Sunday, September 08, 2024

Something to talk about: ChatGPT’s enormous energy drain revealed

By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
September 6, 2024

Image: — © AFP

Artificial intelligence’s energy consumption is skyrocketing, driven by the expansion of large language models and other forms of AI. To keep the data insights turning, carbon needs to be burnt. A new survey reveals just how much energy is required for ChatGPT to handle user queries throughout the year.

Since its launch nearly two years ago, OpenAI’s ChatGPT has quickly captured the public’s attention, amassing an estimated 100 million monthly users within just two months. However, while its capabilities, from drafting essays to solving complex math problems and writing code, are impressive, they come with a hefty energy cost. Each ChatGPT query reportedly consumes about 0.0029 kilowatt-hours of electricity, nearly ten times the 0.0003 kilowatt-hours required for a standard Google search.

To put the scale of ChatGPT’s energy consumption into perspective, the firm BestBrokers has calculated its total annual electricity usage for generating command responses alone. The results are concerning: ChatGPT consumes approximately 226.82 million kilowatt-hours each year just to process user queries.

According to the calculations, this amount of electricity is enough to fully charge about 3.13 million electric vehicles, each with an average battery capacity of 72.4 kWh. In fact, this represents nearly 95 percent of the 3.3 million electric cars on U.S. roads by the end of 2023.

In terms of individual contributions,ChatGPT uses 621,429 kWh of electricity every day to handle over 200 million user queries. To put that in perspective, it consumes more than 21 thousand times the daily energy of an average U.S. household, which uses about 29 kWh.

Over a year, ChatGPT consumes 226,821,615 kWh to manage more than 78 billion prompts. This adds up to about $29.71 million in energy costs, based on the U.S. average commercial electricity rate of $0.131 per kWh as of June 2024. Each query costs $0.00038 in electricity.

What does this energy drain mean?

As it stands, the power used by ChatGPT to generate responses in a year could fully charge 3,133,371 electric vehicles, each with an average battery capacity of 72.4 kWh. That’s nearly 95 percent of the 3.3 million electric cars on U.S. roads by the end of 2023.

What could be done with the energy?

ChatGPT’s yearly energy consumption to handle requests could also power 21,602 U.S. homes for a full year. While this is only 0.02 percent of the 131 million households in the country, it’s still a significant amount of energy, especially considering the U.S. ranks third globally in household numbers.

The energy ChatGPT uses in a year to answer questions could also charge 47.9 million iPhones 15 every day for an entire year, each with a battery capacity of 12.98 Wh. Additionally, the chatbot consumes as much energy to process user queries in one hour as it would take to stream video for 137,728 hours in Europe.
Image: — © AFP

What does this mean geographically?

ChatGPT’s yearly energy consumption for handling prompts exceeds the annual electricity usage of twelve small countries and territories, including Gibraltar, Grenada, Dominica and Samoa. It could also power all of Finland or Belgium for a day, or keep Ireland running for over two days.

The future

The future looks like recording a great energy drain for training the GPT-4 model, with over 1 trillion parameters, required 62.3 million kWh of electricity over 100 days, 48 times more energy than it took to train GPT-3, which consumed nearly 1.3 million kWh in 34 days.


MONOPOLY CAPITALI$M

Google ‘anti-competitive’ over online ad tech: UK



By AFP
September 6, 2024

Google-parent Alphabet recently reported that revenue from online ad searches climbed to $48.5 billion in the second quarter of this year - Copyright AFP MAURO PIMENTEL
Ben PERRY

US tech titan Google employs “anti-competitive practices” with regards to online advertising, Britain’s competition watchdog concluded Friday in provisional findings of a two-year long investigation.

The probe has focused on so-called ad tech — the system that decides which online adverts people see and how much they cost.

The US Department of Justice and European Commission are carrying out similar investigations into Google.

In Britain, the Competition and Markets Authority “provisionally found that Google is using anti-competitive practices in open-display ad tech, which it believes could be harming thousands of UK publishers and advertisers”, the CMA said in a statement Friday.

The regulator, which launched its probe in May 2022, said it would “carefully consider representations from Google before reaching its final decision”.

– ‘Flawed interpretation’ –

In a statement to media on Friday, Google VP of Global Ads, Dan Taylor, said the CMA’s “case rests on flawed interpretations of the ad tech sector.

