Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Delta

I have been outrageously fortunate in my life, for I have three loves.

The first is a gentle tide, ebb and flow everlasting
She is a quiet spouse who loves me like the moon
If I lay as the Earth, her soft body entangles mine, warming me as we fly through space

My second love is a supernova, or perhaps the Northern Lights
a burning building
Or a four-part harmony drifting through empty alleys

My third love is the most cruel mistress of them all
But even as she torments me I am enraptured by her beauty
The suffering is mine alone, yet she can be possessed by no man
This would lead some to call her harlot, but they mistake the nature of her majesty
Like a Buddhist or Trafalmadorian, she is not encapsulated by mortality

My first love is life-giver, doomed to decay in time
My second is a lighter-flame of passion
But my third is the Undying Queen of existence
And if you approach the world with soft eyes
She will be your true love too

Thursday, August 19, 2010

"Withdrawing" From Iraq and American Imperialism

Cross-posted from the Th!nk3 blog here

This morning it was announced that the US had finished its planned withdrawal of all of its designated combat brigades from Iraq two weeks ahead of schedule, resulting in about 14,000 troops being withdrawn. Despite this, over 56,000 US troops remain in Iraq who are trained in combat and expected to continue combat operations, and the Obama administration plans to double the number of private military contractors in Iraq to 7,000. Could anyone rational expect there to not be a US military presence in Iraq anytime in the foreseeable future?

In the same stroke, Obama has just authorized an additional $600 million to further militarize the US-Mexico border in response to increasing migration into the US and escalating drug war violence along the border, even as Mexican President Felipe Calderon calls for a debate on drug legalization and former President Vincente Fox openly supports legalization. Both presidents have been staunch allies of the US in fighting the war on drugs, and since 2006, when Calderon entered office and increased pressure on Mexican drug cartels, it is estimated that over 28,000 people have been killed in Mexico as a result of the war on drugs.

In addition to increasing the militarization of the border, deportations from the US have risen for the 7th year in a row to an all-time high of 393,000 in 2009 under the Obama administration. Of those deported, 72% were from Mexico. The deport-and-militarize strategy is not a sustainable solution to illegal immigration, as it does nothing to address the root cause of why these people are coming to the US.

The true source of the problem lies in US polices that have been encouraged in/forced upon Mexico, particularly NAFTA and the drug war. NAFTA essentially implemented US farm policy in Mexico, favoring large corporate monoculture factory farms and destroying the ability of small farmers to make a living. The drug war, as explained above, caused an epidemic of violence in the country. With no way to make a decent wage and rampant, brutal violence, it should be no surprise that some of these people want to come to the US. Yet, as with 9/11, Americans refuse to see that our foreign policy and our imposition of will on others has resulted in backlash against us, so we characterize all Muslims as terrorists and all immigrants as blood-sucking leeches on our community.

It is a shame to see this influence continue to be exerted for no other reason than profit and greed again, this time in India. The Obama administration is reportedly pressuring the Indian government to provide leniency for Union Carbide, the company responsible for massive environmental and public health damages as a result of the 1984 Bhopal disaster and which is now a subsidiary of Dow Chemical Corporation, one of the largest in the world. The leverage is coming in the form of US support for millions of dollars of development aid from World Bank loans.

Fortunately, it is reassuring to see some countries take a stand against American imperialism. The Colombian Constitutional Court has recently ruled that a deal that would give US forces access to seven Colombian military bases and permit 800 US troops and 600 contractors to operate with diplomatic immunity in the country was unconstitutional. In Afghanistan, President Hamid Karzai issued a statement requiring all private security contractors, of which the US employs about 26,000, to cease operations within four months.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

On Social Darwinism

Cross-posted from the Th!nk3 blog here

Social Darwinism is the theory that applies Darwin's ideas of evolution to human social structures. The basic premise is that, like competition between different species, those who overcome struggle to prosper and reproduce are the ones most fit to survive and should be rewarded, while those who do not are not meant to survive and deserve no help. This kind of philosophy is behind ideas ranging from free market capitalism to conservative opposition of unemployment and welfare benefits to Nazism and Aryanism.

Proponents of this school of thought tend to ignore Darwin's ideas on an important aspect of survival of the fittest: competitive advantage - the aspect which affords a species greater survivability. Darwin argued that it was human's ability to cooperate (facilitated by our capacity for language) that was our competitive advantage and that allowed us to populate the most diverse and hostile regions of the globe. It has been our cooperation that has allowed our population to increase to such great numbers (whether this is really a good thing is debatable, but in terms of species survival and genetic variability it is beneficial) and to accomplish such enourmous feats as space travel.

