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A Challenge to Corporate Feudalism? (What's up)



A Challenge to Corporate Feudalism?

by Lewis Seiler & Dan Hamburg


"[T]he powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate
the political system of each country and the economy of the world as
a wh***. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by
the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements
arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences."
--Prof.
Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope, 1966

For the first time in more than four decades, a militant student movement is taking shape across the country.
This movement is in direct response to the IMF-style "austerity
measures"
being waged against all American citizens in the form of new mandatory
taxes and a range of government-imposed belt-tightening measures
designed
to restore "fiscal responsibility." Students are facing astronomical
increases in tuition (32% in California's famed UC system), expanding
class sizes, loss of vital programs in the arts, music, technical and
physical education. 19,000 California public school teachers have
received pink slips and 20,000 students will be turned away from
community
colleges next fall. Add in thousands more support staff facing
layoffs, cutbacks, and shrunken benefit packages and you have a mass
of angry students, educators, and workers.

Of course, nearly all Americans are feeling the pinch. Nationwide, 50 million people need to use food stamps
to eat. 50 million have no health care, with 60% of bankruptcies
resulting
from medical emergencies. Americans have lost $5 trillion from their
pensions and savings and $13 trillion in the value of their homes since
the latest economic crisis began. The real unemployment rate is over
20% with 30 million US citizens unemployed or underemployed. Deutsche
Bank predicts that the number of ‘underwater' loans may rise to
48 percent, or 25 million homes by 2011. Every day 10,000 US homes
enter into foreclosure. 60% of Americans live from paycheck to
paycheck.

But it's the students who offer the best potential to make change happen. Unburdened by mortgages and families, young people have the least to lose and the most to gain
by overcoming a trend that is turning the majority of U.S. citizens
into modern day serfs. And it's students' newfound understanding
of the linkage between neoliberal economics and the collapse of public
education that may push the kind of change that Barack Obama never
imagined
in his wildest dreams.

As Will Parrish and Darwin Bond-Graham write in their latest column for Counterpunch titled "WE Make the University Crisis": "Something new is afoot here."

This new student movement, informed by both the successes and failures of movements past, has the potential to probe more deeply into the inherent flaws that plague the American
system and thus to achieve more in the way of establishing something
closer to real democracy. Young people are especially fed up with
seeing
public dollars line the pockets of the economic elites while education,
and steady employment, increasingly become an unattainable dream. Those

young people tenacious and fortunate enough to make it through the
system
leave school saddled with crushing debt and facing a job market that
is dicey at best.

Even as students in large numbers begin to pick up their placards and march, occupy offices and blockade freeway ramps, the state's machinery of repression is oiled-up and
ready to roll. A recent article in Harper's magazine
titled "The Soft-Kill Solution" describes in grisly detail the expanding

arsenal of non-lethal weapons being developed and tested for crowd
control,
mostly with government funding. The United States now hosts on
its soil battle-hardened army brigades trained in places like Fallujah
to deal with civil unrest. In a previous post to this site, we
discussed HR 645, a bill to establish six command-and-control "emergency

centers" under the direction of FEMA and located throughout the
continental
United States. We have also pointed to the series of single-bid
contracts that the Army Corps of Engineers has entered into with
Halliburton
subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR) to build detention camps at
undisclosed locations. ("Rule by Fear or Rule by Law," Common
Dreams, 2/4/08)

The latest bombshell is the "Enemy Belligerent, Interrogation, Detention, and Prosecution Act of 2010" recently reported by Marc Ambinder on The Atlantic website.
This bill, introduced by Sens. John McCain and Joseph Lieberman this
month, sets out a comprehensive policy for the detention, interrogation
and trial of "suspected enemy belligerents who are believed to have
engaged in hostilities against the United States requiring these
individuals
to be held in military custody, interrogated for their intelligence
value and not provided with a Miranda warning."

McCain/Lieberman, which does not distinguish between U.S. persons-visa holders or citizens-and non-U.S. persons., appears to be a follow-up to California Rep. Jane
Harman's Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention
Act which ultimately failed in Sen. Susan Collins's Homeland Security
Committee. Obama may have rebranded Bush's War on Terror as
an "overseas contingency operation," but it's clear that the war
continues both on foreign lands and right here at home. Those
old enough to remember COINTELPRO and more recently, John Poindexter's
Total Information Awareness (TIA) program won't be surprised at any
of this.

McCain/Lieberman asks the President to determine criteria for designating an individual as a "high-value detainee" if he/she (1) poses a threat of an attack on civilians or
civilian facilities with the U.S. or U.S. facilities abroad; (2) poses
a threat to U.S. military personnel or U.S. military facilities; (3)
has potential intelligence value; (4) is a member of al Qaeda or a
terrorist
group affiliated with al Qaeda; or (5) is deemed such based on "other
matters the President considers appropriate." Determination
of whether an individual is a "high-value detainee" is to be made
by the Secretary of Defense and the Attorney General after consultation
with the Director of National Intelligence, the FBI and the CIA.
As Ambinder glibly notes, "The President himself doesn't get to
make the call."

A very noxious brew is being cooked up here. First, the elites, lurking in the shadows behind a neutered government, squeeze the vast majority of citizens, workers, and
students,
moving their jobs overseas, foreclosing on their homes, looting their
savings, stealing their hopes and dreams. When they rebel, they
are gassed, tased, shot with rubber bullets, and have their nervous
systems attacked with high-tech non-lethal weaponry. If they persist
in their protests, they will be jailed (according to a new report cited
by David DeGraw on Alternet, "a new prison opens every week somewhere
in America") without habeus corpus or rights to trial. They can
then be detained indefinitely in camps. They can even be disappeared.

Yes, disappeared as in murdered. It may be hard to believe but just last month it was none other than President Obama's very own Director of National Intelligence, Dennis
Blair who acknowledged in a congressional hearing that "the U.S.
may, with executive approval, deliberately target and kill U.S. citizens

who are suspected of being involved in terrorism."

This is America as it moves into the
second decade of the 21st century. All we can say is
that we the people better wake up fast, before there's nothing worth
waking up for.



Lewis Seiler is president of Voice of
the Environment
. Dan Hamburg, a former US congressman,
is executive director.

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