Casas de carton proudly brought to you by United Fruit Company.
Leftist candidate Mauricio Funes has claimed victory in El Salvador’s presidential election, in a historic vote that ends the 20-year rule of right-wing party ARENA.
- Leftist declares victory in El Salvador
- EL SALVADOR (casas de carton)
- United Fruit Historical Society – Chronology
- Operation PBSUCCESS
Holy Toledo, Batman! How is Uncle Sammy and his CIA gonna get all those Central and South American snakes back into the box and deal with the rest of the planet simultaneously!? The U.S. economy is singularly inclement with bailouts galore and China holding the purse strings. The Middle Eastern countries are hair-trigger toey and appear unreceptive to “God’s gift of Democracy”. The Ugly American empire is turning to caga before the eyes of the world and it’s not a good look.
Rome on the skids was never like this; hegemonic hiccoughs never so dyspeptic.
Remember, remember the eleventh of September
The CIA’s murderous plot
For families and friends of The Disappeared,
It will never be forgot.
Footage of the US fighter/bombers destroying the presidential palace in Santiago, September 11, 1973.
Democratically elected Salvador Allende and hundreds of his supporters were murdered on that day, thousands who resisted were later tortured and “disappeared”. Pinochet’s fascist regime could not have maintained power after the coup without the the full co-operation of Holy Mother Church and her Secret Police, Opus Dei.
Michelle_Bachelet supported Allende in his rise to the Presidency. She is a medical doctor, and a divorced mother of three.
The Kangaroo Connection …
On January 10, 1975, Michelle Bachelet and her mother were detained at their apartment by two DINA agents, who blindfolded them and drove them to Villa Grimaldi, a notorious secret detention center in Santiago, where they were separated and submitted to interrogation and torture. Some days later they were transferred to Cuatro Álamos (“Four Poplars”) detention centre, where they were held until the end of January. Later in 1975, due to sympathetic connections in the military, both were exiled to Australia, where Bachelet’s older brother Alberto had moved in 1969.
Meanwhile, Latin America swerves towards the left …
Latin America is swerving to the left, (former conquistadors Portugal and Spain have already done so) and a distinct backlash is already under way against the predominant trends of the last fifteen years: free market reforms, agreement with the U.S. on a number of issues and the consolidation of representative democracy. (movement of jah people).
- Venezuela (Chavez)
- Bolivia (Morales)
- Cuba (Castro)
- Brazil (Lula)
- Argentina (Kirchner)
- Uruguay (Vasquez)
- Chile (Bachelet)
Abstract
The multinational United Fruit Company has been considered the quintessential representative of American imperialism in Central America. Not only did the company enjoy enormous privileges in that region, but also counted on authoritarian governments in dealing with labor unrest. The literature assumes that United Fruit and the dictators were natural allies due to their opposition to organized unionism. This paper shows that this alliance could only survive as long as the multinational provided the dictators with economic stability for the country. However, when the multinational proved to be incapable of doing that, the dictators allied with the working class to confront the multinational and extract higher rents (or as in El Savador’s case, democratically elect a president, not necessarily a dictator who can tell the corporate exploiters to pay their fair share or vamoose).
http://econpapers.repec.org/paper/eclillbus/06-0115.htm
(thanks for your fire dog lake link at 925, ChrisB, after reading it, this thread self-collated)
765 replies on “Viva El Salvador! A century of solitude no more”
Just doing some housekeeping.
For the record – when the page is under edit, if you scroll down to Advanced Options, there is a heading title “Comments and Pings”. Just make sure that the “Allow Comments” checkbox is checked then hit the Save button and your cooking on gas.
You’re welcome to come over and do as much of it as you like Catrina! LOL
😛
Is David Brooks singing hosannas or reciting a Requiem for American capitalism? He thinks he’s celebrating the animal spirits that have, in the past, made America ‘great’, but they are also the very same spirits that have run amok and polluted the entire globe with their excesses.
Sure, they will come back, but they’ll be reined in quite a bit this time, or better be, for all of our sakes.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/17/opinion/17brooks.html
So pleased to see you back,Cat! 🙂
Thanks for info.
We knew you would be able to do it Catrina.
Dick Cheney sticking his head up – commentary by Keith Olbermann.
Stuff Happens …
Ah, Cat, that’s bewdiful. Thank you.
————-
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68078
http://www.truthdig.com/cartoon/item/20090316_tarred_and_feathered/
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68032
Tues March 17:
http://news.yahoo.com/edcartoons/jeffdanziger;_ylt=AhK8Q4t2lKqjf2Xhpog2ZjbXj5Z4
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68053
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68049
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68051
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68064
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68065
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68075
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68076
Tues March 17:
http://news.yahoo.com/edcartoons/tomtoles;_ylt=AoaiG31AmQJE91w7t_GEvkjV.i8C
Sun March 15:
http://news.yahoo.com/edcartoons/tonyauth;_ylt=An7CxK4wLNYRreBucJ5pBsrmcLQF
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http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68041
No problem EC.
🙂
Jen – this is for you.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22425001/vp/29729290#29729290
😉
cat 😆
Paddy are you up for an early mornin slurp.
Choice is hard though, not sure which one to rip the scab off.
http://www.theage.com.au/cartoons/
Ecky, a fine batch of ‘toons there, and the white hot rage at AIG is warming the planet!
The natives are revolting, of course. Their betters have always thought them revolting, with their petty middle class concerns, like morality and preoccupation with social equity. Yes, quite revolting.
