Sunday, April 26, 2009

The Banality of 'Evil' in US Foreign Policy

My published NYTimes comment # 273.
April 26, 2009 11:43 am

Link


April 26th, 2009 9:58 am
The Banality of Bush & Obama White House Evil

"The Banality of Bush White House Evil" is being continued and it is cut from the same cloth, as Obama's daily drone raids in the western areas of the South Asia region. The plan to send tens of thousands more troops into South Asia will undoubtedly exacerbate that evil, make it more banal -- until we recoil from it, usually too late.

What makes Obama's drones banal is that they have become part of the everyday operations of the US in my region. The drones kill, maim, terrify innocents and they unleash the pathological anger, fear and violence of the Taliban who were, lest we forget, the Mujahideen of the Soviet-era 80's, trained and armed by the US with its allies:
1) Suadi Arabia, that pillar of Democracy,
2)a US-weakened Pakistan
3)warlord factions in Afghanistan.

Clearly, evil then, is socially constructed and cumulative, as we can see from two administrations touted as 'different' in style and substance. (I never voted for either of the Bush(es) and I did vote for Obama knowing I was voting for the lesser of the two evils). Obama is at least (still) open to persuasion and humane logical reasoning.

The sense that something or someone is Evil carries a complex, evolved set of emotions like horror and revulsion (even reflexes like gagging).We evolved to agree to define evil as pathological and antisocial, capable of crimes against our species. That sense that evil exists was essential, so that we could persevere in building social groups on the basis of cooperation and collaboration, rather than sadistic annihilation.

I get the sense from this article that torture behavior is somehow to be set apart. But it is part of the horror repertoire of military adventurism in the 50+ year context of White House evil from Nixon to Obama.

Of course a history of slavery and genocide as earlier banalities of evil helps us to understand the current context.

Can we persevere to move past evil? Yes we can.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http:EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
-----------------------------------
New York Times copyright
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/26/opinion/26rich.html?em
Op-Ed Columnist: The Banality of Bush White House Evil
By FRANK RICH

Torture was a tool in the campaign to exploit 9/11 so that fearful Americans would support a war that had nothing to do with Al Qaeda.
---------------
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/26/opinion/26rich.html?s=1&pg=11
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Saturday, April 25, 2009

Schemas Stereotypes & the Evolved Ethical Self

April 26th, 2009 0:42 am
"Snap judgments" that help us assess social situations(example 'frumpy' Susan Boyle singing with a wonderful voice) are not "natural" as your subhead states, they're evolutionary.

Our mind-brains have EVOLVED over millennia, to acquire and construct SCHEMAS -- a useful, time-conserving, energy-conserving mental shorthand to group or categorize (stereotype)information about the world we live in -- the social world; all of nature; as well as all the objects and entities of our material culture.

We build stereotypes not only about people, but about about things, and even about what cannot be proven to exist, example God. Therefore, religion.

This capacity to categorize conveniently into schemas is essential to our survival as a species. We rely on our schemas, even when presented with conflicting information (plain women can have unique singing talent).

Do I have a useful, convenient, efficient stereotype about The New York Times? Yes I do!

Of all the experts you quoted in your article, the least useful, most limiting, for understanding stereotypes is the one advanced by Berreby in his Us and Them.

Our schemas (stereotypes), whether about singing sensations like Boyle or 11 year old Shaheen Jaffargholi or about garbage or Congress (!) help us to re-assess previously held ideas (which help us generate new schemas) without necessarily developing an insider-outsider binary. I don't have to be for or against Susan Boyle, see her as an outsider or insider, to maintain a schema about plain women who may (or may not) sing extraordinarily well.
One schema tells us Looks do Matter but another schema counteracts with Appearances are Deceptive.

Both are useful, convenient, effective navigational tools as we daily find our way in the world.



Chithra KarunaKaran
City University of New York
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
------------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
Yes, Looks Do Matter
By PAM BELLUCK
Published: April 24, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/26/fashion/26looks.html
==============================================================================

Friday, April 24, 2009

The Emerging Sovereign Nation-State of TalibanPakistan

My Lede NYTimes Comment #72. April 24, 2009 5:16 pm Link

April 24th, 2009 8:56 am

The Emerging Sovereign Nation-State of TalibanPakistan


Pakistan has neither Motivation nor Reason to stop the Taliban. Why would they?

I analyze 3 reasons why Pakistan current leaders and civil society will accommodate and unite with the Taliban.

1. So long as the Taliban is perceived as a threat to Pakistan, MONEY and WEAPONS keep flowing into Pakistan from interested parties like the US, Saudi Arabia and Iran. This money and arms are used by feudal elites (this includes the ruling political leaders)to create cash liquidity, maintain power and control over land and other resources.

2. It is possible to envisage a scenario in which the Taliban rule Pakistan through a coalition with the feudal landowners who now rule Pakistan. That coalition will keep Pakistan securely within the fold of repressive nation-states like Saudi Arabia, who have the substantial longstanding support of the US. Everybody knows that Democracy is NOT a US export item.

3. Pakistan's very existence as a nation-state is entirely defined by its separation,in 1947, from India. mainly through Brit divide-and-rule imperial strategy. Pakistan can therefore continue to maintain its 60+ years of a nation-state political orientation in which India can continue to be portrayed to its civil society, as The Enemy, the Infidel, the Unbeliever. This view is wholly consistent with the Taliban's view of India.
The US can do virtually nothing to alter the Pakistan-Taliban dynamic. The US appears ready to consolidate and inflame that dynamic through additional troop deployment and ongoing drone strikes.
Let us also not forget that the US created, armed and trained the mujahideen who morphed into the Taliban.

The US policy in South Asia constitutes the gravest threat to the world's largest democracy, India. But India will likely rise to that threat, no thanks to the US.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice

The Emerging Misogynist Sovereign Nation-State of TalibanPakistan

The US policy in South Asia constitutes the gravest threat to the world’s largest democracy, India. The Taliban threat is nothing compared with the threat posed by the presence of US and US-led NATO troops.

To focus on the comment about white US female soldiers, is to give undue importance to the Taliban’s views on women which are already well known (they are proven arch misogynists), and to deflect attention from the Paksitan Govt’s role:

Pakistan has neither Motivation nor Reason to stop the Taliban. Why would they?

I analyze 3 reasons why Pakistan current leaders and civil society will accommodate and unite with the Taliban.

1. So long as the Taliban is perceived as a threat to Pakistan, MONEY and WEAPONS keep flowing into Pakistan from interested parties like the US, Saudi Arabia and Iran. This money and arms are used by feudal elites (this includes the ruling political leaders)to create cash liquidity, maintain power and control over land and other resources.

2. It is possible to envisage a scenario in which the Taliban rule Pakistan through a coalition with the feudal landowners who now rule Pakistan. That coalition will keep Pakistan securely within the fold of repressive nation-states like Saudi Arabia, who have the substantial longstanding support of the US. Everybody knows that Democracy is NOT a US export item.

3. Pakistan’s very existence as a nation-state is entirely defined by its separation,in 1947, from India. mainly through Brit divide-and-rule imperial strategy. Pakistan can therefore continue to maintain its 60+ years of a nation-state political orientation in which India can continue to be portrayed to its civil society, as The Enemy, the Infidel, the Unbeliever. This view is wholly consistent with the Taliban’s view of India.
The US can do virtually nothing to alter the Pakistan-Taliban dynamic. The US appears ready to consolidate and inflame that dynamic through additional troop deployment and ongoing drone strikes.
Let us also not forget that the US created, armed and trained the mujahideen who morphed into the Taliban.

