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The Coming War Against the Supreme Court
and Corporate Power

The U.S. Supreme Court’s Jan. 21 decision unleashed unlimited corporate funds for open purchase of political control. In a special report Mason Gaffney traces the ebbs and swells of popular control of corporations since America’s founding. Did Jan. 21 mark a new high in corporate takeover? Gaffney outlines the agenda for popular counterattack in the coming decades.  From the battle lines of struggles against corporate power across the world JoAnn Wypijewski reports on capital’s choke points along the “cargo chain” and how  workers in ports,  rail yards, trucks and warehouses can challenge a system where 225 people are worth more than the combined wealth of 2.5 billion.  Get your new edition today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents.

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Today's Stories

March 12-14, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Relax, the Empire's in Safe Hands

Franklin C. Spinney
Obama's Toxic "Green" Policy

Joshua Frank /
Jeffrey St. Clair
Obama and Nuclear Power: Resurrecting a Failed Industry

Ismael Hossein-zadeh
Back to Market Fundamentalism

David Rosen /
Bruce Kushnick Network Failure: the Crisis in America's Telecommunications Network

T. P. Wilkinson
Drug War Without End

Ashley Smith
A Tale of Two Earthquakes

John Ross
Phantom of Mexican Narco-Guerrillas Haunts U.S. Security Chiefs

Jorge Mariscal
Trouble in Paradise: Welcome to Post-Racial California

Conn Hallinan
The Dubai Debacle

Joe Bageant
Learning About Capitalism at Gunther's Garage

Saul Landau
The Confessions of Antonio Veciana

Ramzy Baroud
The Al-Mabhouh Murder: a Different Concept of Justice

Bill Moyers /
Michael Winship

The Country is Getting Mugged

Ray McGovern
Taboo Thwarts Candor on Israel / Iran

Rannie Amiri
Lebanon, Libya and a Lingering Question

Nadia Hijab
The Trouble with Gender

Missy Beattie
Crunch Time

P. Sainath
Yet Another "Pro-Farmer" Budget

Cyrus Bina
U. S. Foreign Policy and Post-Election Iran

Dave Lindorff
The Bogus $100 Billion Medicare / Medicaid Fraud Claim

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Decoding the Language of Social Control

Alan Farago
The Police Got There First

Norman Solomon
War in a Box

Sam Bahour
Proximity Talks?

Jed Brandt
Greetings From Nepal

Mike Prysner
What's Behind the New Mission in Afghanistan?

Greg King
The Value of Water: Implications of the Klamath Dam Deal

Stephen Soldz
Iceland Sets New Path Toward Press Freedom

Anthony Papa
How Governor Paterson Could Build a Legacy

Charles R. Larson Civil Service at a Price: Mahfouz's "Cairo Modern"

Michael Dickinson
Sticks and Stones

Kim Nicolini
Labyrinth of Madness: Scorcese's "Shutter Island"

David Yearsley
Spring Break Cocktails

Poets' Basement
Pointer, Orloski and Holt

Website of the Weekend
Israel: a Nuclear Chronology

March 11, 2010

Jonathan Cook
Rachel Corrie's Family Finally Puts Israel in the Dock

Yossi Sarid
The Obama Administration Asked for the East Jerusalem Fiasco

Patrick Cockburn
An Iraq Without Terror?

Jayne Lyn Stahl
Your Retirement Funds to Bail Out Failed Banks?

Winslow T. Wheeler
This Pentagon Needs Watching

Sasha Kramer
The Sanitation Crisis in Port-au-Prince

Billy Wharton
Can ESPN Tolerate Free Speech?

Dru Oja Jay
Greenpeace's Corporate Overreach

Ron Jacobs
This Battle is About More Than Schools

Russell Mokhiber
The New Wonder Bread: Health Care and the Democrats

David Macaray
When Bill Maher Finally Blew It

Website of the Day
The Anti-War Vote

March 10, 2010

Marie Bénilde
The End of Newspapers

Carl Conetta
The Pentagon's Runaway Budget

Sasan Fayazmanesh
An Academic Blunder

Julia Stein
I Was a Charter School Teacher

Joshua Frank
The Dirty Truth Behind Clean Coal

Don Monkerud
Why Californians Can't Afford Health Insurance

Heather Gray /
K. Rashid Nuri
How Organic Agriculture Can Feed the World

Laura Flanders
Why Labor's Mad at Obama

Dave Lindorff
Kill Bill: Death to Obamacare

Russell Mokhiber
Will Jerry Brown Sign Single Payer?

