oportet: (Default)
[personal profile] oportet
To buy or not to buy Greenland, that is the question. I think it's unlikely it will ever be a possibility, but let's assume for a moment it is.

Recent history tells us that Presidents get one good stupid shopping spree with the nation's already maxed out credit card. Biden had the Inflation Reduction / Infrastructure acts, not sure where that money went. Trump 1 spent all his on a covid response, and I'm being generous to call that shitshow a response. Obama care, failure. W had some wars, possibly the benchmark for wasteful fuckups this century.

If you accept that Trump 2 is going to get to spend a ton of money on something eventually...

For the righties - would you really want this to be it? All that talk of america first and you want him to give that much money and attention to a piece of land a few thousand miles away?

For the lefties - would you really want to close this door, having no clue what's behind door 2? What's behind door #2? Sit back a minute and let your Trump-hating imagination run wild. Not only could it be worse, it probably couldn't get much better.
airiefairie: (Default)
[personal profile] airiefairie
Hmmm. Greenland possesses significant, largely untapped, mineral resources, inc. rare earth elements, graphite, lithium, and other critical minerals:

PDF MAP

A lot of that is in areas that hold special value and rights to the locals. I know ethnic cleansing for resources is an American tradition, but I kinda hoped that was in the past. But alas.

Trump's lust for taking Greenland is so obvious. It has nothing to do with the security of the US. It is nothing more than a land grab for Greenland's resources. Worse, he is willing to use force, he says, to take Greenland.

The arm-twisting for Ukraine's resources for the sake of a stop of the Russian attacks is also quote telling.
airiefairie: (Default)
[personal profile] airiefairie
Fascinating. Have you ever found yourself contemplating the intriguing possibility of an America untouched by the hand of European colonization?



Someone on the internet has actually taken the time to create a vivid cartographic tapestry that envisages a continent shaped exclusively by the hands of Indigenous nations. - LINK
kiaa: (Default)
[personal profile] kiaa
So, now we have Russia in Ukraine, Iran backed militia in the Middle East and now Venezuela preparing to invade Guyana... Will this be the final nail in the coffin for worldwide peace and are we about to move to the next defcon status?

Venezuela referendum result: voters back bid to claim sovereignty over large swath of Guyana

Personally, I think the US will have to intervene else they'll be even more swamped with refugees they can't house or care for.

Now, I'm not against accepting refugees as long as you have the means to accomodate them. But if you can't even house them and care for them, you're not really helping them. The best way is to remove the reason they became refugees in the first place and that means interveening directly in their countries. Sadly.

Let's face it. Mexico, the US and Canada can't keep accepting refugees indefintely as they're about to run out of resources to take care of them. Housing availability is at sub 1% in most cities already. Food banks are empty and the health services are burned out after overworking themselves during Covid. They can't even house their own homeless citizens already.

Venezuela invading Guyana will be the final straw, I think. As long as conflict happens an ocean away, the US isn't in any hurry to intervene unless they're attacked directly. But South America is different, it's in America's backyard. So you can expect this to become big news in the days to come.
luzribeiro: (Default)
[personal profile] luzribeiro
How about dragging Steve Bannon off to the The Hague for international criminal conduct?

This is what happens when people actually start listening to the drunk guy ranting and raving at the end of the bar. The guy who tells everyone what is what and has been uniformly ignored for centuries. Not now. Now, we call him Steve Bannon. Cheers Steve. Do another shot for the revolution:

How Trump's allies stoked Brazil Congress attack

Steve Bannon calls Bolsonaro protesters ‘freedom fighters’

After a free and fair election they're hardly freedom fighters, are they Bannon? When the incumbent loses it's the best indicator of a free and fair election there is if you ask me! That is why when Trump lost, he definitely lost - it's the people in power who have the most opportunity to fix it, not the party out of power - as we saw with Trump and as we are seeing with Bolsonaro they are definitely trying to fix the result by using violence, not the ballot.

Bannon, Trump and the rest of these anti-civilization haters of everything should be put on trial for crimes against humanity and treason. And the people who funnel money into them should stand right next to them, whenever we can find them. You foment unrest and hate and fear and try to destabilize the world, you own it and face the consequences. You don't tell us you're not REALLY stirring up one violent uprising against democracy after another... AS YOU'RE DOING IT. And then expect us to pretend to be so stupid we can't tell, right?

Are these people to ever be held accountable?
luzribeiro: (Default)
[personal profile] luzribeiro
"We have to kill over 30,000 people." These words were uttered by the current president of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, the 1990s. They reek of nostalgia for the Brazilian military dictatorship that lasted from 1964 to 1985.

New presidential elections are coming up on October 2 in Brazil, which, according to all polls, Bolsonaro will lose to his opponent Lula da Silva. You know, the same Lula who was previously ousted.

