holdmyark | Located in south-western Arnhem land Australia is a stone monument that
was created by the aboriginal Australians 50,000 years ago. A part of Jawoyn country,Nawarla
Gabarnmung is an incredible example of engineering a rock shelter not
seen elsewhere at this period of time in ancient history. Meaning, “hole
in the rock”, “passageway”, or “valley open from the centre” by the
Jawoyn people, Nawarla Gabarnmung is a sacred and protected site. Jawoyn
Elder, Margaret Katherine, has the responsibility of safe guarding this
very special place today. The Jawoyn people have only allowed
‘Gabarnmung’ to be studied in recent years. Margaret explains how
sharing knowledge with blackfullas, and whitefullas is important.
The work completed at Gabarnmung by these ancient engineers may not have
required the precise mathematics to build a great pyramid, but still
valued math and the intelligent knowledge of working with stone for a
great length of time. The shelter was constructed by tunneling into a
naturally eroded cliff face. The roof is 1.75m to 2.45m above floor
level, supported by 50 pillars created by the natural erosion of fissure
lines in the bedrock. 36 pillars were painted. Some pre-existing
pillars were removed, some were reshaped and some moved to new
positions. In some areas ceiling slabs were removed and repainted by the
ancient Jawoyn people who used the shelter.
This [hole in the wall] ‘monument’ contains a historical gallery of rock art and some of the oldest full paintings in the world. Also a historical recording of human history like many other sites in the Arnhem Land area of Australia. The Artwork at Gabarnmung rivals the paintings found in France and Spain. Noting that most dates for Rock Art are questionable, so are those greater dates now suggested for France and Spain[65,000 years]
The significance of the Gabarnmung rock art is in the amazing detail. These mystifying and intriguing images demonstrate the experience of the Jawoyn Artists. The people and culture still being here today to help tell the story is what makes the works of art much more alive. The many examples found in rock painting across Australia over the past 200 years explains how the Original people have been painting since the earliest times in human History. A few years ago Smithsonian wrote an article making these comparisons of Gabarnmung:
If science can offer something to the Jawoyn, the Jawoyn have something to offer science. “We don’t have anyone to explain Chauvet Cave to us. In France, these are sites with no memory, no life. With Gabarnmung, we are lucky. There is the living culture, the memories. The Jawoyn can help us build a new knowledge.” Jean-Michel Geneste
“ Like the Sistine Chapel, the ceiling of the expansive rock shelter was a mural of breathtakingly vivid and bold works of art – hundreds of them. And the paintings extended up and down 36 remarkable sandstone columns that, like the pillars of a temple, appeared to support the cave”
bbc | Scientists are beginning to tap into
a wellspring of knowledge buried in the ancient stories of Australia's
Aboriginal peoples. But the loss of indigenous languages could mean it
is too late to learn from them.
The Luritja people, native to
the remote deserts of central Australia, once told stories about a fire
devil coming down from the Sun, crashing into Earth and killing
everything in the vicinity.
The local people feared if they strayed too close to this land they might reignite some otherworldly creature.
The
legend describes the landing of a meteor in Australia's Central Desert
about 4,700 years ago, says University of New South Wales (UNSW)
astrophysicist Duane Hamacher.
It would have been a dramatic and
fiery event, with the meteor blazing across the sky. As it broke apart,
large fragments of metal-rich rock would have crashed to Earth with
explosive force, creating a dozen giant craters.
The
Northern Territory site, which was discovered in the 1930s by white
prospectors with the help of Luritja guides, is today known as the
Henbury Meteorites Conservation Reserve.
Mr Hamacher, who runs an Indigenous astronomy program at UNSW, says
evidence is mounting that Aboriginal stories hold clues about events
from Australia's ancient past.
Last year, he travelled to Victoria with tsunami expert James Goff, also from UNSW, to visit members of the Gunditjmara people
"They
describe this gigantic wave coming very far inland and killing
everybody except those who were up on the mountaintops, and they
actually name all the different locations where people survived," says
Mr Hamacher.
He and Mr Goff took core samples from locations
between 500m and 1km (0.6 miles) inland, and at each spot, they found a
layer of ocean sediment, about 2m down, indicating that a tsunami likely
washed over the area hundreds, or possibly thousands, of years ago.
The samples need further analysis but Mr Hamacher says it is a "very exciting" result that suggests the legend could be true.
Earlier
this year, another team of researchers presented a paper arguing that
stories from Australia's coastal Aboriginal communities might "represent
genuine and unique observations" of sea level rises that occurred
between 7,000 and 11,000 years ago.
wikipedia | Besides the Papuans, Australian Aboriginals, Melanesians, and Negritos, the "Australoid" category is often taken to include various tribes of India.
The inclusion of Indian tribes in the group is not well-defined, and is closely related to the question of the original peopling of India, and the possible shared ancestry between Indian and Australian populations of the Upper Paleolithic.
