The real story behind Donald Trump’s phony Baku hotel, and other real stories - 6:03 AM 9/11/2019
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The real story behind Donald Trump’s phony Baku hotel, and other real stories - Link - 6:03 AM 9/11/2019
A rather disturbing answer to that question may lie on the shores of the Caspian Sea, in the city of Baku, Azerbaijan. It’s a rather complicated and multi-layered story. The first layer is that in 2012, team Trump officially joined a project to build and develop what was meant to become the Trump International Hotel & Tower in a not-yet-developed part of Baku; a project that has all the markings of a money laundering operation.
The Trump Organization’s partners on the Azerbaijani side were members of the Mammadov family – the family of a wealthy and powerful oligarch who was characterized by a U.S. diplomat as notoriously corrupt, even for Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan, in turn, is generally rated as one of the most corrupt nations in the world.
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Car burglaries soar, but NOPD stats don’t show true extent | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Property crime in New Orleans is on the rise in 2019, and a stark uptick in vehicle burglaries is largely responsible. Vehicle burglaries have increased more than 82 % as of mid-August compared with the same time last year, New Orleans Police Department data show. The number of vehicle burglaries in 2019 is on pace to exceed 6,800 -- more than double the average annual total, 3,101, from 2014-2018The increase may sound startling, but the Police Department's practice of sometimes grouping multiple burglaries in one report makes it difficult to capture the full extent of the city’s vehicle break-in problem. It also makes comparisons to historical stats less reliable.In recent months, the targeting of multiples vehicles in the same block or parking lot has left car owners with smashed windows and stolen personal items. A review of the Po9lice Department's reports and data shows individual vehicle burglaries that occur near each other and in a short time frame are often grouped in a single report and counted as one vehicle burglary “incident.” The Police Department said grouping vehicle burglaries that way is allowed under FBI guidelines.Burglaries down the blockTwice this year, Jason Williamson, a Gentilly Terrace resident, has woken up to find the window of his Toyota Tundra smashed to pieces and belongings scattered inside his truck. “It’s really frustrating,” said Williamson, 42. “It causes a lot of anxiety, a lot of restless nights.” After a February burglary, he installed a surveillance camera outside his home. His window was smashed a second time in April. After that, he said, “I started leaving my truck unlocked because I was tired of paying for broken windows. It adds up pretty quick.”Williamson also bought an alarm that sounds when someone opens his unlocked truck doors. Since then, the alarm has been tripped and he’s watched security footage showing people running from his truck. On April 28, Williamson’s pickup truck was one of four vehicles burglarized in the 4900 block of Music Street, where he lives. His girlfriend’s car and the truck of a neighbor who lives two doors down were also broken into that night. Elizabeth Fluellen, 18, woke up at her father’s home, nine houses down the street from Williamson, that morning. She said her stepmother shook her awake, to tell her that her Acura MDX had been burglarized and its window had been smashed. Her SUV’s burglary was included in the same police report as the burglaries of the vehicles of Williamson, his girlfriend and another neighbor, and was tallied as one incident for statistical purposes. Fluellen said her stepmother paid out of pocket for the window repairs and she said months later, she keeps findings shards of glass on the floor of her vehicle.Many vehicles, one reportWDSU poured through Police Department reports and found other burglary sprees involving multiple vehicles condensed into a single incident report. They include: 11 vehicles at the Audubon Zoo parking lot on Aug. 11 10 vehicles in a Mid-City church parking lot during an Aug. 3 wedding five vehicles at the Audubon Zoo on Aug. 2. 15 vehicles in a parking lot at Marrero Commons on May 2. nine vehicles beneath the Claiborne Avenue overpass near the Superdome during the Nov. 22 Saints game against the Atlanta Falcons. New Orleans police defend their practice of consolidating auto burglaries into single incident reports, saying they do so, in part, “in order to not unnecessarily tie up resources,” and to help prosecutors “in a more comprehensive prosecution of those responsible.” Police Department spokesman Gary Scheets cited the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting Handbook, saying in a statement that crimes can be included in the same incident if they “have occurred during an unbroken time duration and at the same or adjoining location(s).” Scheets said that when officers respond to a vehicle burglary, if they notice other cars appear to have been burglarized “in a relative proximity,” those burglaries will be included in the report, “because the owners of those additional vehicles may not have yet directly contacted NOPD.” If the owner later contacts the