Re: China's State-Owned-Enterprises
My concept of refutation is quite different ...
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Il giorno 9 ott 2020, alle ore 22:51, Louis Proyect <lnp3@...> ha scritto:
I get a chuckle out of Michael Roberts and others
pointing to China's powerful SOE sector as proof that it still
not capitalist. Take a gander at Harbin Pharmaceutical's
headquarters and tell me that this is what Karl Marx had in
mind.
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Cliff Willmeng and Kieran Knutson: Two working class fighters run for union office
Cliff Willmeng and Kieran Knutson are two long time working class fighters living in Minneapolis. Kieran is running for president of CWA Local 2750 and Cliff is running for Minnesota Nurses Association Board of Directors. Here is a videotape interview with the two of them:
I sent this two days ago, but for some reason I didn't find it in my daily summary. (Maybe I missed it, but I don't think so. I understand that these things happen.
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Re: Fascism, Trumpism, and the left | Louis Proyect: The Unrepentant Marxist
On 10/9/20 5:00 PM, Andrew Stewart
wrote:
The folks at Black
Agenda Report have made the very cogent argument that a fascistic
take-over has taken place within the past 50 years as a response
to the movements of the 1960s. But rather than being in the form
of a coup, it took place in the realm of the police/security
agencies and manifested in the mass Black incarceration GULAG
archipelago. Ergo the “Communist threat” did and does exist, even
if it does not manifest in an organized vanguard party at this
moment.
A fascist take-over in the police/security
agencies? I don't think so. We are dealing with a serious
problem of killer-cops but the victims tend to be powerless
Black people rather than anybody opposed to the capitalist
system. In fact, there was far more fascistic violence in the
1960s and 70s when Lyndon Larouche, Meier Kahane's Jewish
Defense League and the Cuban gusanos were attacking meetings,
bombing offices of the left and generally targeting the left
with the blessing of the FBI and CIA.
One of the reasons the left has it easy today is
that it is so marginal. When is the last time a DSAer was beaten
up or jailed on false charges? For that matter, most BLM
protests are not attacked by the cops as long as they are
peaceful. Compare that to the Selma to Montgomery march in 1965
when the cops rioted against Black people as if it were South
Africa. On February 26, 1965, activist and deacon Jimmie Lee
Jackson died after being shot several days earlier by state
trooper James Bonard Fowler, during a peaceful march in nearby
Marion, Alabama.
When I joined the SWP, the FBI opened a
Cointelpro operation against me intended to get me fired from my
job or scaring me to the point of giving up on radical politics.
Nothing like that happens today. I wrote about this incident
here:
https://louisproyect.org/2007/08/19/encounters-with-the-fbi/
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Re: Fascism, Trumpism, and the left | Louis Proyect: The Unrepentant Marxist
I think this is missing a few different things. First, I would agree with the claim that we cannot argue that Trump is an outside fascistic force intent upon taking over the organs of the state via a March on Rome or alternatively a process of “Nazification” wherein Hitler overnight converted the Weimar state government systems into those in service of the Nazi Party, thereby ending their independence. But I also disagree with the claim that a fascist development is by default dependent upon a rather mechanistic dialectic whereby the antithesis is a “Communist threat.” This is mistaken because it seeks to impose the norms of the European parliamentary system upon the American Federalist system. Even though European parliaments and American Federalism share as a norm of governance elections, they are radically different in almost every other regard. Conflating the two is a foundational failure of radical analysis in this country. The divergences are far more numerous than the similarities. As just one instance, the norm of the parliamentary system after an election is for the victors to begin a process of forming a government. By contrast, in the USA the inauguration of a new president transfers power to a new Chief Executive within what has been one continuous, singular government dating back to 1789 when George Washington took power. This is important because it relates to the reality of American power relations and fascism. The folks at Black Agenda Report have made the very cogent argument that a fascistic take-over has taken place within the past 50 years as a response to the movements of the 1960s. But rather than being in the form of a coup, it took place in the realm of the police/security agencies and manifested in the mass Black incarceration GULAG archipelago. Ergo the “Communist threat” did and does exist, even if it does not manifest in an organized vanguard party at this moment. Finally, the desire to use the word fascism in America simply misses the point entirely, that fascism was modeled on American settler colonialism and the Monroe doctrine. Hitler sought to make Germany more like America and failed whereas America succeeded in further consolidating its position in the world system. Trotsky’s words might have some insights but that oversight renders him hopelessly deficient in key ways. Robert Paxton is no radical by any means but at least he acknowledged in his book on fascism the key role played by the US as inspiration of the European fascist projects.
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China's State-Owned-Enterprises
I get a chuckle out of Michael Roberts and others
pointing to China's powerful SOE sector as proof that it still
not capitalist. Take a gander at Harbin Pharmaceutical's
headquarters and tell me that this is what Karl Marx had in
mind.
Why are prescription drugs so expensive? Here is the
answer.
A few years ago, Harbin Pharmaceutical Group Co., Ltd.,
a Chinese state-owned company and the country’s second-biggest
drug maker by market value, posted on their website a set of
photographs showing the insides of their office in Harbin, in
the northeast of Heilongjiang province. The photos shows an
extravagant interior decorated in the style of the Palace of
Versailles, with fully carved wood corridors, gold foil
inlays, triple-tiered crystal chandelier and marble columns as
thick as tree stumps. The construction of the building and
interior decorating cost the company more than 93 million yuan
(USD 15 million).
Unsurprisingly, the photos generated a huge uproar
among Chinese internet users and drew a barrage of criticism.
One outraged internet poster wrote on Sina Weibo, a
Twitter-like microblogging site, “It’s a palace which is built
on the pain of millions of patients,” while another posted:
“Now I finally know why Chinese people can’t afford to go to
the doctor and buy medicines.”

Citizens living near the building also reacted with
anger to the pictures, insisting the money should have been
spent on sorting out the factory's sewage problems. A few
months earlier, the company was accused for illegally
discharging wastewater, waste gas and industrial waste. At
that time the company had said that it didn’t have the money
to solve the problem.
Incidentally, the firm's annual report for 2010 showed
that it spent 19.6 million yuan (USD 3 million) on
environmental protection but 27 times more on advertising.
According to Ministry of Finance data, the company made
profits of nearly 2 trillion yuan the same year.
Seeing the backlash, the company removed the
sensational photos from its website, and claimed the photos
are of a wood-block-printing art museum located in the same
building as the company’s headquarters. Lu Chuanyou, head of
the company, said that for except for the magnificent lobby,
the design and decoration of the working section is generally
plain and simple, while the art museum’s section, located from
the fourth floor to the sixth, looks sumptuous, decked out
with crystal chandeliers and finely crafted copper-coated
wooden figures as well as grandly-decorated meeting rooms and
parlors. The museum was added, according to Mr Lu, to promote
cultural development and highlight the company’s social
responsibility.
When asked why the pharmaceutical company decorated the
plant’s art museum section in such a luxurious style, the
spokesperson failed to answer.
Pharmaceutical companies and hospitals all over China
are notorious for awarding fat bonuses to doctors who
prescribe expensive medicines or order up high-tech tests.
Data from the Ministry of Health show that around 50% of total
health spending in China is for drug purchases, which is
disproportionately high compared to other countries.










Sources: Wall
Street Journal / Daily
Mail / China
Smack
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Re: So who is in control of the nuclear football right now?
Andrew -- you can relax. From Washington Post White House reporter Anne Rumsey Gearan:
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So who is in control of the nuclear football right now?
Since Trump is high as a kite and rambling delusional nonsense I thought it might be a good question to ask.... Best regards, Andrew Stewart - - -
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Declassified Records on Guevara's death at the National Security Archive
Argentine-born Revolutionary Executed 53 Years Ago Declassified Records Describe Intense U.S. Tracking of Guevara’s Movements, Initial Doubts about His Death, and Hopes that His Violent Demise Would Discourage Revolutionaries in Latin America
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Re: How rock became white (part 2) – Tempest
These articles were great! It seemed like I was reading an existentialist-Marxist music historian without the jargon.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On Thu, Oct 8, 2020 at 9:59 AM Louis Proyect < lnp3@...> wrote:
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Pandemic Exposes Holes in Sweden’s Generous Social Welfare State
Pandemic Exposes Holes in Sweden’s Generous
Social Welfare State
By Peter S. Goodman and Erik Augustin Palm
NY Times, Oct. 8, 2020
In the popular imagination, Sweden does not seem like the sort
of country prone to accepting the mass death of grandparents to
conserve resources in a pandemic.
Swedes pay some of the highest taxes on earth in exchange for
extensive government services, including state-furnished health
care and education, plus generous cash assistance for those who
lose jobs. When a child is born, the parents receive 480 days of
parental leave to use between them.
Yet among the nearly 6,000 people whose deaths have been linked
to the coronavirus in Sweden, 2,694, or more than 45 percent,
had been among the country’s most vulnerable citizens — those
living in nursing homes.
