Bank of India (SBI) to less than 60 percent. To rationalise operations and make the SBI more attractive for investors, it is also in the process of merging six SBI subsidiaries into the parent bank. Two of the six, the State Bank of Indore and State Bank of Saurashtra, have already been fully merged into the SBI.
In his 2016 budget address, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley vowed that the BJP government would reduce the government’s stake in IDBI Bank, the world’s tenth largest development bank, to below 51 percent. “We are trying to consolidate some of the banks, which may otherwise find it difficult in a competitive environment. ...,” Jaitley told an “Economist India Summit” last September. “In one case, (IDBI Bank) we are thinking of reducing the government stake to 49 percent.”
The unions claim the main reason for the problems in the banking sector is “bad loans,” which they attribute to poor management and corruption. They are demanding the Modi government and the country’s central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, take tough measures against big business defaulters including publicly naming and punishing them.
Undoubtedly, there are all manner of corrupt ties between big business and the political establishment.
But the global capitalist crisis, not “crony capitalism” and poor management, are the root cause of India’s banking crisis. While Modi and the BJP government are boasting of India’s high economic growth rate, the reality is India’s economy has been battered by falling exports and anemic growth in manufacturing. Because India’s corporate houses are hobbled by debt—much of it dollar-denominated, making then highly vulnerable to an erosion in the value of the Indian rupee—capital investment has plunged.
Modi termed the demonetisation of 500- and 1,000-rupee notes a “surgical strike” against corruption. In truth, it was a ploy to provide India’s crisis-ridden banks with a huge, desperately needed cash infusion. That the sudden withdrawal of 85 percent of India’s currency caused economic mayhem, especially for the working class and rural toilers, was of no consequence to the government. Similarly, the government’s “reforms” of the banking sector are aimed at boosting the banks’ bottom lines and Indian capitalism at workers’ expense, through job cuts, casualisation, and the shredding of worker rights.
In announcing the one-day strike, Venkatachalam of the AIBEA, a union aligned with the Stalinist CPI, said, “The unions have been fighting for more than two decades against the reform measures of the government as these are against the interests of the general public and labour force in the country.”
He did not explain why the trade unions have failed to stop successive governments from implementing wave after wave of pro-big business “reform” or why it was the ultra right-wing BJP that was able to exploit popular anger over mass joblessness, poverty and ever-widening social inequality to win India’s first parliamentary majority in decades.
The reality is the unions, the CPI, and the CPM have systematically suppressed the class struggle. Since the Indian elite repudiated its bankrupt national capitalist development strategy in 1991, the twin Stalinist parliamentary parties have repeatedly propped up governments at the centre, most of them Congress Party-led, that have pursued neoliberal policies. And in those states where the CPM and CPI have formed the government, most notably West Bengal and Kerala, they have implemented what they themselves characterise as “pro-investor” policies.

