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Today's Stories

April 30 / May 1, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Marla Ruzicka, Rachel Corrie and "Credibility"

Gabriel Kolko
Lessons from a Total Defeat: the End of the Vietnam War, 30 Years Later

Jennifer Loewenstein
The Disengaged: Gaza and the Fragmentation of Palestinian Nationhood

Doug Giebel
Saving Jane Fonda

Steven Erlanger
A Response to Kathy Christison, from the NYT Jerusalem Bureau Chief

 

April 29, 2005

W. John Green
Rice in Colombia: Silence on the Death Squads?

Luke Brothers
Greenwashing Nuclear Power: Nicholas Kristof, the John Stossel of the NYT

Norman Solomon
War, Aid and Public Relations

M. Junaid Alam
The Politics of Smears and Self-Absorption

Jackie Corr
The Bush Budget and Constitutionally Protected Tax Havens

Hunter Greer
Feeding Tubes and the SAT: Finally, a Use for Standardized Testing!

Sharon Smith
The New Assault on Women's Rights: Why are the Democrats Silent?

Website of the Day
Tony Blair's Election Rap

 

April 28, 2005

Omar Waraich
Blair's Poodle: the Billy Bragg Interview

Kevin Zeese
Abu Ghraib One Year Later: Have Those Responsible Gotten Off?

Dave Lindorff
Bush's Torture Tort Reform

Greg Moses
Why I'm Not Standing with the Gringo Vigilantes

Toni Solo
Nicaragua on a Dollar a Day...Forever?

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Republican Dole Drums; Democrats in Doldrums

Werther
George Will Revises the Vietnam War

 

April 27, 2005

John Ross
Pope Ratzo and the Hucksters of Death

Joshua Frank
DeLay, Abramoff and Israeli Militias

Ray McGovern
The Bolton Affair: More Than Meets the Eye

Mark Donham
Government Pettiness and Wetland Destruction

Dan Smith
Bush's Iraq Poker: Hold, Fold, or Raise?

 

April 26, 2005

Dave Lindorff
Church Sex Trumps Torture and Murder

Alevtina Rea
Magic of the Yellow Emperor

Greg Moses
The Senator and the Narc Pirates of Highway 281

Joshua Frank
Horowitz's Gang of Ghouls and Cowards on Ruzicka

Diana Johnstone
The French are At It Again

 

April 25, 2005

Uri Avnery
The Persecution of Vanunu

Alison Weir
The Okrent Perversions: How the NYT Minimizes Palestinian Deaths

Lee Sustar
Labor Loses a Hero: the Strong Life of Dave Yettaw

Leonardo Boff
A Liberation Theologist on Ratsinger: a Pope of Fear and Centralized Power?

Gary Leupp
Bush's Bully: the Career of John Bolton

 

 

 

 

April 23 / 24, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Time's Buried Hitler Cover

Gary Leupp
The Anti-Japanese Demonstrations in China

James Petras
Elections for Democracy or Empire?

Harry Browne
Springsteen's "Devils and Dust"

Fred Gardner
The Custody Threat

Ron Jacobs
The Desterrados of Colombia: They are not Collateral Damage

Elizabeth Schulte
Why Backing Democrats is Pulling the Anti-War Mvt. to the Right

Chris Floyd
Oil, Guns and Banks

 

April 22, 2005

Saul Landau
The Kinky Moralists: Missionaries Forever

Kevin Zeese
Dean Backs the Iraq Occupation

Joshua Frank
Earth Day Paradox: Enviros vs. Nature

Mike Whitney
God's Rottweiller: Pope Ratzinger's Pie-in-the-Sky for the Masses

Michael Flynn
Wolfowitz on Top of the World

Lee Sustar
The One-Sided Class War

Website of the Day
Bitter Greens

 

April 21, 2005

Bill Quigley
The Church Picks Its Ashcroft for Pope: a Catholic Worker Response to the Rise of Ratsinger

Dave Lindorff
Bush's X-Files

Jason Leopold
Drilling and Spilling in ANWR: Worse Than the Exxon Valdez?

Kathleen Christison
Sharon's 92 Percent Solution: How the Misperceptions Roll On


April 20, 2005

 

April 20, 2005

John Ross
Lopez Obrador: Mexico's Would-be Mandela (Part Two)

Kevin Zeese
Halliburton: Poster Child of the War Profiteers

Uri Avnery
The 100 Days of Abu Mazen

Website of the Day
The House that Jack Built

 

April 19, 2005

Jean-Guy Allard
An Exclusive CP Interview with Ricardo Alarcon on One of the World's Most Notorious Terrorists: "Is Posada Still Working for the White House?"