The American Journal of Physical Anthropology (1996, p. 382) by
American Association of Physical Anthropologists. Luigi Luca
Cavalli-Sforza, Paolo Menozzi and Alberto Piazza in their text, The History and Geography of Human Genes (1994, P. 241) all use the term.[clarification needed]
Tee suggested Australoid ancestry of the original South Asian
populations has long remained an open question. It was embraced by
Indian anthropologists as emphasizing the deep antiquity of Indian
prehistory. Australoid hunter-gatherer and fisherman tribes of the
interior of India were identified with the Nishada Kingdom described in the Mahabharata. Panchanan Mitra (1923) following Vincenzo Giuffrida-Ruggeri (1913) recognizes a Pre-Dravidian Australo-Veddaic stratum in India.[19]
Alternatively, the Dravidians themselves have been claimed as originally of Australoid stock,[20]
a view held by Biraja Sankar Guha among others.[21]
South Indian tribes specifically described as having Australoid affinities include the Oraon, Munda, Santal, Bhil, Gondi, the Kadars of Kerala, the Kurumba and Irula of the Nilgiris,
the Paniyans of Malabar, the Uralis, Kannikars, Mithuvan and Chenchus.[22]
but other Indian anthropologists of the post-colonial period, such as
S. P. Sharma (1971) and D. N. Majumdar (1946, 1965), have gone as far
as claiming Australoid ancestry, to a greater or lesser extent, for
almost all the castes and tribes of India.[23] Newer Indian anthropology studies about cranial morphology do not support an Australoid ancestry in South Asian populations.[5]
According to a large craniometric study (Raghavan and Bulbeck et
al. 2013) the native populations of South Asia have distinct
craniometric and anthropologic ancestry. Both southern and northern
groups are most similar to each other and have generally closer
affinities to various "Caucasoid" groups. The study further showed that the native South Asians (including the Vedda) form a distinct group and are not aligned to the "Australoid"
group. However, Raghavan and Bulbeck et al., while noting the
differences of South Asian from Andamanese and Australoid crania, also
explain that this is not in conflict with genetic evidence (found by
Reich et al. in 2009) showing a common ancestry and genetic affinity
between South Asians and the native Andamanese (a group sometimes
considered to be related to Australoids), stating: "The distinctiveness
of Andamanese and southern Indian crania need not challenge the finding
by Reich et al. for an “Ancestral South Indian” ancestry shared by
southern Indians and Andamanese" [the latter being a Southern Eurasian
population possibly related to Australoid peoples] and that "some
populations are craniometrically specialised while others are not...What
the present analysis adds is that southern Indians also have
specialised craniometrics. Andamanese on the other hand have
unspecialised craniometrics...Therefore, southern Indians' craniometric
distinctiveness from Andamanese should be interpreted as a result of
their craniometric specialisation rather than as evidence against a
shared, ancient ancestry with Andamanese.[24]
xinhua | Sanliurfa Provincial Culture and Tourism Director Aydin Aslan said to
the Anadolu Agency that Gobeklitepe was a huge excavation site that
changed the world's archaeology history to a great extent, adding that
excavations were continuing non-stop in the region.
The city is home to the world's oldest temple, which is believed to be twice as old as the Stonehenge and the Pyramids.
Ancient stone carvings and a tablet analyzed at this mysterious site
could eventually confirm, even there are some critics to this new
theory, that a comet struck earth around 11,000 BC. Experts at the
University of Edinburgh, Scotland, analyzed mysterious symbols carved
onto stone pillars at Gobeklitepe to find out that they could be linked
to constellations.
The markings, according a research published in Mediterranean
Archaeology and Archeometry, suggest that a swarm of comet fragments hit
earth at the time that a mini ice age struck, changing the course of
human civilization.
Researchers believe the images on the pillars were intended as a
record of cataclysmic event, and a further carving showing a headless
man could possibly indicate human disaster and massive loss of life.
This site is contemporary with the Greenland ice core samples, which
are dated to around 10,900 BC of the sites may features, none are more
famous than the many standing pillars that dot the excavated grounds.
This is because of the extensive programs and animal reliefs that
decorate these pillars, which include various representations of mammal
and avian species. One of the pillars, known as the "vulture stone," was
of particular interests to archaeologists, as it is suspected that its
representation which is associated with death could have been intended
to commemorate a devastating event, like a cataclysm.
The Turkish official Aslan said the roof works are expected to be
finished on July 15. "As of July 15, the roof project will be finished
and the area will be open to visitors. The priority of works is the
protection of Gobeklitepe. The cost of this work is nearly 600,000
euros, provided by the Turkish state and the European Union," he added.
The head of the Gobeklitepe excavations team, Celal Uludag, said for
his part that the excavations will be delayed because of the roof
project in the field.
He said the protection of the field of historical artifacts is as
important as the protection of the artifacts, and that new findings can
also be unearthed during upcoming excavations. He said they have been
planning to start excavations in the region for long years.
"We will start excavations after the roof project. We believe that we
can continue excavation works in the settlement for long years. So far,
seven temples have been unearthed in the region and many of them are
waiting to be discovered. It is important to protect and display the
findings. Now we give priority to the protection of the current
findings," he added.
Gobeklitepe was discovered in 1963 as a Neolithic settlement, during
the surface surveys realized as a part of a Joint Project named
"Prehistoric Research in Southeastern Anatolia" by Istanbul University
in cooperation with Chicago University.
smithsonian | Six miles from Urfa, an ancient city in southeastern Turkey, Klaus
Schmidt has made one of the most startling archaeological discoveries of
our time: massive carved stones about 11,000 years old, crafted and
arranged by prehistoric people who had not yet developed metal tools or
even pottery. The megaliths predate Stonehenge by some 6,000 years. The
place is called Gobekli Tepe, and Schmidt, a German archaeologist who
has been working here more than a decade, is convinced it's the site of
the world's oldest temple.
"Guten Morgen," he says at 5:20 a.m. when his van picks me up
at my hotel in Urfa. Thirty minutes later, the van reaches the foot of a
grassy hill and parks next to strands of barbed wire. We follow a knot
of workmen up the hill to rectangular pits shaded by a corrugated steel
roof—the main excavation site. In the pits, standing stones, or pillars,
are arranged in circles. Beyond, on the hillside, are four other rings
of partially excavated pillars. Each ring has a roughly similar layout:
in the center are two large stone T-shaped pillars encircled by slightly
smaller stones facing inward. The tallest pillars tower 16 feet and,
Schmidt says, weigh between seven and ten tons. As we walk among them, I
see that some are blank, while others are elaborately carved: foxes,
lions, scorpions and vultures abound, twisting and crawling on the
pillars' broad sides.
Schmidt points to the great stone rings, one of them 65 feet across. "This is the first human-built holy place," he says.
From this perch 1,000 feet above the valley, we can see to the
horizon in nearly every direction. Schmidt, 53, asks me to imagine what
the landscape would have looked like 11,000 years ago, before centuries
of intensive farming and settlement turned it into the nearly
featureless brown expanse it is today.