But now the punters can’t avoid it: the executive class in American finance has no morals, no concern for anyone, let not even the company they work for. Their entire reason for being is to milk as much out of it as they possibly can, and to do this they had to pump the share prices sky high.
America, you’ve made Madoff’s little Ponzi scheme look like a kid’s lemonade stand in comparison. Across the country, share values were inflated with dodgy accounting, off balance sheet shenanigans, colossal leverage and every trick in the book.
And ALL of this served one purpose: to milk shareholders for the satisfying of unbridled greed of the new ruling class, the executive class.
AIG’s little bonus travesty, paying the guys and gals who wrote trillions of bucks of bets that went sour, is one travesty too far, the bonus that breaks the camel’s (ie taxpayer’s) back.
The beast has had ENOUGH.
And who can blame them?
But not bailing out AIG was the equivalent of letting Lehman’s fail multiplied by a thousand. California got a couple of those bailout billions…and boy, they need every nickle they can get. A total, catastrophic failure of the system was what they were seeing down the barrel. The Fed and Treasury blinked, especially after what they’d seen when Lehmans was allowed to collapse.
It’s a very tough situation, especially when you realise the bonuses are one tenth of one percent of the bailout so far paid.
It’s a rounding error in absolute terms, and a moral travesty in moral terms. But the punters will glow with anger over it for a very long time, and who can blame them?
I believe we can add more to you list EC. Paraguay, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru and Ecuador. The only South American country with a right wing leaning that’s not a colony us Columbia. The only Latin American country not to turn left (I think), is Mehico. Excuse the accent.
BBC News has excellent coverage.
BBC News
Oh how the mighty have fallen.
When George Bush came to power in 2000. The USA still controlled the world. How could the USA control the world I hear you say? By propping up and controlling corrupt right wing governments in South America. Around 40 times the USA has interfered one way or another in South American politics. Either through invasion or indirect funding to right wing movements in South America. Remember the Iran Contra affair. Who can forget what happened in Chile? What about the invasion of Grenada? Such a big threat to the USA. Cuba, Argentina, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador the list goes on….
All these involved right wing governments, and they did exactly what the USA said. This put the United Nations firmly in US control. But now things are changing. Governments in South America are being thrown out at an astonishing rate. Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, Chile, Bolivia and more. They are changing to a varying shade of pink, from light pink to bright pink, and they are coming into power with a distinct anti American or George Bush flavour.
This was written a while ago.
South America’s New Revolt
Feature Article by Chris Harman, July 2004
Che Guevara’s vision of continental revolution is being revived, argues Chris Harman, but political leadership remains essential.
Nearly four decades after the murder of Che Guevara, a new ferment of revolt is beginning to spread across South America. Three governments have been driven out in three years – in Ecuador, Argentina and Bolivia – by spontaneous uprisings. In Peru the Toledo government that took office after the fall of the Fujimori near-dictatorship is being shaken by recurrent rebellion against its economic policies. In Brazil discontent with the policies of the Workers Party government of Lula elected just 20 months ago is giving birth to new left currents. And in Venezuela the intense political polarisation of the whole country after the two failed attempts to overthrow the government of Hugo Chavez seems likely to come to a head in the next few weeks.
This new ferment is barely four years old. The previous 20 years were bitter indeed for the left through most of South America. A series of military coups had devastated the workers’ movement – in Brazil in 1964, in Uruguay and Chile in 1973, in Argentina in 1976, in Bolivia in 1980 – and returns to civilian rule in the course of the 1980s did little to repair the damage. There were workers’ struggles but they were defensive, as economic crisis and industrial restructuring took their toll. This was often called ‘the lost decade’, when 40 years of intermittent economic growth came to an end with an enormous debt crisis.
The 1990s were not much better. Ruling classes and their advisers everywhere came to the conclusion that renewed ‘development’ was only possible by replacing old policies centred around state intervention by a turn towards neoliberalism. As they privatised, deregulated and dismantled welfare programmes, foreign capital flooded to buy up privatised services – and domestic capital flooded out, seeking security in foreign banks and profits on foreign stock exchanges. Meanwhile, restructuring of industry destroyed swathes of jobs, even before the Asian economic crisis of 1997 hit the continent, creating another downward recession cycle. As governments pushed through still more neoliberal packages and wide sections of the population found already meagre living standards reduced still further, a new discontent began to build up, scarcely noticed, at the base of society.
Ecuador
The first explosion of this discontent was in Ecuador in January 2000. Thousands of people organised by the indigenous peoples’ movement, Pachakutik, converged on the capital, Quito. Soldiers guarding the parliament building, instead of repelling them, allowed them in and, as President Jamil Mahuad fled, an army officer, Lucio Gutiérrez, joined with one of the indigenous leaders and a high court judge to establish a revolutionary junta.
The uprising was a reaction to economic policies which had impoverished wide sections of the population. Economic output had shrunk by over 7 percent in the previous year, and inflation had rocketed to 60 percent. Mahuad, a Harvard-trained economist, had responded by pushing through further austerity measures. A key plank of the government plan was to replace the country’s currency, the sucre, by the US dollar.
The victory of the uprising did not last long. Within hours military chiefs had replaced the junta and installed a new government under Mahuad’s vice-president, another neoliberal, Gustavo Noboa. But protests continued for the next three years, with another near-insurrection involving armed clashes in February 2001, and repeated strikes and blockages of roads until finally, at the end of 2002, the neoliberals were defeated in the presidential elections by a coalition headed by Gutiérrez and backed by the indigenous alliance.
