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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Sunday, January 3, 2016

RSN: The Chinese in the US Virgin Islands, Be Concerned, The Big Blowback: How US Foreign Policy Erodes Democracy Everywhere, Wind, Solar Power Soaring in Spite of Bargain Prices for Fossil Fuels




It's Live on the HomePage Now: 
Reader Supported News

John Kiriakou | The Chinese in the US Virgin Islands, Be Concerned 
John Kiriakou. (photo: AFI Docs) 
John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News 
Kiriakou writes: "A Chinese oil company is poised to take over one of the 10 largest oil refineries in the world - a refinery in a U.S. territory - threatening livelihoods, the environment, and U.S. national security." 
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Bernie Sanders: Billionaires Won't 'Rule This Nation' 
Bradford Richardson, The Hill 
Richardson writes: "Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is making a New Year's resolution not to let the billionaire class take control of the nation - starting with Donald Trump." 
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en. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is making a New Year’s resolution not to let the billionaire class take control of the nation — starting with Donald Trump.
“I say to Mr. Trump and his supporters that the billionaires in this country will not continue to rule this nation,” Sanders said at an Amherst, Mass., rally on Saturday, according to the Washington Examiner.
The Democratic presidential hopeful said his fourth-quarter fundraising haul of $33 million, announced Saturday, is a sign that a political revolution is underway.
“What is revolutionary about all of that is we are showing you that you can run a national campaign … without being dependent on big money,” he said.
“If you’re ready to wage a political revolution, if you’re ready to do that, please bring out your friends, your families, get those people who have become cynical to get re-involved in the political struggle,” he added. “We’re going to win here in Massachusetts, and we’re going to win this election.”
The campaign said the average donation was less than $30, and that the vast majority of donors had not reached the $2,700 limit.
Sanders also said his experience growing up in a family where money was always tight inspired him to fight for the working class.
“How about creating an economy that is not rigged?” he said. “How about creating an economy that works for working families and not just a handful of billionaires?”
If elected president, he said he would extend paid maternity leave and decriminalize marijuana.
Sanders is scheduled to travel to another event in Worcester, Mass., on Saturday night

Bundy Brothers Lead Occupation of National Wildlife Refuge Building in Oregon 
Associated Press 
Excerpt: "A protest in support of Oregon ranchers facing jail time for arson was followed by an occupation of a building at a national wildlife refuge led by members of a family previously involved in a showdown with the federal government." 
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Here's Another Sign the Era of Mass Incarceration Is Slowly Coming to an End 
Keith Humphreys, The Washington Post 
Humphreys writes: "The Bureau of Justice Statistics has released new evidence that mass incarceration continues to unwind in the United States. The rate of U.S. adults under some form of criminal justice supervision declined for the seventh straight year, dropping to a level not seen since 1996." 
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New Year Brings Minimum Wage Hikes for Americans in 14 States 
Eric M. Johnson, Reuters 
Johnson writes: "As the United States marks more than six years without an increase in the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, 14 states and several cities are moving forward with their own increases." 
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The Big Blowback: How US Foreign Policy Erodes Democracy Everywhere 
Walden Bello, teleSUR 
Bello writes: "When the late Chalmers Johnson introduced the word 'blowback' to the analysis of Washington's relations with the rest of the world, he did not refer simply to the victims of the US imperial intervention striking back on American soil. More importantly, he saw as the most dangerous blowback the destabilization of American democratic processes by the multiple consequences of Washington's adventures abroad." 
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The Islamic State group or Daesh is seen as a consequence of U.S. policy in the Middle East. (photo: AFP)
The Islamic State group or Daesh is seen as a consequence of U.S. policy in the Middle East. (photo: AFP)
The biggest blowback from U.S. policies abroad has been the erosion of the country’s democratic processes.