Dave Lindorff
What's Good for Canada is Good for GM: Health Care Costs and Job Flight

Neve Gordon
Before the Law: Israel's Military Justice System in the Occupied Territories

Brian Concannon, Jr
Immaculate Evasions in Haiti

Murray Hudson
Chemical Warfare Over Tennessee: Aerial Spraying of Deadly Pesticides

Frank B. Ford
Poem for Marla Ruzicka

Monty Python
Memo to Pope Rat

Michael Dickinson
Cardinal Sins

Paul Craig Roberts
Outsourcing the American Economy: a Greater Threat Than Terrorism

Website of the Day
Strindberg and Helium


April 18, 2005

Linda Schade / Kevin Zeese
The Carter-Baker Commission: Corporate Conflicts of Interest

John Ross
Mexico's Would-Be Mandela Stares into the Darkness

Brian McKenna
Dow Chemical Buys Silence in Michigan

Mike Whitney
The NYT in Fallujah

Patrick Cockburn
Iraqi Peace in Tatters

Dave Zirin
Straight Outta High School: Jermaine O'Neal, Race and Hip Hop

Eli Stephens
The Killing of Nicola Calipari: a Math Lesson

Harry Browne
War and Elections in Britain and Ireland

Website of the Day
A16: Photos of the World Bank Protest

 

April 16 / 17, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Message in a Bottle: How Coca-Cola Gave Back to Plachimada

Mark Dow
The Art of Jailing: Inside America's Immigration Gulag

Omar Waraich
Blair's Accountability Moment: Lesser-Evilism Grips Britain

Robert Buzzanco
How I Learned to Quit Worrying and Love Vietnam and Iraq

Sherry Wolf
Bitches' Liberation? Whatever Happened to the Struggle for Women's Liberation?

Fred Gardner
The Pharmaceuticalization of Marijuana

Ron Jacobs
Free Speech with Permission Only: a Tale of Two Universities

Mark Weisbrot
CAFTA will Further Depress US Wages

John Pardon
The High-Tech "Competitiveness" Smokescreen

Yoshie Furuhashi
Debtors of the World Unite! How Dems Went to Bat for the Credit Industry

Mike Roselle
Cubicle of Doom: the Death of Environmentalism?

Ralph Nader
Scientists or Celebrities?

Ramzy Baroud
Gaza: the Line of Memory and Despair

Jackson Thoreau
Barbara Bush: We Should Have Pulled the Plug on Our Daughter

Michael Dickinson
"Imagine" and the Koran: Listening to Lennon in Istanbul

Richard Neville
Shaking the Walls of TwinWorld™

Poets' Basement
Albert, Engel, Curtis, Ford and Gaffney

Website of the Weekend
Rebel Angel

 

 

April 15, 2005

Brian Cloughley
Diplomacy, Bush Style: Boorish Bolton & Arrogant Rice

Bill Glahn
No Child Left a Dime

Mickey Z.
One Zimbabwe or Another: an Interview with Greg Elich

Stephanie McMillan
Fear and Art: Feds Raid Another Exhibit

Josh Mahan
Victoria's Dirty Secret

David Russitano
Will the Real Minutemen Please Stand Up?

Jorge Mariscal
Rodolfo Gonzales: the Passing of a Legend

Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales
"I am Joaquin"

Tom Reeves
Students Rise Again in Québec

 

April 14, 2005

Karyn Strickler
Red States Rebellion: Montana vs. the Patriot Act

Pat Williams
The Flattened Economy of the Rocky Mountain West

Jessica Pupovac
What You Should Know About Bank One's New Daddy

Joshua Frank
Contradictions of the Anti-War Mvt.

Jerzy Mankowski
Jeffrey Sach's Millennium Plan: a View from Poland

Talli Naumann
Right-to-Know in Mexico

Antony Loewenstein
The Aussie Press Under the Empire of Murdoch

Virginia Rodino
Challenging the Empire: Tactics for the Anti-War Movement

Saul Landau / Farrah Hassen
Bush's Vision of Arab Democracy vs. Two Reports

Website of the Day
The 13th Moon: Women Poets Read for Peace in Portland

 

 

April 13, 2005

Maria Carrión
Bolton in the Western Sahara

Mike Whitney
Fighting Torture with Art: the Abu Ghraib Paintings of Fernando Botero

Terry Jones
Let Them Eat Bombs

Dave Lindorff
A Sickening Error

Nathaniel Livingston, Jr.
Ethnic Cleansing at Air America

Kurt Nimmo
Israeli Nuclear Blackjack with Iran

Don Fitz
Battling Dengue Fever with Bats and Birds: the Vietnamese Alternative to Pesticides

