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The New Intellectuals of Empire (Yusuf Serunkuma)

Posted: 06 Jul 2021, 06:35
by Zmeselo


Imperialism in the 21st Century
The New Intellectuals of Empire

In a powerful polemic against the new intellectuals of empire, Yusuf Serunkuma addresses an African audience. Serunkuma warns his audience of a new breed of missionary-scholars who speak to the visible wrongs in our midst, but they hardly ever offer any context, longue durée, causation, and abstraction, to the point that they have even conscripted disciples from among us. This new breed, he argues, is more tactical, more sophisticated, but as dangerous as their colonial predecessors.

By Yusuf Serunkuma

https://roape.net/2021/07/01/the-new-in ... of-empire/

July 1, 2021



It has become increasingly common for scholars, activists and politicians who see Africa from African vantage points to be outraged by neo-orientalist portrayals of Africa by activist-scholars and media from the west. By ‘African vantage points’, I mean that they tend to explain and offer context to the well-publicised crimes of Africa’s leaders as opposed to calling them out and campaigning for sanctions and intervention from the benevolent west. I mean, whilst they would be critical of Muammar Gaddafi or Robert Mugabe, they are unwilling to support coalitions of the so-called ’vanguards of justice and human rights’ to flush these bad leaders out, even if flushing them out comes by way of sanctions. These scholars and activists are my main audience in this essay – because I claim to be one of them.

It is my contention that we need to be kinder to the West’s celebrity-missionary intellectuals and media. They commit no crime when they ’misrepresent’ the continent. In fact, misrepresentation as a term does not even apply to them as, indeed, they are not mispresenting anything but simply doing their job – which is mainly writing for and informing their home audiences on how to see Africa, which remains an abundant wild reserve for game and exploitation. It would be liberating for the African activist and scholar to beware that over 95 per cent of academics, mainstream media outlets such as the BBC and CNN, and the myriad commentors including bloggers, columnists, and overly sanctimonious tweeps on Africa from the West will — oftentimes involuntarily, instinctively or by association — follow the foreign policy positions of their countries.

So, Michela Wrong, Nic Cheeseman, Robert Guest and many others remain intellectuals of empire. But with a sophistication; they are not crude like their predecessors (such as the colonial anthropologists and explorers who were, among other things, openly racist and abusive). This new breed of missionary-scholar speaks to the visible wrongs and actual abuses by African leaders, but they hardly ever offer any context, longue durée, causation, and abstraction. They treated their subjects as exotic and geographically contained with neither global-local connections, nor power games with the new colonial powers etcetera. Indeed, these outright half-analyses have been used quite successfully to even conscript disciples from amongst us. You will constantly hear African university graduates chanting tired buzz words about democracy, free market economies, the need to attract foreign investments, praising IMF and World Bank data, and congratulating themself after more aid is released. They’ll then focus on small and obsolete campaigns such as decolonisation, demand reparations to appear cool and sophisticated. All this is the work of the new breed of the intellectuals of empire, which is more tactical, more sophisticated, but as dangerous as their predecessors.

Reflecting on Wrong’s recent book, Do Not Disturb, Jörg Wiegratz and Leo Zeilig https://www.theelephant.info/long-reads ... -syndrome/ have reminded us about the timeless trope of monsters in Western media and academia in reference to African ‘autocratic‘ presidents. It is worth stressing that presidents that are labelled ’monsters’ are not necessarily innocent individuals; they are and have actually committed crimes to fit the label. But while their badness ought not to be denied, it has to be understood as a timeless fact of all politicians: their monstrosity ought to be understood as a function of power – so the truism that
power corrupts but absolute power corrupts absolutely
– and this is not limited to Africa.

