Showing posts sorted by relevance for query bilderberg. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query bilderberg. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, June 19, 2023

Central Alberta records ‘tremendous’ amounts of rain; flooding a concern
ALBERTA IS THE BIBLE BELT
FIRST FIRE THEN FLOODS
Story by Emily Mertz • Yesterday 


Water accumulates in Edmonton at 34 Street and 69 Avenue on Monday, June 19, 2023, after heavy rain fall Sunday.© Global News

Edmonton saw nearly half of the average amount of rain it usually sees for all of June in just one day.

As of 6 p.m. Sunday, the city had recorded up to 38 millimetres of rainfall. For Edmonton, the June average is 77 mm.

“We’ve seen a tremendous amount of rain so far in the city and over the course of just Sunday," said Global Edmonton weather specialist Phil Darlington.

Darlington pointed out that the University of Alberta weather station has recorded about 129 mm of rainfall so far this June.

Some private rain gauges recorded over 40 mm of rain by Sunday night. Over the course of 24 hours, some parts of Edmonton recorded nearly 80 mm of rain.

Video: Edmonton weather forecast: Monday, June 19, 2023

“We’ve already exceeded our June normal, which is very interesting considering we started the month off well below normal," said Sara Hoffman, a meteorologist for Environment and Climate Change Canada.

She said the first two weeks of June were incredibly dry. Calgary recorded zero precipitation and Edmonton recorded just 0.5 mm.

“So really, over the past six days, we’ve seen a month’s worth of rain -- and more -- fall in the Edmonton region," Hoffman said.

“This amount of rain, at this time, especially for west-central portions of the province, is a little bit unusual and not as common. These rainfall amounts in 24 hours are definitely not the norm.”

Much of central and northern Alberta also saw a lot of rainfall thanks to this significant low-pressure system.

“The most rain fell west of us in Yellowhead County, around Hendrickson Creek and the Edson area," Hoffman added.

Accumulated precipitation amounts (over an approximately 48-hour period) as of noon Monday were:

Hendrickson Creek: 132.8 mm

Carrot Creek: 128 mm

Evansburg: 108 mm

Edson: 107.5 mm

Edmonton area: 52-76 mm

Jasper: 73.5 mm

“The dichotomy of how it started and how it is right now is kind of giving us whiplash," Hoffman said.

"It started off so hot and dry. Now we’re well below normal temperatures, with some portions of the province seeing a crazy amount of precipitation.”

Environment Canada still had rainfall warnings in effect Monday for much of central and western Alberta, including places like Yellowhead County. The weather agency said those regions could see between 40 and 80 mm of rain.

"A long period of heavy rain continues," Environment Canada said. "Widespread rain amounts of 50 to 80 mm have already fallen, with some areas receiving over 100 mm so far.

"Heavy downpours can cause flash floods and water pooling on roads. Localized flooding in low-lying areas is possible."


When considering what they've already seen in the last couple days, that could add up to more than 120 mm total, Darlington said.

The town of Edson, where residents were just allowed to return home after being forced out by wildfire, declared a local state of emergency Monday due to heavy rainfall and flooding.

The town said crews were out with pumps, directing water to avoid flooding issues. Residents experiencing flooding in their homes are being told to call 780-723-6300.

"Crews are extremely busy right now and may not be able to respond right away," town officials said in a post on Facebook.

"Once our main office lines are open again, please contact Infrastructure and Planning to make sure you’re on the tracking list of flooded properties.

"Please stay away from creeks, streams, and other bodies of water right now. We are monitoring Hillendale Pond, Centennial, and other areas and trying to mitigate issues as best we can."

According to Alberta weather station data, the Edmonton Blatchford station accumulated about 52 mm of rain between June 16 and 19. Over the same time period, the Carrot Creek daily station recorded nearly 85 mm.

Bruce Webb, a rancher in Carrot Creek, said the flooding happened really quickly.

"It (Lobstick River) was dry – nothing flowing through it or nothing. Just overnight – like late (Sunday) afternoon around supper it was just a little stream and (Monday) morning it’s all flooded.”

Video: Flooding in western Alberta after heavy rainfall

He said he can see how high the water is from his house.

"Just overnight... It’s flooded a big area of it.