“We disagree with the CMA’s view and we will respond accordingly”.

He added that Google’s “advertising technology tools help websites and apps fund their content, and enable businesses of all sizes to effectively reach new customers.

“Google remains committed to creating value for our publisher and advertiser partners in this highly competitive sector”, Taylor said.

The CMA said it had “provisionally found that, when placing digital ads on websites, the vast majority of publishers and advertisers use Google’s ad tech services in order to bid for and sell advertising space”.

The watchdog “is concerned that Google is actively using its dominance in this sector to preference its own services.

“Google disadvantages competitors and prevents them competing on a level playing field to provide publishers and advertisers with a better, more competitive service that supports growth in their business”.

The UK’s Competition Appeal Tribunal recently ruled that a multibillion-pound claim against Google for alleged anti-competitiveness in digital advertising can proceed to trial.

The £13.6 billion ($17.9 billion) claim, brought by the Ad Tech Collective Action LLP, accuses the company of abusing its dominant position and causing significant losses to UK online publishers.

Juliette Enser, interim executive director of enforcement at the CMA, noted on Friday that “many businesses are able to keep their digital content free or cheaper by using online advertising to generate revenue.

“Adverts on these websites and apps reach millions of people across the UK — assisting the buying and selling of goods and services”, she said in the CMA statement.

“That’s why it’s so important that publishers and advertisers — who enable this free content — can benefit from effective competition and get a fair deal when buying or selling digital advertising space”.

Google-parent Alphabet recently reported that revenue from online ad searches climbed to $48.5 billion in the second quarter of this year.
New French nuclear reactor enters automatic shutdown

THAT'S NOT GOOD

Agence France-Presse
September 5, 2024 

Flamanville has been beset by problems (Lou BENOIST/AFP)

France's newest nuclear reactor, plagued by massive delays and cost overruns, shut itself down automatically Wednesday just a day after starting up for the first time.

The European Pressurised Reactor (EPR) in Flamanville, Normandy is going through a "long and complex startup process requiring many trials and tests, and that can induce shutdowns like this," a spokeswoman for state-owned energy giant EDF told AFP.

The shutdown "proves the safety system is working well," she added, saying that staff were now "doing the necessary technical checks and analysis... then they will restart the reactor".

EDF's latest reactor, supposed to be the model for a new generation of power plants pushed by President Emmanuel Macron for the coming decades, has been completed 12 years late at a cost of 13.2 billion euros ($14.6 billion) -- around four times the 3.3 billion initially budgeted.

Reactors of the same design have previously been completed in China and Finland.

"On the Finnish EPR, there were several setbacks, especially with some hydraulic pumps that were faulty and had to be replaced," said Nicolas Goldberg, an energy expert at Colombus Consulting.

"This doesn't call the startup into question. We'll just have to be patient," he added.

EDF had on Monday secured approval to begin the fission reaction from France's ASN nuclear safety authority, having loaded uranium fuel into the reactor in May and carried out a battery of tests.

The Flamanville plant will gradually ramp up to 25 percent output before being connected to the grid "by the end of autumn", the power company says -- a further delay from its previous target of the end of summer.


At full power it will be France's top-producing nuclear reactor at 1,600 megawatts, enough to supply around three million homes with electricity.
AMERIKA
An unholy alliance: The real reason right-wing preachers are weaponizing our courts

Thom Hartmann
September 4, 2024

Photo by Matt Botsford on Unsplash

A group representing right-wing preachers is trying to bring about a merger of church and state with a new lawsuit. This is incredibly dangerous. The blowback against their effort has even generated a meme that has gone viral on social media:



Sadly, most Americans don’t understand that when a corporation (churches are corporations) doesn’t have money left over at the end of the year because they spent it all on their mission, they don’t pay a penny in income taxes, whether they’re non-profit or for-profit organizations.

Playing off this ignorance, right-wing preachers across America are howling that Democrats want to stop them from feeding the hungry or helping the poor, a completely 100% BS argument with no basis in reality. And they’re being helped out in this scam by their largest trade association and lobbying group.

The National Religious Broadcasters (NRB) is a group heavily supported by preachers and televangelists, many of whom collectively rake in literally billions of dollars every year that they use for everything from promoting Trump to private jets to 35,000 square foot 40-room lakeside mansions.