I felt I needed to bring this up because it serves as an important reminder to us in the competition of why we're doing this, and to everyone else that we're all in this together. I see divisiveness growing throughout the world, from the Islamophobia that has flared up in America again, to the lack of aid reaching Haiti and Pakistan, to the international climate negotiation debacle, and it is up to us to remind our leaders what the world truly needs from them.

The English poet Albert Pine said, "What we do for ourselves dies with us. What we do for others and the world remains and is immortal."

Thursday, August 12, 2010

How Legalizing Drugs Can Help US Foreign Relations

Cross-posted from the Th!nk3 blog here

On its surface, the drug legalization question seems to be at most a national issue. Portugal has enjoyed some success with its decriminalization regime, while Amsterdam proceeds with re-criminalizing hallucinogenic mushrooms. Meanwhile, developing countries tend to favor harsh punishment for simple possession. However, 28,000 bodies over the last three years in Mexico and calls from their pro-drug war President Felipe Calderon to open the debate on legalization suggest a need for the international community to consider this issue.

The U.S. could benefit greatly from changing its international drug war policies, which are the source of much fear, mistrust, and anger towards the U.S. abroad. Furthermore, legalization of the drug trade would remove a major source of profit for international criminal and terrorist organizations.

In South America, Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia are the top producers of cocoa, which is used to manufacture cocaine. U.S. relations with these countries have fluctuated over time. Peru and Bolivia, once allies with the U.S. in the War on Drugs, have cut off these ties after realizing the effect of U.S.-funded aerial spraying of cocoa fields on their economies, not to mention the impacts to human health and the environment. This led to massive amounts of cocaine trafficking in Colombia in the 1980s - and now that the U.S. is spending billions on its anti-drug programs/military buildup in Colombia, trafficking has shifted to Mexico, the location of massive amounts of recent drug war violence, while cocoa production in Peru is experiencing a resurgence. If drugs were legalized, the needless destruction of land would stop, Venezuela would not have to fear the massive buildup of U.S. troops near its borders, and the saved money could go toward community development in South America, stopping LRA violence in Africa, or any other of the world's problems (thus improving the world's view of the U.S.).

Afghanistan is the opium capitol of the world, producing 80-90% of the world's supply. Opium has had tremendous impacts on the economy there, making up over a third of the country's GDP. It is also a major reason for instability and U.S. resentment - protection of opium profits requires paying off insurgents or terrorist groups, often the only form of peacekeeping in remote regions, and the destruction of crops by U.S. forces threatens the livelihood of the people involved in the trade, which is about 10% of the population. Drug legalization would vastly decrease the profits made from farming opium poppies and encourage people to go back to farming traditional crops and raising livestock. It would also reduce the need of opium farmers to rely on insurgents for protection of their now-legal trade and help discourage people from that lifestyle if survival can be found through less extreme measures. Reductions in insurgents, while not the only factor in a very complicated situation, would help lead to a sooner end of the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan, which many view as the inevitable end to an unwinnable situation.

In Mexico, the U.S. spends countless dollars supporting President Calderon's drug war by supplying arms and training troops - only to have these troops defect to the drug trafficking organizations. Corruption is widespread throughout Mexico's government and police force, whether due to greed or these officials fearing for their safety. As the government comes down harder on drug traffickers, the violence escalates due to desperate traffickers struggling to protect their profits. As a result, schools in Mexico are now teaching elementary school children how to hide under their desks when shootouts start. Legalizing drugs and removing the profit motive would completely eradicate this violence, if not these organizations in their entirety.

The costs of the drug war are too high for a humane society to inflict on itself or any other. The international community needs to look to places such as Portugal that have figured out how to reduce the harms of drug use while eliminating the harms of prohibition.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

To Show Our Strength

Cross posted from the Th!nk3 blog here

Last night on the Daily Show, John Stewart reported an excellent piece on the controversy surrounding a proposed Islamic cultural center near the former site of the World Trade Center (WTC) in New York City (to see the report, click here). To be clear, the plans are for a cultural center, not a mosque, and it is not actually on the site of the former WTC, but a few blocks away in an abandoned department store. Yet opponents are still fighting back fervently, some of the most extreme opposition coming in the form of banners on buses in New York depicting a plane about to crash into a flaming WTC tower and posing the question, "Why there?"

If this were a nation that upheld freedom of religion as defined by the First Amendment to the Constitution to the full extent of the law, this would be a non-issue - people may not like it, but the cultural center would be established nonetheless. Instead, Islamic cultural centers and mosques face opposition all across the country, from New York to California. For a country that claims to value freedom so highly, I am thoroughly embarassed that an elected public official would insinuate that Islam is "a cult" and should be persecuted as such (I believe that even cults, however you define the word, deserve respect and space, unless they perpetrate crimes such as forced childhood incest).

