How Movements can Maintain Their Radical Vision While Winning Practical Reforms
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It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
How Movements can Maintain Their Radical Vision While Winning Practical Reforms
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Why should Arizona Desecrate Sacred Lands Just to Send Copper to China?
Arizona mining promoters often claim that the world faces a drastic copper shortage that will block the development of a clean energy economy needed to avert the worst impacts of climate change.
The only way to achieve a decarbonized future, they say, is for copper-rich Arizona to avert the supply crisis by developing another generation of so-called “sustainable” copper mines.
Their pitch then deploys an America First trope that other countries, like China, will fill the void without Arizona developing new copper mines.
But the truth is far different, and the copper barons know it.
There is no copper shortage
The copper cheerleaders now include Fred DuVal, who misleadingly states in his March 13 guest column that “the current – and projected – global copper supply is insufficient to power this transition to clean energy.”
DuVal then suggests a specific way to avert America’s dire copper shortage by constructing the proposed Resolution Mine east of Superior, repeating an unsupported industry assertion that Resolution “will produce up to 25% of America’s needs.”
Here are the facts.
First, the world is not facing a copper supply crisis, according to the leading industry source for copper market transparency. The International Copper Study Group World Copper Factbook for 2020 states:
“Since 1960, there has always been, on average, 38 years of reserves and significantly greater amounts of known resources. In addition, recycling, innovation, and mining exploration continue to contribute to the long‐term availability of copper … Despite increased demand for copper produced from ore in recent years, increases in reserves have grown, and there is more identified copper available to the world than at any other time in history.”
The U.S. Geological Survey’s 2022 copper production report states that the world produced 21 million metric tons of copper last year. A 2015 USGS survey determined the world has 2.1 billion metric tons of copper resources and estimated undiscovered copper resources of 3.5 billion tons.
The fact that copper is widely available and has low exposure to trade disruptions are two reasons why copper is not included in the USGS 2022 list of 50 mineral commodities critical to the U.S. economy and national security.
Resolution’s copper would likely go to China
Second, U.S. mines already produce more copper concentrate than can be domestically refined into useable metal. Last year, U.S. mines produced 1.2 million metric tons of raw copper. They exported 360,000 tons overseas, the bulk of which came from Arizona mines. The U.S. only has three copper smelters and they do not have sufficient capacity to process what’s already produced in the U.S.
DuVal asserts that the Resolution Mine will supply 25% of America’s copper needs. Resolution has stated it does not intend to build a new smelter to process its 500,000 tons of sulfide ore projected to be produced each year. So, where will Resolution’s copper be smelted?
China is the only logical place to smelt Resolution’s copper.
Resolution Copper Project is a joint venture of the two largest, foreign-based mining companies globally, Rio Tinto (55%) and BHP (45%). Aluminum Corporation of China is Rio Tinto’s single largest shareholder with 14.6% of the company’s stock.
By huge margins, China is the world’s leading importer of raw copper and is the world’s leading producer of refined copper. According to USGS, Chinese refiners produced 10 million metric tons of copper in 2021, 10 times the amount produced in the United States.
Why destroy a sacred site for that?
There is no legitimate reason to destroy and industrialize a vast area of Tonto National Forest and obliterate our most sacred religious site for copper controlled by foreign mining companies destined for export overseas, most likely to China.
Our tribe stands vehemently opposed to the Resolution Mine that would destroy irreplaceable sacred and cultural sites at Oak Flat on the Tonto National Forest 70 miles east of Phoenix. Oak Flat is the foundation of our traditional religious beliefs. It is on the National Register of Historic Places as a Traditional Cultural Property.
Our tribe has opposed Resolution for nearly 20 years.
During this period, we have gained a few insights into the hypocrisy of copper industry boosters. They intend to continue extracting raw American copper, desecrating our land and then shipping it overseas to be processed into useable products sold back to American consumers.
Those are the facts that DuVal ignores.
Terry Rambler is chairman of the San Carlos Apache Tribe.
The Neo-Liberal World Order May Be Over
Anne Applebaum, a Russian expert, recently wrote a piece in The Atlantic entitled, “There Is No Liberal World Order.” She laments: “There is no natural liberal world order, and there are no rules without someone to enforce them.”
But who? Who is going to not only make the rules, “the liberal world order,” and who is going to “enforce” them? Sadly, Applebaum doesn’t answer these questions.
