Sunday, October 13, 2024

What Ideas From the Paleolithic Are Still With Us in the Modern World?

An interview with renowned economic historian Michael Hudson on where our calendar comes from, his collaborations with the late intellectual David Graeber, and the long-lost practice of forgiving debt.
October 11, 2024
Source: Originally published by Z. Feel free to share widely.





Is the order of the modern alphabet connected to how our shared ancestors counted the phases of the moon and its effect on tides 50,000 years ago? Did the first stirrings of government and bureaucracy emerge from the efforts of early astronomers to reconcile solar and lunar calendars? These are the kinds of questions that have kept economic historian Michael Hudson up at night.

On the surface, learning about the origins of the methods people use to bring order to their lives—such as time, weights and measures, and our financial systems—seems like just another history lesson. One ancient practice leading to another, resulting in guesswork of what people did before the last Ice Age.

But it goes beyond interesting. It’s very useful. The more we can parse out and extrapolate the beliefs and attitudes of previous eras, the more we might be able to step out of present behavior patterns and perceive social problems we keep creating because we thought we had to.

A deeper reach into human history is now possible, thanks to a growing body of archaeological and scholarly research collected in recent decades. Many experts in related fields have speculated that this research will have a large social impact as it percolates through centers of influence and we become accustomed to relying on a wider, global human historical evidence base as a reference. Society will greatly benefit from minds that are trained to think in deeper timescales than a millennium or two—archaeology and biological sciences increasingly permit useful insights and pattern observations into humanities at a historical depth spanning millions of years.

Hudson’s research has already made inroads into modern life. Many contemporary economists rely on his understanding of financial history in the Ancient Near East. Hudson’s collaboration with the late anthropologist and activist David Graeber inspired his launch of the debt cancellation movement during Occupy Wall Street. Graeber’s book Debt: The First 5,000 Years is a popularized adaption of Hudson’s research on the early financial systems of the Near East, encouraging Graeber to follow up and coauthor the bestselling book The Dawn of Everything, an overview of new interpretations in archaeology and anthropology about the many paths society can take.

I reached out to Hudson for a conversation on these topics, starting with his reflections on what drew him into prehistory in the early 1970s, and his collaborations with Harvard prehistorian Alex Marshack.

Jan Ritch-Frel: Alex Marshack was well-known for his idea that many of the social institutions we live by today are derived in large part from the “thought matrix of the Paleolithic”—the ideas and attitudes, social systems, and means of recording and transmitting information developed over thousands of millennia until the most recent Ice Age. How did you two find each other?

Michael Hudson: I had read in the New York Times about Alex Marshack’s analysis of carvings on a bone found in France, made approximately 35,000 years ago with markings that he viewed as tracing the lunar month, not mere decorations. We became friends. He was living and working in New York City, with a housing arrangement between NYU and Harvard to provide housing for each other’s faculty.

Marshack was working from the Paleolithic forward, the time before the last Ice Age, to see how it shaped the Neolithic and Near Eastern Bronze Age. My approach was to study the Bronze Age because my study was about the origins of money and debt and its cancellation. And then to work back in time to see how these practices began.

Marshack was most focused on how the measurement of time began before there was any arithmetic. Counting began with a calendrical point of reference. Marshack showed that lunar months initially were pre-mathematical, indicating symbolic literacy proliferated in the Paleolithic. He developed the idea that a motive was to arrange meetings—groups separated by distance tracking the passage of time to convene at pre-agreed locations. I was interested in the calendar as an organizing principle of archaic society: its division into tribes, and as providing a model of the cosmos that guided the structuring of social organization.

I had been writing on ancient debt cancellations, and the idea of economic renewal on a periodic basis. We both had this basic question—how did this awareness of time turn into actual counting and provide a basis for ordering of other systems, from social organization to music? Marshack showed what I’d been writing to the head of the Peabody Museum at Harvard University, who invited me up for a meeting, and soon enough I was a research fellow there too.

I began my work on how order was created by trying to think about how the calendar became the basic organizing principle certainly for the entire Bronze Age, and no doubt leading up to it.

Ritch-Frel: The words “month,” “measure,” and “menstruation” are all derived from the word moon in Proto-Indo-European: “mehns” according to scholars of the early Bronze Age Language, which is ancestral to many of Eurasia’s major languages spoken today. Going back to Marshack’s research direction of looking at the thought matrix of the Paleolithic, what answers was he looking for with the evidence from the past?

Hudson: Marshack saw the centrality of social and prosocial behavior as a driver among separate groups—today’s humans thrive on the interaction between groups. The management of that, diplomatically and administratively through a calendar process had to be a key basis for survival across time; it had an ordering function. The need for dispersed populations to come together for trade and intermarriage.

Marshack believed that Paleolithic leaders would have understood that this lunar calendar and the notations associated with it were technologies of chieftains, of governance. Oftentimes, leadership comes down to organizing meetings and the rules these meetings have. The lunar calendar was the basis for figuring out when separate groups were all going to meet together at some annual interval, and maybe there were meetings at the monthly or seasonal interval, such as the equinoxes or solstices. And it was probably based on a new moon.

Here’s a case of the thought matrix of the Paleolithic shaping societies that we call ancestral: Marshack and I came to interpret that the key meeting date would be a new moon—time was thought of as a baby, the moon grows and becomes older. This goes right down to the Roman calendar. The new year was the shortest day of the year. When the year is born, it’s the smallest before it grows. The idea of a life course of a year, with weather, people, and animals traveling along with it was at the heart of the Paleolithic thought matrix. Marshack, for example, studied the amount of attention and care Paleolithic cave painters of Europe put into drawing animals to indicate a particular time of year. If there was a painting of a fish, it would have the long jaw that fish developed in the mating season. You could look at whether the animals were molting or not. Paleolithic artists across the world were always careful to note that.

To show you how the year’s 12 lunar months were a format often adopted for organizing other social structures, let’s consider the social models we see in the Near East and the Mediterranean that are recorded in the Bronze Age: As populations settled into increasingly sedentary communities, a typical form of association was the amphictyony, divided into 12, four or six “tribes” or regions. These tribal divisions enabled the rotation of chiefs by the month or season so that all members of the amphictyony would be equal. “Foreign relations” were standardized carefully to provide equality.

Ritch-Frel: I am mindful that when people elect to use an ordering system for some part of life, it’s based on good reputation and there being a convention that connected social groups share. If people decide to organize society into groups using a 12-month lunar calendar logic, it’s a measure of its latency in the wider human culture and is still with us today. This Paleolithic tradition organizes the backgammon board we play on today, designed by Sassanid Persians, it’s rooted in the lunar calendar logic of 12. We don’t pay much attention to ordering systems once they’re in place, as long as they work.

Hudson: Certainly by the Neolithic, people began to count everything. Even if they didn’t have systems of mathematics, they were counting—and trying to find correlations and associations with natural phenomena around them, from weather to the behavior of animals. For instance, an archaic cosmologist might count the number of teeth of a horse and attempt to correlate that with something that shared the same number.

The assumption was that maybe we could control things by taking some proxy that shared the same number or some other cosmological characteristic with another, and we could have a ritual on earth that would somehow manipulate the heavens and our environment in the way that we wanted to.

We might call that pseudoscience—confusing similarity with true correlation, confusing correlation with causation. While many of us might make a living in science using higher-grade scientific standards, there’s quite a lot of that still going on today—in conversations with family and friends, in sports and its statistics, and fortune telling is an industry that’s still going strong.

Ritch-Frel: We can regard this general instinct as leading to know-how and in some cases part of science, as the process gets refined.

Hudson: Think of it as experimentation: “Let’s see if we can do this and see what works.” They were experimenting, but the logic was to think in terms of a system, and I think that’s what made the Bronze Age societies work.

The key to archaic science was to think in terms of a cosmos, in which everything was interrelated. The so-called Astrological Diaries of Babylonia correlated grain prices, the level of the Euphrates, and other economic phenomena, including royal disturbances and behavior much as modern astrology seeks to do. They were seeking order, and they started by correlating everything they could, including the movements of the planets.

Today, we think in the decimal system. But it’s not automatic to assume 10 fingers as the basis for how hunter-gatherers are going to count; even in cases of using the body as a memory device. Some Indonesian societies, for example, counted across the span of their outstretched arms, with 28 spots. That would be a measure of using the body to follow the phases of the moon. I also noted that these tended to track with a range in the number of letters in the alphabet that we see in many languages today, in the mid-20s and 30s. It seems that before numbers, something like the alphabet was used to name the moon’s phases.

The number of letters in many early alphabets that we know of corresponded with the lunar months. And the most important characteristic of the alphabet is its sequential order. We don’t say AMD, we say ABC. They’re always in the same order. Does that contain an older pattern? The key is the fixed sequence, a pre-mathematical organizational system.

We know that many Paleolithic communities across Eurasia and the Americas were following the phases of the moon. And we know from Neolithic structures such as Stonehenge that people were also focusing on the key solar intervals, especially the solstices that were turning points for the birth of the year on the shortest day, and equinoxes that were the turning points.

There was a permanent need to combine a lunar calendar, which governed local social life, with a solar calendar, which told the story of the seasons, separated by solstices and equinoxes. And, of course, that was a big problem because imagine the frustration that they had when they realized that the lunar and solar months don’t correspond exactly: A lunar year has 354 days, and a solar one has 365. The mathematics of the form of solstices and equinoxes, and the time gap between the 354-day lunar year and the 365-day solar year (as well as the leap year) could lead to divergences in cosmology and social ritual using the calendar as a basic organizing principle. The solstices and the seasons, often highly social events with important rites and traditions, would be more complicated to schedule and would be pushed to different dates as the years went by.

