Monday, September 14, 2015

Re: [blind-democracy] Where Is Our Jeremy Corbyn?

If the United States had an official National Prophet position, I
would promote Chris Hedges as our first National Prophet.
I posted a note announcing Corbin's election, before I read Hedges
article. His following article makes mine appear to have been written
by some weak-kneed old fuddy duddy.
Go get 'em, Chris!
Carl Jarvis ****


On 9/14/15, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@optonline.net> wrote:
>
> Where Is Our Jeremy Corbyn?
> http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/where_is_our_jeremy_corbyn_20150913/
> Posted on Sep 13, 2015
> By Chris Hedges
>
> Jeremy Corbyn waves in London after he was elected the leader of the
> Labour Party on Saturday. (Kirsty Wigglesworth / AP)
> The politics of Jeremy Corbyn, elected by a landslide Saturday to lead
> Britain's Labour Party after its defeat at the polls last May, are part of
> the global revolt against corporate tyranny. He had spent his long career
> as
> a pariah within his country's political establishment. But because he held
> fast to the socialist ideals that defined the old Labour Party, he has
> risen
> untarnished out of the ash heap of neoliberalism. His integrity, as well as
> his fearlessness, offers a lesson to America's self-identified left, which
> is long on rhetoric, preoccupied with accommodating the power
> elites—especially those in the Democratic Party—and very short on courage.
>
> I will not support a politician who sells out the Palestinians and panders
> to the Israel lobby any more than I will support a politician who refuses
> to
> confront the bloated military and arms industry or white supremacy and
> racial injustice. The Palestinian issue is not a tangential issue. It is an
> integral part of Americans' efforts to dismantle our war machine, the
> neoliberal policies that see austerity and violence as the primary language
> for speaking to the rest of the world, and the corroding influence of money
> in the U.S. political system. Stand up to the masters of war and the Israel
> lobby and you will probably stand up to every other corporate and
> neoliberal
> force that is cannibalizing the United States. This is what leadership is
> about. It is about having a vision. And it is about fighting for that
> vision.
> Corbyn, who supports negotiations with Hamas and Hezbollah and once invited
> members from those organizations to visit Parliament, has called for
> Israel's leaders to be put on trial for war crimes against the
> Palestinians.
> He has expressed support for the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement
> (BDS) against Israel and the call for an arms embargo against that nation.
> He would scrap Britain's Prevention of Terrorism Act, which, like the
> Patriot Act in the United States, has been used to target and harass
> Muslims. He wants the United Kingdom to withdraw from NATO. He cannot
> conceive of any situation, he has said, that would necessitate sending
> British troops abroad. He was a vocal opponent of the invasion and
> occupation of Iraq and a founder of the Stop the War Coalition. He
> denounced
> the United States for what he called its "assassination" of Osama bin
> Laden,
> saying the al-Qaida leader should have been captured and put on trial, and
> he assailed the British government for using militarized drones to kill two
> British jihadists in Syria in August. He advocates unilateral nuclear
> disarmament and has urged the elimination of Trident, his country's nuclear
> weapons system. He opposes any British military intervention in Syria and
> wants to put pressure on "our supposed allies in the region"—read Saudi
> Arabia—that support Islamic State. He has called for talks with the leaders
> of warring factions in Iraq and Afghanistan to end the conflicts.
> "There is no solution to the killing and abuse of human rights [in the
> Middle East] that involves yet more Western military action," Corbyn has
> written. "Ultimately there has to be a political solution in the region
> which bombing by NATO forces cannot bring about. The drama of the killings
> and advances by ISIS in the past few weeks is yet another result of the
> Bush-Blair war on terror since 2001. The victims of these wars are the
> refugees and those driven from their homes and the thousands of unknown
> civilians who have died and will continue to die in the region. The
> 'winners' are inevitably the arms manufacturers and those who gain from the
> natural resources of the region."
> And that is just his foreign policy.
