Thursday, June 5, 2014

US Oligarchy, no democracy


Study: US is an oligarchy, not a democracy

An old man in a suit looks up from his newspaper and brandy.This man does not like to be disturbed while he's running the US
A review of the best commentary on and around the world...
Today's must-read
The US is dominated by a rich and powerful elite.
So concludes a recent study by Princeton University Prof Martin Gilens and Northwestern University Prof Benjamin I Page.
This is not news, you say.
Perhaps, but the two professors have conducted exhaustive research to try to present data-driven support for this conclusion. Here's how they explain it:
Multivariate analysis indicates that economic elites and organised groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on US government policy, while average citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no independent influence.
In English: the wealthy few move policy, while the average American has little power.
The two professors came to this conclusion after reviewing answers to 1,779 survey questions asked between 1981 and 2002 on public policy issues. They broke the responses down by income level, and then determined how often certain income levels and organised interest groups saw their policy preferences enacted.
"A proposed policy change with low support among economically elite Americans (one-out-of-five in favour) is adopted only about 18% of the time," they write, "while a proposed change with high support (four-out-of-five in favour) is adopted about 45% of the time."
On the other hand:
When a majority of citizens disagrees with economic elites and/or with organised interests, they generally lose. Moreover, because of the strong status quo bias built into the US political system, even when fairly large majorities of Americans favour policy change, they generally do not get it.
They conclude:
Americans do enjoy many features central to democratic governance, such as regular elections, freedom of speech and association and a widespread (if still contested) franchise. But we believe that if policymaking is dominated by powerful business organisations and a small number of affluent Americans, then America's claims to being a democratic society are seriously threatened.
Eric Zuess, writing in Counterpunch, isn't surprised by the survey's results.
"American democracy is a sham, no matter how much it's pumped by the oligarchs who run the country (and who control the nation's "news" media)," he writes. "The US, in other words, is basically similar to Russia or most other dubious 'electoral' 'democratic' countries. We weren't formerly, but we clearly are now."
This is the "Duh Report", says Death and Taxes magazine's Robyn Pennacchia. Maybe, she writes, Americans should just accept their fate.
"Perhaps we ought to suck it up, admit we have a classist society and do like England where we have a House of Lords and a House of Commoners," she writes, "instead of pretending as though we all have some kind of equal opportunity here."
South Korea
Ferry tragedy was a manmade disaster - The death toll from the sinking of the Sewol off the south-eastern tip of South Korea could have been greatly reduced if the passengers had been properly instructed in safety procedures and the crew hadn't been among the first to abandon the ship, write the editors of South Korea's Joongang Daily.
The South Korean government also shares blame, they write. "It failed to grasp the seriousness of the accident from the start and didn't know how many were rescued or missing."
The government, they continue, should conduct a thorough investigation and prepare a report on how to upgrade the nation's "safety systems and procedures".
Argentina
Cristina Kirchner's sham populism - The government of Cristina Kirchner touts a populism that "redistributes wealth to benefit the poor", writes Luis Alberto Romero in Agentina's Clarin (translated by WorldCrunch).
In reality, he says, "the outcome has been greater wealth concentrations and more social polarisation, helped by subsidy policies".
The Kirchner regime, he argues, has been "built on two foundations: concentration of power and accumulation of wealth".
Algeria
Presidential vote endorses status quo - It seems clear that President Abdelaziz Bouteflika will win a fourth term in this week's election despite looking "more dead than alive", writes University of Houston Prof Robert Zaretsky in the Los Angeles Times.
Mr Bouteflika "is entrenched, propped up by generals and an uneasy status quo", he says.
"The question is," he writes, "how long will the government manage to impose scripted elections on a population ready for the risks and rewards of an unscripted future?"
Ukraine
Nato football v Russian chess - The Ukrainian crisis has taken Nato planners by surprise, writes Prof David Murphy of National University of Ireland, Maynooth, in the Irish Times. This, he says, is because of "fundamental cultural, strategic and political differences" between Russia and the West.
"Nato operates at a huge disadvantage as it needs consensus and co-operation within its member states in order to act," he writes. "President Vladimir Putin and his political and military staffs do not face such limitations and have the freedom to act quickly."
Russia has formulated a plan and is executing it, he concludes. It is up to the members of Nato to work together to stop it.
BBC Monitoring's quotes of the day
Ukrainian media respond to high-level meetings between officials from the US, EU, Ukraine and Russia in Geneva aimed resolving the crisis in Ukraine.
"There is an illusory hope for the conference in Geneva. Ukraine will be presented there as a pie which will be divided. Everything ... shows the signs of a grand plot, where big geopolitical players resolved their issues at Ukraine's expense. It will be like that this time around too." - Editorial inGlavkom.
"Today's meeting will show if the West can counter [Vladimir] Putin's plans to impose his 'world order'." - Editorial in Den.
"International talks will hardly improve the situation in Ukraine until people inside the country start talking. So the only thing the Geneva meeting could influence is to facilitate the beginning of talks inside the country between representatives of the east and the central authorities. If the meeting provides this impetus it will be a positive result." - Volodymyr Fesenko in Komsomolskaya Pravda v Ukraine.
Facebook
Have you found an interesting opinion piece about global issues that we missed? Share it with us via email at echochambers (at) bbc.co.uk.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Caribbean Book Festival at Medgar Evers College, Brooklyn NY