That tragedy is in part the story of how Sweden has, over
decades, gradually yet relentlessly downgraded its famously
generous social safety net.
Since a financial crisis in the early 1990s, Sweden has slashed
taxes and diminished government services. It has handed
responsibility for the care of older people — mostly living at
home — to strapped municipal governments, while opening up
nursing homes to for-profit businesses. They have delivered cost
savings by relying on part-time and temporary workers, who
typically lack formal training in medicine and elder care.
This is how the nursing staff at the Sabbatsbergsbyn nursing
home in the center of Stockholm found itself grappling with an
impossible situation.
It was the middle of March, and several of the 106 residents,
most of them suffering dementia, were already displaying
symptoms of Covid-19. The staff had to be dedicated to
individual wards while rigorously avoiding entering others to
prevent transmission. But when the team presented this plan to
the supervisors, they dismissed it, citing meager staffing, said
one nurse, who spoke on the condition on anonymity, citing
concerns about potential legal action.
The facility was owned and operated by Sweden’s largest
for-profit operator of nursing homes, Attendo, whose stock
trades on the Nasdaq Stockholm exchange. Last year, the company
tallied revenue in excess of $1.3 billion.
On weekends and during night shifts, the nurse was frequently
the only one on duty. The rest of the staff lacked proper
protective gear, said the nurse and a care aide, who spoke on
condition of anonymity for fear of being fired. Management had
given them basic cardboard masks — “the kind house painters
wear,” the nurse said — while instructing them to use the same
ones for days in a row. Some used plastic file folders and
string to make their own visors.
By the time the nurse quit in May, at least 20 residents were
dead, she said.
“The way we had to work went against everything we learned in
school regarding disease control,” the nurse said. “I felt
ashamed, because I knew that we were spreaders.”
The lowest-wage workers — who are paid hourly and lack the
protection of contracts — continued showing up for shifts, even
after falling ill, because government-furnished sick pay did not
cover all of their lost wages, the care aide said.
“This is an undervalued part of the labor market,” said Marta
Szebehely, an expert in elder care at Stockholm University.
“Some care workers are badly paid, badly trained and have really
bad employment conditions. And they were supposed to stop a
transmission that nobody knew anything about, and without much
support.”
Vulnerability in another area was central to the devastation:
Over the last two decades, Sweden has substantially reduced its
hospital capacity. During the worst of the initial outbreak,
elderly people in nursing homes were denied access to hospitals
for fear of overwhelming them.
When nursing home residents displayed Covid symptoms, guidelines
in force in Stockholm in the initial phase of the pandemic
encouraged physicians to prescribe palliative care — forgoing
efforts to save lives in favor of keeping people comfortable in
their final days — without examining patients or conducting
blood or urine tests, said Dr. Yngve Gustafson, a professor of
geriatrics at Umea University. He said that practice amounted to
active euthanasia, which is illegal in Sweden.
“As a physician,” Dr. Gustafson said, “I feel ashamed that there
are physicians who haven’t done an individual assessment before
they decide whether or not the patient should die.”
In the United States, some 40 percent of total coronavirus
deaths have been linked to nursing homes, according to a New
York Times database. In Britain, Covid has been directly blamed
in more than 15,000 nursing home deaths, according to government
data.
But these are countries characterized by extreme levels of
economic inequality. An estimated 45,000 Americans die every
year for lack of health care, according to one report. Britons
endured a decade of punishing austerity that battered the
national health system.
Sweden is supposed to be immune to such dangers. Yet this
country of only 10 million people has been ravaged by the
coronavirus, with per capita death rates nearly as high as the
United States, Britain and Spain, according to World Health
Organization data.
One element appears to have substantially increased the risks:
Sweden’s decision to avoid the lockdowns imposed in much of the
rest of Europe as a means of limiting the virus. Though the
government recommended social distancing, and many people worked
from home, it kept schools open along with shops, restaurants
and nightclubs. It did not require that people wear masks.
“There’s been more society transmission, and it’s been more
difficult to hinder it from entering the care homes,” said
Joacim Rocklov, an epidemiologist at Umea University. “The most
precious time that we lost, our mistake was in the beginning.”
Those who operate private nursing homes in Sweden assert that
residents have been the victims of the government’s failure to
limit the spread of the virus.
“It’s the total transmission in society, that’s the key,” said
Martin Tivéus, chief executive of Attendo, the company that owns
the Sabbatsbergsbyn home in Stockholm.
Investigations by Swedish media have concluded that private
nursing homes suffered lower death rates than their public
counterparts. But experts say private and public homes are
governed by the same decisive force: Municipalities handle
elderly care, and taxpayers have been inclined to pay less.
For decades aggressive public spending was the rule in Sweden,
rendering joblessness a rarity. By the beginning of the 1990s, a
sense had taken hold that the state had overdone it. It was
subsidizing industries that were not internationally
competitive. Wages were rising faster than productivity,
yielding inflation.
In 1992, Sweden’s central bank lifted interest rates as high as
75 percent to choke off inflation while preventing a plunge in
the national currency, the krona. The next year, amid a
tightening of credit, Sweden’s unemployment rate surged above 8
percent. The economy contracted, depleting municipal tax
revenues.
This played out just as the policy sphere became infused with
the thinking of economists like Milton Friedman, whose
neoliberal principles placed faith in shrinking the state and
lowering taxes as a source of dynamism.
From the middle of the 1990s through 2013, Sweden dropped its
top income tax rate to 57 percent from 84 percent while
eliminating levies on property, wealth and inheritance. The net
effect was a reduction in government revenue equivalent to 7
percent of national economic output.
Under a 1992 law, Swedish elder care shifted from a reliance on
nursing homes to an emphasis on home care. Part of the
alteration was philosophical. Policymakers embraced the idea
that older people would better enjoy their last years in their
own homes, rather than in institutional settings.
But the shift was also driven by budget imperatives.
As a share of its economy, Sweden spends 3.2 percent a year on
long-term care for the elderly, according to the Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development, compared with 0.5
percent in the United States and 1.4 percent in Britain. Only
the Netherlands and Norway spend more.
But that expenditure is now spread across a population with
greater needs. With home care the rule, nursing homes are
reserved for older people suffering from complex ailments.
Attendo said it had enough protective gear to satisfy Swedish
guidelines, and more than public nursing homes had, but not
enough to manage the pandemic. When the company realized it
needed more, it confronted a global shortage.
“It took five or six weeks to get the volumes outside of China,”
said Mr. Tivéus, the Attendo chief executive.
The shortages at Swedish nursing homes underscore the extent to
which budget math has taken precedence over social welfare, say
those who have watched the refashioning.
“What this pandemic has done is demonstrate a number of system
errors that have gone under the radar for years,” said Olle
Lundberg, secretary general of Forte, a health research council
that is part of the Swedish Ministry of Health and Social
Affairs. “We totally rely on the global production chain and
just-in-time delivery. The syringes we need today should be
delivered in the morning. There is no safety margin. It may be
very economically efficient in one way, but it’s very
vulnerable.”
Mia Grane was unaware of the systemic issues when she moved her
parents into the Sabbatsbergsbyn home in the summer of 2018.
In their younger days, her mother had been an Olympic swimmer.
Now, she was descending into Alzheimer’s. Her father used a
wheelchair.
The home sat in the center of Stockholm, a 15-minute bike ride
from her apartment, with lovely gardens that were used for
midsummer parties.
“It was a perfect place,” said Ms. Grane, 51. “They felt at
home.”
But her confidence evaporated as the pandemic spread. When she
asked the nursing home staff how it planned to manage the
danger, it reassured her that everything was fine.
“I thought, ‘If this virus gets into this place,’” she said, “‘a
lot of people are going to die.’”
A week later, she read in a local newspaper that a prominent
Swedish musician had died. He had lived in the same ward as her
parents. She called the home and was told that her father was
suffering cold symptoms. A test showed that he had contracted
Covid.
Ms. Grane urged the staff to transfer her father to the
hospital. It told her that no one was making that journey, she
said.
Nursing homes lack advanced medical equipment like ventilators,
and hospitals were effectively off limits to nursing home
residents.
“We knew that Sweden had fewer intensive care beds per
inhabitants than Italy,” said Dr. Michael Broomé, a physician at
an intensive care unit in Stockholm. “We had to think twice
about whether to put elderly people with other conditions on
ventilators.”
This forced the nursing home to administer comfort care, easing
the pain with opioids as death approached.
Ms. Grane’s father died on April 2. “He was all alone,” she
said.
She begged the staff to save her mother — “the most important
person in my life.” But she wasn’t eating. A week later, her
mother died, too.
Ms. Grane struggles to make sense of it — the staff not having
proper masks, the hospital deemed off limits, the lack of
concern about the nature of the threat.
“For me, it’s clear that they wanted to save costs,” she said.
