Showing posts with label Reminder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reminder. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Reminder: ‘The US Is Surrounding China With Military Bases, Not Conversely’


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The geopolitical tensions arising between China and its smaller neighbors are complex. There are ways to mitigate them and ways to exacerbate them. For the U.S., however, it’s a much simpler question. Considering the maritime and territorial disputes are none of our business, and we have no right to meddle in regional disputes half a world away, Washington simply has to renounce its claimed prerogative to dominate the Asia-Pacific and - voila! - we no longer have to concern our Air Force, Navy, Army, Special Operations forces, diplomats, and politicians with such parochial issues.


In anticipation of a number of talks he is scheduled to give in Tokyo next week, Noam Chomsky was interviewed on the regional tensions in the Asia-Pacific by the Japan Times. Here are some excerpts.


You arrive in Japan at a possibly defining moment: the government is preparing to launch a major challenge to the nation’s six-decade pacifist stance, arguing that it must be “more flexible” in responding to external threats; relations with China and Korea have turned toxic; and there is even talk of war. Should we be concerned?


We should most definitely be concerned. Instead of abandoning its pacifist stance, Japan should take pride in it as an inspiring model for the world, and should take the lead in upholding the goals of the United Nations “to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.” The challenges in the region are real, but what is needed is steps toward political accommodation and establishing peaceful relations, not a return to policies that proved disastrous not so long ago.


How in concrete terms, though, can political accommodation be achieved? The historical precedents for the kind of situation we face in Asia — competing nationalisms; a rising undemocratic power with opaque military spending and something to prove in tandem with a declining power, increasingly fearful about what this means — are not good.


There is a real issue, but I think the question should be formulated a bit differently. Chinese military spending is carefully monitored by the United States. It is indeed growing, but it is a small fraction of U.S. expenditures, which are amplified by U.S. allies (China has none). China is indeed seeking to break out of the arc of containment in the Pacific that limits its control over the waters essential to its commerce and open access to the Pacific. That does set up possible conflicts, partly with regional powers that have their own interests, but mainly with the U.S., which of course would never even consider anything remotely comparable for itself and, furthermore, insists upon global control.


Although the U.S. is a “declining power,” and has been since the late 1940s, it still has no remote competitor as a hegemonic power. Its military spending virtually matches the rest of the world combined, and it is far more technologically advanced. No other country could dream of having a network of hundreds of military bases all over the world, nor of carrying out the world’s most expansive campaign of terror — and that is exactly what (President Barack) Obama’s drone assassination campaign is. And the U.S., of course, has a brutal record of aggression and subversion.


These are the essential conditions within which political accommodation should be sought. In concrete terms, China’s interests should be recognized along with those of others in the region. But there is no justification for accepting the domination of a global hegemon.



And, as Chomsky always shows, the reality of the tiff between the U.S. and China is crystalized by the simple thought experiment of reversing the roles:


What’s the U.S. role in all this? It seems clear that Washington does not want to be pulled into a conflict with Beijing. We also understand that the Obama administration is upset at Abe’s views on history, and his visits to Yasukuni Shrine, the linchpin of historical revisionism in Japan. However we can hardly call the U.S. an honest broker…


Hardly. The U.S. is surrounding China with military bases, not conversely. U.S. strategic analysts describe a “classic security dilemma” in the region, as the U.S. and China each perceive the other’s stance as a threat to their basic interests. The issue is control of the seas off China’s coasts, not the Caribbean or the waters off California. For the U.S., global control is a “vital interest.”


We might also recall the fate of Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama when he followed the will of the large majority of Okinawans, defying Washington. As The New York Times reported, “Apologizing for failing to fulfill a prominent campaign promise, Hatoyama told outraged residents of Okinawa on Sunday that he has decided to relocate an American air base to the north side of the island as originally agreed upon with the United States.” His “capitulation,” as it was correctly described, resulted from strong U.S. pressure.



It goes without saying that Washington wouldn’t accept for even one moment a China with tens of thousands of troops and security guarantees with, say, Cuba, Honduras, and Venezuela. If China routinely patrolled fleets of navy warships along U.S. coasts and had a policy explicitly aimed at containing U.S. power in its own backyard, it is dubious that the U.S. would respond peacefully. The U.S. wouldn’t accept it. Why should we expect China to?


Update: For a helpful in-depth look at the U.S.’s containment policy towards China, see the Cato Institute’s Justin Logan here. He writes that the U.S. has “developed a posture in Asia that is designed with the obvious purpose of putting China’s seaborne commerce at risk.” Again, that is something Washington would never let China do without bombing in retaliation. Logan also argues that China’s rise does not threaten the U.S.: ”no one has specified precisely how even a very militarily powerful China would directly threaten US national security.”




Antiwar.com Blog



Reminder: ‘The US Is Surrounding China With Military Bases, Not Conversely’

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

A Reminder – Stay Above It


Wednesday, December 18th, 2013. Filed under: Inspiration


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Can’t summarize it better than this. Not all inclusive, but again a powerfully poignant reminder. Love, Zen







Just Wondering – Alternative News and Opinions



A Reminder – Stay Above It

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Engagement Rings Are Hardly Romantic -- Sparkly Rocks Are a Reminder of a Time When Women Were Property



Let"s not be so sentimental.








After Vancouver"s most famous jilted paramour got his 15 minutes of international attention recently, I was left wondering how we came to be living in a culture manufactured almost entirely by marketers.


Pasquale Angelino (“Charlie”) Zampieri hit the headlines when he sued his former fiancée for the return of the $ 16,500 sapphire and diamond ring he gave her, after three weeks acquaintance, in anticipation of their soon-to-be wedded bliss. They"d met on one of those online dating sites, the news stories recounted with glee, and by his account it was kismet.