“I haven’t seen what it’s done to my crop fields yet.”

It's as bad as he's ever seen for this time of year.

“Usually in the spring and spring runoff, but not as big as this. This has been quite a few years since we’ve had this much rain," Webb said.

Video: Rare June snowfall warning in the Rocky Mountains, Marmot Basin shares snow photos

There were six 24-hour rainfall records set: Bretton, Camrose, Edmonton, Edson, Elk Island and Grande Prairie.

“For the higher elevations in the Rocky Mountains, this actually fell as snow," Hoffman said. "So we’ve had some accumulating snow especially on Highway 93 and portions of Jasper, Nordegg.

"At this time of year, most people have their summer tires on, so if you’re planning to be in the Rocky Mountains for the next couple of days here, you’ll have to drive to conditions because there’s snow on the roads.”

“Conditions in Jasper are very snowy right now," said Brian Rode, vice-president of Marmont Basin, on Monday at 11:30 a.m.

"It’s been snowing probably for about seven or eight hours now.

"We’ve got a foot on the ground up in Marmont Basin and some trees down in Jasper, so lots of snow but it looks like the weather is going to be sunny here in a few days," Rode said.

High streamflow advisories were also in place for much of central and western Alberta Monday, including for tributaries of the North Saskatchewan River (from Rocky Mountain House to the city of Edmonton, mainstem within the city of Edmonton), the Swan Hills watershed, the Peace River Basin (all streams in the Smoky River Basin) and the Athabasca River Basin (Pembina River Basin).

According to Alberta Rivers, water level rises in the tributaries of over 1.2 metres are possible but no flooding impacts are expected at this time.

Water levels of the North Saskatchewan as it flows through Edmonton are expected to peak late Wednesday into early Thursday, rising 1.5 metres more.

"This may impact boat launches as well as the docks near Dawson Park, Edmonton riverboat."

There was also a flood watch for the Athabasca River Basin (parts of McLeod River near Whitecourt and Paddle River near Barrhead).

Edmonton is no longer under any rainfall alerts, but there's still a risk of rain over the next several days.

Panex Oil and Gas controller Brenda Toews arrived at work on Monday to six inches of water in the Edmonton shop.

The building, located at 37 Street and 69 Avenue in Edmonton, experienced a bit of flooding on Thursday, Toews said, but they were able to sweep it out with brooms.

EPCOR drained it on Friday, she said, but the water returned Monday with a vengeance.

“Now we’ve got five pumps pumping out the water as fast as we can because sweeping it wasn’t working," Toews said.

“It’s really hard to weld when you’re standing in water. So we have no production and I’m paying all my welders to sweep water."

She said it's very frustrating.

"Stressful because we’re going to miss deadlines… and stressful that no one’s being held accountable."

Toews thinks the flooding is connected to a train track and ditch behind the shop.

“I’ve been here 23 years and it’s never happened before. Obviously there’s a big issue. It’s going to continue happening until someone decides what’s wrong.”

Video: What homeowners should watch for when it rains

When the rain started really coming down Sunday, Charity Sagart knew her older home might have some issues.

“Last night, of course, it was flooding outside. The (basement) carpet was saturated with water so I just lifted it up and cut through the drywall and saw a little bit of a crack and followed it up and it’s there."

She found a crack in her foundation so she called to have it assessed and repaired Monday.

“We’re getting over 100 calls a day," said Todd Ivanochko, president of Shield Foundation Repair.

“This is just that time of year. You get a month’s worth of rain in less than three days.”

He said the most common issues are deficiencies in foundation walls, vertical cracks, leaking snap ties (the wires going through the foundation) and honeycombing (when the concrete separates and becomes porous).

“Water can be terrible. It not only wrecks the drywall, it’ll wreck the baseboards, it can wreck your flooring, it can damage any furniture in the area, and if you don’t catch it right way, it can create mould and other issues.”

“I’m in homes that were built in 2023. I’m in homes that were built in 1910. It doesn’t matter.

"We live in an environment that has a very high plastic clays, which means the more moisture you get, the more the ground swells (and) the less moisture you get, the more it shrinks. So the house is always wiggling and moving," Ivanochko said.