Police Department to report their vehicle was burglarized, “they are then issued a separate item number,” which would presumably generate another report.Multiple Police Department vehicle burglary reports from 2018 and 2019 show officers interviewed multiple vehicle owners at the scene, yet still lumped the burglaries in a single incident. In one police report, three vehicle burglaries on Nov. 23 were grouped together even though they occurred in two different blocks – the 2100 block of Carondelet Street and the 1700 block of Josephine Street – and officers spoke with all three vehicle owners at the scene. The Police Department did not answer questions about the investigations of the above cases, including if suspects had been identified or arrested. In a statement provided Tuesday, though, the department said investigations into car burglaries have led to arrests in many cases and information about potential suspects in others. Police acknowledged the rise in vehicle burglaries and said they are “committed to a proactive approach” to vehicle burglaries and other crime. What other agencies doMost law enforcement agencies in the New Orleans area interpret FBI rules for crime reporting differently than the New Orleans Police Department does. The Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office, the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office, the Gretna Police Department and the Kenner Police Department all said if four cars were burglarized in the same block in the same night, each would be written up as a separate incident. The Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office, St. Tammany and Kenner agencies went further, saying that, even if two cars were parked the same driveway, were burglarized, would only be grouped in a single incident report if the vehicles had the same owner. If two cars in the same driveway had different owners, each of those departments said, two separate incident reports would be generated. Gretna police said cars burglarized in front of different addresses in the same city block would be written up in separate reports, with limited exceptions. For example, the burglary of multiple vehicles in a fenced-in auto repair shop would be grouped in a single report, Capt. Russell Lloyd said.Ronald Walker, 71, owns one of the roughly 25 vehicles burglarized on May 13 in the Lake Carmel subdivision in New Orleans East. The lack of an accurate count of auto burglaries concerns the former police officer, who serves as vice president of the neighborhood’s homeowners association. “You had people violated. So those are individual crimes,” he said. “You have to base it on victimization, not location, and that’s what they’re doing.”Costly consequencesAccording to the New Orleans Police Department, 412 guns were reported stolen during vehicle burglaries last year. Through Aug. 12 this year, 330 guns had been reported stolen from cars. The Police Department said the department can’t combat vehicle burglaries alone and asked that residents secure their vehicles, park in safe areas and avoid leaving valuables in plain sight or remove them from their cars. The May 8 Mid-City shooting death of 63-year-old Zelda Townsend and the wounding of her husband highlighted the potential danger of fast-rising vehicle burglaries. Townsend and her husband, armed with a gun, approached someone trying to burglarize their vehicle, police said, when the 17-year-old inside their car shot the couple. Emanuel Pipkins, 17; Byrielle Hebert, 18; and Alvin Robinson, 16, face life imprisonment in connection with charges of first-degree murder in the botched car burglary case. In Gentilly Terrace, Williams said replacing his truck windows and having his belongings taken is an expensive nuisance. But it also affects his sense of safety when he considers suspected burglars may be armed. “I don’t want to go out in the middle of the night, let the dog out, and I’m face to face with a gun. That’s kind of terrifying,” he said.
NEW ORLEANS —
Property crime in New Orleans is on the rise in 2019, and a stark uptick in vehicle burglaries is largely responsible.
Vehicle burglaries have increased more than 82 % as of mid-August compared with the same time last year, New Orleans Police Department data show. The number of vehicle burglaries in 2019 is on pace to exceed 6,800 -- more than double the average annual total, 3,101, from 2014-2018
The increase may sound startling, but the Police Department's practice of sometimes grouping multiple burglaries in one report makes it difficult to capture the full extent of the city’s vehicle break-in problem. It also makes comparisons to historical stats less reliable.
In recent months, the targeting of multiples vehicles in the same block or parking lot has left car owners with smashed windows and stolen personal items. A review of the Po9lice Department's reports and data shows individual vehicle burglaries that occur near each other and in a short time frame are often grouped in a single report and counted as one vehicle burglary “incident.”
The Police Department said grouping vehicle burglaries that way is allowed under FBI guidelines.
Burglaries down the block
Twice this year, Jason Williamson, a Gentilly Terrace resident, has woken up to find the window of his Toyota Tundra smashed to pieces and belongings scattered inside his truck.