Website of the Day
The Great Florida Fop-Off

March 9, 2010

Keane Bhatt
Chomsky on Haiti

Steven Higgs
The Poisoning of a Generation: Do Vaccines Cause Autism?

William Blum
Congress of Corruption

Dean Baker
Stop Calling It a Financial Crisis

Roger Burbach
The Social Earthquake in Chile

Marshall Auerback /
Rob Parentau

Let a Dozen Latvias Bloom?

Ralph Nader
In the Shadow of Power

Conn Hallinan
The Crackdown on Israeli Dissidents

Nadia Hijab
A Tale of Two Richards

Dan Bacher
Westlands Water Goes Rogue

Website of the Day
Romney's Health Plan Covered Abortions

March 8, 2010

Gareth Porter
The Siege of the Fictional City of Marja

Chris Floyd
Unnatural Acts: Breaking the Fever of Militarism

Carl Ginsburg
Save is the New Spend

Jonathan Cook
Is Europe Planning Seal of Approval for Israeli Settlers?

Dean Baker
The Myths of Financial Innovation

Bill Quigley
When Silence is Betrayal

Greg Moses
Murder-Suicide of English Language in Texas

Shamus Cooke
The Fight to Save Public Education

Tolu Olorunda
Ebony's Shame: Taking Time Out to Kick Mumia Abu Jamal

Kieko Matteson
Habeas Porpoise

Mike Bader
Last Chance for the Bull Trout

Website of the Day
"The Special Forces of Spiritual Warfare"

March 5 - 7, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
The Bogus Hispanic Crime Wave

James Ridgeway /
Jean Casella

The Terrible Case of Jamie Scott

Saul Landau / Nelson P. Valdes The Untouchable Budget: Defense Department, Inc.

Ishmael Reed
The NAACP House of Shame

Dave Lindorff
Who Cares About Child Rape and Sodomy by Afghan Security Forces?

Mike Whitney
The Stealth Bailouts

Russell Mokhiber
The Top Ten Ways to Crack Down on Corporate Financial Crime

John Ross
Death Waltz Across Texas

Mark Schuller
Fault Lines: Haiti's Earthquake and Reconstruction Through the Eyes of Many

Mark Weisbrot
Hillary in Latin America

Rannie Amiri
Mordechai Vanunu's Nobel Stand

Ramzy Baroud
Flexible Objectives in Afghan War

David Rosen
The New Morality Police

David Ker Thomson
What's Your Excuse for Driving in the City?

Wajahat Ali
The Future of Malaysia: an Interview with Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim

Missy Beattie
Wake Up

George Wuerthner
Playing Politics With the Fate of the Sage Grouse

Benjamin Dangl
Compromise and Celebration in Uruguay

Martha Rosenberg
Agribusiness Gets Handed Its Lunch

Vladimir Radyuhin
Orange Revolution Tossed in Trashcan

Eric Walberg
Fanning the Flames of Another War in the Caucasus?

Robert Bryce
The Irony of Iowa's Ethanol Exemption

Alison Weir
A Wrench in the Israeli Gears

David Macaray
Lessons From India

Laura Flanders
Challenging "High Road" Contracting

Bouthaina Shaaban
The Navi and the Palestinians: Avatar's Parable of Our Times

Charles R. Larson
Second Thoughts on Those Virgins

David Yearsley
Sensual Secrets of the Vatican

Poets' Basement
Landau, Anderson and Costley

Website of the Weekend
Mindless Missiles

March 4, 2010

Paul Craig Roberts
Is the Recovery Real?

Dave Lindorff
Executing Handcuffed Afghan Kids?

Conn Hallinan
Obama's Landmine Betrayal

Steven Higgs
"A Massive, Toxicological Experiment with Our Children"

Frank Green
Drones Club Meets in San Diego

Ron Jacobs
Of Course Narcs Are Crooked ...

Christopher Brauchli
Trial by Confusion

Don Monkerud
Who Runs America?

Roberto Rodriguez The Politics of the Census: Masking Identities or Counting the Indigenous?