And all of it is tax-free: you and I pick up the tab for everything from their police and fire to their use of the nation’s airspace and airwaves. As Leona Helmsley famously said, “Only the little people pay taxes.” And only a few of these folks are “the little people.”

To keep this gravy train rolling along, the NRB and two rightwing churches just launched a federal lawsuit to overturn the so-called Johnson Amendment, part of the IRS’s tax code that says that when nonprofits engage in political activity they lose their tax-exempt status.

We got the Johnson Amendment back in 1954 because rightwing whites-only churches had joined Fred Koch’s John Birch Society in the “massive resistance” movement against the racial integration of public schools mandated that year by the Supreme Court in Brown v Board. It passed that year by a unanimous voice vote in a Republican-controlled senate and was signed into law by Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Since the Reagan era, however, the law has been largely ignored. As The Washington Post noted in a 2016 editorial:

“Indeed, more than 2,000 mainly evangelical Christian clergy have deliberately violated the law since 2008 as a form of protest against it; only one has been audited by the IRS, and none punished…”

When preachers push politics instead of religion on Sunday morning, the so-called Johnson Amendment said, their church should lose its tax-exempt status. As the IRS notes:

“Under the Internal Revenue Code, all section 501(c)(3) organizations are absolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office.”

The NRB is bringing their suit in a Texas federal court before a Trump-appointed rightwing judge who will almost certainly rule in their favor. From there, it’ll eventually make its way to the Supreme Court, which is clearly the NRB’s goal.

Given the six rightwing Catholics on the Court who’ve already enshrined their Church’s religious doctrine into law with the Dobbs decision, odds are the Johnson Amendment is facing the end of its days.

This is just one more example of how Bush and Trump packing the Court with rightwing religious fanatics — including one who was a member of a Catholic cult where, as The Washington Post notes, she was referred to as a “Handmaid” most of her early life — who are distorting American law and rewriting the Constitution.

Religion is one of the great unregulated realms of American life. There are no federal standards for a person to lead a congregation, become a televangelist, or open a new church. Anybody can do it.

It’s been that way from the beginning of America to this day because we’ve all accepted the Founders’ and Framers’ belief that religion and government should be as separated as possible. As author of the Declaration of Independence and then-President Thomas Jefferson wrote to the Danbury Baptist Association on New Years Day of 1802:

“I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should ‘make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,’ thus building a wall of separation between Church & State.”

Every member of the Constitutional Convention in 1787 agreed, which is why there are two different places in that document that forbid our government from promoting or prohibiting any particular religion or religious doctrine, and outlaws a religious test for holding office.

They did this because of their experience of the previous two hundred years, during which Europeans on this continent brutally inflicted and enforced radical anti-woman religious dogma on our citizens, particularly in New England.

Now, however, Republican judges and politicians, heavily supported by right-wing preachers, want to take us back to that grim era and are working as hard as they can to pull it off.

This is just one more example of how out-of-control the rightwing faction of our court system is, as I lay out in detail in The Hidden History of the Supreme Court and the Betrayal of America.


It’s why it’s so vital that next year sees the Supreme Court expanded, term limits imposed, Clarence Thomas and Sam Alito impeached, court-stripping legislation put into law, and a binding code of ethics on SCOTUS passed and enforced.

It also requires our federal legislators to get ready now, with legislation to re-impose the Johnson Amendment’s separation-of-church-and-state in a way that the Supreme Court cannot overturn. And the IRS must begin enforcing it.

Rightwing Republican fanatics constantly telegraph their next move, in part to help raise money from their base. Democrats and Republicans who care about our secular republic must stop playing after-the-fact defense and go on the offense now.
'Absolutely a fantasy': Woman who triggered Trump's childcare word salad slams J.D. Vance

Kathleen Culliton
September 6, 2024

Republican vice presidential nominee U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) introduces 2024 Republican presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump during a rally at Herb Brooks National Hockey Center on July 27, 2024 in St. Cloud, Minn. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

The woman who triggered former President Donald Trump's childcare word salad slammed both the Republican presidential nominee and his running mate for responses she deemed callous and delusional.

Reshma Saujani, CEO of Girls Who Code and a member of the Economic Club of New York, where the GOP hopeful spoke Thursday, appeared on CNN Friday afternoon to discuss with anchor Jake Tapper Trump's and Sen. J.D. Vance's commentary on a financial crisis hitting parents nationwide.

