This is how we can end xenophobia in a year | Independent on Saturday – IOL

War refugee Samuel Fikiri Cinini abandoned medical school amid fighting in the DRC and has since worked his way up to an academic with a doctorate at UKZN. Picture: Duncan GuyDurban - Interventions by the government could eradicate xenophobia within a year, according to a University of KwaZulu-Natal academic.

Samuel Fikiri Cinini, a lecturer in criminal justice and forensic investigation, told the Independent on Saturday that South Africa needed to make xenophobia a crime, create a panel of African foreigner representatives and appoint a branch of the police to deal with matters relating to this.

A foreigner from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Cinini lists these recommendations in his recent doctoral thesis, A Criminological Analysis on the Safety and Security of African Foreign Nationals in Durban.

If there was this law, people would fear doing it. But they dont and thats why they do it, he said.

Theres no punishment attached to it. People are free to kill, loot and damage and its just xenophobia. It should be considered not just an attitude, but a crime.

Cinini further called for the establishment of a representative body with which the government could consult and get to know the challenges and together come up with suggestions and solutions to assist these people to live with human rights.

My thesis also suggests that the government should create a new police branch dealing with foreign nationals and that police should be trained in terms of migration and fully empowered so that they can deal with migrants.

Cinini challenged the perception that foreigners took jobs away from locals, saying they were excluded from the government sector and usually did not have access to the private sector because broad-based black economic empowerment was an obstacle to them.

Competition was, therefore, more in the sector of casual work.

He recommended that ward councillors be trained to educate South Africans that their country was a signatory to many treaties, meaning that foreigners had access, that many were refugees from wars and oppression and were legally in the country.

There are no refugee camps here. Foreign nationals go into the open community.

He also questioned why there was xenophobia in South Africa and not in other African countries where there were also significant populations of non-resident Africans.

Cinini said that while it was true that some were involved in the illegal drug trade, it was only through corrupt government officials and police that drugs came into South Africa in the first place, especially at the Durban harbour.

He said that apart from politicians occasionally making xenophobic statements, the targeting of foreigners was the result of South Africans dependence on being close to government officials, through nepotism. They therefore did not target their frustration at the government but elsewhere.

They are too scared of the government, he said, adding that they feared targeting it would lead to their losing what service delivery they received.

That fear was, however, negligible to what he had lived through in his country when it was called Zaire, under the dictator Mobutu Sese Seko.

Mobutu was killing people for any mistake they made.

Cinini, who is from Bukavu in the eastern DRC - the same city as recent Nobel laurate Denis Mukwege - began his journey to South Africa in 2006 when he fled fighting between government forces and Congo Rally for Democracy rebels, he said.

Choosing South Africa for its democracy, he spent two years as a car guard, which he called a safe place for foreigners in South Africa.

Locals dont want that job but there is money in it.

He said he was able to live frugally, send money home and save.

It was not easy. You just have to know what you want, what youre here for and who you are.

On his savings, he studied a non-degree course in English at UKZN and eventually qualified for a student loan which he is now paying back, he said. In the process, he has also moved from sharing crammed inner-city accommodation to owning a flat on North Beach and acquiring a doctorate.

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This is how we can end xenophobia in a year | Independent on Saturday - IOL

OP-ED Beyond Hong Lim Park: What Singapore decides to do with dissent could determine the future of the next generation – The Independent

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SingaporeDissent has been much in the headlines lately, what with the whole world keeping its eyes on the protests in Hong Kong for the past four months. Back home, a recently canceled one-week course on dissent at Yale-NUS College drew concern from the president of Yale University, while a couple who wore anti death-penalty t-shirts to a run supporting former convicts found themselves investigated by police.

The issue of whether authorities overreacted to the t-shirt wearing pair was debated online.

For historian and activist Pingtjin Thum, it was an example of systemic oppression. He wrote on his Facebook account, the real damage is fear and intimidation being sowed in the wider population, with the clear lesson not to express an opinion contrary to the official government position.

For Polish blogger Michael Petraeus, whose blog Critical Spectator has shown support for government policies, the issue of the runners statement shirt had nothing to do with quashing dissent or muzzling the public. It is about preventing a precedent and protecting the democratic order of the country. Mr Petraeus went on to explain that Singapores democracy, being very fragile, has always set strict rules in place to prevent conflict from erupting through an uncontrollable chain reaction.

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In the west, dissent is considered to be foundational to democracy, and people regard it as a right to speak up on issues that they disagree with. American historian and playwright Howard Zinn said, Protest beyond the law is not a departure from democracy; it is absolutely essential to it, while author and activist Barbara Ehrenreich wrote, Dissent, rebellion, and all-around hell-raising remain the true duty of patriots.

In Asia, dissent is considerably less tolerated both historically and in the present day, with a 2018 Amnesty International report showing that the repression of dissent has become an alarming and intensifying trend in several countries such as China, Cambodia and Bangladesh.

Interestingly, there are a number of young people, many of whom are in their teenage years, who are making names for themselves as dissenters in todays fractious, and I dare say, even dangerous environment.

These are young people who are standing up against the status quo and have chosen to make a difference. Presently, you can barely open up any news site and not hear about Swedish environmental activistGreta Thunberg, who is all of 16 years old. Ms Thunberg took a boat from Europe to the United States last month to participate in the UN Youth Climate Summit, as well as to testify in Congress about the current climate crisis.

Hong Kongs Joshua Wong, age 23, has been hailed as one of the heroes of his citys largely unorganised protests, is also in the US as of the writing of this piece, drumming up international support for the demonstrators, who have been the target of increasing police brutality.

Pakistans Malala Yousafzai, now 22, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 for her years-long struggle for the rights and education of children, especially females, in countries where there is oppression against them. When she was 15, she was shot in the face by a gunman from the Taliban.

In the US, teenagers and young people have taken the lead in the gun control issue, especially after the Stoneman Douglas High Schoolshooting on February 14, 2018, when a shooter took the lives of 17 people and injured 17 others. Some of the students from the school have made it their mission to change the law concerning the right to bear arms.

Even Thailand has its own version of Greta Thunberg, a 12-year-old named Ralyn Lilly Satidtanasarn, who has declared war against plastic.

There are some who would argue that dissent is simply not in Singapores DNA. There is a proper venue for dissent, Hong Lim Park, the only area in the country where protests are legally allowed. There are rules and conditions governing public protests, to put safeguards in place. However, such rules and conditions can imaginably put a damper on the spontaneity and passions that fuel demonstrations.

What then, is the future of dissent in Singapore? Will the country produce world-changers such as Greta Thunberg or Joshua Wong, who are not without detractors in these parts?

Perhaps middle ground can be found between Hong Lim Park and the protests in Hong Kong. Perhaps part of the freedom necessary for the youth to develop critical thinking and innovation may be given to them, alongside the order, prosperity, and peace that they already have. -/TISG

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OP-ED Beyond Hong Lim Park: What Singapore decides to do with dissent could determine the future of the next generation - The Independent

Ijaw group kicks against NDDC appointments, asks Buhari to intervene – Legit.ng

- There are dissenting voices over the recent appointments of the board of the NDDC

- A group known as Western Ijaw Consultative Assembly say the Ijaws have been sideline on the board

- The group stated that excluding Ijaws from the board is deliberate and an act of injustice and oppression

The Western Ijaw Consultative Assembly have kicked against the recent appointment of the board of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

The group made its stance known after its monthly meting held recently in Delta state.

Recall that President Muhammadu Buhari recently reconstituted the board of the NDDC.

The office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation on Tuesday, August 27, released the names of the new NDDC members.

The group described the action of the government as an act of injustice, marginalization and oppression.

They further lamented that the action is the deliberate exclusion of Ijaws from appointments and opportunities due us.

Time and principle enshrined in the NDDC Establishment Act has offered the good people of Delta state the opportunity to produce at least another Managing Director.

This rare opportunity offers any good leader with a sense of history to correct the ethnic bias inherent in the previous board appointments.

However, the very unique opportunity has been snatched by people parading themselves as close allies to of the federal powers, to further their ungodly anti-Ijaw, anti-progress ploy for the sake of satisfying narrow, parochial ethnic agenda by the nomination of another Urhobo national for the third time to occupy the position of the Managing Director of the NDDC.

This is not fair to the Ijaws that produce the bulk of the oil and gas in Delta state; neither does it engender inter-ethnic peace and harmony, the group stated.

The group alleged that some over-zealous politicians are working assiduously to maliciously push the Ijaws out of the political power play in Nigeria.

According to them, politicians like Ovie Omo-Agege and his cohorts have taken liberty of their position in the federal government to oppress us. He has shown that he is anti-Ijaw and does not want our development and progress.

This is a man clamoring to be the next governor of Delta state. If he can treat us this badly as a Deputy Senate President, imagine what will become of him if elected as governor.

The group called on President Buhari to correct this injustice as a matter of urgency.

Similarly, a group, Civil Society Groups for Good Governance (CSGGG), has called for an urgent investigation into the announcement of new board members of the NDDC by President Buhari.

The group in a statement sent to journalists on Wednesday, August 28, and signed by its president, Comrade Dominic Ogakwu, stated that the procedure employed for the purported dissolution of the acting management of the NDDC and appointment of a new board for the commission, lies in bad taste and it is worrisome.

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Ijaw group kicks against NDDC appointments, asks Buhari to intervene - Legit.ng

BC supporter of Modi’s actions in Kashmir insults NDP leader Jagmeet Singh – Ricochet Media

If the silence of many local New Democrats in Surrey, B.C., over the slandering of their own federal leader by a local Hindu nationalist is any indication, the pro-India lobby is getting stronger in Canada.

Many local NDP representatives, who often come from trade unions and tout their philosophy of international solidarity, have failed to stand up against Parshotam Goel, who described Singh as mentally retarded and called for a boycott of the NDPs federal leader during a press conference held in Surrey on Aug. 15 in response to a question about human rights for the people of Kashmir.

Goel is a supporter of the right-wing Hindu nationalist Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modis actions in Kashmir, where the Indian government has recently intensified its military presence and repression after revoking the special status given to the state.

Phones and Internet services have been disrupted, as the region remains cut off from the rest of a country that claims Kashmir is an integral part. Kashmiri politicians have been detained, while physical violence continues to be applied to dissidents with impunity.

Modi and his supporters claim that the move was necessary to contain terrorism and violent struggle for an independent Kashmir. They have gone to the extent of labelling anyone who criticizes their approach to Kashmir as anti-national.

Goel is associated with the Laxminarayan Hindu temple in Surrey, which hosted Modi in 2015. During the Aug. 15 press conference to support the Modi governments decision on Kashmir, Goel insulted Singh after being asked about a recent statement by the NDP leader criticizing the Modi government for committing human rights violations in Kashmir.

He doesnt deserve to be NDP leader, Goel said about Singh when asked about Singhs comments at the press conference by Omni TV reporter Haroon Gaffar. I would especially tell the general public, boycott openly of such a mentally retarded person, Goel added.

Earlier in August, the federal NDP had issued a statement on the repression in Kashmir:

New Democrats are deeply concerned by reports of the Indian governments crackdown in recent days in Kashmir. The government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently took steps to revoke section 370 of the Indian constitution, which granted Kashmir considerable autonomy, and moved to arrest top Kashmiri political leaders, deploy thousands of troops, impose a shutdown of telephone and internet services and restrict peaceful assembly.

One month since the press conference, there has been no public reaction to Goels comments from most NDP MLAs in Surrey or Singhs party.

Notably, some NDP MLAs are close to the Indian consulate and the lobby group known as Friends of India. They have frequently attended public events where Goel and officials of the Indian government were present. Recently, some of the MLAs participated in a series of events organized and sponsored by the Indian consulate, but they have stayed away from rallies and demonstrations held in solidarity with the people of Kashmir. They have even refused to make a statement on Kashmir, saying this is a federal matter. This despite the fact that NDP MLAs and MPPs in Alberta and Ontario have strongly spoken out against the oppression in Kashmir.

All this suggests how influential the pro-India lobby has become in Canadian politics. If the NDP, which claims to be a champion of social justice, cannot stand up for the underdog and even for its own leader, then there is something seriously wrong with its current crop of political leaders.

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BC supporter of Modi's actions in Kashmir insults NDP leader Jagmeet Singh - Ricochet Media

IOK matter of survival of Pakistan: Firdous – The News International

IOK matter of survival of Pakistan: Firdous

ISLAMABAD: Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Information and Broadcasting Dr. Firdous Ashiq Awan Monday called for unity among different segments of society, including religious and political, to effectively highlight the plight of Kashmiri people.

Speaking at an All Parties Kashmir conference here, she said there were close bonds between the Pakistani nation and Kashmiri people, adding that Pakistan was incomplete without Kashmir.

She said Kashmir was not a political issue but a matter of survival of Pakistan. It is a matter of pride for the nation that a daring leader in the form of Imran Khan is today the prime minister of Pakistan, who has openly challenged Indian PM Modi, she said.

Talking about the governments endeavours to project Kashmir issue, particularly after August 5 illegal actions of Indian regime, she said it was for the first that the European Parliament had discussed the issue of Pakistan.

She continued that the declaration issued by the Human Rights Council was a big success of Pakistan. However, she emphasised that there was a lot to be done yet for settlement of Kashmir issue as per the UN Council resolutions.

India, she noted, had unleashed a wave of oppression in the Occupied Kashmir but the Kashmiri people there were standing firm with regard to their just struggle for the right to self-determination.

She said, It is part of our faith that oppression perishes when it exceeds limits. Dr. Awan contended that the government had effectively highlighted Kashmir dispute at the international level under the leadership of Prime Minister Imran Khan and achieved diplomatic successes.

Prime Minister Imran Khan, she said, had in unequivocal terms exposed the fascist face of Modi government. She said Imran Khan will effectively raise the voice of Kashmiris in the UN General Assembly.

Earlier, in tweets, she said the government's stepsfor prosperity of people and national development had started yielding results. She said the government was implementing the agenda of economic reforms under the leadership of Prime Minister Imran Khan and taking measures to improve the countrys economic condition.

She explained that enhancement of tax revenue and reduction in fiscal deficit were the governments priorities, adding that Rs580 billion tax in the first two months of the current fiscal year had been collected against Rs509 billion in the corresponding period last year.