He added that if homeowners notice water damage, they should try to contain the water and minimize its impact by rolling up carpet and moving any belongings away.

“People should pay attention to their downspouts and where they’re going, any negative sloping grating towards the house, that’s just encouraging more water to go up against the foundation wall.”

Fire to floods: Edson declares local state of emergency due to massive rainfall

Story by Karen Bartko • Yesterday 

Heavy rainfall caused Bench Creek through Centennial Park to flood and become a lake as the town of Edson dealt with flooding on Monday, June 19, 2023.© Credit: Edson Mayor Kevin Zahara via Twitter

To say it's been a trying few weeks for the people of Edson, Alta., may be an understatement.

After being forced to evacuate twice in the the span of a month due to wildfires fuelled by dry conditions, residents in the town about 180 kilometres west of Edmonton are now dealing with an opposite extreme: too much water.

"We asked for rain and boy, did we get it. Way too much and if it wants to stop now, I'm thinking we would be very happy about that," Edson Mayor Kevin Zahara said Monday afternoon.

"Really shocking. From one extreme to the next."

More than 105 millimetres (mm) of rain has fallen in Edson in the past 48 hours and Zahara said the bulk of it — about 85 mm — came over the course of couple of hours Monday morning.

"Which is the types of rainfall you would see over a period of a month. So our infrastructure — no town infrastructure, city infrastructure — can handle that much water at that amount of time."

Late Monday afternoon, Yellowhead County issued an emergency alert for flash flooding.

"We are experiencing heavy rainfall resulting in overland flooding, snow accumulation, fallen powerlines, and in some areas, power outages," the Alberta Emergency Alert issued at 4:19 p.m. said.

People were advised to avoid driving through flooded areas, stay away from downed power lines and be prepared for outages.

Just before 6 p.m., the county also said part of a hamlet about 60 kilometres south of Edson and Hinton was being told to evacuate.

An evacuation order is being issued for residents in Lower Robb due to heavy rainfall. They were told to head to a reception centre up the road at the Robb Multiplex/Curling Hall.

As of 1 p.m., the town of Edson said 13 properties had reported flooding but the number is expected to change. Zahara said he's never seen this much rain or flooding in the community.

During a update in which a state of local emergency was declared by the town due to heavy rainfall and flooding, Zahara became overwhelmed with emotion.

"Listen, folks. This has been incredibly difficult the last number of weeks..." he said, choking up and having to pause to collect himself.

"Today is hard to watch, to see people struggling with their homes... But I am incredibly proud of our staff here at the Town of Edson and our emergency responders. Thank you," he said through tears.

Zahara said residents are dealing with flooded basements and homes and the flooding is taxing the town's already exhausted resources.

"We know this is a lot to deal with right now."

All available staff in the town have pivoted to deal with the flooding.

"We have every available resource within the Town of Edson deployed right now. Many of them were working during the fires as well. So they are a bit taxed and we are looking at bringing additional resources in," Zahara said.

Phone landlines and internet were also down in the town Monday, which the community noted was an issue with Telus and the telecommunications company was working to fix it.

By declaring the state of local emergency, Zahara said the town will be in contact with the Alberta Emergency Management Agency to get more resources in to help, as well as requesting assistance from surrounding municipalities.

"We're going to be reaching out to our neighbouring municipalities if they can help support us with some crews, to help our teams to be able to divert this water," Town CAO Christine Beveridge said during the update.

Some roads have been closed and pumps have been set up to deal with localized flooding in Edson, she added.

The Edson landfill is also closed until further notice due to deteriorating road conditions and bridge concerns, the town said later in the afternoon.

The town noted the storm surge being experienced Monday is unprecedented, adding the majority of the sewer system was designed back in the 1960s and 1970s and is undersized for today's needs.

"No amount of infrastructure funding and infrastructure upgrades would deal with this kind of rainfall over this short of a period of time," Zahara said.

The town said once the system becomes overwhelmed, roads become the natural path for runoff to any one of the three creeks that flow through Edson.

With the past few days of continual rainfall, the ground has soaked up as much as moisture as it could, and Edson said the waste treatment system is running at capacity.