   
36 Writers.   18 Countries.  WORD!
Sunday, June 8, 2014
Medgar Evers College
1650 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY
Roundtables
2:00
Space on the Shelf Creativity and commerce as it relates to Caribbean writers and the Publishing Industry
Avril Ashton - Secret Cravings Publishing
Ashton Franklin - Franklin & Franklin Publishing
Johanna Ingalls - Akashic Books
Moderator: Ron Kavanaugh, publisher, Mosaic Literary Magazine

3:00
Verse in Print - Where the poem will live, in traditional publishing or in digital media.
Jason Price (Belize), leaves of love
Monique Simon (Antigua & Barbuda), T.H.E. Carib Kindling: Fire Lights!
Mervyn Taylor (Trinidad & Tobago), The Waving Gallery
Moderator: Anthony 'Wendell' DeRiggs, author, Reflections and Ole Talk
 
4:00
Speaking in Tongues - Translation in formal and informal language 
Adam Mansbach (USA), Go de Rass to Sleep
Kellie Magnus (Jamaica), Go de Rass to Sleep
Anthony Polanco (Panama)
Yolaine St. Fort (Haiti), For the Crown of Their Heads
Moderator: Dhanpaul Narine, president, Shri Trimurti Bhavan
 
Young Readers
2:00
(Under 8yrs.): Culture Making - Literature That Defines Us 
Kellie Magnus (Jamaica), Little Lion Goes for Gold
Carol Ottley-Mitchell (St. Kitts - Nevis), Chee Chee in Paradise
Ibi Zoboi (Haiti), A is for Ayiti
Moderator: Karlene Largie, Union of Jamaica Alumni Associations

3:00  
Seeing Self - Illustrators as storytellers
Ricardo Cortes (Mexico)
Laura James (Jamaica), Anna Carries Water
Joseph Zoboi (Trinidad & Tobago)
Moderator: Ingrid Charles, Aruban Antillean Association

4:00
Coming of Age Journeys into the Unknown
Chen Chin (Jamaica), The Adventures of Flat Head
CJ Farley (Jamaica), Game World
Joanne Skerrett (Dominica), Abraham's Treasure
Clyde Viechweg (Grenada), Caribbean Twilight: Tales of the Supernatural  
Moderator: Beverly Benjamin-George, Friends of the Antigua Public LIbrary 
  
5:00  
New Voices - Open Mic
A stage, a microphone, a poem; a world of possibilities
Moderator: Rose October Edun, Guyana Cultural Association

Adult Readers
3:00
Lest We Forget - When that's all you have memory, memorial and memoir
Lloyd Crooks (Trinidad & Tobago), Ice and Eyes in the Sun
Hubert Guscott (Jamaica), Mystical Speed
D C Campbell (Grenada), Blood of Belvidere
Carole Boyce Davies, author, Caribbean Spaces: Escapes from Twilight Zone - Moderator

4:00
(Re)defining Home - Caribbean-American writers on place and voice
Jennifer Davis Carey (US/Barbados), Near The Hope
Nyasha Laing (US/Belize), The Year of Buriels
Idrissa Simmonds (Canada/Haiti/Jamaica), Heirloom 