“It’s really frustrating,” said Williamson, 42. “It causes a lot of anxiety, a lot of restless nights.”
After a February burglary, he installed a surveillance camera outside his home. His window was smashed a second time in April. After that, he said, “I started leaving my truck unlocked because I was tired of paying for broken windows. It adds up pretty quick.”
Williamson also bought an alarm that sounds when someone opens his unlocked truck doors. Since then, the alarm has been tripped and he’s watched security footage showing people running from his truck.
On April 28, Williamson’s pickup truck was one of four vehicles burglarized in the 4900 block of Music Street, where he lives. His girlfriend’s car and the truck of a neighbor who lives two doors down were also broken into that night.
Elizabeth Fluellen, 18, woke up at her father’s home, nine houses down the street from Williamson, that morning. She said her stepmother shook her awake, to tell her that her Acura MDX had been burglarized and its window had been smashed. Her SUV’s burglary was included in the same police report as the burglaries of the vehicles of Williamson, his girlfriend and another neighbor, and was tallied as one incident for statistical purposes. Fluellen said her stepmother paid out of pocket for the window repairs and she said months later, she keeps findings shards of glass on the floor of her vehicle.
Many vehicles, one report
WDSU poured through Police Department reports and found other burglary sprees involving multiple vehicles condensed into a single incident report. They include:
New Orleans police defend their practice of consolidating auto burglaries into single incident reports, saying they do so, in part, “in order to not unnecessarily tie up resources,” and to help prosecutors “in a more comprehensive prosecution of those responsible.”
Police Department spokesman Gary Scheets cited the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting Handbook, saying in a statement that crimes can be included in the same incident if they “have occurred during an unbroken time duration and at the same or adjoining location(s).”
Scheets said that when officers respond to a vehicle burglary, if they notice other cars appear to have been burglarized “in a relative proximity,” those burglaries will be included in the report, “because the owners of those additional vehicles may not have yet directly contacted NOPD.” If the owner later contacts the Police Department to report their vehicle was burglarized, “they are then issued a separate item number,” which would presumably generate another report.
Multiple Police Department vehicle burglary reports from 2018 and 2019 show officers interviewed multiple vehicle owners at the scene, yet still lumped the burglaries in a single incident.
In one police report, three vehicle burglaries on Nov. 23 were grouped together even though they occurred in two different blocks – the 2100 block of Carondelet Street and the 1700 block of Josephine Street – and officers spoke with all three vehicle owners at the scene.
The Police Department did not answer questions about the investigations of the above cases, including if suspects had been identified or arrested. In a statement provided Tuesday, though, the department said investigations into car burglaries have led to arrests in many cases and information about potential suspects in others.
Police acknowledged the rise in vehicle burglaries and said they are “committed to a proactive approach” to vehicle burglaries and other crime.
What other agencies do
Most law enforcement agencies in the New Orleans area interpret FBI rules for crime reporting differently than the New Orleans Police Department does.
The Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office, the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office, the Gretna Police Department and the Kenner Police Department all said if four cars were burglarized in the same block in the same night, each would be written up as a separate incident.
The Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office, St. Tammany and Kenner agencies went further, saying that, even if two cars were parked the same driveway, were burglarized, would only be grouped in a single incident report if the vehicles had the same owner. If two cars in the same driveway had different owners, each of those departments said, two separate incident reports would be generated.
Gretna police said cars burglarized in front of different addresses in the same city block would be written up in separate reports, with limited exceptions. For example, the burglary of multiple vehicles in a fenced-in auto repair shop would be grouped in a single report, Capt. Russell Lloyd said.
Ronald Walker, 71, owns one of the roughly 25 vehicles burglarized on May 13 in the Lake Carmel subdivision in New Orleans East. The lack of an accurate count of auto burglaries concerns the former police officer, who serves as vice president of the neighborhood’s homeowners association.
“You had people violated. So those are individual crimes,” he said. “You have to base it on victimization, not location, and that’s what they’re doing.”
Costly consequences
According to the New Orleans Police Department, 412 guns were reported stolen during vehicle burglaries last year. Through Aug. 12 this year, 330 guns had been reported stolen from cars.
The Police Department said the department can’t combat vehicle burglaries alone and asked that residents secure their vehicles, park in safe areas and avoid leaving valuables in plain sight or remove them from their cars.