Prehistoric people would have gazed upon herds
of gazelle and other wild animals; gently flowing rivers, which
attracted migrating geese and ducks; fruit and nut trees; and rippling
fields of wild barley and wild wheat varieties such as emmer and
einkorn. "This area was like a paradise," says Schmidt, a member of the
German Archaeological Institute. Indeed, Gobekli Tepe sits at the
northern edge of the Fertile Crescent—an arc of mild climate and arable
land from the Persian Gulf to present-day Lebanon, Israel, Jordan and
Egypt—and would have attracted hunter-gatherers from Africa and the
Levant. And partly because Schmidt has found no evidence that people
permanently resided on the summit of Gobekli Tepe itself, he believes
this was a place of worship on an unprecedented scale—humanity's first
"cathedral on a hill."
bbc | The programme, Ancient Voices,
shows that the dimensions of prehistoric skulls found in Brazil match
those of the aboriginal peoples of Australia and Melanesia. Other
evidence suggests that these first Americans were later massacred by
invaders from Asia.
Until now, native Americans were believed to have descended from Asian
ancestors who arrived over a land bridge between Siberia and Alaska and
then migrated across the whole of north and south America. The land
bridge was formed 11,000 years ago during the ice age, when sea level
dropped.
However, the new evidence
shows that these people did not arrive in an empty wilderness. Stone
tools and charcoal from the site in Brazil show evidence of human
habitation as long ago as 50,000 years.
The site is at Serra Da Capivara in remote northeast Brazil. This area
is now inhabited by the descendants of European settlers and African
slaves who arrived just 500 years ago.
But cave paintings found here provided the first clue to the existence of a much older people.
Images of giant armadillos,
which died out before the last ice age, show the artists who drew them
lived before even the natives who greeted the Europeans.
These Asian people have facial features described as mongoloid. However,
skulls dug from a depth equivalent to 9,000 to 12,000 years ago are
very different.
Walter Neves, an archaeologist from the University of Sao Paolo, has
taken extensive skull measurements from dozens of skulls, including the
oldest, a young woman who has been named Lucia.
"The measurements show that Lucia was anything but mongoloid," he says.
The skull dimensions and
facial features match most closely the native people of Australia and
Melanesia. These people date back to about 60,000 years, and were
themselves descended from the first humans, who left Africa about
100,000 years ago.
But how could the early Australians have travelled more than 13,500
kilometres (8,450 miles) at that time? The answer comes from more cave
paintings, this time from the Kimberley, a region at the northern tip of
Western Australia.
Here, Grahame Walsh, an expert on Australian rock art, found the oldest
painting of a boat anywhere in the world. The style of the art means it
is at least 17,000 years old, but it could be up to 50,000 years old.
And the crucial detail is the high prow of the boat. This would have
been unnecessary for boats used in calm, inland waters. The design
suggests it was used on the open ocean.
nature | The Younger Dryas (YD) impact hypothesis posits that fragments of a
large, disintegrating asteroid/comet struck North America, South
America, Europe, and western Asia ~12,800 years ago. Multiple
airbursts/impacts produced the YD boundary layer (YDB), depositing peak
concentrations of platinum, high-temperature spherules, meltglass, and
nanodiamonds, forming an isochronous datum at >50 sites across ~50
million km² of Earth’s surface. This proposed event triggered extensive
biomass burning, brief impact winter, YD climate change, and contributed
to extinctions of late Pleistocene megafauna. In the most extensive
investigation south of the equator, we report on a ~12,800-year-old
sequence at Pilauco, Chile (~40°S), that exhibits peak YD boundary
concentrations of platinum, gold, high-temperature iron- and
chromium-rich spherules, and native iron particles rarely found in
nature. A major peak in charcoal abundance marks an intense
biomass-burning episode, synchronous with dramatic changes in
vegetation, including a high-disturbance regime, seasonality in
precipitation, and warmer conditions. This is anti-phased with
northern-hemispheric cooling at the YD onset, whose rapidity suggests
atmospheric linkage. The sudden disappearance of megafaunal remains and
dung fungi in the YDB layer at Pilauco correlates with megafaunal
extinctions across the Americas. The Pilauco record appears consistent
with YDB impact evidence found at sites on four continents.
craigmurray | Just as we are not conditioned to recognise the violence of the state
as violence, we do not always recognise resistance to the state as
violence. If you bodily blockade a road, a tube station or a building
with the intention to prevent somebody else from physically passing
through that space, that is an act of physical force, of violence. It
may be a low level of violence, but violence it is. Extinction Rebellion
represents a challenge to the state’s claim to monopolise violence,
which is why the Metropolitan Police – a major instrument of state
domestic violence – were so anxious to declare the activity illegal on a
wide scale.
Ultimately civil resistance represents a denial of the state’s right
to enforce its monopoly of violence. The Hong Kong protests represent a
striking demonstration of the fact that rejecting the state’s monopoly
of violence can entail marching without permission, occupying a space,
blockading and ultimately replying to bullets with firebombs, and that
these actions are a continuum. It is the initial rejection of the
state’s power over your body which is the decision point.
Just as I used the example of tax evasion and healthcare to
demonstrate that the state’s use of violence is not always bad, I use
the example of Extinction Rebellion to demonstrate that the assertion of
physical force, against the state’s claim to monopoly of it, is not
always bad either.
We are moving into an era of politics where the foundations of
consent which underpin western states are becoming less stable. The
massive growth in wealth inequality has led to an alienation of large
sections of the population from the political system. The political
economy works within a framework which is entirely an artificial
construct of states, and ultimately is imposed by the states’ monopoly
of force. For the last four decades, that framework has been
deliberately fine-tuned to enable the massive accumulation of wealth by a
very small minority and to reduce the access to share of economic
resource by the broad mass of the people.
The inevitable consequence is widespread economic discontent and a
resultant loss of respect for the political class. The political class
are tasked with the management of the state apparatus, and popular
discontent is easily personalised – it concentrates on the visible
people rather than the institutions. But if the extraordinary wealth
imbalance of society continues to worsen, it is only a matter of time
before that discontent undermines respect for political institutions.