"What [Trump] told us is that, shocker, 'Expenses are no big deal,'" Saujani said. "The fact that you're drowning in debt because of them? Sorry, but not sorry."

Saujani's comment comes one day after Trump gave a two-minute reply to her child question at the panel discussion in New York City that left political commentators baffled and critics concerned about a possible mental decline.

Washington Post analyst Catherine Rampell complained she couldn't even find a complete sentence.

"Well, I will do that and we're sitting down, you know, I was, uh, somebody, we had Sen. Marco Rubio and my daughter Ivanka were so, uh, impactful on that issue, it's a very important issue, but I think when you talk about the kind of numbers that I'm talking about that because childcare is childcare is couldn't, you know, is something you have to have it in this country, you have to have it," Trump told Saujani Thursday.

"But when you talk about those numbers compare to the kind of numbers that I'm talking about by taxing foreign nations at levels that they're not used to but they'll get used to it very quickly and it's not going to stop them from doing business with us but they'll have a very substantial tax when they send product into our country."

Saujani said Friday that all those words masked the lack of a clear policy to address a "huge economic issue" that costs the U.S. more than $100 billion every year and has 40 percent of parents in debt.

"The cost of childcare, as you know, is outpacing the cost of inflation and one in five families are saying like, 'I can't have another kid because I can't afford it,'" she said.

"The fact that President Trump basically said, 'You know, it's not an expense that's noteworthy,' I mean, that's like peak gaslighting."


Saujani was equally unimpressed with Vance's comments Wednesday to far-right activist Charlie Kirk on the same topic, during which he suggested loosening regulations for childcare workers and made a controversial comment.

"Maybe, like, Grandma or Grandpa wants to help out a little bit more," Vance said. "Or maybe there's an aunt or uncle the wants to help out a little bit more."

Saujani told Tapper Vance's comment wasn't policy, but delusion.

"I think that the 'just ask Grandma' part is absolutely a fantasy and not accessible to most Americans," she said. "I want to hear both Vance and Trump talk about what's really happening with child care in America and offer real policies and solutions beyond a 'just ask Grandma' or frankly talking about tariffs that have nothing to do with this."

Watch the video below or click here.

GOP unveils stopgap funding plan pushing 'manufactured' issue of non-citizen voter fraud

Julia Conley, Common Dreams
September 7, 2024 


MR. EVIL

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Leading U.S. Senate Democrats on Friday accused House Republicans of "wasting precious time catering to the hard MAGA right" as House Speaker Mike Johnson unveiled a stopgap funding bill tied to a proposal that would require proof of citizenship in order to vote in federal elections.

The proposal—the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act—has been pushed by Republican presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump and was passed by the House in July, with five Democrats joining the GOP in supporting the bill.

Non-citizens are already barred from voting in federal elections. With about 21.3 million eligible voters reporting in a recent survey that they would not be able to quickly access their birth certificate, passport, naturalization certificate, or certificate of citizenship in order to prove their status, critics say the proposal is a clear attempt to stop people of color and young Americans from taking part in elections.

Johnson proposed including the legislation in a stopgap bill, or a continuing resolution, that would keep the government running roughly at current spending levels through March 28—a move that would postpone major spending negotiations until after the next president takes office.

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said that "avoiding a government shutdown requires bipartisanship, not a bill drawn up by one party," and alluded to former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy's (R-Calif.) attempt last September to ram a spending bill through with immigration and border policy changes in order to avert a government shutdown.

"Speaker Johnson is making the same mistake as former Speaker McCarthy did a year ago," said Schumer and Murray in a statement. "The House Republican funding proposal is an ominous case of déjà vu."

“If Speaker Johnson drives House Republicans down this highly partisan path," they added, "the odds of a shutdown go way up, and Americans will know that the responsibility of a shutdown will be on the House Republicans' hands."

Johnson is expected to bring the bill to the House floor on Wednesday after lawmakers return from summer recess. Congress has a September 30 deadline to make changes to the spending bill in order to avoid a partial government shutdown on October 1.

The House speaker called the proposal "a critically important step" toward funding the government and ensuring "that only American citizens can decide American elections"—prompting one critic to accuse Johnson of pushing a "manufactured" issue.