The May 8 Mid-City shooting death of 63-year-old Zelda Townsend and the wounding of her husband highlighted the potential danger of fast-rising vehicle burglaries. Townsend and her husband, armed with a gun, approached someone trying to burglarize their vehicle, police said, when the 17-year-old inside their car shot the couple. Emanuel Pipkins, 17; Byrielle Hebert, 18; and Alvin Robinson, 16, face life imprisonment in connection with charges of first-degree murder in the botched car burglary case.
In Gentilly Terrace, Williams said replacing his truck windows and having his belongings taken is an expensive nuisance. But it also affects his sense of safety when he considers suspected burglars may be armed.
“I don’t want to go out in the middle of the night, let the dog out, and I’m face to face with a gun. That’s kind of terrifying,” he said.
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Democrats’ chorus for impeachment is gaining strength | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The House Judiciary Committee this week announced it was ready to amp up its investigation into whether to open a formal inquiry. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has so far opposed that move, but House Democrats on Tuesday rushed to downplay any signs of a divide over how to proceed, even as time was running out to make a decision.
Massachusetts Representative Bill Keating, who was among the party members who this summer endorsed the start of impeachment proceedings, said Pelosi “was supportive” of the Judiciary Committee move during a closed meeting Tuesday morning of House Democrats.
House Judiciary Committee chairman Jerrold Nadler has said his committee will meet Thursday to vote on new procedures for its hearings over whether to recommend the impeachment inquiry. If they’re adopted, as expected, the changes would lengthen the time witnesses can testify, allow the committee to analyze evidence in closed session, and allow Trump to respond to allegations in writing.
House Judiciary member David Cicilline of Rhode Island called the step significant, saying it was the first time the committee would formally consider the question of impeachment and that it was in line with Pelosi’s direction. “The speaker’s position has been the committees must move forward with our oversight responsibilities, that we must follow the facts wherever they take us, and that no one’s above the law,” he said.
Pelosi has resisted calls to start an impeachment investigation out of concern that it could backfire politically, given tepid public support and near-solid Republican opposition. A senior staffer with a House Judiciary committee member said Pelosi and Nadler had long been at odds over whether to move forward with the impeachment inquiry and that some within the caucus had grown frustrated with the speaker for not moving more swiftly.
Pelosi has said she wants to make sure all means are exhausted before deciding whether to launch an impeachment inquiry, pointing to pending court cases and at least six ongoing congressional investigations under the Judiciary, Oversight and Reform, and Intelligence committees.
“My position has always been, whatever decision we made in that regard would have to be done with our strongest possible hand, and we still have some outstanding matters in the courts,” Pelosi said before the summer break. “It’s about the Congress, the Constitution, and the courts, and we are fighting the president in the courts.”
Pelosi did not comment to reporters after leaving the meeting of House Democrats Tuesday.
If Democrats don’t launch an inquiry soon, they risk having an impeachment effort spill into next year’s election season. But Representative Ro Khanna, a Democrat from California, said he believes the next three months will provide enough time for committees to dig into the facts.
“We don’t want to politicize this,” he said. “We have to pursue it until we get a resolution, but I think it is much better to do this before the Iowa caucuses.”
At least 134 of 235 House Democrats publicly favor starting the impeachment inquiry, according to a CNN count. Just under 100 Democrats supported an inquiry before the summer recess began.
But most members in favor of the inquiry are from progressive or safe Democratic districts. Members in swing districts were in favor of continuing the ongoing deliberate process outlined by Pelosi.
A Quinnipiac University poll released in late July found that 32 percent of Americans thought Congress should begin the process to impeach Trump, even as his approval ratings have consistently remained low.
Yet the calls for impeachment among House Democrats have grown as the Trump administration has refused to cooperate with congressional investigations, disregarding subpoenas related to providing his tax returns, the unredacted report from former special counsel Robert Mueller, and testimony from former White House counsel Don McGahn.
Before her Twitter statement, Underwood had previously believed people in her district cared more about issues such as health care than impeachment. Now she approved of the Judiciary Committee’s latest move.
“It’s about being deliberate,” she said. “And it’s about being diligent to make sure that we are being given all the facts in order to do our jobs to protect our country from this ever happening again.”