Marshack thought that once arithmetic was developed, some priest-like individuals or chiefs began counting everything, looking for a pattern, an explanation. “Let’s see what works.”

I became curious about how Mesopotamia and others blended their cosmological calendars and kept their traditions on schedule and societies harmonized. We know that many of the lunar years remained the basis for many religions all the way from Mesopotamian practices to Jewish practices, down to today, and yet there was also the solar year.

Ritch-Frel: As Near Eastern societies became more complex in the 3rd and 4th Millennium BCE, how did they reconcile all this? And how did the calendrical system become imbued into an arithmetic basis of weights and measures and rations?

Hudson: The early Sumerian cities like Uruk or Lagash frequently experienced the upheavals of warfare and disease. That meant there were large numbers of widows, orphans, and slaves in these cities. The place they found for them was basically in large weaving workshops around the temples. A large, exploited workforce producing textiles required an administrative system to feed the labor pool over the course of the year—a new calendar system.

Leaders worked with their astronomers and cosmologists to develop this administrative calendar to feed this workforce population. It seems that the convention of 12 months per year borne out of the lunar calendar was assumed, the question came down to how many days are there in that month. Neither the 354-day lunar or 365-day solar calendar worked—for causes of variability in length, their need to be corrected to follow the seasons, or the inconvenience of the way the numbers couldn’t be divided by 12. There couldn’t be oversights in the administrative calendar that missed a day—mistakes made in provisioning food for people are quickly noticed.

It seems natural they’d want to land on a day that both served the administrative needs and could be correlated with the 354-day lunar calendar and the 365-day solar calendar. After trial and error, 30 rations per month, 12 months per year produced a social logic of 360, pretty close to the two ancient cosmologies.

The standard ancient daily ration in these early Mesopotamian cities for the workers and enslaved people was two cups of grain per day per person. Using the administrative 30-day calendar, 60 cups of grain was one month’s ration. A slave or a temple worker required 60 cups of grain a month—it became a rule of thumb for the city leaders and managers. One month’s rations, 60 cups, is a unit of weight, a bushel. That key weight, organized by the number 60 has a forcing effect on how the commodity grain is often exchanged for silver. It led to silver being organized in weight units of 60, called a mena, so that the trades for weights of grain and silver could correspond easily.

The palace calendar became the administrative ration calendar model, the 12-month, 30-day calendar. And there was administrative efficiency. They saw correspondence in the rations with the units they used for weights and measures, and for calculating loans and mercantile trade. Naturally, if silver and grain are organized on the basis of 60, it was convenient for minds trained to calculate on the basis of 60 to use it as the numbering structure for interest rates. You can see how units of measure, once they become convention, have an easy time traveling across categories of activity. To hammer it home, the time units for payment plan structures on early Mesopotamian debt were derived from Paleolithic time units: monthly, borrowing from the lunar calendar; quarterly, borrowing from the four annual seasons divided by solstice and equinox; or annually using the solar calendar.

That annual part is the next phase of this to discuss, as you’ll remember, the 360-day calendar is a social artifice that needed a process every year to correctly align with 354- and 365-day calendars. The incompatibility between these calendar years was treated as a time of anarchy, which required harmonization—long before the administrative one was invented. The process of bringing order to chaos was also brought over from the Paleolithic—it was as familiar a convention as the 12 lunar month calendar. The resumption of a new solar year was treated as an occasion for setting affairs back in order and clearing up old dues—not just getting the calendar to align, but the social imbalances and unresolved appeals to justice inside groups and among them. The cleaning of the slates, which listed debts and obligations in increasingly large settlements, would have drawn their justification from this Paleolithic process.

The importance of recording grain supplies and the related mercantile trades and the lending system around them, the palace administrative calendar, and forecasting lunar and solar cycles to find concordance dates for future calendar years put pressure on the astronomers and cosmologists of the Bronze and Iron ages to develop fuller arithmetic, quadratic equations, and even analogue computers with gears to determine the movement of the sun and the moon and other heavenly bodies that served as useful fixed points for their calculations.

Ritch-Frel: The process is important here, and so is this example for understanding how existing human social conventions like the Paleolithic lunar calendar form the basis for future ones. How did Bronze Age rulers adapt Neolithic and earlier traditions of resetting the annual calendar, old debts, and unresolved justice?

Hudson: Archaic societies knew well that social order required active intervention to restore order. Unlike the calendar, realignment in the social economy was not achieved automatically. The birth of a new year was a tool and natural marker to clean up debts and obligations from the year before. This became especially important with the spread of interest-bearing debt in trade and agriculture: It was necessary to prevent an oligarchy.

Cosmology is a system. And calendrical cosmology is a system with an inherent source of disorder: the gap between the solar and lunar years. Certainly, both in Mesopotamia and Egypt, the idea that the gap between the lunar year and the solar year was a time out of time—when repair of social inequality and imbalance could be addressed.

Debt cancellations were normal practice throughout the Bronze Age in the form of royal proclamations of clean slates. Not only were debts wiped out, but bondservants were free to return to their own families (and enslaved people were also returned to their debtor owners), and lands that had been lost through debt or other misfortune were returned to their former holders. The logic of the statements in the proclamations follows a thought line of, as above, so below; on earth as it is in heaven. It’s useful to cloak the ancient calendar convention of the Paleolithic chaos-into-order period into the social-economic principles that the new agricultural society lived by.

And while you’re dealing with this cosmology trying to create order and restore order in terms of time, how do you prevent the disorder from the increase in wealth that occurs as technology and population grow and societies become more and more productive and wealthy? That was a big challenge to civilization. The Asian societies met it very well. The Middle Eastern societies met it very well.

They had a system that was able to keep time, and generally prevent or remedy social polarization. They wanted to have a system that maintained order on a continuous basis without creating disorder. And that’s what led me to work with David Graeber and other people trying to think, well, how is it that you’d have some very archaic societies that very often lasted a lot longer than the ones we have today? And as Graeber pointed out in his more recent book, The Dawn of Everything, there are many Mesoamerican, and generally speaking, Native American communities that had a very careful standardization of social poles—you didn’t want there to be wealthy people, it creates egotism, it tends to be abusive to other people.

Ritch-Frel: Can you share a bit about your collaborations with David Graeber?

Hudson: Graeber’s basic aim was to show how some societies had avoided polarization and inequality as social wealth developed. How do we explain the origins of inequality and how do we prevent it? We had talked originally about economic historian Karl Polanyi and his circle’s attempt to go beyond the economic orthodoxy that social organization began with individuals bartering and lending money based on its rate of return. He took the viewpoint that there was a wider society in motion that was shaping our economic structures, not just merchants and customers.

Well, he had read my books, and I mean, we had long discussions and he said, he wrote Debt: The First 5,000 Years largely to popularize my work, and because he realized that debt was the great polarizing fact of antiquity. And that’s why he pushed the Occupy Wall Street movement to focus on debt cancellations.

One of David’s activist tactics was to buy defaulted debts of people for 1 cent on the dollar, which everybody thought was collectible. There are marketplaces for defaulted debt that lenders have given up on, and there’s a secondary market for debt-collecting divisions of banks that want to take their chances, buying the debt at very steep discounts. And Graeber wanted to raise money to buy these debts and tell the debtors, you don’t owe this money anymore. Look, we paid it all off for you.

What David and his friends couldn’t have bargained for is just how depraved and corrupt the banks were—the banks had sold the same collection rights to many different collectors. The debtors were still being harassed by debt collectors even after their loans were bought off.

The tactic didn’t work, but the idea was right. David and I both wanted to advocate debt cancellations here because that’s what’s destroying the economy today. Western civilization never developed the means of canceling debts in the way that the Near East and other parts of Asia did.

Today, we are smothered in a fake storyline, a fake origin myth for economics. Margaret Thatcher typifies this attitude. You have to pay the debts. You have to let the rich people take over because they get wealthy. And unequal wealth is what civilization is all about. The ability of wealthy people to crush and destroy civilization is Western progress.

The myth goes like this:

In the beginning, there were individual entrepreneurs who tried to make money, the government then stepped in and wouldn’t let them make money, canceled the debts, and nobody would lend money anymore, so economies couldn’t develop. But fortunately, our modern economy figured out how to grow: the payment of debts is a must, and that gives security to the creditors. We can’t have a free market, wealth-creating economy if the 1 percent can’t drive the 99 percent into debt. And that’s why the stock and bond market and the real estate market have gone up when the rest of the American population economy, the 99 percent since 2008 have gone down.

Meanwhile, if you look under the hood of the Bronze Age, the Neolithic that preceded it, and the Paleolithic before it—the evidence overwhelmingly points to a default: mutual aid, and common wealth.

Our leading economists say civilization couldn’t have begun this way: “If you began this way, how could you ever have the security of creditors to make the loans, to help everything develop?” They’ve just never lived in that world, so, therefore, it’s unimaginable for them.

Ritch-Frel: A fuller account of human history that stretches millions of years into the geological time scale, across a wider geographic area, is part of the infrastructure humans need to pave a road back to more resilient and equal societies. What have you gathered as you have followed the evolution of social insurance and mutual aid systems into government administration, modern banking, and finance? Did you spot paths not taken that lead to more humanistic outcomes?