Let me repeat: The US policy in South Asia constitutes the gravest threat to the world’s largest democracy, India. The Taliban threat is nothing compared to the threat posed by the ground and air presence of US and US-led NATO convoys, troops and drones. It will predictably get worse when US tr0ops are redeployed from Iraq to Pakistan-Afghanistan border areas.

However, India will likely assess and overcome the Taliban threat, absolutely no thanks to the US. India overturned Brit colonialism now it will dismantle US neo-imperialism and defuse the Taliban reaction to US militarism, male and female, in their homeland.

Chithra KarunaKaran
-------------------------------------------
NYTimes copyright
U.S. Questions Pakistan’s Will to Stop Taliban
By CARLOTTA GALL and ERIC SCHMITT
Published: April 23, 2009
Taliban militants on Thursday outside a mosque where tribal elders and members of the Taliban met in Daggar, the main town in the Buner district of Pakistan.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/24/world/asia/24pstan.html
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/24/world/asia/24pstan.html
----------------------
The Lede NYTimes copyright
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/24/video-of-pakistani-taliban-in-buner-and-swat/?apage=3#comments
April 24, 2009, 7:43 am
Taliban Spokesman Blames American Women
By Robert Mackey

Cheney the Exceptionalist Individualist

My published NYT comment#151.
April 24, 2009 10:51 am

Link

April 24th, 2009 8:20 am
Cheney the Exceptionalist Individualist

US nation-state culture, from the perspective of the social sciences, can accurately be categorized as:

individualistic vs. collectivistic; independent vs. interdependent.

Such a nation-state culture can and does frequently produce individuals (whether Dick Cheney the statist or Charles Manson the sadist) who focus mainly on their own private, narrow, often violent and even pathological self-interest, to the exclusion of the collective and interdependent self-interest.

Cheney represents the most extreme, radical and self-absorbed example of US nation-state culture.

That personal and nation-state cultural orientation is a threat to the individual, the society and the world.

Is it possible for US nation-state culture to produce fewer Cheneys in the future?
This one still has a few more years of destruction left in him.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
---------------------------
New York Times copyright
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/24/us/24cheney.html?scp=1&sq=Cheney%20unapologetic&st=cse
Unemployed, Unapologetic and Unrestrained: It’s Cheney Unbound
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
Published: April 23, 2009
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/24/us/24cheney.html?s=1&pg=7

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Koran Gone Wild or US Foreign Policy Gone Wild?

My comment #96.
April 23, 2009 1:21 pm

Link


April 23rd, 2009 8:16 am
Koran Gone Wild OR US Foreign Policy Gone Wild?

Mainly, a 60-year US policy and on-the-ground intervention, dispossession and dislocation in areas where the majority of Muslims live and pray, has unleashed "fundamentalism" and "extremism".

This POLITICAL dimension simply cannot be ignored, deflected or underplayed. It is the root of the current social chaos in Muslim-majority nation-states.

The fact is Bush-Cheney "fundamentalism" and "extremism", which killed thousands of innocent Iraqi civilians, produced the suicide bombings in Iraq.

Today, the "fundamentalism" and "extremism" of Obama's daily drone strikes and the military adventurism of the US-led NATO forces on the ground in Afghanistan and Pakistan are producing the incursion of Taliban (who were the mujahideen of the Soviet-US Afghan era)into Swat and now Buner.

The entire DIVERSE Muslim world is paying for the POLITICAL missteps of the New Crusades undertaken by the US.

These problems do not lie, nor have their origins in literal or non-literal interpretations of the Koran.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com

— EthicalDemocracy, New York & Chennai
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/23/opinion/23kristof.html
Op-Ed Columnist
Islam, Virgins and Grapes
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: April 22, 2009
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/23/opinion/23kristof.html#postComment

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Tamil Civil Society vs the LTTE: The Challenge for Sri Lanka's Tamils

22. April 21, 2009 12:16 am Link
My published comment #22. April 21, 2009 12:16 am
Tamils vs. the LTTE
The LTTE anti-nationalist rebels, under the murderous Vellupalli Prabhakaran, have conducted terror for 50+ years, and they must now surrender to Sri Lanka forces. They must allow innocent Tamil civilians to leave the embattled area and not be held as human shields by the LTTE forces.

The LTTE do not represent Tamil interests. Tamils can live peacefully in Sri Lanka. They are a part of Sri Lanka,

The Sri Lanka Govt. must accord equal opportunity in jobs, housing, healthcare, education, to minority ethnic Tamils. The SL govt. cannot discriminate against this important and long suffering ethnic and linguistic minority.

The Sri Lanka Govt. was impolitic and deeply unfair to declare Sinhala as the national language. They could have easily given co-equal recognition to both Tamil and Sinhala. The SL govt erected language as a political barrier to keep Tamils from maintaining their distinct Tamil ethnicity and culture and more important, jobs and other economic and political opportunities.

ALL religions, ethnicities and languages must be equally respected by the SL govt. if Sri Lanka is to continue to prosper as a modern pluralistic sovereign nation-state. A strong, democratic, secular, pluralist Sri Lanka would contribute to the stability and solidarity of the South Asia region, which is under threat from extra-state terrorism (Taliban) as well as state-sponsored terror by US and US-led NATO on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

The damage done by centuries of British and Dutch colonialism can only be overturned by SL civil society involving all ethnic and religious groups holding their govt. accountable, to be more responsive to their needs, not letting govt. divide them by language and ethnicity, for political gain.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthiicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
--------------------
NYTimes copyright
April 20, 2009, 6:36 pm
Endgame in Sri Lanka?
By Robert Mackey
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/20/endgame-in-sri-lanka/
-----------
April 21, 2009, 1:23 pm
Two Sri Lankas Struggle to Tell Their Tales
By Robert Mackey
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/two-sri-lankas-struggle-to-tell-their-tales/

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Monday, April 20, 2009

Democracy and Torture

April 20th, 2009 8:40 am
Is torture compatible with Democracy? Apparently it is, in several democratic systems, US, India, South Africa for example, whenever perceived law and order issues and perceived national interest issues are at stake.

The operative word is "perceived."

Torture is incompatible with ETHICAL conceptions of DEMOCRACY. It violates the human body and spirit.

And it is approved and deployed by those in Power, whether they are state-sponsored as in the CIA or extra-state actors like the Taliban.

The expose of waterboarding as a torture technique teaches us that Democracy is always as much a destination as it is a journey.

Democracy's craft is a work in progress, democracy's work is never done. Only We the People can disarm govts. and overturn torture.

----------------
April 20th, 2009 8:55 am Comment #592
TORTURE & THE MEDIA
Why are these revelations about waterboarding coming so late in the deadly game that the US govt has played in Iraq?
Where was the US media? Embedded as well as bamboozled?
Wasn't "shock and awe" itself a form of mass terror and torture? So why this postmortem approach to waterboarding?

Q.Is the US MEDIA complicit (this is not conspiracy theory, it's about complicity) in this delayed reporting on torture? Where are the investigative journalists on the staff of the NYT or The Washington Post?