Underwood and some other House Democrats on Tuesday said the questions over impeachment were nonstop during the summer.
“One thing I didn’t hear was that the House shouldn’t be looking into these issues,” Keating said. “It is a question of how and what timeline. Those are things that differed among people.”
It was the kind of groundswell that Democrats had hoped for ahead of long-awaited testimony from Mueller, who days before the summer break appeared before two House committees to explain his investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible attempts by Trump to hinder the probe. Mueller’s testimony did not produce any bombshells and was seen as underwhelming, but he did confirm that he did not exonerate Trump of obstruction of justice after a two-year investigation.
The House Judiciary Committee vote over its new procedures comes as Corey Lewandowski, Trump’s former campaign manager, is set to testify at a hearing next week.
Nadler said Trump twice asked Lewandowski to deliver a message to former attorney general Jeff Sessions in attempts to limit the Mueller investigation, “making him a critical witness to presidential obstruction of justice.”
The committee also has subpoenaed former White House aides Rob Porter and Rick Dearborn, whom Nadler said witnessed Trump’s repeated obstruction, to appear at the same hearing.
“The adoption of these additional procedures is the next step in that process and will help ensure our impeachment hearings are informative to Congress and the public, while providing the president with the ability to respond to evidence presented against him,” Nadler said this week. “We will not allow Trump’s continued obstruction to stop us from delivering the truth to the American people.”
Jazmine Ulloa can be reached at jazmine.ulloa@globe.com or on Twitter: @jazmineulloa.
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Nearly 300 arrested in global cyber fraud schemes, DOJ says - News - Austin American-Statesman | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The U.S. Department of Justice announced the arrests of nearly 300 more people suspected of engaging in a global effort to trick companies and individuals into handing over millions of dollars.
DOJ investigators worked with the departments of Homeland Security, Treasury and State, along with the Postal Inspection Service and international partners for four months before netting 281 people on charges related to business email compromise, also known as cyber-enabled financial fraud.
Such schemes usually involve people targeting representatives of companies with access to finances and other valuable information to trick them into making wire transfers or payments to them by impersonating business partners or other employees. The schemes also target individuals, and can go hand-in-hand with romance, employment opportunity, fraudulent vehicle sales, rental and lottery scams.
Following a four-month operation dubbed Operation reWired, authorities arrested 74 people in the United States and 207 in other countries. They included 167 people in Nigeria, 18 in Turkey and 15 in Ghana, the Justice Department said.
The operation also resulted in the seizure of about $3.7 million.
Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Chief Don Fort said the conspirators were responsible for stealing about 250,000 identities and filing more than 10,000 fraudulent tax returns trying to get more than $91 million in refunds.
Earlier this year, federal authorities identified seven Texas residents suspected of involvement in a business email fraud scheme, three of whom were living in Austin.
In February, 28-year-old Joseph Odibobhahemen, of Austin, pleaded guilty to money laundering. Two months earlier, 32-year-old Nosa Onaghise, of Austin, pleaded guilty to passport fraud in furtherance of money laundering.
A third Austin resident, 25-year-old Igho Calaba, was later arrested, along with Houston residents Bameyi Kelvin Omale, 31 and Chinonso Agbaji, 29, and San Antonio resident Chibuzor Stanley Uba, 30. Nnamdi Nwosu, 32, of Houston, remains at large, officials said. All seven are Nigerian nationals who were living in Texas.
Trials for Omale, Calaba and Uba are scheduled for November. Agbaji pleaded guilty in late August to conspiracy to launder monetary instruments and will be sentenced in December.
“The FBI is working every day to disrupt and dismantle the criminal enterprises that target our businesses and our citizens,” said FBI Director Christopher A. Wray in a statement. “Cooperation is the backbone to effective law enforcement; without it, we aren’t as strong or as agile as we need to be. Through Operation reWired, we’re sending a clear message to the criminals who orchestrate these BEC schemes: We’ll keep coming after you, no matter where you are. And to the public, we’ll keep doing whatever we can to protect you.”
People who have been victimized are encouraged to file a complaint online at bec.ic3.gov.
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‘The Socialist Manifesto’ and the rise of social democracy – Workers World | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Writers across the range of socialist and communist groups are openly grappling with strategies to achieve socialism. Every viable socialist organization needs an analysis of the past in order to look toward the future. With the growth of social-democratic organizations, how should revolutionaries view the path toward socialism?
