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Showing posts with label nuclear deal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nuclear deal. Show all posts

Tuesday 2 August 2011

The debt deal will hurt the poorest Americans, convinced by Fox and the Tea Party to act against their own welfare

Debt deal: anger and deceit has led the US into a billionaires' coup


  • Daniel Pudles
    Illustration by Daniel Pudles
    There are two ways of cutting a deficit: raising taxes or reducing spending. Raising taxes means taking money from the rich. Cutting spending means taking money from the poor. Not in all cases of course: some taxation is regressive; some state spending takes money from ordinary citizens and gives it to banks, arms companies, oil barons and farmers. But in most cases the state transfers wealth from rich to poor, while tax cuts shift it from poor to rich. So the rich, in a nominal democracy, have a struggle on their hands. Somehow they must persuade the other 99% to vote against their own interests: to shrink the state, supporting spending cuts rather than tax rises. In the US they appear to be succeeding. Partly as a result of the Bush tax cuts of 2001, 2003 and 2005 (shamefully extended by Barack Obama), taxation of the wealthy, in Obama's words, "is at its lowest level in half a century". The consequence of such regressive policies is a level of inequality unknown in other developed nations. As the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz points out, in the past 10 years the income of the top 1% has risen by 18%, while that of blue-collar male workers has fallen by 12%. The deal being thrashed out in Congress as this article goes to press seeks only to cut state spending. As the former Republican senator Alan Simpson says: "The little guy is going to be cremated." That means more economic decline, which means a bigger deficit. It's insane. But how did it happen? The immediate reason is that Republican members of Congress supported by the Tea Party movement won't budge. But this explains nothing. The Tea Party movement mostly consists of people who have been harmed by tax cuts for the rich and spending cuts for the poor and middle. Why would they mobilise against their own welfare? You can understand what is happening in Washington only if you remember what everyone seems to have forgotten: how this movement began. On Sunday the Observer claimed that "the Tea Party rose out of anger over the scale of federal spending, and in particular in bailing out the banks". This is what its members claim. It's nonsense. The movement started with Rick Santelli's call on CNBC for a tea party of city traders to dump securities in Lake Michigan, in protest at Obama's plan to "subsidise the losers". In other words, it was a demand for a financiers' mobilisation against the bailout of their victims: people losing their homes. On the same day, a group called Americans for Prosperity (AFP) set up a Tea Party Facebook page and started organising Tea Party events. The movement, whose programme is still lavishly supported by AFP, took off from there. So who or what is Americans for Prosperity? It was founded and is funded by Charles and David Koch. They run what they call "the biggest company you've never heard of", and between them they are worth $43bn. Koch Industries is a massive oil, gas, minerals, timber and chemicals company. In the past 15 years the brothers have poured at least $85m into lobby groups arguing for lower taxes for the rich and weaker regulations for industry. The groups and politicians the Kochs fund also lobby to destroy collective bargaining, to stop laws reducing carbon emissions, to stymie healthcare reform and to hobble attempts to control the banks. During the 2010 election cycle, AFP spent $45m supporting its favoured candidates. But the Kochs' greatest political triumph is the creation of the Tea Party movement. Taki Oldham's film (Astro)Turf Wars shows Tea Party organisers reporting back to David Koch at their 2009 Defending the Dream summit, explaining the events and protests they've started with AFP help. "Five years ago," he tells them, "my brother Charles and I provided the funds to start Americans for Prosperity. It's beyond my wildest dreams how AFP has grown into this enormous organisation." AFP mobilised the anger of people who found their conditions of life declining, and channelled it into a campaign to make them worse. Tea Party campaigners take to the streets to demand less tax for billionaires and worse health, education and social insurance for themselves. Are they stupid? No. They have been misled by another instrument of corporate power: the media. The movement has been relentlessly promoted by Fox News, which belongs to a more familiar billionaire. Like the Kochs, Rupert Murdoch aims to misrepresent the democratic choices we face, in order to persuade us to vote against our own interests and in favour of his. What's taking place in Congress right now is a kind of political coup. A handful of billionaires have shoved a spanner into the legislative process. Through the candidates they have bought and the movement that supports them, they are now breaking and reshaping the system to serve their interests. We knew this once, but now we've forgotten. What hope do we have of resisting a force we won't even see? • A fully referenced version of this article can be found on George Monbiot's website. On Twitter: @GeorgeMonbiot

Saturday 25 August 2007

Listen To The People

If this deal is so indispensable, why can't the government get even a simple majority in its favour in Parliament?

