Charles Ferguson's new book "Predator Nation:
Corporate Criminals, Political Corruption, and the Hijacking of
America" is a well written, scathing critique that exposes the
crooked underside of corporate America.
Ferguson doesn't exactly come across as a radical.
He's a former executive and government adviser who spent enough
time in academia to obtain a Ph.D in political science from M.I.T.
The background he brings to his research makes his damning
criticisms of financial industry practices all the more compelling.
He could go further but given his background and perspective this
might be an unreasonable expectation.
He also directed the documentary
"Inside Job" - in his words a film about "the
systemic corruption of the United States by the financial services
industry and the consequences of that systemic corruption."
At the 2011 Oscars "Inside Job" won an
Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
A deeply troubling aspect of the financial crisis was the
horrendous fall-out that impacted and continues to impact everyday
people across America, but equally startling was the lack of legal
consequences for bad corporate actors. In his acceptance speech at
the Academy, Ferguson said in part: "Forgive me, I must start by
pointing out that three years after our horrific financial crisis
caused by financial fraud, not a single financial executive has
gone to jail, and that's wrong."
In "Predator Nation" Ferguson exposes the fraud and shady practices
that lie at the heart of the financial industry. He does so as
someone intimately familiar with the inner workings of the
system.
Random House lists some of the key points in the book:
* Finance has become America’s dominant industry, while
manufacturing, even for high technology industries, has nearly
disappeared.
* The financial sector has become increasingly criminalized, with
the widespread fraud that caused the housing bubble going
completely unpunished.
* Federal tax collections as a share of GDP are at their lowest
level in sixty years, with the wealthy and highly profitable
corporations enjoying the greatest tax reductions.
* Most shockingly, the United States, so long the beacon of
opportunity for the ambitious poor, has become one of the world’s
most unequal and unfair societies.
The following excerpt touches on some of Ferguson's central
concerns:
Starting around 1980, American society began to undergo a series
of deep shifts. Deregulation, weakened antitrust enforcement, and
technological changes led to increasing concentration of industry
and finance. Money began to play a larger and more corrupting
role in politics. America fell behind other nations in education,
in infrastructure, and in the performance of many of its major
industries. Inequality increased. As a result of these and other
changes, America was turning into a rigged game—a society that
denies opportunity to those who are not born into wealthy
families, one that resembles a third-world dictatorship more than
an advanced democracy.
The “Occupy Wall Street” protests that began in New York in
September 2011, and then rapidly spread around America and the
world, were initially somewhat unclear in their goals. But the
protesters were deeply right about one thing: over the last
thirty years, the United States has been taken over by an amoral
financial oligarchy, and the American dream of opportunity,
education, and upward mobility is now largely confined to the top
few percent of the population. Federal policy is increasingly
dictated by the wealthy, by the financial sector, and by powerful
(though sometimes badly mismanaged) industries such as
telecommunications, health care, automobiles, and energy. These
policies are implemented and praised by these groups’ willing
servants, namely the increasingly bought-and-paid-for leadership
of America’s political parties, academia, and lobbying
industry.
In the accompanying video Amy Goodman of Democracy Now explores
aspects of the financial crisis and its ongoing impact in
discussion with Charles Ferguson:
Date Published: Jun 02, 2012 - 9:56 am
News of the axing of a vital marine pollution program is just one
more indicator of how Harper's Conservative government is failing
Canadians on the environment front.
Times Colonist:
The entire DFO contaminants program nationally and regionally —
including two research scientists, a chemist and four technicians
at the Institute for Ocean Sciences in North Saanich — is being
shut down effective April 1, 2013.
Across Canada, the government is slashing up to 75 jobs in the
national contaminants program — that involves any one who works
mostly in marine pollution. For about a decade Fisheries and
Oceans has been trying to offload the program to Environment
Canada. Instead, this week, it axed it.
Environmental toxicologist,
Peter Ross, one of those impacted by the
decision said “I cannot think of another industrialized nation that
has completely excised marine pollution from its radar... It is
with apprehension that I ponder a Canada without any research or
monitoring capacity for pollution in our three oceans, or any
ability to manage its impacts on commercial fish stocks,
traditional foods to over 300,000 aboriginal people, and marine
wildlife.”
