The largest corporation in the world is USA Inc. Not only it is the leading company, but it also is the most influential and the most tightly protected for-profit-organization in the world. The corporation has close to ten thousand owners and co-owners worldwide. The largest military in the world, by far, protects this conglomerate and all its subsidiaries all around the world. With more than 800 military posts in over 70 friendly (!) countries, it is a daring prospect to try to undermine this company. Of course, there are other entities (countries) that have been competing very carefully, due to their special circumstances. One of them is Russia, that is not economically a challenge for the Big Brother, but has not submitted to it either, due to its history. The other one, China, became an economic power taking advantage of the opportunities provided by the United States. Of course, these countries and some other few that have not become America’s plain field, are not considered “Normal” by American establishment, and there have been plans to convert them through smaller and weaker ex-alliances. This has been the case for Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Libya, Syria, with a prospect for a few others, such as Iran. Justifications for such military and covert actions are planned so intelligently (with the aid of majority Americans’ trust in their governments) that such excuses can easily be consumed by American public.
اندیشمند بزرگترین احساسش عشق است و هر عملش با خرد
Saturday, May 1, 2021
Sunday, April 25, 2021
A Model Businessman- Philanthropist
1929 “He should be the most thanked man in the world,” said the New York Times on his seventy-fifth birthday. No buccaneer like many self-made moguls, this enormously wealthy man sought more than money. He was George Eastman, founder of Eastman Kodak, the pioneer of roll film and the simple box camera. His company slogan: “You press the button, we do the rest.” By creating an affordable product that helped preserve memorable moments, George Eastman richened people’s lives.
Saturday, April 24, 2021
Who's Rising and Falling on Planet Earth?
Like his immediate predecessor, Joe Biden is committed to a
distinctly anti-China global strategy and has sworn that China will not “become the leading
country in the world, the wealthiest country in the world, and the most
powerful country in the world… on my watch.” In the topsy-turvy universe
created by the Covid-19 pandemic, it was, however, Jamie Dimon, the CEO and
chairman of JP Morgan Chase, a banking giant with assets of $3.4 trillion, who
spoke truth to Biden on the subject.
Saturday, April 17, 2021
Throughout Trial Over George Floyd’s Death, Killings by Police Mount
By John Eligon and Shawn Hubler
MINNEAPOLIS — Just seven hours before prosecutors opened their case against Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapolis police officer charged with murdering George Floyd, a Chicago officer chased down a 13-year-old boy in a West Side alley and fatally shot him as he turned with his hands up. One day later, at a hotel in Jacksonville, Fla., officers fatally shot a 32-year-old man, who, the police say, grabbed one of their Tasers. The day after that, as an eyewitness to Mr. Floyd’s death broke down in a Minneapolis courtroom while recounting what he saw, a 40-year-old mentally ill man who said he was being harassed by voices was killed in Claremont, N.H., in a shootout with the state police. On every day that followed, all the way through the close of testimony, another person was killed by the police somewhere in the United States. The trial has forced a traumatized country to relive the gruesome death of Mr. Floyd beneath Mr. Chauvin’s knee. But even as Americans continue to process that case — and anxiously wait for a verdict — new cases of people killed by the police mount unabated.
Saturday, April 10, 2021
The Force That Can Help Amazon’s Workers? Amazon’s Shoppers.
April 10, 2021
Here are some of the ways that people who have worked inside Amazon’s warehouses describe the experience: “The job crushed my spirit and crippled my body.” “The lowest point in my life.” An “isolating colony of hell.” “They’re killing people mentally and physically.” “I began to hate my day-to-day life.” “The way Amazon pushes people is not moral.” “I had whole days where I didn’t talk to anyone.” “The systematic devaluing of human bodies.”
Saturday, March 20, 2021
In City After City, Police Mishandled Black Lives Matter Protests
By Kim Barker, Mike Baker and Ali Watkins
For
many long weeks last summer, protesters in American cities faced off against
their own police forces in what proved to be, for major law enforcement
agencies across the country, a startling display of violence and disarray.
Has Biden’s Description of Putin as a Killer Finally Dispelled Kremlin Hopes for Good Relations?
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/56472.htm
Paul Craig Roberts
March 20, 2021
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov responded to Biden’s unacceptable characterization of Russia’s president as a killer by stating that Biden had made it clear that “he doesn’t want to normalize relations.” In the Kremlin does hope burn eternal? It has been obvious to me for many years that Washington does not want normal relations with Russia or any country. Washington wants a hegemonic relationship with Washington as the hegemon and Russia as the obedient puppet as Russia was during the Yeltsin decade.