Argentina
The Argentinazo uprising of 19-20 December 2001 was a spontaneous coming together of all the different groups hit by an economic crisis comparable in depth to that which hit the advanced industrial countries in the 1930s. The Radical Party government of president De La Rua effectively confiscated the savings of the middle and working classes by freezing all bank accounts, cut the salaries and pensions of public sector workers, and then declared a state of siege after unemployed crowds looted the big supermarkets. People from the white collar and lower middle class neighbourhoods of inner Buenos Aires poured into the city centre to join unemployed manual workers in besieging the presidential palace. After two days of bloody clashes with the police – and around 30 deaths – De La Rua fled in a helicopter.
It was four weeks, and four presidents, later before a veteran Peronist politician, Duhalde, was able to form a half-stable government, and 18 months later before elections produced a formally legitimate president. Even then, the government had to buy time for itself by repeatedly deferring a final agreement over debt repayments with the IMF, and did not dare carry out sustained repression against the unemployed piqueteros in the capital (it was forced to beat a sharp retreat in the summer of 2002 when its one attempt to do so led to a huge popular backlash).
Bolivia
The turn of Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, president of Bolivia, to flee by helicopter came in October 2003 when thousands of miners armed with gelignite joined with peasants, indigenous organisations and workers from the huge suburb of El Alto to take over the centre of the country’s capital, La Paz.
The first stirring of revolt in Bolivia had been provoked in 2000 by the privatisation of water in the Cochabamba region. A series of protests eventually forced the government – led at the time by President Banzer, a former military dictator – to rescind the privatisation. Wave after wave of struggle followed over the next three years, with road blockades repeatedly shutting down large regions of the country. There was a near-uprising in February 2003, when government tax increases and cuts provoked a series of confrontations in the capital, including a strike by the police, the burning of government buildings, and clashes with the military police that cost 33 lives. The government withdrew the tax plan but managed to hang on to power.
The successful uprising came eight months later, as protests began across the country against plans to export natural gas via Chile. More shootings of protesters by government forces had the effect of drawing into a single movement all the rebellions of the previous three and a half years. This was enough to drive Sanchez de Lozada from office, to be replaced by his deputy, former television celebrity Carlos Mesa.
Venezuela
Venezuela has not witnessed an uprising against an established government. But it has experienced two processes of mass insurgency by the poor in support of a government they see as their own. The first was when the poor took to the streets of the capital, Caracas, in April 2002 to force the abandonment of a military coup that had briefly seized power from Hugo Chavez. The second was eight months later, when an upswell of agitation from below – from the urban poor and from sections of workers – defeated an employers’ ‘strike’ (in reality a lockout).
The effect of the attempts to overthrow Chavez has been to radicalise a big section of the workers and the urban poor. Chavez won the presidency in 1998 by tapping a popular mood of opposition to the existing political establishment, but his campaign was not in any sense anti-capitalist or based on an appeal to class feeling. Rather it centred on demands for a purer form of bourgeois parliamentarianism, which was embodied in a new constitution. But the upper classes turned rabid when Chavez began pushing minor reforms to the advantage of the poor and reorganised the management of the state oil company (Latin America’s biggest multinational) to try to stop its profits flowing into elite pockets. Even then, at the time of the first attempt to overthrow him, many workers were still under the influence of corrupt unions leaders affiliated to the old political establishment, and stood on the sidelines waiting to see what happened.
The upper class onslaughts on Chavez have changed that. He himself has been very indulgent with those who plotted against him (the Supreme Court chosen under Chavez’s constitution allowed the military plotters to go free, the newspapers and private TV channels continue an endless stream of lies about the government, the Caracas metropolitan police remain in the hands of the upper class opposition and freely assault Chavez supporters, the bulk of Venezuela’s oil continued to flow to the US throughout the war against Iraq). But among the mass of workers there has been growing awareness that what is happening is the development of a class struggle, however much it is wrapped up in talk of democracy, nationalism and the legacy of the country’s founder, Simon Bolivar.
That is why the country’s rich are embarking on one more attempt to get rid of Chavez, and what he has come to symbolise, through a referendum due in the next few weeks.
Brazil
The tempo of development in Brazil – by far the biggest country and economy in South America – has been very different to the previous four cases. The election of the Workers Party government 20 months ago was a massive display of opposition to neoliberal attacks. But it was electoral opposition, not rooted in recent struggle – except in the case of the Landless Workers’ Movement that had been trying to take over big estates.
The Workers Party had originated in the industrial militancy of metal workers in the ABC area of São Paulo in the late 1980s. But years of parliamentary opposition to the civilian heirs of the old dictatorship domesticated much of the party’s leadership. So Lula endorsed an IMF agreement drawn up by the outgoing Cardoso government before his election in 2002, and in government was soon pushing welfare cuts the Workers Party opposed in opposition. This led to demonstrations and strikes, to the expulsion of four Workers Party parliamentarians, and to the launching by them of a new Socialism and Liberty Party.
A new reformism
An uprising is not a revolution, although it can prepare the ground for one. The masses who take part in an uprising are driven to take action by hostility to aspects of the existing system. That is not the same as yet understanding the need to overthrow it totally, or having the confidence to do so.
For these reasons, even when uprisings open up a potentially revolutionary situation, there is an interlude in which versions of reformism come to the fore. There can be a Kerensky who may or may not give way to a Lenin at a later stage.
New varieties of reformism have emerged from the revolts against neoliberalism in South America and for the moment overshadow revolutionary forces.
