Monday, June 26, 2023

 Buildings, Prague, Czech Europe City

Radical Decentralization Was The Key To West’s Rise To Wealth And Freedom – OpEd

By 

By Ryan McMaken

It is not uncommon to encounter political theorists and pundits who insist that political centralization is a boon to economic growth. In both cases, it is claimed the presence of a unifying central regime—whether in Brussels or in Washington, DC, for example—is essential in ensuring the efficient and free flow of goods throughout a large jurisdiction. This, we are told, will greatly accelerate economic growth.

In many ways, the model is the United States, inside of which there are virtually no barriers to trade or migration at all between member states. In the EU, barriers have been falling in recent decades.


The historical evidence, however, suggests that political unity is not actually a catalyst to economic growth or innovation over the long term. In fact, the European experience suggests that the opposite is true.

Why Did Europe Surpass China in Wealth and Growth?

A thousand years ago, a visitor from another planet might have easily overlooked Europe as a poor backwater. Instead, China and the Islamic world may have looked far more likely to be the world leaders in wealth and innovation indefinitely.

Why is it, then, that Europe became the wealthiest and most technologically advanced civilization in the world?

Indeed, the fact that Europe had grown to surpass other civilizations that were once more scientifically and technologically advanced had become apparent by the nineteenth century. Historians have debated the question of the origins of this “European miracle” ever since. This “miracle,” historian Ralph Raico tells us:

consists in a simple but momentous fact: It was in Europe—and the extensions of Europe, above all, America—that human beings first achieved per capita economic growth over a long period of time. In this way, European society eluded the “Malthusian trap,” enabling new tens of millions to survive and the population as a whole to escape the hopeless misery that had been the lot of the great mass of the human race in earlier times. The question is: why Europe?1

Across the spectrum of historians, theories about Europe’s economic development have been varied, to say the least.2 But one of the most important characteristics of European civilization—ever since the collapse of the Western Roman Empire—has been Europe’s political decentralization.

Raico continues:

Although geographical factors played a role, the key to western development is to be found in the fact that, while Europe constituted a single civilization—Latin Christendom—it was at the same time radically decentralized. In contrast to other cultures—especially China, India, and the Islamic world—Europe comprised a system of divided and, hence, competing powers and jurisdictions.3

Although modern EU centralizers are attempting it, at no point has European civilization ever fallen under the dominion of a single state as has been the case in China. Even during the early modern period, as some polities managed to form absolutist states, much of Europe—such as the highly dynamic areas in the Low Countries, Northern Italy, and the German cities—remained in flux and highly decentralized. The rise of the merchant classes, banking, and an urban middle class—which began as early as the Middle Ages and were so essential in building industrial Europe—thrived without large states.

After all, while a large polity with few internal borders can indeed lead to large markets with fewer transaction costs, concentrating power in one place brings big risks; a state that can facilitate trade across a large empire is also a state that can stifle trade through regulation, taxation, and even expropriation.

The former vast kingdoms and empires of Asia may have once been well positioned to foster the creation of a wealthy merchant class and middle class. But the fact is this didn’t happen. Those states instead focused on stifling threats to state power, centralizing political control of markets, and extorting the public through the imposition of fines and penalties on those who were disfavored by the ruling classes.

The Benefits of Anarchy

In contrast, Europe was relatively anarchic compared to other world civilizations and became the home of the great economic leap forward that we now take for granted. This isn’t “anarchy” in the sense of “chaos,” of course. This is anarchy as understood by political scientists: the lack of any single controlling state or authority. In key periods of the continent’s development—as now—there was no ruler of “Europe” and no European empire. Thus, in his book The Origins of Capitalism, historian Jean Baechler concludes:

The first condition for the maximization of economic efficiency is the liberation of civil society with respect to the state….The expansion of capitalism owes its origins and raison d’ĂȘtre to political anarchy. (emphasis in original)4

For many years, economic historians have attempted to find correlations between this political anarchy and Europe’s economic success. Many have found the connection to be undeniable. Economist Douglass North, for instance, writes:

The failures of the most likely candidates, China and Islam, point the direction of our inquiry. Centralized political control limits the options—limits the alternatives that will be pursued in a context of uncertainty about the long-run consequences of political and economic decisions. It was precisely the lack of large scale political and economic order that created the environment essential to economic growth and ultimately human freedoms. In the competitive decentralized environment lots of alternatives were pursued; some worked, as in the Netherlands and England; some failed as in the case of Spain and Portugal; and some, such as France, fell in between these two extremes.5

 Competition among Governments Means More Freedom

But why exactly does this sort of radical decentralization “limit the options” for ruling princes and kings? Freedom increases because under a decentralized system there are more “alternatives”—to use North’s term—available to those seeking to avoid what E.L. Jones calls “predatory government tax behavior.” Thus, historian David Landes emphasized the importance of “multiple, competing polities” in Europe in setting the stage for:

private enterprise in the West possess[ing] a social and political vitality without precedent or counterpart. This varied, needless to say, from one part of Europe to another.…And sometimes adventitious events like war or a change of sovereign produced a major alteration in the circumstances of the business classes. On balance, however, the place of private enterprise was secure and improving with time; and this is apparent in the institutional arrangements that governed the getting and spending of wealth.6

It was this “latent competition between states,” Jones contends, that drove individual polities to pursue policies designed to attract capital.7  More competent princes and kings adopted policies that led to economic prosperity in neighboring polities, and thus “freedom of movement among the nation-states offered opportunities for ‘ best practices’ to diffuse in many spheres, not least the economic.” Since European states were relatively small and weak—yet culturally similar to many neighboring jurisdictions—abuses of power by the ruling classes led to declines in both revenue and in the most valuable residents. Rulers sought to counter this by guaranteeing protections for private property.