VINOD MEHTA
O, National Interest, what sins are committed in thy name! Prakash Karat is protecting our national interest, Manmohan Singh is protecting our national interest, Amar Singh is protecting our national interest, George Fernandes is protecting our national interest, V.P. Singh is protecting our national interest. Mother India is being suffocated by these eminent protectors. One longs for someone who is selling the country for a few pieces of silver! It seems not patriotism, but national interest is the last refuge of the scoundrel. So complete and comprehensive is this protection that the country's blood pressure is at bursting point while the government is hanging by its short hairs. India needs to be saved from its protectors.

How did we arrive here? Barely two weeks ago, the UPA was sailing smoothly, uplifted by impressive victories in a presidential and vice-presidential poll. Politics was at once boring and predictable. In the UK, August (when the natives go en masse on chhutti) is the silly season. Newspaper stories about spotting the first cuckoo abound. So, too, it seemed in our blessed republic where completion of 60 years of freedom had resulted in an orgy of self-congratulation.

Governments, especially coalition governments, fall regularly in all democracies. In India, sometimes serious, sometimes less serious issues cause a government to go down. However, never in our chequered history has a foreign policy issue caused the death of a government. It is always a local issue—Advani's rath yatra, Rajiv taking umbrage at some IB men loitering in the wrong place—which has profound domestic implications.

Now we have the possibility of a civilian nuclear deal with the United States, which 99 per cent of the indigenous population do not understand or care much about, dragging the Congress-led coalition to the brink of self-annihilation.

A civilian nuclear deal with America is important, even very important. The ayatollahs of get-into-bed-with-the United States confidently assert it is a life or death matter for the country. Perhaps. From 3 per cent to 7 per cent of nuclear power is a gargantuan leap, and who knows what other goodies await us in the brave, new world of technological embrace with George Bush.

Forgive the frivolity. The deal, we are told, is a "stunning foreign policy achievement". The deal is Manmohan Singh's gift to the nation. The deal cements the economic, strategic, political and emotional bonds between the world's largest and oldest democracies. The deal will further boost the morale of 1.5 million NRIs in the US (according to me, that is good reason for rejecting the deal). All the aforementioned arguments are either wholly or partially true. Nevertheless, one must ask: is the deal worth sacrificing the government for?

If the much-desired deal is for some reason delayed or scrapped, will the US declare war on India? Will McDonald's pack up, will Boeing stop selling us aeroplanes, will GE shut shop, will Pizza Hut quit our shores? Without the sainted deal, Indo-US ties are booming, they are touching the stratosphere. Those who maintain that non-signing will cripple or seriously hamper bilateral relations are being economical with the truth. We need the deal, but we don't have to cut our nose to spite our face in order to get it.

It is not just the comrades who are suspicious of George Bush or Hillary Clinton. To talk about an independent foreign policy is not the sole prerogative of the Communists or the cold warriors. Do we wish to get into a clinch with a country which could bomb Iran before the deal is signed by the US Congress?

In Delhi the latest parlour game is to heap abuse on the Left. Hypocrites, harlots ("power without responsibility"), ideological dinosaurs, blind, selfish, Chinese spies—Messrs Bardhan and Karat may well be the hate figures of our America-loving democracy.Alas, abusing them won't get us very far. If this deal is so indispensable, why can't the government get even a simple majority in its favour in Parliament?

Dr Manmohan Singh is a wise, sincere, honest patriot and politician. Someone who he trusts and respects must explain to him that politics without power is meaningless. If the PM wants this deal and other free market reforms to go through, he must help his party win 272 seats. At present, it is Deal vs Government. Which will he choose? More important: which will the people of India choose?