Kirchner in Argentina comes from the Peronist Party that ten years ago embraced the neoliberalism of the then president, Menem. But now he sees that stabilising Argentina politically means haggling for better terms with the IMF, loving up to the trade union bureaucracy, making certain token gestures to the left (like lifting the immunity of army officers involved in murders under the dictatorship) and buying off at least a little of the discontent of the unemployed (by a ‘jobs plan’ which provides doles, distributed by both the Peronist apparatus and by the piquetero organisations). Such an approach won him a honeymoon after last year’s election and gained him some support from some of the more susceptible elements of the left.
In Bolivia Mesa is trying a similar approach. He has been opening his government up to the supporters of one of the key figures in the protests of the last four years, Evo Morales, the leader of the cocaleros (the growers of coca leaves from which cocaine is made). Morales justifies playing along with Mesa by claiming any alternative would provoke US military intervention.
In Brazil Lula is under much less pressure from below since he was brought to office by the masses in the ballot boxes, not in the streets. His ‘left’ gestures have mainly involved trying to make the major imperialisms take into account Brazilian big business interests (by opening up their markets to the exports of Brazilian agrocommerce capitalists). But he continues to get some support from the trade union bureaucracy, and the important Landless Workers’ Movement has not quite lost faith in him.
Gutiérrez in Ecuador rapidly disillusioned many of his supporters when he signed a new agreement with the IMF last year. The indigenous groups broke with the government and are now among the organisations trying to revive the popular movement from below.
Chavez is seen by many on the Latin American left as different to the others, since he initiated a process of reform instead of having it forced upon him by the mass movement from below. But his central approach remains reformist, as was shown a year ago when he praised Lula as showing the way for all Latin America.
The mass movement has an important role to play in this strategy, but it is as a form of pressure within an overall strategy based on trying to change Venezuelan society piecemeal, from the top down. This centrally relies on manoeuvres within the institutions of the state, above all in the armed forces. Retiring some senior officers and moving others sideways has so far prevented any more coups. But Chavez’s control still depends on keeping on board officers who might not object to marginal reforms but who will never swallow wholesale revolution. As a result his tirades against imperialism and the rich are accompanied repeatedly by conciliatory gestures to them, like making the future of the government depend on a referendum they have campaigned for.
Towards revolution?
The uprisings have not led to revolution yet. But neither have those who took part in them yet suffered any decisive defeats. The new reformism rests on making promises to the masses, not on an all-out confrontation. Yet at some point the pressure of the world system on its weaker national components will demand such confrontation.
This is shown most starkly over the question of debt. The new reformists are caught between two different pressures. On one hand the local ruling classes insist that they keep IMF and the banks happy. On the other, cutting living standards further in order to do so can precipitate renewed popular insurgency.
The revolutionary left has to prepare itself for new explosions. When the new phase of revolt began four years ago it was weak, divided and often demoralised as a result of the defeats of the mass movements of the 1970s and 1980s. Now there is a vast new audience for revolutionary ideas. The various fragments of the revolutionary left have some influence in the discussions of Bolivian COB union activists, among the piqueteros of Argentina, in the new Venezuelan union federation. But they are not yet the decisive force anywhere, and have to struggle to win people away from reformist and half-reformist ideas.
In Argentina the trade union bureaucracies are telling people to trust Kirchner, and within the piquetero movement there are powerful groups refusing to see it has to connect with employed workers if it is to exercise real strength. Some go as far as to justify not doing so, deploying ‘autonomist’ arguments that see social change as possible if each group does its own thing, without a decisive confrontation with the state.
In the Andean republics (Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia) a key part in the new insurgency has been played by the movement of indigenous, non-Spanish-speaking peoples who make up half or more of the population. They were virtually enslaved during the three centuries of colonial rule, and have been treated as second class citizens and routinely humiliated in the nearly two centuries of independence. Their movements, like the movements of black people in the US in the 1960s or of dalits in India today, are about dignity and recognition – and about the right to use their own language – as well as about economics. This can easily shift over to hostility, not only to the Spanish-speaking ruling class and political establishment but also to Spanish-speaking workers and urban poor. Yet these too are fighting back against the neoliberal attacks. The revolutionary left has to learn to identify itself with the indigenous movements against oppression (something it has not always done in the past), but at the same time convince them of the need for a united movement to revolutionise society.
In Venezuela the activists in the mass movements have enormous illusions in Chavez. It could not be otherwise, since it was his top-down reforms that prompted the failed offensives of the bourgeoisie and the right. But those illusions can stop the movement acting independently as he again and again tries to conciliate the bourgeoisie so as to operate through the existing structure of the state. For all the grandiose talk about a ‘Bolivarian revolution’, no revolution has taken place in Venezuela. This leaves the bourgeoisie with the hope of getting their revenge on the mass movement that thwarted them twice – with some at least looking for help from the hard right wing government and the murderous paramilitaries of neighbouring Colombia.
The speed that events work themselves out in South America will vary considerably from country to country. My guess is that the tempo will be much faster in Bolivia, Argentina and Venezuela than in Brazil and Uruguay. Whatever the exact pattern, revolutionaries have a chance to play a role for the first time in decades.
Not the date: 2006. More has happened since then.
Analysis: How the US ‘lost’ Latin America
Here is an article that gives a background into operation Condor.
BBC News
Without the idiots help this would not have been possible in such a short time. It may have eventually happened but not as fast as this. Good has triumphed over evil!
Viva la revolution!