In truth though, those characterised as monsters across formerly colonised places have been men [and women] unwilling to allow modern imperial plunder disguised as free trade and often packaged in the slick language of human rights. Please note that monsters do not begin as monsters in both their political character, and the ways in which the world sees and writes about them. Frequently, they simply undergo a key turn, which often happens at that sobering moment of encounter with the imperial capitalist machine. Slovenian theorist, Slavoj Zizek has described this moment, as a ‘key dilemma’ https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... ly-had-won for any president seeking to champion the lives of the wretched of the earth under a corrosive capitalist modernity.

Ugandan president Idi Amin started out as a darling of the West. But he became a monster as soon as he chose to get the natives out of the backwaters of the economy, which actually meant taking the economy away from the Indian-Asians, the ‘deputies of colonialists’ as historian Lwanga-Lunyiigo called them.[1] After Amin radically pulled the rag from under their feet — as Kenya http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/date ... 738629.stm and Tanzania https://www.csmonitor.com/1986/0821/oken.html had done using their legal systems — Uganda’s former colonisers who had actually shipped Indians into the region and deliberately privileged them over the natives, were the first to demonise Amin labelling him an autocrat, a monster. Once politically ‘bad’, Amin also became bad in the scholarship and media coverage. Most famously, he became a ’white pumpkin’ in popular media circles.

Queen Elizabeth II bestowed a knighthood on President Mugabe, which was clearly a subtle bribe to get him to ignore land reforms, a burning issue at independence in 1980. For 20 years, Mugabe remained a darling of the West, never antagonising white farmers and instead, becoming ensnared in endless negotiations with them and the UK government to find a less radical or less painful way to allow them to keep their colonial loot. Even when the British government gave Mugabe money to buy land for redistribution, the white landowners refused to sell. Caving into pressure in the late 1990s from inside his own party and from former combatants, Mugabe then took a hard stance on land. Shamelessly, Zimbabwe’s former colonisers took back their bribe, and the media and academia competed in badmouthing Mugabe. On the heels of UK government sanctions, were tons of monsterizing scholarship and media coverage.

In nearby South Africa, the gift for his political-economic naivety was the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Nelson Mandela which was working wonders. Mandela admitted in his memoir, Long Walk to Freedom, that he had blatantly defied the ANC’s resolutions in his ignorant and childlike pursuit of political independence. In effect, he left South Africa’s entire economy in the hands of white South Africans. As Zizek puts it, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... ly-had-won if Mandela had really won, he would never have become a darling of the West — and of the world. Similarly, before Kagame started taking a hard stance towards the West, he had been their darling for years. He is now their monster.

Ever wondered why with all Museveni’s crimes, he is yet to become a monster? Well, Museveni is in Somalia, Central African Republic, South Sudan, and in the Democratic Republic of Congo – doing mercenary work for the western democracy merchandising imperialists. He is providing the calm under which foreign mining companies enjoy Congolese resources, and also providing the environment under which European pirates https://www.jstor.org/stable/41059758?seq=1 enjoy Somalia’s marine resources. Thus, despite his well-documented crimes on Ugandans,
he is yet to make the label, a monster.

The point I am making here is that a huge percentage of scholarship and media in the West reflects the foreign policies of their states. This is true not just in the so-called “formerly colonised” places, but it is also true of Europe’s and America’s relations across the world where their exploitative tentacles are being resisted. Mainstream scholarship, and media, which is largely ‘a bunch of fraudshttps://chomsky.info/power01/ as Noam Chomsky puts it, will often find the ‘ethical imperative’ to blast leaderships in Russia, Syria, Iran, Turkey, Pakistan, Bolivia, Cuba, Venezuela, Brazil, China, and even helpless Palestine — as long as their multinationals face stiff opposition attempting to monopolise the economies of these countries.