2021 Update: Half of America In or Near Poverty
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2021/02/22/2021-update-half-america-or-near-poverty
Paul Buchheit
Poverty, as defined by the World Bank, is a "pronounced deprivation in
well-being." This describes the millions of Americans who are unable to pay for medical treatment; who suffer the stress
of delinquent rent and mortgage payments; who see a steady decline of jobs that pay enough to support a family;
and who are victims of the surge in drug and alcohol and suicide "deaths of despair" that continue to increase among poor
Americans during the COVID-19 crisis.
The facts and numbers from numerous sources
reflect the reality of deprivation in America, and help to confirm what has been called the "sharpest rise in the U.S. poverty
rate since the 1960s."
Saturday, February 27, 2021
How This Country Fails Its Most Vulnerable
Economic crises shine a
spotlight on a society’s inequities and hierarchies, as well as its commitment
to support those who are most vulnerable in such grievous moments. The calamity
created by Covid-19 is no exception. The economic fallout from that pandemic
has tested the nation’s social safety net as never before.
Between February and May
2020, the number of unemployed workers soared more than threefold — from 6.2
million to 20.5 million. The jobless rate spiked in a similar fashion from 3.8%
to 13.0%. In late March, weekly unemployment claims reached 6.9 million,
obliterating the previous record of 695,000, set in October 1982. Within three
months, the pandemic-produced slump proved far worse than the three-year Great
Recession of 2007-2009.
Things have since improved. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced in December that unemployment had fallen to 6.7%. Yet, that same month, weekly unemployment filings still reached a staggering 853,000 and though they fell to just under 800,000 last month, even that far surpassed the 1982 number.
We Must Fight the System, Not Each Other
Link: https://www.commondreams.org/views/2021/02/14/we-must-fight-system-not-each-other
Once I saw the connection between domestic and international injustices of our societies and capitalism, I found myself awoken after years of sleeping in the belly of the beast.
Once a year on our immigration anniversary, my mother and I reflect on our journey from Iran to the United States. In the past, we would celebrate the freedoms we were given in America, embrace the struggles we endured as immigrants to settle in a new home, and learn not only a new language, but also a new way of living, a new culture, a new dream.
But if you ask me to celebrate this immigration today, I would tell you how bittersweet it is to be an American, how disappointing it feels, and how my heart aches with disappointment and rage. Sometime in late 2019, I began learning about the destructiveness of capitalism: its ravaging of our planet earth, imperialism—its disastrous twin—fighting to keep it from collapsing. Once I saw the connection between domestic and international injustices of our societies and capitalism, I found myself awoken after years of sleeping in the belly of the beast.
Saturday, February 13, 2021
No One Is Listening: A Country Divided Against Itself
By Philip Giraldi
January 15, 2021
The
U.S. may morph into two nations with the increasingly impoverished helot
“deplorables” under the heel of the empowered social justice warriors.
In a recent article Catholic University professor Claes G. Ryn wrote “Few people are really open to persuasion in any case—not just on political subjects but on any subject about which they care and on which they have adopted certain views. Diehard partisans for a certain outlook will refuse to have their beliefs questioned, and so will many others. They will be no less dismissive of a document challenging their opinions if it is full of footnotes and appendixes. Such a document will, indeed, make them resist it even more. As for the relatively few people who are truly open-minded, they will not find another person’s observations dispositive. They will, as they should, want to consider the evidence on a contested matter for themselves.”
Saturday, January 16, 2021
9/11 Was the Prelude. 1/6 Is the Holy Grail
Jan. 14, 2021 By Pepe Escobar
Whether civil war is
coming will depend on the degree of stoicism prevalent among the Deplorable
multitudes.
I hear the sons of the
city and dispossessed
Get down, get undressed
Get pretty but you and
me
We got the kingdom, we
got the key
We got the empire, now
as then
We don’t doubt, we
don’t take direction
Lucretia, my
reflection, dance the ghost with me
Sisters of Mercy,
Lucretia my Reflection
9/11 was the prelude.
1/6 is the Holy Grail.
9/11 opened the gates
to the Global War on Terror (GWOT), later softened by Team Obama to the status
of Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) even as it was suavely expanded to the
bombing, overt or covert, of seven nations.
9/11 opened the gates
to the Patriot Act, whose core had already been written way back in 1994 by one
Joe Biden.
1/6 opens the gate to
the War on Domestic Terror and the Patriot Act from Hell, 2.0, on steroids
(here is the 2019 draft ), the full 20,000 pages casually springing up from the
sea like Venus, the day after, immediately ready to roll.
And as the inevitable
companion to Patriot Act 2.0, there will be war overseas, with the return in
full force, unencumbered, of what former CIA analyst Ray McGovern memorably
christened the MICIMATT
(Military-Industrial-Congressional-Intelligence-Media-Academia-Think Tank)
complex.