This doesn’t mean there were never abuses of power, of course, but as Landes observed:

To be sure, kings could, and did, make or break men of business; but the power of the sovereign was constrained by the requirements of states…and international competition. Capitalists could take their wealth and enterprise elsewhere and even if they could not leave, the capitalists of other realms would not be slow to profit from their discomfiture.8

Nor was decentralization limited to the international system of separate sovereign states. Thanks to the longtime tug-of-war between the state and the church, and between kings and nobles, decentralization was common even within polities. Raico continues:

Decentralization of power also came to mark the domestic arrangements of the various European polities. Here feudalism—which produced a nobility rooted in feudal right rather than in state-service—is thought by a number of scholars to have played an essential role….Through the struggle for power within the realms, representative bodies came into being, and princes often found their hands tied by the charters of rights (Magna Carta, for instance) which they were forced to grant their subjects. In the end, even within the relatively small states of Europe, power was dispersed among estates, orders, chartered towns, religious communities, corps, universities, etc., each with its own guaranteed liberties.9

Over the long term, however, it was the system of international anarchy that appears to have ensured that states were constrained in their ability to tax and extort the merchant classes and middle classes, who were such a key component of Europe’s rising economic fortunes.10

We Need a Return to Smaller Polities

Even today, we continue to see these factors at work. Small states—especially in Europe and the Americas—tend to have higher incomes and have greater openness. We can see this in the microstates of Europe and in the Caribbean. Small states, seeking to attract capital, often undercut larger neighbors in terms of taxes.

It is true that one of the most economically successful polities in the world today is a large one: the United States. The US’s success, however, can be attributed to the enduring presence of political decentralization internally—especially during the nineteenth century—and to the latent, albeit receding, economic liberalism esteemed by much of its population. Europe, of course, was already rich—and relatively politically free compared to the despotic regimes of the East—long before it began to centralize political power under the banner of the European Union.

Today, however, we are seeing the impoverishing downside of decades of political centralization in both the US and Europe. Government regulations decreed from Brussels and Washington continue to stifle innovation and entrepreneurship. The EU has sought to crack down on low taxes in smaller member states. Both the EU and the US are erecting trade barriers to producers outside their trading blocs.

Unfortunately, those in power, who benefit from the status quo and from holding the reins of large states, are unlikely to relinquish this newly gained power without a fight.

*About the author: Ryan McMaken (@ryanmcmaken) is executive editor at the Mises Institute. Send him your article submissions for the Mises Wire and Power and Market, but read article guidelines first. Ryan has a bachelor’s degree in economics and a master’s degree in public policy and international relations from the University of Colorado. He was a housing economist for the State of Colorado. He is the author of Breaking Away: The Case of Secession, Radical Decentralization, and Smaller Polities and Commie Cowboys: The Bourgeoisie and the Nation-State in the Western Genre.

Source: This article was published by the MISES Institute. This article is Chapter 2 of Breaking Away: The Case for Secession, Radical Decentralization, and Smaller Polities. Now available at Amazon and in the Mises Store.

  • 1.Ralph Raico, “The Theory of Economic Development and the ‘European Miracle’,” in The Collapse of Development Planning, ed. Peter Boettke (New York: New York University Press, 1994), p. 39.
  • 2.Chiu Yu Ko, Mark Koyama, and Tuan-Hwee Sng, for example, contend China was forced to centralize due to threats from the Eurasian steppe. (See Chiu Yu Ko, Mark Koyama, Tuan-Hwee Sng, “Unified China and Divided Europe,” EH.net, June 2014, http://eh.net/eha/wp-content/uploads/ 2014/05/Koyama.pdf.
  • 3.Raico, “The Theory of Economic Development and the ‘European Miracle’,” p. 41.
  • 4.Jean Baechler, The Origins of Capitalism (Oxford, U.K.: Basil Blackwell, 1975), pp. 77, 113. Baechler influenced F.A. Hayek in his thinking as well. Hayek quotes this passage in Baechler on “political anarchy” in volume 3 of Law, Legislation and Liberty. See F.A. Hayek, Law, Legislation, and Liberty, vol. 3 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979). Hayek also writes in The Fatal Conceit: “…the history of China provides many instances of government attempts to enforce so perfect an order that innovation became impossible. This country, technologically and scientifically developed so far ahead of Europe that, to give only one illustration, it had ten oil wells operating on one stretch of the river Po already in the twelfth century, certainly owed its later stagnation, but not its early progress, to the manipulatory power of its governments. What led the greatly advanced civilisation of China to fall behind Europe was its government’s clamping down so tightly as to leave no room for new developments, while, as remarked in the last chapter, Europe probably owes its extraordinary expansion in the Middle Ages to its political anarchy.” F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism, ed. W.W. Barley, III (London: Routledge, 1988), p. 44.
  • 5.Douglass North, “The Paradox of the West,” in The Origins of Modern Freedom in the West, ed. R.W. Davis (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1995).
  • 6.David Landes, The Unbound Prometheus: Technological Change and Industrial Development in Western Europe from 1750 to the Present (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1969), p. 15.
  • 7.E.L. Jones, The European Miracle: Environments, Economies and Geopolitics in the History of Europe and Asia (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2003), p. 118.
  • 8.Landes, The Unbound Prometheus, p. 15.
  • 9.Raico, p. 42. It is important to note Raico does not treat Latin Christendom’s “radical decentralization” as something that “just happened.” That is, I think Andrei Znamenski is reading Raico incorrectly when Znamenski states the framework which stresses the “role of political fragmentation and decentralization as the major factor that allowed Europe to spread its economic wings” is “a well-taken and well-supported one,” but concludes “it leaves unanswered the simple question of how the fragmentation and decentralization came into existence in the first place.” Raico does address this by noting it was specifically Western Europe, which was the most economically successful and non-coincidentally existed under the Latin Church’s opposition to any single civil government becoming the ultimate civil power in Europe. See Andrei Znamenski, “The ‘European Miracle’ Warrior Aristocrats, Spirit of Liberty, and Competitionas a Discovery Process,” The Independent Review 16, no. 4 (Spring 2012).
  • 10.The importance of decentralization within states cannot be ignored, of course. As historian Joel Mokyr notes in “The Enduring Riddle of the European Miracle: The Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution” (2002), the rise of political and economic liberalism (which he calls “the Enlightenment”) was key in weakening states in their ability to enrich entrenched rent seeking interests at the expense of market producers. This, however, does not undermine our theory of decentralization since decentralization is a key component in sustaining and laying the groundwork necessary for ideological liberalism to thrive. See Joel Mokyr, “The Enduring Riddle of the European Miracle: The Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution,” October 2002, http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.477.6576&rep=rep1&type=pdf.