The crime of the leaderships of these countries is trying to extract maximum benefit from their mineral resources — especially oil, gold, lithium and platinum — and fighting for their land. As these leaders are derided by EU and American politicians, western scholars and journalists endlessly chant their badness. These same scholars and media also sweat blood and tears to ensure that the crimes of empire are not exposed. Ali Mazrui https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles ... ern-values told us as much in 1997 when the BBC censored him for reporting factually about Muammar Gaddafi. More recently, The Conversation killed a well-researched piece by Matthew Alford https://mronline.org/2021/05/26/a-mains ... ightbox/1/ on how
western media rationalises and amplifies state-sanctioned violence and wars as millions die.
Please note that these fellows in the Western-based media and academia hate being associated with their countries’ foreign policies. They will vehemently deny this accusation. They strut themselves around as independent objective academics and analysts building their craft purely on fieldwork and theory. This is rightly undeniable but to a degree. There are two glaring handicaps with their claim: first, you’ll never hear them speak out against the crimes of their own countries the way they do about those of other countries or their leaders. You do not see them calling out Israel’s colonisation of Palestine. You do not see them joining Black Lives Matter, nor see them call out the wars in Yemen, Iraq, and the entire Middle East that were started on absolute deception. And this isn’t a case of disciplinary focus or areas studies. That would be a clumsy excuse. A true activist-scholar has to start by calling out the crimes of own countries. Sadly, you have heard them downplay the double standards of structural adjustment, or simply remain silent. They are happy to harp on about democracy and human rights as if there is no connection between livelihood and governance. It is as if they do not see the continued ruins of structural adjustment as local African populations remain disempowered and emasculated – and the double standards with which Europe and North America still enforce the Washington Consensus onto Africa as they themselves do the exact opposite at home.

Second, and this is an important point I intend to make: working or simply following the foreign policy positions of their countries cannot be seen as a crime on the part of these activist-scholars and media. They really have no choice. Even those most aware of their positionality in this game – by far the fewest – end up with very limited choices. To appropriate David Scott, https://www.dukeupress.edu/conscripts-of-modernity they did not choose to do this job, they were simply conscripted. They did not choose to work for their countries as earlier intellectuals of empire did. To survive as scholars, they have to stay true to the mission of the master who not only introduced them to these parts of the world, but who also enables their intellectual and financial power to undertake scholarship in these parts of the world.

That the majority are unaware of or simply deny their conscription to the imperial machine is how it is meant to be. This is because the conscription is more discreet and takes many subtle forms including their training, funding, legitimation by their schools, historical connections, etc. This is an existential dilemma. Just one telling example, there are exponentially more scholars from the UK than from France or Germany working in the former British colonies, in the same way that there are more scholars from France than from the UK in the former French colonies. And although this form of conscription runs deep, it remains not just largely invisible but unconsciously suppressed. Should it be strange that there are almost zero scholars from the colonies doing fieldwork in Europe and North America. To this day, it is still viewed as almost comical that an African university started a centre for the study of the Americas.[2]

The bigger point I wish to make is this: scholarship is closely linked to the economy—and to politics. Until Africans develop their economies to fund their own scholarship, these men and women from the west will continue to say whatever they want – and there will always be good evidence to back up any arguments they choose to make, which actually makes their scholarship appear sound and objective. But as Foucault has told us, to focus on a particular argument or focus on a particular subject is often a political position and not an intellectual one. It is not intellectual persuasion or a case of overwhelming evidence. It is power and politics.

My intention is not to make the conscription of Western media and scholars at the service of their countries’ foreign policies a crime (though perhaps if they acknowledged this fact, they would be humbler and less sanctimonious). It is to remind African intellectuals and activists that there is a need to spend more time fighting at home to better their politics and economies. This, in turn, will give them the intellectual and political power to also push our side of the story – which will also be, as Nigerian historian Yusufu Bala Usman https://books.google.de/books/about/Bey ... edir_esc=y would put it, a political position.

Yusuf Serunkuma is a columnist in Uganda’s newspapers, scholar and a playwright. In 2014, Fountain Publishers published his first play, The Snake Farmers and it was received with critical acclaim in Uganda, Kenya and Rwanda.