"Anyone who reads the SAVE Act understands it is a bad bill," said attorney Heath Hixson, "a poorly worded unfunded mandate that'll lead to voter suppression and racist outcomes."
Major GOP figure's endorsement of Harris seen as 'massive signal' to undecided voters

David McAfee
September 7, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris. (AFP)

A major figure in the GOP just sent a "massive signal" to undecided voters that Vice President Kamala Harris is their choice, a former Barack Obama aide said on Saturday.

Democratic political commentator Van Jones, a frequent guest on CNN, appeared on the network over the weekend to discuss the state of the presidential race and the upcoming debate during which Harris is set to face off against Donald Trump. Jones appeared alongside GOP operative Scott Jennings.

Both political strategists were asked about the recent endorsement of Harris by former Vice President Dick Cheney, who stated that Trump has shown he's not trustworthy in a position of power. The host noted that Harris said Cheney's comments were "courageous."

Jennings, who worked for George W. Bush and said he "reveres" Cheney, said most Republicans would disagree with the conclusion Cheney reached.

Jones, on the other hand, said this specific endorsement could actually reach crucial undecided voters.

"I see it very differently. If you are an undecided voter and you're trying to figure out what to do, this is a pretty massive signal," Jones said. "If Kamala Harris does stuff that you don't like, maybe her tax policy is too aggressive, you can vote her out in four years and fix it."

He then added, "If you put somebody in office who does not respect the rule of law, the Constitution, somebody who led an insurrection, somebody you may not be able to vote out in four years, you can't fix that really easily."

Jones further stated, "But if you're in the middle trying to figure out who is going to have the most survivable set of errors... even Dick Cheney says that Kamala is a safer bet for America."


Watch below or click the link here.

'Funny boy': Mark Cuban goes to war with Trump adviser Stephen Miller over economic policy


David McAfee
September 7, 2024 

President Donald Trump speaks as Senior Advisor to the President Stephen Miller (C) listens during a round-table discussion on border security and safe communities with State, local, and community leaders in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 11, 2019 in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images)


Business giant Mark Cuban is taking on senior Donald Trump advisor Stephen Miller on the issue of tariffs.

Cuban, a billionaire known for his business acumen, has vocally opposed some of Trump's economic policies. Recently, this led to firebrand conservative Tomi Lahren questioning Cuban's knowledge of international trade and taxes, which in turn caused people to ridicule her.

Miller, who in May suggested that he had some evidence that Special Counsel Jack Smith, and not the ex-president, "is the one subverting the law," decided to start his own fight with Cuban earlier this week.

It began when Cuban flagged a report about Fox News political consultant Jessica Tarlov saying that Goldman Sachs "came out today and said that the GDP will significantly decrease under Donald Trump and it will continue to increase under Kamala Harris." Cuban included a money emoji.

This caused a social media user to ask Cuban, "How would you protect American industry w/o very punitive tariffs?" that Trump proposes.

Cuban replied, saying that there "is a huge difference between targeted tariffs and across the board tariffs."

"There are targeted tariffs in place. And you and [Elon Musk] can lobby for those that impact your business," Cuban said, adding that Vice President Kamala Harris "listens to business and wants to help our industries succeed."

"Have you had anyone reach out to her campaign? And to be clear. Across the board tariffs are a tax on everyone. They make no sense at all," Cuban said on Wednesday.

Miller then jumped into the conversation, saying that Cuban "Cuban epitomizes billionaire elites whose bottom line depends on offshoring, hence his support for the pro-offshoring candidate: Kamala Harris."

"Trump’s entire plan is devoted to building vast manufacturing wealth for American labor, Kamala’s entire plan is devoted to enriching foreign workers, foreign nations and her donors who invest in foreign factories," Miller claimed in response. "Trump is for Pittsburg, Milwaukee, Detroit and Raleigh. Kamala is for Beijing, Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh and every other far-off place but America."

Cuban then hit back on Friday, asking, "You are a funny boy, aren’t you Stephen?"

"First. Pittsburgh has an h at the end," Cuban said, correcting Miller. "More importantly, I have worked to help a portfolio company, [Guardian Bikes] move their production from offshore to Indiana."

"And we built [Cost Plus Drugs] robotics based factory in Dallas. We make things like pediatric cancer drugs that are in short supply," Cuban added. "Your turn..."

