Author Archive for admin

Fidel Retires. Washington Surprised. As Usual.

Fidel Castro
For 49 years Fidel Castro has outfoxed and bamboozled the U.S. government. Ten separate administrations in the White House have been at a total loss in how to deal with Castro: Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton and Bush Jr.

Not one of them, with the possible exception of Jimmy Carter, has been willing to do the one thing likely to have worked with Castro and Cuba: open up travel, trade and communication. Instead, kowtowing to the Cuban exiles in Miami and the fear of looking “soft on Communism”, the Republicans and Democrats have let crass political motives and self-serving ideology get in the way of reality. As a result of being blinded by its own immediate interests, Washington hasn’t the slightest idea of what’s going on in Cuba or how the country operates.

Case in point: the upcoming election for President in Cuba. On February 24, the members of the Cuban National Assembly will elect a new president of Cuba. Will it once again be Fidel Castro? Surprising Washington and the American people, but few others around the world, Fidel has today answered that question, saying he will not be a candidate for the office of President and the commander-in-chief.

Is it because of his health? Well, yes, that’s what he says. But there’s more to it than just that. Both Fidel Castro and Raul Castro know that if the success of the Cuban revolution is dependent on one man—or two brothers—it is a failure. It must be able to continue without a Castro at the top. And now it will.

What the U.S. government has failed to recognize—since it likely hasn’t even read Cuba’s constitution—is that when Fidel realized he was too ill to continue to actively lead the country in its day-to-day operations, he did not “hand over power” to his brother Raul; the constitution mandated the transition, not because Raul was Fidel’s brother but because Raul was already the elected First Vice-President of the Cuban Council of State. And it was always intended that this interim position would continue only until the next election by the National Assembly.

Now Castro says he will not seek re-election, though it’s likely he wishes to remain as a member of the Council of State. Common wisdom (sic) in Washington, D.C. is that Raul will continue to run the country as the “new” Fidel. That’s nonsense. Much more likely is that Raul will return to his position as First Vice-President and the Defense Minister, and that the National Assembly—whose members have been elected by the Cuban people—will, with the total support of Fidel and Raul, name a younger man to head the country.

Likely candidates are:

Carlos Lage, the 56 year-old Executive Secretary of the Council of Ministers of Cuba who is often considered to be Cuba’s de facto prime minister. Lage is a former pediatrician who has been actively involved in various aspects of Cuba’s economy and is an expert on the U.S. and its relations with Cuba.

Felipe Pérez Roque, Cuba’s foreign minister, who at the age of 42 is the youngest member of the Cuban cabinet and the only member born after the 1959 revolution. Roque was a leader of student organizations and Fidel’s chief of staff for a decade.

Ricardo Alarcón, the 70-year-old doctor of philosophy who has been president of the National Assembly since 1993. Alarcón was formerly Cuba’s representative to the United Nations, where he was also vice-president of the General Assembly. He was active in Castro’s 26th of July Movement to overthrow Batista, organizing student guerrilla groups.

While Cuba’s National Assembly could elect someone other than one of the three above, it seems likely that it would choose someone that already has considerable experience and respect, and those three all fit the bill.

Alarcón would be an excellent choice. He’s brilliant and often seen as the heir apparent, but at the age of 70 doesn’t quite symbolize a younger generation. Roque at the age of 42 would be a remarkable choice, demonstrating Cuba’s (and Fidel’s) faith in a younger, post-Revolution generation, but our money is on Lage, who at 56 is from a younger generation than Fidel and Raul’s, who has the experience to deal with the economic challenges, and who has the knowledge of the U.S. to handle what will inevitably be changes in Washington’s approach toward Cuba.

We say inevitably because if there’s one thing Washington listens to, it’s capitalists; and U.S. corporations want more and more trade with Cuba, particularly as the U.S. hits economic recession, depression and even what we believe will be GD2 (or GDII if you prefer a closer analogy to World War II).

Yes, that’s Great Depression II, and the more the economy goes down the toilet, the more American companies are going to look for new markets. Why not a market 90 miles from our shore? We predict a new face (for Americans) leading Cuba to meet with the new face (for the entire world) leading the United States.

Update: Well, Chicken Little screwed up. Raul Castro was elected president, a very old general dating back from the Sierra Maestre days now heads Defense, and Lage remains pretty much where he was.

Too bad. The Castro Boys had a chance to make a dramatic change that would truly have thrown the U.S. government for a loop. Instead they kept the old guard in charge–with a Castro at the top.