And yet, as we have learned from their recent congressional
testimony, key members of his own National Security Council did not
share his views and indeed were opposed to them. Certainly, this was
true of Fiona Hill and Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman. Both of them seemed
prepared for a highly risky confrontation with Russia over Ukraine,
though whether retroactively because of Moscow’s 2014 annexation of
Crimea or for more general reasons was not entirely clear.
Similarly, Trump was slow in withdrawing Marie Yovanovitch, a
career foreign service officer appointed by President Obama as
ambassador to Kiev, who had made clear, despite her official position in
Kiev, that she did not share the new American president’s thinking
about Ukraine or Russia. In short, the president was surrounded in his
own administration, even in the White House, by opponents of his foreign
policy and presumably not only in regard to Ukraine.
“Jewish Twitter is
erupting in anger over the latest incendiary video from an anti-Semitic
website, this one asserting that the impeachment inquiry into President
Trump was a “Jew coup.”
TruNews, the creator of
the video, said YouTube had “banned us again” because of the “Godcast,”
published on Friday. In it, the site’s founder, a non-denominational
pastor named Rick Wiles, and Doc Burkhart, the site’s general manager,
highlight Jewish Democrats connected to impeachment.
Outraged
Jewish leaders and others called on Twitter, Apple and other platforms
to ban TruNews as well, the latest flare in the ongoing wars over the
boundary between free speech and hate crimes. …”
“An American pastor and radio host warned of a “Jew coup” to impeach U.S. President Donald Trump on Christian site TruNews.
“This impeach Trump movement
is a Jewish coup. And the American people better wake up to it really
fast,” said Rick Wiles, a non-denominational pastor at Flowing Streams
Church in Florida and founder of TruNews, in a video posted Monday. …”
Look who is outraged at TruNews for doing nothing but reading
headlines from a bunch of different Jewish media sources about Trump’s
impeachment:
Thanks to Pamela
Karlan for so aptly capturing Democratic elites' delusional,
Reaganite, jingoistic Cold Warrior mindset in your claim that we need to
arm Ukraine "so they fight the Russians there and we
don't have to fight them here" & we remain
"that shining city on the hill." pic.twitter.com/C78aNThnUk
blackagendareport | Self-styled liberals believe they are a better class of people than
Trump, but are bigger supporters of unjust wars than the so-called
“deplorables.”
“Liberals eagerly wait for a war they can believe in.”
The trauma of Donald Trump’s presidency has created continued
insanity for American liberals. They were never very trustworthy, due to
their abiding belief in United States exceptionalism and an imagined
right for it to intervene in the rest of the world as it pleased.
Liberals could be counted on to protest wars which killed Americans in
Vietnam or in Iraq. But by and large they trust in imperialist dictates
if someone they like is in charge and who doesn’t allow too many of
their countrymen to get hurt.
Hence their dilemma with Donald Trump. Trump is their anti-Christ, a
bad mannered, proudly stupid, racist who expresses the id of the great
unwashed deplorable white masses. There are many reasons to oppose him
but liberals generally attack from the right. The same people who
remember that the surveillance state lied about the WMD threat from Iraq
now parrot every word from the same people if they are anti-Trump.
Their earlier opposition to war propaganda was more a result of their
anti-Bush, anti-Republican stance than anything else. They didn’t really
oppose U.S. interventions or stand up for peace. Instead they eagerly
wait for a war they can believe in if the rationale is to their liking.
thegrayzone | AMLO’s left-wing policies have caused shockwaves in Washington, which
has long relied on neoliberal Mexican leaders ensuring a steady cheap
exploitable labor base and maintaining a reliable market for US goods
and open borders for US capital and corporations.
On November 27 — a day after declaring Nicaragua a “national security
threat” — Trump announced that the US government will be designating
Mexican drug cartels as “terrorist organizations.”
Such a designation could pave the way for direct US military intervention in Mexico.
The designation was particularly ironic considering some top drug
cartel leaders in Mexico have long-standing ties to the US government.
The leaders of the notoriously brutal cartel the Zetas, for instance,
were originally trained in counter-insurgency tactics by the US military.
Throughout the Cold War, the US government armed, trained, and funded right-wing death squads
throughout Latin America, many of which were involved in drug
trafficking. The CIA also used drug money to fund far-right
counter-insurgency paramilitary groups in Central America.
These tactics were also employed in the Middle East and South Asia. The United States armed, trained, and funded far-right Islamist extremists
in Afghanistan in the 1980s in order to fight the Soviet Union. These
same US-backed Salafi-jihadists then founded al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
This strategy was later repeated in the US wars on Libya and Syria. ISIS commander Omar al-Shishani,
to take one example, had been trained by the US military and enjoyed
direct support from Washington when he was fighting against Russia.
The Barack Obama administration also oversaw a campaign called Project Gunrunner and Operation Fast and Furious, in which the US government helped send thousands of guns to cartels in Mexico.
Mexican journalist Alina Duarte explained that, with the Trump
administration’s designation of cartels as terrorists, “They are
creating the idea that Mexico represents a threat to their national security.”
“Should we start talking about the possibility of a coup against Lopez Obrador in Mexico?” Duarte asked.
Jacobin | At four o’clock in the afternoon on October 17, 2019, the Mexican city
of Culiacán, capital of the northeastern state of Sinaloa, erupted in
gunfire. Minutes before, in the exclusive Tres RÃos district, members of
the army and National Guard had arrested Ovidio Guzmán López, son of
the jailed former head of the Sinaloa Cartel, JoaquÃn Guzmán (“El
Chapo”), and one of the organization’s new generation of leaders.
The response was immediate: taking to the streets, cartel members
fired rounds of automatic weapons from trucks and blocked intersections
with burning vehicles, all in a bid to sow chaos. Surrounding the armed forces involved in the raid, they cut off access on the three bridges leading out of the area.
Not to be outdone, elements of the military also got in on
the game: in a case of rank insubordination, General Carlos Demetrio
Gaytán Ochoa declared:
“We feel insulted as Mexicans and offended as soldiers.” Going on to
question the “strategic decisions” of the president, Gaytán Ochoa
stated: “We are currently living in a politically polarized society
because the dominant ideology . . . is based on currents from the
so-called left, which accumulated a large amount of resentment over the
years.”