Hudson: In my opinion, the key driver of Western economic history is the shifting and unstable political relationships that grew out of the financial dynamic of debts growing at compound interest faster than the economies can pay. Casting the net wider, we can see that it was a tenet of Chinese law, Indian law, and Middle Eastern law, to prevent an independent financial oligarchy from developing.

How did we lose all of that?

A series of historical events, of course, rooted in what we call the Classical Era in the Mediterranean. When Phoenician and neighboring sea traders expanded their trading posts into the Mediterranean and mixed with various colonies, they enforced the concept of charging interest on debts, and the chieftains of city-states and colonies adopted this policy without the debt cancellation cure that centralized rulers adopted across the Near East. The traders just wanted their silver, they weren’t terribly bothered by upheavals in the social order that occurs when you don’t cancel debt. The economies of Greece and Rome and their political heirs in Western Europe were all about creating a financial oligarchy and sanctifying debts instead of sanctifying the cancellation of debt.

By explaining the Mesopotamian and other Near Eastern royal proclamations canceling debts and reestablishing order, it is possible to show people another path—one that has worked for thousands of years, and emerged out of that Paleolithic thought matrix. What we call Western civilization and progress is a detour from the direction that human civilization had been traveling for a much longer time.

This whole detour of not being able to control the egotism borne by wealth and the development of a creditor class—who eventually gain control of the land and the basic needs of life—is a civilizational problem.

This article was produced by Human Bridges, a project of the Independent Media Institute.
The Electorate Restores Kashmiri Identity But Will the ‘Nationalists’ Take Heed?

October 11, 2024
Source: Originally published by Z. Feel free to share widely.


A group of voters waiting for turn to cast their ballot at a polling station in Shadipora village of Bandipora. Photo: Jehangir Ali.

In 1947, the moot question was whether the Muslim-majority Jammu & Kashmir, then a princely state, would follow the stipulations of the Partition agreement — namely, demography and contiguity — and join with the new dominion of Pakistan, or whether it would strike a blow for the idealisms that underpinned India (with its vastly Hindu-majority India) in defiance of what might have been more natural for it to do.

We know what historic decision they made.

But for that enlightened decision, the Hindu-majority region of Jammu may have had to either capitulate to the Partition agreement or support Independence (as the Hindu Maharaja wished to do).

Incontrovertibly, if Jammu & Kashmir has since been a uniquely prized part of republican India, the credit accrues to Kashmiri Muslims.

It is precisely for that reason that Kashmir’s political identity has been inseparable from the career of the National Conference (NC).

That fact also explains why Hindutva forces have strenuously sought to erase this formation of Kashmiri secular idealism from the political map of the region.

For five years now, we have been carpet-bombed with the calumny that it is the NC which has been at the root of the problems in Kashmir, even as historical facts suggest precisely the opposite.

And, over five autocratic years Narendra Modi has sought to persuade everyone that the people of Kashmir have seen that point and relegated the Abdullah legacy and its political-cultural role and content to the dustbin, along with the allegedly complicit shenanigans of the Congress party.

The Hindu-nationalist media has played this establishment tune relentlessly since the abrogation of Article 370 — the special status for J&K which had been collectively conceived as the bridge facilitating the state’s accession to the dominion of India.

It may be noted in passing that after five months of negotiations with the NC from May to November 1949, it was Sardar Patel who obtained concurrence to the special status provision both within the Congress party and the Constituent Assembly (see his letter to Nehru dated November 3, 1949).

Well now, after five long years of slander and suppression, what a tight slap this party of the Kashmiris has struck across the falsifying, undemocratic, authoritarian cheek.

In giving the party 42 seats from a total of 90 — 35 in the valley and 7 in the Jammu region — the J&K voter has sought to leave no one, especially Modi and Amit Shah, in any doubt that they fully endorse the pre-eminence and the manifesto of the NC, making sure that the NC/Congress combine had an unquestionable majority in the new assembly.

It is being propagated that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has done better than in 2014. Actually, it has not. When it got 25 seats in the Jammu region then, the total number of seats in that region was 37; now it is 43. That makes the party’s 2024 tally of 29 seats the same as before.

To the extent that the NC manifesto spoke plainly of their resolve to bring back the lost special status, above and beyond restoring full statehood to the humiliated Kashmiris, the vote and seats they have achieved cannot but be interpreted as a popular endorsement of that agenda.

And may we ask why such an agenda is seen as an anathema when the demand and grant of special status to many a state in the republic has been routinely negotiated by the central authorities when both the Congress and the BJP have been in charge?

The lack of a reasoned answer to the above poser leads one inevitably to the unlovely conclusion that the character of the demography of Kashmir — i.e. its Muslim majority — seems to make democratic demands of this nature seem toxic while not being so regarded when raised in other regions of the republic.

Let us recall that the one time a demand for the secession of a state from the Union was raised in Independent India by a major political force was in 1962 by no less than the late Annadurai in his maiden speech in parliament.

Heavens did not fall; always understanding that such sentiments from the south had to do with the fear of the imposition of Hindi, the Nehru regime found the right democratic answers to the problem.

Never once since its inception has the NC raised a demand for the secession of the state from the Union, in contrast to the many times such demands have been raised in states like Nagaland.

If anything, it was a BJP prime minister who thought it safe and fit to send Farooq Abdullah to the Security Council to argue India’s case on Kashmir.

The worst thing that the Modi regime can do now is to procrastinate on the just demand for the restoration of full statehood – and not the neutered Delhi or Puducherry like statehood – to Jammu & Kashmir.

If it fails to do so, the BJP will only be inviting fresh trouble in that most sensitive region. Modi and Shah must play straight if they indeed believe Jammu & Kashmir to be an integral part of India.

Badri Raina taught at Delhi University.

This piece was first published on The India Cable and has been updated and republished here.


Badri Raina

Badri Raina is a well-known commentator on politics, culture and society. His columns on the Znet have a global following. Raina taught English literature at the University of Delhi for over four decades and is the author of the much acclaimed Dickens and the Dialectic of Growth. He has several collections of poems and translations. His writings have appeared in nearly all major English dailies and journals in India.
Demonizing Hezbollah to Legitimize a US/Israel Onslaught on Lebanon
October 12, 2024
Source: FAIR



Corporate media’s handling of the US-supported Israeli assault on Lebanon has, like all war propaganda, entailed a campaign to demonize the purported bad guys—Hezbollah, in this case. The coverage of the US/Israeli assault on Lebanon has also evinced a casual disregard for Lebanese lives, and often an outright zest for killing the country’s people.

The Wall Street Journal (9/29/24) celebrates assassination as “deterrence.”


One person’s terrorist…

Denouncing Hezbollah as a terrorist outfit is pervasive in corporate punditry. A Wall Street Journal editorial (9/25/24) called the group “terrorists” three times, as in, “One lesson of October 7 is that Israel can’t let terrorists build up armies.”

Another Journal editorial (9/29/24) used the T-word twice before asserting that Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader Israel recently assassinated, was “a terrorist whose killers are responsible for the deaths of thousands of Americans and Europeans.” The claim that Hezbollah is liable for killing “thousands of Americans and Europeans” is extraordinary, but the authors don’t make clear who or what they’re talking about, let alone offer any evidence to support their claim.

In the New York Times (9/25/24), columnist Bret Stephens said Hezbollah is a “terrorist militia” and a “terrorist group” that “terrorizes its neighborhood.”

Max Boot of the Washington Post (9/26/24, 9/28/24) called Nasrallah a “terrorist kingpin” and referred to Hezbollah as a “terrorist organization” three times. “It would be nice to think the Lebanese government could now disarm Hezbollah and end its reign of terror,” he mused, describing the organization as “one of the world’s deadliest terrorist groups.”
Violence they dislike

Two decades out from 9/11, it should be clear to honest observers that the term “terrorism” is politicized to the point of uselessness. The US, Canada and other Western states have designated Hezbollah a terrorist organization, but there is no universally applied objective measure of whether a given group deserves that label, nor is there a neutral body that decides who is and is not a terrorist. The US put Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress on a terror list in 1988, and Mandela’s name was not removed until 2008 (NBC, 12/7/13).
Amal Saad (X, 10/4/24): “The US and other Western powers’ designation of Hezbollah as a terrorist organization has effectively empowered Israel to escalate its campaign of state terrorism in Lebanon.”

In practice, to paraphrase what Noam Chomsky said when asked if he thinks Hezbollah is a terrorist organization: “Terrorism” is used by the great powers to refer to violence that they dislike. The US considers Hezbollah a terrorist group, he argued, because the US supports Israeli invasions and occupations of Lebanon, and Hezbollah has twice driven Israel out of the country through successful military campaigns.

Amal Saad of Cardiff University, a scholar who focuses on Hezbollah, raised the salient point about the US and its Western allies’ listing of Hezbollah as a terrorist organization:


The blanket proscription of Hezbollah, including its civilian and political branches, has created a direct conflict between domestic and international law. By criminalizing these non-military elements, it provides Israel with cover to blur the critical distinction in international law between combatants and noncombatants, enabling it to act with impunity….