With a little help from Obama, this revolution will become highly successful. George Bush has done in a short time what the Russians tried to do for years without success. What will the Neocons do with their hero now?
16 Chris B Typo. Note the date.
Kirri
Someone has finally put it and now i understand it all. LOL
Mary is the proprietor of a bar in Limerick .. In order to increase sales, she decides to allow her loyal customers – most of whom are unemployed alcoholics – to drink now but pay later. She keeps track of the drinks consumed on a ledger (thereby granting the customers loans).
Word gets around and as a result increasing numbers of customers flood into Mary’s bar.
Taking advantage of her customers’ freedom from immediate payment constraints, Mary increases her prices for wine and beer, the most-consumed beverages. Her sales volume increases massively.
A young and dynamic customer service consultant at the local bank recognizes these customer debts as valuable future assets and increases Mary’s borrowing limit.
He sees no reason for undue concern since he has the debts of the alcoholics as collateral. At the bank’s corporate headquarters, expert bankers transform these customer assets into DRINKBONDS, ALKBONDS and PUKEBONDS. These securities are then traded on markets worldwide. No one really understands what these abbreviations mean and how the securities are guaranteed. Nevertheless, as their prices continuously climb, the securities become top-selling items.
One day, although the prices are still climbing, a risk manager (subsequently of course fired due his negativity) of the bank decides that slowly the time has come to demand payment of the debts incurred by the drinkers at Mary’s bar.
However, they cannot pay back the debts. Mary can not fulfil her loan obligations and claims bankruptcy.
DRINKBOND and ALKBOND drop in price by 95 %. PUKEBOND performs better, stabilizing in price after dropping by 80 %.
The suppliers of Mary’s bar, having granted her generous payment due dates and having invested in the securities are faced with a new situation. Her wine supplier claims bankruptcy, her beer supplier is taken over by a competitor.
The bank is saved by the Government following dramatic round-the-clock consultations by leaders from the governing political parties.
The funds required for this purpose are obtained by a tax levied on the non-drinkers.
Latin America in Revolt: Continent Defies USA. (2005).
continued on The Minority Report.
A Republican has suggested the AIG board of management employ the Japanese method of honour. Ritual suicide.
Thanks, Kirri and Chris. Gotta see a man about a dog this morning, will reply in more detail before our Pale Blue Dot completes the upcoming quarter of its daily revolutionary imperative.
🙂
Just heard a couple of pearlers on RN while rustling up a boiled googie and buttered soldiers:
The Borg’s election promise du jour:
“….laws which will make it illegal for politicians to lie to parliament.”
And apparently the owners of the vessel (whose captain felt it was propitious to ply headlong into a category 5 cyclone and as a consequence split its guts of oil and nitrate to wreak ecological devastation) has recieved “best in show” awards from none less than the United Nations for being examplars of environmental protection.
fuck*me*dead
Yeah, and they reckon Typhoid Mary was a great root too if you lived long enough to reflect upon it. 🙂
This girl makes a lot of sense. Lets hope she doesn’t have a lot of influence in the Republican Party for sometime to come. 😈
view the video on The Huffington Post
This is our ritual suicide guy, giving us more….
Chuck Grassley: AIG “Sucking The Tit Of The Taxpayer” (VIDEO).
The Huffington Post
11
gaffy
I was up so early this morning, I missed the media.
But those three, are fine examples of the cartoonists craft. 🙂
However……Not content with being merely First Dog.
That rotten scribbler from Crikey has now elevated himself to being First God On The Moon.
http://media.crikey.com.au/Media/images/090318-Fielding-fbf7be1d-385c-43a4-bb04-920d3a119951.jpg
Hilarious Paddy.
Time to nationalise and take the heat, or get melted by the white hot rage of the punters:
In the end, the buck stops with Obama. For some reason, he appears to have a blind spot to the damage the mismanagement of this bailout is doing not only to any efforts to turn around the economy, but to his entire political agenda.
He continues unaccountably to rely on his economic team to handle the mess, while he goes about his business of doing the things he always wanted to do as president — close Guantanamo, restore stem-cell research, invite Stevie Wonder to the White House. The result is that his credibility is suffering enormous damage.
(marketwatch.com)
…a moment of truth is rapidly approaching Team Obama.
That clip with Cheney was classic Catrina. Cheney is like a zombie, you can’t kill him, he just keeps coming at you with the same vacant stare and the same lies.
Creepy.
That’s so cute, Paddy.
Anyone else get the feeling that Fielding is utterly out of his depth?
Another earth quake in Victoria, same place as last time 4.6 again. I heard it. I thought it was someone throwing something in the back of a truck!
Its George Bush’s fault. !GB!
KR – Fielding is embarrassing. My mother would have used the expression “he’s as thick as pig shit”. It’s Labor’s fault though. As I recall it was their preference distributions that got him in (I think at the expense of the Greens?).
35 Katielou, I understand that it was our friend Conroy who arranged that.
Philip Adams will have Satyajit Das on Late Night Live tonight.
Always a guy worth listening to.
Yeah KL, your Mum would have been spot on in this case! LOL
On PM tonight, the Pope has arrived in Africa and decreed in an AIDS ridden continenet that the use of condoms will only make matters worse, and Moral Sexual Behviour is the answer – so condemning unknown tens of thousands to further infection from HIV (particularly women who cannot refuse sex, anal or otherwise, as they are the property of their husbands), and the resulting children .
Genocide in other words.