MISES

The Mises Institute, founded in 1982, teaches the scholarship of Austrian economics, freedom, and peace. The liberal intellectual tradition of Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) and Murray N. Rothbard (1926-1995) guides us. Accordingly, the Mises Institute seeks a profound and radical shift in the intellectual climate: away from statism and toward a private property order. The Mises Institute encourages critical historical research, and stands against political correctness.


FOR THE LEFT WING VERSION OF THE LIBERTARIAN THEORY OF THE STATE

FOR A CRITIQUE OF THIS PETITE BOURGEOIS THEORY OF ECONOMICS SEE
KARL MARX CRITIQUE OF PROUDHON; THE POVERTY OF PHILOSOPHY

Russia Has Still Not Learned Lessons Of Arrest And Execution Of Beria – OpEd

Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria. Photo Credit: Unknown author, Wikipedia Commons

By 

 70 years ago today, Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria was arrested by his fellow leader of the Communist Party and the Soviet state and six months later he was shot not after a trial for his crimes against the Soviet people but in order to protect the other leaders from becoming victims of such revenge and reprisals as well.

In a remarkable and lengthy lead article, the editors of Nezavisimaya gazeta re-examine what happened seven decades ago and conclude that Russians have not assimilated the lessons of what happened then and so have left open the possibility that such acts of revenge and reprisals will occur again (ng.ru/editorial/2023-06-25/2_8756_society.html).

The editors point to Beria’s action in the months after Stalin died, including the release of hundreds of thousands of GULAG prisoners, criticism of the Russification and Sovietization policies in western Ukraine and Lithuania, and his calls for a new approach to East Germany to keep its population from fleeing to the West.

Until his arrest by other members of the Politburo, all these Beria recommendations for change were unanimously approved by the party leadership. But Nikita Khrushchev and the others began to recognize that what Beria was doing could open the floodgates of change that could ultimately threaten their positions of power and even their lives.

They therefore decided to have the military arrest Beria, to conduct a detailed interrogation of this longtime head of Stalin’s secret police, to blacken his reputation with attacks on his policies and even say he was an English spy, and then in December 1953 to have him shot without any court verdict.    

The details the editors of Nezavisimaya gazeta give to Beria’s criticism of what had been Stalin’s russification and sovietization policies in Ukraine and Lithuania are certain to attract enormous attention given what the current Russian government is doing today. But the paper’s broader point about the Beria affair is certainly even more important.

The editors’ conclusions on that point are worth quoting in extenso:

“70 years ago, the leaders of the USSR, by arresting Beria, resolved issues of their own security. They had no energy or ideas of their own. Meanwhile, many questions that were raised in those distant days remain relevant to this day. And the main one involves the nature of fear in the leadership when making key, life-changing decisions for the country.

“Beria was convicted and shot. What was he accused of? Nothing less than “the liquidation of the workers’ and peasants’ system to restore capitalism and the rule of the bourgeoisie. All his notes of March-June 1953, which were approved by the Presidium of the Central Committee and on the basis of which the relevant decisions were adopted, paradoxically formed the basis of the accusations. 

“And, of course, Beria was accused of being an agent of foreign intelligence since 1919. It is clear that the accusations against Beria contained all the traditionally punishable “sins” of the Stalin era: treason against the motherland, organizing an anti-Soviet conspiracy, committing terrorist acts…

“Can this kind of punishment serve as a lesson to future generations? At least to someone? Of course not: he was convicted for fictional, non-existent crimes. Therefore, someone can conclude: it is possible to kill, it is possible to create lawlessness, it is possible to falsify trials. The main thing is not to fall into the boss’s disgrace.

“After all, it would never occur to anyone that Beria really wanted to restore capitalism in the interests of British intelligence …

“The lessons of the ‘Beria case’ are numerous and varied. It is amazing how quickly colleagues, associates, and closest employees disowned him. From interrogations, testimony and speeches at the Plenum of the Central Committee, it turned out that Beria was a man of low moral character, rude, poorly educated, self-serving. And he wrote out cash prizes for himself, and forfeited half a million rubles to his son, and in the atomic project – an empty place, and does not read books …

“Two and a half years later, Stalin’s personality cult was exposed on a large scale at the 20th Congress, and ‘the anti-party group’ in another year and a half. Party comrades then quickly disassociated themselves from other long-term ‘leaders’ — Molotov, Malenkov, Kaganovich, Bulganin and … Shepilov, who joined them. Nobody was shot and no one went to jail, so there was some progress and it allowed ‘the leaders’ to live out their lives in peace.

“But from the point of view of the interests of the whole society, the lessons of the Beria case have not been fully learned … [Moreover,] those who remain in power a long time typically have vindicative grievances against otherss. The nightly fears of ‘the leaders’ and their loved ones make them cling to power out of fear of extrajudicial reprisals.

“All this stems from the misunderstood concept of ‘party unity’ as the highest value for the political leadership of the Bolshevik government. Unity around ‘the leader’ was presented as the main need and interest of the whole society. The main enemy of this falsely understood unity is a free press, freedom of political activity, opposition, and criticism. 

“So it turns out that while a person is in power, they praise him. But people at the top are usually cynical and have no illusions about their own identity. They do not believe in the gratitude of descendants and the fairness of justice. Since they themselves have administered such “justice” many times against opponents.

“And they stay in power until the last moment, coming up with various projects to stay for one more term, and one more, so that everything looks legitimate.

“Beria, his family and closest subordinates became victims not of justice, but of reprisals. When this becomes impossible, then Russia will be a state of law. Society should not be held hostage to the nightly fears of the elite.”

Many will read these words as is likely intended not as a description of events 70 years ago but of what has taken place in Russia in the last seven days. 