Raymond J. Lawrence
The Brave New World of Sexual Addiction

Website of the Day
Mining Nicaragua

 

March 3, 2010

Norman Finkelstein
Truth and Consequences in Gaza

Bill Quigley
Mercenaries Circling Haiti

Franklin C. Spinney
Eisenhower's Nightmare Arrives

Dean Baker
The Power of Stupidity: Economic Policy and Unemployment

Mike Whitney
We Need Bigger Deficits

Raed Jarrar /
Erik Leaver

Sliding Backwards on Iraq

Adam Federman
To Drill or Not to Drill

Joshua Frank
The EPA's Coal Ash Whitewash

Will Parrish / Darwin Bond-Graham
"WE Make the Crisis"

Matt Siegfried
The Ganja Games

Website of the Day
Sea Lion Defense Brigade

March 2, 2010

Patrick Cockburn
Uproar Before Iraqi Elections

Tricia Shapiro
Mountain Injustice

Gareth Porter
Defying the U. S.

Paul Craig Roberts
A Religion Divided Against Itself

Ellen Brown
IMF-Style Austerity Comes to America

David Macaray
Labor and the Democrats: What Does $400 Million Buy You These Days?

Stewart J. Lawrence
Is Obama Already a Lame Duck?

Shamus Cooke
How Obamacare Kills Real Health Care Reform

Udi Aloni /
Ofer Neiman
What Israel Fears

Binoy Kampmark
Australia's History Wars

Stephen Soldz
The Battle Over Informed Consent

Website of the Day
What to Do About Tactical Nuclear Weapons

March 1, 2010

Ralph Nader
Whatever Happened to "We the People"?

Will Parrish /
Darwin Bond-Graham

Who Runs the University of California?

Mike Whitney
The Case Against Bernanke and Greenspan

Diana Johnstone
The Fall of Greece

Jayne Lyn Stahl
A Refuge for Cowards: the Senate Extends the Patriot Act

Vijay Prashad
It's Love! India and Saudi Arabia Embrace

Paul Buhle Organizing Against Empire: Where Left and Right Meet ... Amicably

Robert Jensen
Getting Rid of Hope and Faith

Marga Tojo Gonzales
Will Capitalism Absorb the World Social Forum?

Website of the Day
The Decline of the Israeli Right?

February 26 - 28, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Feed Pete Peterson to the Whales

Alison Weir
Media Reporting on Israel: All in the Family

Will Parrish /
Darwin Bond-Graham
DiFi and Blum: a Marriage Marinated in Money

Jason Hribal
How Orky and Kasatka Almost Sank Sea World

Saul Landau /
Nelson P. Valdes
The Pentagon: Gargantua's Mouth

Mark Weisbrot
The Debt is Not the Threat

Alan Farago
The Potemkin Village Economy

Suzan Mazur
Peer Review as Censorship: an Interview with Historian David Noble

Martha Rosenberg
Talking with Gail Collins About the Women's Rights Movement

Ray McGovern
A "Good" Terrorist Captured by Iran

Rannie Amiri
Egypt's Nuclear Option

Dave Lindorff
The Accidental Patient

Ramzy Baroud
Challenging History

David Macaray
Union Politics for Grown-Ups

Jared Ritvo
The Life and Death Struggle of the Yanomami

Missy Beattie
The Indefatigable Cindy Sheehan

Brian McKenna
Zinn and the Art of History

Don Santina
Don't Mourn, Go Green

Binoy Kampmark
Deadly Purchases

M.G. Piety
Frozen in Time: Does Figure Skating Have a Future?

Michael Dickinson Art as Defensive Weapon

Charles R. Larson
Learning to Live

Ben Sonnenberg
"24 City:" a Remarkable Chinese Film

David Yearsley
Sex in the Name of Christ

Poets' Basement
Edward Beatty

Website of the Weekend
A Tribute to Howard Zinn

February 25, 2010

Jason Hribal
Orca Resistance at Sea World

Clancy Sigal
No, in Anger: Liberals Have Lost Their Thunder

Tariq Ali
The Assault on Illhem

Jonathan Cook
Ethan Bronner and Conflicts of Interest

Mike Whitney
The War on Toyota: Is It All Politics?