5:00  
Words and Colours - The happy pairing of visual artists who write.
Anna Ruth Henriques (Jamaica), The Book of Mechtilde
Deborah Jack (St. Marteen/St. Martin)
Iyaba Mandingo (Antigua & Barbuda), Sins of My Fathers
Michèle Voltaire Marcellin (Haiti), Lost and Found
 
6:00 
Wordsmiths - New Voices.  New Tales.
Annette Vendryes Leach (Panama), Song of the Shaman
Petra Lewis (Trinidad & Tobago), The Sons and Daughters of Ham
Katia Ulysse (Haiti), Drifting
  
7:00
Get Up! Stand Up! - Texts of Empowerment II
Adissa AJA Andwele (Barbados), Just Words
Arielle John (Trinidad & Tobago), Sea, Land and Mountains
Michèle Voltaire Marcellin (Haiti), Lost and Found
Hermina Marcellin (St. Lucia)
David Mills (US/Jamaica), Sudden Country
Ras Osagyefo (Jamaica), Psalms of Osagyefo
Maria Rodriguez (Puerto Rico), Brooklyn's Daughter
Ras Yah Yah (St. Lucia)
EMAIL:  info@caribbeantheatre.org
INFO:  718-783-8345 / 718-270-6917 / 718-270-6218
DONATION$10 - adults.  $5.00 - children
    
SUBWAY: Franklin Avenue Station - 2, 3, 4; S
BUS:  B49 - Bedford Ave/Rogers Ave and Crown St; B44 - Nostrand Ave & Carroll St; B43 - Empire Blvd & Bedford Ave
Presenting Partners
Brooklyn Arts CouncilCaribbean Research Center - Medgar Evers College Medgar Evers College Poets & Passion - A Caribbean Literary LimePoets & Writers, Inc

Programming Partners
Akashic Books
Anansesem, Caribbean children's literature ezine
Franklin Franklin Publishers
Friends of the Antigua Public Library
Guyana Cultural Association
Mosaic Literary Magazine
St. Martin/Sint Maarten Friendship Association
Union of Jamaica Alumni Associations
 
Patrons
Caribbean Community Corps of Consuls General

Adam Turner Collage of Marvin X and the Black Arts Movement Poets Choir and Arkestra at Malcolm X Jazz/Arts Festival

Adam Turner photography and  collage, special to the Oakland Post News Group

The Black Arts Movement honors Amiri Baraka
By Aqueila M. Lewis

The Black Arts Movement (BAM) Poets Choir and Arkestra honored the life and legacy of Amiri Baraka with poetry, music, song and dance on Saturday, May 17, 2014 during the 14th Annual  Malcolm X Jazz Festival at San Antonio Park. It closed out the festival with a BAM!

The Black Arts Movement and Arkestra led by Marvin X, BAM founding member and close  friend of Baraka, included participants choreographer Linda Johnson who opened the show with a beautiful audience participatory dance with her former students; harpist and vocalist Destiny  Muhammad; violinist Tarika Lewis and student musicians; vocalist Mechelle LaChaux,  actress/poet Ayodele Nzinga; poets Genny Lim, ToReadah Mikell, Paradise Jah Love, Kalamu  Chache', Aries Jordan, actor Geoffery Grier, percussionist Tacuma King, drummer Val Serrant,  Zena Allen on the Kora, vocalist/guitarist Rasheedah Sabreen Shakir and Special Guests  saxophonist David Murray and poet Umar Bin Hasan~member of The Last Poets.

The late Amiri Baraka was the chief founder of the National Black Arts Movement (Black Arts/Black  Aesthetics) the Artistic branch of the Black Power movement of the 60’s and 70’s. He was a noted  dramatist, novelist, and poet and was one of the most respected and widely published African- American writers who spent most of his life fighting and advocating for African-Americans and  the oppressed.  

BAM has been seen as one of the most important movement  in American literature. It  inspired Black people and other ethic groups to establish their own publishing houses, magazines, journals and art  institutions. It led to the creation of African-American Studies programs within universities. Marvin X and The Black Arts Movement Poet Choir and Arkestra are creating a nationwide 27- City Tour to continue his legacy and that of all the cultural workers nationwide who made BAM a reality.

If you would like to invite Marvin X and the Black Arts Movement Poets Choir and Arkestra to your city, please contact Marvin X at 510-200-4164 jmarvinx@yahoo.com www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com