Paul Goble is a longtime specialist on ethnic and religious questions in Eurasia. Most recently, he was director of research and publications at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy. Earlier, he served as vice dean for the social sciences and humanities at Audentes University in Tallinn and a senior research associate at the EuroCollege of the University of Tartu in Estonia. He has served in various capacities in the U.S. State Department, the Central Intelligence Agency and the International Broadcasting Bureau as well as at the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Mr. Goble maintains the Window on Eurasia blog and can be contacted directly at paul.goble@gmail.com .
Canadian wildfire smoke reaches Europe as Canada reports its worst fire season on record

By Joe Sutton, Taylor Ward and Zoe Sottile, CNN
Published Mon June 26, 2023

Smoke from Canada's record-breaking fire season has crossed the northern Atlantic and is now impacting portions of western Europe, according to the UK Met Office.NASA MODIS
CNN —

Canada has officially marked its worst wildfire season on record, with smoke from the blazes crossing the Atlantic Ocean and reaching western Europe on Monday.

Canada has had a dramatic start to wildfire season, with at least 18,688,691 acres already charred across the country. Wildfire activity in Canada typically peaks from June to August, leaving more than half of the peak season still to come.

As a result of the unprecedented start to the wildfire season, this year has become the worst fire season on record, surpassing the previous benchmark set in 1995 for the total area burned. In 1995, at least 17,559,303 acres were burned in the country, according to fire statistics from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre.

And the smoke from the wildfires, which wrapped New York City in a cloud of smog earlier this month, has now reached as far as the United Kingdom, according to the UK Met Office.


Four alarming charts that show just how extreme the climate is right now


The smoke that has made its way into Europe has done so via the jet stream – strong winds in the upper levels of the atmosphere. This means the smoke will not lead to dramatically worse surface air quality like the Northeast US experienced a few weeks ago.

“Whilst the smoke is high up in the atmosphere, it may make for some vivid sunrises and sunsets in the next few days,” the Met Office, the UK’s national weather service, wrote on Twitter.

Forecast models show the smoke lingering in the upper levels of the atmosphere over Europe for much of this week.

CNN previously reported that smoke from the wildfires reached Norway at the start of June. Because the smoke is injected at high altitudes, it’s able to stay in the atmosphere longer and travel farther distances.
Fires continue to rage across Canada

The wildfires have continued to burn across multiple provinces in Canada. There were at least 53 new wildland fires on Sunday, according to the National Fire Situation Report from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre.

Alberta had the most at 23, followed by Ontario and Quebec, which had eight each, according to the report.

On Monday, the agency reported at least 27 new wildland fires, with 16 in British Columbia.


Smoke from Canada's wildfires has reached as far as Norway


The record wildfire season continues to impact air quality throughout parts of North America. On Friday, Environment Canada warned in a bulletin that smoke would continue to cause poor air quality in many parts of the country. In Ottawa, Canada’s capital, government air quality readings reached a high of 10 on Sunday, representing a “high risk,” before moderating Monday morning.

And in addition to sending smoke to western Europe, the fires have also resulted in plumes of smoke impacting parts of the US. Wisconsin, Michigan, and Indiana all issued air quality alerts on Monday, according to the National Weather Service.

As the climate crisis escalates, scientists expect that wildfire seasons will increase in severity, especially as droughts and heat become more common and more severe across the world.

CNN’s Paula Newton contributed to this report.
Celebrities join call for Kurdish singer Nudem Durak's release from Turkish prison


ROGER MCKENZIE
SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 2023
https://morningstaronline.co.uk/

NEARLY 50 international celebrities signed a letter on Saturday demanding the release from prison and retrial of Kurdish singer Nudem Durak.

Ms Durak, who has been languishing in a Turkish prison since April 2015, ran a cultural centre and sang about the democratic, political and cultural struggle of her people.

She has been sentenced to 19 years in prison and is not due for release until 2034.

The letter, signed by 47 celebrities, included authors Alice Walker, Arundhati Roy, and Annie Ernaux; film-makers Ken Loach and Carmen Castillo; actors Juliette Binoche and Miriam Margolyes; musicians Bryan Adams and Peter Gabriel and former football player, now actor, Eric Cantona.

The letter said that the authorities have wrongly labelled the work carried out by Ms Durak as “terrorism.”

Ms Durak “is not a member of any party and has simply, through her voice and her art, given voice to a historically oppressed minority.

“Through her voice, muzzled, beaten and tortured, it is the voice of millions of people that resounds,” the letter said.

Writing from her prison cell, Ms Durak said: “I, the child of these people, will not betray.

“Against war, against exile, against the occupation that forbids us to cry, to laugh and even to speak, I will embrace music.”

Other Turkish and Kurdish artists have also been targeted by the regime of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

At the end of 2021, the singer Omar Souleyman, an international electro-folk star, was arrested. A few months later, the famous pop singer Gulsen was thrown into prison following a joke made during a concert.

Kurdish singer Aynur Dogan also had one of her concerts cancelled by the authorities.

The signatories said: “Our duty — as artists committed to justice — is to amplify their voice and their message.”

They said: “Nudem Durak is not a terrorist. Justice for her and for all political prisoners!”
Unknown future awaits Palestinian refugees as UNRWA may stop services next September

Sally Ibrahim
Gaza
26 June, 2023

Last Tuesday, UNWRA chief Philippe Lazzarini said that the agency may stop working as of next September if it does not obtain additional financial resources from member states.



"This is not the time to waver. The time has come to act," Lazzarini stressed. [Getty]

Palestinian refugees are still struggling to stay afloat and keep their issue alive amid the endless efforts adopted by the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees to end its services under the pretext of lack of financial aid.

Last Tuesday, UNWRA chief Philippe Lazzarini said that the agency may stop working as of next September if it does not obtain additional financial resources from member states.

Lazzarini's remarks came during a meeting in the Advisory Commission (AdCom) meeting, which convened in Beirut on 20 and 21 June, calling the participants to increase sustainable and predictable funding to the Agency, reiterating the real risk and probable impact of a suspension of services on Palestine refugees.

"The meeting of the AdCom this time should serve as an early warning of the looming disaster we will hit in September if we do not receive extra funding," said Lazzarini.