"We have pumps that are diverting sanitary past the (sewage) treatment plant to holding ponds to relieve the pressure on our system," Beveridge said.

"We've had over 85 millimetres of rain in a very short time and obviously we're trying our best to minimize the damage."

The mayor shared a photo on social media showing Bench Creek through Centennial Park had overflowed its banks and turned into a lake, with water levels reaching a pedestrian bridge that runs through the park in the middle of town.

Beveridge said a "beaver specialist" has been called in to free blockages (presumably caused by beaver dams) downstream on the creek.

An Environment Canada rainfall warning is in effect across much of western Alberta as a long period of heavy rain continues.

Widespread rain amounts of 50 to 80 mm have fallen with some areas receiving over 100 mm so far, the national weather agency said Monday afternoon.


Edmonton itself saw nearly half of the average amount of rain it usually sees for all of June in just one day.


Video: Heavy rain flooding basements in Edmonton: ‘It’s heartbreaking’

A noon update from Environment Canada said Hendrickson Creek near Grande Cache has received 132.8 mm of rain, while Carrot Creek got 128 mm. Edson is located between those two communities.

Additional amounts of 40 to 80 mm are expected before rain tapers off Tuesday night, the government said.


It was just last Thursday the roughly 8,000 residents of the town in Yellowhead County were allowed to return home, six days after being ordered to evacuate.

On June 9, a massive wildfire sped towards the western Alberta town, fuelled by high temperatures and winds.

That evacuation of both the town and much of the county came a month after a nearly identical situation in early May.

Monday's town update was actually supposed to be a wildfire update but that is no longer the main threat to the community.

"At this point in time, we will have a further update later this week as the water is now our issue over fire," Beveridge said, adding 84 mm of rain has fallen at the head of the wildfire as of Monday morning.

"We still can't let our guard down as as when conditions dry, we'll start to see more risk again. But at this moment in time, it's really about the water."

The flooding comes as the town is still working to get back to normal after the wildfire evacuations.

Beveridge praised the patience of residents and the efforts of workers to re-open stores and restore services and utilities.

She said ATCO Gas has gotten 3,400 homes back online since last week. She thanked all the help provided by other municipalities in recent weeks, including the City of Edmonton which opened a reception centre.

"It's second-to-none when it comes to how our residents were treated. It's just been ... amazing."

The wildfire danger is low in the Edson area now and while the fire burning near town is still classified as out of control, Alberta Wildfire said little fire spread is forecasted due to the mild weather.

"I wish we would have had some of this rain a few weeks ago," Zahara said.

"Obviously, this is going to help our wildfire situation, but has brought a whole bunch of new problems to our community."

Zahara said administration would have a further update on Tuesday.




FIRE AND FLOODS HAVE PLAGUED ALBERTA SINCE THE RALPH KLEIN DAYS

Ralph Klein attended the 1995 Bilderberg meeting while floods ravished the south of the province and forest fires decimated the North. It was a good time for a trip abroad. He was invited by long standing Bilderberg Steering Committee member and international corporate criminal; Conrad Black.



Tuesday, March 27, 2007

LaRouche Takes Over Vive le Canada


There has been a disturbing trend over at Vive le Canada lately, it seems to have lost it's moderators for there can be no other explanation for the right wing conspiracy theorists that are now spamming it with their nut bar posts.

Here is the latest one from followers of the former Trotskyist turned conspiracy noodle head; Lyndon LaRouche. This appeared also on Progressive Bloggers because Vive le Canada is a member of the PB aggregator.

This article appears in the December 14, 2001 issue of Executive Intelligence Review. Dope, Inc. Is $600 Billion and Growing by Jeffrey Steinberg In the Summer of 1996, EIR conducted an exhaustive study of the worldwide illegal drug trade,

EIR is one of LaRouche's major publications. LaRoucheites came up with the slogan Nuke the Whales, since they are proponents of nuclear power and have used their private intelligence to attack the anti-nuke movement.