However, Applebaum hints at answers to the questions. She argues:
Because of Europe’s metamorphosis—and especially because of the extraordinary transformation of Germany from a Nazi dictatorship into the engine of the continent’s integration and prosperity—Europeans and Americans alike believed that they had created a set of rules that would preserve peace not only on their own continents, but eventually in the whole world.
Then she notes:
This liberal world order relied on the mantra of “Never again.” Never again would there be genocide. Never again would large nations erase smaller nations from the map. Never again would we be taken in by dictators who used the language of mass murder.
She concludes, warning: “Precisely because there is no liberal world order, no norms and no rules, we must fight ferociously for the values and the hopes of liberalism if we want our open societies to continue to exist.”
Reading Applebaum’s article one must shout: Open your eyes!
For all Applebaum’s well-intentioned discussion, she ignores how “ferociously” the U.S. has fought since WW-II to maintain the global hegemony she identifies as liberalism. Yes, the U.S. is a very dynamic nation with, for many, unprecedented freedom to do almost anything they want – and with the largest military (and military-industrial complex) in the world. Her celebrated “Never again” mantra is the social lubricant of decades of foreign intervention – from Vietnam to Afghanistan and everywhere in between.
Applebaum claims that at the core of the belief in “Never again” is a very simple, if profound, belief: “Wealth would bring liberalism. Capitalism would bring democracy—and democracy would bring peace.”
This belief, if not reality, defined U.S. and Europe social life for decades. People once believed in the “American Dream.” And for decades, it worked. The lives of most people in the advanced capitalist countries got materially better – be it measured in life span, medical care, income, home ownership and even sexual life. Greater political and social attention was focused on issues relating to social equality, be they involve race, gender or wealth.
However, that era of “relative” equality has been eclipsed by a new order of “inequality,” of Robber Barron capitalism reliving the Gilded Age. A century ago, the Gilded Age was an era of the celebrated grand bourgeoisie but also marked by widespread poverty, racist violence and women launching first-wave feminism. We appear to be a swimming in an unstable era marked by not only a global pandemic, but the ever-growing rise environmental concerns, increased forced migration, widespread malnutrition (especially among the very young) and neo-colonial warfare fought with postmodern techno-madness.
Applebaum, The Atlantic’s long-time writer about Russia, offers an informed overview of how the former Soviet Union was transformed into the newly constituted Russia of old, with Vladimir Putin becoming the new tzar. She informs readers:
The leaders of Russia, owners of the world’s largest nuclear arsenal, were reconstructing an army and a propaganda machine designed to facilitate mass murder, as well as a mafia state controlled by a tiny number of men and bearing no resemblance to Western capitalism.
And she reminds her readers that the “for 30 years, Western oil and gas companies piled into Russia, partnering with Russian oligarchs who had openly stolen the assets they controlled. Western financial institutions did lucrative business in Russia too …”
She tells her readers that “neither Bill Clinton nor George W. Bush made much attempt to arm or reinforce the new NATO members. Only in 2014 did the Obama administration finally place a small number of American troops in the region, largely in an effort to reassure allies after the first Russian invasion of Ukraine.”
Applebaum fails to acknowledge the role the U.S. played through NATO as its cat’s paw in seeding the current geo-political showdown. The historian Mary Sarotte, author of Not One Inch: America, Russia, and the Making of Post-Cold War Stalemate, reported on NPR:
Over the course of the 1990s and early 2000s, NATO expanded three times: first to add the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland; then seven more countries even farther east, including the former Soviet republics of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania; and finally with Albania and Croatia in 2009.
Does expansion equal encroachment? And does encroachment mean conquest? These are the historical questions being played out in the Ukraine war.
Applebaum’s analysis doesn’t place Russia’s current war in a long-term historical context, nor does she consider Putin in terms of what might best be called the Russian “character” or “spirit.” She presents Putin on face value, with little or no reference to the history his personality and title embody. A reading of Vasily Grossman’s insightful novel, Everything Flows, is in order.
Applebaum makes a strong, convincing case that “Russia is not the only nation in the world that covets its neighbors’ territory, that seeks to destroy entire populations, that has no qualms about the use of mass violence.” She warns about the treats posed by North Korea, China, Belarus, Venezuela, Iran, Nicaragua, Hungary and “potentially others.” She warns, “they understand that the language of democracy, anti-corruption, and justice is dangerous to their form of autocratic power—and they know that that language originates in the democratic world, our world.”
Applebaum divides the world between “democracies” and “tyrannies,” thus ignoring the great economic restructuring that’s reordered the global order over the last quarter-century. U.S. hegemony – economic, military and diplomatic — is in crisis, it’s might faltering. And with a destabilized world order, almost anything is possible.