US immigration authorities expand dragnet raids

Zaida Green 

“As we speak, we are removing gang members, drug dealers and criminals that threaten our communities and prey on our citizens,” declared US President Donald Trump in his speech to Congress Tuesday, adding, “Bad ones are going out as I speak tonight.”
That day, eleven undocumented workers were arrested by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) near Woodburn, Oregon on the morning of February 28 while riding in two vans on their way to work. Neither of ICE’s original two targets—one of whom has never been convicted of a crime—were present. Four of the workers arrested were already in deportation proceedings; all eleven now face deportation.
The Woodburn round-up is only one in a wave of “collateral arrests” carried out since the Trump administration prioritized the deportation of all removable undocumented immigrants regardless of criminal record. Bystanders have been swept up in ICE raids at their homes, workplaces and near schools across the country.
Yerlyn Castro, a legal assistant at Katja Hedding Law Firm in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, recounted to AL.com a raid on an apartment in Birmingham, Alabama on February 22. “ICE officers showed up at the apartment complex and asked for the person's name,” Castro said. “They said the person they were looking for didn't live there anymore, so they [ICE] arrested three undocumented people who were living there instead.”
Immigrants rights advocates and attorneys are reporting an increasing frequency in ICE operations and collateral arrests since the Trump administration’s first week-long campaign last month, over the course of which almost 700 people were arrested.
“Before, we used to be told, ‘You can’t arrest those people,’ and we’d be disciplined for being insubordinate if we did,” a 10-year veteran ICE agent told The New York Times. “Now those people are priorities again.”
“It's blown up over the past two weeks,” Alabama defense attorney Paul Scott told AL.com. “We can't even attend our phones because so many people are calling with these kinds of detentions. … Definitely the executive order is mobilizing ICE everywhere…”
In Texas, Travis county officials confronted ICE regional field director Dan Bible on Friday, demanding to know if ICE was targeting the city of Austin in particular. Fifty-one Austin residents were arrested in a two-day sting last month carried out by the agency, Operation Cross Check. “I was interested to know, ‘Are you out doing these crazy roundups trying to snare people?,” said County Commissioner Gerald Daugherty. Travis county officials suspect the agency is retaliating against a policy that subjects to review some ICE requests to detain arrestees in county jail, instead of granting automatic approval.
The Trump administration’s immigration advisors have proposed that the Department of Homeland Security double the number of people held in immigration detention centers to 80,000 per day. Trump has received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from private prison companies—whose stocks are rising as they salivate over the prospect of mass incarcerations.
The recent raids have filled immigrant communities throughout the United States with fear, with teachers reporting that families are afraid to venture outside to get groceries, and children expressing the fear of coming home and discovering that their family members have been arrested by ICE. Parents are scrambling to set up guardianship arrangements and obtain US passports for their children in case of deportation.
“What we’re seeing is a lot of parents who used to pick up their children from school and now they’re sending them on the bus,” an anonymous teacher told the Huffington Post. “The parents are afraid to come to the school.” Teachers have attended workshops on how to answer students’ questions and fear regarding deportation. The Austin Independent School District in Texas sent out a memo to teachers on February 13 warning them to cooperate with ICE and to stop handing out “partisan” leaflets.