Besides, civil society publics, both in the US and elsewhere have always suspected that torture was being used in Iraq and Guantanamo.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com

------------------------------------------------
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/us/politics/21intel.html?_r=1&ref=global-home
Obama Urges C.I.A. Not to Be Discouraged by Memos
President Obama spoke at C.I.A. headquarters as C.I.A. director Leon Panetta looked on.
By PETER BAKER and SCOTT SHANE
Published: April 20, 2009
------------------------------

-----------
Waterboarding Used 266 Times on 2 Suspects
By SCOTT SHANE
Published: April 19, 2009
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/20/world/20detain.html

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Embar-GO OBAMA in Latin America and Caribbean?

April 19th, 2009 7:52 pm

Obama is doing the very minimum -- to reverse the serious DAMAGE inflicted for over 60 years, by successive United States Govts., upon world stability and peace, by American:

1) militarist -- from Vietnam to Iraq and then some

2)supremacist/exceptionalist (we-are-the-best-the-greatest blather)

3) punitive (as in the unsuccessful sanctions and embargoes)

4)protectionist (there's nothing better than 'free' unfair trade)

foreign policy. I don't expect Obama to do any anything more than make the most minimal adjustments to longstanding US neo-imperial policy.

But at least it's a shaky and transient start. Republicans like Graham and Ensign show Latin America how difficult and untrustworthy the US will be in any negotiation towards a fair world order.

The govts. of Latin America and the Caribbean would be wise not to make any premature and hasty concessions to this or any other US govt., until the US demonstrates substantive changes on the above.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
---------------------------------------------
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/20/world/americas/20prexy.html
162.
April 19, 2009 7:18 pm

Link
President Obama should return to Venezuela the terrorist Luis Posada Carriles who blew up a Cubana airliner in 1967 killing all 73 people aboard and whom the United States has been harboring within our borders since he escaped from a Venezuelan prison while he was awaiting trial in 1985.

President Obama should also apologize for the toppling of dozens of democratically elected governments by the United States in Latin America since 1953 and replacing them with murdering, torturing dictators.

President Obama should also close the School of the Americas (now called the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation), in Fort Benning, Georgia, where the United States trained those dictators' murderers and torturers.

— Bill Appledorf, San Francisco
RecommendedRecommended by 4 Readers
------------------
86.
April 19, 2009 8:07 pm

Link
As a Venezuelan-American from and old and honorable Venezuelan family, I am shocked at the overture that President Obama gave to President Chavez.
I will resume like this: I just visited with my family in Caracas and was horrified about the mess that has become that beautiful city.
In case President Obama, who deserve my respect and admiration, doesn't know about Mr. Chavez, I am going to resume his behavior in one phrase:
Mr Chavez Chavez has caused the most unbelievable destruction and division that now exists in my country of origin. All the three powers, Supreme Court, Legislative and Excecutive are in his hands, managed by his close incompetent friends.
Tha last thing I saw before leaving was the assault of a Sinagogue in which a group of "bandoleros" even destroyed the Torah. This was the result of a very agressive rethoric which he uses against his "enemies."
For no reason he broke diplomatic relations with Israel, a country with which we have had excellent relations. There has never been anti-semitism in Venezuela until he came to power.
I expect President Obama to learn more about Mr. Chavez.

— leomill11, Tucson, Arizona 95718
RecommendedRecommended by 5 Readers
187.
April 19, 2009 8:07 pm

Link
As a truly democrat venezuelan, who opposes Chàvez and his dictatorship and totalitarian government I liked Obamas approach to Chávez. I thought that the multicultural reference that accounts for Obama made him understand what even many venezuelans have not understood. Chávez claims to be the world liberator of all oppressive regimes of the past. He wants to be the leader of the world. As oil prices have diminished he is not so sure on his feet.So he is bright enough and knows that he and needs to enlargen his scope of relations. One of them is US with multicultural President that happens to be brighter than him. I think Obama behaved politically correct and he has to wait for Chávez reactions in order to ask him his pre conditions to negotiatea after he humilated the US Embassador in Caracas and kick him out in 24 hours. As a truly democrat citizen who adverses Chávez I hope that Obama asks Chávez the minimal pre requirements of Democracies. Cha´vez`s totalitarian regime has strenghten trough the last months and days and we citizens of this country have almost no right to talk.....or propieties are in danger

— elisae, Venezuela
Recommend Recommended by 4 Readers
-------------------------------
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/20/world/americas/20prexy.html?hp
Obama Defends Reaching Out to Chávez
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
Published: April 19, 2009
================================================================================

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Civilians, Sovereign States and Extra-State Terror Actors: The Humanitarian Crisis in Sri Lanka

My comment #148. published April 17, 2009 1:40 pm Link
Civilians, Sovereign States and Extra-State Terror Actors
The civilian numbers involved here in Northern Sri Lanka eclipse Srebenica

Innocent women, children and men are presently caught in what appears to be a decisive phase in a murderous 60 year inter-ethno-nationalist conflict that has its origins in the colonial period of British and Dutch exploitation.

All of the “independent” ( including the Times Reporter and HRW) news reports appear to be saying the same thing — that the LTTE terrorists are holding TAMIL civilians as hostages and deploying them as human shields.

Let us understand that the LTTE terror acts have accumulated over decades, not just days. The Govt. of Sri Lanka has deployed its army to quell the rebel action. This is a war situation. Sovereign nation-states have the legal right to maintain law and order within their borders. The govt. and its army have the obligation to end the occupation of Jaffna by LTTE rebels, and end the LTTE claim of a separate ethnic Tamil ‘homeland’

Without a doubt, the Sri Lankan army and the Sri Lankan govt. must be held accountable for any alleged ethnic cleansing of Tamils, whether in Jaffna or elsewhere in the island nation-state. But it appears, once again, that it is the LTTE, not the Sri Lankan Government forces that stop at nothing to recruit Tamil child soldiers, use Tamil women as human shields, forcibly train Tamil civilians to carry out assassinations, coerce Tamil refugees abroad to send funds to pay for LTTE rebel terror separatist action.

So, explain to me, the Sri Lankan Govt. has to accept foreign ships delivering “humanitarian’ supplies? Where will these vital supplies end up? The strong possibility is they will will fall into LTTE terrorists’ hands, because the LTTE cadres need the supplies to continue the rebel action and because the LTTE still control the narrow wedge of land where reportedly hundreds of thousands of innocent Tamils are trapped — by the LTTE!.

Clearly, crimes can be committed under the guise of "humanitarian" relief.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/17/is-the-world-ignoring-sri-lankas-srebrenica/?scp=2&sq=Sri%20Lanka%20massacre&st=cse
==================================================================================

Thursday, April 16, 2009

India Elections 2009 -- Strengthening Democracy Through Lived Practice

My NYTimes Comment #18 published
April 16, 2009 2:23 pm

A Mega Election

There is poverty, hunger, homelessness, disease, the poor can't eat their vote so what is it good for, our Indian democracy has often been tested and found wanting, India still has a long long way to go to satisfy the most basic necessities of her millions.....

Yet , what an election! There are hundreds of candidates and scores of local and regional parties. Everyone seems to be voting! It's creative chaos under the rule of law. Conducted in 5 phases and lasting a month long with 700 million plus voters eligible to exercise their franchise. There's nothing like it, anywhere.

India's Lok Sabha elections are an unprecedented exercise in Democracy.

In 1947, after an historic freedom struggle led by the iconic Gandhi and a host of compassionate leaders like Maulana Azad,(whom Gandhi called his "conscience keeper") India chose to have a nation-state that was NOT based upon religious identity, but on universal principles of individual rights and responsibilities, yet to be realized in full.

That dream of a democratic secular India, building upon an ancient history and a vibrant, composite culture, has frequently failed to meet the most important needs of its civil society.