Peter Lee
China's New Iran Strategy

Russell Mokhiber Prosecuting Bush for War Crimes

Deepak Tripathi Charlie Wilson's Legacy

Norman Solomon
War Politics

Phillip Doe
Colorado's Weed War Swindle

Website of the Day
Once There Was a Senator of Conscience ...

February 24, 2010

Ashley Smith
Haiti and the Aid Racket

Mike Whitney
Geithner's Gotta Go

Garerth Porter
The Real Objective of the Marja Offensive

Joe Bageant
Round Midnight: the American Disease

Shamus Cooke
The Plot to Kill Social Security

Al Benchich
GM's Northern Strategy: Go Non-Union

Harvey Wasserman
The Nuclear Lobby's $645 Million Con Job

Jim Goodman
Promises, Promises: the Fairy Tale of GM Crops

Ron Jacobs
The Hollow Man Reaches His Omega Point

Stewart J. Lawrence
Sarah Palin: All Pump, No Caribou

Tom Clifford
Bribes, Corruption and the Pandur APC

Website of the Day
Blackwater and the "South Park" Alias

 

Weekend Edition
March 12-14, 2010

Counterpunch Diary

Relax, the Empire's in Safe Hands

By ALEXANDER COCKBURN

Are they really bumblers? The establishment’s opinion columns quiver with reproofs for maladroit handling of foreign policy by President Obama and his secretary of state, Hillary Clinton. Meanwhile, those who cherished foolish illusions that Obama’s election might presage a shift to the left in foreign policy fret about “worrisome signs” that this is not the case.

It’s true that there have been some embarrassing moments. Vice President Biden, on a supposed mission of peace to Israel, is given the traditional welcome – a pledge by Israel to build more settlements, plus adamant refusal to reverse the accelerating evictions of Palestinians from their homes in East Jerusalem.

Hillary Clinton, touring Latin America, was not greeted with gobs of spit, like vice president Nixon back in 1958, but she did get a couple of robust diplomatic slaps from Brazil’s foreign minister, Celso Armorim, rejecting Mrs. Clinton’s hostile references to Venezuela and call for tougher action toward Iran. Amid detailed news reports of butchered activists in Tegucigalpa, Latin Americans and even some Democratic members of the U.S. Congress listened incredulously to Mrs. Clinton’s brazen hosannas to the supposedly violence-free election of Honduras’ new, U.S.-sanctioned President Lobo in a process to which both the Organization of American States and the European Union refused to lend the sanction of official observers.

Meanwhile, China signals its displeasure at the U.S. with stentorian protests about Obama’s friendliness toward the Dalai Lama. The PRC continues its rumblings about shrinking its vast position in U.S. Treasury bonds. 

The Turks recall their ambassador from Washington in the wake of a vote in a U.S. congressional committee to recognize the massacre of the Armenians in 1916 as “genocide.” Russia signals its grave displeasure at Mrs. Clinton’s rejection, in a speech at the Ecole Militaire in Paris, of President Medvedev’s proposal to negotiate a new security pact for Europe. “We object to any spheres of influence claimed in Europe in which one country seeks to control another's future,” she said. Shortly before this categorical statement, Poland announced that the U.S. would deploy Patriot missiles on its territory, less than 50 miles from the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad on the Baltic Sea.

Is this partial list a reflection of incompetence, or a registration that, with a minor hiccup or two, U.S. foreign policy under Obama is moving purposefully forward in its basic enterprise: to restore U.S. credibility in the world theater as the planet’s premier power after eight years of poor management?
Consider the situation that this Democratic president inherited. In January 2009, the world was reeling amid violent economic contraction. Obituaries for the American Century were a dime a dozen. The U.S. dollar’s future as the world’s reserve currency was written off with shouts of derision. Imperial adventuring, as in the 2003 invasion of Iraq, was routinely denounced as fit only for Kipling buffs. The progressives who voted Obama in were flushed with triumph and expectation.

Not much more than a year later, Obama has smoothed off the rough edges of Bush-era foreign policy, while preserving and, indeed, widening its goals, those in place through the entire postwar era since 1945. 