US, South Korea mount massive joint military exercises

Peter Symonds

The US and South Korean militaries yesterday began their annual joint Foal Eagle war games, which entail large-scale drills of land, sea and air forces over the next two months. The related Key Resolve, a largely-computer simulated exercise, will be conducted from March 13 to 23.
Last year’s exercises, involving 300,000 South Korean troops and around 17,000 American military personnel backed by warships and warplanes, were billed as the largest-ever. While official figures have yet to be released, a US official in South Korea told the Nikkei Asian Review those numbers would be exceeded this year.
The US navy is sending the aircraft carrier, the USS Carl Vinson, and its strike group of two guided-missile destroyers and a guided-missile cruiser, to join the Foal Eagle drills. The US Marine Corps is dispatching sophisticated F-35B stealth fighters from Japan to the Korean Peninsula for the first time. A South Korean official suggested that nuclear-capable strategic bombers, such as B-52s and B-1Bs, could be sent from Guam.
The annual exercises are dress rehearsals for war with North Korea and have always raised tensions on the Korean Peninsula. The massive show of force this year takes place amid an already tense stand-off over North Korea’s nuclear and missile testing and unsubstantiated accusations that it was responsible for killing Kim Jong-nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
American and South Korean officials routinely describe the annual exercises as defensive. However, in 2015 the two countries changed their operational plan for fighting war with North Korea from nominally defensive to “pre-emptive” or aggressive. OPLAN 5015, which reportedly includes pre-emptive strikes on North Korean nuclear, missile and military sites as well as “decapitation raids” on the North Korean leadership, was the basis for the 2016 joint exercises and will be for this year’s. In the event of war with North Korea, the US military would also assume overall command of South Korean military forces.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un responded by visiting an army unit headquarters. He praised the troops for their vigilance and ordered them to “set up thorough countermeasures of a merciless strike against the enemy’s sudden air assault.” Far from defending the North Korean people, the regime’s militaristic declarations and military build-up play directly into the hands of the US and heighten the danger of war.
US Defence Secretary James Mattis told his South Korean counterpart Han Min-koo the US “remains steadfast in its commitment” to South Korea’s defence. He warned that any North Korean attack on the US or its allies would be defeated and any use of nuclear weapons would be met with an “effective and overwhelming” response.
A South Korean defence ministry official told the Korea Times: “The phone conversation was intended to send a more effective warning to North Korea over its nuclear and ballistic missile provocations on the occasion of the drills.” Defence Minister Han “stressed the need to bolster the drills.”
Agence France Presse reported that dozens of protesters gathered outside the US embassy in Seoul yesterday to oppose the war games, saying they would “bring the peninsula sharply closer to the brink of nuclear war.”
The expansion of the South Korean-US drills in recent years is not primarily directed against North Korea. It is part of the US military build-up throughout the region against China. This began under the Obama administration’s “pivot to Asia” and is accelerating under Trump, who has threatened trade war measures against Beijing and action against China in the South China Sea.
During his phone call, Mattis welcomed a land-swap deal reached on Tuesday between the South Korean government and the Lotte Group conglomerate that clears the way for the installation of a Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) anti-ballistic missile battery on the Korean Peninsula. Mattis and Han agreed to complete the deployment “promptly”, fuelling speculation it could be completed as early as May.
The THAAD battery in South Korea is part of a wider US anti-missile system nominally directed against North Korea, but in reality aimed at preparing for nuclear war with China. The US has never renounced the use of a first nuclear strike and the THAAD system is designed to neutralise Chinese nuclear retaliation.
Beijing has repeatedly protested against the THAAD installation. The Chinese foreign ministry this week declared that the anti-missile system “jeopardises the strategic security interests” in the region and warned of “consequences” if Seoul and Washington proceeded.
Chinese state-owned media outlets have threatened a boycott of South Korean goods. An editorial in the Global Times on Tuesday proposed that Chinese society “should coordinate voluntarily in expanding restrictions on South Korean cultural goods and entertainment exports to China, and block them when necessary.” The official Xinhua news agency suggested Chinese consumers should target the Lotte Group.
The Trump administration has no intention of backing off, however. A senior administration official told reporters on Tuesday that Trump regards North Korea and its nuclear program as the “greatest immediate threat” to the United States. The US president met with Chinese State Councillor Yang Jiechi on Monday and again demanded that Beijing take action to force North Korea to end its nuclear and missile program.
The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that an internal White House review of US strategy towards North Korea “includes the possibility of military force or regime change” to deal with the alleged nuclear threat. “US officials have underscored the possible military dimensions of their emerging strategy in recent discussions with allies, according to people familiar with the talks,” the article added.
Despite the fact that Malaysian authorities are yet to complete their investigation, the killing of Kim Jong-nam at the Kuala Lumpur international airport on March 12 is being exploited to heighten the scare campaign against North Korea. With many unanswered questions still remaining, South Korea, backed by the US, is claiming that North Korea used a “weapon of mass destruction”—the nerve agent VX—to kill Kim.
Unnamed American officials told the Asia Times they were concerned the US had focussed on North Korea’s nuclear arsenal and not paid sufficient attention to its chemical and biological weapons. A senior Pentagon official said he feared most “a surprise attack on Seoul, Tokyo or American forces stationed in Asia” if North Korea ever felt its existence threatened. “At that point, we won’t be worrying about just nuclear weapons but lots of different weapons that could kill a lot of people, millions even. We need to be ready,” he said.
The growing hysteria over North Korea in the US and international media is aimed at creating the climate for reckless moves against Pyongyang, including pre-emptive military strikes against its nuclear and missile sites. The huge military exercises in South Korea only heighten the danger that an incident or provocation could spiral out of control.