“In the end, it’s the money that talks.”
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Fascism, Trumpism, and the left | Louis Proyect: The Unrepentant Marxist
Ever since the 1964
election, liberals and many radicals have referred to the
Republican presidential candidate as a fascist threat. When
Goldwater accepted the Republican nomination, Democratic
California Gov. Pat Brown said, “The stench of fascism is in the
air.” Those worries continued through the Nixon years, abated
somewhat under Bush ’41, then waxed again under Bush ’43. Today,
they loom larger than ever, with Donald Trump’s outside chance of
being re-elected in November.
Invoking the 1932
election in Germany, some leftists urge a vote for Joe Biden to
keep Trump from consolidating the fascist regime he began
constructing in 2016. While not mentioning the word fascism, a letter signed by Noam Chomsky, Barbara
Ehrenreich, Cornel West and 52 other notable leftists insists that
we vote for Biden, especially in swing states. Chomsky probably
spoke for the entire group when he told The Intercept:
“Failure to vote
for Biden in this election in a swing state amounts to voting
for Trump. Takes one vote away from the opposition, same as
adding one vote to Trump. So, if you decide you want to vote for
the destruction of organized human life on Earth. . . then do it
openly. . . . But that’s the meaning of ‘Never Biden’”.
Even before Trump’s 2016
victory, Chomsky fixated on the threat fascism posed. When Chris
Hedges interviewed him in 2010, he compared the U.S.A. to Weimar
Germany: “It is very similar to late Weimar Germany. The parallels
are striking. There was also tremendous disillusionment with the
parliamentary system. The most striking fact about Weimar was not
that the Nazis managed to destroy the Social Democrats and the
Communists but that the traditional parties, the Conservative and
Liberal parties, were hated and disappeared. It left a vacuum
which the Nazis very cleverly and intelligently managed to take
over.”
full:
https://louisproyect.org/2020/10/09/fascism-trumpism-and-the-left/
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The Dynamics of Ecological Crisis (1970)
Interesting iconographic from Gregory Bateson: 
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Those Commie Folksingers and the FBI
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Please donate to CounterPunch
OCTOBER 9, 2020
BY BECKY GRANT
From left to right: Nichole
Stephens, Becky Grant and Deva Wheeler.
CounterPunch was
born as a tiny, hand-copied and folded newsletter. Fast forward
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Review of Ken Burns Country Music documentary
Even When It’s a Big Fat Lie
Country
Music
directed
by Ken Burns.
PBS, eight episodes
In October 2017,
two months after white supremacists had held a ‘Unite
the Right’ rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, Donald
Trump’s (then) chief of staff, John Kelly, went on Fox
News and delivered a history lesson. ‘The lack of an
ability to compromise led to the Civil War,’ he said.
‘Men and women of good faith on both sides made their
stand where their conscience had them make their
stand.’ Kelly’s comments echoed the president’s
remarks in the rally’s immediate aftermath. (‘Some
very fine people on both sides,’ Trump said, comparing
the marchers – who carried torches and chanted ‘Jews
will not replace us’ – with those who had come out to
protest against their presence.) In many quarters
Kelly was taken to task. But when Trump’s (then) press
secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, was asked about it,
she concurred. ‘I don’t know that I’m going to get
into debating the Civil War,’ she said. ‘But I do know
that many historians, including Shelby Foote, in Ken
Burns’s famous Civil War documentary, agree that a
failure to compromise was a cause of the Civil War.’
Sanders was right: Kelly’s comments could have
come straight out of Burns’s documentary, which gave a
sympathetic hearing to the notion of the ‘Lost Cause’.
‘Basically,’ Foote said at the start, ‘it was a
failure on our part to find a way not to fight that
war. It was because we failed to do the thing we
really have a genius for, which is compromise.
Americans like to think of themselves as
uncompromising. Our true genius is for compromising.
Our whole government’s founded on it. And it failed.’
Foote was right, too, in a way: the history of
federal compromise with the slave states went all the
way back to America’s founding: Southern colonies
refused to ratify the Declaration of Independence
until Thomas Jefferson struck out a clause attacking
the slave trade; the constitution counted each slave
as three-fifths of a person in the Federal census,
granting slave owners disproportionate representation
in Congress; the Missouri Compromise admitted Missouri
and Maine into the US as
a slave and a free state, respectively; the
Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed settlers to decide whether
or not slavery would be allowed in their territories;
and so on. But what Foote – a novelist and popular
historian who never held a position at a university –
didn’t say was that slavery lay at the heart of every
one of these compromises, that all of them favoured
the status quo, and that, when the process finally
broke down, it did so despite Lincoln’s best efforts
to preserve slavery in the South, on condition that it
not be allowed to expand into new territories. By this
reckoning (which most historians outside the
neo-Confederate fringe agree on) the North didn’t fail
to compromise; it compromised all the way to the edge
of a cliff.
But the Lost Cause – which holds that the war
was fought to defend states’ rights and so to save the
Southern way of life – won out anyway in the South,
where monuments to soldiers who fell in ‘the war of
Northern Aggression’ still stand in town squares,
because it allowed white Southerners to pretend that
men on both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line had fought
honourably for their own noble causes. It won out in
the North because, in theory, it paved the way for
national reconciliation. Despite the best efforts of
scholars such as W.E.B. Du
Bois, it worked its way into the textbooks, where it
remained well into the 20th century.
(When I was at school in New York in the 1980s, I was
taught that the war had been fought over states’
rights; slavery wasn’t much mentioned.) Now Trump’s
White House was invoking the Lost Cause again.
To his credit, Burns was quick to respond to
Kelly’s statements. ‘Many factors contributed to the
Civil War,’ he said on Twitter. ‘One caused it:
slavery.’ By and large, his documentary had made the
same point. But Americans who watched The
Civil War (39 million of them when
the series first aired, and many more since) could
have been forgiven for drawing other conclusions – in
part, because the avuncular Foote was given so much
time to make the opposite case. It left the
impression that reasonable people on both sides could
have reasonable disagreements about the war’s causes.
None of this went unnoticed when The
Civil War was released in 1990.
Historians wrote papers. Symposiums were held. In
1996, Oxford published Ken
Burns’s ‘The Civil War’: Historians Respond.
Two of the essays, by Eric Foner and Leon Litwack,
were scathing, but, for the most part, the book’s tone
was measured; Burns and Geoffrey Ward, who had written
the film’s script, contributed replies. But a funny
thing happened as Burns made more documentaries:
instead of making more of the views of historians, he
shunted them to the sidelines. For all its faults, The
Civil War featured 24 historians.
Burns’s 2007 film on the Second World War, The
War, had 15. The
Vietnam War (2017) included two in
its chorus of 79 talking heads, and Country
Music – which premiered in the
States last September and aired, in edited form, on BBC 4
two months later – has only one: Bill Malone, whose
book Country
Music USA: A
Fifty-Year History (1968) provided
the template for Burns’s documentary.
‘Going to a dance was sort of like going back
home to mama’s, or to grandma’s, for Thanksgiving,’
Malone says, eight minutes in.
Country
music is full of songs about little old log cabins
that people had never lived in, the old country
church that people have never attended. But it spoke
for a lot of people who were being forgotten – or
felt they were being forgotten. Country music’s
staple, above all, is nostalgia. Just a harkening
back to the old way of life, either real or
imagined.
Burns’s producers interviewed Malone in 2014.
Two years later, a lot of Americans who were being
forgotten, or felt they were being forgotten, voted
for Trump, who promised to return them to the ‘old way
of life, either real or imagined’. They were the
people country songs spoke to; the people Burns’s new
film seems to speak for. ‘It depicts our entire
history,’ the singer-songwriter Vince Gill said when
he appeared with Burns at the 92nd Street
Y in New York last September. ‘And what’s beautiful
about the way it’s been depicted is that it’s finally
given the respect that it’s never had. As someone
that’s kind of given their life to it, to finally see
our story told with that is – it’s amazing.’ The
filmmakers ‘weren’t part of the culture’, Gill said.
‘They weren’t part of the fibre. They weren’t part of
the history. But they told it in such a profound and
honest way that it’s light years more compelling than
if we could have told it ourselves. I think we would
have lied.’
For the most part, they do tell it themselves:
Bobby Bare, Garth Brooks, Roseanne Cash, Charlie
Daniels, Little Jimmy Dickens, Merle Haggard, Emmylou
Harris, Rhiannon Giddens, Kris Kristofferson, Loretta
Lynn, Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Charley Pride,
Randy Scruggs, Connie Smith, Marty Stuart, Dwight
Yoakam – a who’s who of Nashville, Austin and
Bakersfield turned out for Burns’s camera, 85 strong.
They’re a pleasure to watch, and if they’re dishonest,
they’re disarming about it. ‘Truth-telling,’ Ketch
Secor says in the first episode, ‘which country music
at its best is. Truth-telling, even when it’s a big
fat lie.’ It’s the stuff in between interviews that’s
a drag, because it’s dishonest, too, but in more
insidious ways.