Moreover, she said six lakh more people had filed tax returns. The credit for this success goes to Prime Minister Imran Khan, who for the first time turned tax revenue collection into a national movement, she said.

Dr. Awan noted it was for the first time that the government income, not of rulers, was increasing. This is a good news for the country and the nation, she remarked.

She said 73 percent reduction in the current account deficit was a major achievement, while there had been a significant increase in exports and decrease in imports. She said Rs70 billion had been received from two cellular companies under license fee, and another Rs70 billion was expected to come from another cellular company.

As a whole, she noted Rs200 billion would be received from this sector, adding that the government was striving to promote economic activities and facilities the business community. Dr. Awan said the government had reduced its expenditures and no supplementary grant was approved during the two months, and the government saved Rs246 billion due to appreciation in the currency value during the last few weeks.

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IOK matter of survival of Pakistan: Firdous - The News International

LIFESTORY: DR SAID AILABOUNI – GOD IS ON THE SIDE OF "REJECTED, OPPRESSED, OCCUPIED", PART II – Sight Magazine

20 September 2019 IVARS KUPCIS

Follow this link for part I...

Born in Nazareth, Galilee, Rev Dr Said Ailabouni moved to the US at the age of 19 to become a physician. But he was so angry at God that he went to study theology instead, becoming a Lutheran pastor. Now he is leading the Middle East & Europe desk of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Since leaving his hometown 50 years ago, he visits his Palestinian family regularly. As this week marks the World Week for Peace in Palestine and Israel, Ailabouni agreed to share some of his lifetime observations with theWorld Council of Churches...

What are the Middle East countries in which the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America supports particular programmes?"Jerusalem and the West Bank are major areas where we are investing in support to our companions. The Augusta Victoria hospital in Jerusalem is one of the major institutions that we support. It is a health institution providing specialised care for Palestinians from all over the West Bank and Gaza. It is also the only hospital for cancer treatment for Palestinians. "We are providing support to refugees in Egypt. Like Jesus 2000 years ago went to Egypt to find refuge from King Herod, there are many people now going to Egypt fleeing from tyrants. They are coming from Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Yemen, Syria, Iraq. Unfortunately, they are not always welcomed - Egypt is a poor country and they have plenty of hardships themselves. "We also support two seminaries in the Middle East one in Beirut, Lebanon, and one in Cairo, Egypt. Besides supporting Lutheran World Federation work in the Middle East we also support a couple of programmes of the Middle East Council of Churches. These programmes provide women the opportunity to develop skills to earn a living, and to provide trauma healing to church workers who have been traumatized by the war, so that they can recover and go back and serve. "We want to grow our support for the refugees in the four countries where we are working now, which are Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq."

Rev Dr Said Ailabouni, director for Europe, Middle East & North Africa region at the Global Mission Unit of Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. PICTURE: Ivars Kupcis/WCC

What has been your experience visiting Palestine after you moved to the United States?"I first came back four years after I started a college in 1973. In those days there was no internet or email, telephone calls were expensive, we mostly could just write letters. It was wonderful to go back my family was still there at the time. "But I was obviously changed, and I was not done with my education yet - I was not even sure I will be transitioning from medicine to theology. That happened after this trip. God was doing something in my life I was not very clear about right then. I just knew there was no future for me back home. "Nowadays, a lot more young people have a future that I did not have back then. There are more people who can go to college and have a future that was not available 50 years ago."

What are your observations on how situation has been changing in Israel and Palestine over these 50 years?"A lot more building, lots more settlements, lots more roads. Our church is committed to a two-state solution - but I do not see how that is going to be possible as more and more land is being taken away. I see a real push to Judaise Jerusalem, when my dream and my wish is that people would live together Jews, Muslims and Christians. That was how my parents and grandparents grew up in Tiberias, living with Jews and Muslims peacefully. "I grew up with both Christian and Muslim friends, we were neighbours, we went to school together I can never think of Muslims as bad people, they are my friends. Of course, there are also people who do bad things among Jews, Christians and Muslims, the extremists, but thats not the majority. It is sad to see this desire in Israel to make it just for Jews a Jewish state. I know that we can live together and enjoy being together. It has always been my experience that it is possible but the push now is to say 'No, we cant do it'. "That scares me, because what is going to happen - does it mean Palestinians will be pushed out? If thats the case, it would be really sad and catastrophic."

How do you see the situation has changed for Palestinians still living in their land?"Palestinians in Israel have more opportunities to have jobs, to go to school, grow economically. But Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank and Gaza have a struggle. Christians or Muslims living in Bethlehem cannot go to Jerusalem which is just six miles away. They need a permit, and that makes it very difficult. There are kids who have grown up just a few miles from Jerusalem, who never have seen Jerusalem, or the Mediterranean Sea. This division is oppressive. And it is also a humiliation of people under occupation. Seeing how people are treated at the checkpoints it is hard to watch."

Do you think Christians worldwide are understanding what is happening between Israel and Palestine?"Unless people go there and see it with their own eyes they wont know. Media does not cover that very well. And often Palestinians are portrayed as violent stone-throwers people never see non-violent resistance to the occupation. Not even the Jews in Israel know, because they are never going to Palestine, they are not allowed. "Now more and more Israeli soldiers are coming out talking about their experiences working in Hebron and other places, saying we did what was wrong, and we are not happy about it. They come out talking about how they treated Palestinians, and they dont like what they did. But most Israelis do not know it. And most people are not interested they are interested in their own lives, they are not concerned about the people they do not see. And you dont see a Palestinian unless you are working in the particular areas."

What do you think are the causes of oppression and suffering taking place? Why would still today someone go to another land, try to take it away and oppress people who have been living there for generations?"Unfortunately, some, including Christians and Jews, use the Bible to justify what they are doing. You can justify whatever you want using the Bible. "But there are also a plenty of other Bible verses that talk about welcoming the stranger, treating them as equal, taking care of widows and orphans there are plenty of verses reminding us of what Gods justice is intended to be for all people. "Certainly Jews have suffered a lot in their lives, and desire to have a place where they can be free and secure and not be oppressed again. But to oppress the Palestinians in the process - I do not think it is fair or just."

We hear about situations when violent acts are done at the both sides of the conflict...Can violence be justified?"Certainly as Christians we should be against any kind of violence we are not supposed to kill one another. I do not think violence is the right answer to anything. For more than a year Palestinians in Gaza have been demonstrating nonviolently, but some of them have been killed for doing that. "Neither side should use any kind of weapons against each other. Humans are too valuable to be killed. We all should be against any kind of destruction and murder."

Qalandiya checkpoint between the northern West Bank and Jerusalem, where thousands of Palestinians try to make their way to Jerusalem each day. PICTURE: Albin Hillert/WCC

With your work at the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America you are supporting refugees and contributing to peace in the region. What do you think other churches in the world can do to support justice and peace in Israel and Palestine?"Imagining that all of our churches have policies about human rights and anti-racism, we all have values as Christians that we should lift up and hold everyone accountable for. Human rights is an international treaty for all people. And we are against racism no matter who is being attacked. "There is a lot of racism and a lot of abuse of human rights and dignity, and therefore we as churches should speak up against all that. We should be persistent and as loud as we can working with our government officials to help them realise this is not Gods intention for humanity."

How could churches more actively support peace in the Middle East region?"We need bold prophetic voices to continue speaking. The God we know is the God who loves all people. Including those that we dont like God calls us to reconcile with each other, to love the enemy, to be peace-makers, because peace-makers will be called the children of God. We have a mandate as individuals and as churches to be that kind of light to those in darkness, whether we see results or not. "Ive struggled with hatred myself, and as I grew older, I asked myself can I continue like this, or can I just love, even my enemy. I think we all have to struggle with whats in our hearts, and really to love the other in our lives, whoever they are - especially the ones we do not like. We all can do something, but we have to start with looking at whats inside us and how can we change that for the better."

This article was first published on theWorld Council of Churches' website.Ivars Kupcis is communication officer for the World Council of Churches.

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LIFESTORY: DR SAID AILABOUNI - GOD IS ON THE SIDE OF "REJECTED, OPPRESSED, OCCUPIED", PART II - Sight Magazine

Mohamed Ali: Folk hero, whistleblower, and talk of the town – Middle East Eye

In early September, as videos of Egyptian film star and property tycoon Mohamed Ali went viral, a group of plainclothes conscripts, working as guards at a Cairo military hospital, were enthralled.

They sat, during their shift, just blocks away from the Ministry of Defence, watching Ali accuse top government and military officials of corruption when suddenly a superior officer walked in.

'Everyone watches them, but no one dares speaking about them'

- Ismail, military conscript

I thought we would be court-martialledand maybe jailed, Ismail, one of the conscripts, told Middle East Eye.

Instead, the officer asked Ismail and his colleagues to send him the videos on WhatsApp: he wanted to watch them, too.

The 43-year-old Egyptian whistleblower has released over a dozen videos from self-exile in Spain, laying out in detail how he says officials misappropriated millions in public funds for their personal projects.

Who is Mohamed Ali? Meet the tycoon-turned-YouTube star with Sisi in his sights

Over the past 15 years,as the owner of a property company that contracted with the Egyptian military on major construction projects, Ali says he has had a front-row seat for all of it - and he's speaking out now because he hasn't been paid.

In a country where media is tightly controlled by the state and public dissent is hard to come by, Alis regular dishing sessions have captured the nations attention.

Everyone from the newcomers to the highest-ranking officers in the hospital or in the unit [where he spends his nights] watch the videos secretly, Ismail said, describing the viral videos as porn.

Everyone watches them, but no one dares speakabout them.

Alongside his contract work, Ali has also worked as a film actor and producer, but his screen time had largely gone unnoticed until he started posting his videos.

Overnight, he became one of Egypts most high-profile and controversial figures, a folk hero to some, an enemy of the state to others, stirring up Egyptians all over the world.

'He is not an officer who is shouting, nor is he a politician in a fancy suit. He is a man of the people'

- Essmat, microbus driver

Now he's called for Egyptians to take to the streets on Friday for one hour. If the number of people who respond and go out reaches 30 million, he told his viewers, Sisi should resign.

You can hate him as much as you want, Noura, a retired journalist, told MEE. But we have to agree that he made millions of people talk about a topic that was an extreme taboo which is corruption in the military.

Noura now starts each day checking Alis Twitter and YouTube accounts to see if Ali has posted anything new overnight. Shes not alone.

Now you can see families and friends who rarely discussed politics or who had very different opinions agreeing on his statements, she said.

Noura said she will participate in the protests that Ali has encouraged: We should not be afraid of the regime, and people should come together to express their discontent.

Alis videos have sparked a public debate over the contradiction between Sisi urging Egyptians to cut their spending, and his alleged use of the armys budget to fund his palatial residences.

Following Mohamed Alis videos, a number of hashtags have gone viral, calling on the Egyptian president to step down.

In a video posted on 15 September, Ali called on Egyptians to use the hashtag #__ (Thats enough Sisi) which was trending at number one in Egypt and at number six worldwide.

Since then, the hashtags # (step down) ___, (The people demand the downfall of the regime ) and #_ (Friday of anger) were also being used widely to express dissatisfaction with the current government.

The videos and trending hashtags have sparked a counter hashtag, # (We are with you Sisi) from government supporters. The hashtags have been a key part of sparking debate about the current conditions in Egypt, with people using them to discuss living conditions and socio-economic problems.

His working-class yet expressive manner of saying what he wants is what made people feel connected to his claims, Essmat, a microbus driver, said of Ali.

He is not an officer who is shouting, nor is he a politician in a fancy suit. He is a man of the peoplewho is wealthy but is not ashamed of his roots or background.

Essmat said that in the first couple of days, when the videos went viral and then Sisi responded last Saturday to the claims during the eighth National Youth Conference, it wasall anyone could talk about as he drovearound Cairo.

People are always comparing their own status and the status of the country and the lack of services and jobs with the lavish lifestyle that Sisi, his wifeand family are living in, the microbus driver said.

During one journey, an argument broke out between an older man and a younger female passenger who was watching one of Ali's videos, with the man yelling at her and calling her a traitor.

I stopped the car, asked the older man to step out of the car ,and gave him back his money, and told him no ass-kissing in this car, he said.

Despite the rules he keeps in his microbus, Essmat said he wont protest, fearing that the police are more violent than ever before.

I fear for my family and many people do, he said. They are angry, but they are afraid of the oppression.

While attracting viral support, Alis work as a military contractor has also drawn criticism from those who say he isa hypocriteattacking the same system that once made benefited him.

He was a part of the scandals that he talks about, and he decided to talk to the public because he didnt get the rest of his money, said Shenoda Saleb, a computer engineer in Alexandria.

'He was a part of the scandals that he talks about'

- Shenoda Saleb, computer engineer

Saleb doesn't sympathise much with Ali, but regardless, he has raised awareness among Egyptians at a time when the state controls much of the media and has snuffed out dissent, something he can get behind.

I dont see him as a Robin Hood, but I am for anything that causes trouble for the regime, he added, saying he will be watching to see if any protests break out.

Its not only the public that has been electrified by Ali, but intelligence officialsaround Sisi have also been rattled.

A source affiliated with Egypts General Intelligence Service told MEE that the president had been advised by intelligence officials to ignore Alis videos and refrain from making public comments.

But Sisi went ahead and made comments at the youth conference anyway his first acknowledgement of Alis accusations saying that intelligence agencies had begged him not to address the claims.

The source said the presidents intervention was poorly received among the intelligence community.

It indeed caused some anger, especially that the non-official manner the president used to address the claims [only] widened the discussion about them, the source said.

Since the speech, there have been several reports of dissentamong military officials, but the source denied the reports, saying there were no divisions in the militarys ranks.

The same source said he believed there is only a small possibility that the protests that Ali has called for on Friday will actually materialise on the streets.

But security forces, he said, may be concerned that his call sparks Egyptians to protest over other issues, like lack of services.

Zamalek-Al Ahly football match to kick off early after call for Egypt protests

On Tuesday, residents in Cairos Eyen el-Sera neighbourhood were demonstrating against the governments decision to forcefully evacuate cemeteries in the Zienhom district.

People then gathered and chanted against the government, the source said.

In response to Ali's call for protests, the Ministry of Interior has declared a high state of alert, cancelling time off for allofficers and personnel, a source in the ministry told MEE.