Why We Are Against India-US Nuclear Deal!


By Sandeep Pandey, Aruna Roy & Medha Patkar
24 August, 2007
Countercurrents.org


Much has been said and written about the India-US Nuclear Deal; beginning with the statement issued by many eminent nuclear scientists soon after the talks on the deal began between India and US governments. Public fora and People's organisations such as Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace called it anti-Sovereignty. Today when it is seen as an issue of conflict between the UPA and its Left front allies, we as representatives of people's movements must re-iterate our stand, which is that the deal is not just anti-democratic but against peace, and against environmentally sustainable energy generation and self-reliant economic development.

The Left front is questioning the fact that such an international deal with significant implications is imposed on the Indian people and Parliament, with no public debate and consultation in India. While US Congress took a year and a half to discuss the proposed change in the US laws, permitting nuclear commerce with India, the process in India has been totally undemocratic.
The deal is part of a successful attempt by the United States to build a strategic relationship with India, in confronting the rising capitalist challenge from China where India will be used as its client in the region. Directly or indirectly, the US will also enter the Indian sub-continent, to manage intra-regional, inter-country relations. This whole process is likely to escalate the arms race between Pakistan and India, sabotaging the India-Pakistan peace process. How can we ignore that fact the US sells arms to both India and Pakistan?
The agreement also facilitates a full-fledged international exchange of nuclear fuel and technology with insufficient caution and control. There will no doubt be a corporate rush to extract, export and misuse nuclear fuel and technology, and it will be very difficult to prevent misuse even for the arms trade. Highly superficial clauses don't instill any confidence against such a possibility.
However, our basic objections to this deal stem from our opposition to the production and use of both nuclear weapons and nuclear energy. The irreversible dangers of radioactivity and its ongoing impact on health, water, and the environment are factors that are being summarily dismissed in an irresponsible manner. The whole cycle of nuclear production beginning with uranium mining, is fraught with catastrophic dangers, and as a nation we cannot use the decisions of another country as justification for our own. Places like Jaduguda in Jharkhand, Kota and Pokhran in Rajasthan, have already demonstrated the ongoing dangers of nuclear use to the common citizen.
We, in India, have inherited rich renewable sources of energy, which are environmentally benign and abundantly available. The solar, wind, and ocean waves along with human power need to be fully tapped and put to use with people's control. Appropriate technology, research and development for production of cheaper equipment and tools, need to be combined with just distribution, for the right priorities. There is no political will for this in the ruling establishment. Estimates show that India can generate far more energy through alternative, environmentally sound sources. The nuclear energy option should be put up for widespread public debate giving citizens a full opportunity to make an informed choice.
This deal however raises questions beyond nuclear energy opening up large spaces for US government and corporate control in India. This, no doubt, is a symbol of imperialism already demonstrated through the Iraq war and the obvious links of US policy with corporate control over resources. With unbound exchange of information, data and material, knowledge and technology the dominant global power is all set to encroach upon Indian reserves and impinge upon our sovereignty. The deal ensures supply of sufficient nuclear material to nuclear reactors in India for the next 40 years, but the precautionary agreements to negotiations and consultations are only promises for the future. All this is subject to approvals and conditions to be monitored by the US Congress, while sidelining the Indian parliament.
The UPA government is proving to be increasingly submissive to the exploitation of our resources, knowledge and cheap labour by commercial interests and corporate interests. The BJP and its allies are also in the power game, using capitalist forces for support. The Left has raised an important issue using their bargaining power. Non-party people's formations may not have the power in parliament, but we have an important set of issues that need to be considered.
The Indian Constitution which allows deal such as this, as well as international treaties and agreements to be reached without democratic consultation, needs an amendment to make public debate and referendums mandatory and pre-conditional. We need an approval from the Indian electorate before we agree to sign the agreement.

Sandeep Pandey
ashaashram@yahoo.com

Aruna Roy
e-mail: arunaroy@gmail.com, mkssrajasthan@gmail.com

Medha Patkar
e-mail: nba.medha@gmail.com



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