Latin America? Enough of talk about a new era, led by Chavez of Venezuela, Morales of Bolivia, and other progressive leaders. So far as Uncle Sam is concerned, this is still his backyard. On the campaign trail in 2008, it was Republican John McCain who was reviled as the lobbyist for Colombia’s death squad patron, President Uribe. Today, it’s Obama who presides over an adamantly pro-Uribe policy, supervising a widening of U.S. military basing facilities in Colombia. As an early signal of continuity, Honduras’ impertinent president Zelaya, guilty of populist thoughts, was briskly evicted with U.S approval and behind-the-scenes stage-management.

If ever there was a nation for whose enduring misery the U.S.A. bears irrefutable responsibility (along with France), it is Haiti. As noted by Noam Chomsky on this site last week, the hovels which fell down in the earthquake were those of people rendered destitute by U.S. policies since Jefferson, and most notably by the man to whom Obama is most often compared, another Nobel peace-prize-winning U.S. president, Woodrow Wilson. The houses that did not fall down in such numbers were those of the affluent elites, most recently protected by Bill Clinton who was second only to Wilson in the horrors he sponsored in Haiti. Yet under Obama, the U.S.A. is hailed as a merciful and generous provider for the stricken nation, even though it has been Cuba and Venezuela who have been the stalwarts, with doctors (in the case of Cuba) and total debt forgiveness (in the case of Venezuela). The U.S.A. refused such debt relief.

Israel? Not one substantive twitch has discommoded the benign support of Israel by its patron, even though Obama stepped into power amid Israel’s methodical war crimes – later enumerated by Judge Goldstone for the U.N. – in Gaza. Consistent U.S. policy has been  to advocate a couple of mini-Bantustans for the Palestinians and, under Obama, the U.S. has endured no substantive opposition to this plan from its major allies.

With Iran, there is absolute continuity with the Bush years, sans  the noisy braggadocio of Cheney: assiduous and generally successful diplomatic efforts to secure international agreement for deepening sanctions; disinformation campaigns about Iran’s adherence to international treaties, very much in the Bush style of 2002. In the interests of overall U.S. strategy in the region, Israel is held on a leash.

No need to labor the obvious about Afghanistan: an enlarged U.S. expeditionary force engineered with one laughable pledge – earnestly brandished by the progressives – that the troops will be home in time for the elections of 2012. The U.S. and, indeed, world anti-war movements live only in memory. Earlier this week, Congressional Democrats in the House could barely muster 60 votes against the Afghan war.

Russia? Vice President Biden excited the foreign policy commentariat with talk of a “reset” in posture toward Russia. Outside rhetoric, here’s no such reset – merely continuation of U.S. policy since the post-Soviet collapse. Last October, Biden emphasized that the U.S. “will not tolerate” any “spheres of influence,” nor Russia’s “veto power” on the eastward expansion of NATO. The U.S.A. is involved in retraining the Georgian army.

China may thunder about the Dalai Lama and Taiwan – but, on the larger stage, the Middle Kingdom’s world heft is much exaggerated. The astute China-watcher Peter Lee hits the mark when he wrote recently in Asia Times that “the U.S. is cannily framing and choosing fights that unite the U.S., the EU, and significant resource producers, and isolate China and force it to defend unpopular positions alone. By my reading, China is pretty much a one-trick pony in international affairs. It offers economic partnership and cash. What it doesn’t have is what the U.S. has: military reach … heft in the global financial markets (Beijing’s immense overexposure to U.S. government securities is, I think, becoming less of an advantage and more of a liability), or a large slate of loyal and effective allies in international organization.”

The United States, as Lee points out, is also making “good progress in pursuing the most destabilizing initiative of the next 20 years: encouragement of India’s rise from Afghanistan through to Myanmar as a rival and distraction to China.”

All of this is scarcely a catalogue of bumbledom. Obama is just what the Empire needed. Plagued though it may be by deep structural problems, he has improved its malign potential for harm – the first duty of all U.S. presidents of whatever imagined political stripe.

Oscars in the Age of Obama

If you want a signifier of the changed image of empire, and imperial adventures in foreign lands, think about last Sunday’s six Oscars for The Hurt Locker, including ones for Best Movie and Best Director. The film’s director, Kathryn Bigelow, said at the end of her acceptance speech, “I'd like to dedicate this to the women and men in the military who risk their lives on a daily basis in Iraq and Afghanistan and around the world and may they come home safe.”