The leader of the Green Party,
Elizabeth May, described the loss of
toxic-related research at the Institute of Ocean Sciences (IOC) as
shocking and said the cuts are no longer about “streamlining but
instead steamrollering.” She raised an important question about the
motivations behind the move - “We’re talking about putting
oil tankers on our coastline so they close the Emergency Response
office for oil spills in B.C., and move nine toxicologists?”
These cutbacks are part of an agenda that places the environment
low on the list of Conservative priorities.
Despite all the talk about reducing greenhouse gases by 17% below
2005 levels by 2020, they have no credible plan in place to meet
this target. Similar backsliding also applies when it comes to
funding for the clean-up of federal toxic sites.
Conservative policies don't serve the public interest, they
primarily serve private interests and agendas. Environmental groups
that challenge the Tory agenda are dismissed as a lunatic fringe
and anti-Canadian.
Senator Don Plett, the party's former president,
is typical of the reactionary mindset. In an
attack on
the funding of environmentalist groups, Plett said "If
environmentalists are willing to accept money from Martians, where
would they draw the line on where they receive money from? Would
they take money from Al Qaeda, the Hamas or the Taliban?" Bizarre
stuff.
There is an argument to be made that the Tory government is the
real lunatic fringe when it comes to the values Canadians care
about. The Tories are pushing a radical Conservative agenda with
39% of the popular vote.
Sierra Club Canada's executive director John Bennett
said "All the polling we've done say that I'm representing the
majority and he's (Harper) representing the lunatic fringe."
Date Published: May 27, 2012 - 7:13 pm
Date Published: May 27, 2012 - 7:13 pm
On May 18, in an effort to quell protest
the National Assembly in Quebec passed Bill 78 -
emergency legislation that includes a number of repressive
measures. It's an unwise move that is showing every sign of
backfiring. Léo Bureau-Blouin, president of the association of
junior colleges said “We deplore that the government chose the path
of repression rather than that of negotiation.”
The
Canadian Civil
Liberties Association has raised serious concerns about the new
law.
Bill 78 drastically limits freedom of expression, association and
peaceful assembly rights in Quebec. It puts in place a
number of prohibitions that are at best tenuously linked with the
goal of ensuring access to postsecondary education. Even those
provisions that do directly address access to educational
institutions are frequently overly broad, vague and
discretionary.
You can read the details of the CCLA response
here.
In defending measures such as "prior notice" the Charest government
claimed that similar rules exist in Toronto. This is a misleading
statement. The Quebec law requires that organizers of a march of 50
or more give the authorities 8 hours prior written notice. In
Toronto these conditions don't apply - protest organizers aren't
required by law to get prior permission or even give notice.
The law will effectively put a chill on protest by making
organizers responsible for the actions of other participants, which
is ludicrous. How on earth are organizers supposed to be
responsible for the conduct of individuals in a march of thousands?
Participants could be required to answer for the behavior of people
who may have joined the protest for other reasons.
It's not surprising that after a rise in his approval numbers
Charest has seen an erosion in support. These repressive measures
have further damaged the government's credibility.
In a powerful show of strength, on May 22 Quebec students kicked
off the 100th day of protest with the biggest demo to date. Tens of
thousands took the streets.
CBC:
CLASSE spearheaded Tuesday's march, aided by Quebec's largest
labour federations. The province's two other main student groups,
FEUQ and FECQ, also rallied their supporters.
CLASSE said Monday it would direct members to defy BILL 78, Quebec's
emergency legislation.
CLASSE spokesman Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois said the special
legislation goes beyond students and their tuition-hike
conflict.
"We want to make the point that there are tens of thousands of
citizens who are against this law who think that protesting
without asking for a permit is a fundamental right... If the
government wants to apply its law, it will have a lot of work to
do. That is part of the objective of the protest today, to
underline the fact that this law is absurd and inapplicable."