But despite our many flaws, our many and continuing inequalities, we have persevered and persisted to become a sovereign nation-state that endures, improve the lives of its diverse peoples and strive to become of force for good in the world.

Satyameva Jayate, Inquilab Zindabad and Jai Ho!

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
----------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
Local Issues Dominate as India VotesBack to Article »
By SOMINI SENGUPTA

Neither of the major parties is likely to prevail in the five-week election without the help of smaller parties.
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/17/world/asia/17india.html
================================================================================

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Women, Religion, Patriarchy and Militarism in South Asia

My NYT Comment #114 published April 16, 2009 8:36 am

Women, Patriarchy, Religion, Militarism & the Ethics of Tolerance in the South Asia Region

How interesting that Randy Cohen is posing the question of Tolerance (see below) as a living ethical precept. That's vitally important to do. But here, as elsewhere, the additional crucial questions are -- Tolerance of what? By Whom? Of Whom? What is the specific political context in which the precept of Tolerance is being posited? What is the social-political location of the one posing the questions?

Afghan women have been courageous for decades, actually centuries. This street protest (against an ordinance signed by Karzai, that targets mainly Shiite women), is the latest example of Afghan women's civil society heroism, their capacity to survive and endure, assert their human dignity, raise and protect their families.

It is a grave mistake to construct and advocate a division between Afghan women and Afghan men.

Afghan women and men belong to the same social fabric and their lives are bound together by common aspirations for escape from poverty, freedom from hunger, freedom from violence and a desire for employment, education, peace, stability, dignity.

Afghan men have suffered and endured, because men were particularly targeted during British colonial campaigns against them. Their fierce resistance defeated every British attempt to colonize them.

Before the Brits, Afghan men were forcibly recruited by every conqueror coming through the mountain passes, on their way to set up empires in New Delhi, or simply to loot and carry away treasure from western and northern India.

Now, after the end of repressive and exploitative colonial occupation by the Brits and after the 9-year Soviet debacle in Afghanistan, Afghan women and men jointly face the daily neo-imperial threat of US and US-led NATO campaigns against them.

Did the US (using Pakistan's ISI) create, train and fund the Mujahadeen who evolved into the Taliban? Was Osama bin Laden the CIA's star pupil?

Into the above toxic mix, throw in Saudi Wahabbism supported by weapons and fueled by Saudi money, a fact conveniently ignored by the US govt as the US shields its longstanding repressive petrodollar ally.

The US and US-led NATO have absolutely no legitimacy in Afghanistan or Pakistan.
They must get out ASAP, so that AFGHAN WOMEN can forge their own destiny together with their male kin, their families and communities and their own political and religious leaders.
The US, US-led NATO presence distorts any possibility of normalcy and creates new problems for the entire South Asia region.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com

— EthicalDemocracy, New York, NY
---------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
The Limits of Tolerance
By Randy Cohen
http://ethicist.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/14/limited-tolerance/?apage=5#comments
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My comment April 16, 2009 8:25 am
Women, Patriarchy, Religion, Militarism

Afghan women have been courageous for decades, actually centuries. This street protest (against an ordinance signed by Karzai, that targets mainly Shiite women), is the latest example of Afghan women's civil society heroism, their capacity to survive and endure, assert their human dignity, raise and protect their families.

It is a grave mistake to construct and advocate a division between Afghan women and Afghan men.

Afghan women and men belong to the same social fabric and their lives are bound together by common aspirations for escape from poverty, freedom from hunger, freedom from violence and a desire for employment, education, peace, stability, dignity.

Afghan men have suffered and endured, because men were particularly targeted during British colonial campaigns against them. Their fierce resistance defeated every British attempt to colonize them.

Before the Brits, Afghan men were forcibly recruited by every conqueror coming through the mountain passes, on their way to set up empires in New Delhi, or simply to loot and carry away treasure from western and northern India.

Now, after the end of repressive and exploitative colonial occupation by the Brits and after the 9-year Soviet debacle in Afghanistan, Afghan women and men jointly face the daily neo-imperial threat of US and US-led NATO campaigns against them.

Did the US (using Pakistan's ISI) create, train and fund the Mujahadeen who evolved into the Taliban? Was Osama bin Laden the CIA's star pupil?

Into the above toxic mix, throw in Saudi Wahabbism supported by weapons and fueled by Saudi money, a fact conveniently ignored by the US govt as the US shields its longstanding repressive petrodollar ally.

The US and US-led NATO have absolutely no legitimacy in Afghanistan or Pakistan.
They must get out ASAP, so that AFGHAN WOMEN can forge their own destiny together with their male kin, their families and communities and their own political and religious leaders.
The US, US-led NATO presence distorts any possibility of normalcy and creates new problems for the entire South Asia region.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com

— EthicalDemocracy, New York, NY

------------------------
My NYT comment #24 published
April 15, 2009 8:18 am
April 15th, 2009 4:26 am

Women, Religion and Militarism

As the editorial (below) notes, a woman was publicly flogged in Swat in Pakistan and earlier Afghanistan's Karzai signed into law an edit that appears to sanction rape in marriage.

Both these incidents show how religion and patriarchal culture can be deployed as deadly weapons against women.

But ...

I would submit that the US govt. and the US-led NATO forces don't give a hoot for women in either Pakistan or Afghanistan.

It seems hypocritical to argue that the US is concerned about women, when drone strikes kill women and children from the air. This happened (again) last week in a NATO airstrike and the civilian death toll which included women and children, was confirmed by President Karzai, with no denial from the US.

There's more to come, with more women dying when Obama sends more troops.

How would Obama feel if his wife and two daughters were killed in a drone strike?

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
--------------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/15/opinion/15wed1.html
Editorial: Women, Extremism and Two Key States
Published: April 14, 2009
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/15/opinion/15wed1.html

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

The Long Term Threat To South Asia -- Taliban Or US?

My Comment # 18. April 14, 2009 11:51 pm Link

Who’s the real threat in the South Asia region– The Taliban?

Or the US and US-led NATO?

The fact is the Taliban emerged from the mujahideen that the US nurtured, armed and trained in the 10-year Cold War face off in Afghanistan against the erstwhile Soviet Union. The US were the paymasters and handlers of the Taliban and the ISI.

The US govt. has been a force for destabilization and lately, state-sponsored terror, since the Dulles era of the State Dept in the Eisenhower administration, targeting Pakistan for satellite status after Pakistan was weakened by the Brit-driven Partition. The South Asian nation states went from colonization to neo-imperial threat.

The physical presence of the US and the US-led Nato in my South Asia region distorts intra-regional geopolitics among the sovereign nation-states (some more fragile than others).
The US now holds the balance of power in the region, which is its core objective in every region of the world.

I wonder how Obama would feel if his daughters Sasha and Malia were killed in a US drone attack. That happened to children last week in a NATO airstrike, and the death of children was confirmed by President Karzai.

When civilians are killed by the US and US-led NATO, recruitment demands into the Taliban ranks are more likely to succeed, especially when families are grieving and therefore more vulnerable to Taliban and warlord pressure.