They are racists, LaRouche spent years attacking black culture, believing in a banking conspiracy they are Anti-Semites, they are homophobic AIDs deniers, they believe in the Anglo-American conspiracy theories, etc. etc. in other words they are a violent proto-fascist movement


evidence shows 'suicide' student was beaten to death
Duggan, from Golders Green, north-west London, had become involved with the Wiesbaden followers of Lyndon LaRouche, an American millionaire with virulent anti-Semitic views. Unaware of the group's leanings, the former Christ's Hospital pupil told followers that he was Jewish. At 4.20am on 27 March, 2003, Duggan rang his mother. His voice was hushed: 'Mum, I am in deep trouble.'

Worldwide LaRouche Youth Movement

Of course it doesn't help when anti-globalization publications like Michel Chossudovsky's Global Research.ca publish LaRouche sourced materials giving them undeserved legitimacy.


The LaRouche organization was also described by Norman Bailey, a former senior staffer of the National Security Council, as "one of the best private intelligence services in the world."

Global Research refuses to publish neo-fascist white racists who oppose globalization but will publish LaRouche via his followers. It shows that
Chossudovsky's conspiracy theory laden analysis of globalization is far closer to LaRouche than he cares to admit.

In that same vein the proto-nationalism of Vive le Canada with its opposition to Deep Integration allows it to fall into the same ideological trap as the anti-globalizationists, accepting conspiracy theories from the left and the right as long as they appear reasonable.

Folks get your act together and start monitoring those posts!


DISCREDITED former MP Ken Aldred was last night dumped as a Liberal candidate in the federal election over his links to far-right groups and his attacks on a prominent Jewish lawyer. Mr Aldred appeared before a specially convened meeting of the Liberal Party's administrative committee in Melbourne after he issued a legal threat to the party demanding the right to attend.

He tried to justify his past conduct in a statement that he read at the meeting, but the committee members - including Peter Costello and state Liberal leader Ted Baillieu - voted unanimously to dump him as the preselected candidate in the seat of Holt.

Liberal Party state director Julian Sheezel confirmed the result last night saying: "The administrative committee considered that he was an unsuitable candidate to receive endorsement."

John Howard had earlier written to members saying he did not think Mr Aldred - who has been linked to the far-Right US-based LaRouche organisation and its Australian arm, the Citizens Electoral Council - was a suitable person to stand for the Liberal Party.

Prominent Jewish lawyer Mark Leibler, who has led calls for the party to dump Mr Aldred, yesterday described Mr Aldred's preselection last weekend as an "embarrassment".

Mr Leibler, who was falsely accused by Mr Aldred in 1995 of being involved in a money-laundering scam run by Israeli spy agency Mossad, said yesterday: "It's not half the embarrassment it is to me as it is to the Liberal Party.

"This guy is a racist, an anti-Semite, he's presented fraudulent documents to the parliament. He is not the sort of person who would be supported by the Prime Minister or the Treasurer or any Liberal of standing."


The LaRouche Movement: American 'fascism' or something else?

The LaRouche movement is a clever organization: clever because it operates several independent divisions that are hard to connect with each other. The Schiller Institute, the Fusion Energy Forum, the Executive Intelligence Review, the Campaign to Explore Human Rights Violations in the U.S. (whose main interests seem to be the rights of Larouchians), Bread for the World, the Human Life Committee, the New Federalist , and 21st Century Science & Technology magazine are all part of the LaRouche organization. Currently, LaRouche is also connected to the ' Productive Triangle Program" (the 'Paris-Berlin-Vienna' axis) promoted by the International Progress Organization (IPO) in Central Europe, intended to promote economic development. Lyndon H. LaRouche has run (as a Democrat, no less) for president several times; in 1992 he is running from a jail cell, with the Rev. James Bevel (a SCLC founder and associate of Rev. King) as his vice presidential running mate. One might note, incidentally, that several LaRouchians do hold various offices around the country, and many LaRouchian groups have sprung up in Europe.