Tom Crumpacker
Democracy and the Multiparty System: The US and Cuban Experiences

JG
The Abuse of Haitian Kids at PS 34

Jack McCarthy
Horowitz Comes to Tallahassee

Kevin Zeese
Is God Picking a Side in Iraq?: an Interview with Rev. Sekou

Jeffrey St. Clair
How Exxon Used the Guise of Homeland Security to Purge One of Louisiana's Environmental Champions

 

April 12, 2005

John Wheat Gibson
The Goddess of Immigrants: Aeschylus, Thucydides and the Patriot Act

Kevin Zeese
The Time to Oppose a Draft is Now

Alan Farago
The Cancer Clusters of Cape Coral: Toxics Trump Democracy in Florida

Dave Lindorff
Blackout in Montgomery: Selling Social Security Destruction to White Alabamans

Ron Jacobs
Bob Dylan at the Crossroads

Nelson P. Valdes
Flashback: John Bolton's Big Lie

Dave Zirin
War Games and War Names

Website of the Day
Parents Against the Draft

 

 

April 11, 2005

Tom Barry
Negroponte and the Eclipse of the CIA

Saul Landau
Love for the Unborn and Brain Dead: Contempt for the Rest Us

Monique Dols
Scapegoated at Columbia: Smearing Joseph Massad

Phil Gasper
Burning Professors: Resurrection of a Witchhunt

Mike Whitney
See No Evil: Pope TV and the New World Media

Edwin Krales
The Origin of AIDS: an Ethical Inquiry

Paul de Rooij
Undermining Civil Society: Horowitz's Corrosive Projects

Website of the Day
Academic Freedom at Columbia: a Petition

 

 

April 9 / 10, 2005

Jeffrey St. Clair
Torture Air, Incorporated

William A. Cook
Janus at the State Dept.: Glossing Over Israel's Human Rights Abuses

Gary Leupp
My Favorite Papal Moment: a Bonfire in Peru

Alan Maass
Pope-a-Dope: John Paul 2, Death of a Reactionary

Laura Carlsen
Democracy Sinking in Mexico

Joe DeRaymond
Death and Displacement in Colombia

Nikolas Kozloff
Bush Rebuffed in Venezuela (Again)

Dave Lindorff
The Price of Oil and the Bush Dollar

Greg Moses
Growling at Hallliburton

Fred Gardner
Southern Station Session

Justin Smith
The US Prison System: a Hesitant Defense of the Not-Quite-as Bad Old Days

Ron Jacobs
George Bush's True Religion: From Bob Jones to Jim Jones

M. Junaid Alam
No Intelligence Failure in Iraq; Political Failure in the US

Ira Kay
West Point's Bad Geography: the Conqueror's Warped View of the World

Elizabeth Schulte
From McCarthyism to COINTELPRO: the Ongoing War on the Left

Jackie Corr
Stranger in a Strange Land: What Bush Didn't See in Montana

Christopher Brauchli
From Darfur to Iraq: Crime Without Punishment

Leslie A. Fiedler
On Saul Bellow: "The Age of the Jewish-American Novel is Over"

Ben Tripp
Pocket Furniture

Poets Basement
Lamantia, Engel, Louise, Albert and Curtis

Website of the Weekend
Military Free Zones

 

 

April 8, 2005

Rob Eshelman
Made in Palestine: the First Exhibition of Palestinian Art in the US

Hom Raj Acharya / Sally Acharya
The Elephant in Nepal's Parlor

Felice Pace
A Golden Opportunity for Justice on the Klamath

Neve Gordon
Israel is the Key to Iraq

Mike Whitney
The Economic Tsunami: Coming Sooner Than You Think

Don Monkerud
God's Shock Troops: the Religious Right and US Foreign Policy

Adam Engel
The Code of Frank Conroy

Vicente Navarro
Opus Dei and John Paul II: a Profoundly Rightwing Pope

Website of the Day
Mountain Justice Summer

 

 

April 7, 2005

Joshua Frank
The DeLay Scandal Isn't a Partisan Issue

Yitzhak Laor
Racism by Any Other Name

Alan Maass
Tug of War with Terri Schiavo

Steven Sherman
An Open Letter to Daniel Okrent: Why the Times is Not "Assertively Left"

Dave Lindorff
Bush's Potemkin Town Meetings

Gerry Adams
The IRA Should Change from "Volunteers" to "Activists"

John Chuckman
Hanoi Jane and the City of God

Michael Dickinson
Two Weddings and a Funeral

John Ross
Lost and Found in the Arizona Desert

Website of the Day
Genetically-Engineered Small Pox?