Take the film’s description of Fiddlin’ John
Carson, whose 1923 recording of an old minstrel song,
‘The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane’, was country
music’s first bona fide hit. Carson performed
‘wherever an audience could be found’, Burns’s
narrator says. ‘Store openings and farm auctions,
Confederate veterans’ reunions, and political events
ranging from Ku Klux Klan gatherings to a rally in
support of a communist union organiser.’ Immediately,
the false equivalence is jarring – multiple KKK ‘gatherings’
against that singular ‘rally’ (and communists weren’t
forming lynch mobs). But there’s also a backstory,
which Burns doesn’t go into. Carson did more than
perform for the Klan; he was a well-known Klansman.
He’d made a name for himself, in the 1910s, when he
set up shop with his fiddle outside Georgia’s state
capitol, where Governor John Slaton was deciding
whether or not to commute the death sentence of Leo
Frank. Frank, a factory superintendent at the National
Pencil Company in Atlanta, had been convicted of the
murder of a 13-year-old factory employee, Mary Phagan.
The evidence against him was shaky. He was Jewish and
a Northerner; the case had strong antisemitic
overtones, and Carson’s ‘Ballad of Mary Phagan’ did a
good deal to stoke public sentiment against him; but
Governor Slaton commuted the sentence to life
imprisonment. Two months later, a handful of notable
men, including the state’s previous governor,
organised a lynch mob that broke into the prison farm
where Frank was being held. The mob handcuffed the
warden, took Frank, and drove him through several
small towns on the way to Phagan’s hometown, Marietta.
Carson’s song ‘Dear Old Oak in Georgia’ celebrates the
tree from which Frank was hanged: ‘Two years we have
waited and tales we have listened to,’ he sang. ‘But
the boys of old Georgia had to get that brutal Jew.’
There’s more to say about Fiddlin’ John Carson
(‘The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane’ mourns the
collapse of an antebellum plantation), but Burns has
moved on to the next thing, and it isn’t only the Klan
he leaves blurry along the way. It’s personal stuff,
too, like the framing, six episodes later, of Dolly
Parton’s break with Porter Wagoner, who launched her
career by featuring her as the ‘girl singer’ on his TV show.
By the start of 1974, Burns says, Parton had written
and recorded ‘Coat of Many Colours’ and ‘Jolene’ – she
was already a much bigger star than Wagoner would ever
be – and he wasn’t about to let her leave. ‘Well,’
Parton explains,
I
think Porter had a real hard time after other people
started recording my songs, and I was writing, and I
was getting to be pretty popular. And it was his
show. I wasn’t trying to hog it. But I just kind of
carved out a little, you know, place for myself. But
it was a love-hate relationship. We fought like cats
and dogs. We were just both very passionate people.
There was no way that I wasn’t gonna do what I was
gonna do, and no way I was gonna not do what he
thought I was gonna do. When I was trying to leave
the show, I had told Porter: ‘I’ll stay five years.’
It had been five. Then it was six. Then it was
seven. He was just having a real hard time, ’cause
it was gonna mess up his show. We were very bound
and tied together in so many emotional ways, and he
just would not hear it. And so, he was gonna sue me,
he was gonna do this, he was gonna do that – and so,
I went home. I thought, ‘He’s not gonna listen to
me. ’Cause I’ve said it over and over.’ And so I
thought: ‘Do what you do best, just write a song.’
So I wrote the song, took it back in the next day,
and I said: ‘Porter, sit down. I got something I
have to sing to you.’ So I sang it, and he was
sitting at his desk and he was crying. He said:
‘That’s the best thing you ever wrote. OK, you
can go, but only if I can produce that record.’ And
he did, and the rest is history.
The song in question was Parton’s biggest hit,
‘I Will Always Love You’ – and that’s what the film
leaves us with. But again, it isn’t the end of the
story. For one thing, Porter didn’t get a producer’s
credit on the song – Bob Ferguson did, because he’d
already produced it, six months before the events
Parton describes, in the summer of 1973. For another,
Wagoner didn’t just let Parton go; he filed a $3
million lawsuit for breach of contract, and the suits
and countersuits dragged on for years. That isn’t such
a pleasing tale – and it may not be the story that
Parton, who eventually reconciled with Wagoner, wanted
to tell – but it’s what happened. Why not tell it
straight?
There’s a lot more
Burns gets wrong, or sweeps under the carpet, and that
may be unavoidable, given the scale of his projects.
(He tends to work on several at a time.) This one took
six years to make, whittling six hundred hours of
footage down to sixteen. The credits are 174 names
long, not counting the interviewees. Surely, any
mistakes must pale next to the effort and service that
these films provide. (‘More Americans get their
history from Ken Burns than from any other source,’
Stephen Ambrose is supposed to have said, and for
better or worse, I believe him.) But you notice, after
a while, that the errors all face in a certain
direction, and serve to make the same points, while
all the things that are supposed to stay under the
carpet keep reappearing. That may be unavoidable, too,
when you try to make apolitical films about highly
charged subjects. But country
music is about as politically charged as an American
cultural subject could be because, in a sense, it’s
the Lost Cause set to a I-IV-V
chord progression: the broken heart longing for
simpler times, mother and home, and some sense of
stability (stand-ins for the old Southern manse, where
the log cabins were also slave shacks); the
lip-service paid to Christian values (coupled with
belligerence, blood-lust, knee-jerk patriotism, and a
native distrust of authority); the lingering
persistence of minstrel-show stereotypes, melodies and
songs.
For decades, until country’s star-making,
gate-keeping, make-or-break barn dance and radio show,
the Grand Ole Opry, moved out of the Ryman Auditorium
in Nashville in 1974 (the ‘Mother Church of Country
Music’), performers looked up and saw a long wooden
marker, fixed to the balcony, that said ‘Confederate
Gallery’. The music sprang from the shared culture of
poor whites and blacks in the South, but for decades
the only African-American performer to appear on the
Opry was DeFord Bailey, a harmonica virtuoso.
Introduced on stage as ‘our little mascot’, Bailey was
an Opry star for 15 years, until 1941, when he was
quietly fired – and Burns doesn’t gloss over the
story. ‘They turned me loose,’ he quotes Bailey
saying, ‘to root hog, or die. They didn’t give a hoot
which way I went.’ (Burns gives even this a rosy tint:
Bailey ‘set up a successful shoeshine parlour in his
house, and then expanded it to a thriving storefront
in downtown Nashville’.) But the focus on individual
triumphs and tragedies comes at the cost of addressing
systemic abuses and failures. One of the notable
things about Bailey, whose race was not advertised on
the Opry, is that, for all his musical talent, he was
the exception that proved a rule: black folks were all
right, in their place, just so long as that place was
out of sight, at the back of the line. Burns also
features Charley Pride: the first black regular of
‘Grand Ole Opry since DeFord Bailey decades earlier,
the first black artist to have a number one country
record and the first artist of any colour
to win the Country Music Association’s Male Vocalist
Award two years in a row.’ But that’s not quite the
same as noting that it wasn’t until 1967 – 42 years
after the Opry’s founding – that a black voice was
allowed on the programme.
Think what you will of the Nashville
establishment – and plenty of great artists, like
Merle Haggard and Willie Nelson, didn’t think highly
of it at all – it was Northern industry that caused
Southern music to be segregated to such an extent in
the first place. The process started in 1923, when
Northern scouts such as Ralph Peer (who found Fiddlin’
John Carson) turned their gaze to Southern cities in
search of raw talent. ‘Country’ at the time was just
string-band music: songs played on violins, guitars
and banjos. It didn’t have a name yet and, even in the
South’s most segregated pockets, it didn’t always
respect racial boundaries. It was a steam valve; a bit
of grease in the stiffest gears. But record companies
needed to market the music, and the paradigm they had
to work with was ethnic. ‘We put out German records,
Swedish records and what have you,’ Peer said. ‘And
when the hillbilly came along and I quickly saw the
analogy ... I
gave that a separate number series almost
immediately.’ The companies auditioned several names
for their new series: ‘Old Southern Tunes’, ‘Old
Familiar Tunes’, ‘Old Time Tunes’ – like Benjamin
Button, the music was old in its infancy – before they
settled on ‘Hillbilly Music’, which eventually morphed
into ‘Country’ and ‘Country and Western’.
But the category wasn’t as catch-all as all
that, because the ‘race records’ series, for
African-American artists and audiences, had come along
a few years earlier. What was a record executive to do
now with string-band music made by black musicians?