Granted this means there’s no threat to the embargo. If both Raul and Fidel had left the top levels of government, George W. would have had egg on his face. According to the Helms-Burton Act, nothing changes while a Castro is running things (it doesn’t appear to say anything about a Castro being in the National Assembly). Since a Castro now remains in the top echelon, the embargo remains. And thus Cuba continues to have its excuse for anything wrong in the country. And, let’s face it, the Americans aren’t responsible for everything that doesn’t work.

Perhaps Raul just wants more time to deal with the transition and make sure everything is in place before the next generation takes over. Perhaps. Our money is still on Carlos Lage to run things in the future. But for now, it’s Raul and the old guys. Maybe they just couldn’t bear the thought of walking away while George W. was still in power.

It could truly have been dramatic - and a master stroke. Sigh.

Monbiot on the Biofuel Fantasy

George Monbiot in the Guardian has written what I consider the best, and most accessible, summary of the biofuel fantasy, Apart from used chip fat, there is no such thing as a sustainable biofuel.

George W. Bush - A Man of his Word

George W. has been badly misjudged by many people. He has been accused of acting against his campaign promise in 2000 that he would not be a “nation builder”. Many consider his efforts to create democratic, capitalist governments in Afghanistan and Iraq as “nation building”.

Not so. George W. is a man of principle. He is not a nation builder; he is a “nation destroyer”. He singlehandedly took a country that had one of the lowest standards of living in the world and reduced it to the absolute lowest in the world. And that was only a start.

Recognizing that his mission in Afghanistan was fairly easy, he next moved on to Iraq, where he took the most sophisticated, advanced and secular country in the Middle East and destroyed its infrastructure, governmental system, cultural heritage, health and education services, indeed the entire country from top to bottom.

There are now more than 4,000,000 refugees, 1,000,000 dead and hundreds of thousands maimed in that country. What was once a secular country where neighbors and even families were a mixture of Shia, Sunni, Kurd, Christian and other groups, is now divided into fiefdoms where ethnic and religious groups vie with one another for power and even existence. Nation building? No way. Not from George W. Bush. Not from the man who promised America that he would never build nations.

But George W. wasn’t satisfied with even Iraq. He wanted more. And, by God, he did it. In a breathtaking leap of imagination and courage, he managed to destroy (not build) his own country, gutting its educational and health systems, destroying the financial system (including the worldwide standard the petrodollar), helping banks and other financial institutions throw millions out of their homes, and then, in a stunning burst of inspiration, destroying those very banks and financial institutions as well. Granted, much of what Bush accomplished had been started by Ronald Reagan, but Reagan never had the imagination to take it as far as George W. has.

By destroying the United States, George got a two-fer. He also brought down the most powerful empire the world had ever seen, something no other country, even the Soviet Union, had been able to do. The U.S. Army and Marine Corps have been nearly destroyed, the U.S. is reviled throughout the world, the image of America as the symbol of everything good and moral is gone forever, its once-powerful economy is shattered and the dollar will soon be worthless, not even worth the bits it is imprinted on.

Did George W. stop there? Not this president. Along the way he managed to speed up the possible destruction of the entire planet by fighting international efforts to slow down and reverse global warming and pollution. No planet builder, he.

Is he resting on his laurels? Not yet. He has his heart set on targeting yet another country in which he will not build a nation. That next country is Iran, yet another sophisticated country that he believes deserves to not experience nation building. Bush has just less than a year in which not to build a nation in Iran. Only time will tell if he can succeed.

As promised, no nation building has taken place on George W. Bush’s watch. George W. Bush is a man who stuck to his values and campaign promises. To those who voted for him in 2000 and 2004, we can only say: “Well done. You got what you voted for.”

Are you “Cheat Neutral”?

What is Cheat Offsetting?

When you cheat on your partner you add to the heartbreak, pain and jealousy in the atmosphere.

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Find solace at www.cheatneutral.com.

Dinner for One

If you’re not German, you likely have never seen this hilarious 11-minute program. If you are, you probably have it memorized, having seen it on every German TV channel at New Year’s Eve and even on Lufthansa New Year’s flights. It’s been a phenomenon in Germany since 1972.

James Kunstler Forecast for 2008

One of my favorite observers, and caustic commentators, on our current society is James Kunstler and his website Clusterfuck Nation. Here are his thoughts on the present and future…

Dec 31, 2007
Forecast 2008

For the tiny fraction of people who actually pay attention to real events — those, for instance, who know the difference between Narnia and Kandahar — the final hours of 2007 leading into the fog-shrouded abyss of 2008 must induce great racking shudders of nausea. Has there ever been a society so exquisitely rigged for implosion? The whole listing, creaking, reeking edifice stands like one of those obsolete Las Vegas pleasure palaces awaiting a mere pulse of electrons to ignite a thousand explosive charges perfectly placed to blow away the structural supports.