> Corbyn says he will back significantly increasing taxes on the wealthy and
> ending the unfair tax breaks of corporations. He is for imposing safeguards
> to protect those on welfare and instituting a "maximum wage" for corporate
> executives in order to fight "grotesque levels of inequality." He would
> install widespread rent control to stop what he calls "social cleansing"
> caused by gentrification. He has called on the Bank of England to carry out
> what he terms a "People's Quantitative Easing," demanding it invest
> billions
> in housing, energy and other infrastructure projects. He supports the
> creation of a sanctuary in the Antarctic to prevent mining and oil drilling
> there. He opposes fracking. He calls for government investment to build
> renewable energy based on solar and wind, and "global regulation" to
> prevent
> the export of carbon products. And he would end the steps to privatize
> parts
> of his country's universal health care system, known as the National Health
> Service.
> As Labour veered to the right and became dominated by corporate money and
> neoliberalism under Prime Ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown—a process
> also carried out by the Democratic Party under Bill Clinton and Barack
> Obama—Corbyn became a rebel in his own party. Between 1997 and 2010, as a
> member of Parliament, where he has held a seat since 1983, he voted against
> bills or challenged positions championed by the "new" Labour Party
> leadership more than 500 times. Blair, who detests Corbyn, warned that if
> Labour backs Corbyn in the next election for prime minister (which is set
> for 2020 but can be held any time a no-confidence vote occurs in
> Parliament), it will face "annihilation" at the polls. Corbyn responded by
> suggesting that Blair should be prosecuted as a war criminal for his role
> in
> the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
> Corbyn, in the course of his roughly 40 years on the fringes of the British
> political establishment, has called for the abolition of the British
> monarchy and has described Karl Marx as "a fascinating figure who observed
> a
> great deal and from whom we can learn a great deal." He wants to
> nationalize
> energy companies and renationalize the post office and the rail service.
> "Without exception, the majority electricity, gas, water and railway
> infrastructures of Britain were built through public investment since the
> end of WWII and were all privatised at knock-down prices for the benefit of
> greedy asset-strippers by the Thatcher and [John] Major-led Tory
> governments," he wrote in a column for the Morning Star newspaper.
> He has raised the possibility of the U.K. leaving the European Union,
> citing
> the EU's draconian assault on the Greek people in the name of austerity.
> "Look at it another way," Corbyn said. "If we allow unaccountable forces to
> destroy an economy like Greece, when all that bailout money isn't going to
> the Greek people, it's going to various banks all across Europe, then I
> think we need to think very, very carefully about what role they [the EU]
> are playing and what role we are playing in that."
> Corbyn has proposed a National Education Service that would, with increased
> taxes on corporations, provide free universal education starting with day
> care and going up through vocational schools, adult education programs and
> universities. He would abolish the British equivalent of charter schools
> and
> end the tax-exempt status of the elite private schools. He would bring back
> state funding for the arts. He issued a statement in August titled "The
> arts
> are for everyone not the few; there is creativity in all of us." It is
> worth
> reading.
> The arts community in the United States, like that in Britain, is in deep
> distress. Actors, dancers, musicians, sculptors, singers, painters,
> writers,
> poets and even journalists often cannot make a living. They have few spaces
> where they can perform or publish new work. And established theaters,
> desperate to make money to survive, produce tawdry spectacles or plays that
> are empty pieces of entertainment rather than art. The war on the arts has
> been one of the major contributions to the dumbing down of America. It
> shuts
> us off from our intellectual and artistic patrimony, contributing to our
> historical and cultural amnesia. The parallel removal of the arts from
> school curriculums, now dominated by vocational skills and standardized
> testing, has cemented into place a system in which Americans have been
> taught what to think, not how to think. Self-expression and creativity,
> disciplines that make possible self-awareness, transcendence and the
> capacity for reverence, are anathemas to the corporate state. The imposed
> dogma of neoliberalism must be unquestioned.