DeFord Bailey had called it ‘black hillbilly music’,
but it couldn’t be hillbilly music, because, by
definition, the ethnic category for hillbilly was
‘white’. It couldn’t be race music, either, since it
sounded like something that could have been made by a
hillbilly band. A certain amount of confusion ensued:
in 1927, when the producer Frank Walker put out a
blues song by a white duo called the Allen Brothers on
Columbia’s race records series, the Allens threatened
to sue. ‘It would have hurt us in getting dates,’ Lee
Allen said, ‘if people who didn’t know us thought we
were black.’ When the dust settled, the lines were in
place. Black artists made blues records and gospel
records; white artists had more latitude, as long as
the taxonomies were observed; and the black string
bands withered, and went unrecorded, until they barely
existed at all.
To this day, America’s record charts are
segregated – Hot Country Songs, Hot Latin Songs, Hot
R&B/Hip Hop Songs – sparking racially inflected
debates like the one, last year, about the proper
place of Lil Nas X’s song ‘Old Town Road’. The
blurring of lines in micro-genres such as Hick-Hop
tells yet another story. But those aren’t stories that
Burns tells, either, because he tends to cauterise his
films at convenient junctures. The
Civil
War stopped just before
Reconstruction (which turned the idea of the war as a
unifying force on its head). Jazz ended
around the time of Bitches
Brew (leading to the film’s brutal
dismissal of free-jazz artists such as Cecil Taylor,
and cementing a regressive view of the jazz canon). Country
Music stops in 1996, allowing
Burns to skirt such subjects as the Dixie Chicks’
stand against the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and the
subsequent, multi-year industry blacklist (along with
the term ‘Dixie Chicked’, which means ‘getting fucked
for espousing a liberal opinion’). By ignoring the
last 25 years of the music’s development, Burns cuts
himself off from musicians of colour, such as
Priscilla Renea and Kane Brown, who have worked to
upend the stock narratives (and have spoken, in
public, about the persistence of racism within the
country music establishment). Never mind Lil Nas X –
whom Burns kept referring to as ‘the black gay rapper
Little Nas X’ at the 92nd Street
Y – who’s still very new on the scene, what of Darius
Rucker, who got his start in Hootie and the Blowfish,
but ended up as the third black performer, after
DeFord Bailey and Charley Pride, to become a regular
on the Grand Old Opry? Or Rhiannon Giddens, who’s a
key interviewee in the film, but almost absent as a
musician? Burns cuts himself off from a quarter of a
century of scholarship, too – from writers such as
Karl Hagstrom Miller, whose Segregating
Sound painted a messier, more
complex picture of places country music has been.
‘We are historians, not journalists,’ Burns and
his co-producer, Dayton Duncan, write in a
coffee-table book published alongside the films in
2019. ‘That means, as in other series we’ve done, like Jazz or The
National Parks, that we need a
historical arm’s length from our topic, the space in
time that provides a perspective between what may have
seemed popular or important at the moment and what was
historically significant – about a generation’s
distance.’ But as recently as last year, Burns said:
‘I’m not a historian, I’m a filmmaker.’ And out in the
real world, it matters.
But Burns isn’t much of a filmmaker. All those
static shots, and slow pans over still images as well
as the soothing pace of his films, and their lulling,
hypnotic effect, make the viewer feel safe, smart –
and well cushioned whenever sore subjects are raised.
Time and again, the sore subject is race, which Burns
sees (again, to his credit) as central to the American
story. But where a documentary filmmaker like
Frederick Wiseman questions everything – American
institutions like high school, the state legislature
and the police department as they are, or appear to be
– at every turn, Burns makes films that are composed,
entirely, of flat declarative statements. (Not once,
in the course of Country
Music, or any other Burns film I can think of,
does the narrator pause to ask a question.) It’s not
that these documentaries are as conservative formally
as they end up being politically. It’s that,
inadvertently, the two end up being one and the same.
If you’re looking to question the status quo – which
is to say, white supremacy – don’t.
‘If one would preserve the rural musical
styles,’ Bill Malone said in 1970, ‘he must also
preserve the culture that gave rise to them, a society
characterised by cultural isolation, racism, poverty,
ignorance and religious fundamentalism. It is doubtful
whether anyone would seriously suggest a return to
such a society, despite the simplicity and sentimental
attraction which such a society might hold.’ I wish
Burns had featured him saying the same thing, today,
in this film where simplicity and sentimental
attraction are the main draws. But nostalgia is also
Burns’s ‘staple above all’ – and untempered nostalgia
is a tricky thing. A voice like Miller’s would have
gone a long way in this film. But Malone could have
done the job himself, if Burns had just given him a
bit more space. ‘I think maybe I would have liked to
talk a little bit more about the politics of the
music,’ Malone said last year. ‘The politics isn’t
always pretty, and it’s too tempting to just gloss it
over and present the music as just, oh, a romantic
view of working-class history.’ Overall, he was
praising the series – and I’d like to praise it, too,
for any number of wonderful moments. But I can’t.
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Trump Lashes Out at His Cabinet With Calls to Indict Political Rivals
(Mind-boggling, even by Trump's standards.)
Trump Lashes Out at His Cabinet With Calls to Indict Political Rivals
By Peter Baker and Maggie Haberman NY Times, Oct. 8, 2020
WASHINGTON — President Trump berated his own cabinet officers on Thursday for not prosecuting or implicating his political enemies, lashing out even as he announced that he hoped to return to the campaign trail on Saturday just nine days after he tested positive for the coronavirus.
In his first extended public comments since learning he had the virus last week, Mr. Trump went on the offensive not only against his challenger, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., but the Democratic running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, whom he called “a monster” and a “communist.” He balked at participating in his debate next Thursday with Mr. Biden if held remotely as the organizers decided to do out of health concerns.
But Mr. Trump secured a statement from the White House physician clearing him to return to public activities on Saturday and then promptly said he would try to hold a campaign rally in Florida that day, two days earlier than the doctor had originally said was needed to determine whether he was truly out of danger. The president again dismissed the virus, saying, “when you catch it, you get better,” ignoring the more than 212,000 people in the United States who did not get better and died from it.
In his statement on Thursday night, the physician, Dr. Sean P. Conley, reported that Mr. Trump “has responded extremely well to treatment” and that by Saturday, “I fully expect the president’s return to public engagement.” Dr. Conley, who has previously acknowledged providing the public with a rosy view of the president’s condition to satisfy his patient, contradicted his own timeline offered upon Mr. Trump’s release from the hospital, when he said doctors wanted to “get through to Monday.”
The president has not been seen in person since returning to the White House this Monday, but he sought to reassert himself on the public stage with a pair of telephone interviews with Fox News and Fox Business as well as a video and a series of Twitter messages. Even for him, they were scattershot performances, ones that advisers said reflected increasing frustration over his political fortunes only 26 days before an election with surveys that show him trailing Mr. Biden by double digits.
The president castigated his own team, declaring that Attorney General William P. Barr would go down in history “as a very sad, sad situation” if he did not indict Democrats like Mr. Biden and former President Barack Obama. He complained that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had not released Hillary Clinton’s emails, saying, “I’m not happy about him for that reason.” And he targeted Christopher A. Wray, the F.B.I. director. “He’s been disappointing,” Mr. Trump said.
“Unless Bill Barr indicts these people for crimes, the greatest political crime in the history of our country, then we’re going to get little satisfaction unless I win and we’ll just have to go, because I won’t forget it,” Mr. Trump said, referring to the investigation into his 2016 campaign ties with Russia. “But these people should be indicted. This was the greatest political crime in the history of our country, and that includes Obama and it includes Biden.”
Mr. Trump has often argued that his political antagonists should be prosecuted, but in this case, he went further by indicating that he had directly pressured Mr. Barr to indict without waiting for more evidence. “He’s got all the information he needs,” the president said. “They want to get more, more, more, they keep getting more. I said, ‘You don’t need any more.’”
The president was all over the map in his two Fox phone calls, throwing out unsubstantiated or discredited accusations, explaining that he wanted to bring home troops from Afghanistan to be ready to fight China or Russia if necessary and calling Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan “the lockup queen” even as his own Justice Department was announcing the existence of an anti-government group’s plot to kidnap her.
As for his opponents, he said on Fox Business that Mr. Biden “wouldn’t be president for two months” because “he’s not mentally capable,” leaving Ms. Harris to then take over the presidency. “She’s a communist,” he said. “We’re going to have a communist.” A few hours later, Mr. Trump reposted Twitter messages claiming that Speaker Nancy Pelosi might be orchestrating “a coup” against him.
Mr. Trump told his Fox interviewers that he felt well despite his hospitalization, although during his evening phone call with Sean Hannity, his voice at times sounded raspy and twice he had to clear his throat. During his hourlong morning call with Maria Bartiromo, he seemed to suggest he may have been infected by the Gold Star parents of soldiers killed in battle at an event honoring them last month at the White House, although a spokeswoman later denied he meant that.
Fellow Republicans exhibited increasing frustration with the president’s casual approach to the virus that has now infected not just himself and the first lady but two dozen other high-ranking officials, campaign aides, advisers and Republican senators who attended White House events. Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, even indicated that he was boycotting the White House because of its lax handling of the virus.