1 Mar 2017

Enter for the Keele University International Smart Minds Essay Contest 2017/2018 – UK

Application Deadline:  29th May 2017
Eligible Countries: International
To be taken at (country): UK
Type: Masters
Eligibility: 
  • Before applying for the scholarship, applicants must have already made an application for a taught Master’s degree at Keele University, to begin in September 2017.
  • Any offer of scholarship will be conditional upon applicants meeting the academic and English language requirements for their chosen course as set out in the offer letter.
  • This award is for international fee payers only and can not be combined with any other University funded scholarship or bursary which is intended for international fee paying students. In cases where an applicant is eligible for more than one award, the highest value award will be applied.
Number of Awardees: 5
Value of Scholarship:  £5,000 tuition waiver
Duration of Scholarship: One time
How to Apply: Submit an essay of no more than 250 words to international@keele.ac.uk telling us which Smart Mind has inspired you to pursue further studies in your subject area of choice. This could be your professor at university, a Nobel Prize winner, or another well-known figure in your area.
Essays should be typed/word processed and not handwritten.
Please remember to include your Keele ID number in your scholarship application.
Award Provider: Keele University

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) Masters Scholarships for Developing Countries 2017/2018

Application Deadline: 12th May, 2017 17.00 GMT.
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Developing Countries
To be taken at (country): UK
About the Award: The Masters in Public Health for Eye Care at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine is a well-established course that aims to train leaders in prevention of blindness and to strengthen research and academic capacity for eye care programmes and training facilities, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. The course provides eye health professionals with the public health knowledge and skills required to reduce blindness and visual disability in their population.
Type: Master
Eligibility: The applicant must:
  • come from low or middle income Commonwealth countries that are lessrepresented in the alumni body of the MSc Public health for eye care
  • work in regions where there are severe constraints in human resources for eyehealth
  • work in regions where there are no / limited training opportunities in PHEC /community eye health
  • demonstrate previous involvement / commitment to community eye healthactivities or VISION2020 programmes
  • present a clear career plan in public health for eye care, which they will realistically
  • be able to follow on completion of the MSc
  • have experience in public health for eye care based research and/or training in eyecare
  • fulfil the UK Border Agency English Language Requirement by passing the LSHTM English language requirement by 12May, 2017.
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Scholarship: Several scholarships are made available each year.  Each scholarship covers course fees, two return flights, dissertation project funds, living costs and accommodation at the International Students House in Central London.
Duration of Scholarship: Duration of program
How to Apply: Download Application: CEHC 2017.18 – MSc Scholarships Application. Word Doc.
Download and complete the form and submit to the ICEH Student & Alumni Engagement Officer – Romulo Fabunan at Romulo.Fabunan@Lshtm.ac.uk by the deadline
Award Provider: London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Birkbeck / International Student House Scholarship for Developing Countries 2017/2018

Application Deadline:  19th June 2017
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Developing Countries
To be taken at (country): Birkbeck University of London, UK
Offered Since: 2016
Type: Postgraduate
Eligibility: 
  • Students should be from a developing or emerging country and intending to return on completion of their studies.
  • Students must hold an unconditional offer for a full-time course at Birkbeck.
  • Preference will be given to postgraduate students.
  • Preference will be given to students that are studying a course that will provide skills to assist in the development of their home country.
  • Students must have a good proven academic record, with every prospect of success in their study and future careers.
  • Preference will be given to students who would otherwise be unable to study/finish their study for financial reasons.
  • Students must have a full tuition only scholarship in place from Birkbeck or a recognised organisation. Please note that students whose scholarship includes living cost expenses are ineligible.
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Scholarship: Successful applicants will be awarded with free accommodation at International Students House, in a single room.
Duration of Scholarship:  one year
How to Apply: To apply for the scholarship please email accommodation@bbk.ac.uk by 19th June 2017, specifying how you meet the criteria for the scholarship. The email subject should be “Birkbeck/ISH full scholarship application”.
Award Provider: Birkbeck University of London
Important Notes: It is possible to apply for the Birkbeck/ISH scholarship at the same time as applying for a nominated room. Please indicate in your scholarship application, if you are also applying for a nominated room in our partner halls of residence.

