December 07, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Current Events, Ecology, Jennifer Browdy
Telling the Story of Climate Change
by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
You probably didn’t notice, but this past week another round of major international climate talks were held in Doha, Qatar, surely one of the least “green†locations on the globe.
The mainstream press barely bothered to give a nod to what has come to be a mind-numbing ritual of bait, switch and dodge. The alternative press knew better than to look to the assembled ministers in Doha for any real news, focusing instead on the grim report released early last week by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and Climate Analytics.
The 84-page report, titled “Turn Down the Heat†and funded by that radical fringe group known as the World Bank, demonstrates that if we continue our reckless heating of the planet at the present rate, all the scenarios of which readers of this blog are well aware — sea level rise, droughts and floods leading to severe food shortages, more frequent and more severe storms, loss of biodiversity and loss of human life on a biblical scale — will come to pass. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 06, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Ecology, Economy, Evaggelos Vallianatos
Greece Struggles With a Financial and Ecological Tsunami
by Evaggelos Vallianatos
When in 2008 the “too big to fail” Western banks brought misery and near collapse in the economies and societies of Europe and America, the same banks hit Greece with a ton of bricks.
Greece is a small country that has no control of its currency. Second, the Greek and foreign elites of Europe and America that control both the euro, the currency of Greece and the countries of the European Union, and the giant banks, decided to shock Greece in order to make the country a pliant customer.
Since Greece can’t pay back the banks, the European Central Bank, the European Commission and America’s International Monetary Fund, known as troika, intervened to make certain the borrowers got their money back. The troika pays the borrowers and then lends Greece more money at high interest rates. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 05, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Politics, Roberto Rodriguez
War and Peace in the 21st Century
by Roberto Cintli Rodriguez
Despite the political rhetoric, America is not defined by its division into red and blue states, but by its addiction to imperialism, exceptionalism and a military budget that positions it as The United States of War.
In the United States, Arizona has come to represent many things; a super-magnet for the ignorant, the backward and the insane; a home to racial supremacists and xenophobes and, most of all, a laboratory for hate legislation.
And yet its real political function nowadays is that of a convenient political distraction.
Truth is, Arizona is but a mirror of the rest of the nation. It is what permits Americans to point the finger at this desolate state, allowing them to feel superior because it represents what America isn’t. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 04, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Current Events, Economy, Robert C. Koehler
On Brand Names and Mass Graves…
by Robert C. Koehler
Cheap clothes! Their cost, as it turns out, is beyond calculation.
“Babul Mia said he identified his wife Mariam Begum, 25, who was apparently burnt beyond recognition, but he could identify her bangles and her small teeth,†reported Bangladesh’s main English-language newspaper, The Daily Star.
“Zahera Begum, who worked on the fifth floor of Tazreen Fashions, too, was identified by her husband Iqramul from her nose ring, bangles and necklace.â€
So a fire swept through a sweatshop in Bangladesh on Nov. 24, killing at least 112 people, nearly half of whom were unidentifiable and buried in a mass grave. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 03, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Current Events, Politics, Randall Amster
The Just Actions of a ‘Fan of Sunshine’
by Randall Amster
Whatever one’s views about his alleged actions, you would need a pretty hard shell not to be moved by the case of Bradley Manning. Hero to some, traitor to others, this diminutive soldier has endured an unprecedented level of mistreatment, languishing in a largely
incommunicado pretrial state for more than two years and facing repeated episodes of humiliation and degradation. Compounding this case is Manning’s status as a gay solider, for which he had experienced repercussions well before gaining international notoriety as a purported Wikileaks source for some of the whistleblowing site’s most damning allegations about governmental and military machinations around the world.
Being accused of revealing the “emperor’s new clothes†is likely to land one in hot water, but Manning’s treatment has crossed all bounds of fairness, decency, and legality. Having one’s life stripped down (literally) to its most basic functions, being confined in a space barely the size of a standard bathroom, having to formally ask even for toilet paper while standing at attention, and getting access to the outdoors for only 20 minutes per day is the sort of thing that could drive anyone mad. Read the rest of this entry →
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November 30, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: David Swanson, Economy, Politics
Marking December 1st as a Day of Peace
by David Swanson
I’ve been fond of December 1st ever since I was born on it. I later found out that it had been on a December 1st that Rosa Parks had sat down and refused to stand up or move to the back of that racist bus in Montgomery. Later still I found out about a December 1st that had happened still earlier.
It was on December 1, 1948, that President José Figueres Ferrer of Costa Rica abolished the military of Costa Rica. He didn’t “cut” its projected dream budget by a teeny fraction that sounded bigger if multiplied by 10 and announced as a reduction “over 10 years.” He didn’t cut it in the ordinary sense of actually cutting it. He abolished it. Costa Rica put its military in a museum and a museum in its military headquarters. It turned its military bases into schools. It turned its military budget into a fund for useful projects. In 1986, President Oscar Arias Sánchez declared December 1st the DÃa de la Abolición del Ejército (Military Abolition Day). Read the rest of this entry →
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November 29, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Community, Culture, Randall Amster, Windy Cooler
Strengthening the Ties that Bind in an Era of Alienation
by Randall Amster and Windy Cooler
As we move into the winter of 2012, the days are getting shorter and the sociopolitical realities put before us seem, in some ways, to be darkening by the minute. How is it that we do not know how to live in the world, in those ways that have sustained and advanced
the human experiment for eons? Today we have reactionary, regressive policies masking as “progress,†replacing the reciprocal bonds of authentic community with the wafer-thin ties of social networking and, in the process, turning our alienation and dysfunction into a nouveau spectacle. During the recent Israeli assault on Gaza, for example, a reporter for the Jerusalem Post actually asked residents in fear for their children’s lives if anyone could give an interview about how the shrieking sirens were affecting pets. It is so taboo to speak of what really matters with the people who matter that we have to be encouraged to do so. Read the rest of this entry →
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