> "Under the guise of a politically motivated austerity programme, this
> government has savaged arts funding with projects increasingly required to
> justify their artistic and social contributions in the narrow, ruthlessly
> instrumentalist approach of the Thatcher governments," Corbyn wrote in the
> August statement. "During the 1980s, [then-Prime Minister Margaret]
> Thatcher
> sought to disempower the arts community, attempting to silence the
> provocative in favour of the populist. The current climate of Treasury
> value
> measurement methodologies (taken from practises used in the property market
> and elsewhere) to try to find mechanisms appropriate to calculating the
> value of visiting art galleries or the opera are a dangerous retreat into a
> callous commercialisation of every sphere of our lives. The result has been
> a devastating £82 million in cuts to the arts council budget over the last
> 5
> years and the closure of the great majority of currently funded arts
> organisations, especially outside London."
> He went on:
> "Beyond the obvious economic and social benefits of the arts is the
> significant contribution to our communities, education, and democratic
> process they make. Studies have demonstrated the beneficial impact of drama
> studied at schools on the capacity of teenagers to communicate, learn, and
> to tolerate each other as well as on the likelihood that they will vote.
> The
> greater involvement of young people in the political process is something
> to
> be encouraged and celebrated. Further, the contribution and critique of our
> society and democracy which theatre has the capacity to offer must be
> protected. To quote David Lan, 'dissent is necessary to democracy, and
> democratic governments should have an interest in preserving sites in which
> that dissent can be expressed.' "
> Corbyn says he would also reverse the government cuts that gutted the BBC.
> He understands that the destruction of public broadcasting, which is
> designed to give a platform to voices and artists not beholden to corporate
> money, means the rise of a corporate-dominated system of propaganda, one
> that now controls most of the U.S. airwaves.
> "I firmly believe in the principle of public service broadcast and am
> fearful of following the path tread in the United States, where PBS has
> been
> hollowed out, unable to deliver the breadth of content to compete with the
> private broadcasters, and where Fox News has as a result been effectively
> allowed to dominate and set the news agenda," he wrote. "I want to see the
> Labour Party at the heart of campaigns to protect the BBC and its license
> fee. When we [Labour] return to power we must fully fund public service
> broadcasting in all its forms, recognising the crucial role the BBC has
> played in establishing and supporting world class domestic arts, drama, and
> entertainment."
> Corbyn became a vegetarian at the age of 20 after working on a pig farm and
> witnessing the abuse, torture and slaughter of the animals. He champions
> animal rights. He does not own a car, bicycles almost everywhere and is
> notoriously frugal, usually filing the lowest expense of any member of
> Parliament. His favorite novelist is the late Nigerian writer Chinua
> Achebe,
> who wrote "Things Fall Apart," an exploration of the destructive force of
> colonialism. Corbyn speaks fluent Spanish and comes from a left-wing
> family.
> (His parents met at a rally in support of the Republicans fighting Franco's
> fascists during the Spanish Civil War.)
> He is acutely aware of the problem of male violence against women. He would
> halt the government's closure of domestic violence centers for women, fight
> discrimination against women in the workplace and bolster laws against
> sexual harassment and sexual assault. He says his Cabinet would be 50
> percent women.
> Corbyn's ascent to the head of the Labour Party has already triggered a
> backlash against him by the forces of the neoliberal political order. These
> forces are determined to prevent him from becoming prime minister. The
> entrenched elites within his own party—a number of whom have already
> resigned from party leadership positions in protest of Corbyn's
> election—will seek to do to him what the Democratic establishment did in
> 1972 to George McGovern after he won the party's nomination. The rhetoric
> of
> fear has already begun. Prime Minister David Cameron on Sunday tweeted:
> "The
> Labour Party is now a threat to our national security, our economic
> security
> and your family's security." This battle will be ugly.
> Corbyn, like Syriza in Greece and Podemos in Spain, is part of the new
> popular resistance that is rising up from the ruins of neoliberalism and
> globalization to fight the international banking system and American
> imperialism. We have yet to mount this battle effectively in the United
> States. But we, especially because we live in the heart of empire, have a
> special responsibility to defy the machine, held in place by the Democratic
> Party establishment, the war industry, Wall Street and groups such as the
> Israel lobby. We too must work to build a socialist nation. We may not win,
> but this fight is the only hope left to save ourselves from the predatory
> forces bent on the destruction of democracy and the ecosystem on which we
> depend for life. If the forces that oppose us triumph, we will have no
> future left.