On Saturday, Miller replied again, flagging a Cuban social media post from 2019 and saying, "Oh no, Mark, look what I found. Here’s your post vehemently opposing Trump’s tariffs on China. You’re just another China-first America-last globalist sellout—which is why you’re all-in for Kamala."



Women ride Pakistan's economic crisis into the workplace

Karachi (AFP) – Amina Sohail veers through heavy traffic to pick up her next passenger –- the sight of a woman riding a motorcycle drawing stares in Pakistan's megacity of Karachi.


Issued on: 08/09/2024
Amina Sohail is the first woman in her family to enter the workforce 
© Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP

The 28-year-old is the first woman in her family to enter the workforce, a pattern emerging in urban households coming under increasing financial pressure in Pakistan.

"I don't focus on people, I don't speak to anyone or respond to the hooting, I do my work," said Sohail, who joined a local ride-hailing service at the start of the year, transporting women through the dusty back streets of the city.

"Before, we would be hungry, now we get to eat at least two to three meals a day," she added.

The South Asian nation is locked in a cycle of political and economic crises, dependent on IMF bailouts and loans from friendly countries to service its debt.

Prolonged inflation has forced up the price of basic groceries such as tomatoes by 100 per cent. Electricity and gas bills have risen by 300 per cent compared to July last year, according to official data.

Sohail used to help her mother with cooking, cleaning and looking after her younger siblings, until her father, the family's sole earner, fell sick.
Sohail joined a local ride-hailing service at the start of the year, transporting women through the dusty back streets of the city © Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP

"The atmosphere in the house was stressful," she said, with the family dependent on other relatives for money. "That's when I thought I must work."

"My vision has changed. I will work openly like any man, no matter what anyone thinks."
'Get her married'

Pakistan was the first Muslim nation to be led by a woman prime minister in the 1980s, women CEOs grace power lists in Forbes magazine, and they now make up the ranks of the police and military.

However, much of Pakistani society operates under a traditional code which requires women to have permission from their family to work outside of the home.
Hina Saleem works as a telephone operator at a leather factory in Korangi, Karachi's largest industrial area © Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP

According to the United Nations, just 21 percent of women participate in Pakistan's work force, most of them in the informal sector and almost half in rural areas working in the fields.

"I am the first girl in the family to work, from both my paternal and maternal side," said Hina Saleem, a 24-year-old telephone operator at a leather factory in Korangi, Karachi's largest industrial area.

The move, supported by her mother after her father died, was met with resistance from her extended family.

Her younger brother was warned that working could lead to socially unacceptable behaviour, such as finding a husband of her choice.

"My uncles said 'get her married'," she told AFP. "There was lots of pressure on my mother."

At the changeover of shifts outside the leather factory, workers arrive in painted buses decorated with chinking bells, with a handful of women stepping out amid the crowd of men.
Anum Shahzadi, 19, was encouraged by her parents to enter the workforce after completing high school © Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP

Nineteen-year-old Anum Shahzadi, who works in the same factory inputting data, was encouraged by her parents to enter the workforce after completing high school, unlike generations before her.

"What is the point of education if a girl can't be independent," said Shahzadi, who now contributes to the household alongside her brother.

Bushra Khaliq, executive director for Women In Struggle for Empowerment (WISE) which advocates for political and economic rights for women, said that Pakistan was "witnessing a shift" among urban middle class women.

"Up until this point, they had been told by society that taking care of their homes and marriage were the ultimate objective," she told AFP.

"But an economic crunch and any social and economic crises bring with them a lot of opportunities."
'We are companions'

Farzana Augustine, from Pakistan's minority Christian community, earned her first salary last year at the age of 43, after her husband lost his job during the Covid-19 pandemic.

"My wife had to take over," Augustine Saddique explained to AFP.

"But it is nothing to be sad about, we are companions and are running our house together."
Farzana Augustine earned her first salary last year at the age of 43, after her husband lost his job during the Covid-19 pandemic © Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP

The sprawling port metropolis of Karachi, officially home to 20 million people but likely many millions more, is the business centre of Pakistan.

It pulls in migrants and entrepreneurs from across the country with the promise of employment and often acts as a bellwether for social change.

Nineteen-year-old Zahra Afzal moved to Karachi to live with her uncle four years ago, after the death of her parents, leaving her small village in central-eastern Pakistan to work as a childminder.