However, Bolsonaro doesn't seem to care about some pesky polls. Similar to Donald Trump a couple of years ago in the US, Bolsonaro has already announced that the election will be manipulated by his opponents. There's of course not an ounce of credence or logic in his claims as he actually currently holds all power in Brazil. But yeah, just like Trump he doesn't want to lose his grip on power, right?

Read more... )
airiefairie: (Default)
[personal profile] airiefairie
Unprecedented drought has dried up the second largest river in South America, the Paraná. Its course begins in Brazil and runs for over 4,800 km through Paraguay and Argentina. The river gives life to huge tropical forests and farms. More than 80% of farmers in Argentina depend on this rier. In addition, Paraná is a key waterway for each of the countries through which it passes.

Currently, the water level in Paraná is the lowest since at least 1944, as a result of a prolonged drought in Southern Brazil, which began in 2019 and has not yet ended. It is not clear when this cycle will end, either.

Government officials in Argentina are now advising citizens to "save water" and catch rain for domestic and commercial use. In these dry conditions, the authorities are also urging people to stop burning waste or lighting fires to secure pastures.

As the level of Paraná continues to decline, thousands of forest fires have raged over the past two years in the region. Dried tropical vegetation is highly flammable, and the low river level dries up the canals, which usually help stop the fires. This is a vicious cycle out of which no exit is to be seen any time soon.

And in the meantime, Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro has been one of the most outspoken climate change deniers.
kiaa: (kitty)
[personal profile] kiaa
Haitian President Jovenel Moïse was assassinated in an attack on his private residence, the country’s interim prime minister said in a statement Wednesday, calling it a “hateful, inhumane and barbaric act."
First Lady Martine Moïse was hospitalized following the overnight attack, interim Premier Claude Joseph said. The nation of more than 11 million people had grown increasingly unstable and disgruntled under Moïse.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/official-haiti-president-jovenel-moïse-assassinated-at-home/ar-AALS9TL?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531

The country is already on the edge of falling apart, there are pockets of the nation pretty much in some phase of civil conflict with one another.

We are watching it all slowly collapse, and seeing an official killed in their home pretty much ends the debate on where Haiti is headed.

Haiti has been in rough shape for a long time. It's a shame really because their island-sharing sister does so much better.

Haiti through a series of actions has devolved into a violent nation with areas in more or less chaos without local government. Despite the US, the UN, and other nations lining behind Moise denouncing the attack (and we all should denounce such violence) there is a realization that his term did not improve things in the slightest.

We have no idea who is really in charge now.

In Haiti who is next in line is dead, their President of the Supreme Court should be in control but he died of Covid. I guess we could look to the acting prime minister, but that takes approval from their Parliament that is largely idle, worthless, and also in disarray.

The US Embassy there is in lockdown and there are travel restrictions to and from.

If I had to guess what is next, all out civil war. I am not talking about more pockets of fighting for control over this or that but outright humanitarian disaster causing long term bloody and messy civil war.

And it will be horrifically sad to see Haiti devolve into such a terrible ending.
tcpip: (Default)
[personal profile] tcpip
In 1970 the people of Chile had the temerity to elect the radical socialist Salvador Allende as their President, through a coalition of Christian leftists, social democrats, democratic socialists, radical liberals, and communists. The Allende government sought to nationalise major (and often foreign-owned) industries, engage in agrarian reform, increase minimum wages, employment, enhance social security, education, and public health. Three years later the military, under General Augusto Pinochet, organised a coup against the Allende government, ushering in seventeen years of a fascist dictatorship where tens of thousands would be executed, "go missing", imprisoned, tortured, and raped.

With declassified documents it is evident that the coup against the Allende government was encouraged and supported by the U.S. government, despite claims to the contrary by public officials for years. Further, the U.S. government supported the Pinochet régime, especially through Operation Condor, a U.S. campaign of assisting state terrorism against left-wing and democratic activists in South America. At least 60,000 deaths have been attributed to Operation Condor. Under the influence of anti-public economists, such as Milton Friedman and Arnold Harberger, the Pinochet régime banned trade unions, and privitised social security and public enterprises, with many of the latter being sold below market price to politically-connected buyers.

Always following as a subservient second-ranked imperial power, Australia too supported the murderous coup and all that followed with our own operatives in Chile. Now former Australian military intelligence officer and academic Clinton Fernandes is seeking the release of classified documents relating to the role Australia played in helping the military regime of General Pinochet. Most of these documents are around fifty years old, but nevertheless the Australian government is resisting the release of these documents, arguing "national security" issues, as is always done. It stands in stark contrast that other countries involved, including the United States, that have already declassified information relating to their involvement.