He said that on Friday, riot police will be deployed in working-class areas, popular squares, and government buildings - just in case.

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Mohamed Ali: Folk hero, whistleblower, and talk of the town - Middle East Eye

Peace for Syria | Bahia Mardini – The Arab Weekly

My hope is simple. A peaceful Syria.

The Syrian conflict, now in its ninth year, has lasted longer than World War II, but I continue to pray and hope my home country finds peace. I believe this can be achieved through democracy.

Political rights and civil liberties have been compromised and in my opinion dismissed in Syria by one of the worlds most oppressive regimes.

I have witnessed in the United Kingdom that democracy delivers progress, stability and peace. It is key to societys welfare, safety, and human rights. It provides a voice to all corners of society from disadvantaged minorities to those underrepresented communities.

The Assad regime suppresses societys freedom of speech and prohibits any opposing parties from challenging it. There is utter corruption, mass displacement of citizens and rampant regime forces using chemical weapons against opposing rebels, killing civilians in its path.

The Baath Party, or should I say the Assad family, has governed Syria without interruption since the late 1960s. Syrians have been subject to the rule of the Assad regime without any democratic rights or say.

Many had hoped that with the defeat of the Islamic State (ISIS) earlier this year, Syria could begin to return to what it once was. But from my experience, I knew this would not be true. I was a journalist in Damascus the war began. The political climate became volatile, unstable and corrupt. I thought it was my personal duty to research and write about the unfolding violence between Syrian civilians and the Assad regime.

I was often framed as an enemy to Assad regime as I exposed its increasingly tyrannical and vindictive reaction to unrest. I was once interviewed by a Western journalist about my work and following the publication of this piece, I was detained for hours by the Syrian security services.

It has been eight years since the Syrian security services threatened to cut off my hand and I do not doubt that those speaking out against Assad, even after the defeat of ISIS, will face the same threats.

The government has operated for years with minimal transparency and no accountability for their actions. The conditions for civilians have worsened. The military is loyal to the regime and populations are exploited by the regime. Society groups independent from the regime and media outlets are crushed, unable to shed light on the tyranny in Syria.

Someday the Assad regime will be defeated but the people of Syria will still face hardship. The difficulty ahead is building democracy after decades of oppression and almost ten years of bloodshed.

Terror continues to strike in Syria. In northern rural Aleppo, there was an attack leaving 11 people dead and 15 injured. This atrocious crime took place on September 15, only two days after another attack killed 13 civilians, including children, shortly before the weekly Friday prayers. These premediated attacks indicate persistence by the Assad regime and allies on pursuing military goals over peoples lives, undermining any chances for a political solution.

There are those that propagate the Damascus Declaration in Syria today, which calls for a truly democratic country under law, and discusses the role of Islam and the situation of Syrias Kurdish population as equal citizens. I admire the courage of those who wrote it in 2005 and suffered time in prison for exercising their rights. Their devotion, I believe, provided Syrians with the guidelines and foundations to follow. It provides hope that democracy can be one day built.

What can the international community do? While it quickly condemned the Syrian regime during the start of the civil war, nine years on, the world is facing new threats and challenges while Syria continues to suffer. Prospects for a peaceful solution are limited without international support but the most powerful states seem to have different points of view about the Syrian crisis.

While there are conflicting views about how to handle the conflict in Syrian, Russian involvement is not the solution: It will not lead to a better or peaceful Syria. The international allies of the Assad regime have strengthened his reign and his sights remain set on Idlib. It is a beautiful province inundated with fighting. While there is now a ceasefire, we are unsure that it will last and I call on other world leaders to stop the uncontrollable bombing by Russian and the Syrian regime.

The International community needs to continue to condemn Assad openly, diminish his power and hold him accountable for his war crimes and unspeakable human rights violations. This I know will help achieve peace to the country I still love and will always be home.

The world must speak up about the human rights violations Syrians have been forced to endure for too long and there must be democratic elections for peace to really be achieved.

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Peace for Syria | Bahia Mardini - The Arab Weekly

HISTORY: AFTER THE FALL OF THE BERLIN WALL – DAWN.com

Police from both sides stands idly by as the Berlin Wall is breached at the Sandkrug Bridge crossing-point on Invaliden Strasse, in November 1989

Speaking at the Brandenburg Gate in the western part of Berlin on June 12, 1987, US President Ronald Reagan made a historic statement: Behind me stands a wall that encircles the free sectors of this city, part of a vast system of barriers that divides the entire continent of Europe Standing before the Brandenburg Gate, every man is a German, separated from his fellow men. As long as this gate is closed, as long as this scar of a wall is permitted to stand, it is not the German question alone that remains open, but the question of freedom for all mankind

General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalisation, come here to this gate.Mr Gorbachev, open this gate!Mr Gorbachev, tear down this wall!

Two years after President Reagans passionate speech, the Berlin Wall collapsed. On November 9, 1989, thousands of people from East Berlin forced the East German security forces to let them cross the wall, leading to the ultimate collapse of the Warsaw Pact.

Thirty years on from the fall of a wall that divided people, what lessons does the event have for us?

CONSTRUCTION OF THE WALL

At the end of World War II, the defeated Germany was split into four Allied Occupation Zones through the Allied peace conferences at Yalta and Potsdam. The eastern part of the country came under the control of the Soviet Union, while the western part went to the US, Great Britain and France. Even though Berlin was located entirely within the Soviet part of the country (about 100 miles from the border between the eastern and western occupation zones), the Yalta and Potsdam agreements split the city into similar sectors.

The Berlin Wall was erected in August 1961 by the German Democratic Republic (GDR) the pro-Soviet East German government to prevent the escape of East Berliners to West Berlin, though the official purpose of the wall was to keep Western fascists from entering East Germany and undermining the socialist state. Earlier, the wall only covered the divided city of Berlin, but later it was extended to a dividing line between East and West Germany. It covered a length of 155 kilometres in the form of a concrete wall and fence.

However, this symbol of tyranny, oppression and division of East and West Germany by force, failed to deter those who wanted to cross it and escape to the western part of Berlin. Between 1961 and 1989, around 150 people who tried to cross the wall were killed by the East German security forces. Tunnels were also dug from East Berlin to help people attempting to escape communist rule.

Thirty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, we can analyse how the world changed as a result of this singular event that resulted in the reunification of Germany, the collapse of the Warsaw Pact, the Soviet disintegration and an end to the Cold War. A process of change was set in motion in Europe and throughout the world.

However, the fall of the Berlin Wall failed to have any meaningful impact on some countries where walls have been built, or are being built, to prevent cross-border movement in the name of national security. India constructed a wall/fence along its border with Pakistan all the way from the Rann of Kutch to the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir, while Pakistan built a wall on its border with Afghanistan. US President Donald Trump is determined to construct a wall along the US borders with Mexico in order to prevent illegal migrants. Israel has built a wall in the occupied West Bank in order to separate Jewish settlements from the Palestinian population. The need for protecting borders from terrorists, smugglers, the illegal influx of people and national security have led to policies which focus on dividing instead of uniting people across borders.

It would not be wrong to say that walls reflect an insecure mindset, based on mistrust, suspicion and paranoia. From 1961 till 1989, as the Berlin Wall became a symbol of suppression and denial of freedom to the people of East Germany, West Berlin became a symbol of defiance and resistance against the communist order during the Cold War.

WHAT LED TO THE FALL OF THE WALL?

In the late 1980s, Gorbachevs policy of reforms to liberalise communism such as Perestroika and Glasnost gave an impetus to popular sentiments in the GDR for tearing down the wall. At the same time, Erich Honecker, secretary general of the German Socialist Unity Party (19711989), was forced to quit when he failed to suppress the rising tide of democracy in East Germany. On August 23, 1989, two million people of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania formed a 675.5 kilometres long human chain demanding freedom from the Soviet Union. Moscow did not prevent the massive popular defiance because, by that time, Moscow had given up the Brezhnev Doctrine of November 1968, which warned of Soviet intervention in case of reformist movement in any communist country.

By 1989, the crumbling economy of the then USSR and the strengthening of a pro-reform lobby, led by Secretary General Mikhail Gorbachev in the ruling Soviet Communist Party, gave a clear message to the forces of democracy and change in the Warsaw Pact countries, including the GDR, that state retaliation in the wake of popular uprising was not possible, unlike the crushing of popular revolts of 1956 in Hungary and 1968 in Czechoslovakia.

A workers movement in Poland called Solidarity launched under Lech Walesa had been crushed by the military, and martial law had been imposed by General Jaruzelski on December 13, 1981. But under popular pressure, Solidarity was also later legalised by the Polish regime and it won multi-party elections in June 1989.

IMPLICATIONS OF THE FALL OF THE WALL

The fall of the Berlin Wall and its implications in todays world need to be analysed from three angles. First, the defeat of undemocratic and authoritarian regimes, that sustained brutal systems of oppression, received an impetus with the dismantling of the Berlin Wall. But, even after the passage of three decades, it seems that democracy, tolerance and multiculturalism have not been able to take root in former communist societies. In former GDR, the surge of right-wing ultra-nationalism and neo-Nazism is a dangerous sign and a major threat to German democracy.

In 2013, the far-right political party Alternative for Germany (AfD) emerged as a cogent political force with an agenda focusing on anti-migration rhetoric, and a sizeable electoral strength in the former GDR.

Former Warsaw Pact members, such as Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary and Poland, despite being members of the European Union, refused to accept migrants according to the standards set by the European Union (EU). In all the four countries one can observe a surge of right-wing and xenophobic groups who are intolerant to non-white immigrants, particularly Muslims. This means that despite the collapse of the communist regimes of Eastern Europe, the mindset of those in the opposition and in the government has not changed because transformation from authoritarian to a democratic political culture takes time. On the positive side, on August 24 this year, thousands of people marched in the East German city of Dresden to express their opposition to the AfD. Demonstrators raised slogans against the neo-Nazis and right-wing extremists.

Second, the collapse of the Berlin Wall and German reunification gave a thrust to the process of European integration. Without united Germany, it would have been difficult to transform the European Economic Community (EEC) into EU. The elimination of restrictions on the free movement of people, goods, services and capital in the EU only became possible when Germany emerged as an economic powerhouse of Europe. Germany was officially united as a single state on October 3, 1990, a year after the fall of the Berlin Wall. During this time, the West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl held crucial negotiations with Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet president and secretary general of the Soviet Communist Party, the French President Francois Mitterrand and the Polish President Mazowiecki for their support for the reunification of Germany. Without the endorsement of Moscow, Warsaw and Paris, it would have been impossible for the West German leadership to give a final shape to the reunification of East and West Germany. The US President George H. Bush also rendered his countrys support to reunify Germany.

In the post-reunification period, France and Germany have emerged as pivotal states of European Union, as their unity has so far worked to keep EU together against all odds. The transformation of EEC to EU on November 1, 1993, according to the historical Maastricht Treaty, was only possible because of the collapse of Berlin Wall. The expansion of the EU, from 12 members in November 1993 to 27 in 2019, has much to do with the reunification of Germany, the collapse of the Warsaw Pact and Franco-German unity.

Third, the euphoria which existed in Germany after the collapse of the Berlin Wall and reunification disappeared with the passage of time. Despite the German governments investment of around 100 billion euros to end economic and infrastructure asymmetry between the eastern and western parts of the country, feelings of uneven economic development and wages still prevail over the former GDR.

On June 30, 2019, Herbert Knosowski from the Reuters news agency reported that Frauke Hildebrandt, a member of the centre-left Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and professor of early childhood education at the University of Applied Sciences in Potsdam, suggested that an employment quota should be introduced for the residents of East Germany. A study by the German Centre for Integration and Migration Research in April shows that more than 50 percent of East Germans polled said they backed the proposal. In March this year, the SPD introduced a motion in the Bundestag (German parliament) calling for an East German quota, arguing that the German constitution mandates proportionate representation of civil servants from all states.

It is often argued by the supporters of the reunification that a sense of deprivation in the former GDR is exaggerated, because German Chancellor Angela Merkel is from the former East Germany and the level of development in that part of the country in the last 30 years is unprecedented. Even then, the AfD has been able to take advantage of the frustration and anger, particularly among the youth of the eastern part of Germany, to emerge as a major political force taking 25.5 percent and 19.9 percent of votes in Saxony and Brandenburg in the European parliament elections held in May this year.

According to a 2016 study, Who Rules the East? compiled by the Dusseldorf-based Hans Bocker Foundation, while East Germans constitute about 17 percent of the population nationwide, they hold only 1.7 percent of the top jobs. In the areas of the former GDR, 87 percent of people are East German but they only fill 23 percent of high-level positions such as judges, generals, presidents of universities, CEOs and editors-in-chief among others. Of some 200 generals and admirals in the military, for example, only two are East German while there are no East German university presidents anywhere in the country.

Reint E. Gropp, president of the Halle Institute for Economic Research, in Halle, an East German town states: A lot of us thought, admittedly somewhat naively, that people between 30 and 50 the generation that was already working during reunification would be affected. But that was a mistake. The effects are transferred through generations and we still see it today.

Although the quality of life in the GDR was quite low compared to their counterparts in the Federal Republic of Germany, the state was responsible for providing jobs, housing, health facilities and public transport to citizens of East Germany. After the reunification, they lost all such facilities as state enterprises were replaced by a capitalistic economy.

If the world has not significantly changed after the collapse of the Berlin Wall, at least Europe has been transformed with free connectivity, and minimum travel and trade restrictions. The Franco-German and German-Polish borders, hard to cross freely during the Cold War, are now a thing of the past as every year millions of people cross these borders without passing through security checkposts and stringent visa controls. Even the sneaking in of more than one million migrants in Europe in the autumn and winter of 2015 has not led to the transformation of soft borders to hard ones. Populists and right-wing political parties and groups in Germany and other EU countries demanded the imposition of strict border controls in order to prevent further influx of migrants but, despite their demand, the EU borders are generally open.

The fall of the Berlin Wall emerges as a source of inspiration for those who are living under severe restrictions that deprive them of basic freedom. The unification of Jammu and Kashmir has been a long-standing demand of the beleaguered people of that unfortunate territory partitioned since August 1947. But the disappearance of the LoC that separates the people of Jammu and Kashmir and the connectivity of people from both sides is yet to be seen. Like the Germans, Kashmiris living on both sides of the LoC must decide their future and tear down the wall. After decades of suffering, they deserve a better future.