Bhaskar Sunkara, the founder of Jacobin magazine as well as a former vice chair of the Democratic Socialists of America, is one of the most influential leaders in the growing U.S. socialist movement. Jacobin, with over 40,000 subscribers and millions of online views a month, is a major venue for ideological and practical debate. With 60,000 members, DSA has become the largest organization publicly identified with socialism. Sunkara’s book, “The Socialist Manifesto, The Case for Radical Politics in an Era of Extreme Inequality,” reviews the history of various trends within the socialist movement from a social-democratic viewpoint.
Originally titled “Socialism in Our Time,” “The Socialist Manifesto” is part historical analysis of workers’ states and capitalist social democracies, part hypothetical social-democratic future, and eventually a 15-point call to action which synthesizes Sunkara’s interpretation of the past and compels the development of “class struggle social democracy.”
The author of this “Manifesto” ignores the control by the corporations and ruling billionaires over the state apparatus — the FBI, COINTELPRO, the Pentagon, the police, the courts and the prisons. Here, police prepare to attack Indigenous and other protesters against the Dakota Access pipeline.
Electoral road to ‘democratic socialism’
Sunkara has never argued for a socialist revolution similar to those led by the Bolsheviks, the Chinese Communist Party or the July 26th Movement in Cuba. Throughout his book, Sunkara goes to great lengths to reiterate numerous popular talking points on what he considers the limitations of these revolutions. One could find these in any bourgeois newspaper.
Sunkara acknowledges some failures of social-democratic parties to build socialism. He acknowledges the shortfalls of the Social Democratic Party in Germany which enabled World War I, the rise of Hitler and the annihilation of German communists.
Seeking a hopeful example of successful social democracy leading in the direction of socialism, Sunkara looks fondly at the five decades of social democracy in Sweden — or in his words, “the most humane social system ever constructed” (p. 14). Sunkara laments the lost potential for 1970s Sweden to transition from social democracy to democratic socialism. The main components of the capitalist economy — the banks, major industries and the state — still remained under the control of a few Swedish families. Unsurprisingly, the 15 families who owned the vast majority of the economy blocked legislation to create wage-earners’ funds which would allow workers eventually to collectively own these industries.
There is no mention of Sweden’s supplying the Nazis with iron ore, its pillaging of African nations, its sending of over 6,000 troops to Congo in 1960 in an effort that led to the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, or of Sweden taking control of Congo’s copper mines. Swedish imperialism’s junior partnership with other leading empires is omitted, much in the same way that the Marxist-Leninist concept of imperialism is ignored.
Sunkara sees the transition from social democracy to democratic socialism in hypothetical thought exercises like this one about the U.S. in 2036: “With more decisions in the hands of ordinary people, civil life is full of political debate and new ideas. Even distributional questions are still not settled: a center-right party advocates for more market incentives and a reduction in the basic income; a center-left party questions traditional metrics of growth, proposing a happiness index instead; an internationalist left calls for more vigorous support for the workers’ movement abroad and more extensive democratic planning at home. And yes, there is a Right calling for the restoration of capitalism, but its support diminishes over time, much like monarchism slowly lost supporters in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries” (pp. 27-28).
Further elaborating, at the end of the book, Sunkara writes: “Our task is formidable. Democratic socialists must secure decisive majorities in legislatures while winning hegemony in the unions. Then our organizations must be willing to flex our social power in the form of mass mobilizations and political strikes to counter the structural power of capital and ensure that our leaders choose confrontation over accommodation with elites. This is the sole way we’ll not only make our reforms durable but break with capitalism entirely and bring about a world that values people over profit.”
‘Denial of class dictatorship’
This conception of a multiparty U.S. Congress striving toward democratic socialism denies the reality of the class dictatorship in which we currently live. This democratic transition to socialism ignores the control by the corporations and ruling billionaires of the state apparatus — the FBI, COINTELPRO, the Pentagon, the police, the courts, the prisons, etc. — and the impact of bourgeois control over education, the media, and religious and cultural institutions. This state enforces all forms of racist, ableist, misogynist, patriarchal, class oppression.