“I haven’t actually been to the White House since August the 6th because my impression was that their approach to how to handle this is different from mine and what I suggested that we do in the Senate, which is to wear a mask and practice social distancing,” Mr. McConnell told reporters.
After being rebuffed by the White House, the Washington city government’s health department released an open letter to the staff members and guests who attended a Sept. 26 ceremony in the Rose Garden that has been blamed for the outbreak, imploring them to get tested for the virus. Crede Bailey, the head of the White House security office, has been hospitalized and a fourth White House journalist tested positive on Thursday.
Ms. Pelosi said she planned to introduce legislation on Friday creating a commission on presidential capacity to review the health of a commander in chief under provisions of the 25th Amendment providing for the temporary transfer of power to the vice president in case of inability to discharge the duties of the office. “Crazy Nancy is the one who should be under observation,” Mr. Trump replied on Twitter.
“I felt pretty lousy,” Mr. Trump said. But, he added, “I’m back because I’m a perfect physical specimen and I’m extremely young.” He once again played down the severity of the disease. “Now what happens is you get better,” he said. “That’s what happens, you get better.”
Mr. Trump later released a video addressed specifically to senior citizens, who were once his political base but have increasingly soured on him as they have been disproportionately affected by the pandemic, according to polls.
“To my favorite people in the world, the seniors,” he said in the video. “I’m a senior. I know you don’t know that. Nobody knows that. Maybe you don’t have to tell them. But I’m a senior.”
Acknowledging that he had been “very sick,” he praised the experimental treatments he was given for the virus and vowed to provide them to seniors. “I want you to get the same care that I got,” he said. “You’re going to get the same medicine. You’re going to get it free, no charge, and we’re going to get it to you soon.”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say that a person infected with the coronavirus can be with other people 10 days after symptoms first appear if the patient has gone 24 hours free of fever without the use of medication that reduces temperatures and if other symptoms are improving.
The onset of the president’s symptoms remains murky; if he started feeling sick on Oct. 1, the day he reported testing positive, then a Saturday return would be premature by C.D.C. guidelines. If he had his first symptoms the day before, then Saturday would meet the 10-day mark. Mr. Trump’s doctors have said he has not experienced fever in days, but the dexamethasone steroid he is taking is known to hide a fever.
Experts said resuming a public schedule might worsen Mr. Trump’s condition, which could still rapidly deteriorate in the next several days. Covid-19, an unpredictable disease, can suddenly and unexpectedly worsen during a patient’s second week of illness. Based on the information provided, “No, I would not clear him to start public engagements on Saturday,” said Dr. Phyllis Tien, an infectious disease physician at the University of California, San Francisco, where she conducts and advises on Covid-19 clinical trials.
White House aides privately expressed concern about whether the president’s animated mood in recent days stemmed from the dexamethasone. Doctors not involved with the president’s care said it could have a significant effect on a patient’s behavior.
Dr. Negin Hajizadeh, a pulmonary/critical care physician at Northwell Health, noted that the majority of Covid patients receiving dexamethasone are on mechanical ventilation and in a state of induced coma, so they do not exhibit any behavioral side effects. But, she said, large studies show that generally 28 to 30 percent of patients will exhibit mild to moderate psychiatric side effects like anxiety, insomnia, mania or delirium after receiving steroid treatments, and about 6 percent may develop psychosis.
“When we prescribe steroids we warn our patients: ‘This may cause you to feel jittery, might cause you to feel irritable,’” Dr. Hajizadeh said. “We will tell family members, especially for our older patients, ‘This may cause insomnia, this may cause changes in eating habits and, in extreme cases, mania and impaired decision making.’”
Watching the news coverage and angry at the state of the race, Mr. Trump has been imploring aides to let him resume campaign rallies as soon as this weekend. He showed up again in the Oval Office on Thursday despite efforts to get him to remain in the residence until he was more fully recovered. In addition to the attempt to hold a rally in Florida on Saturday, he said he would try to stage one the following day in Pennsylvania.
Around the White House and inside the Trump campaign, some advisers were worried about how far down he was in the polls, roughly 10 percentage points on average. Others looked to the calendar and argued that there is still a lot of time left even as they realized that there are few if any opportunities to change the trajectory of the race. That would be especially true without next week’s debate.
Campaign noted that the “Access Hollywood” tape with its sexually offensive banter that was seen as the end of his 2016 candidacy emerged on Oct. 7 that year, roughly the same point in the campaign as now. But something else happened that day that helped distract attention from the tape: the leak of emails stolen by Russia from Mrs. Clinton’s campaign chairman.
Mr. Trump appeared eager for such a bolt of lightning this year as he talked with Ms. Bartiromo on Thursday. He spent a striking amount of time on the four-year-old investigation of Mrs. Clinton’s emails at the same time another 1,000 people died of the coronavirus in the United States on Wednesday and his own White House had become the biggest hot spot in the nation’s capital.
Alex Conant, a Republican strategist and former aide to Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, said that the Trump campaign was entering a dangerous period, one when a campaign heading for a possible defeat can become treacherous.
“The knives come out, the donors flee and the candidate throws embarrassing Hail Marys,” he said. “Most politicians can handle losing a race, but they really don’t want to be embarrassed. When a loss seems inevitable, people who want a future in politics start looking out for their own interests. People start looking over their shoulders.”
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The FARC: Between Past and Future - COSMONAUT
Today we have
an interview with Yanis Iqbal, a student and freelance writer
from Aligarh, India, who has written many articles on the
topic of the subaltern under neoliberalism and the topic of
imperialism in Latin America and Colombia.
https://cosmonaut.blog/2020/10/08/interview-on-columbia/
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“No piece of land is worth it”: Moscow’s Armenians and Azerbaijanis on the Karabakh conflict | Lefteast
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The International Brigades by Giles Tremlett review – fighting fascism in Spain
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How systemic racism shaped Floyd’s life and hobbled his ambition
How systemic racism shaped Floyd’s life and hobbled his ambition By Toluse Olorunnipa and Griff Witte Ho Washington Post, Oct. 8, 2020
His life began as the last embers of the civil rights movement were flickering out. Its horrific, videotaped end ignited the largest anti-racism movement since, with demonstrators the world over marching for racial justice in his name.
During the 46 years in between, George Perry Floyd came of age as the strictures of Jim Crow discrimination in America gave way to an insidious form of systemic racism, one that continually undercut his ambitions.
Early in life, he wanted to be a Supreme Court justice. Then, a pro athlete. At the end, he just longed for a little stability, training to be a commercial truck driver.
All were bigger dreams than he was able to achieve in his version of America. While his death was the catalyst for global protests against racial inequality, the eight-minutes and 46 seconds Floyd spent suffocating under the knee of a White police officer were hardly the first time he faced oppression.
Throughout his lifetime, Floyd’s identity as a Black man exposed him to a gantlet of injustices that derailed, diminished and ultimately destroyed him, according to an extensive review of his life based on hundreds of documents and interviews with more than 150 people, including his siblings, extended family members, friends, colleagues, public officials and scholars.
The picture that emerges is one that underscores how systemic racism has calcified within many of America’s institutions, creating sharply disparate outcomes in housing, education, the economy, law enforcement and health care.
While Floyd’s life span coincided with many advancements for Black Americans — some of them dramatic — his personal path highlights just how much those hard-fought gains remain out of reach for millions like him.
“My mom, she used to always tell us that growing up in America, you already have two strikes,” as a Black man, Floyd’s younger brother Philonise said in an interview. “And you’re going to have to work three times as hard as everybody else, if you want to make it in this world.”
Like many Black Americans, Floyd was behind long before he was born.
A descendant of enslaved people and sharecroppers, he was raised by a single mother in a predominantly Black Houston neighborhood where White flight, underinvestment and mass incarceration fostered a crucible of inequality.
In the crumbling Houston public housing complex where Floyd grew up — known as “The Bricks” — kids were accustomed to police jumping from cars to harass and detain them. His underfunded and underperforming public high school in the city’s historically Black Third Ward left him unprepared for college.
When Floyd was a young man, minor offenses on his record yielded significant jail time and, once released, kept him from finding work. One conviction — a $10 drug deal that earned him 10 months behind bars — is now under review because the arresting officer is suspected of fabricating evidence in dozens of low-level drug cases.
Floyd spent a quarter of his adult life incarcerated, cycling through a criminal justice system that studies show unjustly targets Blacks. His longest stint was at a private prison in a predominantly White town where the jail housing mostly minority inmates generated a third of the town’s budget.
A survivor of covid-19, he struggled with several ailments that disproportionately cut short Black lives.
Floyd made many mistakes of his own doing. His choices landed him in jail on drug and robbery charges, while also leaving him without a college degree and with limited career prospects. He acknowledged many of his poor decisions and tried to warn others against making them too. But for him, each misstep further narrowed his opportunities.