 

 

April 6, 2005

Peter Camejo
The Crisis in the Green Party

Kevin Wehr
The Eco-Terror Hoax: Domestic Security and the Culture of Fear

Matt Vidal
Bush's Legacy: Dead Bodies, Dead Wrong, Dead Logic

Robert Creeley / Bruce Jackson
On the Subject of Company

Nikolas Kozloff
Chavez's Oil Gambit

Sea Shepherd Crew
Attack of the Hak-a-Piks

Brenda Child
Ojibwe Have Dealt With Grief Before: From Boarding School Abuse to School Shootings

Terry Eagleton
The Pope with Blood on His Hands

David Swanson
Why the Media Can't Read the Banktuptcy Bill

Cindy Ellen Hill
On the Lists: What's the Patriot Act in Belfast

Website of the Day
The New Nike?

 

 

April 5, 2005

Jim Connolly
The Pope Who Revived the Office of the Inquisition: an American Catholic on the Papacy of John Paul II

Paul Craig Roberts
"Partnering" the Destruction of the American Economy

Gary Leupp
Bombing the Malwiya Minaret

Dave Lindorff
The Grassroots Resistance to the Patriot Act

Ron Jacobs
The Terrorism of War

Dan Smith
Riding the Dragon, Soaring on the Eagle: US Economic Decline and the Rise of China

Mark Engler
John Paul II's Economic Ethics: Moral Values and Global Capitalism

Richard Oxman
Bono for Pope

Greg Moses
Narcowars vs. Civil Rights

Website of the Day
Impeach Cheney and Bush

 

 

April 4, 2005

Kevin Zeese
Liberals and Neocons for a Draft

Paul Craig Roberts
American Rot: When Opposing Voices Do Not Oppose

Larry Birns / Sarah Schaffer
Bush's Arms Sales Hypocrisy

Karyn Strickler
Blood on Ice: Seal Pup Slaughter on the St. Lawrence

Joshua Frank
The Minuteman Project: Paramilitaries on the Border

Michael Dickinson
It's Too Late Now for John Paul II to Repent

Surendra R. Devkota
Ending the Deadlock in Nepal

Derrick O'Keefe
Haiti, Yesterday and Today: an Interview with Laura Flynn

Uri Avnery
Djinn in the Box

Website of the Day
Libby, Montana: America's Most Toxic Town?

 

 

April 2 / 3, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Death, Depression and Prozac

Jeffrey St. Clair
Trippwired

Stan Goff
A Trojan Jackass for the Anti-War Movement

John Ross
How to Change the World Without Taking Power

Saul Landau
Guns, Vitamins and God

Robert Creeley
Goodbye

Mike Roselle
Riding Shotgun with Woody Harrelson

Joshua Frank
Dead Wrong Intelligence

Fred Gardner
The Obvious Green Issue

Greg Moses
Photo ID Movement as White Privilege

Fran Quigley
The Economics of Global Poverty: an Interview with Jeffrey Sachs

Kurt Nimmo
The Strange Allure of Paul Wolfowitz

Nicole Colson
Pentagon Greenlights Murder in Iraq

Chris Genovali
Killing Grizzlies for Fun

Alan Farago
Dirty Water and Land Speculators in the Florida Keys

Lawrence Reichard
The M-19 and the Siege of Bogota

Ben Tripp
Civilization and War

Avantika Regmi
Chaos in Nepal

Lee Sustar
Off the Script in Kyrgyzstan

Ron Jacobs
Death of a Revolutionary: Vermont Loses an Honest Man

Dave Lindorff
The Black Arrow: a Review

Poets' Basement
Smith-Ferri, Curtis, Louise, Engel and Albert

Website of the Day
O2 Collective: No Breathing Tube Required

 

 

 

April 1, 2005

Tom Barry
Michael Chertoff: Legal Storm Trooper

Rahul Mahajan
WMD Commission: Yet Another Intelligence Failure

Charlie Cray / Jim Vallette
Dancing with Wolfowitz

Dave Lindorff
News Media Anguish Over Schiavo's Death

Zeynep Toufe
The Terri Schiavo Success Story

Suzan Mazur
Pension Funds and the Price of Oil

Michael Dickinson
Shut Your Mouth or Go to Prison!

Stan Cox
Iraq Reconstruction Funds Invested on Wall Street

Ra Ravishankar
Et Tu, George?

Daniel Wolff
Patti Scialfa's Conversation with America

 

 

March 31, 2005

Sharon Smith
Leftwing Apologists for the Occupation

Ron Jacobs
Rounding Out Iraq's History

Tariq Ali
British Elections: Punish the Warmongers

Michael Dickinson
Cartoon Capers: Turkey's War on Political Cartoonists

Kanak Mani Dixit
The Struggle for Nepal's Future

Mitchell Zimmerman
The Bizarre Legal Philosophy of Justice Janice Rogers Brown

Xuan-Trang Ho
Guatemala and CAFTA: Return to the Bad Old Days?

Dave Zirin
Pay the Damn Players!