Montrealers also took to the streets outside their homes to protest
the law with the use of pots and pans in what has been dubbed the
"casserole movement." On Tuesday evening hundreds of citizens in
Villeray, Mile-End, Petite-Patrie and the Plateau made their
disapproval loudly heard by banging their kitchenware:
In addition to education-related grievances, the Quebec protests
address broader
issues of economic justice. This in part
explains the staying power of a movement that is getting
international attention with coverage by a number of the biggest
media outlets in the world. CBC reports that supporters in New York
and Paris staged marches in solidarity with Quebec students. Events
were also organized in Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver.
Date Published: May 23, 2012 - 9:11 pm
Still frames from - "Racism
Report: Africans in Israel"
(video posted beneath)
When Israeli president Shimon Peres spoke on Holocaust Remembrance
Day at Yad Vashem in 2011, he said that out of all the countries in
the world Israel did the most to combat racial discrimination:
We, the Jewish people, were victims of racism, persecution and
discrimination, but we never neglected the commandment to respect
every person. Because every person, according to our tradition,
is created in the image of God. Even in a darkened world we
aspired, and will aspire to be a light unto the nations.
This is the significance of the State of Israel: To physically
defend our people, and morally defend our tradition. Every
citizen of Israel, regardless of religion or race knows that
Israel is, and will be the most anti-racist country in the world.
Unfortunately Peres' high sounding rhetoric doesn't reflect the
reality on the ground.
In January the African Refugee Development Center (ARDC) submitted
a report
to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination.The report cites Israel's harsh detention
policy, discriminatory edicts by state-employed rabbis, tolerance
of segregation in the school system and other problematic areas. It
points out ways in which Israel ignores international obligations
towards asylum seekers and enacts discriminatory policies and
practices.
African migrants who make it to Israel in hopes of asylum, often
after dangerous treks, encounter not just sporadic racism, but
orchestrated anti-immigrant campaigns backed by rabbis and
politicians. Most recently PM Binyamin Netanyahu
went public with dire warnings, branding African
migrants "illegal infiltrators" who threaten "the social fabric of
society, our national security and our national identity." Nothing
less than a threat to 'the Jewish and democratic character of the
country.'
This alarmist rhetoric with its hyped threat level sends a message
not borne out by reports from Israeli activists familiar with the
situation in Tel Aviv and elsewhere. Worse Netanyahu's rhetoric is
profoundly discriminatory. It targets people already threatened
with poverty, homelessness and racial discrimination. Israel claims
to be a democracy and has signed on to various treaties that come
with humanitarian obligations. Using security and identity issues
to target African migrants is a cop out.
Israelis involved in protests have accused migrants of bringing
disease and jacking up the crime rate. The attempt to conflate the
immigrant presence with crime is a favorite tactic of the
xenophobes who make every effort to paint Africans as criminals,
even though there is little truth in the accusation. In fact the
crime rate among foreigners in Israel is 2.04% - significantly
lower than the 4.99% among Israelis.
Instead of Israel adding to the quality of life and human dignity
of migrants, the opposite has been happening. Migrants have been
restricted in the area of employment and many landlords refuse to
rent to them as the result of a campaign backed by rabbis. There
have been reports of assaults on the street.
Molotov cocktails were thrown at the residences of
Africans in south Tel Aviv.
Since it signed
the refugee convention in 1949, less than 200 people
have been granted refugee status in Israel - a paltry number when
you consider the sanctuary offered by European nations. It's hard
not to note the irony that this has occurred in a nation all too
familiar with discrimination.
Far from Israel showing signs of a more inclusive approach - it is
constructing a huge detention center that will
hold up to 11,000 people. In the words of a human rights lawyer
familiar with the project, it will be a 'prison for people from
Africa.' The vast complex is being built on the grounds of the
Ktzi'ot prison in the Negev desert, close to the border with
Egypt.
Racist attitudes have long been
directed at Arab Israelis who in some walks of life
are effectively treated like second class citizens. Now African
migrants have become an additional target. It makes a mockery of
Shimon Peres' claim that Israel is on the front lines in the battle
against racism.
The video beneath suggests that an anti-immigrant mentality is
prevalent. One protestor even evokes xenophobic European attitudes
- often associated with the far-right - to justify the targeting of
African migrants in Israel.