This was showcased by Israel’s strike on Hezbollah’s Islamic Health Unit, along with separate incidents where many other paramedics and healthcare workers were killed while attempting to rescue victims of Israel’s attacks. It was also shown by Israel’s pager attacks on Hezbollah cadres, most of whom were members of its mobilization unit (off-duty reservists and thus noncombatants), healthcare workers and other civilians.
Lebanon ‘hijacked’ and ‘kidnapped’

What the Mideast crisis is “really about,” according to Thomas Friedman (New York Times, 10/1/24): a struggle between “decent countries,” like Israel and Saudi Arabia, and “brutal, authoritarian regimes.”

Stephens (New York Times, 9/25/24) built on the terrorism theme, writing that Hezbollah has “hijacked” Lebanon. Hezbollah and its allies won the majority of seats in Lebanon’s parliament in 2018, and although the bloc lost its majority in 2022, it still won more seats than any other formation (Al Jazeera, 5/17/22). Performing well in elections isn’t “hijacking” a country.

Nor is it “kidnapping” a country, as Stephens’ Times colleague Thomas Friedman (10/1/24) asserted. Friedman wrote:


It is hard to exaggerate how much Hezbollah and its leader, Hassan Nasrallah…were detested in Lebanon and many parts of the Sunni and Christian Arab world for the way they had kidnapped Lebanon.

Friedman is also wildly oversimplifying the range of views held by people in “the Sunni and Christian Arab world.” The Associated Press’ Bassem Mroue (9/28/24), writing from Beirut, characterized Nasrallah as “idolized by his Lebanese Shiite followers and respected by millions of others across the Arab and Islamic world,” even as Hezbollah lost some of its popularity after intervening on the side of the Syrian government in the war in that country.

Saad Hariri, the two-time Lebanese Prime Minister and leader of the primarily Sunni Future Movement party, called Nasrallah’s assassination “a cowardly act that we condemn in its entirety.” He offered “heartfelt condolences to [Nasrallah’s] family and comrades,” and added that the killing has brought Lebanon and the region “into a new phase of violence” (LBC International, 9/28/24).

Lebanese Christian leaders praised Nasrallah, including the country’s former president, Michel Aoun, who called Nasrallah “a distinguished and honest leader who led the national resistance on the paths of victory and liberation” (Newsweek, 9/28/24).
Reduced to a ‘proxy’

For the Washington Post (9/29/24), Nasrallah’s assassination was “a much-deserved comeuppance for an Iranian proxy militia.”

A slight variation on the effort to suggest that Hezbollah should be understood in purely sectarian terms are the ubiquitous reductions of the group to an Iranian “proxy” (Wall Street Journal, 9/29/24, 9/25/24; Washington Post, 9/29/24; Boston Globe, 10/6/24; New York Times, 10/1/24). Stephens (New York Times, 9/25/24) made the same allegation but in more racist, dehumanizing language, writing that “Tehran is the head of the octopus and Hezbollah…is merely one of its tentacles.”

As I’ve previously shown (FAIR.org, 4/21/21, 8/26/20), it just isn’t true that Hezbollah is an Iranian vassal. The goal of this narrative is to misrepresent Hezbollah as a foreign imposition without a mass base in Lebanon.

The point of presenting Hezbollah’s role in Lebanon in the most negative possible light is, of course, to make the US/Israeli onslaught against Lebanon sound legitimate: Readers who think Hezbollah is a terrorist group without any legitimacy in Lebanon are more likely to support a war to crush them than audiences who are aware of facts that don’t fit this narrative—such as the group’s record of building “a vast network of social services, including hospitals, schools and youth programs” (New York Times, 8/14/20).

Nor, likewise, do simplistic tales that cast Hezbollah as a purely malevolent force capture the widespread popularity the group has at times garnered in Lebanon and elsewhere in Arab majority countries. It won considerable admiration in 2000 when its military forced Israel to end its 18-year occupation of Lebanon (AP, 9/28/24), and, as the pro-Israel Washington Institute for Near East Policy (3/8/16) conceded, when it successfully fought off Israel’s 2006 re-invasion.

‘Remarkable restraint

The Wall Street Journal (9/25/24) claimed that Israel has given the last 11 months “over to diplomacy on its northern front.” That “diplomacy” has attacked Lebanon 7,845 times, killing more than 600 people, including at least 137 civilians (Al Jazeera, 9/11/24; Amnesty International, 9/25/24).

The commentariat has also painted Hezbollah as the aggressor in its struggle with Israel. The first Journal editorial (9/25/24) on Israel’s Lebanon assault said that Israel had given the months since October 7 “to diplomacy on its northern front, even as Hezbollah fired 8,500 rockets and forced 60,000 Israelis from their homes.” The Journal‘s follow-up editorial (9/29/24) praised Israel for supposedly “exhibit[ing] remarkable restraint for nearly a year in response to Hezbollah’s thousands of rocket and missile attacks that have made the country’s north uninhabitable.”

Carine Hajjar of the Boston Globe (10/6/24) rationalized Israel’s attacks in similar terms, writing that “in the past year, more than 60,000 Israelis have been displaced from the northern region by escalating rocket fire. No country would put up with that.”

These are complete misrepresentations: Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (ACLED) shows (Al Jazeera, 9/11/24) that Israel was responsible for about 82% of all attacks on either side of the Lebanon/Israel armistice line between October 7, 2023, and September 6, 2024. In roughly the same period, prior to Israel’s most recent escalation, Israel had killed 137 civilians in Lebanon, whereas attacks by armed groups in Lebanon killed 14 civilians in Israel (Amnesty International, 9/25/24).

Totally absent from the Journal editorials is the significant fact that Hezbollah has consistently indicated that it would agree to a ceasefire with Israel if Israel agreed to end its genocide in Gaza (Reuters, 2/29/24; AP, 7/2/24). Indeed, an Israeli official told NBC (9/28/24) that Israel “took the decision to assassinate Nasrallah after concluding he would not accept any diplomatic solution to end the fighting on the Israel/Lebanon [armistice line] that was not tied to an end to the war in Gaza.”

Whatever corporate media say, Israel isn’t massacring people in Lebanon because Hezbollah is attacking Israel; it’s massacring them so that it can go on massacring Palestinians.

Arab lives don’t matter to corporate media


Arab deaths are rarely treated as having serious moral weight in US corporate media (Al Jazeera, 9/23/24).

The op-ed pages have also demonstrated, at best, a callous indifference to Lebanese life and, at worst, rah-rah enthusiasm for the slaughter of Lebanese people.

The first Journal editorial (9/25/24) wrote:


Following the exploding pagers and successful attack on Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force commanders, Israel this week dropped evacuation notices and bombed Hezbollah’s missile stores. Israel says it destroyed tens of thousands of missiles and launchers, most hidden in civilian homes, leaving Hezbollah without half its strategic arsenal.

Lebanon says more than 550 people have been killed, including terrorists.

The attacks on the Radwan Force killed 15 Hezbollah members and 31 people in total (NPR, 9/21/24). Wiping out 16 non-Hezbollah persons, including three children (Le Monde, 9/21/24), evidently isn’t enough for the editors to qualify the extent to which this violence was a “success.”

The subtext of the reference to the “evacuation notices” is that Israel did its due diligence by warning civilians—“death threats” is more apt than “evacuation notices”—but UN human rights office spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani pointed out that these “notices” seemed to presume that civilians would know where Hezbollah’s weapons are stored. The messages, she said, helped spread “panic, fear and chaos.” She went on to say:


If you warn people of an imminent attack, that does not absolve you of the responsibility to protect civilians. The obligation to protect civilians is paramount. So, whether you’ve sent out a warning telling civilians to flee, [it] doesn’t make it okay to then strike those areas, knowing full well that the impact on civilians will be huge.

According to Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor (9/23/24), despite issuing these supposed warnings,


in both the Gaza Strip and Lebanon, the Israeli army deliberately denies civilians enough time to escape the areas being bombed, offering them no real protection from the dangers arising from military operations.

Moreover, some of those Hezbollah “missile stores” the Journal referred to took the form of “hospitals, medical centers and ambulances,” all of which Israeli airstrikes damaged, as the Lebanese minister of health noted (Human Rights Watch, 9/25/24). The Lebanese Health Ministry also said that Israeli bombs hit “cars of people trying to flee” (Al Jazeera, 9/23/24). That the Journal didn’t mention Israel’s killing of 50 children in its September 23 attacks (CNN, 9/24/24) demonstrates how little value the paper assigns to Arab life.

The same applies to a Washington Post editorial (9/29/24), which began:


In a display of military and intelligence prowess reminiscent of its surprise victory over Arab armies in the Six-Day War of 1967, Israel has delivered a series of devastating preemptive blows on Hezbollah, the Shiite Lebanese paramilitary force, culminating in the assassination of its longtime leader, Hasan Nasrallah, under a hail of bombs on Friday.

The piece went on to say that


Israel seems to prefer not to have to follow up its air campaign by going into Lebanon on the ground, which would be costly for both the Jewish state and civilians of Lebanon inevitably caught up in the fighting.

Here Lebanon’s dead are erased, their murders cast as a hypothetical possibility rather than a well-documented reality, while Israeli brutality is praised as “a display of military and intelligence prowess.”

‘More Hezbollah’s fault’
What the Wall Street Journal (9/29/24) called “a remarkable display of intelligence [and] technological skill,” Human Rights Watch (9/25/24) said “appears to violate the prohibition against booby-traps” under international law.