And tomorrow’s Colbert will have Juan Cole as guest. (Pity he’s not on Jon Stewart’s show, since Colbert’s show is ONLY about Colbert, pretty much).
Anyway, Cole will no doubt have some gems on what is really going on in the Middle East if Stephen can shut his trap for a few seconds.
Fielding- out of his depth???
How could you suggest such a thing when he had such a vote of confidence from the People …1.8 percent. And now holds the balance of power.
FktheALP and their dumbarse preference deals.
39 Jen, yes FTP, sans condom, and preferably by some AIDS carrying rapist.
Sweet Jesuz, why are they such fucking fascists? And why does anyone in their right mind let themselves be mind fucked by this old mass murdering monster?
Not content to condemn the poor to families they cannot afford to feed, he’d also like them to die from diseases they could easily and cheaply avoid with some latex barrier.
They make me sick, the whole bloody hypocritical pack of them.
Kirribilli – I am also angry. VERY. This is tantamount to the most deliberate and horrendous death sentences for hundreds of thousands in the Name Of God.
Fk Religion – including Stephen Fielding and his ridiculously naive happy clappers. Who happen to have final word in what happens in our country. FFS.
Kirri at 12, nice piece of writing that! (good ‘eavens, a Benaudism) 🙂
And Chris B, great corroborative links to the thread head. Cheers and ta, you commie punk!
Gaffy, who was the “someone” you glommed 22 from? Is that a C&P or did you pen it yourself? Tres instructive for ESLs like me…….Economics as a Second Language. 🙂
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68125
Katielou, I like your mum’s turn of phrase. Clearly not a woman to be trifled with. Speaking of swine…….
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68099
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68106
Tues Mar 17:
http://news.yahoo.com/edcartoons/mikeluckovich;_ylt=AvS7PelbRRcTj9QOErBC6qDX.sgF
http://news.yahoo.com/comics/mattbors;_ylt=AjeOK23MIbAgHY7u4TIZejzX.sgF
Don’t know the players, doesn’t matter, great cartoon!
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68111
Achtung! Contains explicit Watchmen-style violence
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68115
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68134
Wed March 18:
http://news.yahoo.com/edcartoons/tonyauth;_ylt=A0WTUcKAuMBJZ3UAJxYDwLAF
Wed Mar 18:The discrete charm of the AIGeoisie.
http://news.yahoo.com/edcartoons/tomtoles;_ylt=AoQf6PhHI7LL1AVpU4m20DnX.sgF
Tell me about it, Bobby!
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090318_perp_walks_instead_of_bonuses/
Let’s do the Perp Walk again…..whaddya mean ya can’t do it?!?
You take a jump to the left…..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Rc7An9wbiU
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68136
http://editorialcartoonists.com/cartoon/display.cfm/68118
paddy@11-
told you Bob was god.
Let them eat Credit Default Swaps! LOL
Yes, the punters are revolting, Ecky!
Jen, there’s a thread over at LP on Ratzinger by tigtog. Some wonderfully savage comments. Definitely worth a quick lash.
And the viscious red-shoed frocked-up control freak cops a below linked right Fisking.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090228_consider_the_source/
44
EC
C&P from an email
It’s a bottler orright, Gaffy!
from your link re The Pope Ecky…
I thought Bush’s demise was the turning point, but it’s probably not even half-way.
Not in our lifetimes I fear. 🙁
Ecky…..there’s movement at the Qld election station:
ALP – 1.45
NATS – 2.75
Bumpkin Borg looms on the Qld horizon …and Fielding is running the country.
Who let the idiots out????
Some kind of Clayton’s vote in the Senate tonight, eh?
Pope Ecky, eh? Jesus, I’d like that.
*slips on red shoes and lily-white togs*
my first encyclical : places text on lectern, clears throat, sneers earnestly at camera…….
http://www.rense.com/general69/obj.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeSSwKffj9o&feature=PlayList&p=F67F4DBE019FA48E&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=40
Ecky my Friend-
I am going to pray to you from now on.
Sublime.
Fear not, Ferny, authoritative sources(my gut) reckons ALP are not in trouble until they drift beyond $1.65.
Fluccies for campaign to date:
ALP open at $1.50, firmed to 1.34 the next day and since last Friday have drifted to tonight’s quote of $1.45.
LNP open at $2.50…..drift to 3.20 and now $2.75.
Flyiny to Perth for a family wedding at sparrow’s tomorrow so I’ll miss all the fun on Sat. night.
If The Borg’s mob do get up, they’ll do far more environmental harm to Qld environment than Bligh’s mob. I’m beyond giving much of a toss about anything else with regard to State governments. They’re all bent to buggery. Underbelly on 9 recently reinforced corruption as a given. It’s the degree of corruption that varies from State to State. I know Jack Herbert carked it, is Terry Lewis still alive?
States are just lines drawn on maps when we go Big Picture on the biosphere though.
—————
Can you see Punter’s boys doing da Boggies three-zip?
Ferny…
“Who let the idiots out????”
ummm – the Labor Party, sadly.
Well fuck ’em Jen. An idiot with 1.8% of the Victorian senate vote is running the country.
One of the Greens candidates is over on a Crikey blog arguing that Bundaberg & Maryborough are in South East Qld and that the last premier from regional Qld (apart from Cooper) was Forgan-Smith from Mackay. Someone whisper ‘Joh’ in his idiot Green ear.
Idiots are popping up everywhere Jen – like pimples on a bum.