Most troublesome, the same vehicle that Russia is employing in its attempt to take over Ukraine is the same entity Applebaum believes the West/U.S. should use to “enforce” what she calls “the liberal world order” – an all-powerful State.
To her credit, Applebaum knows how fragile the “democratic” State is, especially in the wake of Donald Trump’s presidency and the January 6th failed attempted coup. But are “the language of democracy, anti-corruption, and justice” sufficient? Perhaps it’s time to think outside the formal, established “box” of social order and restructure the structure of ever-centralizing power of both the State and the oligarchs to safeguard the future of democracy in the U.S., Europe and the rest of the world.
David Rosen is the author of Sex, Sin & Subversion: The Transformation of 1950s New York’s Forbidden into America’s New Normal (Skyhorse, 2015). He can be reached at drosennyc@verizon.net; check out www.DavidRosenWrites.com.
A Decaying USA, From Canada’s Coign of Vantage
BY ELLIOTT MILLERA Review of the Next Civil War: Dispatches From The American Future
To distill a subject, like the possibility of another American civil war, requires integral literary tools, some of which are: Time, Perception, Honesty and a sufficient amount of Valor—assets that unfortunately, all writers do not possess. When I saw that novelist/journalist Stephen Marche had strapped on a parachute and went feet first into the subject, I felt somewhat at ease. I say that as someone who has not read a lot of Mr. Marche’s work—but the little I have read (an unflinching Esquire piece on the 2016 film, A Birth of a Nation, and a 2021 Literary Hub piece that confronts, “contemporary fiction’s slow abandonment of literary voice”) rendered me thoroughly impressed. Those essays are what nudged me into his latest nonfiction effort, The Next Civil War: Dispatches from the American Future, but it wasn’t until I ran into the following assertion, on page 8 in the book, that I truly, reclined my chair and embraced the ride: “American liberals in the major cities retain a kind of desperate faith in their country’s institutions that amounts nearly to delusion…”
Mr. Marche, hailing from the neighboring Republic of Canada, opines that statement while watching our American production unfold from a convenient premium seat. Still, with liberal and conservative flags planted firmly around the globe, and cancel culture surging, it takes an audacious critical observer to make, and document, an impartial forthright assessment of that polemical caliber. To put it more bluntly, one can assume that in a book like this, the hard right’s antebellum pipe dreams would receive an intense examination. However, that fact does not guarantee a similar exploration of neoliberal politics, and the romanticism and chicanery it imposes on American citizens in blue and purple states.
On the same candid page, Marche even x-rayed neoliberal’s 21st century darling, the 44th President of the United States—with the kind of statement that I’m almost certain, after besotted feelings subside, historians will perpetually drum, when they excavate and deliver their unabating analysis on his eight year tenure:
“Barack Obama’s presidency was based on what we will, out of politeness, call an illusion of national purpose. He articulated the idea most passionately, most purely, during his keynote address at the 2004 Democratic Convention”:
“There is not a liberal America and a conservative America—there is the United States of America. There is not a Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America—there’s the United States of America.”
“It was a beautiful vision.” Marche continued. “It was also fantasy.”
After setting a great nonpartisan tone in the book’s opening chapters, Marche blurred literary lines and intermittently summoned his fiction voice to craft five hypothetical plots, (chapters he labeled, “Dispatches” that suggest the type of natural, and unnatural disasters that could (in his opinion) ignite another civil war:
Dispatch One: THE BATTLE OF THE BRIDGE – A calculating General and a troop of US forces, confront an armed anti-government militia, cosseted by a Machiavellian sheriff and his loyal deputies, on a run-down, insignificant bridge.
Dispatch Two: PORTRAIT OF AN ASSASSINATION – An angry despairing loner, seizes an unlikely opportunity, assassinates a sitting female President, and is anointed “a hero to one half of the country—and a cold-blooded murderer to the other.”
Dispatch Three: THE FALL OF NEW YORK – A category 5 super storm devastates New York. Three droughts in five years leave America starving; and climate change triggers flooding, heat waves, climate refugees and economic turmoil.
Dispatch Four: THE OUTBREAK OF WIDESPREAD VIOLENCE – The author ruminates on multiple civil disorder scenarios—all of which lead to insurgency, and the “reshaping of the American political landscape.”
Dispatch Five: THE END OF THE REPUBLIC – Tribalism reigns. The Constitution becomes toilet paper. America cracks and secedes into three separate nations. And the self-professed, Last Citadel of Democracy, belongs to the ages.