"Our budget is tight and cannot be further decreased if we are to deliver on our mandate," he added, referring to the public-like services UNRWA provides to Palestine refugees in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, the besieged Gaza Strip, and refugee camps in neighbouring countries like Syria, Lebanon and Jordan. 

The New Arab Staff

"Without immediate additional funding, UNRWA will be unable to maintain operations beyond September, threatening the closure of over 700 schools and 140 health centres," he explained.

He added that emergency services in all of his organisation's areas of operation will grind to a halt, leaving millions of Palestine refugees, who are reliant on assistance from UNRWA, on the threshold of starvation.

"This is not the time to waver. The time has come to act," Lazzarini stressed.

A Gaza-based senior official at UNRWA, who preferred not mention to his name, said to The New Arab that UNRWA already has adopted some procedures to reduce its services in the West Bank and Gaza in a bid to curb its financial crisis.

"We were ordered to decline all the contracts for those who have relatives working in UNRWA. In addition, the health centres in our operating areas lack medicine as we cannot purchase more medical treatment currently," the source said.

"Our chief statements were just a warning, but his statements will be implemented soon if the donors do not refund us once again," the source added.

Neither statements of Lazzarini nor the official at UNRWA were accepted by Palestinians who accused the UN agency would implement a political plan adopted by the United States of America and Israeli to end the issue of Palestinian refugees.

"Such an unjust decision will provoke angry reactions among the Palestinians and threaten the future of millions of Palestinian refugees in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon and leave them in front of an unknown fate," Mohammed Kharoub, a community activist in Balata camp in the West Bank, said to TNA.

The New Arab Staff & Agencies

He called on the United Nations and donor countries to provide an urgent budget for UNRWA to continue providing basic services to the refugees until their return.

He warned that stopping UNRWA's operations will leave refugees "facing an unknown fate" and signals "a new catastrophe" that will have repercussions on the countries hosting refugees and security and stability.

Samiha al-Shaer, a 67-year-old elderly Palestinian woman from Rafah refugee camp in the south of Gaza, lives with her family of 11, in a house of no more than 50 square meters, and she is struggling to provide food for her four disabled sons.

"In the past, I mainly depended on the assistance provided by UNRWA, in terms of food and some money, but today things have changed, as it (UNRWA) has reduced the assistance it used to provide us," al-Shaer said.

Eleven years ago, al-Shaer used to get food aid every three months, which was enough for her family, But now, the food she receives every three months is barely enough for a month only.

"The UNRWA reduced the quantity of food aid and this is why it is not enough for us," the elderly woman said.

The New Arab Staff & Agencies

She said that the UN agency has not fulfilled all its health, education, and food services for refugees, leaving low-income families struggling to provide the minimum requirements of life.

"For decades, the status of refugees has been imposed on us, but without a clear horizon for the end of our continuous suffering. It is not easy to live as a refugee for many years. The word refugee means escaping from death to a safe haven, but we escaped from death to continuous suffering," she stressed.

UNRWA was established as a United Nations agency by a resolution of the General Assembly in 1949 and was mandated to provide assistance and protection to approximately 5.6 million Palestine refugees registered with it in the occupied West Bank, the Gaza Strip, Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan.

UNRWA services include education, health care, relief, social services, camp infrastructure, improvement, protection, and microfinance.

The body's officials say that the agency faces significant financial challenges because it has a financial deficit of about US$100 million for this fiscal year.
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M 
How Miami companies are secretly fueling the dramatic growth of Cuba’s private businesses
END THE EMBARGO
2023/06/26
A man wearing a coat with the U.S. flag walks along a street of Havana, on Feb. 3, 2022.
 - Yamil Lage/AFP/Getty Images North America/TNS

The money that families have sent to their relatives in Cuba for decades is now fueling an explosion of capitalism on the communist island. Businesses that facilitate that flow of cash have created a clever but complex system that is helping Cuban private entrepreneurs sidestep U.S. financial sanctions and buy abroad the supplies they need for their businesses on the island.

Newly emerging agencies abroad, most of them in Miami, are using the cash paid by Cuban Americans to send to their families to buy and ship supplies ordered by Cuba’s entrepreneurs. The business owners in Cuba then reimburse the agencies, which then use that cash already on the island to deliver the remittances.

It is a work-around made necessary by one key obstacle Cuba’s private entrepreneurs face: the U.S. embargo, which bans the American banking system — and basically any international bank that does business in the United States — from providing financial services to people on the island.

The embargo was intended put pressure on the Cuban government. But in practice, it means that Cuba’s private entrepreneurs can’t do what business owners elsewhere do all the time: Borrow money from banks to pay for supplies, shipping, salaries and other expenses.

The Miami Herald spoke to entrepreneurs in Cuba, a consultant in Miami, and Cuban Americans close to the private business community on the island, who described for the first time this informal system that is financing the rapid private sector growth outside the purview of the Cuban state. Two entrepreneurs who are using this method to finance their own import operations described the system in detail, but asked not to be named out of fear of government retaliation.

“The biggest problem we have is how to move money internationally,” said one, an entrepreneur in Havana who recently started importing goods. The banking system worldwide is so intertwined with U.S. banking, he said, that the embargo might as well be “for the entire world. I cannot transfer money between banks in Cuba and the rest of the world.”

There is no single answer to this problem, Cuban entrepreneurs and Cuba experts interviewed for this story said.

Some business owners with dual nationality, those married to foreign nationals or those who have lived abroad for a while, may have bank accounts in foreign countries. They can use those accounts to receive online payments for goods and services provided on the island and pay for supplies bought abroad.

But having a bank account in a foreign country is not a magic solution for Cuban entrepreneurs: because of the embargo restrictions on banking services to Cuba, moving money in and out of the country is still a challenge. And the government limits the amount of foreign currency Cubans can take out of their bank accounts.

The ‘cĂ­rculo cerrado’

The creative solution entrepreneurs on the island have come up with, which they call the “cĂ­rculo cerrado” — the closed loop — taps into the large amounts of cash that remittance companies collect abroad.