While it may be attractive to imagine a peaceful transition to socialism, this exercise denies that the history of the U.S. is one of occupation, economic sanctions, police and military violence, and genocidal attacks on every country that has attempted to break free from Wall Street domination. The question of which class will control the state — the billionaires or the working class — is not resolved by Sunkara’s imagined scenarios. His gradualistic hypothesis at best mediates class conflict, but it cannot lead to the establishment of a bonafide workers’ state.
V.I. Lenin’s classic “The State and Revolution,” based on lived, revolutionary experience, reads like a direct response to “The Socialist Manifesto” as it answers such utopian visions of socialist transformation. Lenin writes in the first chapter: “If the state is the product of the irreconcilability of class antagonisms, if it is a power standing above society and ‘alienating’ itself more and more from it; it is clear that the liberation of the oppressed class is impossible not only without a violent revolution, but also without the destruction of the apparatus of state power which was created by the ruling class and which is the embodiment of this ‘alienation.’” Lenin goes to lengths to challenge writers of his day who, like Sunkara, advocated for reform of capitalist governing structures.
Imperialism, national liberation and opportunism
Leninists have always pointed to how national liberation and socialism have been vitally connected over the past 100 years of socialist revolutions. Sam Marcy, the founding chairperson of Workers World Party, explained this significance in 1983, writing: “Of all the great domestic political problems facing the working class and the oppressed people, none surpasses in importance the relationship of national oppression to the class struggle. Indeed, one may say that it is at the heart of the basic social problem in the United States. It touches every form of social existence, and no sector of society is free from it.”
Sunkara says the left should be “universalist” and that a “democratic class politics is the best way to unite people against our common opponent and win the type of change that will help the most marginalized” (p. 236). This represents a dominant view within the DSA, which has downplayed the relevance of special oppressions like racism, sexism, ableism and anti-LGBTQ2S+ oppression (“identity politics”) in favor of a purportedly class-focused approach.
Sunkara rarely mentions fighting racism or other forms of oppression as a key component of fighting for socialism. Throughout his chapter on the history of socialism in the U.S., the vast majority of his discussion focuses on Eugene Debs, the Socialist Party, the Communist Party, and later Michael Harrington and DSA. There is no mention of the Black Panther Party, the Brown Berets, the Young Lords or any other national liberation struggles inside the U.S. which combined the struggle against racism and the struggle for socialism.
In the era of imperialism, supporting national liberation and fighting racism are fundamental to an international socialist strategy. Sunkara discounts the efforts of China, Angola, Vietnam, Korea and beyond, calling them using socialism to command a type of authoritarian capitalist development. Cuba, covered in a scant, disparaging four paragraphs, is considered a “revolution from above” whose future is in the “hands of a new generation of state bureaucrats and reemerging business interests” (p. 155). This analysis is shocking to those who have seen Cuba’s radical democracy firsthand and admire the leaders’ ability to mobilize and unite with the people to defend their revolution.
Venezuela, perhaps the greatest example in recent history of how mass socialist parties can use existing electoral processes to win major gains and expand true democracy and human rights for the most oppressed, is not mentioned once. Yet the challenges currently facing Venezuela demonstrate exactly the need for a socialist revolution to disarm and dismantle the oligarchy and the imperialists, who bear responsibility for Venezuela’s problems today.
Sunkara holds the view that socialism can only be built in “developed” imperialist countries. This, like his elevation of Swedish social democracies over the victories of billions of people from countries oppressed by imperialism, and the way he and others in DSA promote class over identity politics, reeks of chauvinism.
At the same time, Sunkara’s “class-based,” social-democratic gradualism represents a negation of the foundation of scientific Marxism: the irreconcilability of class antagonisms between labor and capital. To argue that socialism can be achieved peacefully via the bourgeois electoral process is to mislead and disorient the working class and the oppressed. History — consider the bloody 1973 CIA coup in Chile — has proven the opposite.
Ultimately, Sunkara’s brand of socialism seeks to be respectable to bourgeois, anti-communist intellectuals as well as the more privileged sectors of the working class, who see no future beyond imperialism and thus seek an opportunist compromise on essential socialist values.
Opposing U.S. imperialism at every turn; supporting the abolition of the capitalist police, military and state structures; fighting racism and all forms of oppression; and defending countries that are building socialism from imperialist attacks are key principles of a revolutionary strategy.