The fiction in this artistic device highlights Marche’s gorgeous prose and prompts my newfound interest in his two novels (2005 Raymond and Hannah and 2015 The Hunger and the Wolf), but I’m not sure if the author’s hybrid approach buttressed his assiduously researched perspective the way, I assume, he hoped it would. What I mean by that is, nonfiction is usually an intense perusal; the writer turned lawyer, presenting his or her case to a jury of literary peers. To pause the presentation, repeatedly, in order to show the jury a cluster of short films, (so to speak) in the hope that said narratives will help elucidate one’s perspective, is taking a huge risk at convoluting the reader’s literary perception.
Nevertheless, I for one appreciate an artist (and art) that dares to take risks. Whether achieved or not, being adventurous will always represent the road to possibility, and artists are the world’s foremost pilots, chauffeurs and wheelmen, even if we do get into the occasional fender bender every now and then—and as bold and intriguing as The Next Civil War is, it did not, like all literature, roll off the publishing showroom floor unblemished.
In a chapter he titled, HOW TO THINK THROUGH THE AMERICAN HARD RIGHT, Marche contends, “During the decades in which America obsessed over the rise of Islamic terrorism in the Middle East, it failed to notice the rise of a homegrown equivalent, radical Americanism, a pocket heartland ISIS.”
This is the kind of perspective and assessment that coddles “disavowal, repudiation and elusiveness”—language that, Gloria Wekker, writer and Dutch emeritus professor at Utrecht University, appropriately employed, in her shrewd 2016 nonfiction book, White Innocence: Paradoxes of Colonialism and Race. A disingenuous deportment, white innocence, one that affords the US, other governments (and individuals) that don’t want to grapple with the kind of racial quandaries found in Marche’s book, an escape hatch. No, the American government has always been fully aware of its in-house racial ferment, and it is more than capable of quick marching towards domestic hate groups, while blowing bubble gum orbs at foreign Islamic terrorism.
The distraction that Marche suggests is really a furtive indifference from the Department of Justice, one that has been exercised since the end of the Civil War. An intentional blind eye, cast and designed to, Klandestentally nurture American antebellum fervor and principles—the same blind eye that conservative politicians are turning from last year’s United States Capitol attack.
I don’t know how one can be aware of the complicit actions, and responses, from Trump’s political sycophants, with respect to January 6, 2021—while acknowledging the boiling confederate animus this country has been steeping in for over a hundred fifty years—and not see that they are nothing more than kissing gerontophilic cousins.
There are a couple of other aspirated theories, proclaimed by one of the author’s maven military Generals, that I could not digest as well, but I’ll refrain and succinctly conclude this review by saying this… I, unfortunately believe, like Stephen Marche, there will be another civil tragedy in this country, but I’m not sure if it’s going to be the blue/gray coat affair of the mid-19th century, or one of diplomatic seceding states that Marche outlines in the denouement of his prophetic book (as wonderful as that scenario would be). But the antebellum similarity I do see is a bifurcated, compromised military and police force, and polarized US citizens, spilling a river full of brotherly/sisterly blood, in fitful hostilities, all so the conservative demographic in this country can try and preserve antiquated ideals, instead of seeking a new, advanced, apexed way of life.
Advancement and the facility thereof, is the only bonafide gift an intelligent generation can truly offer posterity. We are here, today, because of that gift. And unless the majority of us are willing to concede that man, woman and society have reached their full potential, (a proposition too ludicrous to entertain) we, or everyone occupying this planet, are obliged to pay “advancement” forward—a notion that fundamentally, could very well be, the final amendment to that insincere, anachronistic document called, the United States Constitution.
Ed Sanders is a poet, musician and writer. He founded Fuck You: a Magazine of the Arts, as well as the Fugs. He edits the Woodstock Journal. His books include: The Family, Sharon Tate: a Life and the novel Tales of Beatnik Glory.
Jesus Christ Was a Medicine Man
BY ELLIOT SPERBERFacebookJesus Christ, he was a medicine man
Jesus Christ, he had the best medical plan
There was vision
There was dental
Free education
Clean transportation
He put an end to war
And deforestation
Everybody got
Debt cancellation
And free housing and free food
It’s true
As food and housing’s medicine, too
Elliot Sperber is a writer, attorney, and adjunct professor. He lives in New York City and can be reached at elliot.sperber@gmail.com and on twitter @elliot_sperber