Suppose Bigelow’s former husband, James Cameron, had won Best Director for Avatar. There is surely no way Cameron would ever have dedicated his Oscar to any soldiers, American or Canadian, serving as members of the imperial coalition – volunteers all – in Iraq or Afghanistan, unless they had defected to the other side or mutinied and been put in the brig or were facing a firing squad for treason. There is also surely no way that any movie about a serving unit in Iraq would have been in the running for an Oscar back in Bush time.

I hoped Avatar would get a big Oscar rather than the consolations ones for cinematography and special effects. It would have honored a truly uncompromising anti-war, anti-American-Empire movie. I haven’t seen The Hurt Locker and don’t plan to, having endured more than one bomb-disposal films in my movie-going career. Also, the circumstances of the movie’s filming seemed distasteful, with scenes shot in a Palestinian refugee camp in Jordan. “We had these Blackwater guys that were working with us in the Middle East and they taught us like tactical maneuvers and stuff – how to just basically position yourself and move with a gun,” Hurt Locker actor Anthony Mackie told the New York Times’ Melena Ryzik. “We were shooting in Palestinian refugee camps. We were shooting in some pretty hard places. It wasn't like we were without enemies. There were people there looking at us, 'cuz we were three guys in American military suits runnin' around with guns. It was nothing easy about it. It was always a compromising situation.”

Jeremy Scahill writes an item in The Nation about Blackwater’s role, as disclosed by Ryzik and the author of The Hurt Locker’s screenplay, Mark Boal, made haste to contact him to deny that Blackwater had ever been hired in any capacity. Boal, apparently, supervised all such hiring of military and security consultants. Scahill asked him about comments made by the film's director, Kathryn Bigelow, in other interviews, mentioning the presence of Blackwater personnel on set, including as technical advisers. “It's possible,” Boal conceded,  “that at some point somebody on set worked for Blackwater, but we never hired Blackwater.”

The New York Times writer Melena Ryzik describes how Mackie showed her how the Blackwater men trained him to hold his weapon. “If you're a trained killer,” Mackie told Ryzik, “you're very precise.” This is Blackwater-precision, as displayed by the panic-stricken contractors, when they mowed down 17 unarmed Iraqi civilians in Nisour Square in Baghdad in 2007. But then, as Obama quoted in his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech from his favorite intellectual and unappetizing apologist for Empire, Reinhold Niebuhr, “To say that force may sometimes be necessary is not a call to cynicism – it is a recognition of history; the imperfections of man and the limits of reason.”

The Fight Against Corporate Power

In his important special report in our latest newsletter, Mason Gaffney addresses the U.S. Supreme Court’s notorious January 21, 2010, ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Elections Commission, that a corporation may contribute unlimited funds advertising its views for and against political candidates of its choice – in practice, the choice of its CEO or directors. “The United States was born in rebellion against corporations,” Gaffney writes. “The U.S. Supreme Court soon began restoring their power. When it overreached, strong executives and popular movements set it back: under Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, and FDR.  Today it has overreached again; it remains to see if a new movement or leader will arise to set it back again.”

Gaffney assays the best political  strategies for popular counter-attack. As he concludes, “Will ‘ordinary’ taxpayers rebel, as they did in the American Revolution, Emancipation, the Progressive Age of Reform, and the New Deal, or will corporate power wax unchecked until it replaces democracy altogether? Cyclical theory says we will have another anti-corporate reaction, but history also records tipping points in the decline of nations, from which they do not recover for generations, if ever. This one may be a squeaker.”

Back to FDR, I say.  Pack the Supreme Court!

In the same bumper newsletter JoAnn Wypijewski has a truly terrific piece about the “cargo chain” as  described by at a recent conference of radical dockworkers from around the world, meeting in Charleston, S.C.: “The people who move the world can also stop it,’ radical dockworkers like to say, and that captures the essential fragility of a global production and distribution system that depends on the precise coordination of hundreds of thousands of moving parts. If some of those moving parts—workers at a major trucking hub, a major rail switching network or, especially, a strategic string of ports—refuse to do their part, the whole system gets jammed up. Refuse long enough and broadly enough, and the system would be in crisis. “

Read her powerful reporting from the front lines of the world class struggle.

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Alexander Cockburn can be reached at alexandercockburn@asis.com

 

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