On a personal note the events in Chile had a profound and formative effect on own political thought. Through the movie "Missing", which traced a family's attempts to find their murdered son (Charles Horman) after their coup. It was a fair film, carried well by Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek. The haunting soundtrack by Vangelis was never released, however a kind person has put it up on Youtube. Whilst the film concentrated on the loss of one non-Chilean life, the book went into significantly further details of the setting and the events. The important lesson learned from Allende's Chile is that, despite any claims to the contrary, if democratic capitalism is threatened by democratic socialism the loyalty of the State is not to democracy but to capitalism, and those forces will use any means in their disposal, including instituting a fascist and military dictatorship, to protect their profits, power, and privilege.
dancesofthelight: (Karlee Meir)
[personal profile] dancesofthelight
So.......

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/oct/19/bolivia-election-exit-polls-suggest-thumping-win-evo-morales-party-luis-arce


Evo Morales's party has won a great big thumping victory at the polls, with his opponent conceding. Potshots at Twitter leftism, which screams that dictatorship good, democracy bad and suddenly pulled a 180 )

Will it have to accept that latching onto individuals who progressively adopt a more and more despotic approach to power is the exact mirror of the failure that made MAGA mentality what it is? That a political movement that professes democracy that runs to every tinpot Latin American caudillo and every dime store military junta in the Arab world and is almost entirely localized on Twitter is not in fact a reliable guide to understanding anything that matters? 

Frankly I doubt it, though at least Bolivia gets a better ending than most given what usually happens in Latin America when one lawless clique replaces another and each of them screams about the malevolent shadow of the colossus of the north whether or not the current US bunch can count to 21 without dropping its pants  and if it does so, declares itself a very stable genius while wheezing like Immortan Joe from a preventable illness and high on steroids.

dancesofthelight: (Marianne)
[personal profile] dancesofthelight
In one of the more puzzling elements of a certain stripe of Western, almost entirely US and Canada-centric leftist the Venezuelan system created by Leftie Pinochet and the bus driver is held to be first, socialism, and second a socialist ideal. Leaving aside that Chavez and Maduro are only leftist if Bonapartists and nationalists retroactively become socialist because they tell the Colossus of the North to fuck off and leave it to go hang, and manage to make that stick, at least in part, the reality is that the Venezuelan system is entirely rooted in the oil industry.

This, moreso than active US involvement, which does exist but has failed, and failed spectacularly the last few times it's been tried, is the deeper root of Venezuela's misfortunes. Oil prices have been very low for years as a result of an Iranian-Saudi dogfight, and other oil states, like say, Russia, have suffered heavily for this, too.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-53767424

Venezuela's oil spill, since it did happen in a Chavismo sense, will no doubt be purely blamed on American involvement, because the magical powers of the Chavez legacy mean technological hitches never happen, or simply held to be propaganda by the opposition and then subject to a gag order and compulsory imprisonment.

I think my favorite irony of Bolivarian Venezuela is that it really is what Trump wants the USA to be, and yet Trump and the GOP call that socialism heedless of just how close it is to their own ideal vision.


airiefairie: (Default)
[personal profile] airiefairie
Jair Bolsonaro is a great, brave man. He's been doing great things for his great country, Brazil. Or at least that's what he likes you to believe.

He's done his best to present himself as a brave man who can't be scared by "a little bit of flu", as he often calls the Covid pandemic.

Well, that little bit of flu has now infected 1.6 million Brazilians. 65K are dead. Brazil is the world's second worst affected country after the US (ruled by another great man with a great ego).

Now president Bolsonaro himself, the great brave man, has got the virus. He now has an opportunity to lead by example, and show how great brave men deal with the little flu.

Read more... )
mahnmut: (We're doooomed.)
[personal profile] mahnmut
I was reminded of it by a fellow's remark in the neighboring post:

"The virus chose the most ironic time to hit, didn't it? The most populous countries of the world are currently ruled by ignorant assholes. I'm sure this is going to end well."

So this comes just timely:

Boris Johnson now has the Coronavirus...

...And so does Jair Bolsonaro.

You know, at the risk of sounding evil, earlier today in a conversation with a friend I was ready to make a bet about who the first major world leader to kick the bucket from Covid-19 would be.

Perhaps that would serve as a trigger of some sorts, and give a hard lesson to the rest of 'em, possibly making at least a few of those assholes happening to find themselves in a position of power, capable of affecting the lives (and deaths) of millions of people, finally wake up, if a bit late. Who knows.

I'm still at a choice, however, as to whom my bet should settle upon: Johnson, Trump, or Bolsonaro. Any suggestions? Or maybe you'd like to scold me for my heresy? After all, those are human beings too, as despicable as they might be. I admit I feel guilty for the thought, but still...