Joe Bageant
In Praise of Holy Madness

Jeff Halper
The End of a Viable Palestinian State

Website of the Day
Free Nepal

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Weekend Edition
April 30 / May 1, 2005

The High Tide of the Neo-Con Confederacy

The Undiscovered Country

By T.W. CROFT

It was an early October morning in Gettysburg, sky was gray. The night before, I had watched the second Presidential debate. I was pulled off the road along a hewn-wood fence facing the ground where Picket charged. And then, I could see it allthe massive field, and upper left, the rock formations of the northern line stretching along Cemetery Ridge to the Round Tops. To my lower right, the woods where Lee's troops waited on the morning of July 3, 1863, the last and deciding day of battle. On the first day of battle, one of the federal captains had described the union retreat thru the town square, as "by the skin of our teeth". But the Yanks held Cemetery Ridge and the high ground.

In these days of PR spin, framing and branding (such as "personal accounts" rather than "privatization of social security") the rich metaphors from Gettysburg, this special place and history, came rushing to me as I sat there crossroads, skin of our teeth, hold the high ground, turning point of the war, and the "high watermark of the confederacy".

Gettysburg was a crossroads in more ways than one. The nation is, today, at another crossroads. We are in a struggle to preserve our core values and principles. The attacks on retirement and social security, and the companion attempted roll-back of the mild corporate governance rules of Sarbanes-Oxley, are a final assault on the building blocks of America's New Deal. They are also a rejection of the promise of modern work-life. We've already lost too many battles. But the battle to preserve Social Security and retirement security is a battle we cannot afford to lose.

As Bruce Springsteen said during the election, "the country that we hold in our hearts is waiting." It still does. It is an Undiscovered Country that awaits.

I accidentally came across this fertile metaphor, the idea of an undiscovered country, in a review of a Tom Stoppard play, around the same time. An Austrian novelist and playwright named Arthur Schnitzler originally wrote Das Weite Land in the 1800s about his abhorrence of the Hapsburg Empire's obsession with dueling (and war without end). Tom Stoppard re-worked the play, calling it The Undiscovered Country (yes, you may have heard of the Star Trek movie).

What timely notions, Gettysburg, and its meanings, and Das Weite Landthe Vast Domain. Terre étrangère. The Distant Land. Unknown Country. Far and Wide. The Promised Land. A simple title, with many translations. An Undiscovered Country.

Working people still have two vastly different possibilities for their future, despite the November elections. An undiscovered country that represents the hopes and promise of the future, or an attack on retirement and modern life itself, a return to a bleaker past, where life was solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short (apropos Hobbes) and retirement sometimes the poor farm.

The Attack on Retirement

It's spring now here in Pittsburgh, a fire in the fireplace attempting to ward away late snows and escalating gas bills. The election obviously went the other way, and in the sober light of day, the re-elected President is still on his tour of "town hall conversations", campaigning for his Social Security "reform".

Congress and the White House have been busy at work-not in solving major problems like poverty or global warming-but rolling back protections for working people and consumers, including the class action rules that allowed Erin Brockovich to win awards for PG and E cancer victims, and cutting bankruptcy protection for credit card debtors.

There are good economists like Dean Baker, Paul Krugman and Alan Blinder, former Federal Reserve member, who have successfully taken economic meat cleavers to the President's proposal, explaining that the $2 trillion borrowing from the Trust Fund to start the "private accounts" is only an initial bail from the bucket; it could cost $4-6 billion or more. Alan Hevesi, Comptroller of New York State, reveals that the "plan" increases the acknowledged actuarial imbalance in the Trust Fund, so that the imbalance would start occurring in 2009, not 2018. It's the math, stupid, you might say.

It's also history. I heard a labor speaker recently talk about stories that his father told him from the 1930s in Aliquippa, Pa. Back then, lonely and poor elderly folks often lived out the end of their lives in poor houses and old age homes. The depression of the 1930s led to the election of Franklin Roosevelt, of course. As one Times writer put it,
"The Depression destroyed every mechanism that had existed for covering the vicissitudes of old-age dependency. Before the creation of Social Security, some Americans had private or state pensions, but most supported themselves into old age by working. The 1930 census, for example, found 58% of men over 65 still in the workforce; in contrast, by 2002, the figure was 18%." And the elderly often became a burden on their children and families before the law was passed.

Roosevelt fought to get the program passed, explaining that "we have tried to frame a law which will give some measure of protection to the average citizen and to his family against the loss of a job and against poverty-ridden old age".