To not allow this cultural center to be built shows our weakness to the world. It shows that we, the American people, are weak enough to give in to bigotry and ignorance, to assume that all 1.4 billion Muslims in the world are extremists, and to not stand up for equality in the face of the extremists who oppose this place of diversity and learning. On the other hand, allowing it to be built shows the exact opposite - that we are strong enough to embrace diversity, to reconcile with a faith that has for years been persecuted and discriminated against within our own borders, and to recognize what our real enemies are in the War on Terror - fear, ignorance, and hatred.

I would propose that we allow these plans to proceed at an even higher degree. How would the world react if we allowed a mosque, a place dedicated solely to Islamic worship, to be built not near, but on Ground Zero, where the two towers once stood? It would be our olive branch to the Islamic community, a true sign that we want to make peace with the world, and a show of strength and unity in the face of violence and terror. My ideal plans along these lines would be a Christian church, a Jewish synagogue, and an Islamic mosque all sharing the former WTC space together (not to exclude other religions, but I believe these three send the most powerful message) with a memorial to 9/11 in the center. The dedication would read something like:

'To those who bring us fear, we respond with courage
To those who bring us division, we respond with unity
And to those who bring us violence, we respond with peace.'

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

What's the opposite of global progress? US Congress

I used to think that it would take a major environmental disaster to kick the country into gear and get serious about climate change, but after three months of the BP Gulf oil disaster and record breaking heat waves across the country the Senate has given up on passing a comprehensive climate bill. While official statements suggest that the bill will be up for debate again after the August recess, it is doubtful that the Democrats will try to push hard on a controversial bill with the midterm elections approaching.

This will ultimately be more devastating to the UN climate negotiations than the failure to produce anything meaningful from the Copenhagen talks last December. Prospects for a legally-binding climate treaty were already nonexistent for COP-16 this December in Cancun and slim for COP-17 next year, but if the US fails to act by then the negotiations could completely fall apart. China and India are dumbfounded by this latest US development as they make serious headway in their climate efforts, and if the US continues to show up to the table empty-handed they may just walk away, having no incentive to stay involved.

I see a great parallel here between the financial crisis and the climate crisis. During the financial crisis, the government didn't get involved until Lehman Brothers failed, bailing out the rest of the banks. Will the US stay uninvolved in the climate crisis until the oil runs out or islands start disappearing? I certainly hope not, but there's not much giving me hope otherwise.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Th!nking about it some more

(Originally written March 25, 2010, but never published)

Earlier this week I traveled to Brussels to participate in the kick-off event of the third round of the Th!nk About It blogging competition, sponsored by the European Commission and the European Journalism Centre. The topic for this round is sustainable development and global cooperation, and specifically how the Millennium Development Goals can be met by the target year of 2015.

One of the most amazing things I found was that Europeans and others from around the globe overwhelmingly like Americans, even though they may dislike our foreign policy just as much. One speaker during the conference remarked “Americans are among the nicest, most generous people you will meet” even as he expressed his disbelief that we could support such outrageous foreign policy initiatives as those implemented by Bush (to be fair, Obama has continued many of these policies, so he's not off the hook either).

In particular, the War on Drugs has been devastating for American relations with developing countries such as Columbia, Bolivia, Peru, and Afghanistan that cultivate the crops used to produce narcotic drugs such as cocaine and heroin. In addition to providing a large source of income for these countries, these crops are an important part of the native culture. Among the Andean Indians of South America, chewing cocoa leaves to get relief from hunger and fatigue while working in the fields is the equivalent of coffee and cigarette breaks in our society. Who are we to say that people around the world can only enjoy the drugs our society deems acceptable?

Instead of oppressing these people's culture and livelihood, we should find a way to work together to combat our drug problems. One incentive for growing these crops is that prohibition makes the price of drugs artificially high, so if we were to legalize and regulate drugs we could reduce price and therefore supply and at the same time reduce outrageous spending by our government on drug control policies that not only have failed to reduce the supply and demand of drugs, but actually resulted in increased rates of drug use and availability.

In Afghanistan, Al-Queda understood that the people depended on the poppy harvest for their livelihood, and they were able to gain so much support because they chose to work with the population instead of destroying their source of income and an important part of their culture. We have the ability to solve so many global problems such as drug use and terrorism, but it can only be done if we choose to work with the rest of the world, not against them.