Featured Photograph: Eric Dutton (right), Palmer Kerrison, and Governor Robert Coryndon at Government House in Nairobi, 1924. Dutton was an academic geographer and a major force behind early urban-planning programs in East and Central Africa and author of four books. Permanently disabled by war wounds, he was also permanently infatuated with the moral rightness of British imperial culture (Garth Myers, 1998).


Notes

[1] Since they were neither settlers nor natives at independence, the only category left in this push and pull for belonging and identity was deputies to the colonialists. Quite inexplicably, the Indian-Asians stayed on in the East African colonies even after the end of colonialism. Had they become natives or settlers?

[2] In 2018 South Africa’s University of Witwatersrand started the African Centre for the Study of the United States (ACSUS).

Re: The New Intellectuals of Empire (Yusuf Serunkuma)

Posted: 06 Jul 2021, 07:14
by Zmeselo
So all the fukera & kudda, was just for show? You rodents told us you drove them out by force & will now persue them further, even crossing international borders. Qiqiqi.. aye nay ugume neger!


Re: The New Intellectuals of Empire (Yusuf Serunkuma)

Posted: 06 Jul 2021, 09:13
by Zmeselo
Tell-tale signs of objectivity, neutrality & veracity of various "expert" analysis of the situation in Tigray Region of Ethiopia is the extent to which these authors recognize TPLF's high crimes of war & sedition or fudge & downplay it in welter of dire consequences of its making.

The ICG's recycled news analysis issued in the format of an "expert interview" this week - the timing itself is suspect - falls into the second category of willful disinformation. On Eritrea, in particular, ICG's perspectives remain off-track and as malicious as ever.

TPLF trolls & apologists seem to share these common traits/ailment: i) erratic mood swings that oscillate from ardent "pacifism" to rabid warmongering/advocacy of escalated regional conflagration; ii) a vacuous moral compass, that downplays TPLF high crimes.

Yemane G. Meskel: @hawelti


__________________________




The International Crisis Group: Do Its Funders Control The World On Behalf Of American-and-allied Billionaires?

Thursday, 22 April 2021

Article: Eric Zuesse

https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2104/ ... naires.htm

Conservatives in America demonize George Soros for funding the Democratic Party and U.S.-imperialistic (or “neo-conservative”) international organizations, but he’s actually just a part of a network of around a thousand or so global aristocrats or billionaires who do this. Furthermore, within the individual U.S.-and-allied nations, the billionaires who fund all of the domestic political parties do the same thing in their own way; and, in the United States, a different billionaire, the conservative Charles Koch, is a mega-donor to Republican politicians and is demonized by Democratic Party voters much like Soros is demonized by America’s Republican Party voters. In fact, both Soros and Koch share similar views, deep down; and, so, a naive liberal commentator, Stephen Kinzer, headlined in the Boston Globe on 30 June 2019,
In an astonishing turn, George Soros and Charles Koch team up to end US ‘forever war’ policy,
http://archive.is/7sYPh and he announced the formation by those two billionaires of the “Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft,” an allegedly (but only fake) anti-neoconservative and pro-peace think tank.

But that’s only theater, just more propaganda for the billionaires who are actually in control of U.S.-and-allied nations and ultimately responsible for America’s invasions and coups and attempted coups to conquer Iraq, Syria, Libya, Ukraine, Russia, China, etc.

Neil Clark said, https://archive.is/an2jD in the 2 June 2003 New Statesman, that
The Soros strategy for extending Pax Americana [actually: “Permanent War for Perpetual ‘Peace’”] differs from the Bush model, particularly in its subtlety. But it is just as ambitious and just as deadly. Left-liberals, admiring his support for some of their favourite issues such as [deleted] rights and the legalisation of soft drugs, let him off lightly.
(They share in his guilt, but do so out of their ignorance that the system itself is as evil as it actually is. Maybe they simply do not care about this bigger picture. But if that’s so, they are merely wallowing, not swimming, and therefore won’t make any real progress; their concern for progress is then only a pretense.)

An example will be provided here to show how these operations function.