“I got my shortcomings and my flaws,” he said in a video he posted on social media aimed at convincing young people in his neighborhood to put away their guns. “I ain’t better than nobody else.”
But he also didn’t get the benefits that others might have.
“If you are a Black man in America, you’re going to get stopped and if there’s some basis to detain you, that’s probably going to happen,” said Alex Bunin, chief public defender in Harris County, which includes Houston. “If you have means, you can get out. But if you’re poor and you’re Black, you’re not going to get those breaks.”
“George Floyd,” he said, “wasn’t getting those breaks.”
When Floyd stumbled, he fell far, ultimately battling drugs, hypertension, claustrophobia and depression.
Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin and three of his colleagues are set to stand trial in Floyd’s killing. But his death on Memorial Day has prompted millions of Americans to probe the broader question of whether the systems that limited Floyd’s prospects and contributed to his downfall also need to be cross-examined.
A nation ‘weary of the struggle’
Floyd was born in Fayetteville, N.C., in 1973, a time when Whites-only service at restaurants and segregated seating in movie theaters were fresh wounds.
Five years had passed since the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., and the drive for equal rights for Americans of different races lacked a clear leader. Groups that had once united in common cause were feuding and much of the country appeared to have lost interest in the plight of its Black citizens.
“The nation seems weary of the struggle,” bemoaned the then-executive director of the National Urban League, Vernon Jordan Jr.
But there was still a cause for optimism.
When Floyd was two days old, Maynard Jackson was elected mayor of Atlanta. It was the first time a major Southern city would have a Black leader. Detroit and Los Angeles also elected Black mayors that year. Representation within the system — not just activism on the streets — was the order of the day.
“Politics is the civil rights movement of the seventies,” Jackson declared.
It is a view that largely held for decades and culminated with the 2008 election of a Black president, Barack Obama. But it wasn’t enough. The shooting death of Michael Brown in 2014 in Ferguson, Mo. — along with a spate of other deaths of Black men and women at the hands of the police — put to rest any notions of a post-racial America.
The cellphone video of Floyd screaming “I can’t breathe” before expiring under the knee of a White police officer came during a presidency that has employed the rhetoric of White nationalism and a pandemic that has been especially deadly for minorities. It sparked a fiery summer of activism and unrest unlike any the nation has seen, with peaceful protests sometimes erupting into violent clashes. The demonstrations have continued this fall, most notably after the officers who shot 26-year-old Breonna Taylor to death at her Louisville apartment were cleared of wrongdoing.
“There but for the grace of God go I,” Christopher Lehman remembers thinking when he saw the video of Floyd’s killing. “That was a wake-up call for people still thinking that politics is the movement.”
Over the last half-century, the gap in Black and White life expectancy substantially narrowed, from seven years to three and a half. The ranks of the Black middle class swelled, while the Black-White poverty gap shrank. Long-standing disparities in education have been reduced as high school graduation rates converge.
Yet, Black families also have just over one-tenth the wealth of the typical White household, a gap that has persisted for decades. The Black unemployment rate has consistently been double that of Whites, putting African Americans in recessionary territory even when other Americans are experiencing a boom. And the gap in homeownership is wider than it was a half-century ago.
In recent years, unequal treatment in the criminal justice system has stirred the most passion. Black citizens are incarcerated at six times the rate of Whites. They are also more than twice as likely to be killed during interactions with police, according to a Washington Post database.
“There seem to be two justice systems in America,” said Ben Crump, attorney for the Floyd and Taylor families, as protesters took to the streets in Louisville last month. “One for Black America, and one for White America.”
Injustice endured through generations
The systemic racism that shaped Floyd’s life began more than 100 years before he was born.
Floyd’s great-great-grandfather, Hillery Thomas Stewart Sr., spent the first eight years of his life enslaved in North Carolina, where tobacco fields financed American dynasties — and perpetuated inequality — that endured from the 19th century until today.
Stewart was freed in the mid-1860s, the result of a bloody Civil War that led to the emancipation of nearly 4 million Black Americans who had toiled under a brutal system of chattel slavery.
Despite having no formal education — teaching enslaved people to read and write was deemed illegal by the North Carolina General Assembly in 1830 — Stewart acquired 500 acres of land by the time he reached his 20s, according to Angela Harrelson, Floyd’s aunt.
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Stewart lost it all when White farmers seized the land, using legally questionable maneuvers that were common in the postwar South, said Harrelson, who has helped preserve the family’s history through photographs, letters and other records.
Stewart’s state-mandated illiteracy left him powerless to Mount a legal defense.
“The land was stolen from him,” Harrelson said, adding that her great-grandfather was “targeted” by White usurpers due to his relative wealth. “They used to call him the rich nigger.”
It was not an uncommon occurrence, according to a 1982 report by the United States Commission on Civil Rights that documented the steep decline of Black-owned farms from the Civil War through the 20th century.
“The frequent pattern is for land to remain in minority hands only so long as it is economically marginal, and then to be acquired by whites when its value begins to increase,” the report said.
Floyd’s grandparents were North Carolina sharecroppers, working farms owned by White landowners in exchange for a portion of the crop. They too fell victim to state-sanctioned discrimination and wage theft, according to Harrelson and other family members.
As they raised their 14 children — including Floyd’s mother, Larcenia — they were repeatedly forced out of the shacks they rented with their labor, and regularly cheated out of their pay, Harrelson said. It was a familiar experience for Black sharecroppers, who worked under a predatory system and often had no recourse other than to move to another farm and start again.
By the time Floyd was born, his family had spent more than a century toiling under the unforgiving Carolina sun — with little to show for it.
That dynamic is at the core of the 10-to-1 wealth disparity between Whites and Blacks that has persisted since the civil rights movement, said Melvin Oliver, co-author of “Black Wealth/White Wealth: A New Perspective on Racial Inequality.”
The economic gap only widened during the course of Floyd’s life, a phenomenon many scholars find damning but unsurprising.
“That's what structural racism is. It's built into a system that continually advantages one group and systematically disadvantages another over time,” said Oliver, who now serves as president of Pitzer College in Southern California. “And as long as you don't do anything about it, it's going to continue to create those outcomes.”
While unable to bequeath financial wealth to their descendants, Floyd’s grandparents passed down an ethic of hard work, a reverence for education and a deep familial bond borne out of shared perseverance, family members said. Larcenia and her 12 surviving siblings all graduated from high school, a source of pride for their sharecropper parents who never attended.
But a more ominous sentiment also filtered down through the generations, ultimately reaching Floyd: An unshakable fear of White exploitation, and a skepticism toward a system that had treated the family’s dark skin as a permission slip for oppression.
“That’s the thing about this whole systemic mess — it’s tiresome, it’s frustrating ” said Harrelson, who became a nurse and settled in Minneapolis years before her nephew moved there. “And you’re always working two and three times as hard.”
Recalling the racial profiling he and his siblings experienced regularly in their Third Ward neighborhood, George Floyd’s younger brother put it more succinctly: “Your skin,” Rodney Floyd said, “is your sin.”
Larcenia “Cissy” Floyd arrived in Houston in 1977, a single mother of three hoping to put North Carolina’s tobacco fields behind her and start a new life in Texas.
She didn’t have much money and settled in Cuney Homes, the city’s oldest public housing complex.
The low-slung development in Houston’s Third Ward is a place where generations of neighbors watch each other’s children and an empty lot beneath a pecan tree served as both a community gathering place and gossip hub.
It’s also a sand trap of entrenched poverty and a symbol of enduring racial segregation in the middle of the country’s most diverse metropolis. With a median household income of less than $20,000 and a poverty rate above 60 percent, according to Census figures, the predominantly Black residents of the “The Bricks” were surrounded by signs of struggle.
Against that backdrop, Floyd had what family members described as a happy if resource-deprived childhood. His brothers remember eating mayonnaise and banana sandwiches, washing their clothes in the kitchen sink and sleeping hip-to-hip in a house whose population constantly stretched the capacity of its square footage.
“One thing about Floyd is it’s always family. That’s in the heart. He’s our mother’s child so he’s going to be family, family, family,” said, Rodney Floyd, recalling his older brother’s efforts to be a breadwinner in a multigenerational household.
“One roof, one family,” added Philonise Floyd.
“Yeah, that was his saying.” Rodney laughed, his voice trailing off in remembrance. “Yes … That’s Floyd.”
Larcenia Floyd worked at a neighborhood fast-food joint and, despite her low wages, was quick to extend hospitality to visitors to her home. Neighborhood children would often show up unannounced and hungry. They would stay for a meal — longer if they had nowhere safe to go.
During the civil rights movement, securing economic opportunity and fair housing for Blacks was a key pillar in the fight for equality. Martin Luther King Jr. was met by an angry mob and struck by a rock in 1966 while marching through a White Chicago neighborhood to demand access to integrated housing after years of discrimination. King said the march was part of a campaign “to eradicate a vicious system which seeks to further colonize thousands of Negroes within a slum environment.”