The US and NATO have no legitimacy in the South Asia region.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
--------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/14/south-asias-taliban-problem
April 14, 2009, 5:19 pm
South Asia’s Taliban Problem
By The Editors
--------------
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/14/world/asia/14afghan.html?emc=eta1
Civilians Died in Airstrike by NATO, Afghan Says
By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and ABDUL WAHEED WAFA
Published: April 13, 2009
----------------
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/15/world/asia/15afghan.html?ref=global-home
In Recruiting an Afghan Militia, U.S. Faces a Test
U.S. Army officers held a meeting, or shura, with Afghan elders in Maidan Shahr who read a threatening Taliban "night letter" sent to a village elder warning people not to associate with American forces.
By DEXTER FILKINS
Published: April 14, 2009
===================================================================================

How South Asia Can Move from Post-Colonial, Neo-Imperial Dependency to Regional Stability, Peace and Prosperity

How South Asia Can Move from Post-Colonial, Neo-Imperial Dependency to Regional , Stability, Peace and Prosperity

AFPAK or PACK UP? Unpacking US 60-plus-year Policy in the South Asia Region

For more than 60 years, the US has conducted state-sponsored terror coupled with unethical, narrowly self-serving military/diplomatic maneuvers in the South Asia region. The US is the main trouble-maker and the US, by its continued physical presence, distorts intra-regional geopolitics among nation-states of the South Asia region.

The US began making trouble 60+ years ago during the Dulles era of the US State Dept., under the Eisenhower administration. The US, seeking global influence after the Second World War, detected a power vacuum after the ignominious and well-deserved fall of the British empire, to dramatic liberatory freedom movements throughout South Asia, East Asia and Africa. During this early post-colonial period that stretched from the late 40's to the early 60's, and the start of the US neo-imperial period from the early 50's until and continuing into the present time, The US targeted Pakistan, weakened by Brit-driven Partition, for membership (SEATO, CENTO) and missile bases in Pakistan. As part of US Cold War strategy, The US cultivated Pakistan and Afghanistan because of their strategic geopolitical location south in the soft underbelly of the erstwhile Soviet Union. Instead of newly free Pakistan and India standing together, they were once again divided and ruled, (smaller and weaker Pakistan, much more so than India), but this time by the neo-imperial US.

It was directly as a result of bi-polar US Cold War strategy that the US and the former Soviet Union engaged in Afghanistan in South Asia during the late 70's thru the early '90s. Saudi Arabia and Pakistan supported the US as the US trained the mujahadeen" who later became the Taliban.

Now in 2009, at this critical juncture in the geopolitics of the South Asia region, neither India nor Pakistan should tolerate Obama or Brown, Secretary Clinton or Holbrooke or Mullen or now, failed Presidential candidate John Kerry (see below) to provide unsolicited advice, militaristic meddling and 'foreign aid' bribery, to the leaders and civil societies of their respective sovereign nation-states in South Asia. Obviously for socio-historical and geopolitical reasons, some South Asia nation-states, have been rendered more fragile than others at this time in their political and socio-economic development.

1) The US should stop the deadly daily and nightly drone strikes that kill civilians, including children in Pakistan's western area.
How would Obama feel if Sasha or Malia were killed in a drone strike?

2) The US should stop buying influence in South Asia by throwing money at Pakistan's ISI.
Obama should instead be asking "I wonder where the money went?" re: the billions squandered during the Disastrous Bush-Cheney Afpak Strategy (yeah, just a different name under Obama)

3) the US and NATO need to be requested collaboratively by Afghanistan, Pakistan and India to get out of the South Asia region immediately.


Children and women are being killed everyday by the cowardly, unmanned US drone strikes. These strikes cause grief, spread terror and humiliate the proud people of the westernmost parts of South Asia. The drone strikes and the NATO supply convoys and military strikes cause civilian casualties and actions of retaliation against US>NATO. The drone strikes make families more vulnerable to recruitment demands by the Taliban and Al Q from their vulnerable families just when they are grieving for lost family members killed by US drone strikes and NATO 'encounters' with alleged "militants." "terrorists" "insurgents."

The US intelligence gathering operations should be investigating where the vast sums of money and firepower are flowing from, into the South Asia region. Saudi Arabia? Iran? Russia? Israel? The US? Every news report mentions the presence of vast amounts of funds fueling suicide bombing and other actions.

What can South Asia do? What a breath of fresh air it would be if the Govt. of India, the moat stable nation-state in the region spoke up and criticized the US on the above 3 points. This India govt. would be acting ethically if it protested the loss of tribal civilian life, especially children and women, through US drone strikes.

But no, the old divide and rule colonized mentality persisting among our leaders in both India and Pakistan, makes us dependent on an external dominant power, the US/US-led NATO, to hold the balance of power in our region.

The future of South Asia rests with us, not with the US or Europe. The sooner Afghanistan, Pakistan and India act collaboratively on the above principled 3-point strategy, the sooner there will be peace and prosperity for all of our peoples in South Asia.
Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
-------------------------------------------

Times of India copyright
US will help India, Pak if they stop 'pointing fingers': Kerry
13 Apr 2009, 2209 hrs IST, PT

SLAMABAD: The US will help India and Pakistan "find a new way forward" only if they stop "pointing fingers at each other," a visiting top
Senator said today, even as Islamabad asserted that a "calm eastern border" is essential to focus on its war against terror in Afghanistan.

The US will help both countries "find a new way forward" but at the same time New Delhi
"needs to look at where it is going to be in 10 years," visiting US senate foreign relations committee chairman John Kerry said at a joint news conference with Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi.

If India and Pakistan spent all their time "pointing fingers at each other and on the past", they would "never get to the future," Kerry added.

"The world wants Pakistan to focus on the western border because extremism and terrorism has to be dealt with. But to focus on the western border, Pakistan wants a calm eastern border," Qureshi said.

"And if we have a calm eastern border, it certainly makes our task easier," he added.

The US Senator also made it clear that Richard Holbrooke had been appointed the US special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan and India is not included in his brief.

Issues like Kashmir have to be resolved separately, he said.
--------
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Pakistan/Swat_deal_will_increase_tensions_between_US_and_Pak_US_think-tank/articleshow/4398519.cms
Swat deal will increase tensions between US and Pak: US think-tank
14 Apr 2009, 0908 hrs IST, PTI
-------------------------
New York Times copyright
Militants Unite in Pakistan’s Populous Heart
By SABRINA TAVERNISE, RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and ERIC SCHMITT
Published: April 13, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/14/world/asia/14punjab.html?hp

-----------
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/14/world/asia/14afghan.html?emc=eta1
Civilians Died in Airstrike by NATO, Afghan Says
By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and ABDUL WAHEED WAFA
An airstrike by NATO forces early Monday in eastern Afghanistan killed six civilians, an Afghan official said.
=====================================================================================

Monday, April 13, 2009

Dismantling Whiteness in US Higher Ed in 'postracial'(?) 2009

* Dismantling Whiteness in US Higher Ed
* Posted by Chithra KarunaKaran , Social Sciences at CUNY on April 13, 2009 at 12:30pm EDT
*

Through its new students' orientation agenda, Holyoke is hopefully demonstrating its sincerity and willingness to further discursive engagement on US racialized identity construction, by facilitating discussion on how the US Whiteness System of unearned white skin privilege is deployed as POWER; everyone performs Whiteness in the System -- from the plantation to the Census, to the President, the Supreme Court and the Congress, to the mainstream media, to the student in the classroom, to the child in the home, to the marketplace -- and all points in between.

Hope the international students also get the 'treament' -- I recall being clueless on White racism, the racialized victimization of Blacks and immigrant persons of color, until I got here and had some firsthand, lived experience.