IOE-ISH Centenary Doctoral Scholarships for Developing Countries 2017/2018 – University College London

Application Deadline: Monday 10th April 2017 (23:59 London time).
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Low or Lower-Middle Income Country
To be taken at (country): University of London, UK
Type: Doctoral
Eligibility: Candidates should:
  • Be citizens and residents of a low or lower-middle income country (as per World Bank website).
  • Have an offer to study a full time PhD degree in London at the UCL Institute of Education (October 2017 start).
  • Not have studied or lived in the UK before.
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Scholarship:  ISH provides accommodation, while the IOE covers tuition fees.  The scholarship does not cover subsistence in London or travel.
Duration of Scholarship: 3 years
How to Apply: Students who have received an offer to study at the UCL Institute of Education, will receive an email with a copy of the application form.
If you have an offer and haven’t received the application form please contact IOEinternational@ucl.ac.uk (please include your full name and student ID in your email).
Award Provider: UCL Institute of Education, ISH
Important Notes: Please note the online PhD and the Educational Psychology (Professional Educational, Child and Adolescent Psychology) DEdPsy are not eligible for this scholarship.

Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program (FLTA) 2017/2018 - USA

Application Deadline: 30th April 2017
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Nigeria
To be taken at (country): United States of America (USA)
About the Award: The Foreign Language Teaching Assistant (FLTA) program is a nine month non-degree course funded by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs and administered by the Institute of International Education. The objective of the program is to strengthen foreign language instruction at U.S. colleges, universities, and some high schools, while providing future teachers from abroad the opportunity to refine their skills, increase their English language proficiency, and expand their knowledge of U.S. society and culture.  FLTA fellows must return to their home countries upon completion of their programs to teach English at the secondary or university level.
Type: Short training
Eligibility: All applications must meet the following criteria:
  • Applicants must be teachers of English or in training to become teachers of English.
  • Applicants must possess a university degree in English, Language Arts, or combined honors.
  • Applicants must be fluent in English, demonstrated by a TOEFL score of 79-80 (Internet based testing) or 6.0 (overall score International English Language Testing System-IELTS).
  • Applicants must be between 21 and 29 years old at the time of application.
  • Applicants must demonstrate maturity, dependability, integrity and professionalism.
  • Applicants must be physically present in their home country throughout the nomination and selection process.
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Scholarship: Fully-funded
Duration of Scholarship: 9 months
How to Apply:  
  • Applications must be completed and submitted online.
  • Applicants should request that the academic office of their institution send a stamped copy of their transcripts in a sealed envelope to: The Public Affairs Section, U.S. Embassy, Plot 1075 Diplomatic Drive, Central Area, Abuja, Attention: Cultural Affairs Officer.
  • Other documents to be submitted include academic credentials, signed and stamped letters of reference, and the photo page of a valid Nigerian passport.
  • The application can be accessed at: http://apply.embark.com/student/fulbright/flta.
Award Provider: Government of the United States through the U.S. Embassy, Nigeria.
Important Notes: For further inquiries, please contact Cultural Affairs Assistant, U.S. Embassy, Plot 1075 Diplomatic Drive, Central Area, Abuja: email: CulturalAbuja@state.gov or U.S. Consulate General, #2 Walter Carrington Crescent, Victoria Island, Lagos;

Civil Society Facility South (CSFS) Dialogue Fellows Program 2017 for Young People from MENA Region