LaRouche is one of those political trippers that has managed to take the bend all the way around from the Far Left to the Far Right, without breaking his neck. In the 60s and 70s, he was "Lyn Marcus," head of the International Caucus of Labor Committees, an ultra-doctrinaire Marxist group with some strange disciplinary practices. Even back in the late 70s he was warning of impending financial crisis and cultural ruin. Today, Lyn(don) is a big promoter of the Strategic Defense Initiative, an implacable foe of world communism, a big supporter of a united Germany, and a borderline anti-Semite, who has attacked a whole bunch of Jews - particularly Roy Cohn, Henry Kissinger, and the heads of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai Brith - by saying they are really "Zionists," i.e. a particularly wicked bunch of Jews... anyone remember the Protocols of the Elders of Zion? (One might note that LaRouche has, on several occasions, attacked the Nazi-hunting branch of the Department of Justice (the OSI) as "witch hunters persecuting upright German citizens," some of those upright citizens being V2 rocket engineers smuggled into this country through Project Paperclip.) It is clear that his trip into the Far Right has left him with some discredited Far Left ideas.

LaRouche's main thesis is that the 'Anglo-American cabal,' which involves George Bush, the English monarchy, and some other ingredients, has decided to undertake a programme of genocidal IMF/World Bank-financed de-industrialization to deplete the population of the Third World. The cabal's plan includes "narcotrafficking"; environmental policies to prevent those countries from developing economically; 'Malthusian' population policies which incorporate birth control, abortion, and allowing disease and hunger free rein; profiteering through 'neo-colonial' resource control; the "lab-created" AIDs virus; and promotion of 'antifamily' ideals such as feminism, homosexuality, Satanism, and "the sex-drugs-rock and roll counterculture." This conspiracy theory, needless to say, is a grab bag of far right and far left nut worries. LaRouche believes that only massive industrial projects - nuclear power, huge irrigation canals dug with atomic bombs (!) in the Middle East, and similar high-tech developments - can free the Third World from the sinister grasp of the oligarchs' cabal.


See:

Conspiracy Theory or Ruling Class Studies

Bilderberg

Conspiracy Theory

Conspiracy


Ruling Class



Find blog posts, photos, events and more off-site about:
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, January 06, 2021

QAnon supporter from Arizona dressed in fur and horns joins storming of US Capitol
Richard Ruelas
Arizona Republic



Among the supporters of President Donald Trump who mobbed their way into the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, one – unmistakable in his fur, horned hat and painted face – was Jake Angeli, a QAnon supporter who has been a fixture at Arizona right-wing political rallies over the past year.

Angeli was seen in photographs from Washington, D.C., amid rioters who turned violent and stormed the building, causing both chambers to suspend their intended action of the day: certifying the results of the presidential election for former vice president Joe Biden.

At one point, Angeli was seen on the dais of the U.S. Senate. He posed for a photo flexing his right arm; his left was holding a spear from which hung a U.S. flag.

Since at least 2019, Angeli has held court outside the Arizona State Capitol shouting about various conspiracy theories, most related to the wide-ranging beliefs espoused by QAnon.

Angeli, in a 2020 interview with the Arizona Republic, part of the USA TODAY Network, said that he wears the fur bonnet, paints his face and walks around shirtless with ragged pants as a way to attract attention.

Then, he said, he is able to speak to people about his beliefs about QAnon and other truths he says remain hidden.

The QAnon conspiracy theory supposes that a high-level government agent with Q-level security clearance has been unspooling cryptic clues about secret investigations inside Washington, D.C. Some of those investigations involve politicians running a child sex trafficking ring.

In February 2020, Angeli worked the crowd outside a rally in Phoenix for Trump.

He held up a tattered sign that read, “Q sent me,” and asked the crowd if they knew of the conspiracy. Several met him with affirmative nods.


“The snowball has been rolling and it’s only getting bigger,” Angeli said at the time. “We’re the mainstream now.”

Angeli did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

More:Were voters manipulated by QAnon a force behind Trump's 'red wave' in 2020 election?

Angeli was a fixture at rallies to reopen Arizona businesses shuttered by the government as a measure to prevent the spread of COVID-19. He has also been at rallies contesting the Arizona election results.

Besides the government corruption espoused by QAnon, Angeli believes that leaders have conspired to keep blockbuster scientific discoveries from the public in order to maintain the system as it is.



Angeli said that he discovered much of what he found through his own research on the Internet. That research – which included “Behold a Pale Horse” by Arizona author William Copper – involved shadowy groups, including the Illuminati, Trilateral Commission and Bilderberg group, that control the world.

“At a certain point, it all clicked in a way,” he said. “Oh, my God. I see now the reality of what’s going on.”