>
>
>
> http://www.truthdig.com/ http://www.truthdig.com/
> Where Is Our Jeremy Corbyn?
> http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/where_is_our_jeremy_corbyn_20150913/
> Posted on Sep 13, 2015
> By Chris Hedges
>
> Jeremy Corbyn waves in London after he was elected the leader of the Labour
> Party on Saturday. (Kirsty Wigglesworth / AP)
> The politics of Jeremy Corbyn, elected by a landslide Saturday to lead
> Britain's Labour Party after its defeat at the polls last May, are part of
> the global revolt against corporate tyranny. He had spent his long career
> as
> a pariah within his country's political establishment. But because he held
> fast to the socialist ideals that defined the old Labour Party, he has
> risen
> untarnished out of the ash heap of neoliberalism. His integrity, as well as
> his fearlessness, offers a lesson to America's self-identified left, which
> is long on rhetoric, preoccupied with accommodating the power
> elites—especially those in the Democratic Party—and very short on courage.
> I will not support a politician who sells out the Palestinians and panders
> to the Israel lobby any more than I will support a politician who refuses
> to
> confront the bloated military and arms industry or white supremacy and
> racial injustice. The Palestinian issue is not a tangential issue. It is an
> integral part of Americans' efforts to dismantle our war machine, the
> neoliberal policies that see austerity and violence as the primary language
> for speaking to the rest of the world, and the corroding influence of money
> in the U.S. political system. Stand up to the masters of war and the Israel
> lobby and you will probably stand up to every other corporate and
> neoliberal
> force that is cannibalizing the United States. This is what leadership is
> about. It is about having a vision. And it is about fighting for that
> vision.
> Corbyn, who supports negotiations with Hamas and Hezbollah and once invited
> members from those organizations to visit Parliament, has called for
> Israel's leaders to be put on trial for war crimes against the
> Palestinians.
> He has expressed support for the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement
> (BDS) against Israel and the call for an arms embargo against that nation.
> He would scrap Britain's Prevention of Terrorism Act, which, like the
> Patriot Act in the United States, has been used to target and harass
> Muslims. He wants the United Kingdom to withdraw from NATO. He cannot
> conceive of any situation, he has said, that would necessitate sending
> British troops abroad. He was a vocal opponent of the invasion and
> occupation of Iraq and a founder of the Stop the War Coalition. He
> denounced
> the United States for what he called its "assassination" of Osama bin
> Laden,
> saying the al-Qaida leader should have been captured and put on trial, and
> he assailed the British government for using militarized drones to kill two
> British jihadists in Syria in August. He advocates unilateral nuclear
> disarmament and has urged the elimination of Trident, his country's nuclear
> weapons system. He opposes any British military intervention in Syria and
> wants to put pressure on "our supposed allies in the region"—read Saudi
> Arabia—that support Islamic State. He has called for talks with the leaders
> of warring factions in Iraq and Afghanistan to end the conflicts.
> "There is no solution to the killing and abuse of human rights [in the
> Middle East] that involves yet more Western military action," Corbyn has
> written. "Ultimately there has to be a political solution in the region
> which bombing by NATO forces cannot bring about. The drama of the killings
> and advances by ISIS in the past few weeks is yet another result of the
> Bush-Blair war on terror since 2001. The victims of these wars are the
> refugees and those driven from their homes and the thousands of unknown
> civilians who have died and will continue to die in the region. The
> 'winners' are inevitably the arms manufacturers and those who gain from the
> natural resources of the region."
> And that is just his foreign policy.