Alas, it was not meant to be for reasons not quite clear in the reports, although poor Zampieri says he felt Jessica Bennett, whom he characterized as some sort of a digital Jezebel, took advantage of him. Two weeks ago he filed a suit in B.C. Supreme Court to reclaim the ring. Last week, she filed a suit for defamation.


What"s left of the once intrepid news reporting staffs of this town sprang into action to get man-on-the-street views. Streeters, once considered the last resort of lazy incompetents, are now the gold standard in journalism and I have to admit they do deliver a kind of insight.


The public view falls into two camps, as summed up by a middle-aged couple: “It"s a gift, she"s entitled to keep it!” the wife insisted. “She dumped him, she should give it back,” countered her husband. (I fear they may suffer marital discord off-camera too.)


But not one person in the parade of sidewalk strollers offered the only sensible response: What the hell did this guy think an engagement ring was for?









The engagement ring is not, as diamond advertisers of the last 80 years or so have insisted, a symbol of love: it"s a sort of down payment on a virgin vagina.


I"ve always thought giving engagement rings was a slightly unsavoury custom, given that it began in an era when women were chattel, more or less. It"s hardly romantic. The rings remind me of a time when women couldn"t own property because they were property. Well, except for widows. There"s a reason that Merry Widow of opera fame was so merry.


As Scott Fitzgerald noticed in the 1920s, the rich are different from you and I, and the custom of laying down an engagement ring was something rich people did in an era when marriage was recognized for what it really is: a business contract. It was done to secure property (and political alliances among royalty and the aristocracy) and to ensure there would be an heir and a spare to inherit it all.


That"s why female virginity was such a big deal. It had financial value because it was connected to property. Pre-DNA testing, no one could be sure who the father was unless the bride was irreproachably chaste. And no one wants to see property going to bastards. Post-delivery of the requisite sons, everyone was free to go about discreet amusements, and the country weekend at the manor house came into vogue.


And by society they didn"t mean hoi polloi like thee and me, either. They meant what the insightful 19th century novelist Edith Wharton called New York"s 400 families.


Rings as retainers


Then, engagement rings functioned as a sort of retainer — a lease-a-womb scheme, if you will. The unspoken part of the deal was that an engagement often allowed for a sampling of the goods.


A broken engagement was like a business deal gone bad: there were economic consequences and the injured party (the woman, who was acknowledged to be more vulnerable) was entitled to compensation.


In the event of the man breaking it off, she had what journalists call “a kill fee.” Because the reluctant groom wasn"t just changing his mind: he was telling the world that she was inadequate in some way. He had tried her, and found her wanting. And since she had been, um… tried… she was off the marriage market for at least nine months.


That was an eternity in a time when 50 was a ripe old age. Spinsterhood loomed by 25. So women didn"t want to be seen lollygagging about getting stale-dated or shop-worn.


As the middle class evolved and began owning property, they started imitating their betters, and breach of promise laws sprang up to protect women. Engagement rings weren"t common among my people (the working class) until after the wedding industry invented itself in the 1920s. What we now call a “traditional” wedding is actually just a cheap pantomime of a society wedding that has been marketed to the masses.


The elite gave engagement rings with stones of lasting value like sapphires and rubies (as royalty still does), but a wealth of diamond mines discovered in the late 19th century made the white rocks cheap and plentiful. They needed to create a market for this stone, so they began promoting diamonds as the ideal engagement ring to get in on this newfangled wedding industry.


The real marketing genius behind the engagement ring was a copywriter whom every advertising student learns wrote the single most effective slogan of all time, in 1947: “A Diamond is Forever.”


Frances Gerety (who incidentally was a spinster) cleverly connected romantic love to diamond engagement rings, forever. She obscured their creepy origins as down payments on chattel, and diamond purveyors are still profiting from her sharp thinking.


Get that ice


The real reason for engagement rings wasn"t lost on people of that era, however, as legal scholar Margaret Brinig noted when she researched the history of breach of promise laws. With the abolition of those laws in the 1930s came an increase in the sales of engagement rings to the masses.


That"s not a coincidence, and it"s not just the wedding industry ramping up. Apparently about half of couples were having premarital sex in the 1940s, and researchers believe that women were looking for some sign of commitment from a man before doing the wild thing. In an era of unreliable birth control, a ring was still seen as a down payment and a sort of insurance policy in the event the man bolted and left her holding the baby.


The pragmatic views of the day are perhaps best summed up in the 1949 song “Diamonds Are a Girl"s Best Friend”: “Get that ice, or else no dice.”


If this all sounds terribly mercenary on both sides, please remember that marriage is a contract: the parties are swapping goods and/or services in exchange for benefits. Although, I think the woman warbling that song may have had a contract other than marriage in mind.


Which brings us back to Charlie Zampieri and Jessica Bennett, and what sort of a business arrangement they had that required a retainer. Did Charlie think he was loaning Jessica a ring as a glimpse of future shared property? Did she think he gave her a sparkly thing in exchange for services rendered over the 20 months they were together?


In short: given equality laws and effective birth control, what in the world is going through people"s minds when a man decides to give a woman an engagement ring?


That is what the court will have to sort out, and I"m looking forward to the trial. (Please, please let there be a trial. Also, please let Mr. Justice Paul Williamson preside — he writes the wittiest decisions.)


With any luck, someone will weigh in and explain how we"ve all become such victims of marketing that we have no idea what we"re really doing when we enter a marriage contract and start passing jewelry around. 


 

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Engagement Rings Are Hardly Romantic -- Sparkly Rocks Are a Reminder of a Time When Women Were Property