Whatever the outcome, karma sure is a bitch.
fridi: (Default)
[personal profile] fridi
Hezbollah is conducting illegal activities in Bolivia, Venezuelan opposition MP Carlos Paparoni has reported at an anti-terrorism summit in Colombia. Venezuelan president Maduro was directly accused of harboring friendly relations with the Lebanese terrorist organization.

Paparoni claims he has evidence of links between Maduro's regime and Iran's proxy in Lebanon. Maduro, of course, denies all this, but Israel keeps insisting that it's true.

Mike Pompeo has often said Iran is trying to get a foot in Latin America various Middle Eastern proxies. And he's not the first one. These concerns are actually older than Trump's presidency, but now they've intensified. So far the allegations of a Hezbollah presence in Latin America were mostly related to arms and drugs trade, but now there are increasing reports of activity in the triangle between Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay, and now reports about Hezbollah interests in Mexico. There's also the fact that Obama largely let Hezbollah off the hook for the sake of striking a nuclear deal with Iran. The main basis for these relations is the strong link of the local Arab communities with Lebanon.

Read more... )
dancesofthelight: (Default)
[personal profile] dancesofthelight
 In the beginning, a man of Indigenous Bolivian descent took power in Bolivia, and imposed the most successful socialist regime in South America. I wish that I could define that my first time of anything wasn't really my first and that my third is my second. Then I could say I passed my first math class in college only one time )

In Bolivia, nobody except CIA agents votes no to MAS. So 51% of Bolivia is CIA agents.  )
In Bolivia, running for office for indefinite terms is a human right for Evo Morales, because nobody else is going to invoke this particular precedent )

Evo Morales decides like the EU there is only one no vote ever accepted. Brexit.  )It's Springtime for Franco, Madrid is so happy and so gay!  )

In all of this, the prior history of Bolivia that was by no means a secret was forgotten, and the spectacular audacity of proclaiming a human right to indefinite terms in office and in power was neglected. 

So, people of  [community profile] talkpolitics  , I ask you: is there literally anyone else in the world who would proclaim running for another term of office is a human right who'd expect anyone else not beholden to them to accept this at face value? 

That's the grim irony behind the putsch, it replaces an already lawless mindset of entitlement to indefinite power, and manages to pull a 1936: lawless leftists succeeded by murderous thugs in uniform on the Right, proclaiming adherence to ancient history but motivated by all too modern outside forces to keep it. 
nairiporter: (Default)
[personal profile] nairiporter

The Amazon is Earth's lungs, producing 1/5 of the global O2. And now it's burning. It is literally turning to char - at a tremendous speed. As we recently mentioned here, the Brazilian president is subject to fierce criticism for his aggressive rhetoric and his inadequate policy that has allowed widespread fires to be started on purpose. He has removed reputed ecology experts, and silenced them whenever they have published conclusions that he doesn't like.

There is good reason for all the criticism. But is his rhetoric and his reactions such a surprise? What else could be expected from a right-wing populist like himself? The more heated the debate, the more controversy his actions cause, the higher the indignation, the less he and his government are prone to negotiate. They will only be hardening their position. And that's not in anyone's interest.

Read more... )
luzribeiro: (Default)
[personal profile] luzribeiro
At European Parliament, PT accuses the US of coordinating Lava Jato

"In the EU Parliament, PT Congressional leader presents evidence that the US Department of Justice repeatedly violated Brazilian law in its collaboration with the Lava Jato investigation, which damaged the Brazilian economy, opened the door for massive privatization of Brazilian natural resources to American corporations, and led to the illegitimate election of right wing extremist Jair Bolsonaro."

Color me surprised. The anti-corruption operation Lava Jato (Car Wash) had evidently been assisted by the US, a blatant violation of the Brazilian constitution. Pumenta, a PT MP has alerted the EU about this in a special report.

The document states that the US role in the Car Wash investigation was a violation of the law of the land, because all international cooperation investigations should be overseen by the Brazilian Ministry of Justice. And in this case, as you might have guessed by now, it wasn't.

Read more... )
airiefairie: (Default)
[personal profile] airiefairie
Satellite data shows Amazon deforestation rising under Brazil's Bolsonaro



The deforestation of the tropical rainforest in the Amazon has reached the fastest rates in a decade last month, satellite data shows. The experts believe the indiscriminate destruction of the forest is encouraged by the loosened environmental regulations under new president Bolsonaro. The NASA's Brazilian counterpart, INPE, and the DETER satellite system have registered a 739 sq km of deforestation in May alone, usually the first of the three months where deforestation tends to increase after the end of the wet season. This is a significant uptick from the 550 sq km in 2015, and almost double the rate from two years ago.

If the trend persists, this would indeed be a terrible year for the Amazon. It all depends on how much control would be exercised by the police for the next couple of months.

Read more... )

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