Conveniently omitted from such vociferations were several key points.
First, that President Felipe Calderón was the one who launched his
homicidal, so-called war on drugs in the first place, which saw over 121,000 killed in his administration alone. Second, that Calderón himself oversaw the freeing
of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes (“El Mencho”), leader of the Jalisco New
Generation Cartel, under similar siege circumstances in 2012. And third,
according to investigative journalist Anabel Hernández, Calderón’s
government was in fact an active supporter of the Sinaloa Cartel by means of his all-powerful federal police force.
But history hardly matters when the goal is to make AMLO look weak in
the fight against organized crime, the captain of a nation that is
slipping out of his control.
bloomberg | San Miguel de Allende oozes old Mexico charm.
There
are the cobblestone streets, the colonial-era buildings
and wrought-iron balconies, the neo-Gothic steeples soaring high above
the pink-sandstone church anchoring a corner of the main plaza.
Travel
and Leisure magazine has twice named it the best city in the world, a
ratification of how beloved it is with tourists and retirees from the
U.S., Canada and beyond.
But lately, San Miguel has been attracting a very different sort of crowd: the drug cartels. And the moment they arrived and began pushing cocaine and imposing their brutal brand of property tax, the murders began.
A
restaurateur died in a hail of gunfire in front of horrified customers
after he refused to pay extortion demands. The son of the owner of a
construction-materials business was killed on his way to work.
A
tortilla shop owner in the nearby town of Celaya was gunned down along
with two of her employees. And a fruit vendor, a convenience store
operator, another restaurateur and three cantina owners closed their
doors after shakedown-visits and, it would appear, are lying low.
This kind of crime was unthinkable here just a few months
ago. “It’s still hard to believe,” said Manuel, a restaurant manager
who, like many others, would give only his first name for fear of
reprisal.
townhall | Donald Trump is talking about labeling the Mexican drug cartels that
own our failed state neighbor as “terrorist groups,” and this is yet
another step toward what is increasingly looking to be an inevitable
confrontation. They just butchered several American citizens, including kids, which cannot go unanswered. They
murder thousands of Americans a year here with their poison, which
cannot go unanswered. But are we Americans even able to answer a bunch
of pipsqueak thugs anymore? Let’s put aside the question of if we should use our military against Mexico (I discussed it here in 2018, to the consternation of liberals and Fredocon sissies) and look at what might happen if we did escalate.
None of it is good.
It’s
not a matter of the prowess of our warriors. Our warriors, unleashed,
would lay waste to anything we point them at. But the question is,
“Would we ever unleash them? Would we let them do what it takes to
achieve the goal of eliminating the cartels?"
Of course not. We
haven’t decisively won a real war since World War II (except the Gulf
War, unless you accept the arguable premise that it was an early
campaign in a still-continuing Iraq conflict). And there’s a reason we
don’t win. We don’t truly want to, as demonstrated by our
unwillingness to do the hard things required to win. Could you imagine
the Democrats siding with America in a war on Mexican drug cartels? If
you can, you’re higher than Hoover Biden at a strip club on a Saturday
night.
Again, this is not to say whether a war on the Mexican drug cartels is a
good or bad idea. Nor is it to say we do not have the combat power to
do it – we do. It’s just to say that America is culturally and
politically unwilling to do what it takes to win, or to accept the
losses that would come with a military campaign against the drug
cartels.
unz |I
suppose that by now everyone has heard of Trump’s offer to send the
American military to “wage WAR on the drug cartels and wipe them off the
face of the earth,” which he asserts can be done “quickly and
effectively. “
Trump
phrased this as an offer to help, not a threat to invade, which is
reassuring. AMLO, Mexico’s president, wisely declined the offer.
While
the President seems to have made the offer in good faith, he has little
idea of Mexico, the military, or the cartels. The American military
could not come close to wiping them off the face of the earth, much less
effectively and quickly. Such an incursion would be a political and
military disaster. The President needs to do some reading.
If
AMLO were to invite the Americans into Mexico, he would be lynched. Few
Americans are aware of how much the United States is hated in Latin
America, and for that matter in most of the world. They don’t know of
the long series of military interventions, brutal dictators imposed and
supported, and economic rapine. Somoza, Pinochet, the Mexican-American
War, detachment of Panama from Colombia, bombardment of Veracruz,
Patton’s incursion–the list could go on for pages. The Mexican public
would look upon American troops not as saviors but as invaders. Which
they would be.
The
incursion would not defeat the cartels, for several reasons that trump
would do well to ponder. To begin with, America starts its wars by
overestimating its own powers, underestimating the enemy, and
misunderstanding the kind of war on which it is embarking. The is
exactly what Trump seems to be doing.
He
probably thinks of Mexicans as just gardeners and rapists and we have
all these beautiful advanced weapons and beautiful drones and things
with blinking lights. A pack of rapists armed with garden trowels
couldn’t possibly be difficult to defeat by the US. I mean, get serious:
Dope dealers against the Marines? A cakewalk.
You
know, like Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria. That
sort of cakewalk. Let’s think what an expedition against the narcos
would entail, what it would face.
To
begin with, Mexico is a huge country of 127 million souls with the
narcos spread unevenly across it. You can’t police a nation that size
with a small force, or even with a large force. A (preposterous) million
soldiers would be well under one percent of the population. Success
would be impossible even if that population helped you. Which it
wouldn’t.
ronpaulinstitute | Tuesday morning, President Donald Trump, who has the unilateral power to
send the United States military to bomb and invade other countries, as
several of his predecessors have done, stated at Twitter that he is
ready to send the US military to Mexico to defeat drug cartels.
This is the time for Mexico, with the help of the United
States, to wage WAR on the drug cartels and wipe them off the face of
the earth. We merely await a call from your great new president!
Making clear he is talking about a US military action, Trump declared in
another Tuesday morning tweet that “the cartels have become so large
and powerful that you sometimes need an army to defeat an army!”.