Date Published: May 21, 2012 - 7:05 am
In the current
eurozone crisis Greece has been unfairly cast as the
"black sheep" of Europe. Greece isn't alone in being negatively
impacted by neoliberal economic policies - policies that have
precipitated a meltdown in the eurozone and a growing gulf between
classes. It isn't a Greek crisis, it's a European crisis, a crisis
of capital - Greece just happens to be the stage where the drama is
presently coming into sharpest focus.
The
Greece Solidarity Campaign recently met with Alexis
Tsipras (leader of the left-coalition party SYRIZA) and other
Greek representatives.
Tsipras described
the impact of austerity on Greece as
"catastrophic." He says the prescription to cure the economic
crisis is "the medicine of disaster." He further likened it to
"shock neoliberal measures" along the lines of a socio-political
experiment.
In discussing the background to austerity in Greece the GSC learned
that: ...
... 110 billion euros were lost through avoidance and evasion of
tax on profits by the richest in Greece, with tax evasion by the
rich on a grand scale in the last 10 years. Instead of collecting
money owned by the wealthy a direct tax (VAT) of 23% has been
levied, affecting the poorest most. An example of this was given:
Greece has the biggest merchant fleet in the world, but the fleet
owners pay less in tax that the entire immigrant population in
Greece.
They described how for two and a half years the banks, bailed out
in 2008, have not paid back the money that they owe the Greek
people. Tsipras described the ESKRO off-shore account created
outside of Greece by the Greek government, which will pay banks
and other international creditors first, and whatever is left
will go to meet the social needs of Greece. 40 billion Euros of
capital has left Greece in the last year.
What needs to happen in Greece?
Alexis Tsipras talked about the need for the left to create a
climate of social justice and campaign for alternative
policies
He said that the Government had no mandate to sign the two
memoranda, and questioned their legality. He said
the first job of a new Government with a popular mandate should
be to renegotiate the memos, on the agreed principal that Greek
society cannot take the policies of the two memos. Furthermore
they felt that the key question was not in or out of the
eurozone, but rather exploiting being in it to support
renegotiation.
They outlined how regardless of any renegotiations their view is
that there needs to be a reorganisation of social and economic
structures. Key features of this include socialisation
(nationalisation) of the banking system and redistribution of
wealth through a radical change in the taxation system – taxing
big capital not poverty.
The video beneath features an interview up-close and personal with
Alexis Tsipras. In a rather fitting touch the lead-in includes the
Rolling Stones tune "Gimme Shelter." Be sure to click "cc" to get
English subtitles.
Date Published: May 19, 2012 - 1:08 am
The Israeli practice of holding Palestinian prisoners in so-called
"administrative detention" is a violation of international law.
Prisoners are brought before military judges who determine the
length of detention. This can be as much as six months and can be
repeated indefinitely.
Administrative detention was a central issue driving the 28-day
mass hunger strike staged by Palestinian prisoners that saw Israel
make key concessions. The outcome of the strike was hailed by the
Palestinian prisoners' rights group
Addameer as
"achievements of the prisoners' movement."
Details on Israeli concessions from Electronic
Intifada.
Palestinian politician
Hanan
Ashrawi welcomed the deal: "The hunger strikers' courage is
magnificently inspiring, and their selflessness deeply humbling.
They have truly demonstrated that non-violent resistance is an
essential tool in our struggle for freedom..."
The Israeli practice of imprisoning Palestinians without charge or
trial is nothing new.
A Guardian article estimates that there are
presently 308 Palestinians being held in administrative detention
in Israeli prisons.
Guardian:
According to the Israeli human rights organisation, B'Tselem,
about one third have been held for between six months and a year;
one third have been held between one and two years; 13 have been
held between two and four and a half years; and two prisoners
have been held continuously for more than four and a half
years.
Neither those detained nor their lawyers are informed of the
accusations or evidence against them, no charges are laid and no
trial is held. "Since the detainees do not know the evidence
against them, they are unable to refute it," say B'Tselem.
The concessions made by Israel include limitations on the use of
administrative arrest. Prisoners already in administrative
detention won't have their terms renewed unless fresh evidence is
brought before a military judge.
However Addameer warns that this "will not explicitly solve
Israel’s lenient and problematic application of administrative
detention, which as it stands is in stark violation of
international law." Addameer also adds that Israel has a history of
not upholding agreements with respect to prisoners.