Application Deadline: 12th March 2017
Eligible Countries: Participants will come from Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine , Tunisia and Syria
To be taken at (country): Activities to be held mostly in the European Neighbourhood South and Brussels.
About the Award: Young people have played a significant role in demanding basic rights for building their future towards sustainable processes. The Fellowship programme invests in the mobilisation of youth as drivers of change and democracy: it aims at involving Youth into policy making and dialogue in the Southern Mediterranean region. It will support existing youth networks and Youth fellows, to share experience, monitor progress and provide mutual support.
The program features online coaching and three workshops in the region between April and October. The specific focus is on peace, partnerships and preventing violent extremism.
Fields of Dialogue: For this 2017 programme, there will be a specific focus on: peace and partnerships (advocating for CS space; employment and social business), and preventing violent extremism.
Type: Events and Conferences, short courses
Eligibility:  Eligible CSOs from eligible countries can nominate ONE participant based on these requirements:
  • applicant /participant per organization (CSO);
  • Proposed applicant should be within the age limits of 24-36 years old;
  • Proposed applicant has at least 3 years-experience being involved in sectorial projects, specifically in actions of advocacy and policy dialogue;
  • Good Command/ Proficiency in English or/and French language proficiency in addition to Arabic will be required.
Selection: Applicants must be a staff of a Civil Society Organisation (or platform/network) from the Neighbourhood South Region and comply with the definition (in the link below)
Number of Awardees: 30
Value of Program: Costs related to participation will be covered (flights and visas, accommodation, meals)
Duration of Program:  3 workshops will take place in the region between April and October 2017.
How to Apply:  
  1. Application forms fully filled out- with recommendations from the applicant’s CSO supporting the candidacy;
  2. Motivation letter by the applicant in Arabic; translated in either English or French, and co-signed by the CSO;
  3. Curriculum vita of the applicant;
  4. Copy of passport or ID (with birth date).
Applications to be submitted to info@csfsouth.org by 12 March 2017 in Arabic, English or French (for the ones in Arabic, a summary of the cover letter and profile should be translated in French or English).Trainings’ fees will be fully covered by the EU.
Award Provider:  This programme will be managed by the Civil Society Facility South (CSFS), based in Tunis on behalf of the European Union (DG NEAR), in close collaboration with partner CSOs from the region and EU Delegations.
Important Notes: Selected applicants will receive a confirmation of selection by email. They will have to confirm their presence to all activities. Invitations for obtaining visas will be sent.
Workshops will be held mostly in Arabic with translation and interpretation in English and French: a good command of English or French is required