On 18 October 2013, Sibel Edmonds headlined at her “Newsbud” site,
BFP Exposé: CIA-Obama-George Soros Coordinated Misinformation Campaign Targets Russia
https://www.newsbud.com/2013/10/18/bfp- ... ts-russia/ and described and documented the association between George Soros and liberal U.S. media such as “Democracy Now!” and the Washington Post. She also mentioned there the International Crisis Group, which those and other U.S.-and-allied ‘news’-media frequently interview in order to provide ‘expertise’ to deceive their audiences to favor “regime-change” in nations that the billionaires want to add to their existing empire.

Also, an anonymous commentator, at OilEmpire.com, headlines “Who is George Soros? The velvet glove around the fist of empire”, http://www.oilempire.us/soros.html#top and he provides more than a decade of documentation that Soros has significantly funded numerous pro-U.S.-imperialistic organizations. One of the articles he shows there alleges that the International Crisis Group is among those organizations, but documentation for this claim is unfortunately not provided. Documentation for it will be provided here.

The International Crisis Group is as mainstream as they come in U.S.-and-allied propaganda-operations; and, so, here is the main funding for it in two recent years, as reported in 2019 & 2020:



2019

https://d2071andvip0wj.cloudfront.net/I ... 9%20FS.pdf

International Crisis Group https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internati ... isis_Group

Income & Expenditure for the year 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019https://d2071andvip0wj.cloudfront.net/I ... 9%20FS.pdf

Schedule of Contributions and Grants Received, for the Year Ended June 30, 2019

INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP SCHEDULE OF CONTRIBUTIONS, GRANTS AND PROGRAMS SERVICES REVENUE RECEIVED FOR THE YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2019

Foundations [final figure given is USD]

John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Adjustment: Workshop "Europe's Plan B in Saving the Iran Nuclear Deal" 04/18 USD (2,744) $ (2,744)

Foundation to Promote Open Society Core Funding 01/18 - 12/18 USD 2,900,000 2,900,000

The Elders Report on the Nile Dispute and the Evolving Geopolitics of the Horn of Africa 08/18 - 12/18 GBP 20,000 26,252

Carnegie Corporation of New York Peacebuilding and Conflict Prevention in Africa and Transnational Conflict in the Middle East and North Africa 10/18 - 09/20 USD 1,200,000 1,200,000

Rockefeller Brothers Fund Preventing a U.S.-Iran Confrontation: The Iran Trigger List. 10/18 - 10/19 USD 75,000 75,000

Konrad Adenauer Foundation Iraq's Paramilitary Groups: The Challenge of Rebuilding a Functioning State 10/18 USD 5,781 5,781

Foundation to Promote Open Society Preventing a U.S.-Iran Confrontation: The Iran Trigger List. 10/18 - 09/19 USD 25,000 25,000

Foundation to Promote Open Society New Executives Fund 11/18-11/20 USD (250,000) 250,000

Charles Koch Foundation United States Program: Support for Advocacy and Outreach Activities 01/19 - 12/19 USD 92,000 92,000

Ploughshares Fund Iran Trigger List 12/18 - 12/19 USD 75,000 75,000

Foundation to Promote Open Society Core Funding 01/19 - 12/19 USD 2,760,450 2,760,450

UniKorea Foundation North East Asia 08/18 - 05/19 KRW 80,000,000 71,860

Robert Bosch Foundation Core Funding 05/19 - 11/19 EUR 200,000 223,055

Henry Luce Foundation Russian Muslims Abroad: Mapping and Understanding an Evolving Diaspora 07/19 - 04/21 USD 150,000 150,000

Total Corporate Foundations' Contributions and Grants 7,850,154

SOROS=$5,660,450 out of $7,850,154 of Foundation-funding

$19,061,653 TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONS
41% Foundation funded
30% Soros funded
6.3% Carnegie funded
5.0% other-foundation-funded
$4,721,164 individual donations = 2.5% of Total