The fountainhead of our work-life is still the New Deal. The Social Security Act established the systems-old age pensions, unemployment insurance, etc.-that brought millions out of poverty. The Wagner Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act (banning child labor), acts helping poor people, re-establishing faith in the banks, the regulation of corporations and commerce, etc. FDR brought "modern life"-literally-to vast parts of the country like the Tennessee Valley and the South. And the New Deal brought the promise of retirement security to workers for the first time. Professor Teresa Ghilarducci:
In the wake of the Great Depression, government, business and labor representatives forged an informal yet very real social contract on retirement security. For decades, that contract shaped the length of time for which workers could expect to retire.The expectation of healthy leisure at the end of one's working life was the result of (this) negotiation. Social Security provided a safety net, but private pensions were the key to a secure, middle class retirement. Throughout the post-World War II period, workers regularly traded wages for pensions-and even went on strike over pensions. "Do Longer Lives Mean Just More Work?", Perspectives on Work, Teresa Ghilarducci, vol. 6, issue 2.

"The president and Rove are betting that history is on their side," wrote Howard Fineman in Newsweek (2/14/05). "Indeed, their proposal is the domestic capstone of the modern conservative movement, which surfaced in 1963 with what was then regarded (rightly) as a suicidal attack on Social Security by Barry Goldwater"

Is history on their side? The promise of modern work-life was the premise that working people would benefit from the efficiencies of technology and share from the fruits it yields. Workers, after all, invented many of the technologies and spurred many of the productivity changes through these centuries.

Bertrand Russell's "In Praise of Idleness" asserted that the promise of plenty guaranteed by technology would mean that, unlike feudal times, the gains of workers would be converted to leisure. And people could work less and retire earlier.

"Let us take an illustration. Suppose that, at a given moment, a certain number of people are engaged in the manufacture of pins. They make as many pins as the world needs, working (say) eight hours a day. Someone makes an invention by which the same number of men can make twice as many pins: pins are already so cheap that hardly any more will be bought at a lower price. In a sensible world, everybody concerned in the manufacturing of pins would take to working four hours instead of eight, and everything else would go on as before. But in the actual world this would be thought demoralizing. The men still work eight hours, there are too many pins, some employers go bankrupt, and half the men previously concerned in making pins are thrown out of work. There is, in the end, just as much leisure as on the other plan, but half the men are totally idle while half are still overworked. In this way, it is insured that the unavoidable leisure shall cause misery all round instead of being a universal source of happiness.

Today, not only are half the pin makers being laid off, they will likely lose part or all of their pensions. Traditional pensions for workers in general have been sliding-covering half of full-time workers 30 years ago, to below 20% today. More recently, workers have seen pensions stripped at United, US Air, Beth Steel, Kaiser Aluminum and Polaroid, and dozens of other companies. And the Pension Guaranty Corp. (PBGC), the government agency that insures defined-benefit pension plans, ended fiscal 2004 with a net loss of $12.1 billion. It is in deep in trouble, with a year end deficit that doubled over 2003. ("The Domino Effect", David Katz, CFO Magazine, 2/2005).

And lately, we've been reading that Gov. Schwarzenegger had wanted to abolish the pension system in California. Sean Harrigan, president of the state employees pension fund board (CalPERS), was fired by the Governor, part of chamber-inspired attack on workers in California. But there's no going back. The CalPERS Board unanimously elected Rob Feckner its new president Feb. 16. Feckner said "We will do everything in our power to stop the elimination of our defined-benefit pension plan."
Examinations of the "experiments" with Social Security in Great Britain and Chile have undermined the President's case for privatization. The British "plan" under Thatcher has led to hundreds of thousands of workers losing money due to massive fee transfers to investment managers. In Chile, the ruthless dictator General Augusto Pinochet imposed private accounts on workers after the mass murders and oppression of the 1972 coup-d'tat, with the help of Milton Friedman and the University of Chicago boys. "Every time this plan has been tried, from Galveston to Chile, it has been a disaster. People lose money because they don't have the advantages of the professionals and the state. Unless they get lucky, the state plan pays better and is more stable." (WaPo, 4/11). The experimenters-in-chief, including the Cato Institute and its ilk, have created a Frankenstein.

All of this seems to be a well-packaged theft of not just money and retirement, as over-worked Americans are urged to work longer, but leisure in general. Professor Ghilarducci and others have refuted the urban legend that if you retire too early, you will die younger. In her paper "The Political Economy of Pro-Work Retirement Policies and Responsible Accumulation" (2004), she states"pension reform is increasingly geared towards encouraging older workers to postpone retirement and retirees to reenter the work force. In fact, retirement causes better health(Neuman, 2004)".

Russell claimed that the well-to-do in America were "indignant at the idea of leisure for wage-earners, except as the grim punishment of unemployment"

The Roll-Back of Corporate Reform

A close friend of mine with the Pennsylvania SEC receives corruption reports many times a day on his Blackberry. The business press is fat with fresh, daily new corporate corruption scandals and new rip-offs of workers and shareholders. Yet, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) is under a ferocious attack by Wall Street, corporate lobbies claiming that the paperwork and disclosures are strangling their clients. SOX may need a tweak, but it is working well.