When they didn’t ignore civilian deaths, some of these pundits blamed Hezbollah for them. The Journal editorial board (9/29/24) wrote:

Israel has changed its strategy from tit-for-tat responses to a pre-emptive campaign to degrade Hezbollah’s missile stores, launchers and military leadership. These are all justified targets in war. It’s tragic when civilians are also killed, but that is more Hezbollah’s fault. Nasrallah, who knew he was a marked man, located his hideout under residential buildings.

Israel’s campaign has been a remarkable display of intelligence, technological skill and above all political will. The sabotage of Hezbollah’s pagers and walkie-talkies wounded or killed scores of fighters. Its targeted bombings against Hezbollah’s terror masters showed how much Israeli intelligence has penetrated its communications. It continued to bomb Hezbollah targets on Sunday, including military commanders.

Even if US/Israeli attacks were limited to what the Journal calls “justified targets in war,” the bombers’ obligations wouldn’t end there. It’s inadequate—not to mention callous—to brush aside dead civilians as being “more Hezbollah’s fault.” As Human Rights Watch (9/25/24) explained:


The attacking party is not relieved from its obligation to take into account the risk to civilians, including the duty to avoid causing disproportionate harm to civilians if the defending party has located military targets within or near populated areas.

Of course, the US/Israeli airstrikes didn’t just “degrade Hezbollah’s missile stores, launchers and military leadership.” Rather, they “randomly and directly target[ed] civilian buildings, including the buildings of surrounding hospitals and schools,” according to the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor (9/23/24). According to the group, Israel also “used drones to light fires in southern Lebanon’s forests” and burn agricultural land.

As the UN’s refugee agency put it two days prior to the publication of this Journal editorial, “118,466 Lebanese and Syrian people have been displaced inside Lebanon as Israel airstrikes continue to devastate civilian lives.” It’s patently false to describe such actions as “targeted bombings against…terror masters.”

Likewise, Israel’s pager and walkie-talkie attack (CounterSpin, 9/27/24) didn’t exclusively kill and wound “scores of fighters.” The sabotage killed at least 37 people, including children and medical workers, an apparent violation of the prohibition against booby-traps under international law (Human Rights Watch, 9/25/24). The explosions wounded nearly 3,000, many of them civilian bystanders (CNN, 9/27/24). Calling all this mass maiming and murder “a remarkable display of intelligence [and] technological skill” betrays a racist lust for Arab blood.

Matthew Levitt of the Boston Globe (9/23/24) was similarly unconcerned with the harm done to noncombatants, and gushed over Israel’s technical mastery: “Israel, in an extraordinary cloak-and-dagger deception, outfoxed Hezbollah” in a “tactical success.” Yet the communication devices blew up “in crowded civilian areas, such as residential streets and grocery stores, as well as in people’s homes,” causing innumerable people to lose one or more eyes or hands or both (Amnesty International, 9/20/24).

Whether it’s this cold-blooded attitude to people in Lebanon, or offering one-dimensional accounts of Hezbollah’s role in the country that reduce it to mere villainy, pundits appear to be using their platforms to try to get the public to sign off on savage US/Israeli violence.
Where Are the Voices for Peace?

The lack of diplomatic efforts to end wars in Ukraine, Gaza, Sudan, and Congo shame the international community — as the death tolls mount, we need an urgent shift towards peace-building and justice.



October 13, 2024
Source: Morning Star


People carry their luggage as they cross on foot into Syria through a crater caused by an Israeli air strike to cut the road between the Lebanese and the Syrian checkpoints, at the Masnaa crossing, in the eastern Bekaa Valley, Lebanon, October 4, 2024

Today is another huge national march for the people of Palestine, which I’m proud to be part of. I am grateful to the Morning Star for distributing papers to the wonderful people marching today.

As we speak, there are horrific wars going on around the world.

In Ukraine, where Russia wrongly invaded, the terrible war goes on and on — and thousands are now dying both in Ukraine and Russia.

In Gaza, the bombardment carries on unabated. Now, the invasion of Lebanon and the dangers of a disastrous war with Iran.

In Sudan, a massive war is being fuelled by the arms trade.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, thousands have been killed because of the greed of mining companies, extracting cobalt to produce mobile phones we use here and now.

What seems to me to be so badly lacking in the media and the debates in our Parliament is the language of peace and diplomacy. All wars have to end with some kind of negotiation, diplomacy or conference.

It is to the credit of the UN general secretary that he’s been trying to do that. It is to the shame of Israel that they have banned him from even entering the country. It is also to the credit of Latin American presidents and the African Union that they too, have tried to bring about a diplomatic end to these horrific wars.

The horrific attack in October last year was not the start of the war. The start of the war was the occupation of Palestine. It is the continued settlement policy in the West Bank. It is the system of apartheid. It is the displacement of Palestinians denied their right to self-determination.

So far, in Gaza alone, 45,000 people have been killed by Israeli bombardment. The infrastructure has been totally destroyed: hospitals, roads, schools. Now, with the invasion of Lebanon, a million people have already been displaced.

If the US can afford $8.9 billion to support Israel’s war, why can’t the same resources be used to fund peace, energy security, food security and human rights around the world?

We are witnessing mass death, live on our TV screens. Let us achieve a vision of peace and justice instead. With these increasingly dangerous and uncertain times, it is more important than ever that voices for peace are amplified across the globe.

We reiterate our calls for an end to all arms sales to Israel and for the only path to a just and lasting peace: an end to the occupation of Palestine.

In light of these demands, I am proud to sign the Progressive International’s most recent statement below:

End Arms Sales

Amid its genocide in Gaza, the Israeli regime is now plunging the wider region into war. It must be stopped.

One year on from the start of the genocide in Gaza, Israeli forces have killed over 45,000 Palestinians — and, by some counts, many times more. Around half the victims are children.

Gaza has been decimated. Its infrastructure has been damaged beyond repair. Most of its hospitals are inoperational and all its universities are destroyed. Much of the population has been forced into a tiny parcel of land where they are regularly bombarded by Israeli warplanes.

Amid this genocide, the Israeli regime has now launched a series of violent escalations that threaten to plunge the entire region into war.

In Lebanon, Israeli forces have launched a relentless bombing campaign. Within days, they massacred hundreds, displaced over a million, buried entire communities under rubble, and assassinated leaders of the regional resistance. Since then, they have begun a ground invasion into Lebanon — the fourth such invasion in less than 50 years.

All together, the Israeli regime is now waging war on four separate fronts — in Palestine, Lebanon, Iran and Yemen — adding to the instruments of economic warfare already set against their peoples. All the while, Western politicians and their stenographers strain to sustain the lie that Israel is acting merely in “self-defence.”

The Israeli regime is thus not acting alone. It has the full backing of Washington, which recently sent an $8.7 billion military aid package to Tel Aviv. European countries are also continuing to export arms to Israel, aiding and abetting war crimes while ignoring their responsibilities under international law to prevent genocide.

The Israeli regime’s brutal violence recalls that of apartheid South Africa, which escalated its war against Angola, Mozambique and Namibia through the 1980s. Then, as now, international solidarity was critical in dismantling apartheid. It was with the support of Cuban soldiers — and Soviet arms — that South Africa was defeated in Angola, accelerating apartheid’s demise.

The Israeli regime’s reckless escalation is not a show of strength. It is a sign of weakness. But it is also a grave portent of further violence on the horizon.

It is clear, now more than ever, that liberation is the only path to peace. The task of progressive forces today is to internationalise the resistance to the Israeli regime, to break the chains of complicity that sustain it, and to accelerate the global struggle for Palestinian liberation. Nothing less can secure peace for all the peoples of the region.



Jeremy Corbyn is a British politician who served as Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition from 2015 to 2020. On the political left of the Labour Party, Corbyn describes himself as a socialist. He has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Islington North since 1983. Formerly a Labour MP, he now sits as an independent.
The American Jewish Consensus Is Fracturing—and That’s a Blessing

While the Jewish establishment bemoans divisions around Israel, younger Jews are demonstrating that the real crisis is that so many support a state engaging in mass murder.
October 13, 2024
Source: The Nation


Photo from Jewish Voice for Peace



As a rabbi, I’ve devoted my life to tending to the well-being of the American Jewish community. That community is now collapsing in on itself in a moment of true rupture—and that, I believe, is not only necessary but a blessing.

Usually, Jewish homes are full of extended family at this time of year. It’s the season of the High Holy Days, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, and for Jews of all backgrounds this means getting together and, often, going to synagogue. On these holidays, many Jews who otherwise forgo religious services break out the prayer shawl they wore at their b’nai mitzvahs and pray. They fast. They atone.

But many people won’t be attending services at their family’s synagogue this year because it has a large “We Stand With Israel” poster out front or an Israeli flag on the podium next to the rabbi. They won’t be intoning a prayer for Israel—with no mention of Palestinians—alongside the rest of the congregation. Instead, these Jews, many of them young, will be turning to alternative services that are explicitly non-Zionist or creating their own ways to observe the High Holidays. What is typically a time of unity in Jewish communities will this year be a time of separation.

For many in the establishment Jewish community, this is a source of deep anxiety. In May, as a human-made famine was taking hold in Gaza, and as students were protesting across US campuses, Rabbi Jill Jacobs wrote in The Forward: “A panic has developed within much of the Jewish community as more and more Jews—mostly, but not entirely young people—have declared themselves to be anti-Zionists or non-Zionists.”

