ragblog | What are Obama’s drones except a robotized version of the Phoenix program?
Tom may also be prescient in implying that the current celebrity of
the unorthodox ‘warrior thinker’ – whether personified by Kilcullen or
the sinister General McMasters – doesn’t necessarily put any new ideas
on the empire’s table. But Down from the Hills – and this why I blurbed
it – does register with stark honesty a global reality that foreign
policy mandarins have generally ignored: the consequences of warehousing
a billion poor people in peripheral slums with negligible hope of ever
finding employment in the formal world economy.
An agricultural ‘apocalypse’ (and here the term is accurate) has
driven hundreds of millions into cities where, apart from the world
factory of China and its periphery, capitalism no longer creates jobs or
rewards education. Moreover, economic globalization, as it were, has
‘leaked space.’ Without an international red menace incubating in the
slums, governments have often abdicated everything except police
violence and extortion in their poorest and most rapidly growing urban
districts.
Into this “vacuum” of governability, Kilcullen claims, has rushed a
motley mob of terrorist militias and super-street gangs who have
transformed the despair of the young into a new strategic weapon:
suicide bombers. A chief architect of counter-partisan warfare in the
Middle East, he now concedes that special-ops can also be a steroid to
the very movements it seeks to behead. So ‘smart power’ must now pay
attention to underlying causes. Indeed the analysis in his new book
drives him part way into the arms of Jeffrey Sachs. (Or, more
accurately, into those of Dilma Roussef, Brazil’s ex-1960s-guerrilla
president, who extols the military occupation of Rio’s favelas as
‘profound reform.’)
Tom gives all this a deserving yawn: hearts and minds redux. While
desperate liberals having been seeking light at the end of Obama’s
tunnel, Tom has been thunderous in denouncing this scary
administration’s love affair with executive immunity, special ops and
universal surveillance.
But I believe if you carefully read Kilcullen and the literature
coming out of places like the Naval War College (where they recently had
a think-tank discussing the implications of ‘deglobalization’), you’ll
come to the recognition that the Pentagon’s killing machines are not the
most profound danger ahead. Rather it’s the fact that the military
intellectuals are already exploring the consequences of writing off the
future of a large part of humanity. They see an absolute darkness on the
horizon.
During the high Cold War, of course, there was no social group or
acre of sovereign land that wasn’t seen as a valuable ‘stake’ by one
side or another. Ideology had to rhetorically address the condition of
all humanity, whether by the promises of five-year plans or Alliances
for Progress. With the collapse of the USSR, however, the ‘Free World’
became an unnecessary pretense on a planet of free markets while any
vision of common humanity was abdicated to NGOs and UN speeches.
What material interest now remains in wooing the poor or helping them
adapt to global warming?
What geopolitical leverage do they possess in a
world without a powerful international left?
The ultimate warning of my book Planet of Slums was about the ‘triage
of humanity’ that since the 1990s had become the new unspoken framework
of international politics. The greatest evil is no longer that capital
exploits labor but that it expels it from the circuits of production
entirely. To the extent that this surplus humanity poses no realistic
threat of reorganizing society on more egalitarian principles, it’s
simply a problem whose ultimate management – after the helicopter
gunships and Predators – may be through pandemic disease, famine, and
unnatural disaster.
In another of my fraternizations with the enemy, I had a beer with an
admiral a few years ago in Coronado who wanted to pick my brain about
the convergence of urban poverty and natural disaster.
He had commanded a carrier task force in the Gulf and as he put it,
“my kids really didn’t like bombing wedding parties in Afghanistan. But
morale soared when we provided relief after the 2004 earthquake/tsunami
in Indonesia.” He emphasized that only the US Navy could bring the
infrastructure of a medium-sized city (in the form of ships supplying
power, medicine, supplies, helicopters, etc) to a littoral region
devastated by floods or quakes. “No one else – not China, Russia, the UK
or the UN – has this capability.”
“But here’s the rub,” he said, “Congress will never authorize a
serious expansion of humanitarian missions, especially when we’re likely
to see more Katrinas and Superstorm Sandys on our own coasts.” “So at
some point,” I completed his thought, “no one would ride to the rescue.”
“That’s right,” he said, “no one. And this is the kind of future that
some us at Newport [Naval War College] have been trying to understand.”