Read the rest on McClatchy
It seems to have a good cartoon section EC.
http://www.mcclatchydc.com
Good news in El Salvador. Viva! People there have suffered for decades under an iron boot of imperial exploitation and local thugs. Getting a chance to right a few wrongs is the least they deserve. Lets hope they catch a few of the thugs as they flee to somewhere “safe” – come to think about it there aren’t too many handy little dictatorships around the area now (Colombia being a tad risky). We have a few things to thank GWB for – destroying the evil empire.
more on The Votemaster
59 Wakefield
Apparently they got rid of a similar dictatorship in America in November last year. 😈
Obama addressing the AIG subject.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22425001/vp/29756763#29756763
We have moved on deeper into the twilight zone…again. The Fed Reserve has just announced they will buy Treasuries to drive down long term interest rates, which caused a stampede into long bonds, and of course the market popped on the announcement: more cheap money is coming.
Brown did the same thing in the UK, the Yanks were impressed and said they were thinking about it, and now they’ve made the announcement they will pump another 300 billion into the system. More zeros created to buy their own debt.
Welcome to the twilight zone.
Ferny – there are indeed idiots in The Greens, but as a party at least their policies are trying to address the issues, not play tootsies with the fucktards that have been running the show- Badly- for their own interests for so long.
full poll results on The Huffington Post
here’s what His Holiness had to say …
http://www.theage.com.au/world/fury-at-popes-condom-remark-20090318-924s.html
Jen, I listened to the Brazilian doctor who conducted the abortion for that 9 year old girl explain why it was the only humane choice. Of course he’s now been excommunicated!
I’ll have the doctor over ANY of that befrocked bunch of nutbags any day.
Go for it Pete.
http://newmatilda.com/files/images/Katauskaslivingonmykneesres.jpg
49
EC
Yeah there probably would not be anything more secure than an alchoholic’s debts and moreso if there is a TAB in the joint as well. LOL Go Mary!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxHFVszOgWc
What the toonist can say in so many words is amazing!
http://www.theage.com.au/cartoons/
the whole of this article is on Politico
A glimpse into the future. This is a video of a presentation by Pattie Maes from MIT about developments in wearable technology. It’s fascinating. It’s over 8 minutes long – I think the interesting stuff starts around 2 minutes in.
http://www.ted.com/talks/pattie_maes_demos_the_sixth_sense.html
more of this story on Upside Down World.
“I want to thank all who voted for me, all who defeated fear, all who chose the path of hope,” he said.
Funes added: “Today, the public who believed in hope and defeated fear have triumphed. This is a victory for all the Salvadoran people.”
Funes made a phone call to congratulate the rival party for their work, emphasizing that “ARENA (Nationalist Republican Alliance) will become the opposition from now on, and in that capacity, rest assured that the party will be respected and heard.”
He invited various social and political groups to build a new welfare state for the people.
Populist nonsense, all this stuff about bonuses. And politicians pander to it because they need to be popular to hold their seats. Sigh.
Senate was amusing last night. The alcopops bill was voted on, and passed …. because Country Liberal Party Senator Nigel Scullion did not turn up. (He accidentally left his pager behind, so did not know the vote was on).
So they recommitted the bill so it could be vote down – but only after Labor and the Greens lambasted Scullion for stuffing up and accused the coalition of not taking things seriously and on and on and on …
Unwisely, as it turned out …. because Labor Senator Mark Bishop then missed the vote on the recommitted bill because his pager did not work properly.
Those who live by the attempt to score cheap political points on a non-issue die by the … well, you know. 😉
72 Katielou Wow! Thanks for that Katielou, very impressive stuff.
Brian Costar tips an ALP win in Qld:
http://inside.org.au/close-but-not-close-enough/
Kirri @ 67
“Of course he’s now been excommunicated!”
could be the new Badge of Honour.
DG, I beg to differ.
Bonuses, (or ‘bone arses’, since it’s the execs screwing the shareholders, or taxpayers, or anyone standing between them and a dumpster full of gold) represent just the tip of the iceberg.
Real wages, and let’s talk US for starters, (but we can do it for here too), have not kept pace with the glorious amounts of money these egos pay themselves. It’s a simple matter of equity, and while the punters are asked to make sacrifices, the execs gorge themselves, often for mediocre performance.
No individual is worth the kind of money these guys (and it’s ALMOST exclusively guys) think they deserve. It’s a con of mammoth (or mammon!) proportions, and the punters are pissed.
Rightly so.
Judged by what the middle class has suffered over the last ten years, paying these guys millions to run the economy into the ground is an utterly outrageous travesty.
Watch the rules get changed.
And we could also talk about the dubious methods whereby CEOs pump their share prices so as to get mountains of options in the money, and they’ve used EVERY trick in the book and then some.
It just invites fraud, and has bestowed colossal amounts of it upon shareholders.
Remember Arthur Anderson????
KR,
The thing is, if a company wants to pay millions of dollars to staff, what business is it of anyone else? And if the shareholders don’t like it, either sell your shares or pay attention to these matters when it comes to voting your board members in or out.
Shareholders are just as greedy as the executives the hate so much, in that they want the best return that they can get on their money. They wouldn’t turn down millions if millions were handed to them. (And neither would I …).
I understand that there is a difference when the government is providing the money. But if a person is on a contract which says ‘You will get paid X’ then it is very dangerous for a government to try to do things to override those contracts. ANd if the government had had any sense, instead of simply reacting to rampant populism, they would have built in provisions to their bailout that gave them control. But they didn’t. Why?