Senator Joe Dunn of California warns that the right wing has squarely lined up against corporate governance and pension fund activism, quoting Steven Moore, President of the Club for Growth: "The witch hunt against corporate excess and corporate accounting scandals (is) all the rage on the left these days."

What witch hunt? The only witch hunt I've noticed is when federal crime fighters yanked Martha Stewart into the hoosegow to set a quick "example". Most of the bigger fish who caused all of the damage have delayed or skirted justice so far. Ken Lay is still a free man. And the defense used by former CEO Bernie Ebbers of WorldCom was laughable. In the entrepreneurial '80s and '90s, CEOs prided themselves in "walking around", getting to know everyone who worked for them. Ebbers claimed the "know nothing" defense. Well, the jury quickly threw that out warped excuse, thank God.

Did we learn nothing in the last 5 years? The pressure to negate governance reforms comes amid continuing corporate scandals; the largest financial melt down since the Great Crash; millions losing their jobs in the recession; a number of states and numerous cities in fiscal kill-off; a renewed energy crisis; recent market weakness; and, now, a dollar fall off as central banks are now shorting the dollar and moving toward the Euro. Adam Shell reported in USA Today that markets do not recover soon after major crashes, and it took the post-Great Depression Dow 25 years to return to its 1929 levels." ("10 Reasons why the Nasdaq won't Recover Soon", USA Today, B1, 3/10/05).

And, we may not get much help from the vaunted high-tech sector, every troubled city's would-be white knight, as the "knowledge workers" are:
"among a wave of Americans taking to the highway to preserve a middle-class life.information workers are having mobility thrust upon them as companies change the way they staff computer-related jobs. Foreign workers are cheaper for some basic programming and technical jobs, and short-term contract workers give companies more flexibility to add and subtract employees as needed." (Greg Schneider, "Slowdown Forces Many to Wander for Work: IT Unemployment Now Exceeds Overall Jobless Rate." Washington Post, 11/9/04).

Paul Craig Roberts (Reagan's Assistant Treasury Secretary) offered that: "So far in the 21st century, there is scant sign of the American 'new economy.' The promised knowledge-based jobs have not appeared." ("Outsourcing Innovationand Everything Else", March 2005).

If there is a recovery today, it is the most pathetic since WWII, at least in terms of working people and the middle class. Thus, it is not a very good time for investors and investment experiments in general. And it's certainly not a good time to let CEO's wiggle out of the financial sign-off requirements of SOX (lest we want more of the "know-nothing" defenses).

On top of all this, the pressure to "juice" the market will be tremendous. GovernanceMetrics International's recent study of corporate governance practices indicate that the abuses that brought on the corporate Chernobylscozy boards, non-independent auditors, lush CEO arrangements, still exist, and that "investors must remain vigilant for executives and boards that are still in the Stone Age.The firm has just finished examining practices at 3,220 companies around the world. Of those companies, only 34 received GMI's highest rating of 10.Of course, lapses in governance do not necessarily lead to poor performance at a company. But enough investors have lost big money in companies where conduct was questionable that governance should be a constant consideration.Armed with data, investment managerscan't claim ignorance if a trifling corporate governance problem turns into something else." ("Companies Behaving Badly", Gretchen Morgensen, Page 3-1, NYT, 3/6/05).

And after the merge and purge binge that ended badly in 2001, the finance markets are at it again. From ISS: "The recent series of high profile mega-merger announcements should serve as a warning sign that companies flush with cash, and encouraged by a strengthening economy are once again actively getting involved in the high-risk mergers and acquisitions business;" the HP-Compac merger failure being exhibit A.

And SOX? In a recent article, "Lifting the Lid: Many Companies Called to Accounting Carpet", Brendan Intindola of Reuters reports:

So for all the huffing and puffing about the costs of complying with one of the final mandates of Sarbanes-Oxley, introduced in 2002 after a series of huge corporate scandals, there are clear signs that Section 404 of the Act is forcing companies to uncover some deeply buried accounting skeletons.

Regulatory estimates from a few weeks ago put the number of companies that have been forced to come clean at 500 to 600 of more than 10,000 corporations registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Critic have argued the millions of dollars in extra auditing fees to determine if financial controls are adequate is money poorly spent, with no quantifiable return. Yet Section 404 may be keeping Corporate America honest, or at least focused, say accounting experts, adding that the benefits of raising investor confidence will, over time, substantially outweigh the upfront expenses.