> Corbyn says he will back significantly increasing taxes on the wealthy and
> ending the unfair tax breaks of corporations. He is for imposing safeguards
> to protect those on welfare and instituting a "maximum wage" for corporate
> executives in order to fight "grotesque levels of inequality." He would
> install widespread rent control to stop what he calls "social cleansing"
> caused by gentrification. He has called on the Bank of England to carry out
> what he terms a "People's Quantitative Easing," demanding it invest
> billions
> in housing, energy and other infrastructure projects. He supports the
> creation of a sanctuary in the Antarctic to prevent mining and oil drilling
> there. He opposes fracking. He calls for government investment to build
> renewable energy based on solar and wind, and "global regulation" to
> prevent
> the export of carbon products. And he would end the steps to privatize
> parts
> of his country's universal health care system, known as the National Health
> Service.
> As Labour veered to the right and became dominated by corporate money and
> neoliberalism under Prime Ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown—a process
> also carried out by the Democratic Party under Bill Clinton and Barack
> Obama—Corbyn became a rebel in his own party. Between 1997 and 2010, as a
> member of Parliament, where he has held a seat since 1983, he voted against
> bills or challenged positions championed by the "new" Labour Party
> leadership more than 500 times. Blair, who detests Corbyn, warned that if
> Labour backs Corbyn in the next election for prime minister (which is set
> for 2020 but can be held any time a no-confidence vote occurs in
> Parliament), it will face "annihilation" at the polls. Corbyn responded by
> suggesting that Blair should be prosecuted as a war criminal for his role
> in
> the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
> Corbyn, in the course of his roughly 40 years on the fringes of the British
> political establishment, has called for the abolition of the British
> monarchy and has described Karl Marx as "a fascinating figure who observed
> a
> great deal and from whom we can learn a great deal." He wants to
> nationalize
> energy companies and renationalize the post office and the rail service.
> "Without exception, the majority electricity, gas, water and railway
> infrastructures of Britain were built through public investment since the
> end of WWII and were all privatised at knock-down prices for the benefit of
> greedy asset-strippers by the Thatcher and [John] Major-led Tory
> governments," he wrote in a column for the Morning Star newspaper.
> He has raised the possibility of the U.K. leaving the European Union,
> citing
> the EU's draconian assault on the Greek people in the name of austerity.
> "Look at it another way," Corbyn said. "If we allow unaccountable forces to
> destroy an economy like Greece, when all that bailout money isn't going to
> the Greek people, it's going to various banks all across Europe, then I
> think we need to think very, very carefully about what role they [the EU]
> are playing and what role we are playing in that."
> Corbyn has proposed a National Education Service that would, with increased
> taxes on corporations, provide free universal education starting with day
> care and going up through vocational schools, adult education programs and
> universities. He would abolish the British equivalent of charter schools
> and
> end the tax-exempt status of the elite private schools. He would bring back
> state funding for the arts. He issued a statement in August titled "The
> arts
> are for everyone not the few; there is creativity in all of us." It is
> worth
> reading.
> The arts community in the United States, like that in Britain, is in deep
> distress. Actors, dancers, musicians, sculptors, singers, painters,
> writers,
> poets and even journalists often cannot make a living. They have few spaces
> where they can perform or publish new work. And established theaters,
> desperate to make money to survive, produce tawdry spectacles or plays that
> are empty pieces of entertainment rather than art. The war on the arts has
> been one of the major contributions to the dumbing down of America. It
> shuts
> us off from our intellectual and artistic patrimony, contributing to our
> historical and cultural amnesia. The parallel removal of the arts from
> school curriculums, now dominated by vocational skills and standardized
> testing, has cemented into place a system in which Americans have been
> taught what to think, not how to think. Self-expression and creativity,
> disciplines that make possible self-awareness, transcendence and the
> capacity for reverence, are anathemas to the corporate state. The imposed
> dogma of neoliberalism must be unquestioned.
> "Under the guise of a politically motivated austerity programme, this
> government has savaged arts funding with projects increasingly required to
> justify their artistic and social contributions in the narrow, ruthlessly
> instrumentalist approach of the Thatcher governments," Corbyn wrote in the
> August statement. "During the 1980s, [then-Prime Minister Margaret]
> Thatcher
> sought to disempower the arts community, attempting to silence the
> provocative in favour of the populist. The current climate of Treasury
> value
> measurement methodologies (taken from practises used in the property market
> and elsewhere) to try to find mechanisms appropriate to calculating the
> value of visiting art galleries or the opera are a dangerous retreat into a
> callous commercialisation of every sphere of our lives. The result has been
> a devastating £82 million in cuts to the arts council budget over the last
> 5
> years and the closure of the great majority of currently funded arts
> organisations, especially outside London."