American Dystopia – A Future of Racists, Snitches and Outcasts

Yoav Litvin

Dystopia
Pinch me, I really need to wake up from this nightmare.
Donald “grab them by the pussy” Trump, a sexual predator who some claim has trouble reading the English language, is President of the United States.
Pinch me once more.
Hillary Clinton, a warmonger who relished the moment Gaddafi got sodomized and brutally murdered at her behest, has yet to retire in shame after her electoral debacle, ever threatening to return.
Pinch me again and again.
George “they misunderestimated me” Bush is sounding reasonable these days, while Jeff “KKK is OK” Sessions is the Attorney General of the United States.
Pinch me, please, one last time.
Chief White House strategist Steve Bannon is unabashedly preaching his conspiratorial, racist philosophy and passing it off as a rational vision rather than lunacy.
Changes within the Democratic party
In a colossal failure of the Democratic party, mainstream media and other components of “the establishment”, the most extreme elements of the Republican party have assumed control of the White House and both houses of Congress, paving the way for an unprecedented roll back of corporate regulations and civil liberties, a spike in racism and vigilante violence, intense war-mongering, ecocide and general chaos. This unraveling scenario has all the makings of a corporate-controlled police state.
In a testament to the extremity of present day America, comparisons of the new administration to Nazism and fascism, and Trump to Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin et al. have become commonplace and cliché.
Meanwhile, the Democratic “opposition” party just elected Tom Perez, a corporate yes-man, as Chair in yet another indication that they are hopelessly beyond repair, and a further blow to Bernie Sanders’ “revolution from within”.
These tectonic rightward shifts have dramatically changed and polarized the American political map and escalated a fight for its center.
Within this climate, an emerging faction of Democrats/liberals have been showcasing and promoting a thinly-veiled version of White supremacy in the name of “free speech”. Proponents of this approach justify and normalize racism by adopting an identity-driven divisive attitude with a supposed affinity for human rights, but only for those who abide by the notion of American exceptionalism and Islamophobia. It is no surprise that Perez’s Muslim opponent Keith Ellison met his final doom by showing empathy toward (brown-skinned) Palestinians.
Racism and White supremacy are no strangers to the Democratic Party, but a change is happening in the means of its expression. Whereas in pre-Trump America it was inherent yet outwardly denounced, nowadays more and more mainstream liberals are proudly coming out of their closet of bigotry and prejudices. The Democratic party is turning into a liberal wing of the White supremacist movement, a rebranded and “hip” political party that champions the agenda of corporations, warmongers, mainstream media and the deep state.
Within this constitution of forces and movements, Trump’s America will be reduced to racists, snitches and outcasts.
New sub categories of racists will evolve and proliferate with minute, subtle differences; White racists, gay racists, feminist racists, Muslim racists, Black racists, Latino racists, Jewish racists, Russian racists, Indian racists, what have you. They will all coalesce under an umbrella that champions racial divisions and global apartheid.
The obsessive scapegoating and targeting of radicals and progressives is embedded in the political DNA of mainstream Democrats and will only escalate in Trump’s America. Thoroughly debunked smear campaigns against Ralph Nader and Jill Stein are but two examples.
Today’s liberals, “also known as “libtards” in right-wing circles, ever under suspect by the racist dominant class that places loyalty above all else, will be confronted with a choice: either snitch on- and disavow progressives and radicals as a test of loyalty, or join the resistance.
Up against racists and snitches, progressives and radicals will be deemed extreme, naïve, dangerous and irrelevant. They will be ridiculed, marginalized, villainized and abused: i.e. will join immigrants, the poor, Black and Brown communities as American society’s outcasts. It is no coincidence that Jeff Sessions recently called for a renewed expansion of private prisons; he knows that soon there will be a high demand for housing immigrants, dissidents and other enemies of the state.
Welcome to America, a budding racist dystopia. Presently it is barreling away towards a destructive future of injustice, inequality and apartheid.
Resistance is our only hope of awakening from this nightmare and averting catastrophe.