Here is how a typical transaction works:


Say a private-business owner in Cuba wants to buy a cargo container of chicken from a U.S. supplier. The business owner contacts a remittance company in Miami and puts in the order. The remittance company buys the supplies and pays to ship them to the island. Once the shipment arrives in Cuba, the Cuban entrepreneur repays the remittance agency’s representatives on the island, in dollars or in Cuban currency. The agency takes a cut for providing this service while securing cash already on the island to make good on the delivery of remittances— money it can’t simply transfer from the U.S. through normal banking systems because of the embargo.

“There is this whole alternative market because there are no financial or banking solutions,” said a second Cuban entrepreneur who uses remittance agencies to import goods into Cuba. “It is not adequate, but there is no other way.”

Since Cuba’s Central Bank lacks foreign currency and cannot issue international payments on behalf of the private sector, he said, the money generated by these businesses flows outside the government’s financial system through informal channels. That means the government can’t benefit by imposing fees and other charges.

“From a bank’s compliance perspective, it is not appropriate at all,” the private business owner said. “We are talking about the first time in recent history that the Cuban government does not have access to these dollars or any of the funds from these operations.”
Trump crackdown opened the door

The former Trump administration may have unintentionally created the conditions for the creation of the closed-loop model when it shut down official remittances in late 2020 because the money was being handled in Cuba by enterprises run by the Cuban military.

Before the sanctions, Western Union and other large remittance agencies had been legally allowed to transfer money directly to those military-run entities in Cuba. After Western Union closed its offices in Cuba following the sanctions, “the remittance business fragmented, and in this gray area, new small agencies handling a few thousand dollars a month started to appear,” one of the entrepreneurs interviewed said.

They first got around the crackdown by sending the money to Cuba through “mulas” – mules, people who travel to the island carrying large sums of cash, which is not illegal but carries its own risks and limitations. When the Cuban government authorized the creation of private businesses two years ago, the new entrepreneurs needed to find a way to import supplies. They turned to small remittance agencies, and the closed-loop system was born.
U.S. policies to support Cuban entrepreneurs

A U.S. State Department official said Biden administration officials are aware of remittances’ role in the private sector’s dramatic growth in Cuba., which has already overtaken the government in the number of workers it employs and the amount of supplies it imports from abroad—estimated at one billion dollars by the end of year.

The official told the Herald the administration was currently “taking a very close look” at what it can do to give Cuban business owners access to the financial system in the United States “in a way that maximizes the benefit to the Cuban people and to Cuban small business owners while minimizing any benefit to the government.”

“This is one of the top things, if not the top, that Cuban small business owners and entrepreneurs who want to do everything by the book and be respected as first-class business operations have raised with us,” the official said. “It is definitely on our radar screen.”

Cuban Americans have proposed the administration consider allowing Cuban entrepreneurs to open bank accounts in the United States. During the Obama administration, Cubans with permanent residency on the island visiting the United States could do so.

“That continues, but what is not legal is for that person who returns to the island to access it from there. So what has been requested of the Biden administration is that it allow just that: Let entrepreneurs operate the accounts from Cuba,” said Joe GarcĂ­a, a former congressman from Miami who has been traveling to the island to promote greater engagement between Cuban entrepreneurs and the Cuban-American business community.

Among other ideas being currently considered by U.S. government agencies: Increasing access to online payment systems for Cuban entrepreneurs and authorizing U.S. companies to invest in private businesses in Cuba.

This is especially important because the Cuban government provides private businesses little access to credit or other sources of investment money.

“There are no financial support mechanisms available for a Cuban man or woman who wants to start a private business,” said Oniel DĂ­az Castellanos, founder of Auge, a private business in Havana that offers accounting, design and other corporate services to private companies. He pointed out that Cuban legislation doesn’t allow Cubans on the island or abroad to create investment funds to finance the operations of private companies.

In May 2022, the U.S. Treasury Department issued for the first time a license authorizing a U.S. company created by John Kavulich, president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, to invest in and lend money to a small private business in Cuba. But Cuban authorities have yet to respond to the move, in another signal of the ongoing debate within the Cuban government about the future of the new private companies.

Kavulich said the ideas proposed to the administration would not be enough to convince U.S. companies who fear violating the embargo to invest in the Cuban private sector. He would like to see bolder action: reestablishing a direct banking relationship between the two countries, known as correspondent banking.

“Unless the Biden-Harris administration unclogs the movement of money,” he said, “all of this becomes window dressing.”

© Miami Herald
U$ RACIST FOR PROFIT MEDICINE
‘We’re not doing that’: Why a Black couple wouldn’t crowdfund to pay off medical debts

Kaiser Health News
June 26, 2023,

Photo by JC Gellidon on Unsplash

SUFFOLK, Va. — When Kristie Fields was undergoing treatment for breast cancer nine years ago, she got some unsolicited advice at the hospital: Share your story on the local news, a nurse told her. Viewers would surely send money.

Fields, a Navy veteran and former shipyard worker, was 37 and had four kids at home. The food processing plant where her husband worked had just closed. And Fields’ medical care had left the family thousands of dollars in debt.

It was a challenging time, said Fields, who has become an outspoken advocate for cancer patients in her community. But Fields and her husband, Jermaine, knew they wouldn’t go public with their struggles. “We just looked at each other like, ‘Wait. What?’” Fields recalled. “No. We’re not doing that.”

It was partly pride, she said. But there was another reason, too. “A lot of people have misperceptions and stereotypes that most African American people will beg,” explained Fields, who is Black. “You just don’t want to be looked at as needy.”

Health care debt now burdens an estimated 100 million people in the U.S., according to a KFF Health News-NPR investigation. And Black Americans are 50% more likely than white Americans to go into debt for medical or dental care.

But while people flock to crowdfunding sites like GoFundMe seeking help with their medical debts, asking strangers for money has proven a less appealing option for many patients.

Black Americans use GoFundMe far less than white Americans, studies show. And those who do typically bring in less money.

The result threatens to deepen long-standing racial inequalities.

“Our social media is inundated with stories of campaigns that do super well and that are being shared all over the place,” said Nora Kenworthy, a health care researcher at the University of Washington in Bothell who studies medical crowdfunding. “Those are wonderful stories, and they’re not representative of the typical experience.”