As with many Israel-related stories the hunger strike was
under-reported in Canadian corporate media. For in-depth coverage
of Israeli stories reliable options that come to mind include
Haaretz
online,
Guardian online and also some alternative media
sources. Norman Finkelstein said recently during a BBC interview
that many N. American Jews have fallen silent on Israel rather than
'air the dirty laundry' - the same could be said of some media
outlets in Canada, a number of which appear to be journalistically
handicapped by their partisan position.
In the video beneath
Noam
Chomsky speaks with Amy Goodman of DemocracyNow! about the
Palestinian hunger strike and related issues.
More from Al Jazeera -
here.
Date Published: May 16, 2012 - 10:48 pm
Québec education minister
Line Beauchamp has resigned. In making the
announcement she said "I am resigning because I have decided I am
not part of the solution." She denies that her resignation is
connected with the demonstrations and "vandalism." She has been
replaced as Education Minister by Michelle Courchesne.
Despite a long, arduous haul the students are showing no signs of
backing down. Some critics of the student protests say that since
student tuition in Québec is the lowest in Canada, the students
should shut up and put up. This kneejerk response to the Québec
protests fails to take into account that although the students are
addressing local grievances, their protests resonate with
students across Canada who are facing a worsening
debt situation.
The stand of students in Québec has been applauded by the Canadian
Federation of Students, and no wonder. Around 60% of Canadian
students graduate with a debt load of around $27,000 for an
undergraduate degree. Total student debt in Canada is a staggering
$20 billion. Students are faced with fewer jobs that offer wages
sufficient to pay down debt in a timely manner. They are also faced
with interest rates of between 5% to 9% on student loans (depending
on location) with the likelihood of an increase in interest rates
in the future. Graduate students with large debt burdens have
increasingly been making the decision to declare bankruptsy.
Québec students are making a stand on behalf of all who are being
exploited by a system that puts profit ahead of people.
In an open letter to the Québec government the
Canadian Federation of Students stated:
Students in Québec have taken it on themselves to defend the next
generation's right to education. They have put their semester on
the line to fight for a vision of the world where no one is
excluded. They have made a convincing case, they have garnered
public support, and they have presented government with several
alternative solutions to the tuition fee hike.
We are dismayed that the government of Québec has continued to
demonstrate contempt towards young people and bad faith in the
negotiation process that it has claimed to be committed to.
The demonization of the Québec student movement in the mainstream
media is predictable. Critics have been quick to jump on any
evidence of violence by a small minority in order to try and
discredit a movement that sends a powerful message.
The Québec protests are part of a global movement that is
challenging a broken financial system, neoliberal economic policies
that are increasingly out-of-touch and corruption in high places.
The establishment understandably feels threatened by what it has
difficulty patronizing and controlling.
Contrary to the impression created by some reports, student leaders
haven't ignored or encouraged violence. On the contrary the student
group CLASSE
denounced "physical and deliberate acts" and
condemned what it described as "unacceptable actions" by students,
but also by "other people."
By contrast some commentators in the mainstream media have been
calling for ramped up action against the students.
Writing in the National Post, Michael Den Tandt
recommends "Dispersal with massive use of tear gas; then arrest,
public humiliation, and some pain." He brings up corporal
punishment in Singapore as something he apparently finds
commendable - "...caning is more merciful than incarceration
for an energetic young vandal on the cusp of becoming a
full-fledged career criminal." He can also relate to the pillories
used in the Middle Ages which he says "might not be a bad idea" and
suggests that students being humiliated in this fashion should be
posted on YouTube.
You don't hear similar calls for violence coming from Québec
student leaders. What has been going on more to the point is a
campaign of violence and intimidation directed at student
demonstrators.
The video beneath shows in graphic detail the type of police
tactics that have been directed against students and other
citizens.
Date Published: May 15, 2012 - 1:50 am
Date Published: May 14, 2012 - 11:23 pm
An amendment to the Criminal Code of Canada under a new private
member's bill - Bill C-309 - would make it
illegal for protestors to wear masks during
"tumultuous demonstrations" also described by authorities as
"riots" or "unlawful assemblies."