A half-century later, racially segregated housing in America’s cities remains as common as rush-hour traffic.
The concentration of minorities in places like Cuney Homes can be directly linked to government policies — both well-intentioned and prejudiced — that created racialized ghettos in Houston and across the country.
Redlining — the practice of banks either denying mortgages to people in minority neighborhoods or charging those borrowers more — limited Black home buyers’ options through much of the 20th century. Local housing authorities in Houston and elsewhere built projects that quickly became racially segregated. States like Texas have passed laws allowing landlords to continue discriminating against people with low-income housing vouchers, blocking many Black renters from accessing certain neighborhoods.
While the passage of the 1968 Fair Housing Act and other policies have facilitated integration in many neighborhoods, Black Americans have remained the most segregated ethnic group in the country.
Attempts to integrate housing continue to be blocked at the highest levels of government. In July, President Trump eliminated a housing regulation designed to reduce racial disparities in neighborhoods, claiming without evidence that such desegregation would lead to more crime. His reelection campaign has used the same kind of racist tropes that White homeowners and legislators employed to resist King’s push for integration in the years before Floyd was born.
School desegregation didn’t begin in Houston until 1970 — it was the nation’s largest segregated district at the time — following more than a decade of resistance. Schools remained deeply unequal as Floyd moved through predominantly Black classrooms in the 1980s and early 1990s. At Yates, a former “colored” school named for a minister who was born enslaved, test scores were low and dropout rates high, with the 1989 valedictorian — who was seven months pregnant at the time — noting in her graduation speech that more than half of freshmen had failed to graduate.
After a generation of reform efforts, poor and mostly Black school districts continue to suffer from chronic underfunding; a 2019 study showed that state support shifts away from schools as they become more concentrated with Black students.
By the time Floyd left high school in 1993, he wasn’t academically prepared to go to college. But his athletic skills earned him a place at a two-year program in South Florida before he transferred closer to home — to Texas A&M University-Kingsville, a small, mostly Latino school known as a pipeline to the NFL.
“Big Floyd was always talking about going to the league,” said his close friend Demetrius Lott, who also was on the football team and lived in the same apartment complex. “It was what we all wanted.”
The Black students stuck together and supported one another. The red tile-roofed Spanish Mission architecture of the campus, with its rustling palm trees lining quiet streets, was a world away from Third Ward projects. Adjusting to college life wasn’t always easy for him, his friends said, but it was a happy, triumphant time because few from his neighborhood had made it that far. Floyd fired up the grill for frequent barbecues and stayed up all night playing video games.
“I would always tease him because he would eat all my food,” Deron “Smoke” Rutledge said. “He was a gentle giant who never got into any trouble or had any confrontations. He was a humble guy who came from a poverty-stricken neighborhood. I had a little more, but we all shared everything. We were all the same. We were like brothers.”
Floyd, a tight end, went to practice every day, but he wasn’t making the grades or completing the credits that would have allowed him to get on the field. Many of Floyd’s friends also fell short, unable to finish college or make it to the pros.
Other students, particularly White ones, had “a better foundation, a better support system,” said college roommate Marcus Williams. “Me and Floyd didn’t have that.”
For many Black undergraduates, the same is true today. The gap in high school graduation rates has narrowed dramatically in recent decades. But it has persisted at the college level, with only 41 percent of Black students completing their degrees, compared with two-thirds of Whites, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.
A lack of both preparation and financial support help explain why. The disparity, according to a bipartisan Congressional report released this year, represents “a powerful determinant of economic outcomes, undermining the notion that every American has roughly the same chance of achieving economic success.”
While Floyd was away at school, he would send money and clothes back to his siblings regularly, family members said. He felt an even stronger responsibility to provide when his mother’s health started to wane even as her home swelled with grandchildren to feed.
Harrelson, Floyd’s aunt, said her nephew was “torn” between trying to better his life and help out his family back in Cuney Homes, complicating each of his attempts to move on.
Floyd’s time in college ended with neither a degree nor a draft into professional sports. With his two planned routes out of Third Ward blocked, he moved back to Cuney Homes in 1997.
Unequal under the law
It didn’t take much time before he was in trouble with the law.
Police — described by residents as an omnipresent force around Cuney Homes — arrested him in August 1997 for delivering less than a gram of cocaine. A judge sentenced him to six months in jail. It was the first of at least nine arrests in Harris County over the course of a decade, mostly for low-level drug crimes or theft.
The nation’s incarceration rate soared during that period, with Texas leading the way, and people fitting Floyd’s description — young, Black, poor, male — disproportionately targeted.
A 2018 study published in the Boston University Law Review found “profound racial disparity in the misdemeanor arrest rate” for offenses like drug possession, theft and simple assault.
The arrest rate for Blacks was more than double that for Whites for such crimes, and the disparities have “remained remarkably constant” for nearly 40 years, the study found.
Arrests for drug possession soared in the 1990s, peaking just as Floyd was cycling through the criminal justice system and facing many of the very charges with the highest racial disparities.
While federal data shows that Blacks and Whites use drugs at similar rates, public policies ranging from the war on drugs to the 1994 crime bill have contributed to widely disparate rates of prosecution. Policymakers from across the political spectrum have since expressed regret about the far-reaching consequences of the tough-on-crime push.
As police amassed in inner-city ghettos with a mandate to lock up those selling or using drugs, Floyd joined a fast-growing generation of young Black males trapped in a seemingly never-ending cycle of incarceration and deepening poverty with legal fees accruing and job opportunities dwindling. The number of Americans in prison jumped from 200,000 in 1973 to more than 1.4 million today, a sevenfold increase over the course of Floyd’s life, according to Justice Department statistics.
It would take 30 years of mass incarceration — and the arrival of an opioid epidemic in White suburban neighborhoods — before public policy shifted to treat addiction as a public health issue.
In the meantime, police cars continued speeding through the Cuney Homes projects, with officers jumping out and seemingly arresting men indiscriminately, Floyd’s family members said.
Floyd’s 2004 conviction for selling less than a gram of cocaine is under review by Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg, who charged the arresting officer Gerald M. Goines and five other Houston officers with regularly falsifying evidence in drug cases.
“The lion’s share of arrests made by this squad were minority men for low-level drug crimes.” Ogg said as she announced the charges in July. Goines’s attorney has denied the accusations against him.
The most serious charge that Floyd faced was in 2007, for aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon. Prosecutors said the then-33-year-old and four others forced their way into a private home and that Floyd had held a woman at gunpoint while others ransacked the place, looking for drugs and money.
After a plea deal, Floyd would spend four years at a privately run prison nearly three hours northwest of Houston. There, he largely languished, without access to vocational training or substance abuse treatment. Once jovial and confident, Floyd left prison deflated, introspective and terrified at the prospect of being locked up again, according to family members and friends.
At the urging of a local pastor, Floyd left Houston in 2017. The move was a chance to leave his troubles behind — the constant harassment by police, the discrimination against felons in the labor market, the downward pull of his old neighborhood.
After arriving in Minneapolis, he enrolled in a rehabilitation program, began training to become a commercial truck driver and took up jobs working security at the Salvation Army and a Latin nightclub.
Floyd kept a list of goals in his house to make sure he was living a meaningful life, according to his close friends. “Staying clean,” was one of them.
This spring, Floyd contracted the coronavirus and lost his security job when the pandemic forced the nightclub to close.
Over Memorial Day weekend, just before his death, Floyd ran into some of his old Houston friends for the first time in weeks. He felt better, he told them, but they could see he was anxious about money.
That Monday, Floyd talked on the phone with his childhood friend, Aubrey Rhodes. Floyd told him he was going to run out for cigarettes and promised to call later.
By the next day, the world was waking up to images of a man gasping for breath as an officer — who had been called to the scene after a convenience store customer allegedly paid for cigarettes with a counterfeit $20 bill — pressed mercilessly into his neck.
Floyd called out for his deceased mother in his final moments, and body camera footage later showed that her son had heeded her warning to be respectful of the police. “Mr. Officer, please don’t shoot me,” Floyd implored repeatedly.
A mass movement was about to be born, the streets in cities across America soon to be filled, a name poised to echo as a cry against injustice.
The people who had known George Floyd best had to watch with everyone else and try to make sense of how their friend’s death fit with his life.
“I was just looking to see if he had done anything that might have been a little out of character,” said Rutledge, Floyd’s college friend, who watched the video at least 50 times.
“But he didn’t. He was the same guy he had always been.”
Julie Tate, Jennifer Jenkins, and Tracy Jan in Washington; Mary Lee Grant in Kingsville, Tex.; Cleve R. Wootson Jr. in Bartlett, Tex.; Arelis R. Hernández and Laura Meckler in Houston; and Robert Samuels and Holly Bailey in Minneapolis contributed to this report.
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