The
truth, however, is that the drug war waged by the Mexico government,
with the help of the US government, ensures the continued existence of
powerful and dangerous drug cartels in Mexico. Similarly, when the US
had alcohol prohibition, there were dangerous criminal enterprises that
thrived from satisfying people’s demand for prohibited products.
oilprice | Ever since the U.S. signalled through its effective withdrawal from
Syria that it now has little interest in becoming involved in military
actions in the Middle East, the door has been fully opened to China
and Russia to advance their ambitions in the region. For Russia, the
Middle East offers a key military pivot from which it can project
influence West and East and that it can use to capture and control
massive oil and gas flows in both directions as well. For China, the
Middle East – and, absolutely vitally, Iran and Iraq – are irreplaceable
stepping stones towards Europe for its era-defining ‘One Belt, One
Road’ project. Earlier this week an announcement was made by Iraq’s Oil
Ministry that highlights each of these factors at play, through a
relatively innocuous-sounding contract award to a relatively unknown
Chinese firm.
Specifically, it was announced that China Petroleum
Engineering & Construction Corp (CPECC) has been awarded a US$121
million engineering contract to upgrade the facilities that are used to
extract gas during crude oil production at the supergiant West Qurna-1
oilfield in Iraq, 50 kilometres northwest of the principal oil hub of
Basra. The project is due to be completed within 27 months and aims to
increase the capture of gas currently being flared across the site. Two
factors that were not highlighted in the general announcement were
firstly that CPECC is a subsidiary of China’s principal political proxy
in the oil and gas sector, China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), and
secondly that the gas capture project will also include the development
of the oil reserves at West Qurna 1. The current level of oil reserves
at West Qurna 1 is just under nine billion barrels but, crucially, the
site is part of the overall massive West Qurna reservoir that comprises
at least 43 billion barrels of crude oil reserves. “For China, it’s
always all about positioning itself so that it is perfectly placed to
expand its foothold,” a senior oil and gas industry source who works
closely with Iraq’s Oil Ministry told OilPrice.com earlier this week.
Certainly it makes sense for Iraq to finally begin to monetise its
associated gas that it has been burnt off for decades as a product of
its burgeoning oil production. Aside from the negative environmental
impact of this practice, there is the bizarre practical result that Iraq
– which holds some of the biggest oil and gas reserves in the world –
has to go to its neighbour Iran every year and beg for electricity
imports to plug the huge power deficits that afflict it, particularly
during the summer months. As it stands, Iraq has been steadily importing
around one third of its total energy supplies from Iran, which equates
to around 28 million cubic feet (mcf) of gas to feed its power stations.
Even with these extra supplies, frequent daily power outages across
Iraq occur and have been a prime catalyst for widespread protests in the
past, including last year. The situation is also likely to become worse
if change does not occur as, according to the International Energy
Agency (IEA), Iraq’s population is growing at a rate of over one million
per year, with electricity demand set to double by 2030, reaching about
17.5 gigawatts average.
Apart from this, burning gas associated
with the production of crude oil is costing Iraq billions of dollars in
lost revenues. It loses money in the first place because in order to try
to minimise power shortages, Iraq is forced to burn crude oil directly
at power plants that it could sell in the open market for currently well
over US$55 per barrel (and the lifting cost per barrel in Iraq is just
US$2 on average). In this context, the average volume of crude oil used
for power generation has fallen in the past two years from a peak of
223,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2015 but it still averages around
110,000 bpd, or around US$2.25 billion per year in value. It costs Iraq
money in the second place because this associated gas that is flared
could itself either be sold off directly or in LNG form or used as
high-quality feedstock to finally truly kick-start the country’s
long-stalled petrochemicals industry that itself could generate massive
added-value product revenue streams. According to the IEA, Iraq has
around 3.5 trillion cubic metres (tcm) of proven reserves of gas -
mainly associated - which would be enough to supply nearly 200 years of
Iraq’s current consumption of gas, as long as flaring is minimised. It
added, though, that proven reserves do not provide an accurate picture
of Iraq’s long-term production potential and that the underlying
resource base – ultimately recoverable resources – is significantly
larger, at 8 tcm or more.
theduran | In Part 2 we examine the geopolitical associations in Africa which
vary by nation, where major powers have a vested interest in a
particular resource causing that major power to assume an aggressive
posture to ‘protect’ its national interest by dominating or subverting
the African state, in possession of that resource.
Typically those resources include natural gas, oil, gold, diamonds,
silver, uranium, coal, rare earth elements and minerals, etc. Thus the
major powers have their ‘client states’ in pursuance of the extraction
of those resources, where that extraction may result in corruption,
confrontation, armed aggression, and even support for terrorist
organizations in those states.
In this post-Colonial era the extraction of resources by the major
powers in a region where the indigenous people are exhorted to have
their own right to self-determination is a significant challenge to
global corporations, and former colonial occupiers in Africa like
Britain, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, etc.
When corporate interests either collide or collude with state
interests the local insurrection may be severe as mining giant Rio Tinto
discovered in Bougainville.
Other examples include coal and natural gas in Mozambique; uranium and
gold in Niger and Mali; oil in Sudan; diamonds in the Central African
Republic, and so on.
France in Africa
Perhaps the most notable component for NATO – specifically for France
– is the uranium needed to run its nuclear operations. Most of that
uranium originates in Africa even though France has reduced its capacity
for nuclear power. Even so, France still receives in excess of
two-thirds of its electricity from nuclear power via the former Areva Corporation, now called Framatome.
The uranium mined for Framatome’s nuclear reactors is commonly found in the Sahel region
of Africa where most of France’s uranium comes from, primarily northern
Niger and Mali. Chad** and Mauritania also possess enormous reserves of
the dangerous material. Mali is the fourth-largest supplier of gold
too, and with falling registered gold reserves
and the already accomplished confiscation of gold by the west from its
failed states Mali makes an especially attractive target… particularly
for the EU’s struggling banks.