"If Zahra was taken by other relatives, she would have been married off by now," her uncle Kamran Aziz told AFP, from their typical one room home where bedding is folded away in the morning and cooking is done on the balcony.

"My wife and I decided we would go against the grain and raise our girls to survive in the world before settling them down."

Afzal beams that she is now an example for her sister and cousin: "My mind has become fresh."

© 2024 AFP

Nuclear Roulette: The U.S. Nuclear Employment Guideline



 
 September 6, 2024

CHILDREN MUST BE FOUR FEET 
TO GO ON RIDE
Facebook

From left are the Peacekeeper, the Minuteman III and the Minuteman. Photo, 

photo by R.J. Oriez, U.S. Air Force.

The U.S. Nuclear Employment Guideline Report, according to Department of Defense websites, appears to be a detailed target menu in the event the president orders a nuclear attack. It is required of the executive by Congress, Section 491, when the president alters the nuclear weapons strategy of the U.S. As alluded to by top-ranking administration leaders and reported in the New York Times, the revised Nuclear Employment Guideline signed by President Biden reflects China’s expanding nuclear arsenal.

The president sets the nation’s nuclear strategy and the Joint Chiefs of Staff develop the tactical plans to achieve the president’s strategy, according to DOD literature.

As China, People’s Republic of China, has increased its manufacture of nuclear weapons in the past five years much faster than defense analysts had predicted, the U.S. has turned the focus of its nuclear guideline toward the PRC.  China now possesses around 500 nuclear warheads. And while the U.S. and Russia each currently deploy around 1,700 nuclear warheads each, China is on pace to equal that number by 2035.

Similarly threatening to the U.S. is the prospect of China coordinating its nuclear capability with that of Russia, and even with North Korea, now harboring around 60 nuclear warheads and a growing fleet of intercontinental missiles to deliver them.

China has also made aggressive territorial claims to the South China Sea and vows to gain control of Taiwan by any means necessary, definitively by 2049. This July China suspended nuclear weapons control talks with the U.S. citing increased military arms sales to Taiwan by the U.S.

Yet, China has recently dissuaded Russia from threatening the use of nuclear weapons against Ukraine, or against western states that might deploy soldiers to Ukraine. And China repeated its call for the “denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula in joint meetings with Japan and South Korea in May of this year.

Significantly, China maintains its posture of No First Use of nuclear weapons and repeated calls last week for the other leading nuclear-armed nations, Russia, France, U.K and the U.S. to adopt a No First Use nuclear policy. India and China are the only nuclear-armed nations to affirm NFU.

One of the architects of the revised U.S. Nuclear Employment Guidelines is Vipin Narang, Acting Assistant Director of Department of Defense Space Agency. During his retirement speech from DOD this August, Narang blamed China and Russia for failed arms control talks. Before returning to lecture at M.I.T. Narang said China’s expansion of its nuclear arsenal was threatening, and that moving its nuclear-armed missiles to “launch on warning” status was provocative.

Narang did not share that the U.S. possesses more than ten times the number of nuclear warheads, 5,580, as China has. Nor that the entire fleet of U.S. Air Force  Minuteman missiles has been on “launch on alert” status for sixty years.

Failing arms control negotiations with Russia result from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Russia’s announced withdrawal from the NewSTART nuclear weapons treaty in 2026, according to Narang. NewSTART is the only remaining arms control treaty now in effect between Russia and the U.S. It successfully decommissioned thousands of nuclear warhead and missile launchers from each arsenal since its ratification in 2010.  For the deteriorating state of U.S. Russia talks, Narang did not cite the failure of the U.S. to ratify the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, 1996, the U.S. withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Defense Treaty in 2001 or withdrawal from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, INF in 2019.

Narang’s bleak address to his DOD colleagues warned them to “prepare for a world where constraints on nuclear weapons arsenals disappear entirely”. He described the last quarter century following the Cold War as a “nuclear intermission”, and that “the intermission is over and we are clearly in the next act (of the Cold War)”. Grimly assessing the failure of two years of nuclear weapons negotiations he went on to extoll the Air Force’s new generation F-35 fighter jet, the new B61-12 nuclear bomb, the Sentinel fleet of new ICBM missiles, and the “modernization” of our nuclear forces, costing more than one trillion dollars in coming decades.