In one recent study, Kenworthy and other researchers looked at 827 medical campaigns on GoFundMe that in 2020 had raised more than $100,000. They found only five were for Black women. Of those, two had white organizers.

GoFundMe officials acknowledge that the platform is an imperfect way to finance medical bills and that it reaches only a fraction of people in need. But for years, health care has been the largest category of campaigns on the site. This year alone, GoFundMe has recorded a 20% increase in cancer-related fundraisers, said spokesperson Heidi Hagberg. As Fields learned, some medical providers even encourage their patients to turn to crowdfunding.

The divergent experience of Black patients with this approach to medical debt may reflect the persistent wealth gap separating Black and white Americans, Kenworthy said. “Your friends tend to be the same race as you,” she said. “And so, when you turn to those friends through crowdfunding for assistance, you are essentially tapping into their wealth and their income.”

Nationally, the median white family now has about $184,000 in assets such as homes, savings, and retirement accounts, according to an analysis by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The assets of the median Black family total just $23,000.

But there is another reason Black Americans use crowdfunding less, Fields and others said: a sensitivity about being judged for seeking help.

Fields is the daughter of a single mom who worked fast-food jobs while going to school. The family never had much. But Fields said her mother gave her and her brother a strict lesson: getting a hand from family and friends is one thing. Asking strangers is something else.

“In the Black community, a lot of the older generation do not take handouts because you are feeding into the stereotype,” Fields said.

Her mother, whom Fields said never missed paying a bill, refused to seek assistance even after she was diagnosed with late-stage cancer that drove her into debt. She died in 2019.

Confronting the stereotypes can be painful, Fields said. But her mother left her with another lesson. “You can’t control people’s thoughts,” Fields said at a conference in Washington, D.C., organized by the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship. “But you can control what you do.”

Fields said she was fortunate that she and her husband could rely on a tight network of relatives and friends during her cancer treatment.

“I have a strong family support system. So, one month my mom would take the car payment, and his aunt would do the groceries or whatever we needed. It was always someone in the family that said, ‘OK, we got you.’”

That meant she didn’t have to turn to the local news or to a crowdfunding site like GoFundMe.

UCLA political scientist Martin Gilens said Fields’ sensitivity is understandable. “There’s a sort of a centuries-long suspicion of the poor, a cynicism about the degree of true need,” said Gilens, the author of “Why Americans Hate Welfare.”

Starting in the 1960s, that cynicism was reinforced by the growing view that poverty was a Black problem, even though there are far more white Americans living in poverty, according to census data. “The discourse on poverty shifted in a much more negative direction,” Gilens explained, citing a rise in critical media coverage of Black Americans and poor urban neighborhoods that helped drive a backlash against government assistance programs in the 1980s and ’90s.

Fields, whose cancer is in remission, resolved that she would help others sidestep this stigma.

After finishing treatment, she and her family began delivering groceries, gas cards, and even medical supplies to others undergoing cancer treatment.

Fields is still working to pay off her medical debt. But this spring, she opened what she calls a cancer care boutique in a strip mall outside downtown Suffolk. PinkSlayer, as it’s called, is a nonprofit store that offers wigs, prosthetics, and skin lotions, at discounted prices.

“The one thing my mom always said was, ‘You fight whatever spirit that you don’t want near you,’” Fields said as she cut the ribbon on the store at a ceremony attended by friends and relatives. “We are fighting this cancer thing.”

In one corner of her small boutique, Fields installed a comfortable couch under a mural of pink and red roses. “When someone is in need, they don’t want to be plastered all over your TV, all over Facebook, Instagram,” Fields explained recently after opening the store. “They want to feel loved.”


KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.






Education wars waged a century ago show how content restrictions can backfire

Bill Greer 
History News Network
June 26, 2023


Matthew Hawn, a high school teacher for sixteen years in conservative Sullivan County, Tennessee, opened the 2020-21 year in his Contemporary Issues class with a discussion of police shootings. White privilege is a fact, he told the students. He had a history of challenging his classes, which led to lively discussions among those who agreed and disagreed with his views. But this day’s discussion got back to a parent who objected. Hawn apologized – but didn’t relent. Months later, with more parents complaining, school officials reprimanded him for assigning “The First White President,” an essay by Ta-Nehisi Coates, which argues that white supremacy was the basis for Donald Trump’s presidency. After another incident in April, school officials fired him for insubordination and unprofessional behavior.

Days later, Tennessee outlawed his teaching statewide, placing restrictions on what could be taught about race and sex. Students should learn “the exceptionalism of our nation,” not “things that inherently divide or pit either Americans against Americans or people groups against people groups,” Governor Bill Lee announced. The new laws also required advance notice to parents of instruction on sexual orientation, gender identity, and contraception, with an option to withdraw their children.

Over the past three years, at least 18 states have enacted laws governing what is and is not taught in schools. Restricted topics mirror Tennessee’s, focusing on race, gender identity, and sexual orientation. In some cases, legislation bans the more general category of “divisive concepts,” a term coined in a 2020 executive order issued by the Trump administration and now promoted by conservative advocates. In recent months, Florida has been at the forefront of extending such laws to cover political ideology, mandating lessons that communism could lead to the overthrow of the US government. Even the teaching of mathematics has not escaped Florida politics, with 44 books banned for infractions like using race-based examples in word problems.

In a sense the country is stepping back a century to when a similar hysteria invaded New York’s schools during the “Red Scare” at the end of World War I, when fear of socialism and Bolshevism spread throughout the US. New York City launched its reaction in 1918 when Mayor John Francis Hylan banned public display of the red flag. He considered the Socialist Party’s banner “an insignia for law hating and anarchy . . . repulsive to ideals of civilization and the principles upon which our Government is founded.”