The writer is former Meritorious Professor of International Relations and Dean Faculty of Social Sciences, University of KarachiEmail: amoonis@hotmail.com

Published in Dawn, EOS, September 22nd, 2019

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HISTORY: AFTER THE FALL OF THE BERLIN WALL - DAWN.com

Mugabe Is What Happens When A Country Falls For A Charming Socialist – The Federalist

Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwes dictator and lifelong communist, died on Sept. 6, 2019, at the age of 95. In a country where theaverage life expectancy was only 44 years(according to a 2006 census), he outlived most of his countrymen.

However, his protracted and long life was constructed upon inflicting enormous and unimaginable suffering upon his people and country. For the rest of us, his incumbency should serve as a constant warning about why we should not fall for the next charismatic socialist who heedlessly promises everything.

Mugabe was born into poverty. Abandoned by his father at age 10, he attended a Jesuit missionary school and eventually graduated from theUniversity of Fort Hare in South Africa, the same university Nelson Mandela attended.

While Mugabe was receiving educator training in Ghana in the 1950s, he joined one of Africas nationalist movements, calling for the establishment of an independent country led by the black majority in his homeland, which at the time was still a British colony.The emergence of these nationalist movements coincided with the Cold War. The SovietUnion and Communist China expanded their influence in Africa, hoping to turn former colonies into client states.

Mugabe was imprisoned for a decade due to his anti-government political activities, and while in prison, he was elected as the president of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU). During his long imprisonment, Mugabe thoroughly studied Marxist-Leninist ideology. He became afirm believerthat only socialism could save his homeland, and that only his ZANU could lead the peoples revolution and bring true socialism to Zimbabwe. Therefore, ZANU must always remain in power and remain the only power.

Mugabe also came to see private property owners, such as the white farmers, as a threat to the socialist paradise he wanted to build. Upon his release, Mugabe led the ZANU guerrillas to fight against the white minority rule from Mozambique. Somehow, between prison and guerrilla warfare, he managed to obtain seven college degrees and was commended as an intellectual freedom fighter.

In 1979, the British government broke a Lancaster peace deal that officially ended the white minority rule and the civil war in Zimbabwe, and Zimbabwe held its first democratic election in 1980. Mugabe became the first black prime minister of Zimbabwe with an overwhelming victory. The West accepted Mugabes legitimacy, while perversely ignoring the widely reported voter fraud and voter intimation that occurred.

Initially upon his election, Mugabe put on a good show. He promised the white minority in the country reconciliation anddeclared, If yesterday you hated me, today you cannot avoid the love that binds you to me and me to you. His first cabinet included a former political foe and two white men. He promised his countrymen would never see violence and poverty again.

In his early years, he built schools and clinics that improved blacks literacy rate and health. For a while, his oratory about peace and justice had many in the West fooled. Everyone thought he was another Mandela.

Mugabe was hailed as a liberator, knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, and even nominated with the U.K.s Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington for a Nobel Peace Prize in 1981. Compared to other African nations, Mugabes star power helped attract numerousforeign resources andaidto his country.

Underneath Mugabes caring, freedom-loving facade, however, was a cruel, power-hungry, and murderous despot. Just two years into his rule, he dismissed his political opponent from the government and sent an army of former ZANU guerrillas trained by North Korea to the heartland where rival tribes resided, killing as many as20,000civilians, and arresting, torturing, and raping many more.

His brutal act forced his political foe to surrender, turning Zimbabwe into a one-party state. He proceeded to change the constitution to make himself president in 1987. He famouslysaid, Zimbabwe is mine, and only God who appointed me will remove me.

Through violent oppression, voter fraud, and voter intimidation, Mugabe made sure he was the only head of state in Zimbabwe after every election. He ended up ruling Zimbabwe for the next 37 years, until a military coup forced his resignation in 2017.

During his long reign, some compared Mugabe to Adolf Hitler, a comparison he accepted with pride,saying, I am still theHitlerof the time. This Hitler has only one objective, justice for his own people, sovereignty for his people, recognition of the independence of his people. If that is Hitler, then let me be a Hitler tenfold.

As a self-proclaimed communist and socialist, Mugabe installed a socialist experiment in Zimbabwe. His most notorious economic policy was land reform. Mugabes government, in the name of racial justice and to right historical wrongs, insisted that black Zimbabweans could only obtain equal share of land through a land reform.

So his government passed laws allowing landless black Zimbabweans to expropriate land from white farmers without compensation, and to occupy commercial farmland. The law stipulated that Great Britain should pay reparations for the land taken from the African people during its colonial rule. Women and rival tribes who backed Mugabes political opponents werent allowed to benefit from the land reform.

Government-backed ZANU militias were at the forefront to enforce the land reform with violence because Mugabetoldthem, Our party must continue to strike fear in the heart of the white man, our real enemy.The Human Rights Watchdocumented the widespread human rights violations these militias carried out.

Besides the human cost, the economic impact of the land reform was disastrous. Before land reform, Zimbabwe was nicknamed the breadbasket of Africa. Agriculture products were 40 percent of the countrys exports, and the agriculture industry was the countrys largest employer.

Then land reform forced experienced white farmers torun away, leaving much land unattended. Inexperienced new land owners didnt know how to grow crops. Agriculture production rapidly declined. Instead of exporting produces, Zimbabweans couldnt feed themselves. Now, more than 60 percent of them rely on foreign food aid for basic survival.

The rest of the economy fell along with the agriculture industry: Banks closed, factories shut down, and the unemployment rate skyrocketed. Zimbabwesgross domestic product per capitadropped from $1,105 in 1980 (the beginning of Mugabes reign) to $397 in 2007. Average life expectancy dropped from 60 years in 1980 to 46 in 2007, the lowest in the world.

The Mugabe government responded to its economic woes by printing money. Its inflation rate reached 500 billion percent. Shortage of food, water, and electricity were common. Zimbabwe also experienced unprecedented health crises. About 3 million Zimbabweans (roughly a quarter of the population) fled the country. Of course, Mugabe blamed the West, the same West that has been sending millions of dollars in aid.

While his countrymen lived impoverished and destitute, Mugabe enriched himself, his family, and his cronies. His personal wealth isestimatedto have exceeded U.S.$1 billion, including a $5 million mansion in Hong Kong. His second wife, Grace Mugabe, is even known as Gucci Grace because of her impossible-to-satisfy appetite for expensive European luxuries.

The misery Zimbaweans experienced isnt new or unique. Anyone who has lived under Maos China, Castros Cuba, Kims North Korea, and Maduros Venezuela can tell you they shared similar life experiences. Mugabe wasnt the only charismatic socialist who ruined a country and the lives of millions. Socialism has failed everywhere and every time.

Despite socialisms terrible record, it seems it always finds a charismatic spokesperson, whether they are old and wise or young and cute, trying to convince the rest of us to give socialism another try and promising the outcome will be different this time because the wisest leaders in history have finally arrived and are in charge to take care of us.

Mugabes life should remind us not to be fooled by someone who promises to give us everything and to better our lives in every way. C.S. Lewis warned that a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. Those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time likelier to make a Hell of earth.

Mugabe certainly turned a once-prosperous country into a hell on Earth. Lets not give any socialist in our country any chance to ruin our lives.

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Mugabe Is What Happens When A Country Falls For A Charming Socialist - The Federalist

Winning elections is not enough: the left has a world to transform – LabourList

Amidst the political turmoil, one thing seems certain: an election is imminent. To win, Labour will need to mobilise on a scale thats never been seen before, bringing millions of people into the campaign.

Electing a Labour government to Westminster will be a historic achievement, opening up a world of possibilities for working-class people across the country, but it is only part of the picture. Sending Jeremy Corbyn into Downing Street without a movement behind him is like sending a cowboy into a shootout with a water pistol. The decisions that affect our lives are not only made in Whitehall, but in the boardrooms of bosses and living rooms of landlords. Building socialism requires the left to get organised in our workplaces and in our communities. Being election ready also means preparing our movement for what happens beyond the election. Thats what were doing at The World Transformed 2019.

The Labour Party has the potential to be an organising force in every part of the country by deploying its greatest resource its members. But if the party doesnt use them, it will lose them. For the promise of a people powered politics to become a reality, members must have a real say on who represents them and the policies the party advocates.

The trigger ballots taking place in constituency parties are not a distraction from election campaigning; they are a crucial means of engaging members and increasing local campaigning capacity. Labour branches should be community hubs and Labour MPs should be community leaders, providing practical solidarity to the struggles of working people. Well be planning how to make these important changes happen.

The Labour movement has always needed both its political and industrial wings to fly. The gains made by the working class after the war would not have been possible without the 1945 Labour government, nor would it have been possible without the strength of Britains trade unions. However, trade union membership continues to decline and is particularly low amongst younger workers. Labours plans for a Ministry of Labour, led by Laura Pidcock, are an exciting prospect, but we cannot wait for a Labour government. This is a defining issue for the left and at TWT, shop stewards, organisers and elected leaders will be strategising about how workers can build power.

The struggle extends beyond the workplace. To live a good life you need adequate wages, but you also need secure and affordable housing. Women and people of colour need to be free from structural oppression. Disabled people need proper support to be able to live free and autonomous lives. Each one of these movements are essential to transforming society and at TWT well be bringing them together with trade unionists and Labour members to plan for the election and beyond.

Were also running a series of policy labs on issues ranging from mental health to constitutional reform. These will be creative experiments in participatory policy making, demonstrating how radical ideas can be drawn from the grassroots. Well be presenting the results of this collaboration in a Manifesto for the Movement that John McDonnell has said will provide inspiration for the forthcoming manifesto.

Over the last four years, the radical left has proven to be bursting with ideas, while it often seems like moderates just want to turn back the clock. It is notable that Tom Watsons well-publicised initiative to pull together the social democrats of the PLP to create policy has produced precisely nothing. Labours 2017 manifesto signalled a fundamental break with the economic orthodoxy of the last 40 years, however, the party has been more conservative in some important areas. This year, well be complementing the efforts of left-aligned delegates on the conference floor with discussions around how activists can push the party further on issues like climate justice, migration and policing.

At this political crossroads, the left cannot shy away from tackling these pressing challenges. We need to be ready for the election when it comes and prepared for the struggles that lie ahead. We hope The World Transformed 2019 will contribute to building an organised movement, both inside and outside of the Labour Party, that is up to the task.

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Winning elections is not enough: the left has a world to transform - LabourList

The Palestinian voice will be heard at the Labour conference – Middle East Monitor

John Bercow, the speaker of the UKs House of Commons, will be standing down soon. He has been an animated figure, whose gesticulations and dressing downs of MPs have left a mark with viewers all over the world. At the height of the continuing Brexit saga, my 7-year-old son suddenly shouted order, order! with the kind of emphasis Bercow employs.

On a more serious note however, Bercow was also firm in ensuring that any MP speaking, from the newest to the most senior, was not drowned out by ill-disciplined MPs. His firm reassuring line was the right honourable gentleman will be heard. The voice of every single MP was always heard.

I started with this opening to the article, because that is what came to mind when it became clear that Omar Barghouti, the co-founder of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement (BDS), who was due to speak at the Palestine Solidarity Campaign fringe meeting on Sunday, would not receive his visa in time. The Labour Party Conference fringe will also be addressed by Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott MP, Labour Friends of Palestine and the Middle East Chair Lisa Nandy MP and trade union UNITE General Secretary Len McKluskey.

Barghoutis voice, a principled and important mouthpiece for Palestinians, would be silenced by the UKs Home Office. While a Home Office spokesperson put the reason for the delay down to Barghoutis case being a complex case, he stated that Barghoutis application remains within the 15 working day turnaround and that he will receive a decision shortly.

READ: UK minister vows to pressure councils and universities to adopt IHRA definition of anti-Semitism

It is worth reminding readers that the current Home Secretary, Priti Patel, had to resign from her post as International Development Secretary in 2017, over breaches of ministerial conduct when she held meetings with Israeli politicians while on holiday. These meetings were neither authorised, nor coordinated, with the government or the embassy in Tel Aviv. Patel had even considered plans to look into giving tax-payers money to the Israeli military to treat wounded Syrian refugees in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights region a request that was turned down as inappropriate by officials. Patel also visited an Israeli military field hospital in the Golan Heights, which the UK considers illegally occupied Syrian territory. Some of her meetings were attended by Honorary President of Conservative Friends of Israel, Lord Polak, who is known for this blind support of Israel, and for displaying such positions regularly in the House of Lords.

Patel is not the first home secretary to preside over a Home Office that has a record of making it difficult for Palestinians, both from Israel and the Occupied Territories, to come to the UK and to speak freely about the conflict. Former Prime Minister Theresa May ordered the detention of Sheikh Raed Salah, an Israeli citizen and well-known defender of Al-Aqsa mosque and severe critic of the Israeli Government, after his legal arrival in the UK in 2011. He was due to speak at a number of meetings, including in Parliament. This was despite the fact that Israeli citizens travel to the UK without the need for a visa, including illegal settlers and some who may have been involved in the oppression of the occupied Palestinian people. Salah eventually won his appeal against his deportation from the UK.

Barghouti, who lives in the West Bank and is married to a Palestinian citizen of Israel, was instrumental in setting up the BDS movement. Both he, and the movement, have been accused of anti-Semitism. Barghouti will be able to defend himself when he speaks via Skype at the fringe meeting in Brighton. The movement itself, which has at its core freedom, justice and equality, has three demands. All three of its demands are legal and moral. They are: to bring an end to the occupation, for equality for all citizens of Israel and the right of return for Palestinian refugees. Israel and its supporters have been working overtime to smear the movement, claiming it only targets Jews and the worlds only Jewish state. However, Israels supporters cannot point to Israel fulfilling any of the movements legitimate and peaceful demands without external pressure. They claim that the movement and its leaders want to see the destruction of Israel and that they do not support a two-state solution. The same people have been silent while Israel continued to gobble up illegally occupied Palestinian lands, to move settlers illegally into the settlements a war crime under international law and to annex East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights. They have been silent on Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahus promise to annex the illegally occupied Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea, if elected, a policy he shares with most political parties in Israel.