I share Rabbi Jacobs’s sentiment that there is indeed a moral crisis at the heart of mainstream Jewish life. (I also appreciate that she argues against formally excommunicating non- and anti-Zionist Jews, even as we have long been unwelcome in supposedly progressive spaces.)

However, I believe our panic should not be over the waning support for Zionism among Jewish young people. Instead, the crisis is that the Jewish state that was founded in the shadow of the Holocaust has been found guilty of its own plausible genocide. Our Jewish community should break apart when so many of our leaders and institutions go along with or even champion Israel as it maims, tortures, starves, and kills Palestinians, including tens of thousands of children.

Since the beginning of Zionism, 130 or so years ago, there have been Jews who have rejected it—on theological, political, and cultural grounds. The Reform movement of Judaism, today the largest denomination of Judaism in the United States, was adamantly anti-Zionist until the 1970s, eschewing the idea that Jews constitute a nation, asserting instead that we are rather a religious community. The Jewish Labor Bund, a Jewish social democratic movement founded in the same era as Zionism, preferred to link arms with the working class in their home countries to struggle for labor and social justice. Some ultra-Orthodox Jews to this day reject the idea that humans can bring Jewish sovereignty to the Land of Israel by force; only God can do that in messianic times.

Over the past 76 years, since Israel’s bloody birth, the Jewish organizational establishment has cultivated an illusion of a Jewish Zionist consensus. After the Six-Day War in 1967, that effort only intensified, as legacy Jewish institutions in North America pivoted dramatically from promoting Jewish civic and social standing for minorities and new immigrants to pro-Israel advocacy.

Yet today American Jews are further from each other than they’ve ever been before, with the greatest chasm falling along generational lines. A recent Pew study found that younger Jews have less-favorable attitudes toward Israelis and more-favorable views of the Palestinian people. Fifty-five percent of Jews under 35 have an unfavorable view of the Israeli government. Jews ages 50 to 64 are the only age group in which a majority express a favorable opinion of the Israeli government (64 percent). By comparison, just 45 percent of Jews ages 18 to 34 have a favorable view of the Israeli government.

In another study, when presented with a definition of Zionism that asserts the belief in “privileging Jewish rights over non-Jewish rights in Israel,” a full 69 percent of Jewish American respondents said that they were probably or definitely not Zionist.

Crucially, these beliefs are beginning to go beyond the realm of thought and take the form of action. In recent years, Jews between the ages of 18 and 49 have begun stewarding organizations that embody interdependence and solidarity with Palestinians. More and more synagogues with young leadership are rejecting the near-universal ostracism of non- and anti-zionist Jews. And more and more organizations, helmed and populated by young Jews, are flipping on its head the logic that the legacy of the Holocaust requires allegiance to Israel rather than solidarity with Palestinians. For them, as they chant at protests, “‘Never again’ is now.”

These groups are growing not only in number but also in support. Jewish Voice for Peace, which is the only Jewish American organization that has signed on to the Palestinian call for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions against Israel, and If Not Now, a millennial-led organization founded to challenge the Jewish communal establishment, have been mobilizing feverishly since October 7 for a ceasefire and an arms embargo. Meanwhile, Judaism On Our Own Terms, a network of Jewish college campus groups organizing outside of the legacy organization Hillel, has been expanding across campuses. (Hillel prohibits their hundreds of affiliates from hosting groups or speakers that “support boycott of, divestment from, or sanctions against the State of Israel” and has gone so far as to threaten legal action with affiliates that ignore these guidelines.)

These new organizations and networks, liturgies, and identities are doing essential work, yet forming them comes at a cost to familial and communal comfort. Leftist, non-Zionist, and anti-Zionist Jews are often deemed traitors, self-haters, fake Jews, or worse, by the mainstream. I am not immune from those accusations as a rabbi. Some go so far as to claim that we should no longer be considered part of Klal Yisrael, the Jewish people.

Still, communal rejection is the cost many activists over the generations have had to pay to win change for future generations. Many young white people, including white Jews, in the civil rights movement broke with their families to join the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. It was pressure from college campuses in the 1980s that is credited with changing the tide of US support for apartheid South Africa. The student encampments of this past spring showed us that young people are willing to sacrifice to stop their institutions’ complicity in the mass slaughter of Palestinians.

On Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, Jewish prayers demand that we face directly our responsibility for our actions and the precariousness of all human-made institutions. This year, these ancient words will be put to the test. Will they soften our hearts and strengthen our resolve? Will they fortify us to put our relationships and livelihoods on the line if we must? Will they embolden us to dismantle our institutions to rebuild them in God’s image? Will we finally be willing to upend all we thought we knew, to break into a million pieces, if it means all people may be safe, healthy, and free?

It’s the rising generation that best understands the moral demands of this moment, and we must follow their lead.
MAGA’s Fascist Attacks on Gender

Fighting the far right's fascist "family values" with an emancipatory vision of gender and family
October 11, 2024
Source: Liberation Road


Ted Eytan, “Capital Pride Parade” (2018) / CC BY-SA 2.0


1. Why Is JD Vance Afraid of Childless Cat Ladies?


During a 2021 interview with Tucker Carlson, J.D. Vance made a now-famous quip that the country is run by “a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives and the choices that they’ve made and so they want to make the rest of the country miserable, too.” Vance continued: “The entire future of the Democrats is controlled by people without children. And how does it make any sense that we’ve turned our country over to people who don’t really have a direct stake in it?”

Vance’s words resurfaced after his selection as the GOP vice presidential candidate; he has since doubled down on them. Trump has long made similar comments, including reportedly referring to Kamala Harris as a “bitch” behind closed doors. At the recent Moms for Liberty conference, Trump outlandishly claimed that public schools were providing gender-affirming surgery to children without parental knowledge, an assertion so demonstrably false and ridiculous it would be laughable, except that he said it in front of an audience of far right-wing activists who have been instrumental in vicious direct action and legislative attacks against trans people.

Many on the left, center, and even some on the right decried Vance and Trump’s statements as misogynistic and “weird,” out of touch with the values of the American public. While Trump and Vance’s rhetoric may be alienating and unpopular to many, it points to a larger and more alarming reality: patriarchy has become a central component of the MAGA attack plan, dovetailing with its racist attacks as part of a larger vision of white Christian nationalism. And as the right ramps up its assault on gender and especially on trans people, it is crucial for the left to grasp the centrality of patriarchal oppression to MAGA’s broader social, political, and economic agenda and to fight for a different, emancipatory vision of gender and family.

2. Moral Panic and Mass Line on the Right

Since the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision in 2022, the right has discovered that regressive policies on abortion and gay equality are anathema to many Americans. To their dismay, they can no longer rely on anti-abortion activism and “gay panic” to mobilize their base. But through trial and error, they have been working to recycle these old lines and to shift their rhetoric to find new lines of attack. GOP-led states have passed numerous attack bills banning abortion and severely curtailing the rights of trans people. We can view the broad but disjointed attacks of the past years as a kind of practice of mass line development by the far right: which attacks stick, which are effective (and ineffective), and what energizes itsr base?

Through this process, MAGA has shifted the focus of its attacks onto transgender people and especially trans children. But the highly visible attacks on trans people are only the “tip of the spear” of a much broader assault on gender rights and bodily autonomy. As Trump and Vance’s comments make clear, MAGA has in its sights not just trans people but all LGBTQ+ people; women who defy their attempts at control; men who do not uphold toxic patriarchal ideals, whom the right lampoons as too feminine; and all others who fall outside into their narrow definitions of gender and of family.

The policing of a narrow vision of gender, sex, and family is central to the MAGA vision for fascist, patriarchal control. This vision is clearly articulated in Project 2025’s four “promises” to America. The first of these promises, around which all others are articulated, is to “[r]estore the family as the centerpiece of American life and protect our children.”

They are speaking about a certain type of family: white, heterosexual, and Christian. The framing of “protect our children” implies that all those who fall outside those lines are dangerous. This sinister pledge is crucial to their deeply dystopian vision centered on a strict, punitive vision of the heterosexual family, in which women must be mothers and submit to their husbands, even in violent marriages; a man is a father and the authority figure within the family; and the “postmenopausal female,” in J.D. Vance’s words, holds no worth in society except to care for grandchildren.

These are not idle words or empty rhetoric: the right is putting them into practice through law. The reality of life in red and blue states is becoming ever more starkly different.

In MAGA-led states that have banned abortions like Tennessee and Georgia, doctors face agonizing decisions of whether to risk felony criminal charges to provide care when pregnant patients present to the emergency room. While the doctors and lawyers and hospital administrators argue, women have bled out or suffered permanent organ damage while waiting in ER waiting rooms or after being sent home without care. The Republican-led states that are forcing families to have children are the states that provide the least support for families and respond to lack of familial resources punitively by jailing parents and taking away their kids. States with abortion bans are struggling to provide basic gynecological care as doctors move to states where they are not risking felonies by providing care, and medical residents avoid taking residencies in states where they cannot learn the full range of gynecological care.

Trans people and their families are facing desperate choices, too. As Republican legislatures have passed outright bans on puberty blockers and hormone therapy, families with trans kids are fleeing their home states. Trans adults in MAGA-led states fear arrest for using the bathroom or having their drivers licenses revoked.