The Q movement, he said, validated beliefs he had held as far back as 2016.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Poor Protest Against WSF

Following up on the Global Warming conference which the UN held in Narobi, the movers and shakers of the anti globalization movement also held their World Social Forum this year in Nairobi, Kenya. And ironically this progressive alternative to the Davos World EconomicForum, happening at the same time, faced more grass roots protests than the ruling class conference in Davos....

The left wing has become the mirror of capitalism itself.

The Davos forum is an economic boom for this tourist town.

And now that it is no longer a secret meeting of ruling class cabals, it has become a voice for the social reform of the worst excesses of capitalism.

The World Social Forum travels the world and is an economic boom for the region it is held in.

The Davos Economic Forum promotes captialism including the need to ameliorate the worst aspects of capitalism.

The World Socisl Forum promotes amerlorating the worst aspects of capitalism while promoting a more humane capitalism.

There is no difference.

Charities working in Nairobi's slums have complained about slum dwellers being required to pay to enter the Moi International Sports Stadium in Kasarani, where the World Social Forum was taking place.


Meanwhile, protesters raided two food stalls operated by five star hotels at the venue of the World Social Forum. The last two days had been marked by protests over the high cost of food at an event meant to discuss issues of poverty.

"I am a hawker. We are harassed in town. We came here to present our problems, but we found the big bosses selling food at exorbitant prices, and yet this function is meant for the poor," said one of the protesters.

Another one said: "The hotels are selling food at a price we cannot afford, and yet the forum belongs to the poor. That is why we invaded. We are going to eat all the food meant for the rich." The protesters grabbed the food which they then ate as the hotel staff watched in disbelief.

Kenya: World Social Forum - Just Another NGO Fair?

The World Social Forum, which took place in Nairobi, Kenya for the first time in Africa, was supposed to be a forum for the voices of the grassroots. But despite the diversity of voices at the event, not everyone was equally represented.

But to describe only the diversity would be to miss the real, and perhaps more disturbing, picture. The problem was that not everyone was equally represented. Not everyone had equal voices. This event had all the features of a trade fair - those with greater wealth had more events in the calendar, larger (and more comfortable) spaces, more propaganda - and therefore a larger voice. Thus the usual gaggle of quasi donor/International NGOs claimed a greater presence than national organisations - not because what they had to say was more important or more relevant to the theme of the WSF, but because, essentially, they had greater budgets at their command. Thus the WSF was not immune from the laws of (neoliberal) market forces. There was no levelling of the playing field. This was more a World NGO Forum than an anti-capitalist mobilisation, lightly peppered with social activists and grassroots movements.

See

Globalization

Davos

Workers Control Vesus Trade Unions


Bilderberg

Find blog posts, photos, events and more off-site about:
, , , , ,

Saturday, January 08, 2022

Neoliberalism on life support?

As the Mont Pelerin Society approaches its 75th anniversary this year, socialists and trade unionists need to start thinking about how to bring an end to the dead hand of free-market economics, says DOUG NICHOLLS


Conservative leader Margaret Thatcher and deputy leader William Whitelaw during a Conservative Group for Europe Press conference at the Tory Central Office

APRIL this year marks the 75th anniversary of the first meeting of the Mont Pelerin Society. This was convened by the infamous economist Friedrich von Hayek, who wanted to bring together a range of thinkers to oppose the advance of socialism and social democracy.

Few will recognise any names of members of this illustrious gang, except perhaps its founder Hayek or Milton Friedman, Thatcher’s economic butler-in-chief.

But the global elites know them well and have honoured at least nine of them with Nobel prizes in economics.

University economics departments throughout the world knelt at their altar and created a new orthodoxy of free-market fetishism and, in the name of liberalism and tolerance, purged vaguely Keynesian, let alone Marxist, academic from their ranks.

Neoliberal professors gathered in their covens, stirring up potions so hallucinogenic students no longer needed to be hippies. They could become stock market traders instead.

The free market in economic ideas became a monopoly of neoliberalism unregulated by any monopolies and mergers commission.

Yet the funny thing was that there was nothing really new about it. It represented capitalism, mainly in the West, and mainly as embodied by Reagan and Thatcher, whiffed off that they had lost so much and seeking to get revenge.