After the indigenous people of the Sahel suffered serious illness
from the effect of uranium mining – where drinking water is frequently
contaminated – activist leader Almoustapha Alhacen and NGO Aghirin cooperated to oppose France’s corrupt mining giant Areva in Niger and Mali after 2001.
By 2006-2009 the protests and strikes in Agadez and Mali became
effective versus Areva. And by 2011 – surprisingly coincident with
Hillary Clinton’s “Arab Spring” – mysterious new terror cells appeared in the Sahel subsequent to the NATO destruction of Gaddafi’s government, including:
Movement for Oneness Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) funded by France/Morocco Intel
Ansar Dine funded by France/Morocco Intelligence Services
Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) funded by the United States of America CIA
Prior to 2011, a Tuareg rebellion led by the Movement for the Liberation of Azawad
(MNLA) had some success versus the Malian government and versus Areva.
The MNLA is a legitimate secular rebel group and is not funded by any
western intelligence service. MNLA’s success eventually led to air and
ground assaults by France in Mali in Operation Serval (with bases in Bamako and N’Djamena) by 2014.
Under the guise of striking al Qaeda and ISIL in Africa – a continent
where those groups did not exist prior to 2010 – France invoked air
strikes and ground assaults versus the indigenous people who have been
most effective in their resistance to Areva.
theduran | Russia’s intent in Africa – whatever it may be – is certainly as
misunderstood now as it was leading up to the Suez crisis of 1956. That
crisis led to a dangerous and pre-emptive invasion and occupation of
Nasser’s Egypt hatched in a crackpot conspiracy involving Israel,
France, and Britain.
The potential parallel to Suez in 1956 re NATO versus Russia in
Africa today is not altogether preposterous. Because there is another
side to the coin in what appears to be a nascent Russian Federation
attempt at taming Africa for its own — and perhaps China’s! — corporate
interests, being the toxic effect of AFRICOM/ NATO and its abject
mismanagement of resources and subversion of the African right to
progressive state self-determination.
That’s because the United States and NATO operate the largest
military infrastructure in Africa with thirty-four bases (some secret)
and thirty new US military or NATO construction projects underway in
Africa spanning four countries.
The US military has more sites in Niger – five, including Niamey,
Ouallam, Arlit, Maradi, and a secret base in Dirkou – than all other
countries combined in Western Africa.
Chebelley drone base
in Djibouti is the largest drone base in the world where the US can
strike any target in the Sahel or for that matter Iran. And AFRICOM is
building a larger base, Niger Air Base 201 in Agadez, capable of
striking Algeria or any location in the Sahel region while the US
operates a secret drone base in Tunisia (Sidi Ahmed) now opposed by
president Qays Sayed (Kais Saied).
There are five more bases in Somalia including secret bases
supporting AFRICOM’s ‘Lightning Brigade’ also known as the Danab
Advanced Infantry Brigade. Now guess who is training the Danab? Private US military contractors of course, Bancroft Global Development.
Kenya sports four more US military bases including Manda Bay and
Mombasa, where the Manda bay base has consistently launched US drone
strikes against Somalia, Yemen, and Iraq. There are three more secret
US/NATO base locations located along the Libyan coast to carry out drone
strikes as far-ranging as Pakistan.
Then there is Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti where approximately 4,000 US
and NATO personnel are stationed. Camp Lemonnier is claimed to be the
‘only permanent US base in Africa’ – perhaps because so many new US/NATO
bases are under construction while many of the rest are secret or
simply addressed by some arcane acronym known only to the military.
Cameroon, Mali, and Chad also host what the US military calls
‘contingency locations’ no doubt leveraged by NATO in its rather lame
attempt to control the Sahel. They include Garoua drone base, Douala,
and Salak … bases which train private military contractors and track US drone strikes versus the immortal and indestructible Boko Haram terrorists, of course.
Another secret US base in Chad is the historic site of Faya Largeau.
The present operational status of Faya Largeau is of course officially
unknown. Gabon’s Libreville location exists to allow US military or NATO
quick access for a rapid influx of US forces analogous to the base in
Dakar, Senegal, which serves the same strategic purpose.
The list of NATO
and US bases in Africa (whether secret or not) might continue on,
however hopefully the point has been made that the mighty US/NATO
presence in Africa extends far beyond the imagination of even the most
devoted follower of military affairs.
That such a behemoth of an operation as represented by the US/NATO
military presence in Africa could be seriously undermined by an influx
of a small number of lightly armed and under-resourced Russian military
contractors is not only laughable, but patently absurd.
kondaira |Euskara
has never been in contact with the Berber dialects that are currently
spoken in the Maghreb. However, it has similar words to the ones of
those languages that perhaps were introduced in Euskara through the
Iberian language.
According to the theory of the Proto-Basque expansion that took place after the last Ice Age, which is based on the most recent researchon Archaeogenetics,
those similarities could be due to migrations of Proto-Basque human
groups to Africa. This ancient population could leave words and even
Basque verbal morphemes during the miscegenation process with the
Hamitic peoples of northern Africa that have been kept in their
languages until the present day.
Thus,
it can be explained the existence of Basque words in Berber, Guanche
(Canary Islands), Somali, Ethiopian and in old Egyptian (they are all
Hamitic languages), as well as the vigesimal numeral system that is kept in the Tachelhit dialect of Berber.
Due
to those similarities between Basque and Hamitic words, there was
proposed the Basque-Berber theory which considered Euskara as related to
Berber. This theory was abandoned some years ago since the similarities
found were only lexical or lexicographical while they are very
different today, as in the past, when concerning syntax and grammar.
However, some similarities are observed especially in the verbal
articulation as well as the usage of some particles, as stated above.
discover | In terms of historical genetics these assumptions result in the
Basque population be used as a “reference” for the indigenous component
of the European ancestry which reaches back to the Last Glacial Maximum,
and expanded from the Iberian refugium after the ice retreated. One of
reasons for the assumption of Basque antiquity & purity are genetic
peculiarities of the Basques. Foremost among them is that the Basque
seem to have the highest frequency of Rh- in the world, primarily
because of the high frequency of the null allele within the population
(it is a recessively expressed trait). Rh- is very rare outside of
Europe, but its frequency exhibits a west-east gradient even within the
continent. It has been suggested that the mixing of Rh- and Rh+ blood
groups reflects the mixing of hunter-gatherers and farmers in after the
Ice Age. The map above the illustrates the frequencies of this trait,
and you can see how the Basque region is cordoned off. It’s an old map
because blood group were widely collected in the early 20th century.