hen the late Chalmers Johnson introduced the word “blowback” to the analysis of Washington’s relations with the rest of the world, he did not refer simply to the victims of the US imperial intervention striking back on American soil. More importantly, he saw as the most dangerous blowback the destabilization of American democratic processes by the multiple consequences of Washington’s adventures abroad.
Seen in this light, Donald Trump’s “M&M’s Campaign” (“Ban Mexicans and Muslims”) to clinch the Republican presidential nomination is unquestionably a disturbing blowback from Washington’s policies abroad. Trump launched his campaign with a plan to build a wall along the 2111 km U.S.-Mexico border while deporting, wholesale, undocumented migrants and their families. After the San Bernardino shootings on Dec. 2, where a Muslim couple killed 14 people, Trump has pushed for the U.S. to stop accepting Muslims migrants and visitors to the United States. The two proposals go against the U.S.’s character as a country of migrants, threaten to unleash a tide of hatred against Mexican-Americans and Muslims, and put them on notice that their rights are fragile. They have resonated with large sectors of the Republican base, with extremist rhetoric now a staple not only of the Trump campaign but those of his rivals as well.
The Blowback from Iraq
How U.S. policy created ISIS or ISIL, fear of which now drives U.S. domestic and foreign policy, is relatively well documented. The U.S. invasion of Iraq threw the lid off Iraqi society, which had been a pressure cooker of sectarian rivalries contained by the regime of Saddam Hussein. As a Shia-dominated regime took over in Baghdad, an extremist Sunni movement, al-Qaida in Iraq, headed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, rose to fight the government and its American sponsors. Zarqawi found many receptive recruits among the hundreds of thousands of Sunni soldiers in Saddam’s army, which had been disbanded by the Americans shortly after their takeover. Adherents were also nurtured in U.S. prison camps, among them Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. After the death in battle of Zarqawi, Al Baghdadi emerged as the leader of the group, which now assumed the name Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) or Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
At first, ISIS was seen by western intelligence as focused mainly on establishing a Caliphate in the Middle East, for which it undertook a sophisticated international recruitment campaign via the internet. Then concern developed that ISIS was not simply recruiting young people from Europe and the U.S. to fight in Iraq or Syria but training them to be sent back to perform terrorist acts in their home countries. The Paris massacre in mid-November hat saw a handful of shooters kill some 130 people in a sophisticated coordinated operation hitting seven targets was seen as the “ultimate blowback.” That is, until the San Bernardino shooting two weeks later, which U.S. authorities saw as the most scary blowback of all: shooters carrying out uncoordinated individual actions inspired by Isis propaganda disseminated on the net.
The Mexican Blowback 1: The CIA Connection
The blowback process from Mexico is less well known but equally documented. One trigger was, as in Iraq, political intervention. The Mexican drug syndicates were relatively small-time affairs until the 1980’s. It was the Central Intelligence Agency that made them big-time. In the Reagan administration’s efforts to overthrow the Sandinista government in Nicaragua, it engaged in unconventional fundraising operations to evade congressional scrutiny. One was the so-called Iran-Contra deal, where top Reagan administration officials facilitated the sale of arms to Iran--then the object of a U-S- arms embargo – then diverted part of the proceeds to fund the anti-Sandinista guerrillas known as the “Contras.” Another method was to use Mexican drug syndicates. In her brave expose of the rise of Mexican drug cartel, Narcoland: the Mexican Drug Lords and their Godfathers, the celebrated Mexican investigative journalist Anabel Hernandez writes that when the Boland amendment prohibited use of government money to fund the overthrow of the Sandinistas, the CIA made a deal with the cartel to allow large-scale cocaine sales into the U.S. but on condition that part of the proceeds would be diverted by the cartel to support the Contras. Indeed, CIA complicity in fostering the rise of the Mexican cartel, which eventually displaced the Colombian cartels as the main supplier of cocaine to the U.S. is, in fact, documented not only by Hernandez but by a number of U.S. journalists. Among the key beneficiaries of the CIA connection was the Sinaloa Cartel, which eventually produced the lord of drug lords: “El Chapo” Guzman.
The Mexican Blowback II: NAFTA
The other source of the Mexican blowback was economic. Following the Third World debt crisis in the early 1980’s, the U.S., via the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, began an ambitious effort to restructure the Mexican economy along free-market lines. The cutting back of government support for many agricultural services, along with a program of privatization designed to reverse communal ownership of land institutionalized by the Mexican Revolution, resulted in widespread suffering in the countryside, with many peasants thrown off their lands. But even more devastating was Mexico’s integration into the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which quickly became a program for dumping subsidized U.S. corn and other agricultural products into Mexico. According to a 2003 report of the Carnegie Endowment, imports of U.S. agricultural products under NAFTA threw 1.3 million farmers out of work. For these peasants, the choice became either the shantytowns of Mexico City or “El Norte,” with vast numbers opting for the latter. By 2006, roughly 10 per cent of Mexico’s population was living in the United States, some 15 per cent of its work force was working there, and one in every seven Mexicans was migrating to the U.S. There was a strong element of truth in the sardonic comment that, owing to NAFTA’s savage impact on peasant agriculture, Mexico’s peasantry simply moved to the United States.
U.S. policies in Mexico and Central America thus had a dramatic dual blowback effect. On one side, the CIA godfathered a powerful cartel whose massive exports of cocaine devastated inner cities from Los Angeles to Washington, DC. On the other side, US-sponsored structural adjustment and NAFTA ruined Mexican peasant agriculture, leading to the migration of millions to “El Norte,” where they have become scapegoats for the U.S.’s economic troubles. Study after study has refuted claims that migrants take jobs away from the non-migrant workers or that they don’t pay their taxes. Yet, Mexican migrants are continually blamed by opportunistic politicians on the make, like Trump and his Republican colleagues. It is unfortunate that this opportunistic, demagogic game of playing on physical fear (“Muslim terrorists out to take your life”) and economic fear (“Mexican workers out to steal your jobs”), has resonated among many of the country’s white population. Trump, whose anti-Muslim and anti-Mexican rhetoric is most brazen, leads his opponents in the Republican presidential race by a wide margin in the surveys.
Instead of aggressively challenging the Republican candidates’ inflamed rhetoric and pointing to U.S. political and economic programs in the Middle East and Mexico as being responsible for these multiple blowbacks, most liberal leaders are on the defensive. Only Bernie Sanders, among the country’s leading politicians, is pointing to the real roots of America’s foreign policy and domestic crises; in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, his opponent, Hillary Clinton, continues to push for more military intervention in the Middle East and is reluctant to finger Wall Street as the source of the country’s economic troubles.
The country seems headed towards an even less liberal democratic order than now exists, one marked by more religious intolerance, more restrictions on civil liberties, and more immigration rules designed to keep out migrants. And that, as Chalmers Johnson so presciently warned, was really the ultimate blowback.

Wind, Solar Power Soaring in Spite of Bargain Prices for Fossil Fuels 
Joby Warrick, The Washington Post 
Warrick writes: "Wind and solar power appear set for a record-breaking year in 2016 as a clean-energy construction boom gains momentum in spite of a global glut of cheap fossil fuels." 
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