2020 as accessed online on 19 April 2021

http://web.archive.org/web/202104191734 ... support-us: Governments, Foundations, Corporations, & Individuals

https://www.crisisgroup.org/support-us/ ... overnments

Australia (Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade)

Austria (Austrian Development Agency)

Canada (Global Affairs Canada)

Denmark (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

European Union (Instrument contributing to Stability and Peace, Emergency Trust Fund for Africa)

Finland (Ministry for Foreign Affairs)

France (Ministry of Foreign Affairs and French Development Agency)

Iceland (Ministry for Foreign Affairs)

Ireland (Department of Foreign Affairs)

Japan (Japan International Cooperation Agency)

Principality of Liechtenstein (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

Luxembourg (Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs)

The Netherlands (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

New Zealand (Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade)

Norway (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

Qatar (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

Sweden (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

Switzerland (Federal Department of Foreign Affairs)

United Nations Development Programme

United Kingdom (Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office)

World Bank

https://www.crisisgroup.org/support-us/foundations

• Adelphi Research

• Carnegie Corporation of New York

• Ford Foundation

• Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung

• Global Challenges Foundation

• Henry Luce Foundation

• John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

• Open Society Foundations

• Ploughshares Fund

• Robert Bosch Stiftung

• Rockefeller Brothers Fund

• Stiftung Mercator

https://www.crisisgroup.org/support-us/ ... rporations

PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL: BP, Shearman & Sterling LLP, White & Case LLP.

INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL: Anonymous, APCO Worldwide Inc., Chevron, Eni, Equinor, Ninety One, Warburg Pincus and Peder Bratt.

BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE CORPORATE COUNCIL OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP: CO-CHAIRS Lord (Mark) Malloch-Brown Former UN Deputy Secretary-General and Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Frank Giustra President & CEO, Fiore Group; Founder, Radcliffe Foundation. OTHER TRUSTEES Fola Adeola Founder and Chairman, FATE Foundation. Hushang Ansary Chairman, Parman Capital Group LLC; Former Iranian Ambassador to the U.S. and Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs. Gérard Araud Former Ambassador of France to the U.S. Carl Bildt Former Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Sweden Emma Bonino Former Foreign Minister of Italy and European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid. Cheryl Carolus Former South African High Commissioner to the UK and Secretary General of the African National Congress (ANC). Maria Livanos Cattaui Former Secretary General of the International Chamber of Commerce. Ahmed Charai Chairman and CEO of Global Media Holding and publisher of the Moroccan weekly L’Observateur Nathalie Delapalme Executive Director and Board Member at the Mo Ibrahim Foundation. Hailemariam Desalegn-Boshe Former Prime Minister of Ethiopia. Alexander Downer Former Australian Foreign Minister and High Commissioner to the United Kingdom. Sigmar Gabriel Former Minister of Foreign Affairs and Vice Chancellor of Germany. Hu Shuli Editor-in-Chief of Caixin Media; Professor at Sun Yat-sen University Mo Ibrahim Founder and Chair, Mo Ibrahim Foundation; Founder, Celtel International. Wadah Khanfar Co-Founder, Al Sharq Forum; former Director General, Al Jazeera Network. Nasser al-Kidwa Chairman of the Yasser Arafat Foundation; Former UN Deputy Mediator on Syria. Bert Koenders Former Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs and Under-Secretary General of the United Nations. Andrey Kortunov Director General of the Russian International Affairs Council. Ivan Krastev Chairman of the Centre for Liberal Strategies (Sofia); Founding Board Member of European Council on Foreign Relations. Tzipi Livni Former Foreign Minister and Vice Prime Minister of Israel. Helge Lund Former Chief Executive BG Group (UK) and Statoil (Norway). Susana Malcorra Former Foreign Minister of Argentina. William H. McRaven Retired U.S. Navy Admiral who served as 9th Commander of the U.S. Special Operations Command. Shivshankar Menon Former Foreign Secretary of India; former National Security Adviser. Naz Modirzadeh Director of the Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict. Federica Mogherini Former High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. Saad Mohseni Chairman and CEO of MOBY Group. Marty Natalegawa Former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Indonesia, Permanent Representative to the UN, and Ambassador to the UK. Ayo Obe Chair of the Board of the Gorée Institute (Senegal); Legal Practitioner (Nigeria). Meghan O’Sullivan Former U.S. Deputy National Security Adviser on Iraq and Afghanistan. Thomas R. Pickering Former U.S. Under-Secretary of State and Ambassador to the UN, Russia, India, Israel, Jordan, El Salvador and Nigeria. Kerry Propper Managing Partner of ATW Partners; Founder and Chairman of Chardan Capital. Ahmed Rashid Author and Foreign Policy Journalist, Pakistan. Ghassan Salamé Former UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative and Head of the UN Support Mission in Libya; Former Minister of Culture of Lebanon; Founding Dean of the Paris School of International Affairs, Sciences Po University. Juan Manuel Santos Calderón Former President of Colombia; Nobel Peace Prize Laureate 2016. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf Former President of Liberia. Alexander Soros Deputy Chair of the Global Board, Open Society Foundations. George Soros Founder, Open Society Foundations and Chair, Soros Fund Management. Jonas Gahr Støre Leader of the Labour Party and Labour Party Parliamentary Group; former Foreign Minister of Norway. Lawrence H. Summers Former Director of the U.S. National Economic Council and Secretary of the U.S. Treasury; President Emeritus of Harvard University. Darian Swig Founder and President, Article 3 Advisors; Co-Founder and Board Chair, Article3.org. Helle Thorning-Schmidt CEO of Save the Children International; former Prime Minister of Denmark. Wang Jisi Member, Foreign Policy Advisory Committee of the Chinese Foreign Ministry; President, Institute of International and Strategic Studies, Peking University.