CBC reports that MP's studying the bill have
doubled the proposed penalty to ten years. An
excessive penalty, considering that people convicted of hardcore
crime often face lesser penalties. It seems more like an attempt to
put a chill on protest. Section 351 of the Criminal Code already
makes it an indictable offense to wear a mask during the commission
of a crime.
Most people who wear a mask to demos aren't involved in anything
criminal. There are legitimate reasons for wearing a mask. Masks
might be donned by people with concerns about being profiled and
unjustly targeted - for example in the case of a demo against
police brutality.They offer a degree of protection against
chemicals and flying objects such as rubber bullets. Now that riot
police are becoming increasingly militarized double layering,
jockstraps and flak jackets might also be in order.
New Democrat MP Charmaine Borg makes the point that
the bill “takes away an individual’s right to demonstrate
anonymously. An individual is not necessarily going to commit a
crime just because he or she is wearing a mask at a riot. It is
reasonable to think that the person just wants to remain anonymous
and protect his or her identity.”
Masking happens in a lot of different ways come to think about it.
Scamming Canadian voters with robocalls and
lying about it constitutes a cover up, a masking of the truth. That
type of masking is a lot more threatening to the public interest
than the simple act of donning a Guy Fawkes mask.
Creating a special provision banning masks is also a way to
facilitate surveillance. The security apparatus uses face
recognition software for indentification and tracking purposes.
Masks get in the way of that agenda.
A ban on masks is open to interpretation. In Germany
black bloc
protestors use hoodies, ballcaps and shades. A large polo-neck
style sweater rigged to cover the lower half of the face along with
a ballcap and shades would definitely make identification tricky.
Depending on the definition of "masking" it might be difficult to
make the charge stick.
This Big Brother amendment to the Criminal Code will be challenged
because it is wide open to abuse. You can see it now... peaceful
protestors who are masked and in no way "tumultuous" or otherwise
riot disposed will be targeted for the simple act of mask wearing.
The attitude of the cops could well be seize-and-detain and sort it
out later.
Give the authorities an inch and the usual experience is they'll
take a mile. It's a threat to civil liberties and freedom of
expression and it has to be challenged. It also begs the question -
what next?
More on the mask ban
here.
Date Published: May 12, 2012 - 6:15 pm
Norman Finkelstein takes an unbelievable amount of flack for
stating hard truths about Israel.
In
a recent interview on the BBC show "HARDtalk" host
Sarah Montague kept raising objections to
Finkelstein's perfectly valid criticisms of Israel. Finkelstein's
criticisms have been echoed by a number of other influential Jewish
American commentators.
New York Times columnist and Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman when
writing about Peter Beinart's book "The Crisis of Zionism" said:
"Like many liberal American Jews I basically avoid thinking about
where Israel is going. It seems obvious from here that the
narrow-minded policies of the current government are basically a
gradual, long-run form of national suicide – and that’s bad for
Jews everywhere, not to mention the world."
Finkelstein's realism and fearlessness when it comes to calling out
Israel for its nationalistic sabre rattling, war and threats-of-war
is right on the mark. He refers to Israel as 'a lunatic state' and
asks what other country in the world continually speculates about
who they are going to attack next. When by way of comparison, he
asked Montague what countries in the last ten years had been
attacked by Iran she declined to answer, even when he repeated the
question a few times.
It isn't at all surprising if, as Finkelstein claims, American Jews
are increasingly distancing themselves from Israel in its current
incarnation. A large percentage of American Jews are liberal in
outlook, engaged when it comes to progressive social issues,
defenders of civil rights - many are on the front lines in the
fight for justice and fairness in American society. During the last
presidential election
close to 80% of American Jews voted for the
Democratic ticket.
The tilt toward right-wing nationalism in Israel with shows of
belligerence and war threats doesn't sit easily with the the
political outlook and convictions of many American Jews when it
comes to the way forward.
In Canada also the Jewish community is by no means monolithic in
its backing of Israel's policies. In a recent Press TV video Diana
Ralph of
Independent
Jewish Voices and others express concerns about Israel's stance
on Iran:
Date Published: May 08, 2012 - 9:51 pm
Earlier this year - the 30th anniversary of the Falklands war -
Prince William arrived on the islands for military
duty. His provocative presence at a sensitive time sparked
angry words in the media and union jack burning in Buenos Aries.