In the schools, Benjamin Glassberg, a teacher at Commercial High School in Brooklyn, was cast in Matthew Hawn’s role. On January 14, 1919, his history class discussed Bolshevism. The next day, twelve students, about one-third, signed a statement that their teacher had portrayed Bolshevism as a form of political expression not nearly so black as people painted it. The students cited specifics Glassberg gave them – that the State Department forbade publishing the truth about Bolshevism; that Red Cross staff with first-hand knowledge were prevented from talking about conditions in Russia; that Lenin and Trotsky had undermined rather than supported Germany and helped end the war. The school’s principal forwarded the statement to Dr. John L. Tildsley, Associate Superintendent of Schools, who suspended Glassberg, pending a trial by the Board of Education.

Glassberg’s trial played out through May. Several students repeated the charges in their statement, while others testified their teacher had said nothing disrespectful to the US government. Over that period, the sentiments of school officials became clear. Dr. Tildsley proclaimed that no person adhering to the Marxian program should become a teacher in the public schools, and if discovered should be forced to resign. He would be sending to everyone in the school system a circular making clear that “Americanism is to be put above everything else in classroom study.” He directed teachers to correct students’ opinions contrary to fundamental American ideas. The Board of Education empowered City Superintendent William Ettinger to undertake an “exhaustive examination into the life, affiliations, opinions, and loyalty of every member” of the teachers union. Organizations like the National Security League and the American Defense Society pushed the fight against Bolshevism across the country.

After the Board declared Glassberg guilty, the pace picked up. In June, the city’s high school students took a test entitled Examination For High Schools on the Great War. The title was misleading. The first question was designed to assess students’ knowledge of and attitude toward Bolshevism. The instructions to principals said this question was of greatest interest and teachers should highlight any students who displayed an especially intimate knowledge of that subject. The results pleased school officials when only 1 in 300 students showed any significant knowledge of or leaning toward Bolshevism. The “self-confessed radicals” would be given a six-month course on the “economic and social system recognized in America.” Only if they failed that course would their diplomas be denied.

In September, the state got involved. New York Attorney General Charles D. Newton called for “Americanization,” describing it as “intensive instruction in our schools in the ideals and traditions of America.” Also serving as counsel to the New York State Legislative Committee to Investigate Bolshevism, commonly known as the Lusk Committee after its chairman, Newton was in a position to make it happen. In January 1920, Lusk began hearings on education. Tildsly, Ettinger, and Board of Education President Anning S. Prawl all testified in favor of an Americanization plan.

In April, the New York Senate and Assembly passed three anti-Socialist “Lusk bills.” The “Teachers’ Loyalty” bill required public school teachers to obtain from the Board of Regents a Certificate of Loyalty to the State and Federal Constitutions and the country’s laws and institutions. “Sorely needed,” praised the New York Times, a long-time advocate for Americanization in the schools. But any celebration was premature. Governor Alfred E. Smith had his objections. Stating that the Teacher Loyalty Bill “permits one man to place upon any teacher the stigma of disloyalty, and this even without hearing or trial,” he vetoed it along with the others. Lusk and his backers would have to wait until the governor’s election in November when Nathan L. Miller beat Smith in a squeaker. After Miller’s inauguration, the Legislature passed the bills again. Miller signed them in May despite substantial opposition from prominent New Yorkers.

Over the next two years, the opposition grew. Even the New York Times backed off its unrelenting anti-Socialist stance. With the governor’s term lasting only two years, opponents got another chance in November, 1922, in a Smith-Miller rematch. Making the Lusk laws a major issue, Smith won in a landslide. He announced his intention to repeal the laws days after his inauguration. Lusk and his backers fought viciously but the Legislature finally passed repeal in April. Calling the teacher loyalty law (and a second Lusk law on private school licensing) “repugnant to the fundamentals of American democracy,” Smith signed their repeal.

More than any other factor, the experience of the teachers fueled the growing opposition to the Teachers’ Loyalty bill. After its enactment, state authorities administered two oaths to teachers statewide. That effort didn’t satisfy Dr. Frank P. Graves, State Commissioner of Education. In April 1922, he established the Advisory Council on Qualifications of Teachers of the State of New York to hear cases of teachers charged with disloyalty. He appointed Archibald Stevenson, counsel to the Lusk committee and arch-proponent of rooting out disloyalty in the schools, as one member. By summer the Council had earned a reputation as a witch hunt. Its activities drew headlines such as Teachers Secretly Quizzed on Loyalty and Teachers Defy Loyalty Court. Teachers and principals called before it refused to attend. Its reputation grew so bad that New York’s Board of Education asked for its abolishment and the President of the Board told teachers that they need not appear if summoned.

A lesson perhaps lies in that experience for proponents of restrictions on what can be taught today. Already teachers, principals, and superintendents risk fines and termination from violating laws ambiguous on what is and is not allowed. The result has been a chilling environment where educators simply avoid controversial issues altogether. Punishing long-time and respected teachers – like Matthew Hawn, whom dozens of his former students defend – will put faces on the fallout from the laws being passed. How long before a backlash rears up, as it did in New York over Teachers’ Loyalty?

Bill Greer is the author of A Dirty Year: Sex, Suffrage, and Scandal in Gilded Age New York, a nonfiction narrative of the city in 1872.
TRUTH BE TOLD
'I don’t take medications': Marjorie Taylor Greene says TV turns on 'by itself' to spy on her

David Edwards
June 25, 2023

Marjorie Taylor Greene speaks during a court hearing on April 22, 2022 in Atlanta, Georgia. 
(Photo by John Bazemore-Pool/Getty Images

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) suggested her television may be spying on her.

In a message posted to Twitter on Sunday, Greene cited strange behavior from her home electronics.

"Last night in my DC residence, the television turned on by itself, and the screen showed someone's laptop trying to connect to the TV," she wrote.

The lawmaker offered assurances that she was not in mental distress.

"Just for the record: I'm very happy," she said. "I'm also very healthy and eat well and exercise a lot. I don't smoke and never have. I don't take any medications. I am not vaccinated. So I'm not concerned about blood clots, heart conditions, strokes, or anything else."



Greene didn't understand why the television would be spying on her because she did not have "anything to hide."

"I just love my country and the people and know how much they've been screwed over by the corrupt people in our government, and I'm not willing to be quiet about it or willing to go along with it," she concluded.

She followed up her tweet with a link to a story about smart TVs "spying on you."

"You know what they say about conspiracy theories," she later added.