KR,
But shareholders want their share price to go up, so they are just accomplices in the whole deal. As such, I don’t have much sympathy for their wails when the executives take off with a few million.
72 KL, after seeing people driving down the motorway at 100kph talking on mobile phones, and one recently…wait for it, reading a book(!!), it worries me just a bit that people are so readily disconnected from reality with technology. So imagine them downloading the news and projecting onto their windscreen whilst driving in traffic!
Don’t think they won’t???
Now, where’s google earth, so I can find an uninhabited island nearby! LOL
DG, look at Enron as the US corporate system in miniature: they faked the books. They even did one whole floor as a mock up trading floor to show Wall Street investors who were convinced that active and profitable trading was occuring.
Why?
So they could pump up the share price and pay themselves OBSCENE amounts of money.
Kill this rort and the incentive to criminal accounting will take a hammering.
People will still want to lead companies and get paid well, but what we’ve seen is an orgy of pigs at trough, and they cared little about how it got filled.
And while these executives were earning shareholders massive returns, I did not see too much wailing from them about a lack of oversight and problems with executive bonuses …
KR,
But how will that kill it? Are you going to forbid employees of a company from owning shares?
I just do not have much sympathy with protecting shareholders from their own greed. If they had asked questions during the boom times, I might think differently, I guess.
Madoff victims, for example. Did they ever question how they were getting such fantastic returns? Nope – they licked up the honey and asked no questions.
And, why were so many being so cavalier and taking gigantic risks? Because they stood to ‘earn’ so much, and knew that it did not matter if they failed because, hey, the government would have to bail them out anyway.
The acute moral hazard that this ‘tails I win, heads you lose’ system is so blazingly obvious that regulators all over the world are suddenly making noises. Sure, some of those noises will be excessive, but there’s no doubt that the causes were very real.
I agree that there needs to be more regulation. And more education of the public. I am just not overly convinced that there were a bunch of bad guys over there who caused all this and who should be singled out for some kind of punishment.
Madoff returns were NOT ‘fantastic’, but they were consistent, and this lulled people into a false sense of security. Just as the world was lulled into a false sense of security about the ‘efficient markets’ when they were NO SUCH THING.
They were ONLY efficient at enriching some people consistently while putting everyone else on modest growth in wages and at risk of major financial collapse.
No, not a ‘bunch of bad guys’, but a bunch of people who became so habituated to ‘winning’ (they are nearly all Type A characters) that they bent the rules and levied governments to stand aside while they bloated on the excesses they pretended to create.
The whole show has been fueled on debt and cheap money, and we let those who stood to gain the most (by orders of magnitude) game the system.
Game’s over.
http://www.whirlpool.net.au/news/?id=1839&show=custom&hours=12
ACMA Blacklist leaked
Some top notch comments as well
Yes, I have to agree, it IS wonderful to see the Rudd government censoring a Queensland dentist’s website!
Filthy stuff you find in people’s mouths.
SMH:
But about half of the sites on the list are not related to child porn and include a slew of online poker sites, YouTube links, regular gay and straight porn sites, Wikipedia entries, euthanasia sites, websites of fringe religions such as satanic sites, fetish sites, Christian sites, the website of a tour operator and even a Queensland dentist.
______________________
But I’m very glad this site, which contains a lot of young pussy, is also banned:
http://files.kavefish.com/pictures/collections/funny_cat_pictures/_index-list.html
Betfair is on the banned list?????
I’m a member, and it pays me well to be one! LOL
Shame Conroy, shame! LOL
82 Kirribilli Removals Unfortunately they can’t outlaw stupidity.
82 Kirribilli Removals The benefits will far outweigh the problems with it. As always. When the phone was invented they said people wouldn’t go next door to visit their neighbours.
Probably not exactly how the financial press would put it, but this blogger nails it:
The Fed will be creating money electronically out of thin air to finance these purchases. When you buy a bond, its price rises and its yield drops. Buying another $750 billion of MBS along with $300 billion worth of Treasurys with printed money is a simple trade-off, debasing the currency so we can put a lid on the public’s and home buyer’s cost of debt finance.
This is terrible monetary policy. Keeping interest rates artificially low will encourage credit expansion when what’s needed to actually heal the economy is credit contraction. This sounds counter-intuitive, isn’t more lending what’s needed to “get the economy going?” No, too much credit is what got us into this economic mess in the first place. Asset values of all kinds are still over-inflated relative to their intrinsic value, the value of their discounted cash flows.
Credit is a drug. And the Fed is America’s dealer. We know we need to quit the stuff, but we’ll worry about that tomorrow. What we need right now is another fix in order to get through today. Our dealer, of course, is happy to oblige.
This is just a recipe for deeper and more destructive addiction and, eventually, far more painful withdrawal.
Not sure about what is happening in your neck of the woods, but according to the most reputable of the MSM in Victoria (The Age) you can choose from – the untimely death of Natasha Soemone or Other (wife of Liam Neeson), a photo of Charles Manson at 75, Litzl, German Rapist Father pleads guilt, and the fact that Tiger Woods is coming to melbourne ( not sure when , but that’s probably irrelevant).
Fortunately for us we don’t need to know about the financial, environmental or political situations in the world.
Although the Giant ferris Wheel is broken down in Docklands, so we’enot totally immune.
🙄
I’ve just been thinking about the new technology Katielou at #72 shows. It would show up the FAT content of food, which the food companies try to keep secret. They will be forced to change their ways or go broke. Kellogg’s will be in serious trouble along with Coke. 😈
That technology will be BRILLIANT!!!!!