3. The Dark History of Fascist Patriarchy in Europe and the United States

Why is the MAGA movement so doggedly pursuing harsh and punitive restrictions on abortion, trans healthcare, and other gender issues? These restrictions are a means of exercising social control. Access to abortion and birth control gives people a choice in who they love and marry, and sex and childbearing no longer function as a method of control and submission. And the very existence of trans people undermines the Right’s strict lines of gendered social control as people, both trans and not, are no longer forced into immutable gender roles and instead have the opportunity to make their own way in life. The right is attacking gender precisely because gender rights undermine their ability to exercise social control.

MAGA’s attacks on gender are among their clearest articulations of a fascist vision, and they emulate the fascist movements of the 20th century in their regressive views on women and LGBTQ people and harsh authoritarian restrictions on abortion, repression of LGBTQ people, and attempts to criminalize freedom of movement. Early in their rise to power, Nazis attacked Magnus Hirschfield’s Institute for Sexual Science, where some of the earliest 20th century work on trans healthcare and queer sexuality had been pioneered. Later, the Nazis passed harsh laws outlawing homosexuality and imprisoned gay men, lesbians, and trans people in concentration camps. Likewise, in Mussolini’s Italy and Franco’s Spain, women’s ability to participate in public life and employment was severely curtailed, alongside harsh punishments for abortion.

German propaganda poster showing the Nazi eagle behind an image of the “ideal” family

The fascist definition of the family was central to social control in Nazi Germany, Mussolini’s fascist regime in Italy, and Franco’s Spain. Women played the role of mother to the fascist homeland and embodied a fascist vision of fertility and femininity, raising children to be or to birth future fascist soldiers. Men were expected to adhere to a strict image of strength and masculinity, serving as fathers and enforcers of fascist discipline within the home and soldiers to the fascist state outside the home. The patriarchal vision of the family occurred alongside and was dependent upon the subordination, exploitation and/or elimination of bodies, families, and communities perceived as sexually deviant, racially or ethnically other, politically dissident, or otherwise “inferior.” In the fascist regimes of the 20th century, the valorization of “the family” was part and parcel of a genocidal project denying many actual families the right to the term.

But we don’t have to look across the ocean to find examples of the interconnection of fascism and patriarchy. US racial capitalism was formed around patriarchal relations that developed through the enslavement of African people, the exploitation of non-Black people of color and poor whites, and the extermination of Indigenous peoples, and the policies of European fascist states drew heavily on the mechanisms of slavery in the US. Within this context, the creation and enforcement of strict gender and sexual roles was a crucial mechanism of social control and economic exploitation and included the repression and extermination of Two-Spirit and gender-non-conforming people, laws banning interracial families, and widespread sexual violence by white male enslavers against enslaved women. The “cult of domesticity” that restricted wealthy (and, later, middle-class) white women to the role of mother and homemaker is inextricable from the oppression of the many other women and gender-oppressed people to whom any pretense of “family values” was denied. This was made most brutally clear by the commodification of the reproductive capacity of enslaved Black women upon which the perpetuation of slavery depended, particularly after the closing of the legal Atlantic slave trade. Even after abolition, the valorization of “the family” as a private refuge from public life continued to depend on the exploitative, low-wage domestic labor of poor and working-class women and women of color.

4. Project 2025: Restore What and for Whom?


These early foundations echo into the current structures of US capitalism in which reproductive labor is unvalued or undervalued, to the detriment of the health of the entire society. Care work and reproductive labor include having and raising children, teaching, healing the sick, caring for the elderly, domestic labor, janitorial work, and many other crucial jobs that allow our society to function and reproduce itself. These fundamental contradictions underlie US capitalism, and the right’s current project seeks to exacerbate and crystallize them further.

It is with this context in mind that we must evaluate the right’s supposed promise to “restore” the family. We must immediately ask: restore what, for whom? The preface to Project 2025 states:


“In many ways, the entire point of centralizing political power is to subvert the family. Its purpose is to replace people’s natural loves and loyalties with unnatural ones. You see this in the popular left-wing aphorism, “Government is simply the name we give to the things we choose to do together.” But in real life, most of the things people “do together” have nothing to do with government. These are the mediating institutions that serve as the building blocks of any healthy society. Marriage. Family. Work. Church. School. Volunteering. The name real people give to the things we do together is community, not government. Our lives are full of interwoven, overlapping communities, and our individual and collective happiness depends upon them. But the most important community in each of our lives—and the life of the nation—is the family.

The right’s vision of “the family” draws on a long history of policing people’s bodies and reproductive capacity. All people with wombs must be forced to live as women, and all women forced to birth children, whether to reproduce a dominant elite (for white, Christian, middle class, and upper class women) or a dominated labor force (for everyone else). Policies that create greater ease and security for women and children are actually counterproductive to this fascist project. Meanwhile the rhetorical juxtaposition of “natural” and “unnatural” “loves and loyalties” makes very clear who does and doesn’t count as family, paving the way for the subsequent call for the forcible suppression of trans people, who the right calls an “ideology.” Likewise, the invocation of “real people” who care about “community” implies, chillingly, the existence of other, unreal people who do not. Here again, MAGA’s “family values” involve the extirpation of families considered less than fully human and outside the body politic—a core component, always, of fascist logic.

It takes a particularly contorted, deceptive logic to wrap an assault on the social welfare state in the shroud of “defending the family.” The right is not actually pro-children or pro-family at all. MAGA’s policy platform is horrible for families and children: it provides no paid maternal or paternal leave, slashes funding for public education, heavily restricts Medicaid and WIC, attacks access to healthcare, and seeks to turn a profit on our already badly damaged healthcare system by closing hospitals or converting them into badly funded and poorly staffed for-profit facilities. If we follow MAGA’s vision, working mothers, fathers, and parents will have to work more hours to put food on the table at jobs that abuse them and do not respect their rights; immigrant families will be torn apart; our seniors and loved ones will fall ill and not seek care until it is far too late, and then languish in dangerously understaffed facilities; and our children will go hungry.

And yet despite this, we should not underestimate the attraction of the right’s appeal to “family.” Most Americans deeply value family and community. And historically, the terrain of “family values” is one that the left has been willing to cede to the right. Given the deep entwinement of the white Christian, nuclear, patriarchal family structure with forms of racial, gendered and class violence, this is partly understandable. But if we are to successfully combat MAGA’s racist, genocidal, and patriarchal vision of the family, the left must fight for our own vision rooted in radical principles of self-determination, interdependence, and collective care.

5. A Left Vision for Gender Liberation and Family

Rather than ceding this ground to the right, we must fight both to redefine what family means and for the fundamental freedom of people to freely form family when and how they choose. We must recognize that all of the far right’s attacks across different elements of gender are connected: when MAGA attacks trans children, or access to abortion, or mixed families, they are attacking all of us.

The beginnings of a left defense of gender rights are increasingly cohering into a unified line. The majority of the country supports access to abortion and opposes abortion restrictions. In the 2022 elections, backlash against the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision and the overturning of Roe v. Wade was a key driver of Democratic victories and victories in a number of referendums either codifying the right to abortion or rejecting bans on abortion. Most Americans are at least moderately opposed to bans on trans healthcare, and many feel the Right is overemphasizing trans people and should probably just leave them alone. The pro-democracy united front is increasingly hostile to attacks on families, such as JD Vance’s recent comments.

The seeds of our line are right in front of us, in our defense of access to healthcare, freedom of choice, and the value of both paid and unpaid care work. Our vision of family includes mixed and multigenerational families, immigrant families, queer and chosen families, childless cat lady families, etc. We must uplift the value of collective care and fight for a policy platform that provides what families actually need: childcare and senior care, paid family leave, strong public schools and hospitals with unionized teachers and nurses, and a robust and accessible healthcare system that gives the freedom to access all healthcare regardless of income, including abortion and trans healthcare. Policies like universal healthcare access and paid family leave are popular with the American public and would have a tremendous impact on quality of life for the average American.

Left and progressive forces within our united front should take every opportunity to fight back against abortion bans and attacks on trans rights. Our base is mobilized by these issues, particularly abortion, as are many in the middle who may be swayed one way or another. Equally important, we must resist the siloing and demonization of vulnerable groups of people, whether trans people, patients seeking abortions, or immigrants. The right’s attempts to make these groups into scapegoats are dangerous and signal their fascist intentions.

The task in this moment is clear: we must block the fascists from taking power, broaden our united front to unite with the widest possible array of forces, and build the left to take leadership in the front. Through this struggle, we have the opportunity to articulate a vision that recognizes family as expansive and truly and deeply values reproductive labor, care work, and the responsibilities we have to care for one another.


Eli Brown is a member of Liberation Road. He currently serves on the National Executive Committee and is a member of the Oppressed Gender Work Team.
The Dangers of White Totalitarianism

Why is the US ultra-right turning to Rhodesia as their model for a white supremacist state?
October 13, 2024
Source: Africa As A Country


Air Rhodesia Vickers Viscount VP-YND at Bulawayo in the early 1970s.

In June 2015, a young white man named Dylann Roof walked into the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. After accepting an invitation to pray with the parishioners, Roof drew a Glock .45-caliber handgun and began to shoot. Within minutes, he fired some 74 rounds—killing nine church members, including the pastor and a state senator. Roof, we later learned, wore a jacket bearing two flags—one from apartheid South Africa and the other from white-minority-ruled Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). We also learned that the shooter, an avowed white supremacist, was a 21-year-old high school dropout who blamed African Americans for his failure to launch.