The Fictitious Economy: Hiding How the Economy Really Works

Michael Hudson


SHARMINI PERIES: Michael Hudson is a distinguished research professor of economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. He’s the author of many books including, “The Bubble and Beyond” and “Finance Capitalism and Its Discontents”, “Killing the Host: How Financial Parasites and Debt Destroy the Global Economy,” and most recently, of course, “J is for Junk Economics“.
Michael, your book reminds me of Raymond Williams’ key words. That was an incredible contribution to cultural criticism, a criticism of society and cultural studies as a discipline. And I think your book is going to make a phenomenal contribution to the field of economics. It would be a reference for people to go back, especially students to go back, and look at your version of the definition of these terms and looking at economics from that critical prism. So, my first question to you is really about this book. Why did you write it?
MICHAEL HUDSON: I originally wrote it as an appendix to a book to have been called, “The Fictitious Economy.” That draft was written before the 2008 crisis. My point was that the way the economy is described in the press and in University courses has very little to do with how the economy really works. The press and journalistic reports use a terminology made of well crafted euphemisms to confuse understanding of how the economy works.
In addition to giving key words to explain what’s positive and how to understand the economy, I discuss the misleading vocabulary, the Orwellian double-think used by the media, bank lobbyists and corporate lobbyists to persuade people that austerity and running into debt is the key to wealth, not its antithesis. The aim is to make them act against their own interests, by drawing a fictitious picture of the economy as if it’s a parallel universe.
If you can make people use a vocabulary and concepts that make it appear that when the 1% gets richer, the whole economy is getting richer – or when GDP goes up, everybody is improving – then the people, the 95% who did not improve their position from 2008 to 2016 somehow can be made to suffer from the Stockholm syndrome. They’ll think, “Gee, it must be my fault. If the whole economy is growing, why am I so worse off? If only we can give more money to the top 5% or the 1%, it’ll all trickle down. We’ve got to cut taxes and help them so they can give me a job because as Trump and other people said, Well, I never met a poor person who gave me a job.”
I’ve met a lot of rich people, and instead of giving people jobs when they buy a company, they usually make money for themselves by firing people, downsizing and outsourcing labor. So you’re not going to get the rich necessarily giving you jobs. But if people can somehow think that there’s an association between wealth at the top and more employment, and that you have to cut the taxes on the wealthy because it’ll all trickle down, then they have an upside-down view of how the economy works.
I had written an appendix to the book and that took on a life of its own. If you have a vocabulary that describes how
jjunkeconthe world and the economy actually work, then one word will lead to another and soon you build up a more realistic picture of the economy. So, I not only discuss words and vocabulary, I discuss some of the key individuals and the key economists who’ve made contributions that don’t appear in the neoliberal academic curriculum.
There’s a reason the history of economic thought is not taught anymore in the universities. If people really read what Adam Smith wrote and what John Stuart Mill wrote, they’d see that Smith criticized the landlords. He said that you’ve got to tax away their rents, because it’s a free lunch. Mill defined rent as what landlords make in their sleep, without working. Adam Smith said that whenever businessmen get together, they’re going to conspire as to how to get money from the public at large – how to do a deal and mislead people that it’s all for society’s good.
This is not the kind of free enterprise that people who talk about Adam Smith explain when they depict him as if he were a tax cutter, an Austrian economist or a neoliberal. They don’t want to hear what he actually wrote. So, my book is really about reality economics. I found that to discuss reality economics, we have to take back control of the language or economic methodology, not use the logic that they use.
Mainstream economists talk as if any status quo is in equilibrium. The subliminal trick here is that if you think of the economy as always being in equilibrium, it implies that if you’re poor or you can’t pay your debt, or you have problems sending your kids to school, that’s just part of nature. As if there isn’t an alternative. That is what Margaret Thatcher said: “There is no alternative.” My book is all about how of course there’s an alternative. But to make an alternative, you need an alternative way of looking at the world. And to do that you, as George Orwell said, you need a different vocabulary.
SHARMINI PERIES: Speaking of vocabulary and euphemistic economic concepts, that’s what’s so unique about this book. It’s not just the words, like in Raymond Williams’, but it’s also about the theory and the concepts that we are tackling. You also talked about businessmen and how they use these terminologies in order to mislead us. So here we have a businessman in office, as President of the United States, who is proposing all kinds of economic reforms supposedly in our favor, in terms of workers. And you know, the big infrastructure projects he is proposing that are supposed to elevate and lift people out of poverty and give them jobs and so on. What is the mythology there?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, you just used the word “reform.” When I grew up, and for the past century, “reform” meant you unionize labor, you protect consumers, and you regulate the economy so that there’s less fraud against consumers. But the word “reform” today, as used by the International Monetary Fund in Greece when it insists on Greek reforms, means just the opposite: You’re supposed to lower wages by 10 or 20%. You cut back the pensions by about 50%. Ideally, you stop paying pensions in order to pay the IMF and other foreign creditors. You stop social spending. So, what you have is an inversion of the traditional vocabulary. Reform now means the opposite of what it meant early in the 20th century. It’s no longer Social Democratic. It’s right wing, anti-labor, pro-financial “reform” to cut back social spending and leave everything in a privatized way to the wealthy, and to the corporate sector.
So reform is the first word that I’d use to illustrate how the meaning has changed as it’s used in the mainstream press. Basically, what the right wing has done in this country is hijack the vocabulary that was developed by the labor movement and by socialist economists for a century. They’ve appropriated it and turned it to mean the opposite.
There are 400 words that I deal with. Many of these words show how the meaning has been turned upside down, to get people to have an upside down view of how the economy works.