And when MICIMATT starts the next war, every single protest will be branded as domestic terrorism.
Ripe for Fascism: A Post-Coup d’Trump Autopsy of American Democracy
By: NOLAN HIGDON – MICKEY HUFF
January 14, 2021
For the past few years, the corporate/establishment news media oft analyzed Donald Trump’s presidency in an historical vacuum, ignoring the decades-long, bipartisan embrace of neoliberalism that helped bring about his successful candidacy while focusing sensationally on his cult of reality TV personality. Such bread and circus tunnel vision misses the bigger picture. Trump, even with all his faults, is a symptom of a much larger pattern brought on by increased privatization of the public sphere, especially in the realms of education and media, which go back over half a century, particularly the past forty years. With the continued degradation of these key pillars of our society, our civic and information literacy has suffered greatly at a time when the world has become more complex, and our country more unequal. As a consequence, we have become more partisan, more divided, and more estranged from one another as a society. We argued this in our book, United States of Distraction, and unfortunately our thesis continues to ring true.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
The Empire Is Not Done with Julian Assange
By: Chris Hedges
January 5, 2021
Shortly after WikiLeaks released the Iraq War Logs in October 2010, which documented numerous US war crimes — including video images of the gunning down of two Reuters journalists and 10 other unarmed civilians in the Collateral Murder video, the routine torture of Iraqi prisoners, the covering up of thousands of civilian deaths and the killing of nearly 700 civilians that had approached too closely to US checkpoints — the towering civil rights attorneys Michael Ratner and Len Weinglass, who had defended Daniel Ellsberg in the Pentagon Papers case, met Julian Assange in a studio apartment in Central London, according to Ratner’s newly released memoir “Moving the Bar”.
America’s Defining Problem In 2021 Isn’t China: It’s America
A new essay casts doubt on the China threat as promulgated by our nation's ruling elite.
Writing in the journal Palladium, Richard Hanania has produced the first must-read essay of 2021. A research fellow at Columbia University’s Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Hanania is part of an emerging generation of young scholars who reject the increasingly dubious verities of the Cold War and post-Cold War eras. Their arrival comes not a moment too soon.
Saturday, January 2, 2021
New York Times Joins Trump's Anti-China Crusade
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2020/12/31/new-york-times-joins-trumps-anti-china-crusade
David Baker
12/31/2020
There is no doubt that
bureaucratic bungling and authoritarian practices slowed China’s response to
the coronavirus. A New York Times piece documents many of these failings. But,
it is a big step to go from the evidence presented in the article to the
assertion in the first paragraph:
“Beijing acted against the
coronavirus with stunning force, as its official narratives recount. But not
before a political logjam had allowed a local outbreak to kindle a global
pandemic.”
Thursday, December 31, 2020
Should You Be Worried About the New COVID Strains?
By: Gleb Tsipursky
12/30/2020
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2020/12/30/should-you-be-worried-about-new-covid-strains
Should
you be worried about the new COVID strains originating in the UK, South Africa,
and elsewhere, and recently identified in the US?
The
authorities claim there's no cause for alarm. They’re focusing on concerns
about vaccine effectiveness, saying the vaccine will be highly successfully
against the new strain.
They’re
mostly right. While some legitimate concerns have been raised about the
vaccines potentially being 10-20% less effective against the new strains, this
small difference shouldn’t make you too worried.
However,
another aspect of these new strains should make you very worried indeed:
they’re much more infectious. Unfortunately, the implications of their
infectiousness has received little news coverage, which is cause for serious
alarm.
Such
complacency reflects our sleepwalking in the pandemic’s early stages, despite
many warnings from myself and other risk management experts, leading us to fail
to prepare successfully for this situation. We’re about to make the same
mistake with seriously tragic consequences.
Saturday, December 26, 2020
'Unhinged, Lame-Duck President Wants to Start a War'
Thursday,
December 24, 2020
By: Jake
Johnson
Anti-war campaigners are warning that U.S. President Donald Trump is on the verge of launching a full-blown military conflict with Iran after the lame-duck incumbent on Wednesday blamed the Middle East nation for a rocket attack on the American Embassy in Baghdad over the weekend, an accusation Tehran rejected as "fabricated."
"Our
embassy in Baghdad got hit Sunday by several rockets. Three rockets failed to
launch," Trump tweeted late Wednesday afternoon, attaching a photo
purporting to show the three rockets. "Guess where they were from: IRAN.
Now we hear chatter of additional attacks against Americans in Iraq."
"Some
friendly health advice to Iran: If one American is killed, I will hold Iran
responsible," the outgoing U.S. president added. "Think it over."
