READ: UK MPs warn Israel is becoming an apartheid state

Supporters of Israel simply want to silence Palestinian voices, and those of their supporters, with the smear of anti-Semitism as they increasingly point to the new definition of anti-Semitism the so called International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition to attack and smear activists and to intimidate and bully operators of possible venues into not take bookings for events at which Palestine will be discussed. The recent decision by the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, to ban a reception for the Big Ride for Palestine from one of its parks, is a case in point.

The intimidation and bullying, and the hiding behind procedure, will not silence the Palestinians or their supporters. We will continue to bring the plight of the Palestinians and the shameful actions of the Israeli state to the widest possible audience, both as organisations such as the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, and as individuals campaigning for justice for the Palestinians and accountability for Israel.

I would have liked to have given Barghouti a hug on Sunday, but the Home Office has denied me that opportunity. However, in the words of Bercow, the honourable gentleman will be heard. Barghouti will address the meeting via Skype, and the voice of the Palestinians will be heard both at the fringe meeting and beyond, until Palestine is free. The events that led to Israels creation and our dispossession, as well as its continuing apartheid policies, will be heard. That is a promise to Israel and its apologists.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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The Palestinian voice will be heard at the Labour conference - Middle East Monitor

As the DFL marks its 75th anniversary, do the party’s Farmer-Labor roots still mean anything? – MinnPost

The marriage of what were at the time Minnesotas second and third leading political parties was one made more for convenience than for love. Losing will do that.

This year, as the DFL commemorates the 75th anniversary of the union between the Democratic Party and the Farmer-Labor Party, does the combination still have meaning? Or does it simply mean the Democratic Party in Minnesota is called something different from what it is in every other state for reasons lost on most people? Does having the only hyphenated party name simply feed the states need to feel exceptional?

Recent arrivals and old timers both can be confused. As part of a documentary being produced on the history of the Farmer-Labor movement, filmmaker Randy Croce filmed person-on-the-street interviews near the DFL booth at the Minnesota State Fair. What does DFL stand for, they were asked?

Democratic Farmer League? tried one man.

Isnt it Democratic something something? offered a woman.

Something to do with back in the day, replied another woman.

Back in the day turned out to be 1944. At the time, Minnesotas Democrats were barely a factor in state politics or government, having not elected a governor since 1915 and not claimed a U.S. senator since the Civil War.

Though the states dominant political force at the time was the Republican Party, the populist Farmer-Labor Party had managed to do better than the Democrats. Four different Farmer-Labor candidates had won U.S. Senate seats in the 1920s and 30s, and three different FLP governors including Floyd B. Olson were elected during the Great Depression.

Though never in control of both the House and the Senate, whatever New Deal-type legislation passed during those years, it was because of the Farmer-Labor Party, not because of President Franklin Roosevelts fellow Democrats. But the FLPers had lost the governorship to a progressive Republican, Harold Stassen, in 1938, leading to a string of GOP governors that lasted until 1955.

In an interview earlier this month, former Vice President and U.S. Sen. Walter Mondale summarized the futility of the Democrats and the Farmer-Labor Party remaining as two separate entities: There was a built-in fight there, and we always lost.

Then there was Roosevelt himself. The thrice-elected president was seeking a fourth term and worried that the coalition of Democrats and Farmer-Laborites who had helped him carry the state in 1932, 1936 and 1940 was fading.

So who exactly was in the Farmer-Labor Party?

As Croces interviews show, present-day Minnesotans are often confused about the odd name of the present-day party. Where are the farmers? Is labor is as committed to the party as it once was?

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

William Mahoney, circa 1910

And while the rural strength of the Nonpartisan League was enough in states like North Dakota, in Minnesota, where there was a robust industrial base, labor was a necessary ally. It was William Mahoney, a St. Paul labor leader and later mayor, who helped bring the L into the FLP, which also benefited from ethnic Germans, who were targets of oppression by the notorious Minnesota Commission on Public Safety, formed to guard against foreign threats during World War I.

Though the party had nearly 40,000 dues-paying members and was fortified by associations around the state that served as the social and education hubs in many communities, their strategy for the Nonpartisan League and the early Farmer-Labor alliance was to work within the existing parties especially the Republicans, which were stronger and contained a liberal wing, says Tom OConnell, a retired Metropolitan State University professor who has written about the FLP.

In a bitter primary fight in 1918, Farmer-Labor-endorsed candidate Charles August Lindbergh (father of the aviator) lost to the governor who had led the Commission of Public Safety. J.A.A. Burnquist. (Lansing notes that the New York Times dubbed Lindbergh a Gopher Bolshevik.)

The Farmer-Labor Party went on to run its own candidates in the general election, and the party was able to elect a U.S. senator in both 1922 and 1923. Its leading figure, both at the time and historically, was Floyd B. Olson, who was elected governor in 1930 and was reelected in 1932 and 1934.

It took a great politician to take them over the top, said OConnell.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

Charles A. Lindbergh, 1918 candidate for governor

Had Olson not died of cancer in 1936 at the age of 45, he could well have gone on to the U.S. Senate or even national office. Instead, he was replaced first by Lt. Gov. Hjalmar Petersen and later by Elmer Benson, who was atop the party in perhaps its greatest election, 1936, where he won as governor and the FLP carried six of nine congressional seats.

But while Olson and Benson had similar politics, Benson lacked Olsons skills as a public speaker and as a pragmatist. Many historians of the party cite a businessman who complained that while Olson mouthed some of the partys most radical positions, this son of a bitch (Benson) actually believes them.

It didnt help that Benson was openly affiliated with more radical elements of the party, including Communists and laborites from the Congress for Industrial Organization. An occupation of the state Capitol and the Senate not only wasnt resisted by the governor it was praised by him. There was also the tendency to exploit government appointments to both put FLPers in power and collect a 3 percent voluntary party dues payment, all of which gave Stassen the opening to run as a reformer and anti-Communist in 1938, wrote Steven Keillor in his history, Shaping Minnesotas Identity.

Like many protest movements before it, the Farmer-Labor Party rose quickly, peaked during a time of troubles, and then plunged rapidly into public disfavor, wrote historian William E. Lass in Minnesota: A History.

The merger between the Democrats and the Farmer Labor Party was finalized on April 15, 1944. With just a few days left in the candidate filing period, lawyers from both parties delivered registration papers to the secretary of state announcing the union that would be known as the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. So close was the deadline that the secretary of state opened the office on a Saturday to receive the filing, said DFL board member and unofficial historian Jules Goldstein.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

Floyd B. Olson in 1932

Yet from the start, the marriage was tense. FDR and World War II were unifying factors early on, but the new party was not only a fledgling union of political factions, there were factions within the factions that emerged once World War II was won and Roosevelt was dead.

One of those factions was Communists who had been welcomed in the Farmer Labor Party and stuck around after the merger to see what would happen. The Communists some out in the open and some secretive had opposed war with Hitler when Josef Stalin was allied with Nazi Germany but embraced it once the Soviet Union was invaded. A Popular Front strategy of working with any group or politician who opposed fascism marked American Communists during the war.

After the war, however, they opposed any U.S. policy that was opposed by Stalin.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

1936 Farmer-Labor Party ticket

Evidence of this tension comes in a 1947 letter that Goldstein discovered in party archives. It was written by Third Ward Farmer-Labor Caucus in Minneapolis chair Ruben Latz to Truman. It reported on a unanimous vote of the caucus asking the president to repudiate a speech given one week before by former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. By introducing Churchill, Truman had lent the prestige of your office for an address that can only result in isolation of one (of) our heroic allies, Latz wrote.

The speech in question was the one given by Churchill at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, in which he warned against an expansionist Soviet Union that had taken control of Eastern Europe and threatened the West and the United states. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the continent, Churchill famously said.

In his history of the intraparty battle, Macalester College political science chair G. Theodore Mitau described the combatants as the left wing, led by Benson, and the right wing, led by Hubert Humphrey, who had become mayor of Minneapolis in 1944 and would go on to gain national attention when his anti-segregation speech helped pass a strong civil rights platform at the 1948 Democratic National Convention.

After he mediated the merger, Humphrey expected the FLers to fade away. So he was surprised when he and his allies lost control of the party in 1946 to a still potent Farmer-Labor faction that outworked and out organized them at DFL caucuses and conventions.

In the wake of that takeover, Humphrey had become a candidate for U.S. Senate, and he was determined not to lose at the grassroots again. Marine veteran and then-state DFL secretary Orville Freeman was the person given the organizing task, with help from Macalester student Walter Mondale, doctoral student Arthur Naftalin, future ambassador Eugenie Anderson, law student and veteran Don Fraser and St. Pauls Eugene McCarthy, writes Keillor in Shaping Minnesotas Identity.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

Macalester College President Charles D. Turck, Hubert Humphrey and Walter Mondale in 1948.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

Eugenie Anderson in 1951

Thats about how we stated it, Mondale recalled this month. Who wanted to be connected to a party that was openly conspiring with the Soviet Union? Mondale asked. I was not one of them.

In his autobiography The Good Fight, Mondale recalls helping get Macalester, Hamline and St. Thomas students to a Young DFL meeting in late 1947 to help Humphrey win the endorsement for U.S. Senate.

At one point, someone in the audience asked (Humphrey) if he thought the United Front supporters were actually members of the Communist Party, Mondale wrote. Well, if theyre not members, they are cheating it out of dues money, he said.

Said Mondale this month: That was very un-Humphrey-like. He did not like to be confrontational. But I think he saw that his career was involved in this dispute.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

Don Fraser and Orville Freeman, circa 1956.

Mr. Freeman moved that a letter of congratulations be sent to Mayor H.H. Humphrey on his re-election as Mayor and complimenting him on his outstanding leadership of the progressive forces of the State, the minutes stated. But Herman Griffith, a member of the Farmer Labor faction who was a longtime critic of Humphrey, had a problem with that.

As the minutes noted: Mr. Griffith move that references to outstanding leadership be struck. The his motion succeeded.

Joked Mondale: It shows you what love and affection was going on there.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

Hubert H. Humphrey at the 1948 State DFL Convention in Brainerd.

The Wallace and Benson supporters left the DFL or were kicked out and many did not return for another twenty years, Keillor wrote. Unique Farmer-Labor politics never returned.

OConnell attributes the new DFL that emerged as one more suited for post-war America. While the FLP was a response to the Great Depression, its leaders had grown long in the tooth while the liberal Democrats around Humphrey were younger and more energetic with World War II forming their world view, not the Depression.

Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society

A Democratic Farmer Labor party delegation prepares to leave the St. Paul Union Depot for Washington, D.C., in 1949. The Twin Cities Zephyr is at right.

According to Lass, Humphrey advocated for the combined name not just to ease the transition but because he knew there were thousands of votes to be gained by a candidate who had Farmer-Labor in his or her party name. There are fewer people alive now who know the story or vote for someone because of the L and the F in DFL. As recently as 1999, after a disastrous 1998 election for DFLers, a party chair proposed dropping the extra letters.

Goldstein said he sees the legacy of the merger in modern DFL politics with the Bernie Sanders-Elizabeth Warren wing of the party on one side and the more moderate wing, represented by the likes of Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden, on the other.

Courtesy of the DFL Party

OConnell has recently helped revive a nonprofit called the Farmer Labor Education Committee that had been incorporated by the late U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone. It has put on programs and is using state Legacy grants to produce a film about the former party and the populist movement it represented. He said just as his generation of anti-war activists in the 1960s and 1970s didnt recognize their connection to the Farmer Labor Party, the current backers of Sanders and Warren dont know of the connection either.

It is re-emerging without necessarily a historical antecedent, OConnell said. People dont necessarily think of themselves as Farmer-Laborites but as Bernie Sanderites.

The party still does well with some in organized labor, especially teachers, government workers and unions like the Minnesota Nurses and the Service Employees. But it can struggle with skilled trades, which are less politically active and other industrial trades, such as mining and milling, have lost jobs and members as the economy changed. The DFLs loss of the 8th Congressional district seat, which represents the Iron Range, is evidence of perhaps waning support in the north.

DFL candidates have also struggled in what might be considered farm country, due in part to the rise of environmentalism as a core tenet of the Democratic platform, though the Farmers Union stays closer to DFL candidates.

Mondale said he does see challenges outside of the Twin Cities for the DFL, but said he always did well in Greater Minnesota, and he notes that both Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith have strength around the state. In general, though, he said DFL candidates have to get off their asses and work and talk to people in rural areas.

Correction: The original version of this story misstated the date of Hubert H. Humphreys speech advocating for Democrats to adopt a strong civil rights platform. It was at the 1948 Democratic National Convention, not the 1944 convention. The story has been updated and corrected.

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As the DFL marks its 75th anniversary, do the party's Farmer-Labor roots still mean anything? - MinnPost

Selected Quotes of James Madison – Constitution Society

Selected Quotes of James Madison

A pure democracy is a society consisting of a small number of citizens, who assemble and administer the government in person.

A well regulated militia, composed of the body of the people, trained in arms, is the best most natural defense of a free country.

All men having power ought to be mistrusted.

As a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights.

Do not separate text from historical background. If you do, you will have perverted and subverted the Constitution, which can only end in a distorted, bastardized form of illegitimate government. [unverified]

I believe there are more instances of the abridgement of freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments by those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations.

If men were angels, no government would be necessary.

If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy.

It is a universal truth that the loss of liberty at home is to be charged to the provisions against danger, real or pretended, from abroad.

It will be of little avail to the people that the laws are made by men of their own choice if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood.

Knowledge will forever govern ignorance; and a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives.

Learned Institutions ought to be favorite objects with every free people. They throw that light over the public mind which is the best security against crafty and dangerous encroachments on the public liberty.

Liberty may be endangered by the abuse of liberty, but also by the abuse of power.

No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.

Of all the enemies of public liberty, war is perhaps the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every other.

Such democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths.

The advancement and diffusion of knowledge is the only guardian of true liberty.

The Constitution of the United States was created by the people of the United States composing the respective states, who alone had the right.

The Constitution preserves the advantage of being armed which Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation where the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms.

The diversity in the faculties of men, from which the rights of property originate, is not less an insuperable obstacle to an uniformity of interests. The protection of these faculties is the first object of government.

The essence of Government is power; and power, lodged as it must be in human hands, will ever be liable to abuse.