The inertia holding everything together that I described in last year’s forecast finally melted away at mid-summer and events began spooling out of control. Specifically, the massive tonnage of debt-backed securities circulating through the financial sector stood revealed for the mostly worthless bales of paper they truly are, and the investment community was left suspended in mid-air, grinning unconvincingly, like Wile E. Coyote thirteen yards beyond the edge of the mesa, with a sputtering grenade in each hand and an anvil tied to his ankles.

Read the full article

Europeans try to solve traffic woes by throwing out most road rules

Like countless other communities, this western German town lived for years with a miserable traffic problem. Each day, thousands of cars and big trucks barreled along the two-lane main street, forcing pedestrians and cyclists to scamper for their lives.

The usual remedies - from safety crossings to speed traps - did no good. So the citizens of Bohmte decided to take a big risk. Since September, they’ve been tearing up the sidewalks, removing curbs and erasing street markers as part of a radical plan to abandon nearly all traffic regulations and force people to rely on common sense and courtesy instead.

Europeans try to solve traffic woes by throwing out most road rules - Article in the San Francisco Chronicle by Washington Post reporter Craig Whitlock.

This concept started in the Netherlands with similar techniques tried successfully in Australia. It’s a fascinating idea, totally counter-intuitive for most of us, and apparently extremely successful. It’s a way of making communities more people-friendly and drastically reducing public works costs to release funds for much more important uses, such as public transportation rather than empowering privately owned vehicles.

For more information, we recommend visiting www.mentalspeedbumps.com. David Engwicht’s website. Engwicht wrote the book “Mental Speed Bumps: The Smarter Way to Tame Traffic” which is a delightful, fascinating and informative view of the techniques now being used throughout Europe.

Crisis may make 1929 look a walk in the park

As the credit paralysis stretches through its fifth month, a chorus of economists has begun to warn that the world’s central banks are fighting the wrong war, and perhaps risk a policy error of epochal proportions.

Crisis may make 1929 look a walk in the park - from the Telegraph

The Circle is Closed - The End of Suburbia’s Beginner

In a little noticed news item, it was reported on November 11th (“Levitt and Sons files Chapter 11″) that Levitt and Sons, a builder in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, had filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 on November 9th.

According to the company’s SEC filing, the company had defaulted on more than $300 million in loans from Wachovia Bank and KeyBank.

Levitt and Sons (www.levittandsons.com) isn’t just any builder, of course. It happens to be the inventor of post-World War II suburbia, when it created Levittown on Long Island in 1949. It went on to build more than 200,000 homes in the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and Europe.

In a related (kind of) item, the Levittown Tribune on November 30 reported “Suozzi Announces Public-Private Partnership to Turn Levittown ‘Green’” that Nassau County Executive Thomas R. Suozzi recently announced a public-private partnership to make Levittown, America’s first suburb, America’s first green suburb by reducing Levittown’s carbon footprint by 20 percent in 2008.

The partnership with local and national companies would “make it easy and affordable to install new boilers, make energy-efficient home renovations, utilize bio-fuels, solar heating and to purchase innovative, inexpensive products to quickly reduce home fuel consumption.” Suozzo said that he hoped his program “would provide a template for suburbs throughout America”.

No Oil in The Economist

In its December 6, 2007 issue, the Economist magazine devotes its cover to “The End of Cheap Food”. The cover article consists of 1280 words. Not one of those words is the word “oil” (“oilseeds” is used once).

That’s right. When pontificating on the “end of cheap food” not one mention of Peak Oil, stagnant oil production (particularly in relation to accelerating demand for oil and other fossil fuels), or the increasing costs of oil itself—and thus more expensive agriculture production, transportation of food, packaging and much more.

Who are the culprits responsible for the rising costs of food? According to the Economist: Government intervention through farm subsidies and trade barriers, U.S. subsidization of corn fields for biofuels rather than food, and the increasing appetites of everyone’s favorite scapegoat, the Chinese, who are this year eating 2.5 times as much meat as they ate in 1985.

The Economist, as always touched by the plight of the planet’s poor, sheds copious crocodile tears for the farmers of the undeveloped world, and endorses the pleas of that other legendary friend of the poor, the World Bank, in its call for wide-open agricultural trade.

In other words, get government out of the way and off the backs of multinational corporations, and business can feed the world.

Yeah, sure.