Sunday, February 18, 2018

‘An Endless War’: Why 4 U.S. Soldiers Died in a Remote African Desert

‘An Endless War’: Why 4 U.S. Soldiers Died in a Remote African Desert

We will be discussing next week... we've been saying this for five years now.   Endless, meaningless intervention in places we cannot even find on a map.

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

MI: Campaign wants to push insurers away from US coal after progress in Europe

""If our world gets 4°C hotter, it will no longer be insurable," AXA wrote. "As a global insurer and investor, it is up to us to set an example by slowing climate change as much as possible, while there is still time.""



MI: Campaign wants to push insurers away from US coal after progress in Europe

Federal Grants Meant for Clean Coal Misspent on Liquor, Spas

Federal Grants Meant for Clean Coal Misspent on Liquor, Spas

Billionaire Trump Foe Behind Solar Energy Measures in Arizona, Other States

Billionaire Trump Foe Behind Solar Energy Measures in Arizona, Other States



OK, this is one way to make things happen...

Trump budget would gut EPA, DOE renewables office

Trump budget would gut EPA, DOE renewables office



And again, why the Trump administration is insane.

No Drop in U.S. Carbon Footprint Expected Through 2050, Energy Department Says

Why the Trump administration is insane.

No Drop in U.S. Carbon Footprint Expected Through 2050, Energy Department Says




Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Exceptional Victims: On Militarism, Race, and Exceptionalism

"The new exceptionalism is born of the vilification of the antiwar movement and the veneration of U.S. troops as heroic victims."

Exceptional Victims  (Christian Appy, in the Boston Review)
To understand our current political moment, we must understand how political and media forces, especially on the right, responded to this embarrassment and to criticisms such as King’s. Conservatives at the time were determined to rebuild everything they thought the war had destroyed—U.S. power, pride, prestige, and patriotism. Above all, they sought to resuscitate a faith in U.S. exceptionalism. That restoration project was surprisingly successful, but it produced a new, makeshift form of U.S. exceptionalism that is different from its original model. In place of the universalistic, idealistic, intrinsically confident faith in national superiority of the 1950s, the post-Vietnam version of exceptionalism is ever more nationalistic, defensive, bombastic, and xenophobic. Both versions are dangerously imperialistic and aggressive, but our latest model is more explicitly founded on a demonization of foreign—primarily nonwhite—others.

Perhaps the most characteristic feature of the new U.S. exceptionalism is the belief that the world’s greatest nation is not the envy of the world, not a shining city on a hill, but the victim of outrageous and inexplicable attacks from nonwhite countries and cultures. Whether the attacks are real (such as 9/11) or imagined (such as Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction), they are almost always attributed to “rogue” nations, terrorist groups, religious extremists, or nonwhite immigrants whose actions are represented as barbaric hate crimes with no plausible historical motive or U.S. provocation.
The new U.S. exceptionalism has many sources but two important ones were born from the bitter memory of failure and defeat in Vietnam: the effective campaigns to vilify the antiwar movement and to instill deference to the military by constructing an image of U.S. troops and veterans as icons of heroic victimhood. 

Monday, February 5, 2018

Fossil Fuels and Anti-Democratic Politics: ALEC sponsors legislation to criminalize pipeline protests, and it's spreading

OHIO AND IOWA ARE THE LATEST OF EIGHT STATES TO CONSIDER ANTI-PROTEST BILLS AIMED AT PIPELINE OPPONENTS
February 2 2018, 10:58 a.m. 
The bills were proposed less than a week after the right-wing American Legislative Exchange Council, which has close ties to the fossil fuel industry, finalized a model policy titled the “Critical Infrastructure Protection Act,” which calls for more severe punishment for those who trespass on facilities including oil pipelines, petroleum refineries, liquid natural gas terminals, and railroads used to transport oil and gas.

Ex-Military Men Offer Insightful Critiques of Permanent War and Generational War

We will be discussing the long (and ongoing war) in the MIddle East in coming days.  Here are two recent pieces by ex-military who dissect some of the many problems with these wars:

On how America's generals are still trying to re-fight the Vietnam War, in places like Iraq, Afghanistan, and North Africa:

The War that Never Ends
by Major Danny Sjursen, is a U.S. Army strategist and former history instructor at West Point. He served tours with reconnaissance units in Iraq and Afghanistan. He has written a memoir and critical analysis of the Iraq War, Ghost Riders of Baghdad: Soldiers, Civilians, and the Myth of the Surge.

highlights:

"That war and its ill-fated lessons will undoubtedly continue to influence U.S. commanders until a new set of myths, explaining away a new set of failures in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere, take over, possibly thanks to books by veterans of these conflicts about how Washington could have won the war on terror."

Our Enemy, Ourselves
by William Astore, a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF) and history professor, blogs at Bracing Views.

highlights:

"4. Generational wars -- ones, that is, that never end -- should not be considered a measure of American resolve, but of American stupidity.  If you wage war long, you wage it wrong, especially if you want to protect democratic institutions in this country."