The executive has no right, in any case, to decide the question, whether there is or is not cause for declaring war.

The loss of liberty at home is to be charged to the provisions against danger, real or imagined, from abroad.

The means of defense against foreign danger historically have become the instruments of tyranny at home.

The proposed Constitution is, in strictness, neither a national nor a federal constitution; but a composition of both.

The purpose of separation of church and state is to keep forever from these shores the ceaseless strife that has soaked the soil of Europe with blood for centuries. (Unverified by any original source.)

We are right to take alarm at the first experiment upon our liberties.

What is government itself but the greatest of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary.

What prudent merchant will hazard his fortunes in any new branch of commerce when he knows not that his plans may be rendered unlawful before they can be executed?

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Selected Quotes of James Madison - Constitution Society

The Twin Evils Of Government Oppression And Inequality

I want to spend some time talking about . . . a dangerous and growing inequality and lack of upward mobility that has jeopardized middle-class Americas basic bargain that if you work hard, you have a chance to get ahead. I believe this is the defining challenge of our time: making sure our economy works for every working American. Thats why I ran for president. It was the center of last years campaign. It drives everything I do in this office.

President Barack Obama, 12/04/13

Inour last essayin this series on contemporary applications of The Federalist Papers, we argued that the case for limited government is made more difficult in our age because many American leaders, in following William Jamess lead, have been successful in engaging in the moral equivalent of war against the Founders regime. President Obama has been consistently militant in pursuing a progressive domestic agenda during his presidency.

Yet too many within the beltway conservatariat have insisted that the best way to counter militant progressivism is by offering a governing agenda that combines the worst impulses of the Bush Administration: a less militant progressivism at home (prescription drug benefits and No Child Left Behind, not Obamacare and Common Core) with a more militant progressivism abroad (democratizing Iraq and Afghanistan, not rooting for democracy in Syria or Ukraine).

To these folks, such a governing agenda represents a workable conservative alternative because it holds out hope to the American people that progress is just one comparatively sober candidate, one less intrusive policy, one more serious intervention, or one utopian adjustment with teeth away. This so-fancied publicly-acceptable variant of American conservatism is considered astute because it promises a more realistic means to the publics assumed-to-be progressive ends.

And on a personal level, this brand of conservatism is attractive to Progressive alter-egos in that it allows them to remain on the Right side of history and the right side of the political spectrum at the same time. This dual membership has its privileges, since the growth of the post-WWII military-social-industrial-finance-academic complex promises that the surest way to pay off a thirty-year mortgage in a DC-area zip code is to work in a sector of the economy more crony than strictly public or private.

The problem more recently, for those who know better, is that its been difficult if not impossible to achieve a conservative-libertarian consensus in this political environment. But thats changing as the growth of an oppressive state, and the growth of collateral political inequality between insiders and outsiders and rulers and ruled, has made it easier to define whats wrong with American politics. Consider three excellent speeches from this past weeks CPAC convention that give us reason to hope that limited government advocates can reclaim the moral high ground of American politics.

Perhaps the fundamental disputes between todays progressives and their conservative/libertarian critics, then, is the locus of danger to the freedom and prosperity of the American people. In President Obamas analysis, the governments job is to intervene to correct the oppression and inequality imposed by market-based power players, who use their outsized share of economic means to artificially increase the ratio between their own wealth and that of lower and middle class Americans.

Conservatives and libertarians, as demonstrated above, offer two lines of rebuttal. First, they see the results of free exchange as presumptively just and therefore do not assume that differences in wealth (even great differences) are necessarily the consequence of private oppression. Second, they recognize that the power of even the most wealthy individual or corporation is as nothing compared to the power of the government equipped to redistribute that wealth.

When Alexander Hamilton addressed the federal governments power of taxation in Federalist 35, he did so with just such a concern in mind. Opponents of the Constitution were arguing that the national governments taxing power should be restricted to only a few specified objects, like tariffs on trade. Hamilton countered by arguing that such restrictions would, ironically, increase the governments power to bring about the twin evils of oppression and unmerited inequality.

A narrowly-defined taxing power would require the government to tax a few objects heavily, turning commerce out of its natural channel and creating artificial winners and losers: winnersall those whose goods were untaxable; losersall those whose werent.

But the trouble wouldnt end there. Within the class of losers, there would be a factious competition to raise the tax rate, say, on tea and lower it on tobacco. All might have to bear a burden, but not equally so, making politics a scramble to unload some of my burden onto you. In such a case, it would be obvious to all that the government had the power to make or break the fortunes of many, and the most conscientious businessman would have no choice but to make sure his lobbyist was as well-connected and persuasive as the next.

As is so often the case in The Federalist, Hamiltons solution to this problema general federal power to taxis not really a solution. That is to say, it provides no guarantee, in this case, that the government wont use the taxing power to oppress or create artificial inequalities. All it does (and all that can be done) is make it possible for the government to avoid these twin evils and tax in the least burdensome wayif it has the will.

Generating such a will, of course, is our challenge today. To the always-present problem of human selfishness, Progressivism adds an attractive moral justification for redistributive taxation, whether through unequal income tax rates or special tax benefits for those engaged in socially-correct enterprises (like building electric cars).

What we need is a set of leaders who dont want to beat Progressives at their own gameto promise better rewards to more powerful (numerous) friends and more satisfying punishments to more isolated enemies. Let them be satisfied with lifting burdens, not reassigning them.

Theyll also need to argue in the spirit of Hamilton, demonstrating that our moral duty and our personal interest are one. We would be glad if large numbers of Americans were to decide suddenly that they want no part in factious redistributive politics for the simple reason its wrong, but it would be wise for us to take, as Madison often put it, auxiliary precautions.

In President Obamas second term, Americans have begun to see, in very obvious, obnoxious, and personal ways, the true bigness of big government. The three horsemen of last years political apocalypse the IRS, the NSA, and the HHShave discredited government as the slayer of (bossy?) bullies and suggested it might be the biggest bully on the block.

These discrete experiences offer an opening for the type of argument leaders like Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, and Rick Perry made at CPAC. Their successand oursin rolling back government oppression will depend on our ability to show that these are no exceptions to the rule, but rather the natural consequence of pursuing artificial equality, putting the livelihood and independence of all Americans at risk.

David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and Matthew Parks an Assistant Professor of Politics at The Kings College, New York City. They are co-authors of Keeping Our Republic: Principles for a Political Reformation (2011). You can follow their work onTwitterorFacebook.

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The Twin Evils Of Government Oppression And Inequality

Atrocities Against Native Americans – United to End Genocide

Numerous atrocities against Native Americans span the hundreds of years from the first arrival of European explorers to the modern era under a wide range of circumstances. Today there are over 500 Native American tribes in the United States, each with a distinct culture, way of life and history. Even today, Native Americans face large challenges to cope with the disadvantages history has left them and ongoing cases of discrimination.

An estimated 12,000 years ago, a mass migration of nomadic peoples, traveled across a land bridge that connected Asia to what is now Alaska. These people would come to be called Native Americans, numbering over 50 million, and settling from the top of North America to the bottom of South America.

By the time Christopher Columbus reached the Caribbean in 1492, historians estimate that there were 10 million indigenous peoples living in U.S. territory. But by 1900, the number had reduced to less than 300,000.

European expansion into North America whether to find gold, escape religious persecution or start a new life led to the destruction of Native American livelihoods. Disease was a major killer, followed by malnutrition. Colonists in search of gold staged violent ambushes on tribal villages, fueling animosity with Natives. Several wars broke out between tribes and American settlers which led to large death tolls, land dispossession, oppression and blatant racism.

Unlike the U.S. Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, which led to blanket legal reform, Native Americans gained civil and legal rights piece by piece. In 1924, the U.S. Congress passed the Indian Citizenship Act, giving Native Americans a dual citizenship they were citizens of their sovereign native land as well as the United States. Native Americans gained uniform voting rights in the Voting Rights Act of 1965. But it wasnt until 1968, when the Indian Civil Rights Act was passed, that Natives gained the right to free speech, the right to a jury and protection from unreasonable search and seizure.

While the Native Americans history began thousands of years ago, their European encounter started with one man. Determined to find a direct route from Europe to Asia, Christopher Columbus stumbled on the Americas in 1492.

Columbus called the first people he met Indians because he assumed he had been sailing in the Indian Ocean. But in actuality, this land had already been discovered millions of Natives had occupied the Western Hemisphere for hundreds of years.

Ultimately, while Columbus is remembered as a daring adventurer, he was also a perpetrator of atrocities and his legacy is viewed as the starting point that sparked hundreds of years of exploration and exploitation of the Americas.

The most significant reason for Natives decline was disease an invisible killer that wiped out an estimated 90% of the population. Unlike the Europeans and Asians, whose lifestyle had a long history of sharing close quarters with domesticated animals, Native Americans were not immune to pathogens spread by domesticated cows, pigs, sheep, goats, and horses. As a result, millions were killed by measles, influenza, whooping cough, diphtheria, typhus, bubonic plague, cholera, scarlet fever and syphilis.

Spreading disease was not always intentional on the part of the colonists. But there were a few instances that confirm Europeans attempt to exterminate natives. In 1763, a particularly serious uprising threatened British garrisons in Pennsylvania. Worried about limited resources, and driven by atrocities committed by some Native Americans , Sir Jeffrey Amherst, commander-in-chief of British forces in North America, wrote to Colonel Henry Bouquet at Fort Pitt:

You will do well to try to inoculate the Indians [with smallpox] by means of blankets, as well as to try every other method, that can serve to extirpate this execrable race.

Consequently, settlers spread smallpox to the Native Americans by distributing blankets previously owned by contagious patients.

Cultural clashes between European settlers and Natives lasted for over four hundred years small battles, large scale wars and forced labor systems on large estates, also known as encomiendas took a large toll on the Native population.

Throughout the Northeast, proclamations to create redskins, or scalps of Native Americans, were common during war and peace times. According to the 1775 Phips Proclamation in Massachusetts, King George II of Britain called for subjects to embrace all opportunities of pursuing, captivating, killing and destroying all and every of the aforesaid Indians.

Colonists were paid for each Penobscot Native they killed fifty pounds for adult male scalps, twenty-five for adult female scalps, and twenty for scalps of boys and girls under age twelve. These proclamations explicitly display the settlers intent to kill, a major indicator of genocidal acts.

After the American Revolution, many Native American lives were already lost to disease and displacement. In 1830, the federal Indian Removal Act called for the removal of the Five Civilized Tribes the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and Seminole. Between 1830 and 1838, federal officials working on behalf of white cotton growers forced nearly 100,000 Indians out of their homeland. The dangerous journey from the southern states to Indian Territory in current Oklahoma is referred to as the Trail of Tears in which 4,000 Cherokee people died of cold, hunger, and disease.

As the United States expanded westward, violent conflicts over territory multiplied. In 1784, one British traveler noted:

White Americans have the most rancorous antipathy to the whole race of Indians; and nothing is more common than to hear them talk of extirpating them totally from the face of the earth, men, women, and children.

In particular, the 1848 California gold rush caused 300,000 people to migrate to San Francisco from the East Coast and South America. Historians believe that California was once the most densely and diversely populated area for Native Americans in U.S. territory; however, the gold rush had massive implications for Native American livelihoods. Toxic chemicals and gravel ruined traditional Native hunting and agricultural practices, resulting in starvation for many Natives.

Further, in 1850, the California state government passed the Act for the Government and Protection of Indians that addressed the punishment and protection of Native Americans, and helped to facilitate the removal of their culture and land. It also legalized slavery and was referenced for the buying and selling of Native children.

A war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct.California Governor Peter H. Burnett, 1851

In 1890, Wounded Knee, located on the Pine Ridge Reservation in North Dakota, government officials believed chief Sitting Bull was a Ghost Dancer, someone who rejects the ways of the white man and believes that the gods will create a new world without non-believers. In the process of arresting Sitting Bull, federal officials actually ended up killing him, causing a massive rebellion that led to the deaths of over 150 Natives in Pine Ridge.

Since the early 1900s, advancements in Native American rights have been slow and piece-meal. At the turn of century, the Supreme Court ruled that the U.S. federal government has the right to overturn all Cherokee laws in the precedent-setting decision Cherokee Nation v. Hitchcock.

But, in 1928, the Brookings Institute released the Meriam Report, which was one of the first in-depth analyses of reservation living conditions. The report went on to influence policy initiatives which improved healthcare, education, and land rights for Native Americans. This was a step forward for the protection of a minority who was still without voting rights.

In 1949, however, the U.S. government took a step back towards 19thcentury bigotry, as the Hoover Commission urged the assimilation of the Natives,

The basis for historic Indian culture has been swept away. Traditional tribal organization was smashed a generation ago . Assimilation must be the dominant goal of public policy.

One year later, using the same post-war idea that prevented Little Tokyos in the U.S., the Commissioner of Indian Affairs began to implement withdrawal planning, or the termination and relocation of thousands of Natives to cities.

In 1978, Congress passed the Indian Child Welfare Act which protects Native American children and the custody of their parents. Controversy has surrounded cases where state officials forcibly removed children from Native American families.

In Maine, the Maine Truth and Reconciliation Committee, for example, seeks to uncover and acknowledge the truth about what happened to Wabanaki children and families involved with the Maine child welfare system. These forcible removals are still happening today.

South Dakota continues to remove children at a rate higher than the vast majority of other states in the country.

For hundreds of years a mixture of colonial conflict, disease, specific atrocities and policies of discrimination has devastated the Native American population. In the course of this time, it is estimated that over nine million Natives died from violent conflict or disease. For too long this history has been under-recognized and too little discussed.

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Atrocities Against Native Americans - United to End Genocide

Government Oppression | Prometheism.net – Part 32

Right and Left, Protection, Oppression, and Liberty are all directly interrelated, and are in turn a function of what can be termed Government Intervention, or more simply, How Much Government.

The traditional Right-Wing government allows people the rich and powerful to impose upon others by providing insufficient protection through insufficient Intervention.

Left-Wing government allows government to impose upon people beyond simple protection, thus creating a condition of oppression through excessive Intervention.

The degree of Government Intervention also affects liberty. If protection and government intervention is insufficient, people are able to impose upon one another, so the overall liberty is not maximized. On the other hand, excessive government intervention results in oppression, thus once again, the overall liberty is not maximized.