14 comments:
It looks like there's an opportunity here. How many adults are crippled with mental scars but can't afford therapy? We know the brain is malleable. The people that benefit from what I'm talking about the most are athletes and people in the military. Someone could say get the six dollar book. I'll say many could use encouragement and competent coaching never hurt anyone.
There's a HUGE opportunity in rototilling and replanting how public education is done which focuses squarely on the coaching instructional approach. Work currently in progress and approaching fruition.
http://m.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/07/whats-in-a-name-everything/372271/?google_editors_picks=true
Interesting piece refuting the idea that wealth levels truly do change over 1 or 2 generations.
Of the food you ate last week - how much of it was "farmed indoors" by YOU as you prepared for your independent sustenance?
I wish you were concise. Man, you really have to get a grip. I'm going to guess you mean to ask why am I not appeased with Medicaid expansion and you're asking me about my not speaking on the Negro ailment of their not being able to do anything for Black folks outside of the states. To answer the first question one should never be satisfied when it comes to policy. There will always be new and old issues to deal with. As for the Negro ailment, I've spoken on it on this site more than once. I just don't talk about it at times. I was pretty much done with this thread when I made my first comment.
This thing you do is pretty damn annoying. You don't have to do your standard blog post every time you drop a comment. Say your piece and keep it moving. I'm not saying don't argue; what I'm saying is that you can do without the filler. Me talking about the Americanized Negro is filler. Fuck Donald Trump. Bringing up my statement on healthcare being a mess and tying it to THE PROGRESSIVE ALLIANCE is world class fuckery. To bring up VOTING FOR THEIR SALVATION in every comment makes it look like you have a one track mind. Everything shouldn't fit through that lens.
Okay...I was responding to Ed's comment about urban farms with my comment about indoor farming. I was talking about doing it on a large scale. What the fuck is up with you? Do you like being a jerkoff?
And yes, I know a little bit about growing shit indoors. Instead of worrying about me, you should start your own indoor project to get in front of the coming changes.
lol..., bears repeating: You don't have to do your standard blog post every time you drop a comment. Say your piece and keep it moving.
You don't have to do your standard blog post every time you
drop a comment. Say your piece and keep it moving.
You don't have to do your standard blog post every time you
drop a comment. Say your piece and keep it moving.
Teach brother teach:Everything shouldn't fit through that lens.
Everything shouldn't fit through that lens.
Everything shouldn't fit through that lens.and the jarring fact that no matter how many folks or how many times and how many different ways he's been told this simple truth, but he insists on doing the same thing over and over again - watching and waiting for a different result begins to look a little like _________________?
Early life experiences, such as childhood socioeconomic status and
literacy, may have greater influence on the risk of cognitive impairment
late in life than such demographic characteristics as race and
ethnicity, a large study has found. "These findings are important,"
explained the lead author of the study "because it challenges earlier
research that suggests associations between race and ethnicity,
particularly among Latinos, and an increased risk of late-life cognitive
impairment and dementia. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/07/140725110944.htm
It's called bad nurturing, bad environment....the human equivalent of shooting up BigBlue with an AK-47....
Between this and Charles Murray advocating everyone getting a check, I'll say we're making progress.
Yeah this is getting almost like the way Ken talks.
I think, or hope, that CF is gnawing on a real bone in his anti-evolution posts. At least I think there is a real bone nearby, I've done a lot of my own gnawing and digging in that part ofthe yard, and so it sounds reasonable to me. In contrast to Ken, who I think is simply playing games.
But it sure seems like CF keeps calling Vic on stuff Vic already disposed of upthread. I'm naive so I'll just say I find that confusing.
Maybe that's how he has to work? Maybe it takes him a few thousand iterations to squeeze out a breakthrough?
Or something. As I get older I do ruminate more, where when I was younger and had never had any authority I'd just flap stuff out there and be damned.
Whether it's an aid or an obstacle to the creative process I'm not sure.
Ken calls himself trying at least a little bit, as evidenced by the article googling and citing he did last night. http://subrealism.blogspot.com/2009/04/lynn-margulis-symbiogenesis.html#comment-1507669659 Neither one of them, however, is making a genuine good faith effort to learn and grow - rather - each starts with the authoritatively "received" notion that science is not only wrong but wrong-headed - and then radiates out from wherever in that received notion they began.
i.e., they don't want to engage in any scientific inquiry or discourse, rather, they only want to show the science is flawed such that it cannot possibly challenge their received anthropomorphic notions about the origins of living complexity.
Post a Comment