Hevesi, having spearheaded lawsuits against WorldCom, the largest corporate bankruptcy in history, argues that "The job of directors is to be a fiduciary on behalf of shareholders, to demand documents, to ask tough questions of management." As an organizer of the pension fund-led Coalition for Corporate Reform, Hevesi notes that the job of responsible shareholders is to reform companies, not destroy them or run themand that's what the pension funds are doing.

Eliot Spitzer, Attorney General of New York State, rejoined that the right loves to cloak itself in the language of the free market, when in reality the leaders of American big business are hard at work against competition, transparency and accountability.

And Phil Angelides, Treasurer of California, had this to say about the California Governor's plan to dismantle pension funds:

Why this proposal then? Because for the right-wing ideologues behind his plan, the issue is not saving money. It is about draining public pension funds of their clout. Across the country, the governor's ideological soul mates are targeting public pension funds for elimination because those funds - with the CalPERS and CalSTRS at the forefront - have stood up for ordinary investors against the rampant corporate abuses.In pursuing corporate reform, the pension funds are operating not just in their own self-defense. They are also giving a powerful voice in the boardrooms to the interests of millions of families that have invested their savings in the markets.leading the fight on behalf of ordinary shareholders to put transparency and accountability back into American capitalism.

In a recent Harpers Magazine, Michael Hudson sums it up: "What Bush seeks to manufacture is a boom-or, more accurately, a bubble-bankrolled by the last safe pile of cash in America today. His plan is a Ponzi scheme, and in that scheme it is Social Security that is being played for the last sucker." ("The $4.7 Trillion Pyramid", 4/05).

The Promise of Modern Work-Life: The Undiscovered Country

We don't need any more invented crises. We have enough real crises to keep elected leaders and everyone else busy for the next century. There's enough on our plate.

A phalanx of financial institutions, think tanks and lobbyists have been leading this attack on retirement security and corporate governance, and have been joined by the Neo-Cons.

At the same time that the "privateers" and their lackeys in the capitols want to end the too-modest controls placed on them by Sarbanes/Oxley, the President and some governors want to hand over hundreds of millions a year or so in projected "fees" for managing "private accounts" back into the same caring hands of the Wall Street crooks that "experimented" with Enron and WorldCom, etc. And then they plan to demolish the pension trusts of the people, the only consistent forces that have stood against corruption.

So, where is this mugging headed? Next is the assault on modern work-life itself-the progress of the last 60-70 years. Because if SS is destroyed, everything is on the table, as Bush loves to say.

It's all on the table, and it's damned daunting. Just look around. For working families, it is the rejection of not just retirement security, but the 8-hour day, equal employment, health care insurance, minimum wage, etc. In general, the rejection of modern science, international policy ruled by end-times neo-cons, scorched-earth environmental policies, military overreach, and other such tragic absurdities.

After that first day at Gettysburg, the outcome was in doubt, as the Scotsman reported:

"The news of the result of the great engagement of the 3dwill probably be the most important in the whole course of this eventful war. The undoubted defeat of the Federals on the 1st augurs ill for their success in an encounterfor which they occupy a decidedly unfavourable position, under an untried commander, while they are fighting against the skilful and redoubtable LeeFor if Meade is beaten, no second Army of the Potomac remains to shelter the cities of the North against the victorious advance of the Confederate invasion." The Scotsman, July 16, 1863.

But, as we know, the Yanks held the high ground. We, too, will win in the end. Bush and Congress are feeling the heat as a revitalized youth movement has joined the AARP in rejecting their privatization pipe-dreams. Financial houses are feeling the heat of the labor movement. And in California, the Governor just threw in the towel, for the time being, after a massive labor-community campaign convinced the public that the Governor's pension fund demolition was mean-spirited and would hurt Californians. The tide is turning our way.

Back at Gettysburg, I remember groups of school children re-tracing the long path of the charge, walking for a long-time and then passing the road I was on, climbing the wood fence that had been a killing ground for rebels. Other groups were gathered around a speaker at the clump of trees at the northern center, as she explained the bloodbath that took place at the "anvil". Monuments punctuated the horizon, sprouting as far as the eye could see. And, in front of the monuments, school buses.

As the French philosopher, Jacques Derrida, said, the future has a future. It is our undiscovered country, in our hearts. Who will be in it? Our children, and our children's children, and theirs. It is for them we fight. Fight like hell and hold the high ground.

We've been here before, folks, we've beaten back these mossbacks, and we will win again. If we win this battle for the crossroads of the next century, we can win back our Undiscovered Country. Fear not, I think I can see the High Tide of the Neo-Con Confederacy.

T.W. Croft is the Director of the Heartland Labor Capital Network (www.heartlandnetwork.org). He can be reached at: t.w.croft@att.net.

© 2005 T.W. Croft.