The amount of government intervention required to maximize liberty and to provide full protection for all citizens from imposition without creating oppression can be defined with the utmost accuracy.

Throughout most of our political history government has pursued a policy of laisser-faire or minimal intervention in the affairs of society, thus permitting those with superior forces of personality, intelligence and wealth to increase their well-being by diminishing that of others.

Insufficient government intervention permits citizens to harm and exploit one another. That is the essence of Right Wing Conservatism. Under this regime freedom is increased for the stronger elements of society but decreased for the weaker members; hence the overall liberty is not maximized.

The Socialist reaction gave government, or the State, considerably greater powers of intervention designed to help the poor by preventing exploitation and readjusting the balance of wealth.

But excessive government initiates exploitation and oppression by the State. That is the essence of Left Wing Socialism. Under this regime liberty is increased by government protection, but it is then decreased as government goes beyond the point of protection and creates interference, leading to oppression. Again, liberty is not maximized.

Liberty is maximized when government offers full protection, but without moving into oppression.

It thus becomes clear that the significant factor in government policy, and the liberty it produces, is the Degree of Government Intervention.

The Government Intervention Scale

The Degree of Government Intervention can be shown as a simple straight-line scale, calibrated from Zero to One Hundred Percent.

Let us first establish the two extremes at each end of the scale.

At one end of the Scale we have Zero Percent Government Intervention, which means that government quite simply does nothing at all. Government is to all intents and purposes non-existent. The result is anarchy in its pure sense of being without leader, (an arkhos in Greek). In this condition everyone is free to do whatever they like; but this also includes the freedom to limit or eliminate the freedom of others. Liberty, in the sense of a disciplined freedom resulting in a safe and ordered society, could not be said to exist under this regime.

At the other end of the Scale we have One Hundred Percent Government Intervention. Here we find total government control over every aspect of life. This is the kind of environment visualized by authors such as Huxley and Orwell, who attempted to highlight the dangers of allowing government to become oppressive. Here we find ourselves in the sinister world of Total Control, of citizens directed in their every move and every thought by an ever-watchful Big Brother. Clearly, liberty does not thrive here either.

Fortunately most of us experience neither anarchy in the sense of zero government, nor the total oppression of one hundred percent government. But these two positions provide clear end-points as reference positions.

While there is little current example of zero government, many of the ex-socialist-bloc countries swung over to the opposite extreme in the confusion following perestroika, with a low degree of practical government resulting in black markets, widespread corruption, and the control of production and commerce in the cities moving from the State into the hands of Mafia-style gangs. It might still appear to the citizens of Russias major cities that Government Intervention is almost at Zero, a condition which to many may seem infinitely worse than the old Communist days, the memory softened now by time.

More familiar to Western countries is the Low Degree of, say, a nominal 25% Government Intervention. This is represented by the term Laisser-faire, meaning literally let people get on with it.

Low Intervention, or Laisser-faire

The first exponent of Laisser-faire was Francis Quesnay, physician to Louis XV, who came to the conclusion that government was a necessary evil which should interfere as little as possible with individual freedom.

The pioneering thought of Quesnay was developed into one of the most powerful doctrines in the history of ideas by Adam Smith, Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Glasgow, whose work The Wealth of Nations (published in 1776) became the gospel of the system of national liberty for the next century in western political and economic thought.

Familiar with the works of Quesnay, Smith built a more solid basis for his attack on government, updated now to reflect the shift of emphasis from land to industry which was concurrently unfolding.

Smith held that the source of a nations wealth is labor. The increase in a nations wealth therefore depends on making labor more efficient, which in turn is achieved by enhancing the investment of capital, developing specialization and mass production, and promoting the free flow of goods and materials in international trade.

To give full play to this complicated but natural and vital operation, the whole process must remain free from artificial restrictions of government.

This thesis was undoubtedly proposed as a constructive scientific-economic blueprint for the general growth, welfare and benefit of society as a whole, and in theory at least it is difficult to argue against it.

But in production and commerce, as in all aspects of inter-human relationships, there is always opportunity for infringement of liberty, for some to gain through others loss.

And as the industrial revolution unfolded it would become clear that infringement of liberty in industry could be taken to, and indeed well beyond, levels which were unacceptable to anyone with knowledge and a modicum of social conscience.

Though Adam Smith saw benefit for all, in practice it would be the 19th century owners of capital, production equipment and factory premises who would benefit, to the detriment and impoverishment of those in the weaker position: their employees, the ex-hand-weavers now displaced by machines and clamoring for work at any price to ward off starvation. Women and children were paid a meager wage for long hours of concentrated work tending the machines which were dangerous, unguarded, and caused frequent accidents for which there was neither care nor compensation.

And the law was predictably slow to act in their defense. The bankers, investors and industrialists, being either in power or influential in the formulation of government policy, naturally supported a system which gave them a free rein to take advantage of their superior position. Laisser-faire for them was every bit as rewarding as Adam Smith had promised.

But at the same time it was becoming clear to reformers both in and out of government that while accepting the basic doctrine of liberty, an increase in government intervention was necessary to protect workers and improve their lot.

The movement for reform by legislation in England began with the Factory Acts which between 1833 and 1845 succeeded in limiting the work of children under eleven years of age to nine hours a day and of women to twelve hours. These Acts prohibited the employment of children in mines, and for the first time provided general rules for the health and safety of all workers.

So it was that Government Intervention began steadily to increase, with the justifiable aim of eliminating some of the more blatant opportunities for citizen to infringe the liberties of fellow citizen.

But the pace of reform was too slow for the newly awakening, increasingly organized and motivated working classes. And the pendulum of Government Intervention was to swing over to the other extreme: to socialism and communism, which represented a much higher degree of Intervention than most reformers would ever have visualized.

High Intervention, or Socialism/Communism

Under Socialism and Communism we enter the higher realms of Government Intervention, say a nominal 75%, where an increase in the power of government and the State is actively pursued.

Place everything in the hands of the State, the Socialists urged, and the State will take good care of us all.

Set against the Victorian backdrop of widespread poverty, ignorance, ill-health and malnutrition, coupled with a concurrently growing sense of conscience and the need for reform, socialism appeared to offer the answer. Only a few there were who could foresee the implications of high and ever-increasing State control.

One such visionary was British author Herbert Spencer, who wrote, back in 1884:

There is an increasing tendency for administrative compulsion and restraints. The increasing power of the State is accompanied by a decreasing power of the rest of society to resist its further growth and control.

The multiplication of careers opened by a developing bureaucracy tempts members of the classes who regulate it to favor its extension, as adding to the chances of safe and respectable employment for their relatives.

The people at large, led to look on benefits received through public agencies as gratis benefits, have their hopes continually excited by the prospects of more.

Thus, influences of various kinds conspire to increase State action, and decrease individual action. The numerous socialistic changes already made by Act of parliament, joined with the numerous others about to be made, will soon be all merged in State-socialism, swallowed in the vast wave which they have little by little raised.

Spencers words have proved prophetically correct in the light, not only of State oppression in the former Soviet Union and its satellite socialist countries, but also in the light of attitudes, demands for social programs, high taxes and budget deficits in the West.

Nations and their governments have thus far succeeded in creating and experiencing two kinds of political environment: enslavement of man by man, and government oppression. Enslavement of man by man, resulting in slavery, feudalism and industrial poverty, gave way at the turn of the 20th century to socialism and communism, which tended to create government oppression a reduction in personal liberties combined with the secrecy, arrogance and lack of financial discipline so familiar today.

The two conditions or policies of laisser-faire and socialism, Right and Left, and their relationship with Government Intervention, may be simply summarized.

Enslavement, exploitation and imposition exercised by citizens over fellow citizens result from a Low Degree of Government Intervention, or Laisser-faire, which permits Imposition by citizens upon one another.

Oppression, government intrusion, State takeover of business, or Socialism-Communism, result from a High Degree of Government Intervention, which creates Imposition by Government.

Where do we find Maximum Liberty?

Liberty is certainly not maximized at Zero Percent Government Intervention. At Zero Percent Intervention there is no government or legal protection of liberty whatsoever. This is anarchy. Many examples of this can be seen at the present time in the countries of central Africa and even, to a lesser extent, in some of the ex-Soviet states.

As we move away from this condition of lawlessness, proceeding up the Intervention Scale, a gradual increase in Government Intervention provides basic law, order and personal safety, followed as we progress farther up the scale by more sophisticated forms of protection such as consumer, employee and environmental protection.

How far should we continue to increase Government Intervention?

The Right-wing definition of Liberty as minimum Government Intervention has always been a powerful argument, enhanced today in the light of both the experience and the demise of Soviet socialism. Just as innocence until proved guilty, or Presumption of Innocence, is a cornerstone of the English judicial tradition, so too does the Anglo-American concept of law recognize what may be called the Presumption of Liberty, the concept that we should all be free unless there is a very good reason for the law to limit that freedom.

And what constitutes a very good reason for the law to limit freedom? Another very old-established precept of English Common Law provides an answer: it is entirely reasonable for the law to limit or to forbid an action if that action is harmful to others.

Bearing this principle in mind, we continue to increase Government Intervention gradually until we reach the point at which there is sufficient Government Intervention to ensure full protection of each and every individuals liberty from infringement by others in any way. We reach the point where Government Intervention is sufficient to ensure that there is no opportunity for any individual to impose upon, exploit, harm or in any way infringe the liberty of any others.

We have in fact reached the halfway mark on the Scale, represented by 50% Government Intervention.

Under a regime of 50% Government Intervention there would be no opportunity whatsoever for one individual or class or group to harm or enslave or to infringe the liberty of any others.

At this point we have achieved one side of liberty. As we make the final move from 49% to the 50% mark, we have succeeded in eliminating all infringement of liberty by defending the citizen against any and all forms of injury or imposition by other citizens.

But now we must guard against going any further, which would lead us into oppression.

We have already defined the 50% mark as being the precise degree of Government Intervention necessary to prevent any and all infringements of liberty between citizens. So if we increase Intervention any further government can only begin producing laws which are not strictly in the protection of liberty, and are therefore intrusive and ultimately oppressive.

As Government Intervention increases beyond 50% a progressive reduction of Liberty immediately begins. Governments are frequently tempted to make laws regulating personal private conduct for our own good. There may be evidence to show that seatbelts save lives; but when government legislates their use for our own personal protection it is taking the first step down the road to oppression.

At 50% Intervention, government must protect employees and consumers from commercial irresponsibility. But when government takes upon itself all commerce and industry it is denying individuals the exercise of their natural enterprise and initiative. Apart from the reduction of commercial liberty, this also has disastrous effects on national prosperity, a fact which became the major cause of the collapse of Soviet socialism in 1990.

The degree of Government Intervention which will produce Maximum Liberty can be clearly and precisely established:

Under a policy of 50% Intervention, government prevents individuals from imposing their will and judgments upon one another, but initiates no further imposition.

50% Government Intervention neither permits nor creates Infringement of Liberty. Government intervenes promptly when, but only when the law is required to protect a clearly identifiable infringement of liberty.

If there is any opportunity for any citizen to infringe the liberty of any other citizen, if any citizen suffers infringement of liberty to any degree or in any way at the hands of any other citizen, then Government is exercising not 50%, but 49% or some lower degree of Intervention.

Government is permitting a degree of injury and exploitation, of self-enhancement at the expense of others.

On the other hand, if Government issues any law, order or directive which is not clearly and solely in defense of an identifiable liberty from imposition by others, then Government is exercising not 50%, but 51% or some higher degree of Intervention.

Government is initiating some degree of State oppression.

The ability to define the seemingly diverse elements and options of Right and Left, Laisser-faire and Socialism-Communism, of Protection and Oppression on the single common scale of Government Intervention allows us also to define the related degrees of Liberty.

Liberty is maximized when the degree of Government Intervention is 50%: no less, and no more.

At 50% Intervention there is no Infringement of Liberty either by citizen, or by the State; there is neither Exploitation nor Oppression; the general Liberty is maximized.

The Degree of Government Intervention necessary to maximize liberty can thus be identified with a precision which any citizen can readily comprehend, and when necessary, defend.

A government basing its day-to-day legislation on such a clearly definable policy would lose the ability, presently enjoyed by governments of any shade of opinion to act arbitrarily. Government would be operating under such a precisely defined policy that it would become an interpreter of policy, rather than an originator of arbitrary law. This would radically alter the legislative process and the relationship between government and citizen. Government functionaries and departments become answerable to a Principle, their actions easily verifiable by any alert citizen. Citizens are governed, neither by dictator nor majority, but by a Principle which guarantees maximum protection, minimal or zero oppression, and maximum overall liberty.

The Principle of Liberty offers a new direction in politics, based on universality not class interest. DOWNLOAD THE BOOK

If any man, any woman, acquires or is granted power over any other or others, this will not may, but most surely and certainly will lead to abuse, misuse and corruption.

The only Power that is competent and can be trusted to regulate the affairs of community and society is the Power of Principle, the Principle that in the pursuit of self-improvement and the exercise of liberty, no-one should injure or exploit others.

This Principle of Liberty is neutral and impersonal. It is a shield, protecting from injury, preventing injury.

Legislators hold no arbitrary or discretionary power. They are simply Interpreters, applying the Principle in terms of everyday events and actions. The process of Interpretation is clearly delineated and circumscribed. If there is Injury, there must be Protection. If there is no Injury, then there is neither cause nor justification for the interference of law.

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Protection, Oppression, and Liberty: How Much Government?

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Government Oppression | Prometheism.net - Part 32

Thinking Constitutionally About Charlottesville – HuffPost

Violence: Throwing a bomb through the window of an abortion clinic certainly expresses an opinion, but is not protected by the First Amendment. No brainer.

Imminent violence:A lynch mob marching toward a jail, torches and noose in hand, chanting, to seize a suspect, is certainly expressing an opinion, but the march can be curbed before it reaches the suspect without violating the First Amendment.

Fear of violence:Anti-war protesters marching peacefully, if provocatively, through a city street have a First Amendment right to do so, and cannot be curbed because of a fear that others offended by their speech might attack them or because of a fear that counter-demonstrators will lead to violence between the two groups. That fear cannot constitutionally justify a government ban of the demonstration.