https://www.crisisgroup.org/support-us/ ... ndividuals

Honour Roll of Annual Donors

(5) Anonymous

Mark Bergman

Stanley Bergman & Edward Bergman

Peder Bratt

David Brown & Erika Franke

Lara Dauphinee

Herman De Bode

Ryan Dunfield

The Edelman Family Foundation

Tanaz Eshaghian

Seth & Jane Ginns

Ronald Glickman

Geoffrey R. Hoguet & Ana Luisa Ponti

Geoffrey Hsu

David Jannetti

Faisel Khan

Cleopatra Kitti

Samantha Lasry

Jean Manas & Rebecca Haile

Dror Moreh

Lise Strickler and Mark Gallogly Charitable Fund

The Nommontu Foundation

Brian Paes-Braga

Kerry Propper

Duco Sickinghe

Nina K. Solarz

Alexander Soros

Raffi Vartanian



Basically, the big billionaires, who control the largest international corporations (some financial, some not), bring together small billionaires and all of the lobbyists and ‘non-profits’ that they likewise control, and none of them operate solo. Together — such as in the International Crisis Group, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, IMF, World Bank, Transparency International, and other authoritative institutions for deceit — they do their dirty work and dupe the public (both liberal and conservative) to hate
whomever it is that the U.S.-and-allied billionaires want to overthrow and replace (such as Saddam, Assad, Gaddafi, Yanukovych, Maduro, Putin, and Xi).

Anyone who portrays this or that billionaire as being behind it all is correct, as far as it goes — clearly, none of them opposes U.S. imperialism — but misses the basic reality, which is that 100% of billionaires are imperialists, and together they possess the power of their enormous excessive wealth to hire-out their dirty-work, and to advertise it as being, instead, good or even heroic. As long as there will be billionaires, there will be international sanctions, blockades, subversions, coups, military invasions, and military occupations, all promoted by their ‘news’-media and being government-funded by the public, and being financed via the public’s tax-payments, but benefitting only the super-rich, who take tax-writeoffs for their donations to such operations as the International Crisis Group, Human Rights Watch, and other ‘non-profit’ PR firms for imperialism. The billionaire-funded ‘charities’ are pro-invasion, not against it. (Invade to enforce ‘human rights’, and ‘oppose corruption’, etc. Or even ‘for national defense’ against countries that aren’t attacking any other but only defending their own territory against those billionaires’ countries’ aggressions.)