Remember how Obama had to address Race as a hot-seat, make-or-break campaign issue but Hillary didn't have to? That's the Whiteness system operating in real time. And when Obama describes himself self-deprecatingly as a "mutt" he's performing Whiteness (he's already half there!) in language that makes him less threatening to whites. It's a System, remember.

Good effort, Holyoke.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
Theory of Systemic Whiteness & related articles
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/04/13/holyoke#Comments
Orientation for Whites by Scott Jaschik
April 13, 2009
Inside Higher Ed copyright
=====================================================================================

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Globalizing Higher Ed in The Corporate Bailout Era of Late Capitalism.

Globalizing Higher Ed in The Corporate Bailout Era of Late Capitalism.
Isn't that what this is really about?

Higher Education institutions and their ancillary entities AAUP, CAUT, whatever, do not stand outside of history or politics or the economy, instead they are proactive and reactive contributors to them and players within them.

Therefore where AAUP stands depends almost entirely on where it sits. It is obvious that AAUP is primarily interested in protecting and preserving the interests (through dues and perks) of its core constituency (US faculty operating within the tenure system, therefore NOT adjuncts). I would submit AAUP does not give a hoot for teachers or educational arrangements in the emerging or expanding economies, except as profitable sites where AAUP members' interests can be promoted, expanded and preserved.

The AAUP is an integral part of the US higher ed political economy of Globalization which is still controlled by US-dominated market fundamentalism, masquerading as the "free market."

Has the "free market" produced an entrenched inequitable 2-tier faculty system right here in the US?
Has the AAUP been able to do anything about that?

Is AAUP even motivated to do so? So what is AAUP's clout vis a vis the "branches"? What can Northwestern University whose Journalism program is "embedded' in Qatar possibly teach Qataris about a free media?

My own take is that governments of the emerging (China, India, Brasil, Turkey, South Africa) as well as the disadvantaged (Uganda, Botswana) economies of the WTO should vigorously resist inroads by the rich (albeit currently distressed ) economies, which set up the higher ed 'braches" alluded to in the above article. These expanding economies should attempt to grow their GDP through self-reliance on their own domestic resources of teachers and administrators and most important CURRICULUM, based upon their unique history and culture. However globalization makes this difficult, the national elites are corrupt and opportunistic, so the challenges are many, but not in my view insuperable.

I would hate to see the proliferation of the US Higher Ed system throughout the world.

Another world is possible.

Chithra Karunakaran Ed.D.
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scrutiny and Standards for Branch Campuses
April 9, 2009 by
scott.jaschik@insidehighered.com
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/04/09/branch
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/04/09/branch#Comments
Inside Higher Ed copyright
==============================================================================
AAUP statement;
On Conditions of Employment at Overseas Campuses (2009)

The statement that follows is being issued jointly by the American Association of University Professors and the Canadian Association of University Teachers. It was approved for publication in April 2009 respectively by the AAUP’s Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure and CAUT’s Executive Committee. Comments should be directed to the AAUP and/or to CAUT.
U.S. and Canadian colleges and universities have been actively expanding their foreign operations in recent years. Overseas branch campuses and degree programs have proliferated, as have the overseas sale of curricular and other instructional materials and the franchising of campuses, online or distance learning, international student recruitment, and study-abroad programs.

The expansion of higher education opportunities is a welcome feature of today’s more internationally integrated world. Not surprisingly, these international initiatives are proving attractive both to private investors and to colleges and universities. Advocates of private investment now refer routinely to a multitrillion- dollar global market in educational services, and efforts to open up this lucrative market further are driving bilateral or multilateral trade agreements and negotiations. As a result, globalization has become one of the principal means of privatizing and commercializing higher education.

The leading nations in the field of international education have sought, under the World Trade Organization’s General Agreement on Trade in Services and in the name of trade liberalization, to harmonize global standards for providing higher education services. According to the WTO’s tenets of free trade, educational services should be treated like any other commodity, and foreign providers should be afforded the same public benefits and privileges as domestic institutions of any member nation. Several international organizations in higher education have voiced their opposition to these tenets:

* the 2001 “Joint Declaration on Higher Education and the General Agreement on Grade in Services,” issued by four leading academic organizations in the United States, Canada, and Europe (the American Council on Education, the Council for Higher Education Accreditation, the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada, and the European University Association).
• http://www.aucc.ca/_pdf/english/statements/2001/gats_10_25_e.pdf
* the 2002 Porto Alegre Declaration, signed by the major Iberian and Latin American associations of higher education.
• http://www.gatswatch.org/educationoutofgats/PortoAlegre.doc)
* the resolutions adopted by Education International (with 394 national teacher and academic staff federations from 171 countries representing 30 million teachers, academic staff, and others who work in education) at its 2001 World Congress in Jomtiem, Thailand and at its 2004 World Congress in Porto Alegre.
• http://www.eiie.org/worldcongress2004/docs/WC03Res_Gloablisation
EmploymentConditions_e.pdf
• http://www.ei-ie.org/worldcongress2004/docs/WC04Res_HigherEduc_NewInstrument
_e.pdf

These declarations and resolutions recognize that trade liberalization risks weakening governments' commitment to and investment in public higher education. They also assert that education is not a commodity and that reliance on public mandates (exclusively so in most countries) should make it distinct from other services.

The pace of overseas expansion also threatens to affect the character of higher education in the United States and Canada. The sheer number of faculty employed in foreign operations is increasing, and most are contingent employees on temporary contracts. Because foreign programs and campuses are usually less costly, colleges and universities may make decisions favoring their development over more expensive U.S.- and Canadian-based equivalents staffed by tenure-track faculty. Continued pursuit of this path will accelerate the casualization of the academic workforce, taking its toll on the quality of instruction as well as adversely affecting faculty rights.

Moreover, as the U.S. and Canadian presence in higher education grows in countries marked by authoritarian rule, basic principles of academic freedom, collegial governance, and nondiscrimination are less likely to be observed. In a host environment where free speech is constrained, if not proscribed, faculty will censor themselves, and the cause of authentic liberal education, to the extent it can exist in such situations, will suffer.

Consequently, it is essential that all international initiatives undertaken by North American colleges and universities respect the UNESCO Recommendation concerning the Status of Higher Education Teaching Personnel, with its emphasis on academic freedom, institutional autonomy, collegial governance, nondiscrimination, and employment security. [http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=13144&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html]

The treatment of nonacademic employees involved in the construction, service, and maintenance of foreign campuses is another area of concern. Colleges and universities as employers and contractors should uphold the full observance of internationally recognized standards governing the rights and working conditions of nonacademic employees who build and maintain classrooms and offices and meet other needs that keep the institutions functioning. Universities operating internationally should adopt a code of conduct governing the workplace conditions and rights of all non-academic employees, even and especially if these workers are employed directly by a local subcontractor.

Education should not be a commodity, bought and sold in the international marketplace and subject to the rules of competitive trade that govern a deregulated global economy. Participating in the movement for international education can rest on laudable educational grounds. But those grounds will be jeopardized if hard-earned standards and protections are weakened rather than exported.

In sum, the AAUP and CAUT expect every U.S. and Canadian college and university in any international initiative undertaken in partnership, or using the institution’s name, to honor the provisions in the UNESCO Recommendation concerning the Status of Higher Education Teaching Personnel. For nonacademic employees, we expect each institution and its subcontractors to adopt a code of conduct consistent with International Labor Organization (ILO) standards.