The US actor and activist Sean Penn pointedly criticized what he
characterized as British geo-political grandstanding.
A new Olympics-related ad featuring
Fernando Zylberberg of the Argentine men's hockey
team is likely to set off another war or words. The 90-second ad
was reportedly shot by the US based
Young and Rubicam advertising agency.
The ad begins with scenes of the Falklands in what looks like an
early morning setting. Zylberberg appears in training gear, takes a
look at a fluttering union jack and pulls a hood grimly over his
head. Then he hits the road in the capital Stanley, stopping
en-route to exercise outside the Globe Tavern and to do step-ups on
the British war memorial. He winds up on a beach where he does
push-ups and kisses the sand.
The ad closes with the words... "To compete on English soil, we
train on Argentine soil."
The islanders aren't thrilled. A Falklands legislator, Ian Hansen,
said the film was made without permission and demonstrates
Argentina's disrespect for the islanders. On its website the
government of the islands has posted
a reaction to the ad.
Zylberberg informed a Buenes Aries radio station that he took part
in a March 18 marathon involving both Argentine and British
veterans of the 1982 war. He said: "I spent all week running on the
island... I crossed it all doing different takes. It's an
incredible experience because we were surrounded by veterans."
The Argentine sports secretary, Claudio Morresi, told Reuters: "The
Argentine delegation will travel to London with the conviction in
their minds and hearts that the Malvinas are Argentine but all they
will be going to London to do is take part in the sporting
event."
In the opinion of this blogger Argentina has the stronger claim to
the islands -
reasons here. President Cristina Fernandez
de Kirchner's government has been seeking
negotiations but heated rhetoric and accusations of arrogance
coming from both sides hasn't helped. The ad is unlikely to make
communications any more congenial, but it will certainly draw
attention to Argentina's claims.
More on the story from
abcnews.
Date Published: May 04, 2012 - 2:50 am
Protestors march down Broadway:
May 1 2012
May 1 -
international workers' day - is officially
recognized in countries around the world. Even though the May 1
demonstration of solidarity was sparked by events in the United
States - the
1886
Haymarket affair in Chicago - it has never been accorded
official recognition in that nation.
In recent years May 1 has been reborn as a day of protest in the
United States. This year the Occupy movement organized
May Day protests across the US with thousands
turning out in New York for a day of action.
As a way of marking the day I'm posting a video in which the
renowned social theorist
David Harvey reflects on urban uprisings. He is in
discussion with Democracy Now!'s
Amy
Goodman:
Date Published: May 01, 2012 - 9:25 pm
Canadian Human Resources Minister, Diane Finley, recently announced
changes to the
Temporary Foreign Workers Program (TFWP).
Under the new rules employers will be allowed to pay foreign temp
workers 15 per cent less than the average fair market wage.
Companys looking to hire foreign workers have to apply for a
Labor Market Opinion (LMO) which has been fast
tracked to within 10 business days.
The feds estimate that they will process 150,000 temporary foreign
worker applications this year.
The new rules open the door for the exploitation of foreign workers
who have
few protections in Canada. It also leaves
Canadian workers vulnerable to discriminatory hiring practices.
It's no coincidence that the announcement was made by Finley during
a visit to a factory in Alberta. The new rules are about catering
to the corporate agenda and driving growth - even if it happens to
be at the expense of workers.
Nancy Furlong of the
Alberta Federation of Labor expressed her opposition
to the federal move: "They’re trying to drive down salaries and
wages and frankly I don’t think that’s the job of our government to
take one side, that being business, and find them ways of making
money... by allowing them to drive wages down. I just think that’s
just wrong, totally wrong."
Over the long haul the new rules could help open the door for
wage reductions in other sectors. Head economist for the CAW, Jim
Stanford said: “Harper is giving a go-ahead to employers to tap
into vulnerable foreign workers to drive down Canadian wages...
These measures... will be used to staff hotels in Ontario. They’ll
be used for light manufacturing in BC. This is part of a national
low-wage strategy.”
More from the
Toronto Star.
Date Published: Apr 30, 2012 - 7:05 pm