Instead, it is the responsibility of the police to protect the demonstrators against violence, not use the fear of violence to ban the demonstration.

And if there is a likelihood of violence between demonstrators and counterdemonstrators, the police must take reasonable steps toward keeping them apart. As the noted civil rights lawyer Norman Siegel, himself a veteran of many such cases, recently wrote:

To prevent violence, local and state police, and if necessary, the National Guard, need to be trained to separate hostile groups. If need be, you separate them with police officers standing between them or creating First Amendment zones (with wooden or metal barriers if necessary) for each group.

But in Charlottesville, he concluded, video footage and reported personal observations reveal that the lesson of separation was not adhered to adequately.

In the Declaration of Independence, the founders of this country announced a then-new purpose of government: to protect the rights of citizens. To secure these rights, the Declaration said, is the reason why governments are instituted... In Charlottesville, the government failed to secure those rights.

In Charlottesville, however, there was one more highly volatile circumstance: one side in the dispute was ostentatiously armed, carrying dangerous and intimidating weapons. Should that make a difference in how and whether free speech rights are protected?

In a curious step-back from its traditional defense of free speech rights, the ACLU national office has now announced that it may no longer defend the free speech rights of people who carry guns to a demonstration. This is a curious announcement, in part because there is no pending request for such representation, and in part because the death and injuries in Charlottesville were causednot by a gun being fired but by an automobile driven murderouslyinto the crowd of anti-racist demonstrators. And this murderous act was likely enabled in part by the failure of the police to create barriers. Will the ACLU now not defend the free speech rights of people who drive their cars to demonstrations? Or take steps to require the police to be more protective in volatile situations?

But more importantly, the ACLUs announcement is a serious step-back from theBrandenburgstandard, which for nearly a half-century has delivered precisely the sort of free-speech protection the ACLU has sought for its entire history. Are we now to go back to fear of violence as a legitimate justification for allowing the government to prohibit speech it doesnt like?

Because guns are not the only source of violence, and once fear of guns can justify speech restrictions, what other fears will? Fear of cars? Fear of clubs? Fear of knives? Fear of fists? Has the ACLU Board changed its longstanding policy, or was this an impromptu reaction by the staff unable to resist the hostility its free speech cases often provoke? (And maybe concerned about losing donors.)

Moreover, carrying guns as a show of force, is not unprecedented. The Black Panthers did it in the 60s, without the ACLU as I recall ever issuing a pre-emptive statement saying it would never represent them on First Amendment grounds if they carried guns. Carrying guns is threatening, but carrying guns does not necessarily imply using them. Again, the weapon of death in Charlottesville turned out to be a car, not a gun. And people who did not drive that car, regardless of what they carried, cannot be judged to have been responsible for that death.

What can be, and should be, constitutionally curbed is imminent violence, not the fear of violence that leaves the government free to speculate. Which brings us to the second Supreme Court case worth thinking about in this context, a case calledHeller, decided in 2008.

Until theHellerdecision, the Second Amendment had always been held not to confer anindividualright but rather to protect the right ofstatesto raise and maintain state militias as a protection against federal government oppression. Individuals had constitutional rights to own and possess arms only in that context. That is in my view unquestionably right historically. But in 2008, inHeller, Justice Antonin Scalia, the oracle of original intent, abandoned and twisted it to lead the Court to a 5-4 decision, which held for the first time that the Second Amendment conferred a right to bear arms upon individuals,even if not affiliated with any state-regulated militia.

And although the case only ruled that there was a constitutional right of individuals to keep handguns and other firearms for private usein their own homes,theHellerdecision has encouraged the spread of open carry outside the home.

I believeHellerhas no more validity than theDred Scottdecision, which denied all rights to blacks, did in 1857, or theBradwelldecision, which denied the rights of women to practice law, did in 1873. But we are stuck with it for now as those alive in 1857 and 1873 were for a time stuck with theDred ScottandBradwelldecisions. But that doesnt mean we have to agree withHeller, nor does it necessarily mean that a law reasonably regulating open carry would not be upheld by the Supreme Court, even underHeller.

So to summarize:

1. I do not recall the ACLU, back in the 60s, taking the position that the mere brandishing of guns by Black Panthers, without more, disqualified them from being represented by the ACLU in otherwise legitimate free speech cases. So why now, other than different political sympathies? Whats the content-neutral legal principle here?

2. Violence can obviously be curbed. No-brainer. So can imminent violence under the Supreme CourtsBrandenburgdecision. But just brandishing weapons, without more, is not violence any more than hanging someone in effigy is a real hanging. I believe open carry can and should be legally restrained, and not only in the context of First Amendment activity. But once courts allow thefearof violence, without more, to curb expression, it is a very slippery slope.

In 1969, Quaker students in Iowa were prevented from wearing black armbands to protest the war in Vietnam because school principals believed they would provoke or lead to violence. That was upheld until the Supreme Court struck it down, ruling that fear of violence, without more, was not enough. I know armbands are not guns, but fear of violence is not violence, either.

3. As Norman Siegel wrote, it is always the responsibility of the government, utilizing local police or the national guard, to protect peaceful protesters when they are threatened by thugs, whether the thugs have guns or not. That was what the government should have done when the Freedom Riders protesting segregated busing were assaulted by white mobs in the South in 1961, and when civil rights activists marching across the Selma bridge in 1965

were assaulted instead of protected by law enforcement officials, and when anti-war demonstrators were assaulted by hard-hats in NYC in 1970, while the police stood aside.

To secure these rights, the Declaration of Independence announced, is why governments are instituted. If that is to be taken seriously, then the police must be obligated to protect demonstrators, not repress them, especially in volatile situations.

4. And finally: What happened in Charlottesville was not the fault of protesters who did not engage in violence. It was the fault of those who became violent, and the fault of the government that did not adequately prepare for and protect against that possibility.

Let us not allow constitutional standards we fought to establish for so long, and which protect all of our rights to free speech, become an unintended casualty of what happened in Charlottesville. Because the erosion of free speech rights would be a victory for those who oppose liberty and equality.

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Thinking Constitutionally About Charlottesville - HuffPost

Robert E. Lee Was The Richard Spencer Of His Time – HuffPost

I am no different than most Americans. I was taught what most Americans are taught about the Civil War and about its heroes. I was taught to believe that there were heroes on both sides of the Civil War. Chief among those heroes were men like General Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, and Stonewall Jackson, who we were taught were great, valiant, and noble men who served honorably in a difficult time. They were honorable gentlemen who just happened to disagree on the issues. Yes, the main issue at question was the nations peculiar institution of slavery, but for men like Lee it was largely an issue of federalism and states rights. They were so venerated in my high school textbooks that I might have almost inferred that if I were in their shoes, I would have similarly fought, and similarly acted as a matter of conscience.

And you know what? Maybe, just maybe, if my grandparents and parents had not been sharecroppers on cotton plantations in Jim Crows South Carolina and Georgia, I would have been tempted to believe this whitewashed and perverted version of history. Or maybe if I didnt witness firsthand the aftermath of Nixons and then Reagans attempt to galvanize and then weaponize the same racial fears of white people into a Southern Strategy and a so-called War on Drugs, I would have been sympathetic to these arguments. Maybe, just maybe if my high school AP History teacher didnt show us how D.W. Griffiths racist propaganda film, Birth of a Nation, gave rise to the KKK throughout the country and was endorsed by President Woodrow Wilson during the exact time frame in which most Confederate monuments were erected, perhaps I would have believed what they wanted me to believe about the Civil War. But I knew better.

Of course, my history books wanted me to believe that Robert E. Lee was a complicated saint of a man who was forced to lead the Confederate army for the sake of his beloved Virginia. Yet what was Virginias stated reason for secession?

In its ordinance of secession, the state of Virginia argued that they seceded because the Federal Government, having perverted said powers, not only to the injury of the people of Virginia, but to the oppression of the Southern Slaveholding States. Thats right. You read that correctly. Virginia and the ten other states who literally kidnapped, sold, bred, and enslaved humans charged that they were being oppressed by the federal government to end their barbarous enterprise. And white folks across America have tried to argue that the dismantling of the idolatry of white supremacy is their oppression ever since. As has been stated eloquently by others, when you have only known a brutal and barbaric power, even equality feels like oppression.

So no. Robert E. Lee was no gentleman. Robert E. Lee was no hero. As far as Im concerned, Robert E Lee was the Richard Spencer of his time. Like Richard Spencer, he was educated at the finest schools, clean cut and polished. Like Richard Spencer, he perceived of himself to be a noble, honorable man. Like Richard Spencer, he bought into a narrative that he was somehow a champion against white oppression and victimization.

How did this gentleman, Robert E. Lee, behave, when the humans he owned tried to pursue their God-given right to freedom? This gentleman had them beat like cattle or whipped them himself, as The Atlantic recently reported. And when faced with the possibility of serving alongside his West Point classmates who sided with the Union or fighting to defend white supremacy, this gentleman led an insurrection against his homeland leading to the death of over 600,000 people, the bloodiest single war ever on our soil. And what did gentlemen like Robert E. Lee lead men into bloody battle to defend? White supremacy, plain and simple.

Yet today we have a president who on a Monday condemns white supremacy while reading scripted remarks, then condemns both sides when a neo-Nazi claims the life of Heather Heyer. By Friday though, he laments the removal of beautiful statues and monuments dedicated to those who died to defend white supremacy. Then of course today he announces that he will send 4,000 more troops to Afghanistan,hoping that we will all just forget about it and move on.

Yet moving on, is precisely how we got here. Moving on is how 81 percent of evangelical Christians voted for a man who has brought out the very worst of this countrys demons of racism, sexism, ableism, xenophobia, homophobia, transphobia and protectionism. Moving on is precisely how it is 2017 and we are still living with the very real threat of white supremacist fueled domestic terrorism in America. Moving on is precisely how we have managed to sanitize, normalize, and ritualize the legacy of white supremacy in our city squares and on a college campus in Charlottesville. Each time we tell ourselves to move on we turn a blind eye to the reality not only of our countrys racist past but to its racist and monstrous present. We lie to ourselves to suggest otherwise.

Its time for us to finally face the truth in our country. Only through confronting difficult truths can we hear the cries of our neighbors for justice, truly repent, and chart a way forward to redress the iniquities of our past and present. Richard Spencer and his clean cut, khaki band of white supremacists impersonating real gentlemen may be the tiki torch bearers of racial hatred today. However, the truth is that they carry a torch that was passed on to them by the clean cut gentlemen of a stubbornly persistent era of our nations gruesome past. They gathered at that monument of Robert E. Lee to remind us all that Robert E. Lee was the Richard Spencer of his time.

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Robert E. Lee Was The Richard Spencer Of His Time - HuffPost

Why ESPN and Robert Lee are right – Lincoln Journal Star

In the testosterone-laced world of sports, sometimes your name means everything. Think not? I've seen men beaten by mobs just for having the gall to scream out "let's go Cowboys" at an Eagles game. Think of all the racial epithets we've heard, of how one football player, Colin Kaepernick, silently taking a knee during the national anthem in personal protest of injustice in America has divided the nation.

We want to pretend that sports are a safe sanctuary from the world's ugly problems, but that has always been a farce. Truth is, not even the glorious game of football can keep America's toxic culture of bigotry, hate and violence at bay. It's just too heavy a burden.

So imagine if you're scheduled to be the announcer for ESPN's livestream of the University of Virginia's season-opener football game against William and Mary in a few weeks and your name is Robert Lee. But you have watched, along with the world, as thousands of torch-wielding, white supremacists screaming hate-filled chants marched around the UVA campus and rallied all their hate at the foot of a statue bearing your name: Robert Lee. A monument the city had voted to remove under state objections. Well, it's not unreasonable, even though you are Asian-American, that you and your employer may have some concerns.

"This wasn't about offending anyone. It was about the reasonable possibility that because of his name he would be subjected to memes and jokes and who knows what else. Think about it. Robert Lee comes to town to do a game in Charlottesville," ESPN said in a statement that was tweeted late Tuesday night. "No politically correct efforts. No race issues. Just trying to be supportive of a young guy who felt it best to avoid the potential zoo." It was a mutual decision, the network says, to switch Lee to the Youngstown State versus Pittsburgh game that same day.

Nope, not unreasonable at all. Not in today's America. Not when we just witnessed heavily armed, swastika-wearing protesters who believe in white supremacy clashing in the streets with counterprotesters, who believed just as passionately that all people are created equal. Not when one woman is dead and dozens more injured because they had the audacity to stand up to the failed notion of white supremacy. Not when a statue, or a team name, or a presidential tweet can incite racial tensions and violence.

No matter that Robert Lee is Asian-American and his name has nothing to do with the Confederacy or slavery. It seems unreasonable, ignorant and downright ridiculous to associate his name in any way with the Confederate general. Still, nothing we've witnessed in Charlottesville, or since, has been reasonable or intelligent.

Nothing we've seen in Charlottesville or other cities and towns where these types of protests and counterprotests have sprung up could be called reasonable. It's disgusting. Killing one another, fighting, chanting Nazi slogans and counterslogans. Still, it continues. We continue.

As racial tensions over police brutality, immigration and other issues have flared over the past several years in our nation, these statues have become lightning rods symbolizing oppression, hate and the whitewashing of history for many of us, myself included. Others insist these monuments, of which there are dozens across the nation, are a symbol of Southern pride, an important part of American history.

The top headlines from JournalStar.com. Delivered at 11 a.m. Monday-Friday.

Right. If that were the case, wouldn't we also have numerous statues of Malcolm X, Marcus Garvey or Harriet Tubman and countless others who fought for freedom and equality standing proudly outside government buildings, dotting college campuses? Just getting a national monument to Martin Luther King Jr. took decades.

Long before the Charlottesville riots, municipalities had begun to remove these Confederate monuments on public property, citing safety issues. And those efforts have increased since Charlottesville. From Baltimore to Brooklyn to Texas, these statues are toppling amid protest.

While this national conversation continues, ESPN decided to avoid evoking the chaos during a live broadcast. Robert Lee decided he just wanted to do his job, which is to broadcast a livestream of a college football game. As one ESPN executive told me Wednesday:

"Let's not go to the zoo if we don't have to go to the zoo."

Good call. Life is crazy enough already.

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Why ESPN and Robert Lee are right - Lincoln Journal Star