In accordance with the principles of collegial governance, U.S. and Canadian college and university administrations should provide their faculty and staff associations and the institution’s senior academic body with information about any international initiative being contemplated. If the initiative proceeds, administrations should provide detailed updates on all aspects of the project, with special emphasis on provisions to ensure academic freedom and tenure and collegial governance, including policies on approval and regular assessment of programs and curriculum, appointment and evaluation of academic staff, workload, appropriate compensation and working conditions, anti-harassment and -discrimination provisions, intellectual property, occupational health and safety, equity, and rights to appeal procedures characterized by substantive and procedural fairness.

Implementation of these obligations will require vigilance by faculty at U.S. and Canadian institutions. AAUP and CAUT traditions of academic freedom and shared governance make it clear that faculty representatives should have an integral role in drafting and reviewing plans designed to establish satellite programs and branch campuses. Plans for curriculum development and faculty hiring need explicit faculty approval. Compensation, working conditions, and grievance procedures for U.S.- and Canadian-based faculty will be subject to formal negotiation on many campuses with collective bargaining. The state of the law in host countries may necessitate bilateral negotiations in order to ensure fair working conditions for the faculty and staff at an overseas site; domestic faculty should be involved in reviewing such arrangements as an essential safeguard that these conditions are being met.

AAUP local chapters and CAUT member associations can play a key role in making certain that their institutions meet these obligations. AAUP and CAUT stand ready to assist their members and the higher education community more generally in this work.

Culture, Religion, Nation-State & the ETHICAL SELF: Denmark and the Cartoons on the Prophet Muhammad

My Published Comment on The Times of India 9 Apr 2009, 0105 hrs IST:

Denmark is a great country to visit, it has admirable social policies, Denmark has a democratic government and a democratic polity.

However Denmark lacks the basic and necessary understanding that freedom and a free press in democratic pluralist nation-states, does not include license to hurt cultural and religious sentiments.

The case of Denmark illustrates that democratic nation-states are no guarantee for the protection of cultural and religious sentiments of ALL of its citizens, Muslims among them. How are Danish Muslims expected to feel and react?

Ex-premier Anders Fogh Rasmussen lacks an ethical compass, essential for authentic leadership of democratic nation-states. Now, Rasmussen has found the job that fits right into his intolerant worldview -- heading up the US-dominated NATO which has absolutely no business conducting military operations in the South Asia region.

Rasmussen is the right man for that dirty job.

9 Apr 2009, 0105 hrs IST
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prophet Muhammad cartoon goes on sale in Denmark
8 Apr 2009, 2311 hrs IST, AP
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4376765.cms
Times of India copyright
COPENHAGEN
: A Danish press freedom group said on Wednesday it is selling copies of a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad that caused outrage across
the Muslim World.

Some 1,000 printed reproductions of a drawing depicting Islam's prophet wearing a bomb-shaped turban are being sold for 1,400 kroner ($250) each, said Lars Hedegaard, chairman of the Danish Free Press Society.

"All we are doing is starting a debate," Hedegaard said. "We are using our freedom of speech."

Hedegaard said Danish artist Kurt Westergaard, who drew the cartoon in 2005, had given the society permission to produce the copies and sell them. Each numbered copy has been signed by Westergaard, Hedegaard said.

"We have not, and are not, breaking any laws," Hedegaard said.

Westergaard has been living under police protection since an alleged plot to murder him was discovered last year.

Twelve cartoons depicting the prophet, including the one by Westergaard, were published in the Jyllands-Posten newspaper in 2005.

The following year, they triggered massive protests from Morocco to Indonesia, with rioters torching Danish and other Western diplomatic missions. Some Muslim countries boycotted Danish products.

Islamic law generally opposes any depiction of the prophet for fear it could lead to idolatry.

Throughout the crisis, then Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen distanced himself from the cartoons but resisted calls to apologize for them, citing freedom of speech and saying his government could not be held responsible for the actions of Denmark's press.

On Saturday, Fogh Rasmussen was chosen to become NATO's new secretary-general, despite threats by Turkey, the alliance's only Muslim member, to veto his election.
=====================================================================================

Are Illegal Immigrants Economic Refugees?

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/09/us/politics/09immig.html
http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/09/us/politics/09immig.html
New York Times copyright
---------------------------------------------------------
My NYT comment # 213
April 9th, 2009 7:44 .

Are undocumented entrants (aka illegal aliens) economic refugees?

Should such entrants be given refugee status by the U.S. The refugee eligibility category is already an entry category in this country's immigration law.

Illegal entrants must become the responsibility of the "sending" govt. The sending governments (Mexico is one such, drugs and drug cartels are not Mexico's only exports) should be notified that their citizens have illegally entered the US.

The sending governments should be asked to reimburse the US taxpayer for the deportation costs of their citizens.
Governments of sovereign nation-states have to be held accountable for the welfare and well-being of their own citizens. That nmeans provide jobs and justice for your citizens. Do we see a flood of Danes, Swedes, Dutch becoming
boat people' desperate to reach US shores? No, because these responsible and accountable govts. take care of their citizens.

The US has a double standard (ditto foreign policy) on immigration. The US economy needs a steady stream of cheap, in many instances highly qualified and experienced labor, to prop up its allegedly homegrown economy.

US hype operates at every level, and Obama is only its latest practitioner, this time in the politically advantageous policy area of immigration. It is being framed as advantageous for Dems in upcoming congressional elections next year. The GOP hogged the immigration amnesty issue during the Reagan period.

We already know Amnesty policy doesn't work because it contains absolutely no deterrents, and most likely encourages more illegal entry. It also sends a message to potential legal entrants that the law is stacked against them, that the US is NOT a nation of laws.

The US census is coming up. And so are some seats that will be up for re-election in the US Congress.

Canny try Mr. Teflon (for now) President.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
------------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
Obama to Push Immigration Reform Bill Despite Risks
By JULIA PRESTON
Published: April 8, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/09/us/politics/09immig.html

Monday, April 6, 2009

Drone 'em: US Policy Missteps in South Asia

My NYT Comment #18
April 06, 2009 8:53 am


The US should halt its drone activity. Not because Baitullah Mehsud called for it but because daily and nightly drone strikes KILL civilians -- children, women and men.

We can be almost certain that the US govt. and its overreaching military routinely underreports and criminally disregards loss of Afghan and Pakistani civilian lives. Are these hapless individuals wearing T for Taliban T-shirts, that the unmanned drones can accurately target 'terrorists' from the air? I think we all know that US intelligence (yeah, right) is flawed at best and criminal at worst.

The self-proclaimed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and the the Fedayeen-e-Islam are exploiting the US/NATO presence, especially the drone flybys, for their own pathological and murderous ends -- US drone killings of civilians serve as an excellent recruiting tool for the TTP and similar terror outfits.
Both Karzai and Zardari have called for an end to the drones.

On a more urgent and basic level, US state-sponsored terror and billions of US taxpayer cash-for-your-satellitized-subservience dollars flung at Pakistan's ISI-driven civilian government must cease. The US govt. should be proactive on intelligence and security of its own borders, airspace and waterways right here at home, not poke around South Asia creating terror that begets terror.

Instead, humanitarian assistance and other on-the-ground civilian services funneled through international aid agencies are a necessary alternative strategy to the failed and costly US policy of blatant interference and manipulation of weak states in the South Asia region.