Because of the early knowledge of this heritable trait you have a lot of
weird anthropological theories which hinge around blood group genetics
having emerged in the early 20th century. But even as late as the
mid-90s L. L. Cavalli-Sforza reported in The History and Geography of Human Genes using
classical markers that the Basques exhibited some distinctiveness. Over
the years with the rise of Y and mtDNA phylogenetics this
distinctiveness has taken a hit. I think the data have a tendency of
confirming expectations, or it is often interpreted as such. But the
recent story of the R1b haplogroup strongly implied that the Basques are
no different from other west Europeans, and are likely the descendants
of Neolithic farmers themselves!
A new paper in Human Genetics supports the contention that the Basque are just like other Europeans, A genome-wide survey does not show the genetic distinctiveness of Basques:
Basques
are a cultural isolate, and, according to mainly allele frequencies of
classical polymorphisms, also a genetic isolate. We investigated the
differentiation of Spanish Basques from the rest of Iberian populations
by means of a dense, genome-wide SNP array. We found that F ST distances
between Spanish Basques and other populations were similar to those
between pairs of non-Basque populations. The same result is found in a
PCA of individuals, showing a general distinction between Iberians and
other South Europeans independently of being Basques. Pathogen-mediated
natural selection may be responsible for the high differentiation
previously reported for Basques at very specific genes such as ABO, RH,
and HLA. Thus, Basques cannot be considered a genetic outlier under a
general genome scope and interpretations on their origin may have to be
revised.
reuters | From love songs to dance tunes to lullabies, music made in disparate
cultures worldwide displays certain universal patterns, according to a
study by researchers who suggest a commonality in the way human minds
create music.
The study, published on Thursday, focused on musical recordings and
ethnographic records from 60 societies around the world including such
diverse cultures as the Highland Scots in Scotland, Nyangatom nomads in
Ethiopia, Mentawai rain forest dwellers in Indonesia, the Saramaka
descendants of African slaves in Suriname and Aranda hunter-gatherers in
Australia.
Music was broadly found to be associated with
behaviors including infant care, dance, love, healing, weddings,
funerals, warfare, processions and religious rituals.
The
researchers detected strong similarities in musical features across the
various cultures, according to Samuel Mehr, a Harvard University
research associate in psychology and the lead author of the study
published in the journal Science.
“The study gives credence to the idea that there is some sort of set
of governing rules for how human minds produce music worldwide. And
that’s something we could not really test until we had a lot of data
about music from many different cultures,” Mehr said.
Penn State
University anthropology professor Luke Glowacki, a study co-author, said
many ethnomusicologists have believed that the features in a given
piece of music are most heavily influenced by the culture from which the
music originates.
“We found something very different,” Glowacki
said. “Instead of music being primarily shaped by the culture it is
from, the social function of the piece of music influences its features
much more strongly.”
newrepublic | This
way of thinking about injustice and what does and doesn’t call for
remedial action has its roots in enforcement of anti-discrimination law
in the 1960s and 1970s. Identifying disparate treatment or outcomes that
correlate with racial difference can be a critical step in validating a
complaint. However, the inclination to fixate on such disparities as
the only objectionable form of inequality can create perverse political
incentives. We devote a great deal of rhetorical and analytic energy to
the project of determining just which groups, or population categories,
suffer or have suffered the worst. Cynics have sometimes referred to
this brand of what we might term political one-downsmanship as the “oppression Olympics”—a
contest in which groups that have attained or are vying for legal
protection effectively compete for the moral or cultural authority that
comes with the designation of most victimized.
Even
short of that cynical view, a central focus on group-level disparities
can lead to mistaken diagnoses of the sources and character of the
manifest inequalities it identifies. And those mistaken diagnoses, in
turn, can reflect damaging class and ideological biases that ultimately
undercut the struggle for social justice and equality. In this column
and later ones, I will examine facets of this problem and its
entailments. A key point of departure here is the study I published in 2012
with Columbia University public health Professor Merlin Chowkwanyun,
explicating how what we call the “disparitarian perspective” has
distorted discussion of the impact of the New Deal on black Americans.
TheAtlantic | A beautiful illustration of the difference between Twitter and the real
world is the viral status of Michael Harriot’s attack on Mayor Pete
Buttigieg in The Root as a “lying MF.”
theroot | I don’t enjoy fighting. I don’t
even fight very well. In fact, if I combined my amateur fist-fighting
record, my jiu-jitsu sparring, all of my slap-boxing exhibitions, and
the time Zevalon Jackson slapped me for talking smack while running a
Boston on her in spades, my winning percentage is well below .500. But I
believe fisticuffs are a legitimate way to settle disputes while
arguments are usually pointless exercises to get one party to proclaim
why the other party is wrong. I’d rather you beat me up.
So when I received a text message from South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign about an article
I wrote, I genuinely hoped that he was going to send four or five of
his thugs over to rough me up and that would be it. (And if you don’t
believe there are Pete Buttigieg supporters out there willing to throw
hands, then you probably aren’t on Twitter. I think they should call
themselves the “Pete Patrol.” Or the “Buttigang.”)
I
figured one of his surrogates would argue with me for a few minutes and
I could continue my day trying to be a thorn in the side of white
supremacy (The third thing you should know is that I actually keep a
small photo of the mouse from Pinky and the Brain beside my bed that says: “What are you going to do today, Michael?” The answer is always the same: “Fuck with white people.”)
Luckily,
as soon as I agreed to take a phone call, the phone rang. The voice
sounded vaguely familiar and I knew it wasn’t a surrogate or a campaign
volunteer when the person said:
“I don’t think I’ve ever been called a ‘lying motherfucker’ before.”
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