This is not ideological: amongst billionaires, it is unanimous. After all, how many billionaires donated to the U.S. Presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders, or condemned what America is doing to Iraq, and to Iran, and to Venezuela, and to Syria, and to Libya, and to Russia, and to China, etc.? None did. Their evil is unanimous: they all support American aggression. This is not ideological, except that they all support imperialism, and they all oppose progressivism. In that sense, it’s a class-issue, not an ideological one. It’s the aristocracy against any democracy. And demonizing any particular person misses the point, which is that the evil is systemic, not merely individual.

On April 21st, Alexander Mercouris (whom I consider to be the most knowledgeable and reliable commentator on U.S.-Russia relations) headlined his now daily commentary, “Russia Tells US Ambassador To Leave Russia”, https://theduran.com/russia-tells-us-am ... then-goes/ and he pointed out that even during the days of the Soviet Union, when there actually was a communist Russia and only one Party that was allowed in the country, there was no time when U.S.-Russian relations were this bad. He said (at 11:30- in the video), that what we now have is
a situation which is completely unprecedented in the history of U.S.-Russian relations. Ever since the United States restored relations with the Soviet Union after Franklin Delano Roosevelt became President in the early 1930s, there has never been a period of time, to my knowledge, when the Soviet Union or Russia did not have an ambassador in Washington, and the United States did not have an ambassador in Moscow. That is the situation we have now.
Isn’t it time, finally, for U.S. President Joe Biden to call off his billionaire regime’s attack-dogs and cancel the sanctions, which, in any case, would far more rightly be by Russia against America, than by America against Russia? Russia is now responding to America’s aggressions in the hope that things won’t get to the point when Russia will be forced by circumstances to launch a (first-strike) blitz nuclear attack against the U.S. regime and its allies, as the only way to avoid America likely launching such a first-strike blitz-attack against Russia. So: Russia is responding to the U.S. regime’s expelling Russia’s Ambassador to the United States, and America’s Ambassador in Moscow is now heading back to Washington.

It seems that either Biden will end billionaire-rule over America or there will be nuclear war: WW III.

Also on April 21st, RT headlined
Putin says Russia developing high-tech nuclear & laser weapons, warning ‘provocateurs’ will regret crossing country’s red lines,
https://www.rt.com/russia/521700-putin- ... r-weapons/ and reported that,
Speaking as part of his annual address to the Federal Assembly in Moscow on Wednesday, Putin said that his government ‘wants to have positive relationships with everyone on the international stage, including those with whom relations have broken down recently. We really don’t want to burn bridges.’ At the same time, however, he cautioned that ‘those who mistake this stance for weakness need to know that Russia’s response [to any aggression] will be asymmetrical, swift and harsh.’ Those planning provocations, he said, ‘will regret their deeds in a way they have not regretted anything else for a long time.’
Unlike Biden and other of America’s Post-WW-II Presidents, Putin has established a record which shows that he rarely issues any threats, but that he understates when he does issue a threat. He tenaciously pursues the policies that he announces, and he almost always achieves an objective that he announces. That’s the opposite of the record of America’s recent Presidents. His message now to the American regime is clear; it is: Back off — you will get no closer to ‘nuclear primacyhttps://archive.is/5wJUu#selection-1289.0-1420.0 than you have thus far done; one step farther would be a step too far, for you or anyone.

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Investigative historian Eric Zuesse is the author, most recently, of They’re Not Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, http://www.amazon.com/Theyre-Not-Even-C ... 537&sr=8-9 and of CHRIST’S VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B007Q1H4EG

Re: The New Intellectuals of Empire (Yusuf Serunkuma)

Posted: 06 Jul 2021, 09:52
by Zmeselo
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