South Asia can and must be free to negotiate its own geopolitics. The US presence distorts and inflames this fraught geopolitics.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
------------------------------------------------------------------
New York Times copyright
News Analysis
Time Is Short as U.S. Presses a Reluctant Pakistan by Jane Perlez
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/06/world/asia/06islamabad.html
==================================================================================

The Whiteness of Lawrence Summers

My comment #51
April 06, 2009 9:20 am
Link
Summers' 'versatility' and his 'success' at the hedge fund owes much to an identity available to whites in the US political economy, especially white males. I might add that it took Jews, like the Irish, a while to become "white" -- to exchange ethnicity and culture for US racialized dominant default identity.
Summers embodies how WHITENESS works. Persons of color can recognize it on a visceral level especially if we resist the US Whiteness system. We live it every day.

Summers adeptly performs Whiteness. Whiteness goes beyond white (male) skin privilege. Whiteness is a System of dominant racialized, unshared, inequitable, unearned POWER.

Summers was kicked out of Harvard because he made male chauvinist statements about the abilities of female faculty, both of which groups, at Harvard for sure, are mainly white. In fact an African male anthropologist led the charge against Summers.
What does Summers get for his sexist statements, unsupported by scientific evidence? He resigns from Harvard and gets More money, more prestige, more power!

Did Obama perform Whiteness by appointing Summers? It's a system, remember.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
Theory of Systemic Whiteness
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
--------------
A Rich Education for Summers (After Harvard)
After leaving Harvard, Lawrence H. Summers earned nearly $5.2 million advising elite math wizards and scientists at a New York hedge fund.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/06/business/06summers.html?_r=1
=======================================================================================

Sunday, April 5, 2009

US & NATO Impede South Asia's Intra-Regional Geopolitics

Why is this Times of India TOI report calling the Asia Society's Pickering-led group an "independent task force?" It's NOT *independent* because it promotes the dominant, exceptionalist, supremacist US foreign policy perspective in which the US places itself front and center of every regional and inter-regional strategy, so that the US can continue to manipulate the nation-states in the South Asia region, to further US global dominance, market fundamentalism and militaristic foreign policy.

India would do very well to stick steadfastly to PM Manmohan Singh's line that Pakistan needs to guarantee *extra-state* actors on its soil like the LeT and the TeTP, as well as *state* actors like the ISI, will NOT foment and deploy terrorists against the world's largest democracy.

The US and its think tanks can think till they tank! India must continue to carve her own way out of the mess created by the colonial Brits and the neo-imperial US. India and Pakistan need to persevere in order to engage directly, with pre-conditions against Pak terrorism and without 3rd party US-led NATO interference. The civil societies of both our countries have to vigorously persuade our leaders, over the short and long term. Sustainable prosperity cannot happen without this extended civil society effort. That means you and me.
Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
-------------------------------------
Times of India copyright
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India-indispensable-regional-actor-US-report/articleshow/4363594.cms#write
---
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/US/US-think-tank-asks-Obama-to-acknowledge-Pak-as-N-power/articleshow/4362884.cms
--------------------------------------
Back from the Brink? A Strategy for Stabilizing Afghanistan-Pakistan
An Asia Society Task Force Report
April 2009
http://www.asiasociety.org/taskforces/afpak/
http://www.asiasociety.org/taskforces/afpak/Afghanistan-PakistanTaskForce.pdf
Asia Society copyright
======================================================================================

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Social Justice, Ethical Democracy & the G-20

My Comment #61.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/03/world/europe/03summit.html
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April 02, 2009 9:28 am
Obama, the first Black U.S. president is squandering an historic opportunity by failing to focus on socio-economic JUSTICE in the world at the G-20 summit.
I didn't expect him to, (even as I voted for him), because he performs Whiteness. He is rewarded for protecting and preserving the dominant status quo. He is the Black least threatening to the status quo. I voted for him because he was the lesser of two evils, not because I expected him to make Change I could Believe in.

The US economy and US foreign policy would both benefit if the US and other member nations of the G-20 focused on the havenots (their numbers are increasing) in the US and in the world. The member-nations representing the developing economies are still exhibiting a colonized dependent mindset.

The rich countries are already heavily "protectionist" and the so-called "free" market is loaded in favor of the rich looting economies.

Regulation, growth and development in the 21st century should be DRIVEN by the pragmatic idealism of social justice.

Sharing and being fair are important lessons learned in kindergarten.

Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
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http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2009/04/03/world/europe/03summit.html?s=1&pg=3
Global Leaders Meeting to Resolve Rift on Economic Plan
By MARK LANDLER and DAVID E. SANGER
Published: April 2, 2009
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Updated: March 30, 2009

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http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/g/group_of_20/index.html
The Group of 20, or G-20, is an international body that meets to discuss economic issues. Its members -- 19 countries with some of the world's biggest industrial and emerging economies, plus the European Union -- represent about 90 percent of the world's gross national product, 80 percent of world trade (including trade within the European Union) and two-thirds of the global population. The G-20, which represents a far broader range of the world's industrialized economies than the more Atlantic-oriented G-8, has taken on a new prominence in the current economic crisis. On April 2, 2009, its members will meet in London for a session expected to center around President Obama's push for greater economic stimulus around the globe, Europe's desire for a stronger framework of financial regulation and the desire of emerging economies, led by China, for a bigger role in economic dipomacy.

The G-20 was established as a response to the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s and to a "growing recognition that key emerging-market countries were not adequately included in the core of global economic discussion and governance," according to the G-20's public materials.

A smaller group of industrialized nations has been meeting since the 1970s (the G-7 and G-8, which convene finance ministers and heads of government, respectively). In the 1990s, given the extent of the Asian financial crisis, government leaders decided to involve a broader group of countries, including emerging market countries, to deal with the turmoil. A group of 22 countries ("G-22") and then a group of 33 countries ("G-33") met on an ad hoc basis. The G-20 was created in 1999 as a more permanent international economic body that includes representation from emerging countries. The member countries are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey and the United States. The European Union is also a member, represented by the rotating council presidency and the European Central Bank.

The membership of the G-20 has not changed since it was established, and the organization says there are "no formal criteria for G-20 membership." With the exceptions of Argentina, Saudi Arabia and South Africa, all of the member countries fall within the list of the top 20 biggest state G.D.P.'s in the world (using the 2007 rankings from the C.I.A. World Factbook, International Monetary Fund and the World Bank).

"I don't think it's a club you can join except by having a lot of economic growth," said Simon Johnson, a professor at the M.I.T. Sloan School of Management and a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Usually, the attendees of the annual meetings are the finance ministers and central bank governors of the member countries, plus top leadership of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. In November 2008, heads of government attended an emergency G-20 session held in Washington to deal with the crumbling of global credit.

The Washington meeting was referred to by many observers as a possible prelude to a sort of Bretton Woods II, meaning an event that marks the start of a new international financial framework. (The term Bretton Woods System refers to an international monetary system set up during a 1944 conference in Bretton Woods, N.H.; it established, among other things, the I.M.F.).

The I.M.F., which had nearly become irrelevant before the current crisis, is now expected to be a focus of the London gathering. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, who once worked at the fund, has called for its financial resources to be expanded by $500 billion, effectively tripling its lending capacity to distressed countries and cementing its status as the lender of last resort for much of the world.

Japan and the European Union have each pledged $100 billion; the United States has signaled it will contribute a similar sum, though its money will take longer to arrive because of the need for Congressional approval. China, with its mammoth foreign exchange reserves, is the next obvious donor.

Yet officials of China and other developing countries have served notice that they are reluctant to make comparable pledges without getting a greater say in the operations of the fund, which is run by a Frenchman, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, and is heavily influenced by the United States and Western Europe.
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