In the decade that followed the church massacre, members of the US ultra-right have increasingly turned to Rhodesia as their model for a white supremacist state. In particular, they have idolized the Selous Scouts, a brutal special forces regiment in the Rhodesian Army that killed an untold number of civilians, as well as insurgents fighting for democracy and majority rule. Promoting their views on social media platforms and in YouTube videos that garnered hundreds of thousands of followers, they attracted the attention of clothing vendors who began to market pro-Rhodesia t-shirts, hoodies, posters, and patches to white supremacists and gun lovers. Mimicking a Trump rallying cry, one retailer sold a red and white patch sporting the slogan, “Make Zimbabwe Rhodesia Again.”

The following year, Donald Trump was elected president of the US, in part as a result of anti-democratic gerrymandering and intensified voter restrictions that inhibited low-income populations and racial and ethnic minorities from exercising their Constitutional rights. Within months of Trump’s taking office, hundreds of white nationalists gathered in Charlottesville, Virginia, to protest the removal of a statue honoring Confederate General Robert E. Lee. They attacked counter-protestors, killing one and injuring nearly three dozen more. Trump drew national attention when he refused to unequivocally condemn the white nationalists, claiming instead that there were “very fine people on both sides.”

As president, Trump welcomed white supremacists into the fold. Those who rejected democracy, equality, and the peaceful transfer of power, including Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, QAnon, and more than a dozen other neo-Nazi, neo-fascist white supremacist groups, formed the base of Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol in 2021 following their candidate’s electoral defeat. Although their attempts to steal the election failed, racists, xenophobes, and other white supremacists had grown stronger under the care of the Trump administration.

While many journalists have exposed the composition and objectives of these ultra-right organizations, few have investigated the Rhodesian model that inspired them. Nor have they explored the ways in which moderates and liberals publicly decried Rhodesia’s racist, anti-democratic actions, while privately lending tacit support to the minority regime in order to protect their own interests. As we witness the erosion of democracy in the US, we would do well to heed the lessons of white-ruled Rhodesia nearly 60 years ago.

Rhodesia, a white-ruled British settler colony established in Southern Africa in 1890, was governed by a narrow minority of its population. In the 1960s, when many other African colonies were achieving political independence, whites in Rhodesia, who comprised just 7% of the population, panicked. White farmers, ranchers, and mine owners, who benefited the most from cheap black labor, manipulated the working-class whites to fear their fate should the country embrace democracy. Blacks, who comprised 93% of the population, lived far below the poverty line, subsisting on per capita incomes of $500, compared to $18,482 for their white counterparts. Few met the educational and income levels required to obtain the vote.

Largely unnoticed by the world at large, this small colony on the periphery moved to the center of the world stage on November 11, 1965, when Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith announced a Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI). The declaration severed the colony’s ties to the UK without the requisite authorization from the British parliament. In the eyes of the world’s great powers, who had also been colonizers and empire builders, Smith’s regime was therefore deemed illegal. Newly independent African and Asian states also claimed that the regime was illegitimate—but because it came to power on a platform dedicated to retaining power in white hands.

The Rhodesian move put the UK in a quandary. The territory’s declaration of independence came amid widespread decolonization on the African continent. Mass movements for political independence grew stronger after World War II, when African troops were drafted into the British army and African farmers were compelled to feed the imperial army and motherland. By the mid-1960s, the UK had been forced to grant independence to most of its African colonies based on the principle of majority rule.

Many of the new African states were deeply influenced by the resolutions passed at the 1955 Bandung Conference of Asian and African States. Participants had resolved to oppose colonialism and imperialism and to promote economic and cultural cooperation throughout the Global South (then called the “Third World”). They voiced particular support for decolonization and national liberation in Africa.

Knowing that new African members of the UN and the Commonwealth would never recognize Rhodesian-style independence, Britain denounced Rhodesia’s illegal action and refused to recognize its independence until it showed a willingness to move toward majority rule. Composed of the UK and its former colonies, the Commonwealth was a potent symbol of the UK’s gloried past. Weakened by World War II and desperate to keep the Commonwealth together, it was forced to make concessions to African members. African nations demanded an even stronger response to the Rhodesian regime. Rallying under the slogan, “No Independence Before Majority Rule,” many threatened to leave the Commonwealth if London failed to impose majority rule as a precondition for Rhodesian independence.

The US faced a similar quandary. Washington feared that if it failed to oppose the rebel regime, it might drive newly independent African states away from its own orbit and towards the communist powers. Moreover, coming at the height of the US civil rights movement, Rhodesia’s unilateral declaration of independence required a race-sensitive response. However, many in the US government were sympathetic to Rhodesian whites. The US was also hampered by other concerns. It had strong ties to Portugal, a NATO member that furnished the US with critical Cold War services, and apartheid South Africa, where it had significant economic interests. Both countries provided life-saving assistance to the outlaw regime.

Faced with conflicting demands, Washington devised a two-pronged strategy. It would publicly support majority rule and denounce the breakaway state but privately engage in actions that prolonged its life—and protected both Portugal and South Africa. When UN sanctions were imposed, the US, like many other Western powers, turned a blind eye while its businesses engaged in sanctions busting.

Although the UK was sympathetic to Rhodesian whites, many of whom had emigrated from Britain after World War II, it was cognizant of African sentiment and refused to recognize the renegade state. However, it quickly undermined its public display of opposition. Describing the Rhodesian outlaws as British “kith and kin,” London declared that it would not use force to bring Rhodesia back to legality and opposed all-out economic warfare. Instead, it proposed a limited set of economic sanctions, the purpose of which was not to bring the rogue prime minister to his knees, but to make him “reasonable.” It urged the international community to do likewise.

At London’s behest, the UN Security Council followed Britain’s lead, enacting selective voluntary sanctions in April 1966 that discouraged the sale of petroleum products to Rhodesia. In December of the same year, it added selective mandatory sanctions that blocked the import of an array of Rhodesian products including sugar, tobacco, and strategic minerals, and the export to Rhodesia of oil, arms, and military equipment. It was not until May 1968 that the Security Council imposed comprehensive mandatory sanctions, prohibiting any economic or diplomatic relationship with the rebel state.

The US was aware that the selective mandatory sanctions imposed on Rhodesia after UDI were being only “loosely observed.” Although opposed to the imposition of comprehensive mandatory sanctions, the UK and the US agreed to discuss those propositions in order to deflect “more radical measures” advocated by African and Asian members of the UN General Assembly. These measures included the use of force against the Smith regime and the extension of economic sanctions to Portugal and South Africa, where the Western powers had significant economic and military interests. Although closing the sanctions loopholes and using force to bring Rhodesia into compliance were their preferred options, African and Asian states considered the imposition of comprehensive mandatory sanctions in May 1968 a victory.

In October 1968, Africans and Asians in the General Assembly again introduced a proposal that called for the use of force. London warned its allies that it would veto the proposal, noting “that continued abstention by Western states would only serve to encourage further pressures and extreme demands from militant Afo-Asians.” The United States followed Britain’s lead and voted against the resolution.

The lag time of more than two years before comprehensive mandatory sanctions were imposed gave Rhodesia time to restructure its economy, develop new markets, and devise sophisticated means of selling its products clandestinely. It found willing partners on several continents. Some UN member states openly flouted the sanctions resolutions. Apartheid South Africa and the Portuguese colonial regime in Mozambique served as conduits for Rhodesian imports and exports. They ignored the UN call for a boycott of Rhodesian goods—helping the outlaw state sell its products and supplying it with petroleum, military equipment, and foreign exchange.

Subsequent events shredded even the facade of US support for majority rule. In 1971, Congress passed the Byrd Amendment to the Military Procurement Authorization Act, which allowed the importation of “strategic and critical” materials from Rhodesia, including chrome and 21 other minerals, so long as there was no similar ban on such imports from communist countries. A Rhodesia lobby, supported by pro-segregation southerners in the US Congress and a number of US businesses, had pushed hard for the amendment.

This loophole added years to the life of the white-ruled state by providing it with the foreign currency needed to buy weapons and petroleum on the black market. The Western powers’ refusal to hold Rhodesia to account culminated in a 14-year war between Africans fighting for liberation and the Rhodesian security forces—a conflict that cost some 20,000 lives. Even with outside support, Rhodesia was in dire straits. By the late 1970s, the war, a worldwide recession, and the toll of sanctions forced Rhodesia to the bargaining table. In 1979, the rebel regime was compelled to accept a settlement that eventually led to majority rule.

The parallels between Rhodesia over a half-century ago and the US today are troubling. In both Rhodesia and the US, extremist politicians have rejected the basic tenets of democracy and majority rule and manipulated working-class whites, frightening them with rumors of replacement by non-white populations. In 2024, the US is faced with another constituency of whites who feel threatened by the advancement of US-born racial and ethnic minorities and immigrants from the Global South. Some have openly embraced Rhodesia as a model for preserving minority rule. In both cases, extremist political and business leaders have aligned with anti-democratic forces that do their dirty work. The blind support of this constituency continues to be vital to the success of the regimes’ ultimate objective: protecting the interests of wealthy white populations in business and industry.

The case of Rhodesia also has much to teach us about how self-proclaimed critics of a renegade regime professed to support human rights, democracy, and respect for the rule of law, but in fact prioritized their self-interest and prolonged the regime’s life, which ultimately led to civil war. As the 2024 elections approach, die-hard supporters of the extremist minority will not be swayed by evidence. But perhaps lessons from Rhodesia can sway the fence-sitters.