Turning back the clock on imperialism’s decay
“Social democracy was always predicated on economic expansion” (p. 123). Sunkara is correct in that social democracy has made gains in periods of imperialist expansion.
Unfortunately for social democracy, the owners of capital face a systemic crisis. The growth of high-tech capitalist production — originally designed to maximize profits by minimizing the number of workers — has become so capital-intensive that it leads to what Marx explained was “the falling rate of profit.” In fact, this is the terminal period of imperialism, a decadent system which has plundered the earth so thoroughly that all life is threatened.
As Marx explained, the capitalists must “expand or die,” and at this time they are struggling to open new markets and grow their profits. Precisely because the system is so productive, capitalism has entered a period of permanent overproduction. There is little room for the “economic expansion” that is the material basis of social democracy.
For the past two decades of “jobless recoveries,” workers have continued to be thrown out of the labor market while capitalists invest stolen wages in the financial sector rather than the productive economy.
The global labor market has doubled in the past 30 years, meaning the capitalists have at their disposal a larger “reserve army of labor,” as Marxists put it. They no longer need as many comparatively privileged workers in the imperialist countries. White supremacist terror, permanent austerity, low wages, shorter life expectancies and the expansion of mass incarceration are symptoms of the crisis of imperialism.
Given this context, Sunkara has absurdly sought to turn back time to an idealized compromise between the capitalists and the workers.
Rebuild the communist movement
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels wrote “The Communist Manifesto” in the revolutionary period of 1848. “The Communist Manifesto” represented a leap forward in the science of revolution which has inspired billions of people to this day. “The Socialist Manifesto,” written in a time when the international socialist movement has suffered serious losses, reflects the weakness of the left and the inability to see beyond capitalism.
Meanwhile, the earth is on fire because of the policies of the Pentagon, U.S. banks and corporations. We don’t have time to compromise with these capitalists. To defend the future of humanity, we must fight for working-class control to defeat the very banks and corporations that threaten life.
Revolutionary socialist, Leninist and communist parties have seen growth in recent years, although, for now, nothing as dramatic as DSA. These organizations, like Workers World Party, tie their politics to the experiences of successful revolutions across the world that have occurred since the Bolshevik Revolution, including their analysis of capitalism; imperialism; racism; gender, sexuality and ableist oppressions; defense of socialist countries; and solidarity with the most oppressed. We must dedicate ourselves to popularizing these principles of Leninism and continue fighting for socialist revolution.
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By Harper Neidig, Olivia Beavers, Emily Birnbaum, Maggie Miller - 09/10/19 05:49 PM EDT
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By Madison Gesiotto, opinion contributor - 09/09/19 06:00 PM EDT
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Leff sayZ: "I will die like the one of those 26 Baku Commissars... - 5:56 PM 9/10/2019 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Leff sayZ: "I will die like the one of those 26 Baku Commissars... - 5:56 PM 9/10/2019
5:52 PM 9/10/2019 Leff sayz: I will die like the one of those 26 Commissars, I will never betray my beloved Azerbayjani GRU (which was, is, andalways will be just the branch of the "Alma Pater - Mater", etc., in all possible mixes, of the Russian Moscow GRU). In fact, he will sing better than the Sopranos, his "target"; he is the specialist in these matters, apparently. Tell us more about the late Jeffrey Epstein and his adventures on his "Virgin Islands", with whih you must be very well familiar with. Tell us everything, "Douglas". Is this your GRU code name, by the way? GRU General "Douglas Leff" - sounds impresive...
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Secretario de Seguridad Pública en Washington, DC en busca de recursos para atender situación de carjackings en la Isla
Posted on Sep 5, 2019 in Noticias Locales
Leff sayZ: "I will die like the one of those 26 Baku Commissars, I will not tell them anything, I will never betray my beloved Azerbaijani GRU (which was, is, and always will be just the branch of the "Alma Pater - Mater", etc., in all possible mixes, of the Russian Moscow GRU). In fact, he will sing better than the Sopranos, his "target"; he is the specialist in these matters, apparently. Tell us more about the late Jeffrey Epstein and his adventures on his "Virgin Islands", with which you must be very well familiar with. Tell us everything, "Douglas". Is this your GRU code name, by the way?
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бакинские комиссары памятник _________________________________________________
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