> He went on:
> "Beyond the obvious economic and social benefits of the arts is the
> significant contribution to our communities, education, and democratic
> process they make. Studies have demonstrated the beneficial impact of drama
> studied at schools on the capacity of teenagers to communicate, learn, and
> to tolerate each other as well as on the likelihood that they will vote.
> The
> greater involvement of young people in the political process is something
> to
> be encouraged and celebrated. Further, the contribution and critique of our
> society and democracy which theatre has the capacity to offer must be
> protected. To quote David Lan, 'dissent is necessary to democracy, and
> democratic governments should have an interest in preserving sites in which
> that dissent can be expressed.' "
> Corbyn says he would also reverse the government cuts that gutted the BBC.
> He understands that the destruction of public broadcasting, which is
> designed to give a platform to voices and artists not beholden to corporate
> money, means the rise of a corporate-dominated system of propaganda, one
> that now controls most of the U.S. airwaves.
> "I firmly believe in the principle of public service broadcast and am
> fearful of following the path tread in the United States, where PBS has
> been
> hollowed out, unable to deliver the breadth of content to compete with the
> private broadcasters, and where Fox News has as a result been effectively
> allowed to dominate and set the news agenda," he wrote. "I want to see the
> Labour Party at the heart of campaigns to protect the BBC and its license
> fee. When we [Labour] return to power we must fully fund public service
> broadcasting in all its forms, recognising the crucial role the BBC has
> played in establishing and supporting world class domestic arts, drama, and
> entertainment."
> Corbyn became a vegetarian at the age of 20 after working on a pig farm and
> witnessing the abuse, torture and slaughter of the animals. He champions
> animal rights. He does not own a car, bicycles almost everywhere and is
> notoriously frugal, usually filing the lowest expense of any member of
> Parliament. His favorite novelist is the late Nigerian writer Chinua
> Achebe,
> who wrote "Things Fall Apart," an exploration of the destructive force of
> colonialism. Corbyn speaks fluent Spanish and comes from a left-wing
> family.
> (His parents met at a rally in support of the Republicans fighting Franco's
> fascists during the Spanish Civil War.)
> He is acutely aware of the problem of male violence against women. He would
> halt the government's closure of domestic violence centers for women, fight
> discrimination against women in the workplace and bolster laws against
> sexual harassment and sexual assault. He says his Cabinet would be 50
> percent women.
> Corbyn's ascent to the head of the Labour Party has already triggered a
> backlash against him by the forces of the neoliberal political order. These
> forces are determined to prevent him from becoming prime minister. The
> entrenched elites within his own party—a number of whom have already
> resigned from party leadership positions in protest of Corbyn's
> election—will seek to do to him what the Democratic establishment did in
> 1972 to George McGovern after he won the party's nomination. The rhetoric
> of
> fear has already begun. Prime Minister David Cameron on Sunday tweeted:
> "The
> Labour Party is now a threat to our national security, our economic
> security
> and your family's security." This battle will be ugly.
> Corbyn, like Syriza in Greece and Podemos in Spain, is part of the new
> popular resistance that is rising up from the ruins of neoliberalism and
> globalization to fight the international banking system and American
> imperialism. We have yet to mount this battle effectively in the United
> States. But we, especially because we live in the heart of empire, have a
> special responsibility to defy the machine, held in place by the Democratic
> Party establishment, the war industry, Wall Street and groups such as the
> Israel lobby. We too must work to build a socialist nation. We may not win,
> but this fight is the only hope left to save ourselves from the predatory
> forces bent on the destruction of democracy and the ecosystem on which we
> depend for life. If the forces that oppose us triumph, we will have no
> future left.
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