In his book Nuclear Strategy in the Modern Era (2014) Narang proposed a theory about how nations devise their nuclear postures to enhance deterrence. Countries will either seek protection from larger nuclear powers, threaten asymmetrical nuclear attack or promise assured nuclear retaliation.

Missing from Narang’s calculus, is the decision many countries have already made to forgo nuclear arsenal all together. Indeed, the majority of nation-states, pursuant of their own security, have rejected the deployment of nuclear weapons on their soil. The majority of humankind regard nuclear weapons as inherently destabilizing and dangerous and of no military value.

When 193 countries voted for the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Treaty, NPT, in 1970, they agreed not only to halt the spread of nuclear weapons but to reduce nuclear weapons stockpiles, and “cease the nuclear arms race”. The NPT places the onus on the nuclear powers to eliminate all nuclear weapons at an “early date”. All nuclear weapons would eventually come under the control of an international agency as agreed in the NPT’s Article VI.

The international control of military arms and especially nuclear weapons was the lifelong goal of Albert Einstein. Even before WWI but surely after “The Great War”, then WWII and endless conflict since, Einstein regarded nation states as incapable of resolving their disputes in a peaceful manner. The creation of the League of Nations, the United Nations, and the International Atomic Energy Commission have in some measure fulfilled his vision of a supra-national organization of de-militarization and peace.

Three recent decisions by the International Criminal Court in the Hague would have major geopolitical consequences and improve prospects for peace if and when they were enforced: that Isreal’s occupation of Palestinian Territory, including, Gaza, East Jerusalem, and the West Bank is illegal, that China’s jurisdictional claims in the South China Sea are illegal, and that Vladamir Putin’s capture of Ukrainian children was illegal.

Even more consequential is the growing effort begun in the United Nations General Assembly to outlaw nuclear weapons, the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, TPNW. Endorsed by 122 countries in the United Nations General Assembly in 2017 is now ratified or acceded to by 70 countries, banning nuclear weapons from their jurisdictions.

As the U.S. and the other nuclear powers drift further and further from the goal of nuclear disarmament, they double down on their nuclear arsenals and invest in new platforms to deliver their nuclear payloads. Is it too late to build credible assurances that these awful weapons will never be used? It will never be too late to eschew these horrible weapons, unless or until some brilliant leader orders a nuclear attack.

Another Secretary of Defense from Cambridge, Robert McNamara, learned some bitter lessons from the fog of the Vietnam War (The Fog of War, Academy Award film documentary). That the new generation of cold warriors should review McNamara’s warnings before charging into another nuclear arms race.

Lesson #1. Military leaders make mistakes. If you make a mistake with a nuclear weapon you literally destroy nations.

Lesson #2 Empathy; we have to put ourselves in our adversaries’ skin, and look through their eyes, in order to understand their actions.

Lesson #3 Human fallibility and nuclear weapons do not mix. Humans need to think more seriously about war and killing other humans. Beware of having all the answers.

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Lesson #7 Belief and seeing are both often wrong. Your mindset can be wrong. You may see only what you believe.

According to both Defense Secretaries McNamara and George Shultz, we only survived the last Cold War “by sheer luck”. We court disaster by opening another round of nuclear brinksmanship and mutually assured destruction.

“Nuclear weapons are totally irrational”, said Ronald Reagan, they are “totally inhumane, good for nothing but killing people, possible destruction of life on Earth and civilization.” There is no theory that will change the brutal absurdity of nuclear weapons nor transform them into logical agents of peace and security.

In Thomas Schelling’s application of game theory to nuclear weapons the object of deterrence is to convince the adversary not to use their weapons and vice versa. If nuclear deterrence is the stated goal of the U.S. nuclear posture, then adopting a No First Use of nuclear weapon either by treaty or unilaterally is the clear choice. China and India have done so for decades. No First Use makes perfect sense. Repelling conventional assaults should not be part of the nuclear employment equation. Nuclear weapons are not just more powerful conventional weapons. If they are ever used in war again the consequences are unpredictable and beyond any risk assessment.

 It is past time to end the U.S.’ “nuclear ambiguity”. Take the nuclear option off the table. Abide by the Non-Proliferation Treaty; refuse to renew the nuclear arms race.  We cannot win security or freedom in a game of nuclear roulette. But we can and will lose everything if we continue to bet on nuclear weapons. What folly.