It was classical liberalism resurrecting itself in the post-war period when communism and various forms of socialism were on the rise.

It was a time of a new settlement; public ownership, planning, state intervention, the welfare state, the development of free healthcare systems in many countries and of the liberation from colonial domination in many others.

This was all a bit too much for the liberals. Things were freeing up, and liberals hate freedom.

The world was becoming a testament to the failure of the liberal capitalism they had espoused. So they thought in the light of the failure, it was best to have another go and repeat their mistakes even more spectacularly next time.

And of course when they did fail in 2008, they went running to governments to bail them out.

Neoliberalism was the invention of the exhausted and defeated and clapped-out capitalists. Their mission was nothing less than dismantling the progressive post-war settlement and all that the people had fought for and were building up to socialise economic endeavour.

And in this, despite their decrepitude and bankruptcy, they were remarkably successful.

You might say that slash-and-burn, voodoo economics is easy to launch against the people — and in one sense it is. You can understand how the top 1 per cent would adore it, but one of the big problems was that there was insufficiently deep and informed intellectual opposition to it. Economics, like history and politics, disappeared from the trade union education agenda.

The neoliberals took the long view right from their very first meeting in 1947. No instant quick-fix big bang, no sudden counter-revolutionary coup after Chile, which had been their first experiment.

They chipped away. Slowly but surely they sidled up to leading politicians throughout the world and persuaded them that only a small state and a big free market and loadsamoney in very few pockets could save mankind. Wealth, they said, would trickle down — the 99 per cent would benefit!

Ironically, they had to use the state to introduce a new authoritarianism and particularly aim state forces and legislation against the “tyranny” of trade unionism and publicly owned services and utilities.

The value of wages in relation to gross domestic product was systematically reduced by around 10 per cent.

A better wheeze for them than reversing every bit of progressive reform in every country was to find means whereby the national, regulatory parliaments of independent nations could be overridden by supranational entities like, for example, the European Union or the International Monetary Fund.

And the results of all of their conniving and lectures, Nobel prizes and seminars, ever-so-clever papers and policy proposals?

Well, we all know that — from profit burning up the planet, to private energy companies freezing pensioners in winter, from foodbanks to shadow banks concentrating wealth taken from the people in so few hands, the world seems sometimes actually run by a few arch-megalomaniacs.

If someone was to set up a learned institution to train burglars there would be an outcry. But this is what the world has tolerated in the Mont Pelerin Society and its close cousin, the Bilderberg Group, whose meetings even some deluded British trade unionists have attended.

There are many brilliant books and videos on how the neoliberal agenda has influenced world developments and key politicians. The Labour Party under Tony Blair swallowed the elixir of extremism and it looks as though Keir Starmer might be keen too.

But nothing lasts for ever. Yesterday’s gurus are tomorrow’s cranks.

The only way Covid has been tackled has been through state intervention, big government, planning, government expenditure, through public service providers organising clinical and preventative measures, and researching developments, modelling statistics and investing public funds into vaccine development.

Covid-19 has been therefore been curtailed in capitalist countries by adopting socialist measures of social protection and improvement, central co-ordination and planning.

Where countries would describe themselves as taking an overt socialist or communist path, Covid has been very effectively managed, in great contrast to capitalist nations.

No wonder the Mont Pelerin Society is looking forward to its conference this year in Oslo in October to fire a few volts into its life support machine.

The world’s gone mad and had to start looking after people again and invest in science and technology and plan vaccination programmes, so Frankenstein must, the Society thinks, be jolted into life – and vaccine production and circulation must be left to its second-hand car-dealing mates.

But the most important gatherings this year will be all those celebrating and discussing the policies needed to replace the dead hand of neoliberalism.

The General Federation of Trade Unions and our friends will be meeting, not in Switzerland, but closer to home where workers gather, to popularise a new economics for the people.

2022 is the year to begin the end of neoliberal economics, and we should not be squeamish about its demise.

We will this year proudly dust off and raise the banner of our Alternative Economic Strategy again and intensify our education programmes to debunk the prevailing murderous and pathetic attempts at economics.

Doug Nicholls is general secretary of the GFTU.